oocLeaving the timestamp up to you, Elias! Since I don't have a preference when this takes place. Also feel free to use the NPCs as you see fit!
East Street
Midwinter 511AV
East Street
Midwinter 511AV
“You want me to do what?” Achenar asked incredulously.
The group surrounding him chuckled. They were made up of wildly varied individuals forged by the flames of poverty and dust, bound together in a rag-tag group of pseudo-smugglers who sought nothing more than to ‘make it big’. Some were rotund and tall, others were short and thin, but the one that snapped his yellowed teeth together in a harsh laugh looked like he’d been birthed by a rat.
“Ye can’t join the group until ye proven yerself to us, mate,” the man drawled, rubbing the sparse whiskers on his chin. “Listen, we took ya in, especially when no one else could, ay? Watcha think is gonna happen when folks finds yer a horny whatsit of the gods, ay? Slavery. That’s what’ll happen. We doin’ ye a favor, and all ye’ gotta do,” he pushed a finger against the ethaefal’s chest, “is borrow something from someone.”
“Ye,” the bald round man sniggered in the back. “Like a kitten, I’d really like a kitten, Duncan.”
The mousy man rolled his eyes. “Shut up, Wart.”
Achenar’s brow twitched.
“In any case,” Duncan continued, slicking back his greasy brown hair. He stepped closer to the ethaefal. “Teach a man a lesson, ey, and they’ll come a runnin’. Borrow somethin’ valuable, crack some bones, and we’ll see ta it you don’t draw the eyes of anyone….. unsavory, ey?”
The ethaefal blinked. The concept was foreign to him, to be a part of a ‘gang’; aspiring smugglers in the maze of East Street. But perhaps this was really how the world worked. The only thing Achenar was familiar with was the vague structure of Kenash and its dynasties, and the heavy weight of a collar around his neck. Here, he was free, but heavy with a different kind of weight on his shoulders. Perhaps he’d made a mistake leaving the sanctity of Helena and her caravan.
“So basically you want me to rob someone,” Achenar said slowly.
Duncan guffawed and slapped a hand on Wart’s fat belly. “Well lookit here, he’s not such a dumbshyke after all! That’s exactly what we want, horny.”
The ethaefal inhaled. Rob someone, or be left out on the streets with nothing to his name and a thousand unknown scenarios just around the corner. One of them being the very real possibility of the return of pain and shackles and if this was the only way… There was far worse things he’d done.
“Fine,” He exhaled. “I’ll… do it.”
The men sniggered until Duncan turned to silence them with a sharp glare. “Very good,” he said with an unabashed smirk, clapping the ethaefal on the back. He led him towards the alley’s exit. Achenar had to quicken his steps to avoid stumbling. “Now head out there and get’um, boy!” With an unceremonious shove, Achenar was left alone in the dusty street. He glanced back to see the men receding into the shadows cast by the dilapidated buildings. He inhaled, and let out the air in a sharp hiss.
I am so petching stupid. Achenar shook his head, rubbing his face with a hand. Learning what made people tick was so much easier in the confines of a house. But in a city he may as well be a blind mummer. He felt the echoes of true panic settle in his chest as he walked down the narrow street, glancing from side to side like he expected the lash of a whip and a clap of irons. He paused in a shrouded corner by the mouth of an alley, and breathed. “You can do this,” he muttered to himself. All he had to do… was wait.
The group surrounding him chuckled. They were made up of wildly varied individuals forged by the flames of poverty and dust, bound together in a rag-tag group of pseudo-smugglers who sought nothing more than to ‘make it big’. Some were rotund and tall, others were short and thin, but the one that snapped his yellowed teeth together in a harsh laugh looked like he’d been birthed by a rat.
“Ye can’t join the group until ye proven yerself to us, mate,” the man drawled, rubbing the sparse whiskers on his chin. “Listen, we took ya in, especially when no one else could, ay? Watcha think is gonna happen when folks finds yer a horny whatsit of the gods, ay? Slavery. That’s what’ll happen. We doin’ ye a favor, and all ye’ gotta do,” he pushed a finger against the ethaefal’s chest, “is borrow something from someone.”
“Ye,” the bald round man sniggered in the back. “Like a kitten, I’d really like a kitten, Duncan.”
The mousy man rolled his eyes. “Shut up, Wart.”
Achenar’s brow twitched.
“In any case,” Duncan continued, slicking back his greasy brown hair. He stepped closer to the ethaefal. “Teach a man a lesson, ey, and they’ll come a runnin’. Borrow somethin’ valuable, crack some bones, and we’ll see ta it you don’t draw the eyes of anyone….. unsavory, ey?”
The ethaefal blinked. The concept was foreign to him, to be a part of a ‘gang’; aspiring smugglers in the maze of East Street. But perhaps this was really how the world worked. The only thing Achenar was familiar with was the vague structure of Kenash and its dynasties, and the heavy weight of a collar around his neck. Here, he was free, but heavy with a different kind of weight on his shoulders. Perhaps he’d made a mistake leaving the sanctity of Helena and her caravan.
“So basically you want me to rob someone,” Achenar said slowly.
Duncan guffawed and slapped a hand on Wart’s fat belly. “Well lookit here, he’s not such a dumbshyke after all! That’s exactly what we want, horny.”
The ethaefal inhaled. Rob someone, or be left out on the streets with nothing to his name and a thousand unknown scenarios just around the corner. One of them being the very real possibility of the return of pain and shackles and if this was the only way… There was far worse things he’d done.
“Fine,” He exhaled. “I’ll… do it.”
The men sniggered until Duncan turned to silence them with a sharp glare. “Very good,” he said with an unabashed smirk, clapping the ethaefal on the back. He led him towards the alley’s exit. Achenar had to quicken his steps to avoid stumbling. “Now head out there and get’um, boy!” With an unceremonious shove, Achenar was left alone in the dusty street. He glanced back to see the men receding into the shadows cast by the dilapidated buildings. He inhaled, and let out the air in a sharp hiss.
I am so petching stupid. Achenar shook his head, rubbing his face with a hand. Learning what made people tick was so much easier in the confines of a house. But in a city he may as well be a blind mummer. He felt the echoes of true panic settle in his chest as he walked down the narrow street, glancing from side to side like he expected the lash of a whip and a clap of irons. He paused in a shrouded corner by the mouth of an alley, and breathed. “You can do this,” he muttered to himself. All he had to do… was wait.