Showing posts with label fantasy fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fantasy fiction. Show all posts

Saturday, September 16, 2023

In the Mountains, The Dreams (A Cerce Stormbringer Story) Part 3.

Part 2

-

Chapter 4

Cerce fought to open her eyes. There was pain there, but she couldn't remember why. She raised a hand to rub away the sleep. Her mind felt muddled, like she'd awoken in the middle of a dream. She tried to remember. She felt that it might have been something scary, or something cold, but it was gone now. 

Sunlight was streaming through the window, warm, and Cerce wondered why she hadn't been awoken for breakfast. Sitting up, she looked down at herself. The tiny wooden bed in the corner of the big room, so much smaller than the other big bed across the room. 

Yawning, she stood from her little bed and stretched out. Her nightshirt was so long it almost touched the floor around her feet. The wooden floorboards of the bedroom had a reassuring feel to them, the curves and uneven surfaces so familiar, so distinct. She knew every tiny knot in the old wood. She trod it carefully, touching each board with her toes as she stepped across the floor and headed towards the small staircase in the corner.

She was forgetting something. Cerce stopped. Back again, the dream seemed to come close. She had the horrible feeling that she'd forgotten something important, a friend left behind. Of course! She quickly hurried back to her bed and searched in the sheets for him. 

Cerce retrieved the little cloth doll and hugged him close. The stitched on face smiled back at her. With him dangling from a hand, Cerce proceeded down to the kitchen. 

It was warm down there, smells and light filled Cerce's senses. The big old ceramic oven dominated the room, always lit and filling the house with reassuring warmth. There was food cooking, the smell of freshly baked bread. 

Standing, so tall, with her gleaming white hair bright in the morning sun, was a woman. Cerce could see her deft hands chopping at vegetables on the wooden countertop. Cerce skipped forward to hug her legs, and the woman turned, bright loving eyes looking down. Cerce cried out in joy. 

-

"Mommy...." Cerce whispered. 

Her voice was cracking and faint, and she proceeded to cough dust and blood out. Her chest pounded with pain and she blinked her eyes open. There was no way to tell if they were open or closed. Or maybe if she was blind. She knew she'd said something but couldn't remember what it was. 

She breathed in and coughed again. The air was stale, cold like the grave, chilling her lungs. Her lips were chapped and cracking, coated in dust. 

Cerce fought to remember where she was. Her head swam with thoughts. A scream, a face just like her own. A mix of relief and fear. Revulsion and recognition.

She'd fallen, she was certain of that much. Her left leg pulsed with pain, and she ran a hand down it to search for injury. It hurt, and there was a deep ache in the meat of her thigh, but she couldn't feel breaks or blood, so considered herself lucky. 

Fighting to her feet, Cerce reached out, hands waving in the darkness for purchase. It was so silent she could hear her heartbeat in her ears. Vertigo twisted her senses as she took a hesitant step forward, shifting her feet over the stone beneath them. She felt like she'd dropped far into the Earth, but had no concept of how far she'd gone, or how much further there may still be to fall.

The mountain. She'd fallen down into the mountain below the monastery. She brushed at her body, still feeling the places where hands had snatched at her, tore at clothing, ripped out hair.

She knew she'd forgotten something important. She held her breath and listened. 

Absolutely nothing, no sound found her ears, and Cerce sighed. Wherever Adam was, it wasn't close. 

She dropped to a crouch, and swept her hands around the floor. There wasn't much chance, but she had to try. The stone was smooth and cold and old, and she felt her way around the curves and lines and shapes of them. Feeling the shape of them gave her a sudden strangely nostalgic wave, like she'd done it before. She whispered, urging her hands to come across the familiar shaft of her halberd, but there was nothing.

Instead, she stood and decided to move forward. She searched for a breeze, for a sense of direction, but there was nothing. Just the ground beneath her and a feeling of emptiness. She knew she must be below the earth, deep in the cold mountain, but the strange semi-lucidity that was insistently pulling at Cerce's senses kept telling her the opposite. She tried to focus, slow her breathing, slow her pulse. Cerce knew her body was resistant to poisons, whatever affliction blighted the air she would acclimate fast. She just had to get through it. 

Every moment she allowed her mind to wander from focus, it slipped into strange places. The feeling that she was not confined continually washed over her, as if the darkness around her extended off into an impossibly huge space. 

The feeling of size and empty space was suddenly terrifying, and Cerce fought to calm her breathing. The blackness was so complete that her eyes began to fool her, and she imagined staring eyes the size of mountains glinting at her, perceiving the edges and vague shapes of things moving in the darkness bigger than the world. 

The sensation sent her tumbling forward, the hugeness of it impossible to grasp. Her hands found the ground and she fought to protect her limbs. Claws scratched on the cold stone, and the feeling of material came to her fingertips.

-

Cerce rubbed the soft material of her mothers skirts in her little fingers. She felt the reassuring tussle of her choppy hair as her mother reached down. 

Looking up into those deep blue eyes, Cerce had the strangest feeling. Like she hadn't been here in so long. It made her eyes fill with tears immediately. Her mother's voice came then, like chiming bells. The very sound of it knocked the breath from the little girl. 

She cried then, and was lifted up into her mother's arms. The welling, awful feeling of childhood impotency filled her, unable to articulate or explain. She hadn't the knowledge she needed, she didn't know the right words to use to make anyone understand what she was feeling. 

Her mother just held her, and bounced her in those arms, and cooed small reassurances in her ear. 

Soon, Cerce was placed down on the ground again. The wood of the kitchen floor warm beneath her bare feet. The house was so small, but to Cerce it loomed large. The wooden table, just a touch too high to see on top of without standing on her tiptoes, the old shelves filled with jars and books. 

The many containers on the shelves always fascinated Cerce, the multitude of coloured glass jars, ceramic pots sealed with wax or muslin. When cooking, her mother would reach for them, taking them clinking from the shelves and pulling a herb, unguent, or a glitter of spice from one. Cerce used to watch, like watching a wizard work, as her mother created magic. The musical sound of the jars clinking together would echo through the house, and as Cerce reached up to touch one of the little glass jars, they were so cold.

-

The feeling of cold glass was under Cerce's fingertips, and she gripped onto it, searching for anything in the darkness. A row of bottles, maybe. How long had she been on her knees? She wasn't sure all of a sudden.

One object tipped over and rolled aside, the empty glass ringing as it moved across the stone floor. She shook her head, her blurry thoughts making it hard to focus on any of her senses. She sniffed at one of the bottles, momentarily confused that they were empty. Having no idea what she'd expected to be in one, she placed it back down and warily rising, continued her way forward. 

Cerce turned, glancing over her shoulder. She wracked her brain again, knowing someone was just with her, a reassuring presence whose absence left her feeling so suddenly alone. She shook her head, and let out a cough, just to hear something. The noise echoed, coming back to Cerce and breaking the spell of emptiness the place held around her. It was a room, and she could find her way out. 

