Across the street and tucked away from the troubles of the world, two men sat beneath the fickle shade of a small copse of palm trees, sipping from borrowed clay mugs filled with a savory sweet barley beer that eased their minds of the sordid transaction they'd come to make. One man was obviously a native to this depraved world they found themselves in, dark of skin and blessed with more arms than the other had appendages. His mannerisms bled the rich blood of aristocrats despite having a purported lack of affiliation with them, and his smiles were poisoned by dishonesty that poured from kohl lined eyes like faucets. Gideon accounted for the other party, and was used to working with such hollow shells of men on a daily basis. But that didn't mean he lauded their company any more than he might enjoy being stuck in a pit full of disgruntled Dhani.
Their business was not so unethical that they needed concern themselves with eavesdroppers, though. This sort of work could be spoken about as candidly as one man might talk to another on the sad state of Eypharian politics. Either way, the only entities that posed any threat at all to them were presently preoccupied by the delight of spinning a Benshiran's day into a woeful tale. Gideon felt a twinge of pity balling up inside his chest, watching the interaction slowly sour over the course of a half bell while sharing vacant words with his business associate in between. He found himself silently praying that the old man would surrender before things got ugly. Jackals were rarely to be trifled with. But this Benshiran did not seem one to be easily cowed, much to the chagrin of a man who was showing a growing interest.
Turning towards the slimy-eyed Eypharian whom he'd been meeting with for perhaps the twentieth time this year, the mercenary's damaged smile surfaced for a brief moment when he realized the other had just finished telling a joke he found to be worth his own uproarious laughter. It meant to Gideon, if he were to follow precedent, that the anecdote had most likely been a lecherous tale of sexual exploitation ending up in one party being maimed while the other was left in compromising position. And while never having developed a sturdy opinion on the habits of man, Gideon found this particular man's habits to be in poor taste compared to his own. He may have done some cruel things in his life, but deriving pleasure from them was not something they shared. Perhaps that was precisely the point of their disconnect.
The Eypharian's face darkened noticeably when he saw the other not laughing, a look of mild annoyance sculpting his features as he rose a hand to brush the black scruff along his chin.
"What's the matter, Gideon? Have my jokes become so tasteless that not even your black heart can find humor in them any longer?"
"No Ahmet," the sellsword lied with a detached tone, grabbing his mug of beer as he tipped a small sample of its contents down his dry throat. "I'm just curious as to what's going on over there," head nodding sharply in the direction of the clearly vexed potter. "Never understood why a Benshiran would choose to stay here." He set the mug down atop his knee for a moment while pondering the stranger's audacity.
"Didn't his kind used to be slaves to your people?" he asked offhandedly.
The Eypharian leaned back against one of the palms with a heavy sigh, looking gravely in the direction his associate pointed. It seemed he was not entirely comfortable with talk of history when only moments before he had been regaling his company with a silver-tongued joke.
"Ah, it's none of our business, my friend. Let the Jackals do what they must. It keeps them from questioning our own little parley we're having." He chuckled into his own mug, drowning himself in what remained before peering over his nose into Gideon's own. "How's your drink? Might I offer you another?"
"That sounds good," Gideon muttered, unconsciously sliding his mug towards Ahmet's waiting hand.
The mercenary's eyes never left the heat of the argument, distracted most by troubling idiosyncrasies he noticed in their demeanor. An imminent threat of a brawl seemed to stiffen the air like the silence between a bolt of lightning and the crack of thunder. His Eypharian associate was hard pressed to take notice however, gathering himself up to dust his leggings off before returning to the tent where they'd procured their drinks. Then, the floodgates of iniquity crashed open.
A visceral nerve within Gideon's chest snapped to the Benshiran being keeled over like a bag of bricks, all witnesses in the area averting their gaze quickly for fear they might somehow be dragged in. When it concerned the Jackals, very little was more intimidating than men who boasted several sets of arms with the capability of using each as a functional weapon. It kept even the most sympathetic and bravest of hearts from tempting their involvement. But something about this Benshiran pulled upon the strings of familiarity for the man whose silent blue eyes watched from across the sand-kissed street. Springing to his worn sandaled feet, Gideon quickly paced forward, not entirely sure what good he could do against two trained men, but sensing that he at least had to try.
Past a trickling stream of sweat ridden bodies that lined the dusted thoroughfare, the sellsword weaved his way through carefully until slithering out the other side. Greeted by the bronzed flesh of a Jackal's back, Gideon was pleased to see his actions had thus far been neglected by the waspish eyes of men who indulged their thuggish appetites. What left him less than satisfied however, was the direction in which he felt his conscious mind was taking him. It wouldn't require much from him, only a little bit would do, but it was not the amount he wished to call upon that troubled him. It was the latent fear that swirled around the ancient power that went along with it.
Res drooled from the base of his palm like a spring bubbling to life, clinging to the concave flesh that he immediately swept over the shoulder and across the gasping eyes of the Eypharian, swinging fists stilled momentarily by the surprise that washed over him. That was until... A violent scream pierced the cloudless day, moisture ripping from the Jackal's eyes as Gideon activated the magnetic properties of the djed. Sweat and tears tore away from the afflicted man's flesh in small rivulets, a multitude of hands clawing at burning sockets whose blood vessels began to rupture, begging for reprieve that not even closed lids could prevent. But when the Jackal fell to the floor, so did the connection become severed, a spherical ball of clear viscous rolling around in the Reimancer's palm whose visage was one of utter disbelief. Barely the size of a copper miza. And it worked.
Stunned, the supporting Eypharian released his grasp upon the Benshiran, rushing across a small field of tangled limbs with the fires of enmity toiling beneath his eyes. Gideon had only a moment to look up from his little watery creation before his concentration shattered to pieces, plummeting to the ground as a blue sky became his vista, droplets of water splashing across his hand. The air from his lungs was sucked dry instantly, a rasping cough filling his throat as he winced in pain. The Jackal was already upon him, a hail of sturdy blows striking his body around the thighs and abdomen before the mercenary had a chance to ward them off with a fury of haphazard kicks. He only hoped the old man wasn't so useless that he couldn't lend his own hand to the struggle. |
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