51st Day of Winter, 518 Av
“Excuse me, sir. Are you sure there’s nothing I can get for…”
The waitress’s question trailed off uncertainly as a particularly harsh gaze rose to meet hers. She swallowed, looking around in nervous apprehension for help that would not come, and as the stryfer’s glare intensified, the young slave eventually surrendered, bowing in apology as she skittered off back to wherever it was she had come from. Elias swore if she came back to pester him one more damn time, he’d make her eat that damn tray in her hands…
Yes, he was in that kind of mood today.
A kind of mood it seemed everyone could sense. His barely contained rage permeated every action he made, every look he gave, and the fury bottled up within him flowed like a palpable stink from his person. A stink everyone seated around him at the small outdoor café was catching a whiff of and trying to pretend wasn’t there. He sat alone amidst the quiet din of the lunch time crowd, but his uneasy presence was felt by all those around him as if he shared a seat at each and every one of their tables.
Petching Jorah.
Elias was going to skin that fat petch alive for having the audacity to dictate a meeting place to him, and in public of all places, as if the crowds would keep him tame. Caldera was not a man who was told where to go and what do by the likes of that cowardly commandant, yet they both knew he would be here none the less. He had something Elias wanted, and the bastard knew it.
Just then a flash of movement caught the swordsman’s attention, and he recognized the familiar little face weaving amidst the diners and servants attending them. He knew which one of the little shykes it was by the way every nose it scampered past was upturned or clenched tight in disgust. “Reek.” The stryfer grumbled as the scrawny, blonde haired boy shuffled up to his table with a ghastly gap toothed grin upon his filthy face. Reek, as he was so adequately dubbed, was one of Zeb’s kids, a guttersnipe that worked for the little thief prince and his gaggle of cut purses. Occasionally, Elias would have the twerps run messages for him or keep an eye out whenever he needed. Today however, the game was playing escort.
“Found him for you.” The gutter rat giggled proudly, pointing an impossibly dirty finger towards the entrance he’d come from. In the doorway looking back at him stood Commandant Hercan. His arms finely polished and his attire neatly pressed, his combed hair and lack of a ball gag made for an impressively different impression than the first time the two of them had met. He had a feeling the guardsman would have liked to forget that little ordeal however.
His musings were interrupted as Reek’s hand shoved itself towards him open palmed. The boy looked at him expectantly, and Elias’s eyes began to water. God the smell of him… He rummaged around his purse as quickly as he could, planting a silver coin in the rotten runt’s grasp before he began to gag. “A bath, boy,” The soldier gasped through the tears, “For the love of all that is holy, buy yourself a bath.” Rook went pale at the words, as if Elias had just proposed a public execution instead of a vigorous scrubbing, but the Caldera’s attention shifted as another approached.
“Huh, little shyke made me pay him too.” Jorah Hercan grunted, stepping up to the table. The stryfer growled, making to lunge for the double dipping little shyke stain, but Reek was gone with a squeak, scampering off and out of sight before Elias could get his hands on him. The Caldera grumbled irritably under his breath, then motioned for Jorah to join him at the table. “Sit.” He instructed, but the guardsman raised a placating hand. “No, I won’t be long. This will-”
“Sit.” The sorcerer commanded once more, a tinge of something dangerous leaking into his tenor as he glared up at the man from beneath darkening shadows of his pale brow. Jorah hesitated, looking around the establishment and farther still as if trying to assess something, then after a moment, reluctantly pulled up a seat. He’d been making sure his men were all in place before they began, no doubt…
“Where is she, Jorah?” Elias began immediately.
“Like I told you-”
“You’ve had more than enough time. Where is she, Jorah?” he said again, drumming his fingers against the table. Just looking at the man was stirring him into a frenzy, and every wasted word that slithered of his serpent’s tongue only served to wake his rage. He had no patience for this!
“Now listen to me, Calder-”
“Tell me where the petch she is!” Elias barked, smashing his fist against the table. Cutlery clanged and clattered off the side upon the impact and Jorah snarled, his dark gaze locking defiantly with the stryfers. “Or what!?” The guardsman snapped. “Or you’ll do what?!” The two glared at each other for a quiet moment, hatred seething like a flame between them until at last, Jorah seemed to remember where he was. Anxiously, bitterly, his eyes darted from side to side to take in the nervous glances being thrown their way after the outburst. The chubby man leaned in, his contempt still plain as day. “This isn’t some petching whorehouse on the edge of town, and I’m not hanging from a gods damned chain anymore. You won’t make a move against me here, you wouldn’t petching dare! Not in front of all these people” He hissed, keeping his voice low but his words just as sharp as they needed to be. “Now you listen to me, you uppity little cunt, I’m no one’s bitch, least of some arrogant nobody like you. You think you can just run in here and tell me wha-”
Jorah’s eyes went wide with shock as Elias ripped his dagger from its sheath and stabbed it into the table between with a resounding ‘bang!’
