50 Summer 522
It’s a good thing he’s alone.
That’s not a sentiment one hears often; it’s usually the opposite, hearth and home and breaking bread on long tables, bumping elbows and hands squeezing shoulders, and the person opposite you ready with a smile. But Caspian doesn’t know what that’s like; knows, only, that in his line of work one’s a lot better off if they aren’t bogged down. Other people mean other opinions, surplus movements, a tenfold increase in anxiety that anything – not even of anyone’s own fault or input – could go wrong.
The only exception is his sister, but Taalviel’s practically a walking – something squawking – shadow. Weightless, slippery, as exacting as a needle.
And if she were here right now, she’d definitely have something to say about that extremely awkward half-aborted somersault he’s just pulled.
Like a crippled pill bug, he thinks unhelpfully; like a crustacean shaken out of a net and left on the deck with its broken back to flop.
But he’s got the stolen keys in hand, now, and that’s what really matters.
Quietly – still just as awkwardly – he unfolds himself, unsticks his elbow from where it’s crumpled beneath him, eases his knees and hip free from where he’d twisted them. Cats made these floor acrobatics look so simple. He needs to watch them more closely, he resolves; they move like they’re boneless, like they’re water. Anatomy isn’t his area, but surely their spines are just built differently than a person’s, though they’re all mammals; or maybe it’s just that simple for felines because they simply don’t care if they look like fools.
It seems risky to turn one’s back to the woman, so when Caspian rises to his feet he’s taking a step backwards – decides it’s safer to go sideways, gaze flicking between the sleeping old biddy and the cabinet with the goblet he’s been sent here to steal.
One step – holding his breath. A joining of the second foot, to meet the first. Another step, a careful passage through the air, not too high off the ground that he loses his balance, but also not trailing across the floorboards either, which would only create unnecessary noise. His second foot joining the first. This pattern repeats a half dozen times, and then he’s at the cabinet again.
The woman’s body is wracked with little twitches, and she’s muttering a bit more furiously. Caspian waits silently, breathing as shallowly as he can. Eventually, thank heavens, her most recent fit subsides.
And then it’s just him and the handle of the cabinet, the locks on the doors that mock him, and the keys in his hand.
If only there weren’t so petching many.
So far he’s held the whole thing by its ring, limited the suddenness of his movements so as to keep them from clanking together. It’s in his dominant hand; he passes it to the other. Both his hands will have to work together, and seamlessly, if he’s going to keep from making an excess of sound. The locks on the cabinet door are quite small, so that rules out the heavier brass and iron keys that are as long as his digits. Who knows what they’re for – the cellar, perhaps, or, he’s imagining, some great wooden chest.
Word count: 541
x