The Akalak was careful to focus on his peripherals when watching the Svefra take a seat at a table near the corner, pretending his focus was on the beautiful interior of Alements, a place well known across Riverfall as a quality watering hole. So as not to look out of place, Vypec sat a few tables away from the Svefra, leaning against a dark wooden beam and kicking his sizable feet up on the seat of the chair next to him. The bar was nearly empty, the winter's bite keeping all but the most stoic out. Within moments a server was beside him, inquiring as to what he would like from the menu.
Vypec smiled up at the server and said simply, "Ale, please." He fished in the coin purse at his belt for a moment, gathering a battered silver miss from the purse and holding it out. The server gave a perfunctory smile and took the coin before leaving.
You know, you aren't going to find much out if he's just sitting there drinking alone. Vypal's snide words broke the silence that ensued. He's note going to just sit and talk about his ship by himself. His words were, as ever, logically constructive and judge mental at the same time. Vypal was the kind of person one could not be friends with if they were easily offended. Having to share a body and mind with him had fostered a hardy imperviousness to such judge mental tones in Vypec.
Despite this very sound warning Vypec continued to sip his ale slowly. There was nothing he could do in the situation without risking suspicion about his forwardness. His grandfather's voice came to mind, reciting one of the many 'tenets' of spycraft he was so fond of. Observation was the least risk prone of the methods at his disposal. There was a whole risk to gain ratio that Dremandos Algranos had lectures endlessly about at his grandson over the years. The gambit for information was sometimes worth the risk of discovery. Then sometimes the information was so unimportant that it hardly mattered if one was discovered. Vypec stared at the wall next to the Svefra, trying to figure out what the worth of the information was, and how he could glean it.
Observation, theft, the 'meet and greet', key informant, torture. Some of these solutions were hardly relevant, or legal. Vypec rubbed his hand across a smooth jaw, stealing a glance at the Svefra. The man was staring into the top of a tankard of his own. Vypec decided in a moment, without consulting his brother. He slid out from his chair and grabbed up his tankard of ale. The Akalak swaggered over to the table where the Svefra was sitting.
What do you think you are doing? His brother's shocked voice asked hurriedly. Vypal was a firm believer in the more stealthy approaches, anything that meant autonomy.
I'm promoting this guy from a known associate to a key informant. He said, his voice carrying a vague trace of humor. The Svefra looked up with surprise as Vypec slumped into the chair opposite him. The man pulled his tankard back and sat up straighter, staring askance at the Akalak who had dropped heavily into his personal space.
On your head be it. Vypal muttered, clearly annoyed at not being consulted.
Our head, brother!
"Cold as petch out there huh?" Vypec forced an easy going air into his voice. The Svefra grunted and was about to open his mouth to speak, but Vypec thought it would be best to keep him on his toes, at first. "I thought it would be a shame to waste a morning drinking alone." Vypec continued, pushing on past the awkwardness. He raised his tankard and under the cover of the table he flicked his coin purse with his other hand, making the contents clink merrily.
The Svefra, who had been staring at him with a slight frown of confusion on his face, now let his face soften. The man let out a snort of laughter and tapped his tankard against Vypec's own. "Well when you put it that way."
Vypec let his body relax. He had gotten himself talking to the man without raising suspicion at least. The drawback of this method, however, was that the man would recognize him from now on. In an ideal situation he would remain anonymous. But sometimes the risk was worth the reward. In this case the risk was nothing, being a purely fictitious training exercise, so the reward was well worth it.
"So what brings a..." Vypec paused and made a show of scrutinizing the man. "Svefra, to Riverfall in our coldest time?" He asked casually, waving the server back over.
"Business, what else?" The man said shortly. He took a pull from his tankard and seemed content with that explanation.
The man was clearly diverting such questions, and Vypec could not blame him. Trust was not easily won in the tavern. Vypec wouldn't trust a stranger who sat himself down at his table unannounced. He just had to play the part, and make it honest. Honestly was favorable to anything else with most people, even when it was coupled with brashness or crudeness.
Draw out the truth by other means. Vypal said, oversimplifying as always. Here, let me imbecile.Vypal's disapproving tone made him roll his eyes. I meant coax the information out of him by other means than trust.
There was a rushing of something like mental vertigo as Vypal surged to the surface in their shared consciousness. He leant forward on his elbows, knuckles against his jaw. "Me, I've been in Riverfall my whole life. Well, the surrounding grasslands for hunting and such, but no other cities." The regret in Vypal's words almost tasted genuine, if Vypec did not know the lie they were made on. "Why, I'd love to sail south and train with some Nykan monks someday." Vypal let his words trail off, as if he was thinking about the imagined journey.
The Svefra snorted. "Well, friend. You might want to learn a map or two before taking up that adventure. Nyka is north of here." He took a pull from his tankard, eyeing Vypal merrily. He expected the Akalak to look embarrassed and ashamed. He was not disappointed. Though Vypal rarely felt such emotions, he was able to suitably mimic them. Vypec was truly impressed by his brother's theatrics.
You are quite a sly little petcher, brother. Vypec said with all the tone of an admirer.
I do what I can.
"I been to Nyka, well close 'nough. Closer'n you I expect." The Svefra seemed to be imparting his wisdom on Vypal with a grizzly lecture on the trials and tribulations of the Suvan and on. "It's a mighty vicious water, is the route up the east. Ya gotta pass by Sahova, and that's quite a risk in itself. They be trading in cold bodies there." The Svefra let his voice fall to a whisper at that last, as if the Sahovans would somehow hear him from so far away. "We just come from Syliras this season. Made a fat Miza off the Syliran grain too." He rubbed his chin, grinning.
I'm impressed, brother. |
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