A raven laughed somewhere above them, its loud caw-cawing echoing over the sound of clinking clay cups and murmured conversation. Shroud watched the nuit without judgment, analyzing the way he spoke, how he spoke, the way his thin arms and nimble fingers moved. Rayage was a nuit, a creature given unlife by…something. He’d learned that nuit were created, not born, and that their bodies ever swung toward a slow decay. How must that feel? Could they feel? When they lost an arm, was it agony or inconvenience? What did they sup upon, if anything, what perpetuated them outside the magic used in their creation? Was there anything?
Shroud laughed when Rayage commented he might need inspiration, holding up a hand to bade him stop, chuckle doubling over his narrow body, “Inspiration? To dig clay? Please. Your only incentive is a gold rimmed coin, the men work for that rim and they will work harder for more, less for less.” He straightened, finishing off the apple and tossing the core over his shoulder. In an explosion of glossy black feathers, the raven above them winged down and caught the core before it hit the earth, winging off with it into the trees.
“Yon bird cares only for what keeps it alive. It will work for food, if you could make it understand. Men are not so different…surely you remember what it was like to be a man? They are birds with more complex desires, but all to an end. Men want to live, so they seek money, money to buy the bread they use to live. Or men seek power, strength of arm or magic to earn the coin to buy the bread they use to live. Men are more complicated than birds, they add steps before the things they need to feel more complex. Man wants to live, even beyond his death, so he seeks to be remembered. Man seeks to be king that his name might be whispered, that Dira might not claim them so utterly that no one recalls their footsteps. Man, above all else, seeks to live. You, dead man, you seek to live as well…or perhaps just to exist.”
Shroud sighed, taking another swallow from his water skin before setting it aside on the grass, wiping mud from his face. “You want the men to work harder? You must offer them something no employer can. You must offer them more than the coin. What do they care if your shop is built this season or the next? They receive no profit from it, they receive no discounts or treasures. Their names are not carved into your timber; they are not remembered for creating your dream. Only you will be remembered for running it…and so you cannot inspire these men. Not until you show them that you are different.”
Shroud grinned, “But I don’t think you care, dead man. Outside the construction of your shop, I think you couldn’t give a damn about the lot of us. We are your means to an end, your animated tools, some more useful than others.” He shrugged, “I do not fault you for it. You think the same as any predator in Sunberth. Men use men like animals and discard the remains. Sometimes those animals grow fangs and gnaw their masters to the ground with the rest of them. You seek to live? You’ve chosen no more an honest place.”
He held out his arm toward the workers, tired men who huddled with whispered conversations. Their barrel chests rose and fell and two men wrestled weakly, trading blows caught in slow motion. “Man makes no excuses here, hides behind no veil, pretends to be nothing else. If ever you wanted to find connection to life, Dead man, look no farther than your workers. They must live in order to work, they must breathe to eat. When they grow old they will die, their worth worn out on projects completed on their sweat and blood…each one nameless.”
Dusting the drying clay from his hands, Shroud leaned toward Rayage and clasped him on the shoulder, letting him go after but seeming to just initiate contact for the sake of connection. “Not here for the people? I am the people, Rayage. These are my people. I do not feel like myself anywhere else, and I cannot so easily learn the hungers of mankind than here where they are most truthful, most starving.”
The raven called out from above them. Today it dined on apple cores and tomorrow, the flesh of the fallen. It mattered little in Sunberth where the streets drank blood and the walls bit bones when no one watched. “Inspire me then, Rayage, inspire these men and show us you’re different.” Putting both arms behind his head, the murderer looked up at the sky, grinning, “What can you offer us but gold rimmed coins and impatience?” |