Treading carefully, her hands outstretched, Cerce moved on. If nothing else, the cold down here would kill fastest. Sapping strength and chilling the bone. Cerce could feel her joints stiffening from the cold, intermingling with the ache of bruises from the fall until she couldn't tell which ended where. Her lungs hurt from breathing the frigid air, and Cerce let out a growl, half of frustration, half to convince herself that her terror wasn't real. 

Just when the hopelessness of the dark threatened to overwhelm her again, Cerce's boots scuffed against rough ground. Just for a moment, but something was there. She dropped to a crouch and slid her hands across the stones, and her fingers found it. Jagged grooves, harsh on the fingertips and occasionally sharp. A far cry from the smooth edges of the ancient stone, Cerce realized what she was feeling. 

Crawling on all fours, Cerce followed the scratches as they continued, trailing a way through the black labyrinth following in whatever great object had been dragged there. The stones were hard on her knees, and the exertion of movement coupled with the excitement of making progress was making Cerce breathe faster. At the back of her throat there was a taste, a faint aroma that Cerce couldn't put her finger on. Somewhere between lavender and rot, and as she scratched along on the cold stone, it grew stronger. It was so hard to tell, she wanted it so desperately, but Cerce swore a breeze was bringing the smell to her. She continued crawling. 

It seemed an age there in the dark, the stones continuing on endlessly, following the scratches, the occasional brush of a wall, the sense of shape in the dark.

Cerce cursed loudly as her head bumped into something hard. Her claws found firm, worked edges. The heavy weight of the object having dragged scratches across the floor halfway through this place. As she slowly stood, her fingertips found meticulously fine carvings, delicate shapes. It was when Cerce found the breasts that she realized she was touching a life sized statue of a human figure. Reaching out, Cerce could tell the figure stood a few feet higher than her, both arms broken at the shoulder. She was about to move on before she gave a cry of satisfaction, finding the sconce at the statue's back. Her hands found purchase and she pulled the heavy wooden torch from it. 

The cloth wrapped around its end was hard and chilled, but seemed dry. Cerce fumbled at her belt for the pouch containing her tinderbox, the same little kit she'd had since she was a kid hammering away at things in her father's forge. She dropped to a crouch, shielding her work against the statue's side, claws working with practiced precision to get the kit producing sparks. It gave her a warm feeling, somewhere deep inside, to be reminded of her father. 

Varten had given Cerce the kit in the forge one evening. She could remember the sweat on his bald head reflecting the glow of the forge as he guided her slender hands in his great calloused mitts. A whiff of smoke caught Cerce's nostrils, and she stared down at it, the new light painful to her eyes as deep in the folds of the rag, flames began to burn.

-

Cerce felt her mothers hand on her shoulder, a reassuring squeeze as she looked into the fire of the little hearth. The house was small, and the ceilings low, so it warmed fast. Soon the fire was blazing, logs crackling away, and Cerce sat cross legged before it, watching the wood curve and twist. The warm orange glow filled the room, bathing it in deep shadow. Cerce looked back over her shoulder and watched her shadow fill the wall behind her and giggled. 

It was safe there, toasty in the room. Cerce looked back to where her mother stood, tending a boiling pot. Slowly, she circled her spoon in the concoction, before raising it to her mouth and testing the broth. Seeing Cerce peering up at her, she gave a wink and a secret little smile. Then, there was a knock on the door, a familiar, rhythmic knock. The same one he always used. Cerce sprung to her feet and scampered to the door to meet him.

Cerce found she was staring into the flame atop the torch, the heat on her face soothing the freezing chill that had chapped her lips and left her nose numb. She blinked, staring into the flame. Something had roused her attention, a noise. The darkness around her was deeper now in light of the blaze atop the torch, and Cerce raised the torch in front of her, and almost jerked back in shock as a face was immediately revealed.

The stone features of the statue peered back at Cerce, a tall and beautiful figure. She was draped in a gown, the same soft white stone as her flesh, every curve and wrinkle of the material so delicate it almost moved. Cerce felt compelled to reach out to touch it, and found that sure enough, the statue and her garments were unmoving, unchanging stone. The flicker of her torch on the features gave a movement to the statue that was oddly unnerving, but somehow still comforting, not to feel so alone in this place.

As she looked up at the face, its sad smile sightlessly staring forward, Cerce became aware she wasn't looking at a rendition of a human figure. The ears were pointed, but not with the elegant curved helix of Elven anatomy. The lips were wide, coming out across the cheeks in a smooth bow. Cerce shook her head, finding it difficult to believe what she was seeing. 

She reached up to touch the face, to run fingertips down the cheekbones and across the lips. Imperceptible lines of familiar anatomy were here reflected with as much care and craft as had been devoted to the fine filigree of the gown she wore. In all her years, Cerce had never seen a statue of a Nadyr.  

It was a strange feeling, to look up at the face, and an overwhelming feeling of melancholy washed over Cerce as she did. Peering up at a face like her own gave her a sudden feeling of loss that sat in her chest, formless and directionless. Cerce found herself angry that the statue had been dragged down here, and was taken with the sudden urge to find a way to rescue it, to bring it back out into the sun. 

There was a noise, an echoing knock somewhere far above, that brought Cerce from her thoughts and back into the room. Raising the torch high, she realized the room had an open ceiling, a huge circular gap. Echoes of noise travelled down it from above, metal on metal, the distinctive murmur of voices. Chanting. A shrill voice cut through the darkness above the others, and Cerce found herself brushing her hair out the way as it blew into her face to listen. She realized that the ghost of a breeze blowing around her was coming from below, not with the voices from above. 

Following the stare of the statue, Cerce found herself gazing down into the depths of a great void in the floor. Her feet only a step from the edge, she was taken with a sudden swagger of vertigo, and stepped back to steady herself against the statue. Leaning, she found the breeze was coming up from the pit, a chill wind that was bringing with it the scent that seemed to permeate the whole floor. 

Extending her torch out before her, Cerce was met with a blackness so complete it gave a rise of horror in her gut, and the edges of her vision fooled her into imagining something rising from the black void below. The flames of her torch were bright, and the hole in the ceiling was well illuminated, the perfectly smooth sides leaving no hope for a handhold or a way to ascend. Below though, it seemed the light was hesitant to reveal what lay below Cerce's feet, and she took a step back, taken with the sudden dread impression that her light was slowly retreating from the darkness. It was impossible to tell how far through into the mountain the fistular pit cut, but Cerce would have believed in that moment that it went on forever. 

Far up from above in the loftier halls of the monastery, there was a cry. A yell of protest, of pain. Cerce grit her teeth. With the torch held blazing before her into the blackened hall, she strode forward, steady at first, her boots thudding against the stones. Seeking any way up through the bowels of the monastery, Cerce began to run.

