47th of Fall, 514 AV
The lazy afternoon sunlight crept in through the soot stained windows of The Drunken Fish and filled its atmosphere with a torpid haze of succoring warmth. The conversations among its clientele were dull and listless, dispensed on rum quenched tongues while Father Manowar occupied his time by cleaning several clay mugs with a grime soaked towel in anticipation of the evening rush. It was, rather inexplicably, one of the few places in all Sunberth that Gideon felt safe--at least in the waxing bells before the debauchery of the night began.
Motes of dust were captured in the dim rays of light as the desert dweller sat midst a thrall of empty tables and chairs, legs raised above his pelvis with boots planted firmly atop the woodwork before him. His chair was tilted on two legs with spine slouched into the crooked curvature of the backrest, thumbs twiddling above his abdomen as he gazed ponderously across the table.
On the other side sat a...mixed breed of some sort, if Gideon’s summation of the man was indeed correct, his eyes carefully measuring small bits of character to later remember him by should his services be required again in the future. He was a short stalk of a man with coffee stained eyes and sand colored hair, an old scar no more than a feathering of white just above his left brow. His vestments were in shambles, and he equipped a dagger along a frayed length of rope that served as a belt.
He seemed nervous of the world around him, but Gideon could hardly fault him in that. They were in the city of chaos after all, and the mob had an agenda all its own when it came to rabble rousing. It seemed these days were more volatile than those past, but it did not take a sleuth to figure out the reason behind it. Power shifts in leadership often created gaps which needed to be paved...often in blood.
“So you can tell me where he is?” Gideon’s left eyebrow curled along his forehead, healthily dubious of the integrity of the man sitting before him.
“Well, ah, in a fashion, yes.” The other shifted uneasily in his seat, as if expecting a murderous glare in response.
Gideon’s expression fell quiet, tangling briefly with percipience before a deep sigh was filtered through his nose. “So me coming here pointless.”
Lifting his legs from the table, he set them back onto the floor of the tavern with a dull thump, leaning forward in order to stand when the other’s voice squeaked in dismay. “No! What I mean to say is, I don’t know where he is, but…”
Gideon pushed himself to his feet.
“But I know someone who does!” the other snapped, jumping up from his chair and reaching across the table to rest his hand atop Gideon’s own.
Realizing all too late of the mistake that was made, the desert dweller’s other hand had already come to intervene, grabbing the informant’s arm by the wrist and pulling it back towards him. Stout legs, unable to extend his reach beyond the middle of the table, came toppling forward with the rest of his torso. The resulting crack of chin bone connecting with the wooden surface of the table stirred the curiosity of those around him, Father Manowar already growling in protest.
“The Quay House! The Quay Hou--!” the smaller statured man hissed, feeling his arm bending back as Gideon rounded the table and applied pressure to the other’s shoulder while drawing back on the arm. “Sunset Quarters. They can find anyone. Anyone!” he whined, eyes brimming with fear and lips twisted by pain.
Looking up to find that their little encounter had earned them a sizable audience from the drunken patrons couched around the bar, Gideon released his grip and watched the imprisoned arm fall sorely to the other’s side. Grabbing the informant by the scrag of his belt, he lifted him back to his feet and gazed down upon him. “You hard enough to track down to begin, friend. But, I come to find you loading ears with that fool fish again, I take arm with me, savvy?...Buy stiff drink. It help ease pain.”
Fishing into his pouch, Gideon withdrew a silver and slapped it atop the table with a ringing thrum, his steeled blue eyed gaze analyzing the rest of the tavern for signs of retaliation. But seeing as there was to be no exchange in blood, many grew bored quickly and returned to their drinks and banter. Even Father Manowar had stepped down to the other end of the bar and was in the process of replenishing another’s empty mug. The southerner turned and ambled his way out into the street.
***
It did not take long for him to find The Quay House, it’s exterior one of the scant few constructed of stone in this beggared part of town along the coast. Surprised to find that it contained a gatehouse, Gideon was relieved when he saw the door leading in was left invitingly open, its portcullis drawn. The sound of hammer and saw filled the early evening air, the scent of spruce wafting on the coastal breeze and setting the southerner’s mind to a more restful state.
Looking beyond the gate and into the complex itself, Gideon could see men milling about diligently, dragging timber to various locations and cutting planks to size with toothed blades. He still found it odd to be in a land enriched by a resource that was grievously absent in The Burning Lands. Yet these people used it for practically everything. Easier to move than stone, he speculated, though not as promisingly sturdy.
Sliding past the threshold to the inner grounds when he found no one to greet him, Gideon’s curiosity took him past the main building to where the construction was taking place instead. Resting his left hand atop the pommel of his sword sheathed along his side, his right settled onto the hitch of his hip, elbow bending out away from him. Child like awe fell upon him as he watched the men work, noting the foreign tools they used to carve and cut the wood, as well as the expediency with which every task was conducted. He had never seen anything like it.