BATTLE, n. A method of untying with the teeth of a political knot that would not yield to the tongue. - Ambrose Pierce. the Forivec Coup, i: a sword. Timestamp: 01 Summer 514 AV There wasn't a hope in Hai for Decath Rhodes. Not since the day his mother sold him to a ship’s captain had anyone found him to be worth much anything. It had been a thrifty fall in Sunberth, the cold settling in early and a good fifth of Tent City rendered to flapping ashes by the luckless ambition of a gangster firebug. They breathed ashes for a week and ever since Decath couldn’t shake his distaste for reimancy. The latest in a line of lovers had disappeared with half his mother’s ill-gotten gains and the last laugh line she would ever make, all but killing his little family in lay-a-way for winter. Captain Bruin had a wide, white smile and ready mizas for anyone willing to trade him child flesh, especially the kind that would go unasked after. There weren’t actually that many motherless street rats skittering around, at least not many of the kind anyone would want to buy and therefore Bruin would want to sell. Decath was a good head taller than the rest of his siblings and toeing up to a growth spurt that had him complaining for hunger near all the time. His skin was dark and clear, his eyes bright and shrewd. It took sixty gold mizas and half a slab of ham and Decath was aboard the Crack of Noon for the next dozen years of his life. He lost his freedom but he lived to see it taken. Three of his four siblings he later learned starved to death that year. At thirty-two years old Decath decided that was a near even trade. The world had never gotten any kinder, though. It had been a few years since he had last gone hungry, but it was only a matter of hours since he had wanted more. What that more was exactly he couldn’t quite name. It was little more than a skipping stone bouncing about his brain whenever he spent too long down in the tunnels of Rattling Chains, the ghosts of Forivec's dead miners more welcome company than those of Haev Provedan’s dead slaves. There wasn’t anything Provedan didn’t feel Decath owed him, from the soles of his new boots to the blood in his veins. They were no relation, he and Riverfall’s head slaver. Provedan just had the power to take his blood whensoever he wanted, so the fact that it was still in Decath’s possession made it, in his employer’s mind, akin to a gift. On the night that spring collapsed beneath the heat of summer and Caelum walked into the Kulkukan Tavern and Inn, Decath was worrying over that very gift. He half feared Provedan had in mind to take it back did he not return with the demanded gold. He could have hauled himself up from the table and stepped out to find a buyer, but he didn’t. The problem, of course, was that Decath Rhodes had finally grown weary with pieces of him being owned by others. He wasn’t properly a free man if Provedan could flog him, was he? He wasn’t nine and half their size anymore either. He didn’t know what he wanted, but he knew he didn’t want what he had. He wanted more, and more came in with half crooked smile. “Decath, isn’t it?” Caelum asked, stopping by the slaver’s corner table. “Can I sit down?” |