-

Cerce's bare feet padded across the dirt ground of the thoroughfare and she giggled as she ran. The boy from the butcher shop was just ahead, his quick little feet darting. He looked over his shoulder, eyes wide, lips spread in a grin, and he gave a yelp somewhere between surprise and hilarity when he saw how fast Cerce was gaining on him. His laughter made him almost trip, and Cerce snatched at the back of his grubby brown shirt. She jabbed her little fingers into his side, eliciting a squeak of surprise. Cerce darted on by him, leaving him to sit in the street laughing. He pointed frantically in the direction ahead, and Cerce darted onwards. The butcher's boy couldn't play anymore, he was dead now after all. 

Thundering through the street, off the dirt road that threads through the town and onto the wooden planks that border past the stores and shops, she ran. Darting under the sign for the smithy, the next child was small enough to pass, her filthy blonde mop of hair brushing the hanging metalworking tools. Cerce came after, almost stumbling and falling as she did so. She thrust a hand out to steady herself against the wall of the little smithy. So cold, the wall was, somehow.

Quickly regaining the trail, Cerce darted again after her quarry. Furious laughter and a scatter of tiny feet alerted her where to go, and the chase began again. 

One by one she caught them as she ran, the imagined blade darting into bellies, throats. They fell, laughing to the ground as the green skinned girl continued onwards, chasing her friends down. Some days Cerce was the one running, the one hiding, hands clamped over her mouth desperately trying not to giggle, but not today. Today she was the huntress, and she was always the best at it. The sun rose into view at the end of the street, momentarily filling the world with light as Cerce ran.  

The boy whose father kept the livery was the fastest. Older than the other children, his legs were long and he ran beside horses most of his days. Cerce saw him dart around a corner, trying to escape, but she was quicker. Running to cut him off, she threw herself around the stony exterior of the old inn, the one that smelled weird. Stumbling and almost skinning her knees on the uneven stones of the building, Cerce crossed the door and out into the alley beyond, straight into the path of her quarry.

He tumbled into her, his heavy form bowling Cerce over, but she was fast, grappling at him until they crashed to the ground together. He struggled to escape, twisting at her little hands as she snatched for purchase. As he turned, his neck twisted before her face, the curve of his pale flesh stretched out before her. Somewhere, deep inside her head, there was a throb. A deep seated imperative, an instinct. The muscles at the back of her jaw twitched involuntarily, and Cerce let the boy go.

As he ran through the dust, making his way to the winning mark, Cerce rubbed her jaw. It ached. Her hands ached too, her knuckles. She looked down at them.

-

Cerce's knuckles were covered in blood. She felt splatters of it on her face, on her eyelashes. Her hands were raw and painful. At her feet, the monk gave a splutter through broken teeth. She looked down at him. His dark eyes stared up at her, and he shakily raised a hard to ward off further attack.

His other hand still gripped the improvised weapon, and Cerce stared at it in confusion for a moment. The monk dropped it, the heavy censer clanging to the stone to echo throughout the thin hallway. There was a pain in Cerce's jaw, a tensed muscle, one she hadn't used in a long time. It took her a moment to find the will to relax it. 

Behind her, steps leading down to the lower levels were spotted with blood, and the body of another monk was barely visible in the gloom, limbs splayed down the stairs, body still.  

Stepping over the quivering form of the monk as he burbled out pleas, Cerce continued down the hallway. Somewhere she'd lost her torch, she couldn't remember where, but the hall was dotted with lit wall sconces now.

The figures in the dark came for her again. Monks wielding staves, simple wooden staffs, one bare handed and screaming. The first Cerce tripped hard with a shove to his chest, her boot neatly stepping behind his own bare foot and bringing him down hard, his head cracking against the stone. The second raised his weapon in both hands, brandishing the stave as though it were a spear to run the advancing Nadyr through. Cerce made a faux leap, darting forward, and when he flinched backward, shot her claws forward to snatch him up by the collar. Hurling the monk into his oncoming comrade, Cerce brought her boot swinging hard into the sides of the men as they fumbled on the ground for footing. A second time, and the pair were sent tumbling, crying out in pain. 

The last monk that Cerce passed simply slunk to his knees, crying out in words meaningless to Cerce's ears. His palms raised up to her as if in supplication. She stared into his eyes as she strode past him, and immediately he fell prostrate, tears beginning to fall.

She moved without thinking, her feet pounding the stone, her arms rising to block the clumsy assaults of the monks that swarmed upon her. She lashed out with elbows, breaking noses, shattering teeth. Her knees met groins, guts. Her arms turned the swings of metal sconces, chunks of stone, bare clawing hands. Some monks came yelling at her, their voices sometimes seeming close, sometimes seeming like they echoed from afar. Some came in silence, in fear, like ghosts in the darkness that shied from her light. Cerce's eyes would focus, her strides finding stability and her senses drawing her ever onward, then the next moment she would seem to float, lost in reverie, the labyrinthine halls twisting nonsensically. 

Cerce had absolutely no idea how long she had been navigating the cold halls of the monastery. Time seemed to make no impact here. Grasping desperately to hold tight to her thoughts whenever they came clearly, Cerce breathed deep of the chill air. It smelled of stone and ice, incense and unguents. Occasionally a smell would waft past her nostrils. A strange scent, indeterminate and effervescent, that threatened to pull her after it, seeking an origin. She would find herself thinking of a bakery, a fish shop, remembering woodwork, fragments of faces that she could not place but that seemed so real. They teased her, alighting on the edge of memory and on the tip of the tongue, then gone again in a moment. 

Stumbling out of a stairwell and onto a flat plateau, Cerce shook herself clear of the enshrouding scent. It was becoming easier to pull herself out of the strange sensation, quicker to gather her wits. She could feel her senses becoming sharper, her thoughts ordering quicker. Her pace increased, boots thundering down the hall as she headed in the only direction she could, towards the sound.

Chapter 5

It had been only a muttered rumble at first, somewhere beyond the walls, but soon Cerce had come to recognize the sharply sang words of prayer. The strangely accented voice of Leece coming from somewhere in the darkness, raised above the clamour of the monks as they searched for her, moved through the tunnels, and above cries that Cerce was only now recognizing as those of children. The closer she came, she more she could identify the shrill voices. They carried through the darkness, reaching her and pulling her forward. A robed figure almost ran into her as Cerce turned the next corner and, flipping him fully with her own weight onto his back, Cerce stepped over him into a suddenly open space. The oppressive walls seemed to give way, and she found herself looking out onto a wide black empty space.

There were glowing red spots in the dim light now, monks carrying lit bundles. Cerce couldn't make out what they were, but they swayed back and forth among a small throng of robed figures, white smoke pouring from them, acrid stench filling the room. Here and there she saw smaller figures, some held by the shoulders, some gripped fully in the arms of the monks. The sounds of children's tears burbled under the chanting.

In the center of the room opened the great yawning pit, travelling down, down into the darkness below, and Cerce realized she come fully up the spiral to the source of the sermon. Across the pit, among the figures that swayed rapturous in his hold, stood Leece. At his feet, knelt bound before the pit, Adam murmured senselessly into a ragged gag. In the Nadyr monks arms, cradled across his body like some strange infant, was Cerce's halberd. His features were hard to make out in the dim light, but it was clear there was no strain in his face, no gritted teeth, no hunched shoulders. Leece was holding the halberd as if it truly were no more than the steel it appeared to be.

