The 2nd of Winter, 514 AV
A stand of fruit toppled over, juice from a ripe melon painted the air where Andar's head had been a fraction of a second earlier. Scimitar steel caught a glint of sunlight and momentarily blinded the kelvic rogue who had just ducked into a somersault and passed through the swarthy mercenary's bowed legs. Springing up on the other side, he looked over his shoulder and barked a laugh that got quickly muffled with the impact of colliding into a dark haired hefty woman directly in front of him. He teetered for a moment and the woman let out a grunt of surprise followed by a groan of frustration as she lost hold of packages which rained down all over the filthy mucky bazaar ground. "Pardon!" Was all he managed to say before he was moving again, leaping over boxes and away from pursuit.
He weaved in and out of droves of people; some were hawking wares beside various stalls, others bargained vehemently, still more simply followed the current of humanity, too busy getting to wherever it was that they were going. If a few Sunberthians gawked and muttered protests at Andar's passing; they cursed and straightened their wrinkled garments indignantly at the more forceful - and decidedly less agile - meanderings of the paid brutes close behind.
"Get back here you cur!" One man cried.
The heady aromas of the market (exotic spices, baked pies and sundry perfumes), quickly dissolved into less pleasant odors (soiled refuse, sewage from slime encroached drain grates, and stinky laundry hanging out of open windows), as the Seaside Market receded into the distance. Andar raced around a bend in the road that took him out of momentary view of his assailants. Heavy footfalls splashed down the rather dank side street seconds later. They passed right by a heap of mildew stained cushions along the way. When the labored curses had softened to a faint murmur on the wind, said cushions sprang to life; spitting out a rather relieved thief.
Hours later, that day.
"God's damn it!" Andar lounged on a scarred wooden chair, bare feet propped up on an equally scratched table, legs crossed at the ankles. He sucked in a frustrated breath along with a good mouthful of red wine from a clay jug. Upon the table sat a rather small puddle of coins (mostly copper), a vial of cloudy liquid, four wooden figurines, and a brooch of dubious worth. His tunic was partially open at the chest, and he still wore his rather stained breeches. The four walls that enclosed him now were cracked and in serious need of paint. The room was sparsely furnished ( only a creaky wood bed and chest at its foot of note beyond the table and chair he currently adorned). There was a single window to the left of the bed that offered a view of the alley behind the building in all its glorious shades of squalor.
"I cannot live like this. I just can't," he said. There was no one in the room but him, and as usual, no divine messenger materialized magically to tell him: "Do not fret mortal, the tide ebbs and flows, the wind stills and blows, and here's how it will all change....."
That never happened though. Just silence and him feeling tired and spent after a hectic day of robbing folk. Today's daily disaster had been the result of a failed lock box attempt. A foreign merchant selling copious amounts of alchemical devices and potions as it were. Andar had watched the man set up and with a few inconspicuous strolls, had noticed a rather promising lock box tucked away in a secret wooden compartment facing the merchant.
It all should have gone down to plan. Would have too, if not for an alchemical alarm (or so he guessed by the plume of blue smoke that expelled from the box). Things unraveled rather quickly from there. Angry yells of "Stop! Thief! Get him!" Followed by muscled help charging him with clubs and curved blades. A merry goose chase throughout the bazaar ensued, and finally, him barely escaping with his life. If it wasn't for that alchemical trap, he would have had a considerable take today. He wouldn't even have minded the investment of a few silver coins given to an urchin to conveniently distract the merchant just long enough for him to get the job done.
All he managed to take was one measly vial of.....whatever it was. Andar plucked up the vial from the table and shook it, watching the cloudy liquid inside film over the glass and bubble slightly. I could always fob it off as some precious elixir of youth, he thought with a chuckle.
Despite having very little to show for his efforts, Andar leaned back and smiled after a time, raising his jug for another taste of fermented fruit. "Have a care. The night is still young and I, foolishly devoted to her sins."