“What the petch!”
Hercan reeled in his seat, nearly falling out of the thing as instinct forced him backwards and away. Panicked, his eyes went not to the blade, but those around them, the citizens of Ravok who would see such a spectacle and behold the scandal. It was his reputation he cared more in that instant than his own life…
But no one was looking.
No one had even stirred.
“Jorah.” An impossibly calm voice said somewhere in the distance, but the man was staring in confusion at the diners, clearly on edge by the fact all their backs were still turned on him, as if they had all in unison decided to simply ignore the situation. It was more than that though, and the guard could see it. They weren’t just looking away, they’d all gone rigid and motionless. Everyone had simply… stopped.
“Jorah.” It came again, gentle but insistent and this time the guardsman’s attention slowly swiveled back to the blue eyed demon sitting across from him. “Take the knife, Jorah.”
Hercan’s eyes narrowed. “What?”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
The blood drained from the commandant’s face as in horror, he watched Elias’s lips move to form the words, but instead a dozen different voices from all around him cried out as one. He whirled around in his seat, staring in abstract bewilderment at the people who had all abruptly swung their heads around and spoken in unison. They were staring at him now, all kinds, young, old, men and women, they were just sitting there, staring at him -through him. To have beheld that which seized them would have been a nightmarish sight; a dozen oozing tendrils of hypnotics domination slithered from Elias like spider legs each one standing atop the head of a victim, snatching hold their thoughts and corrupting their minds with a will they had no choice but to obey. “What is-” but again the words tumbled from his lips like sand, faltering before they even had a chance as Jorah realized with a start the blade Elias had slammed into the table was now firmly in his grasp. Even the guardsman was not spared the spider's touch. He looked up with a yelp, pale and fearful, only to go rigid as he beheld the sorcerer. Blood seeped from the mage’s eyes like crimson tears, and Jorah saw him raise a gloved hand to his throat, miming it as if he were holding a blade.
With a mewling groan, the guardsman glanced down to see his hand was mimicking the gesture like a mirror, the blade now at his throat and the fear thick in the air.
“You know what makes us so different, Hercan?”
“Wait, wait, wait! It was some big shot family man, that’s who took your girl. I just don’t know who yet!”
“Fear.”
“Ok, ok, hold on.” The blade quivered against his neck, shaking with the very hand that wielded it. “It was the Larks! It was the petching Larks. Some bastard called Radcliffe, please! I just don't know where she is!”
“You’re afraid of what they’ll learn. What they’ll do. What they’ll say… You’re terrified of so much.” Elias kept his tone reserved and collected even as the magic flowed from his mind, even as the blood seeped across his scarred lips. His gaze never once shifted from Jorah’s even as the man writhed and squirmed in his chair. “Me… I’m afraid there’s something brittle in me that will break before it bends. I’m afraid of what I’ll do when I finally just… snap.”
“I can find her!” Jorah wailed, feeling the dagger drive itself against his throat, feeling the thoughts that weren’t his own warping his mind.
“Say her name.” Elias hissed, his facade of calm faltering ever so slightly.
“What?”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
It felt like a hundred different voices all reaching a dreadful crescendo at once, and the guardsman shut his eyes against the sound, still trembling against the dagger’s point. “Shiress.” He gasped, feeling the trickle of warm blood snake its way down his collar.
Elias nodded. “Don’t forget it again, commandant. Or the next time I have you take that knife, it’ll be to carve her name into your wife -into your children, and there will be nothing you can do to stop me, because there will be nothing you can do to stop yourself.”
The clatter of the dagger upon the tabletop was drowned out in the din of idle chatter and clinking forks against plates. The restaurant had returned to normal order around them, and everyone went about their business as usual, enjoying meals, catching up with old friends, taking about the strange events of the season. It was as if nothing at all had happened, and the only ones who seemed to remember what had just transpired were Elias and a panting Jorah.
“Find her, commandant.” The hypnotist said, rising gently from his seat and walking away without another word. “Or I’ll find you.”