Seeing the polearm in the hands of Leece, wielded as light in his hands as any city guardsman resting on his laurels, flooded Cerce with a rush of confused jealousy. His hands slid down the shaft, fingers coiling around Cerce's weapon delicately. The thing may be a curse, but it was her constant companion, it was her burden and hers alone. To see another holding it like only she should have been able to gave her an awful sinking feeling of abandonment. Cerce was reminded suddenly and intensely of one miserable day, years back, carrying an armful of ingots, sporting an aching cheek from where she'd been slapped for talking back. She'd passed by the bakery and saw her friends, her best friends, laughing in there, without her. 

Cerce's jaw tightened, her throat suddenly hot with the choke of tears and her lips peeled back. She wouldn't be abandoned again. 

She barely felt the impact of the monks throat on her fist, or the next as she slammed him into the ground, skull hitting the stone with a slap, as she strode towards Leece. He may have been able to lift the halberd, to hold it and handle it like any other weapon, but he wasn't trained with the use of it. Cerce recognized his clear unfamiliarity with the weapon immediately in the way he gripped it in unbalanced hands. 

Leece's face was lit with madness and excitement when he looked upon Cerce, his voice rising to a crescendo. Cerce couldn't hear his words, they were senseless to her ears. She stared at him a moment longer, halberd raised, swaying in front of the great yawning pit in the center of the room. The convocation crowded closer, bright spots in the dark 

Cerce leapt, clearing the hole in the floor with ease. As the pit yawned beneath her, a single moment of numbing chill like nothing she'd ever felt touched Cerce's flesh, and then was gone. She slammed into Adam, knocking him back from the lip. As she rose to her feet, Leece was in her face immediately, the halberd shaft thrust against her chest. 

Leece's words were in her ear as she struggled against him, the words sickly and promising, but senseless, in no tongue Cerce had ever heard. She thrust out a leg and followed it with a hip, knocking the monk back a step, and yelled for Adam's attention. This close, she could see the thief's eyes were watery red, rolling and focusing on nothing, he let out a moan of senseless despair. 

Cerce heard the heavy clang of the halberd hitting the stone at her feet and Leece leapt at her. With surprising strength Leece struggled against her, fingers finding grasp on her clothes, tugging at her hair. Pulled close, his endless hissing in her face, Cerce held him hard and tensed. Other hands gripped at her, grasping her legs, pulling down, falling about her like dead weight to the cold stone. 

Heat brushed Cerce in the face then, a flare of fiery glow, and she was caught full on in the face by one of the burning bundles emissions. The thick white smoke stuck in her nostrils, sweet in the back of her throat. She fought to stay present, to stay conscious of where she was, but she felt her mind wandering away. 

The chase. The pounding of feet on warm dirt streets. Laughing.

Cerce gave a roar of denial, her hands scratching the cold stone.

She leapt, grabbing her target. They rolled in the dirt. Laughing.

Cerce's ankles locked behind Leece's waist, and she dragged him down. In his arms, close, the monk struggled, Cerce could smell his flesh, the sweat of perspiration. The back of his neck twisting before her.

The throb came to her then, the awful familiar tension, the muscular twitch at the back of her jaw. Leece's eyes closed, and he leant into her arms, almost in submission. Cerce's jaw made a cracking sound that she felt rather than heard. 

It was automatic, instinctual, happening so fast Cerce didn't realize what had happened. 

Cerce became aware of a quieting in the monks, a swelling susurrus that spread away from her as the robed bodies cleared back. Her nostrils were full of the burning scent, and her mouth was filled with the metallic taste of blood. Cerce spat, and with it came the mangled chunk of Leece's vertebrae that had crunched between her teeth. She let his corpse slip to the floor.

Cerce stood, a circle forming around her by the monks. At her side, one of the burning bundles flared, and Cerce reached for it. The bundle was crunchy to the touch, hard like bark, and Cerce tossed it down into the pit. The glow faded into the darkness without a sound.

In silence, one by one the other monks who bore the burning burdens began following, throwing their smoking bundles into the great pit. 

Cerce was on her knees, untying Adam's gag when she realized the first of the monks had tossed themselves into the pit too. She heard only the slip and momentary flap of robes, no scream, and the figure was gone. 

She clutched Adam to her, his coughing face spluttering for breath, as she watched more of the monks fall. Cerce's heart leapt in horror, until she realized the monks were not dragging their captives with them. The children were standing alone, some in tears, some staring in silence as the monks dropped into the pit. One by one they went. 

Soon only one remained. The last of the figures stood over Cerce, her face wet with fresh tears. She stooped, muttering words of thanks over and over, and touched her fingertips into the puddle of blood that leaked from the shattered neck of Brother Leece. She anointed her brow with crimson, and smiled. With another rushed prayer of thanks, she too was gone into the pit, and Cerce was left with nothing but Adam's heaving breaths and the quiet fussing of the children. 

She leaned forward, thinking to catch a glimpse of something, deep down in the pit. For all that had entered, there was nothing. It extended only down into blackness, forever. 

-

Adam was aware of the cool mountain air on his face, and licked his cold lips. He couldn't remember how he'd got there, outside again. His thoughts were a muddle of confusion, of sudden terror and darkness. He jerked forward, and found himself supported by his friend. Cerce held him up, an arm around his shoulder as he shuffled through the opening in the massive monastery door. The light was blinding. 

"What... what did I do?" he said, his tongue feeling heavy, words coming out slurred. Cerce shushed him. There was a smile on her lips, and Adam noticed soon after, a great deal of blood. There was movement around him, and he looked down to see the top of the heads of children. Cerce was shooing them out the door, and they went, two by two, hands clutching small garments around them, shivering against the cold outside. They stared as they left the darkness of the monastery, looking up into the white skies above. Adam put one foot in front of the other, his head lolling against Cerce's shoulder. 

Sniffling, shuffling, and one child skipping, the little procession travelled through the courtyard, and into the forest beyond.

Epilogue

Adam watched Cerce as she slung her heavy cloak over her head and folded the hood into place around her hair. She was standing in the street, her gaze unfocused, lost in thought as she fussed with the clasp. 

Adam exhaled a breath that seemed to be bringing with it less of a cloud, and looked out down the mountain path that would eventually take them home. Both of them were warm from the meal they'd been served in the tavern, from the brandy one of the children's mothers had brought, from the aromatic rolled cigarettes another's father had handed them. On her back was a satchel of supplies, rolled packages of pastries, breads. A few coins clinked in Adam's pockets, gifts from the people, a tiny amount to add to the paltry sum Willam had produced from the town coffers. They had been offered beds to stay in as long as they liked, but Adam had pressed them to move on after a single exhausted night. The town needed to heal, and besides that, sleep had come rough to the both of them, and they had swiftly agreed that putting some distance between themselves and the monastery would be the best cure for it.

