15 Spring 523
The dripping of dark blood onto the floorboards and Caspian’s shallow breaths are the only sounds in the room.
Hanging from his stepfather’s dining room ceiling is a rope, at the end of which is a hook, said hook latched into the left shoulder blade of a dead man, the rest of the body left to sag.
As grim as it sounds, he sincerely hopes the man is dead; any other physical condition would be a terrible one indeed.
The face is bruised and crusted with dried blood and split in some places, all dark red and purple, like a fruit crushed under a wagon wheel.
What had the man done to deserve his stepfather’s ire?
“Hollered the wrong way at yer ma,” gruffs out Skubbs, one of his stepfather’s lackeys, who had just entered the room.
“She’s not my ‘ma’,” Caspian retorts immediately.
“She’s yer pa’s woman, ain’t she?” Skubbs says.
“My stepfather has women all across town, I expect, so by that logic I must have twelve mothers. Or more.” Caspian thinks of his new baby sister swaddled in the crib upstairs, in what was once his own bedroom.
Skubbs chuckles. “Well, don’t let yer ma hear that.”
Scowling, Caspian crosses his arms. The metallic tang of blood pervading the room is unpleasant enough, and the addition of the opinion from someone as lazy and illiterate as Skubbs makes the present situation fairly intolerable. As such, Caspian makes to pivot sharply and exit the room – but a hand lands on his shoulder.
Even through his shirt, he can feel the heavy callouses across his stepfather’s palm.
Even without looking, he can sense his stepfather’s permanent glower, the predator’s focused and imposing stare.
“Did you call me here just to get rid of the body?” Caspian says.
“You really think you could lift it?” Taaldros replies, snorting.
Skubbs laughs openly, revealing somewhat less than half the teeth an adult ought to have.
Caspian schools his face into one of neutrality. Always with the petching comments about his size, even now, when he’s practically thirty years old. Sure, Taaldros isn’t wrong – the man hanging from the ceiling has – had? – a much heavier build than him, and at least half a head in height. But it would have been nice, he thinks, if for once they could start off their day without any reason for animosity.
Perhaps from the chatter – or simply the excruciating pain he must be in – the man hanging from the ceiling grimaces, letting out a groan. Eyes fluttering open, they lock right on Caspian.
Unprepared, the neutrality cracks, and now it’s Taaldros’ turn to laugh at him.
“You can finish the job if you want,” Taaldros says. Ribbing him yet again, this time for the penchant he’d had when he was younger, his – natural and justifiable – aversion to torture and excessive violence.
But he’s older now, and out of a practiced numbness, and simply not wanting to be involved, he turns the other cheek. “I’d rather just get to whatever it is you actually need me for.”
“Suit yourself.”
He follows his stepfather out of the dining room and into the parlor, where a map is spread out on a collection of crates serving as a makeshift table.
Word count: 541