14th Bell - 79th Day of Winter, 516AV - Rainshard Pavilion
It looked more like an abandoned pyre than the remains of a pavilion. He couldn't see any trace of anything inside it; just a blackened, blasted space that stank of ash and destruction amid the colorful liveliness of the Sapphire Clan's homes. If he paused and squinted, he could see the suggestion of debris among the dark, dead smear.
A flash of color, fragment of some cloth or blanket, miraculously untouched. A pool of melted metal, once weirdly white, now dirtied by mud and rain and ash. Gnarled cinders that could have been wooden sticks, bows, the remains of tent poles.
But he didn't pause. He didn't squint. Konrad spared the pavilion a look and then tramped onward deeper into the clan's quarter. He hardly needed to examine it closer. It was his work, after all.
Work. Heh. Like you got petching paid...
His jaw torqued and the voice was banished. No, he wasn't bloody well paid, but it was still work. His mind had been as cold and methodical as any other time a purse had been pressed to his hand, and a name had been muttered into his ear. Not just the deed itself, but who, and where, and how bst to escape that he may enjoy his-
But there was no reward. Konrad scowled for a moment as he allowed the sheer injustice of that to gnaw at him for a hot, blissful moment. Keeping his outrage suppressed was full-time work, after all. No, that bastard Pridesun had given him no pay; not even an opal, not a single coin. Just that he would keep his secret, and continue to protect him.
For how long?
The Sunberth man growled lowly, making a Drykas passing him shudder quickly and look around, trying to pin down the sound. But Konrad was stalking onward, eyes focused on pavilions, turns, banners, until he found what he sought and could forget for a while the secret business he'd been blackmailed into.
He set aside the flap to the pavilion, greeted by the same muggy, close gloom as he had seen last time. Only in the center was there the usual, brilliant beam of Syna cutting through the miasma, and there a coldly beautiful woman looked up from her sketching board. She sniffed at him and rolled her eyes. Further in the gloom, there was the shuffling of a tall, well-built shadow... and her brother didn't even bother to make a sound before going back to his doodling.
"Ah. You again, eh?"
Not from sister or brother, that voice. From the shadow, but coming out to join him. No bundle of rags, but a clean and simple one-piece shawl of... naturally... purest blue. Smooth and unwrinkled, unlike the craggy face above it that smiled thinly at the scarred man.
Who bowed, of course. A walahk, greeting a Drykas Elder? Oh, yes. 'Twas very much the done thing.
"Aye. Me."
"Come t'learn s'more, I'd wager?"
"Aye," Konrad said, and his slow smile told Ed'yta his visit was about something more than Reimancy. "Come t'learn somethin' new."
A flash of color, fragment of some cloth or blanket, miraculously untouched. A pool of melted metal, once weirdly white, now dirtied by mud and rain and ash. Gnarled cinders that could have been wooden sticks, bows, the remains of tent poles.
But he didn't pause. He didn't squint. Konrad spared the pavilion a look and then tramped onward deeper into the clan's quarter. He hardly needed to examine it closer. It was his work, after all.
Work. Heh. Like you got petching paid...
His jaw torqued and the voice was banished. No, he wasn't bloody well paid, but it was still work. His mind had been as cold and methodical as any other time a purse had been pressed to his hand, and a name had been muttered into his ear. Not just the deed itself, but who, and where, and how bst to escape that he may enjoy his-
But there was no reward. Konrad scowled for a moment as he allowed the sheer injustice of that to gnaw at him for a hot, blissful moment. Keeping his outrage suppressed was full-time work, after all. No, that bastard Pridesun had given him no pay; not even an opal, not a single coin. Just that he would keep his secret, and continue to protect him.
For how long?
The Sunberth man growled lowly, making a Drykas passing him shudder quickly and look around, trying to pin down the sound. But Konrad was stalking onward, eyes focused on pavilions, turns, banners, until he found what he sought and could forget for a while the secret business he'd been blackmailed into.
He set aside the flap to the pavilion, greeted by the same muggy, close gloom as he had seen last time. Only in the center was there the usual, brilliant beam of Syna cutting through the miasma, and there a coldly beautiful woman looked up from her sketching board. She sniffed at him and rolled her eyes. Further in the gloom, there was the shuffling of a tall, well-built shadow... and her brother didn't even bother to make a sound before going back to his doodling.
"Ah. You again, eh?"
Not from sister or brother, that voice. From the shadow, but coming out to join him. No bundle of rags, but a clean and simple one-piece shawl of... naturally... purest blue. Smooth and unwrinkled, unlike the craggy face above it that smiled thinly at the scarred man.
Who bowed, of course. A walahk, greeting a Drykas Elder? Oh, yes. 'Twas very much the done thing.
"Aye. Me."
"Come t'learn s'more, I'd wager?"
"Aye," Konrad said, and his slow smile told Ed'yta his visit was about something more than Reimancy. "Come t'learn somethin' new."