There were spots of water on the ground, icicles growing long and translucent, dripping down from the awnings of buildings and the trees. Looking up to the pale skies, Adam thought that if you were generous, you could even say the sun might shine sometime soon. 

There was a great sigh of contentment from behind him, and Adam turned around to see Willam Black beaming at him as he walked to stand with Adam on the little wooden porch. 

"Not what you expect, is she?" Willam said, shaking his head. He folded his hands across his chest and continued looking out at Cerce. Adam watched the man from the corner of his eye.

"What were you expecting?" Adam asked. Willam gave a noncommittal huff. 

"Oh, I don't know. Not quite so friendly, maybe. Not quite so... pleasant? Agreeable? You know. You imagine something fearsome, when you hear talk of Nadyr."

"And when do you hear talk of them eh? Not many people even ever seen one," Adam said. Willam's smile faltered, before he gave a chuff of a laugh and looked away.

"It's rare, actually, to meet one. Could consider yourself lucky, even. If I were you I'd considered myself damn lucky," Adam continued. He turned as he talked, his hand resting on the curved basket of his rapier. 

"Quite..." Willam said, quietly. Adam nodded his head towards Cerce who was nodding and accepting a bundle of something in the street from a sobbing mother. 

"To be able to just call upon her, the Nadyr hero, from all the way up here, ask for her by name even, you must have had your heart set. Didn't even send out any other missives I'll bet, no other help needed. You knew just who you wanted." Adam smiled, a glint in his eye. Willam stared back at him. 

Slowly, the big man shook his head once. In spite of the chill, there was a bead of sweat on his forehead that wobbled slowly down his brow. 

"I did what I had to do, Serra. There was no...The children," he began, his voice breaking. Adam turned fully to him.

"I know. We do what we gotta do," Adam said. He slung the satchel up higher on his back, and then reached to place a hand on Willam's shoulder. A light grip at first.

"Look at her, you look at her and think about how lucky you are, yeah?" Adam whispered, his grip on the fat of Willam's shoulder tightening, "And you think how bloody lucky you are that I don't spit you like a pig for serving her up like that."

Willam gave a single nod, his jowls wobbling, red rimming the white of his blinking eyes, "I didn't have any other choice." 

Adam nodded, his hand lifted from the man's shoulder.

"We all do what we got to do, Black. Cerce would say there's nothing else for it."

The man stared after him as Adam left the porch to walk towards Cerce. As the Nadyr turned, she gave the thief a smile. It was a half smile, framed in a bruise and draped in fatigue and something else that Willam Black couldn't pinpoint. He continued to watch as the Stormbringer and the thief left, boots crunching on the wet street, people of his town calling after them, shouting their names. 

Willam watched them, and then he spat into the street before him, and turned away.

-

As always, it was a long road home. Adam felt the warmth on his face, blissfully returning as they descended the mountain. Every step away from the monastery seemed to be easing the lingering chill that gripped his guts. 

He glanced back over his shoulder to look for Cerce, who trod a dozen steps behind. Her tread quieter than usual, the heavy head of her halberd swinging in her grip. 

"What's got you so quiet, Slither?" Adam asked. 

Cerce looked up, her azure eyes taking in the grey light and reflecting clouds. 

"There was a statue...way down, back in the monastery..." She opened her mouth to say something more, then seemed to reconsider, chewing on her lip. 

Adam turned back, in time to avoid dunking his already soaked boots in another puddle, and soon enough heard the heavy footsteps of the Stormbringer striding up to keep pace. 

"Where do you come from?" she asked. She was looking ahead, down the mountain, and Adam did the same.

"Me? All over the place really. I say the Foul Mouth but, I was around before that. No idea where we were when I was born. I remember this hallway. Little and dark and stone, with a step, and window at the end, cat sleeping on the edge right by it. Don't know where it was now, no one left to ask."

Cerce was silent, staring ahead. Adam could see the hesitation on her face out the corner of his eye.

"You did what you had to do, mate."

"I know..."

"Nothing else for it," they said, almost in unison. Cerce gave a bark of laughter, and gave a slap at Adam's coat. After a moment she cleared her throat and spoke.

"I don't know where I'm from... honestly. I can say Belerion, earliest thing I remember, but it's not where I'm from. Varten sure as shit was my old man, taught me everything I know, but he was human. Who am I?" Cerce shrugged, her free hand reaching out, trying to make a gesture, something to help her articulate what she was trying to say.

"I don't know where I came from. I never got told. I never pushed it. I don't know anyone else like me. I get confused about the simplest things. The only other one like me I've seen, ever...I-"

"No one cares where you're from, Cerce. Not a single bloody soul," Adam said, "And nothing some creepy bastard in a cold church on a mountain could have told you is going to make a difference about that. But what people do think, is 'Fuck me, there goes Cerce Stormbringer. She's amazing. I heard she single handedly ended the battle of Belerion field with the lightening that blasts from her halberd. And that she felled the last Earthkin that rose from the ground in Baldhun Vale. Astride a raging Kelpie. Naked.'" 

Cerce gave a snort and smiled.

"I've heard that one too! I've never even been to Baldhun!" 

"What I'm saying is I don't care where you're from either, Cerce. I know who you are now."

Cerce gave a shy smile, her fangs showing.

"Thankyou."

They strode together through the forest, light dappling the floor through the trees above. 

"Helps the bards to have some mysterious gaps to fill at least. No-one needs to know everything. Bloody Carnaby was born on a pig farm." 

Cerce laughed, reaching into the bundle in her pack and taking a bite of soft grey cheese wrapped in nettles. Adam watched as a bird landed on a nearby tree, flicking moisture from its wings.

High above, in the town of Ancreed, the people told tales. 

Monday, March 7, 2022

Somewhere in Between

Groves gave another great grunt, his arms straining, cheeks puffed out, as once more he desperately tried to lift the wheel. The massive thing seemed made of steel, and budged no more off the ground the first five times the old merchant had tried to lift it.

With a great cough and a tumble of skinny limbs, Groves let go and slumped to the ground. The cart gave a worrying tilt and he scrambled to try and jam the plank back under it. The last thing he needed was all his silks spilling out onto the dirt road.

Satisfied that gravity was kept at bay for the time being, Groves stared miserably down the road. Dusty, sun baked and thick with rocks, it was more than two days home, and still hours from the gates of Truronia. Groves had to hit the one stone among a thousand that would throw his wheel off. He'd never make the market now. 

Murrey gave a low honk, and Groves waved a hand at the scruffy donkey. 

"Aw shut it. Some help you are," he grumbled. Murrey gave a further splutter and turned to graze at the meager brown grass that grew sparingly all down the road. 

He'd expected the road to be well traveled, and when he'd first thrown the wheel and been tossed, quite by surprise, onto the dirt, he'd thought someone would be by in no time. But the hours had lingered on, and the sun had grown heavier, and not a soul walked the dusty road from the north country. 