A stand of fruit toppled over, juice from a ripe melon painted the air where Andar's head had been a fraction of a second earlier. Scimitar steel caught a glint of sunlight and momentarily blinded the kelvic rogue who had just ducked into a somersault and passed through the swarthy mercenary's bowed legs. Springing up on the other side, he looked over his shoulder and barked a laugh that got quickly muffled with the impact of colliding into a dark haired hefty woman directly in front of him. He teetered for a moment and the woman let out a grunt of surprise followed by a groan of frustration as she lost hold of packages which rained down all over the filthy mucky bazaar ground. "Pardon!" Was all he managed to say before he was moving again, leaping over boxes and away from pursuit.
He weaved in and out of droves of people; some were hawking wares beside various stalls, others bargained vehemently, still more simply followed the current of humanity, too busy getting to wherever it was that they were going. If a few Sunberthians gawked and muttered protests at Andar's passing; they cursed and straightened their wrinkled garments indignantly at the more forceful - and decidedly less agile - meanderings of the paid brutes close behind.
"Get back here you cur!" One man cried.
The heady aromas of the market (exotic spices, baked pies and sundry perfumes), quickly dissolved into less pleasant odors (soiled refuse, sewage from slime encroached drain grates, and stinky laundry hanging out of open windows), as the Seaside Market receded into the distance. Andar raced around a bend in the road that took him out of momentary view of his assailants. Heavy footfalls splashed down the rather dank side street seconds later. They passed right by a heap of mildew stained cushions along the way. When the labored curses had softened to a faint murmur on the wind, said cushions sprang to life; spitting out a rather relieved thief.
Hours later, that day.
"God's damn it!" Andar lounged on a scarred wooden chair, bare feet propped up on an equally scratched table, legs crossed at the ankles. He sucked in a frustrated breath along with a good mouthful of red wine from a clay jug. Upon the table sat a rather small puddle of coins (mostly copper), a vial of cloudy liquid, four wooden figurines, and a brooch of dubious worth. His tunic was partially open at the chest, and he still wore his rather stained breeches. The four walls that enclosed him now were cracked and in serious need of paint. The room was sparsely furnished ( only a creaky wood bed and chest at its foot of note beyond the table and chair he currently adorned). There was a single window to the left of the bed that offered a view of the alley behind the building in all its glorious shades of squalor.
"I cannot live like this. I just can't," he said. There was no one in the room but him, and as usual, no divine messenger materialized magically to tell him: "Do not fret mortal, the tide ebbs and flows, the wind stills and blows, and here's how it will all change....."
That never happened though. Just silence and him feeling tired and spent after a hectic day of robbing folk. Today's daily disaster had been the result of a failed lock box attempt. A foreign merchant selling copious amounts of alchemical devices and potions as it were. Andar had watched the man set up and with a few inconspicuous strolls, had noticed a rather promising lock box tucked away in a secret wooden compartment facing the merchant.
It all should have gone down to plan. Would have too, if not for an alchemical alarm (or so he guessed by the plume of blue smoke that expelled from the box). Things unraveled rather quickly from there. Angry yells of "Stop! Thief! Get him!" Followed by muscled help charging him with clubs and curved blades. A merry goose chase throughout the bazaar ensued, and finally, him barely escaping with his life. If it wasn't for that alchemical trap, he would have had a considerable take today. He wouldn't even have minded the investment of a few silver coins given to an urchin to conveniently distract the merchant just long enough for him to get the job done.
All he managed to take was one measly vial of.....whatever it was. Andar plucked up the vial from the table and shook it, watching the cloudy liquid inside film over the glass and bubble slightly. I could always fob it off as some precious elixir of youth, he thought with a chuckle.
Despite having very little to show for his efforts, Andar leaned back and smiled after a time, raising his jug for another taste of fermented fruit. "Have a care. The night is still young and I, foolishly devoted to her sins."