The waitress’s question trailed off uncertainly as a particularly harsh gaze rose to meet hers. She swallowed, looking around in nervous apprehension for help that would not come, and as the stryfer’s glare intensified, the young slave eventually surrendered, bowing in apology as she skittered off back to wherever it was she had come from. Elias swore if she came back to pester him one more damn time, he’d make her eat that damn tray in her hands…
Yes, he was in that kind of mood today.
A kind of mood it seemed everyone could sense. His barely contained rage permeated every action he made, every look he gave, and the fury bottled up within him flowed like a palpable stink from his person. A stink everyone seated around him at the small outdoor café was catching a whiff of and trying to pretend wasn’t there. He sat alone amidst the quiet din of the lunch time crowd, but his uneasy presence was felt by all those around him as if he shared a seat at each and every one of their tables.
Petching Jorah.
Elias was going to skin that fat petch alive for having the audacity to dictate a meeting place to him, and in public of all places, as if the crowds would keep him tame. Caldera was not a man who was told where to go and what do by the likes of that cowardly commandant, yet they both knew he would be here none the less. He had something Elias wanted, and the bastard knew it.
Just then a flash of movement caught the swordsman’s attention, and he recognized the familiar little face weaving amidst the diners and servants attending them. He knew which one of the little shykes it was by the way every nose it scampered past was upturned or clenched tight in disgust. “Reek.” The stryfer grumbled as the scrawny, blonde haired boy shuffled up to his table with a ghastly gap toothed grin upon his filthy face. Reek, as he was so adequately dubbed, was one of Zeb’s kids, a guttersnipe that worked for the little thief prince and his gaggle of cut purses. Occasionally, Elias would have the twerps run messages for him or keep an eye out whenever he needed. Today however, the game was playing escort.
“Found him for you.” The gutter rat giggled proudly, pointing an impossibly dirty finger towards the entrance he’d come from. In the doorway looking back at him stood Commandant Hercan. His arms finely polished and his attire neatly pressed, his combed hair and lack of a ball gag made for an impressively different impression than the first time the two of them had met. He had a feeling the guardsman would have liked to forget that little ordeal however.
His musings were interrupted as Reek’s hand shoved itself towards him open palmed. The boy looked at him expectantly, and Elias’s eyes began to water. God the smell of him… He rummaged around his purse as quickly as he could, planting a silver coin in the rotten runt’s grasp before he began to gag. “A bath, boy,” The soldier gasped through the tears, “For the love of all that is holy, buy yourself a bath.” Rook went pale at the words, as if Elias had just proposed a public execution instead of a vigorous scrubbing, but the Caldera’s attention shifted as another approached.
“Huh, little shyke made me pay him too.” Jorah Hercan grunted, stepping up to the table. The stryfer growled, making to lunge for the double dipping little shyke stain, but Reek was gone with a squeak, scampering off and out of sight before Elias could get his hands on him. The Caldera grumbled irritably under his breath, then motioned for Jorah to join him at the table. “Sit.” He instructed, but the guardsman raised a placating hand. “No, I won’t be long. This will-”
“Sit.” The sorcerer commanded once more, a tinge of something dangerous leaking into his tenor as he glared up at the man from beneath darkening shadows of his pale brow. Jorah hesitated, looking around the establishment and farther still as if trying to assess something, then after a moment, reluctantly pulled up a seat. He’d been making sure his men were all in place before they began, no doubt…
“Where is she, Jorah?” Elias began immediately.
“Like I told you-”
“You’ve had more than enough time. Where is she, Jorah?” he said again, drumming his fingers against the table. Just looking at the man was stirring him into a frenzy, and every wasted word that slithered of his serpent’s tongue only served to wake his rage. He had no patience for this!
“Now listen to me, Calder-”
“Tell me where the petch she is!” Elias barked, smashing his fist against the table. Cutlery clanged and clattered off the side upon the impact and Jorah snarled, his dark gaze locking defiantly with the stryfers. “Or what!?” The guardsman snapped. “Or you’ll do what?!” The two glared at each other for a quiet moment, hatred seething like a flame between them until at last, Jorah seemed to remember where he was. Anxiously, bitterly, his eyes darted from side to side to take in the nervous glances being thrown their way after the outburst. The chubby man leaned in, his contempt still plain as day. “This isn’t some petching whorehouse on the edge of town, and I’m not hanging from a gods damned chain anymore. You won’t make a move against me here, you wouldn’t petching dare! Not in front of all these people” He hissed, keeping his voice low but his words just as sharp as they needed to be. “Now you listen to me, you uppity little cunt, I’m no one’s bitch, least of some arrogant nobody like you. You think you can just run in here and tell me wha-”
Jorah’s eyes went wide with shock as Elias ripped his dagger from its sheath and stabbed it into the table between with a resounding ‘bang!’