-

Groves was staring up at the sun, his vision blurry, and his tongue dry. He'd brought enough water for the trip, but not for this. He would have had something left to eat if he'd not made sport of throwing the wife's awful scones at birds along the trip.

He took a swig of the last waterskin he had left, and shook it. It was getting troublingly low. 

"What do you think, Murrey?" he asked the donkey, looking over to where the beast sat panting in the sun, "Shall we make a walk of it?" 

He could barely stand, his body was so weak. His arms and legs ached from the strain of lifting. His arse ached from the tumbled from his seat. His nose was scorched red from the sun. Groves finally admitted to himself it was lose all the silks and stagger home a begger, or maybe not get home at all. 

"What would the wife say? Eh Murrey? If the sun doesn't kill us, she bloody will I tell you that for nothing," he gave a snort. When he spoke again, it was in a mockery of his wife's piping accent.

"Lost all his wares on the road he did, on that old cart acting a todger as usual. Got nothing left, had to eat the donkey for dinner."  

He smiled at the donkey, and the beasts dark eyes stared back. Groves gave a long sigh.

"You never had any sense of humour."

He looked up the road again, the evening light tricking him into wondering if he could see the shadow of great Truronia's walls on the horizon, but there was nothing. No guards, no soldiers, nothing.

He gave a cursory glance back the way he had come, and his head turned back suddenly when something caught his eye.

He thought it must be a mirage at first, some trick brought on by the sun. 

There was a figure coming down the road. Slow and steady.

The figure was strange, hard to make out at first, seeming to be nonsensical. The blurriness from the sun was making clear assessment difficult. It looked like they were wearing some sort of hat.

Groves watched, mesmerized, as the figure strode closer, slow and steady. 

Tall, and slender to the look of it, not bulky with clothing as far as Groves could tell, but blue all over. Gods, that blue. He'd silks from Zenance he'd sold for a small fortune not as blue as that. He'd have to see where the figure came by it. Some sort of hat was definitely going on there, a tall arrangement extending beyond the figure's head. Almost like horns. 

The figure was clearly female, Groves noticed. He'd made half a century out of watching for women in the marketplace, the way they walk, the shape of their hips. All these thing he'd notice. The curve of the body, the clear shape at chest, hips, it was a woman all right. Something on her thigh was reflecting the dying light, sparkling.

Soon enough, Groves mouth dropped open. The figure was coming closer, slow and steady. It wasn't a hat. They were horns, huge upright horns that pointed towards the great open sky. They extended up from a dark veil, concealing the figure's face. The blue material of the rest of the figure was smooth, not even material like. 

Groves gave a cough and a stunned mutter when he realized the figure was naked. Her skin the most vibrant icy blue he'd ever seen. He found himself staggering to his feet. Staring, he still couldn't believe what he was seeing.

She was a beauty. A figure molded as if from marble. Strong and elegant she strode, one shapely foot in front of the other. Her toes were a softer shade of purple, and they pointed delicately as she walked. Slow and steady. Glinting silver, clasped around her upper left thigh, a coil of metal. Almost like a garter. 

Groves was overcome with a strange dissonance of emotions. To stare at the figure, to take in those legs, the curve of the hips. A modest bosom that he'd have found worth a glance even clothed, swayed bare in the sun as she walked. It made him feel like a giddy child. 

At the same time, he felt a rush of adrenaline, apprehension, fear. What manner of woman walked nude, across miles of country, bearing a head of horns and skin blue as the western seas. 

Was this death? Was this how she comes for you? Groves found himself entertaining the idea, and momentarily glanced back, half expecting to see his own dead body laying there in the dirt. 

No figure lay at his feet, and Groves turned back to find the woman now only minutes away. Within shouting distance, even. There he stood, somewhere in between home and Truronia, somewhere in between standing and fleeing for his life.

The figure came to a stop, a few feet before him, and Groves stood staring, mouth agape. His brain ceased to function for a moment as he took her in. Her face was mostly concealed by a simple black veil that hung about her head, concealing any hair, with holes to allow the horns to sprout through. Only the lower part of her face was visible. A strong, aquiline jaw, with thin purple lips. A face that betrayed no emotion. 

Her eyes were not visible, and he immediately felt shame as hie glanced down at her icy blue body, at her breasts, the dark purple nipples. Her figure was strong, like he figured a warrior must look. The muscles of a worked abdomen reminded him of a youthful body deserted him some thirty years back. He looked between her legs for a moment, a mound of snow white curls inviting him to stare, and found himself looking up directly at where he eyes must be, trying to play it off, thankful that his sunburn concealed his blush. The purple lips did not move to show any displeasure at his apparent appraisal of her bare body.

"Good evening to you, ah, ma'am. Miss." he said, stuttering. His powerful, practiced merchants bark had escaped him, and he sounded like a meek child, "Are you...are you alright, miss?"

The woman looked at him for a moment, as far as Groves could tell, and her hands came to meet in front of her hips. Strong arms, the blue colour darkening purple as it reached her fingers.

"It's a beautiful evening, thankyou. It seems you're having trouble, good sir. Might I be of assistance?" 

Her voice was unexpected and Groves was taken aback. A firm and loud voice, used to speaking, but delicately pronounced, as if speaking to reassure, to calm. Her accent was lyrical, like folk from the old country, and Groves was filled with a wave of nostalgia. 

"Your wheel is broken, might I help?" she continued, and Groves realized he hadn't responded. He raised a hand to scratch his head and turned to the cart, tearing his eyes from her beauty with some difficulty. 

"Oh, yes! Yes, the wheel. Came off on a rock. Heading to Truronia, for...for market." 

"Market day is beautiful, so much to be thankful for, all around."

"Not much to be thankful for here though I tell you that for... been in the sun a long time."

"Nonsense," the woman said, and immediately stepped forward, Groves was taken aback at her approach, and suddenly became aware of the woman's obvious strength. She stopped just before him, her head a few inches above his own, but her horns towering higher, and her lips spread in a warm smile.

"We must be thankful for the trials, and the hardships, and the suffering, good sir. Every day." 

Without a further word, the naked figure dropped to a crouch before the cart. Her strong arms reached out for the wheel, and ran a finger down it, as if appraising the construction. 

"Each day we suffer is a blessing. Each ache, each strike, each burn of the sun on our flesh is a reminder of our physical form. That we can endure, we can feel. We can do so much."

Groves opened his mouth to speak, but nothing came out. He leant to attempt to help, but the woman raised a single hand to him, stopping his movement. 

"Please, allow me to take this burden from you. If it please you."

Looking down at her, Groves gave a shrug.

"I may not be a big lad but I couldn't move it an inch, If you think you might have better luck, you're welcome to give it a try." 

The lips smiled again, and the veil dipped in a nod. 

"Thankyou." she said quietly. 

