Shai crawled back onto the familiar dock. The wood planks beneath her hands for the third time this night. Wounded pride stung, but less so than her throat now that the moment’s struggle had passed. Looking little better than a drowned rat her braid had come loose and charcoal hair dripped a constant stream of seawater. Slowly the thief caught her breath to explain her reasoning. Her voice more a croak than than the dangerous purr from prior to the confrontation, “I do not know, Ren.” The profession lost her no face, because the spider immediately moved to the corpse.
The man’s face was all but shredded from the Symenestra’s claws, but the water had drained much of the bodily fluids punctured eyes and cheeks usually oozed. The thief went for the pockets first, dropping anything she found on the dock. Belt pouches, pockets, boots all of it was removed by the unashamed widow. Making no attempt to secret away any goods, she set it all out for perusal.
Finally she worked back up to the man’s face, having found nothing particularly out of ordinary on his person. Pearl lips parted in a quiet “Ah” as amethyst eyes finally found their mark. The delicate fingers of a thief went to work pressing the puckering flesh on the thug’s face back together, to reveal the black edges of a tattoo. “A gang sign?” After long moments trying to examine the torn mark, Shai moved back to the items against the dock at the same time retrieving her lash from where it had fallen.
“What is happening, does not matter…” Shai murmured to herself, “What matters is how we react.” Shai sorted out a few small weapons and trinkets, mostly useless to her. The mizas amounted to roughly one stale mug of ale, also useless. There was a scrap of paper folded up, but utterly water logged from the waves. “Have you ever seen the mark? I do not know it. “ Setting the paper aside, Shai realized just how cold it was drenched in salt water. “We will retrieve your boat, Ren, but I need a moment to get my tools. Shall we meet in the common room? Five chimes should do...” As was her prerogative, she didn’t wait for a reply.
Long strides took the spider from the scene and body. The night had gone from quiet practice to business far too quick for the thief’s liking. She accepted a great deal of blame for failing to be aware, but there was something else. Who was so foolish as to strike at the heart of a gang’s territory? It smacked of intention, and Shai was going to be asking question after this debacle was set to rest.
Within her home, her eerie sense of grace took over. The walls insulted some of the late Autmun chill. Discarding the wet clothing in an unceremonious heap she sought out a dry set and her night leather.
The sheer number of things, Shai carried on a nightly basis had taken seasons worth of experience and planning to assemble. After the armor, she hid three throwing knives beneath the leather against her skin where the cilia rippled out to grasp the metal and secure it. Two contracted fans slid into the weapons sheath at her thigh, and the coiled lash found its home as well. Her old cloak draped over her diminutive frame in a fluid movement, the black cloak had settled on her shoulders for years now. Within were a number of a buttoned pockets holding a small number of necessities for a larcenist. On her way out the door she snatched up her brush and went at taming the tendrils falling down her shoulders.
When she finally made it to the common room it had been well over eight chimes though the spider acted as though she was early. Her brush handle in her mouth as she tied up her hair in a braid. Remarkably mundane, and yet the plans jumping through her thoughts were anything but. There were any number of ways to run a recovering and it truly depended upon Palaren, how she would proceed. There was no line sacred to the spider, and none she had encountered which she wouldn’t cross in pursuit of a goal. No, this was a matter of pride and gang reputation.
The man’s face was all but shredded from the Symenestra’s claws, but the water had drained much of the bodily fluids punctured eyes and cheeks usually oozed. The thief went for the pockets first, dropping anything she found on the dock. Belt pouches, pockets, boots all of it was removed by the unashamed widow. Making no attempt to secret away any goods, she set it all out for perusal.
Finally she worked back up to the man’s face, having found nothing particularly out of ordinary on his person. Pearl lips parted in a quiet “Ah” as amethyst eyes finally found their mark. The delicate fingers of a thief went to work pressing the puckering flesh on the thug’s face back together, to reveal the black edges of a tattoo. “A gang sign?” After long moments trying to examine the torn mark, Shai moved back to the items against the dock at the same time retrieving her lash from where it had fallen.
“What is happening, does not matter…” Shai murmured to herself, “What matters is how we react.” Shai sorted out a few small weapons and trinkets, mostly useless to her. The mizas amounted to roughly one stale mug of ale, also useless. There was a scrap of paper folded up, but utterly water logged from the waves. “Have you ever seen the mark? I do not know it. “ Setting the paper aside, Shai realized just how cold it was drenched in salt water. “We will retrieve your boat, Ren, but I need a moment to get my tools. Shall we meet in the common room? Five chimes should do...” As was her prerogative, she didn’t wait for a reply.
Long strides took the spider from the scene and body. The night had gone from quiet practice to business far too quick for the thief’s liking. She accepted a great deal of blame for failing to be aware, but there was something else. Who was so foolish as to strike at the heart of a gang’s territory? It smacked of intention, and Shai was going to be asking question after this debacle was set to rest.
Within her home, her eerie sense of grace took over. The walls insulted some of the late Autmun chill. Discarding the wet clothing in an unceremonious heap she sought out a dry set and her night leather.
The sheer number of things, Shai carried on a nightly basis had taken seasons worth of experience and planning to assemble. After the armor, she hid three throwing knives beneath the leather against her skin where the cilia rippled out to grasp the metal and secure it. Two contracted fans slid into the weapons sheath at her thigh, and the coiled lash found its home as well. Her old cloak draped over her diminutive frame in a fluid movement, the black cloak had settled on her shoulders for years now. Within were a number of a buttoned pockets holding a small number of necessities for a larcenist. On her way out the door she snatched up her brush and went at taming the tendrils falling down her shoulders.
When she finally made it to the common room it had been well over eight chimes though the spider acted as though she was early. Her brush handle in her mouth as she tied up her hair in a braid. Remarkably mundane, and yet the plans jumping through her thoughts were anything but. There were any number of ways to run a recovering and it truly depended upon Palaren, how she would proceed. There was no line sacred to the spider, and none she had encountered which she wouldn’t cross in pursuit of a goal. No, this was a matter of pride and gang reputation.