Na'il was having the most horrific nightmare he could ever remember. A man dressed in pristine robes of sable--
No.
There wasn't a shred of clothing draped across him at all. He was shadow incarnate, raised from whatever bottomless pit that fear earned its inauspicious name. It was stalking him down the abandoned city streets of Ahnatep, rising from each corner he passed where the light scarcely touched.
The ship.
He had to get back to the ship. It was his only way to escape this monstrosity, whatever it was. He had no petching idea what the shadow even wanted, but no good could come of it. So he ran, until his lungs burned to smoldering ash and his feet became raw with blood smear. But the boat was near. He could smell the salty brine. So close...
Water.
Its cool kiss splashed against his sun-baked, grease-slicked flesh, momentarily making him forget that he was ever being chased. But water wasn't supposed to be around you. It was supposed to be beneath you, under the keel of your rocking boat in a high north wind towards Zeltiva. Na'il didn't know how to swim. Panic rose. His breaths became labored.
Drowning.
He choked on the acrid taste like it was poison he was swallowing. It may as well have been. Poison took less time to arrest the beat of one's heart, he sarcastically mused. Water filled your lungs until your breaths drew short and became more painful. This was torture. This was...
Not real.
Na'il opened his eyes to the light of a single candle glowing softly from atop the small bureau in his bedchamber, ominous shadows tossed against decorated walls he'd worked hard to fill with the meaningless treasures from a life of travel. His first instinct was to scream bloody murder, but the Eypharian quickly realized that there was something cleverly in place to keep him from doing so. A curious tongue rolled gently against a wad of fabric stuffed into his bloated cheeks, suffused with the bitter taste of his own sweat. Looking down he quickly noticed that a strip of fabric from his flax vest had been torn from the hem.
Movement, as he'd already suspected, was quite limited, arms and legs bound by a length of rope that saw his body tied to a chair. The hemp chaffed to put it mildly, and there were a few key areas where his raw flesh agitated the nerve endings attached to it. He must have been thrashing in his sleep, a habit he'd never quite gotten rid of since the early days of his childhood. That or whoever did this showed little concern for the Eypharian's well-being when he'd bound him to this chair.
A rustling of movement from behind Na'il encouraged a frightful gasp to bubble up from his stomach, head spinning as far as his neck would take him to the doorway leading into the hall. There against the threshold was a man, a human...Benshiran? No. Just a regular man, with his arm raised against the frame and body leaning towards it like he owned the place. His hair was a tangle of youthful blonde and his features were sharp like an osprey. Shadows skittered grimly across his face, and his choice in clothing put him from around these parts. But Na'il had never seen this man in his entire life. Who was he? Where did he come from?
"I hope you speak the Common tongue, Eypharian." The shadow said it all so casually, a touch of disappointment poised on his lips as though half suspecting Na'il might shake his head at that very moment. "My Arumenic is quite limited, and a conversational gap could mean all the difference between whether you live or die."
To look in Gideon's eyes at that moment was to look at the face of Dira, glowing with solemnity and a scintilla of the inevitable. Na'il turned his gaze away quickly, tears brimming from kohl darkened eyelashes as he choked on a wet sob, knowing in that moment what his own mortality meant to him. "Do you?" whispered the dark voice again, softer this time for the respect of his captive's privacy. Kahin nodded as a tear welled into his eye and cascaded down his cheek.
The specter of human flesh moved towards the bureau where the candle sat, allowing it's light to still splash on Na'il's damp cheeks while covering his assailant by silhouette. Gideon's calm and easy manner made him appear no stranger to the aberrant process, palms flattening along each side of the desk where the edge tapered off towards the ground. His gaze was steadier than than a rock against a river's current. "I'm going to ask you several questions, Na'il re Kahin... Of course I know your name. I'm not some petty larcenist who gets his jollies off watching you sweat. I work for an entity, and that entity has some business they'd like to settle with you. So, answer these questions honestly and we'll see where the night takes us."