Groves watched as she moved to grab hold of the wheel, her naked body tensing. He watched as her powerful muscles bunched, her legs braced against the road, arms tightening as she took hold of the wheel. The clasp around her thigh, he saw now, was a delicate arrangement of crossing metal. Clasped so tight was it about her thigh, that as she moved, he knew it must be digging into her flesh. 

"May it please you," she said quietly, then gave a hiss of exertion. Her hips twisted, and with a cry, she lifted the wheel clean from the ground. For a moment, the weight of the great thing was fully supported by her, shoulders tensed, body shaking, teeth clenched hard. With a thrust of her whole figure, she brought the wheel forward, slotting onto the axle with a resonant clunk. 

With one last thump of her clenched fist against the wheel, she slumped to the ground. Groves watched, mouth trembling fighting for words. The woman sat down, seating herself, chest heaving with slow, deep breaths. 

She sat there like that for a moment, her head down on a raised knee. Under her breath, Groves heard her quiet prayer.

"For every pain, for every ache, for every drop of blood I am eternally, exquisitely thankful."

Slowly, she rose. 

"That was... incredible," Groves stuttered, "How did you do it?"

The figure gave the slightest of bows to him.

"No praise is necessary, good sir. You were kind enough to gift to me your pain and hardships. I am deeply grateful."

She extended a hand to him, and for a moment, Groves didn't know what to do. Slowly, he extended his own, allowing her to take it. When her fingertips touched his, they were cold. 

Delicately she bowed, leaning forward, to bring her lips to his palm. Her kiss was soft, and as chill as her touch. 

After she released his hand, he took it back, cradling it to his chest. The sensation of her kiss remained. 

"Who...who are you, please?" he asked. Returning to her pose, hands clasped in front of her hips, she nodded briefly.

"I am Sister Thekkla, if it please you. Of the sisterhood of the martyred one, in the service of our patron The Sundered Lord."

"Well... thanks to him he sent you my way. I could have died out here if you hadn't passed by."

He gestured to her, at her naked figure, and felt ashamed for doing so immediately, but couldn't conceal his interest.

"Why are you...well, you're naked, miss. I thought you were a vision when first I saw you stroll up." 

The head inclined again.

"Penance, good sir. For my transgressions must be punished, so that I may become wiser, stronger, and closer to Him."

"Penance? You're being punished? They just stick you in the stocks where I'm from, not send you out bare naked into the sun."

A ghost of a playful smile touched the purple lips.

"I disagreed with my most exalted mother superior regarding the construction of an awning. She deemed it sufficient to weather winter storms, I made claim otherwise," she hesitated briefly, before continuing, "Twice. The second time including a... choice of language ill fitting someone of my devotion."

"Ah... yeah I've been chewed out for telling my boss to go fuck himself too."

Thekkla laughed, a musical tinkling that was pleasant on the ears.

"Thusly, must I walk at precise pace to Truronia, to the church of the Lost Martyr, to receive a mark upon my back from the disciplinarian. At the exact correct pace, I should have been back before dawn."

"Through Truronia? Like that? You're not afraid you'll be... you know." he gestured down the street, at the specter of the great and luminous capital city.  

"I fear nothing, good sir. And there is no hardship that can be visited by man that my body would be unprepared to endure."

Groves exhaled, glancing again across her body. The curves of it, the cords of muscle, the beauty and strength of it. It was mesmerizing. If he could sell artwork of that body he'd pack in the silk trade altogether and be a rich man. 

Thekkla gave a bow then, a deep and gracious curtsy, her arms spreading out, before bringing her hands back to clasp over her heart.

"Be well upon your journey sir, enjoy the markets. And take pleasure in the hardships visited upon you. Should you ever again face hardship you cannot overcome, bring them to me at the monastery above Marazion Village. I will welcome you."

He stared, awestruck, wanting then deeply to find some hardship. 

"That I will, be sure of that."

Thekkla turned, and began walking back the way she had come, into the evening light. Slow and steady. 

"Truronia's that way though!" Groves blurted out, pointing down the street. 

Without turning, Thekkla stopped, and spoke.

"The pace to complete my penance is quite precise. Mother superior will know I have dawdled. I must return now, and begin anew. Be well, good sir."

With that, Thekkla strode down the dirt road, her bare feet stepping over sharp rocks. 

Groves watched after her for some time, until her naked flesh was just a pale ghost in the moonlight far in the distance. 

Sunday, July 18, 2021

She's a Rainbow

Koshka sighed, it had been a while since she'd thought of him. 

Really thought of him, anyway. Everyday, somewhere at the back of her mind she guessed she must think of him. But calling to mind his face, his voice. It was pleasant to be lost in memory.

"Go on girl, continue, please," encouraged Treave across the room. His little face peered out from around the canvas, his nose preceding the rest of him by some way, before he added, "but keep your chin up, no moving now!"

Koshka gave a cough and reclaimed her proper pose, her face tilted away to expose her neck and shoulders, staring up towards the corner of the tiny studio. Her arm was draped across her reclining body languidly, one knee coyly raised. 

"Well... I don't know what to say about him really. I suppose he was kind. Charming even," the ghost of a smile lit her lips, her fangs showing at the corners of her mouth, "Plenty of them are, of course. But him... he was different. You believe in love at first sight?"

Treave gave a theatrical sigh from behind his easel, and without leaning to look at Koshka to respond, "My dear I am an artist. A thousand times a day I fall in love with a sight." 

"Well then... you understand."

"Well go on then, tell the rest of the story," he said. Behind the easel Koshka could only see the feet of the diminutive artist balanced on his stool, and she heard the rattle of one brush being placed in the water pot and another retrieved.

"I spend a lot of time thinking... where was he from? Because he told me, I know he did. He lay there with me afterwards and he told me all sorts of things. What he'd seen on his travels, how beautiful Waterdeep was from the sea. That there was so much else to see out there. And he told me where he was from but... I just can't for the life of me remember."

"What do you remember?" came the calm and inquisitive voice of the gnome, and Koshka giggled.

"I remember his hair. It was black, and curly, I curled it around my fingers as he lay there. And his eyes, they were brown. Deep and dark and he looked right into you when he talked to you. I remember the exact size and shape of his... well, you get the idea. I remember so much, but not where he came from."

"And what happened?" 

Koshka chewed on her lip before she continued the story. It was so quiet in the room, the scratching of the brush on canvas. Dimly from outside the rom, the heartbeat bustle of Waterdeep noon could be heard.

"Well, I was laying there, on my bed, watching him dress. That nice sailors shirt, strapping on his belt, shiny silver bosuns whistle dangling from it. He came and pulled the covers back and looked at me, and said that I should come with him. Leave for adventure, on his boat."

Koshka studied the knots and whorls in the old wood boards in the ceiling, the tip of her tail fought the urge to twitch.

"So many say that, of course. 'Come with me! I'll leave the wife!' or 'Run away with me, I'll take you away from all this!'" Koshka smiled ruefully, and her white eyebrows tilted ever so slightly apart, "so I just laughed and said next time. He was still smiling at me when he left, and said he wished I'd change my mind. And I just lay there and thought for a while."