“What the petch!”
Hercan reeled in his seat, nearly falling out of the thing as instinct forced him backwards and away. Panicked, his eyes went not to the blade, but those around them, the citizens of Ravok who would see such a spectacle and behold the scandal. It was his reputation he cared more in that instant than his own life…
But no one was looking.
No one had even stirred.
“Jorah.” An impossibly calm voice said somewhere in the distance, but the man was staring in confusion at the diners, clearly on edge by the fact all their backs were still turned on him, as if they had all in unison decided to simply ignore the situation. It was more than that though, and the guard could see it. They weren’t just looking away, they’d all gone rigid and motionless. Everyone had simply… stopped.
“Jorah.” It came again, gentle but insistent and this time the guardsman’s attention slowly swiveled back to the blue eyed demon sitting across from him. “Take the knife, Jorah.”
Hercan’s eyes narrowed. “What?”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
“Take the knife, Jorah.” “Take the knife, Jorah.”
The blood drained from the commandant’s face as in horror, he watched Elias’s lips move to form the words, but instead a dozen different voices from all around him cried out as one. He whirled around in his seat, staring in abstract bewilderment at the people who had all abruptly swung their heads around and spoken in unison. They were staring at him now, all kinds, young, old, men and women, they were just sitting there, staring at him -through him. To have beheld that which seized them would have been a nightmarish sight; a dozen oozing tendrils of hypnotics domination slithered from Elias like spider legs each one standing atop the head of a victim, snatching hold their thoughts and corrupting their minds with a will they had no choice but to obey. “What is-” but again the words tumbled from his lips like sand, faltering before they even had a chance as Jorah realized with a start the blade Elias had slammed into the table was now firmly in his grasp. Even the guardsman was not spared the spider's touch. He looked up with a yelp, pale and fearful, only to go rigid as he beheld the sorcerer. Blood seeped from the mage’s eyes like crimson tears, and Jorah saw him raise a gloved hand to his throat, miming it as if he were holding a blade.
With a mewling groan, the guardsman glanced down to see his hand was mimicking the gesture like a mirror, the blade now at his throat and the fear thick in the air.
“You know what makes us so different, Hercan?”
“Wait, wait, wait! It was some big shot family man, that’s who took your girl. I just don’t know who yet!”
“Fear.”
“Ok, ok, hold on.” The blade quivered against his neck, shaking with the very hand that wielded it. “It was the Larks! It was the petching Larks. Some bastard called Radcliffe, please! I just don't know where she is!”
“You’re afraid of what they’ll learn. What they’ll do. What they’ll say… You’re terrified of so much.” Elias kept his tone reserved and collected even as the magic flowed from his mind, even as the blood seeped across his scarred lips. His gaze never once shifted from Jorah’s even as the man writhed and squirmed in his chair. “Me… I’m afraid there’s something brittle in me that will break before it bends. I’m afraid of what I’ll do when I finally just… snap.”
“I can find her!” Jorah wailed, feeling the dagger drive itself against his throat, feeling the thoughts that weren’t his own warping his mind.
“Say her name.” Elias hissed, his facade of calm faltering ever so slightly.
“What?”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
“Say her name!” “Say her name!”
It felt like a hundred different voices all reaching a dreadful crescendo at once, and the guardsman shut his eyes against the sound, still trembling against the dagger’s point. “Shiress.” He gasped, feeling the trickle of warm blood snake its way down his collar.
Elias nodded. “Don’t forget it again, commandant. Or the next time I have you take that knife, it’ll be to carve her name into your wife -into your children, and there will be nothing you can do to stop me, because there will be nothing you can do to stop yourself.”
The clatter of the dagger upon the tabletop was drowned out in the din of idle chatter and clinking forks against plates. The restaurant had returned to normal order around them, and everyone went about their business as usual, enjoying meals, catching up with old friends, taking about the strange events of the season. It was as if nothing at all had happened, and the only ones who seemed to remember what had just transpired were Elias and a panting Jorah.
“Find her, commandant.” The hypnotist said, rising gently from his seat and walking away without another word. “Or I’ll find you.”