The Eypharian nodded slowly this time, dipping his head in abject misery.
"First question. Is there anyone else that lives with you, aside from the boy?" Gideon's eyebrows rose slightly to the deep baritone of his voice, lower jaw grinding fastidiously from side to side.
All Na'il could think about was what fate had befallen his concubine, glistening eyes seeming to suggest that he was curious to the boy's whereabouts. He shook his head quickly, pleading silently with his captor to divulge some bit of information. Gideon darkly obliged. "He's dead." It was spoken with such nonchalance, like a passing anecdote hardly worth the mention. "A casualty the Houses will not likely miss."
The Eypharian slumped dejectedly in his chair, as little his bondage would allow. His head still swam with the memory of the child's smooth skin brushing affectionately against his own, innocent laughter plaguing his ears like the sweetest song he'd ever heard. It was all such a petching waste, but concubines were not the sort to be lamented. His tears still shed for his own circumstance, as Na'il slowly adjusted and sat up again in his seat, staring willfully at the wall before him where a painting sat whose detail could not be drawn from the meager light.
"Your business often takes you to Zeltiva, yes? You traded marble for the East Winds in exchange for goods and money?" Na'il felt he was being led to some precipice he could not turn back from, pushed by the hand of a man whom had bound him with rope. He could do little else but nod, the thought of a lie too much trouble for his mind to treat with dignity.
"And did you ever keep some for yourself? Skim a little off the top as a personal stipend you could line your pockets with?" Realization sprung to life on the Eypharian's olive skinned face as he shook his bulging cheeks vehemently, a sputtering whimper choking the back of his throat. He'd made some bad choices in his life, but stealing from a House was as good as the darkest sin one could imagine.
"Don't lie to me, Kahin. I will take that piece of cloth you have in your fat mouth and shove it so far down your throat that you will be shitting Pycon sized tapestries for the rest of your petching life." Never once did Gideon's voice deviate from the chilling tone of a whisper, which gave his words a certain edge that sunk deep beneath the skin until it found bone. Kahin, thinking desperately for a moment with wide brimmed eyes, shook his head imploringly once more.
A fervent staccato of footsteps rushed like an errant breeze across the tiled floor, closing the gap between the two men in the halting matter of a second. Na'il could do naught but cringe for what happened next, his paunch collapsing in on itself as fat rippled away from the point where Gideon's fist collided, sinking deeply through a mound of flesh towards vital organs and wounded pride. The Eypharian buckled against the restraints, chin dipping towards the floor as a painful sob racked his entire body and the chair balked against his weight. More troublesome however, was the small well of alcohol he'd accrued over the night's events churning up his throat with acidic bile.
A deluge of bitter viscous sprayed from drawn lips, soaking the cloth which stuffed his mouth like a stuck pig. The monstrous taste only inspired him to vomit more, leaning forward as much as his bindings would allow as it splashed into his lap and down to the floor. Gideon simply watched from a looming height above, scion of apathy, his sandals splashed with the occasional downpour that fell to the floor.
"Your pay doesn't befit the lifestyle, Na'il re Kahin. The money is coming from somewhere. The baubles you have lining your walls, the drinks you pour down your greedy throat, the gambling expenses you never come away on top of. I've been watching you, Kahin, and so have my employers. And they want to know why it is you keep deferring your debts if you have so much miza to waste on frivolity."
Na'il cried into the soaking cloth, more dark effluence dribbling down his chin and splashing into his damp lap. He'd never been treated in such ways, even when displeasure had been wrought by his actions. This was an entirely new level of cruelty, and the Eypharian did not know how to cope with it other than sobbing his little black guts out, trying his best to ignore the wretched taste that filled his mouth or the misery that covered his lap. This was what a slave's life should entail, not his own. "Mmffmmf! Uhmmfff!" He knew it would do him little good, but he moaned against the cloth anyway. There was just no getting around how much fear he felt consumed by, or how much more of this he could even take. Tears and sweat wilted across his insolent facade, pleading silently with his captor for absolution. |
|