Koshka heard the cry of a merchant somewhere outside, the clack of boots in the streets. The creak of a cart going down the lane. 

"I dressed so fast I forgot to button my shirt properly. I remember running, through the alley down towards the dock. Knocked over old blind Albert who sells the shells at the corner by the fish market, I was running so fast."

Koshka listened to the slow brush strokes from behind the canvas for a moment, then:

"When I finally got to the right berth, it was empty. I watched it then, parting waves not too far out the harbour. Big ship it was, all deep dark wood, blazing white sails, a lion on them. The name he told me, The Bride of Brythony, on the back all in pretty gold letters. Up on the front, the figurehead was an Angel, wings and everything."

Koshka tail gave a flick, her attention returning slowly to the room around her. The smell of paint, her own heartbeat.

"I watched that ship until it was a dot on the horizon, and then until it was nothing. I never found out where it went, and it never came back to Waterdeep again. I... suppose I think about what might have happened if I'd been on it, quite a lot."

There was quiet in the room, and Koshka flicked her eyes aside to see Treave smiling at her. 

"Thankyou, dear girl. I always find it calms my models to chat, take their mind somewhere else."

As the gnome approached, Koshka raised one shapely eyebrow.

"Done so soon?" 

Treave gave a shrug.

"Not just yet, but in a foolish mistake I should have foreseen, I did run out of red paint. You're vibrant, you know."

"I've been told. Naturally catches the eye," Koshka said, rising from the low chaise lounge and its many pillows, and stretching. Treave looked up at the Tiefling and removed his tiny spectacles to clean them on his smock. 

"I do understand though, my girl," he said as Koshka bent over to begin retrieving her clothes, "Sometimes you only get one chance to capture something. I try my hardest to." 

He gestured his little arms around him. Although Treave was by far best known for his many portraits of the women of the realms relieved of the burden of any clothing, in between were curious sights captured in his colours. The light on wet cobblestones, gleaming fruit on market stalls, flapping sails at dawn. 

"There's many beautiful things in the city, Koshka," Treave said as he replaced his newly cleaned glasses, "It's a blessing when one of them lingers for more than just a moment."

Koshka smiled playfully down at the tiny figure, and placed her hands on her hips.

"You can't flatter yourself out of the models wages, by the way, little man." she said.

"Wouldn't dream of it, my dear."

Saturday, April 24, 2021

Give the People what they Want

The Yawning Portal was silent for a moment. 

Koshka's eyes darted, her breath caught in her throat, and for that moment it seemed she'd frozen.

Her clothes were a step and a half to her right, her instrument and the garter belt with her knife on it were two steps further, sitting on the bar. Koshka exhaled and realized there was going to have to be nothing else for it.

Barefoot and wearing nothing but her silken underthings, she shot from the chair and darted to her left, towards where she knew one of several exits from the Yawning Portal opened out onto the street. 

Tormyr gave a roar of frustration and, gesturing quickly to his men to take other exits, launched himself after her. Durnan didn't move, but made no mention to Tormyr's men that one of them was sprinting towards a locked and bolted door. 

Hearing the clatter and curse in the hall behind her as Tormyr found the mop bucket with his foot, Koshka slammed both palms into the heavy wooden door and fell out into the wet streets of pre-dawn Waterdeep. The sky was nothing but boiling black rainclouds, and rain spit down upon the cobbled streets as she leapt to her feet and darted towards the nearest alley. 

She was only a few steps away when she heard the door crash open once more, and the sound of heavy footfalls slamming the street in pursuit. 

Always faster than you expect, Dwarves. 

"I'm not gonna hurt you!" Tormyr yelled, and Koshka dared a glance over her shoulder to see eyes blazing with anger and an axe gripped tightly in a hand pumping as the Dwarf ran that she found didn't make the promise entirely encouraging.

Her head snapped back in time to see a fishmonger blearily rolling a wheelbarrow out a door for morning sales, hand half raised towards a yawning mouth, who suddenly jerked to a stop at the sight of a swiftly approaching amount of naked red flesh.

Giving a yelp of shock and stumbling back over his own doorstep, the man watched as Koshka vaulted the wheelbarrow and hit the street lightly, bare feet patting the stone. He was still staring after her when the Dwarf smashed full force into the wheelbarrow, sending it and a day's worth of herring flying across the alleyway with an almighty crash as the Dwarf barely slowed his pursuit.

Koshka turned a hard corner into the street, leaping across an empty market stall, folded up for the night, and picking up speed as she crossed into the tiny cobbled side streets towards the western dock ward. From the far side of the street she heard another commotion, and one of Tormyr's black clad men burst from the other side of the street, shoving a street urchin to the floor in his stride. Glancing quickly about himself, he caught sight of the Tiefling, and surged forward with a speed that startled Koshka. 

There was a brief yell of exchanged information from her pursuers, but Koshka didn't catch the gist of it as she darted down the side street and under the swinging night streetlamps. Had it been earlier in the morning, she might have found better luck with shadowy streets, a darkened corner to hide in, but candles were beginning to burn in the windows of the Waterdeep working class homes, chimneys beginnings to belch smoke, and the bustle of the long work day ahead was already rousing to life. 

Counting the small and crowded buildings as she passed, she hit the one she was looking for, and took a sharp right into the tiny alley between two houses. The normally high wall behind them was cracked and broken down here, and Koshka knew a old discarded chicken coop that would take her weight nicely. As she had a half dozen times before when fleeing a city watchmen, a debt collector or an over-zealous paramour, Koshka leapt to plant both feet on the rotten old wooden coop, and launched herself up to snatch a handhold atop the high wall. 

Tormyr came around the corner as she gained the top of the wall, and Koshka sent a darting glance back at him before she slipped from it. Tormyr roared in frustration once more, jabbing a finger indicating for his man to follow as he doubled back for another path.

Koshka hadn't looked what was on the other side, and as it turns out, the neighboring house had been slacking with the yard upkeep. She fell hard into the rosebush with a yelp of pain, and extracted herself with all the speed and decorum possible. Covered in tiny scratches and with her white hair filled with broken twigs and rose petals, Koshka sent a quiet whisper of thanks to the Gods she could name that somehow the thorns hadn't snagged on a garment and torn the underwear from her body entirely.

Stumbling across the small yard towards the street beyond, Koshka let out a shriek of pain as her bare foot came down hard on the edge of a broken brick, and followed up the shriek with an aggressive taking back of her prayer at the sky above. 

With a creak, Tormyr's man gained the top of the broken wall, and with the far more efficient balanced landing of a clothed body and well shod foot, jumped the rose bush and crossed the garden in a neat roll to follow the limping Tiefling in another alley. 

The wet streets were seeming less like her usual escape route and more like a wetly gleaming tomb as Koshka tried to gain speed again, the shadow of the leather clad man swiftly approaching and the crash of Tormyr coming around the far end of the alley. The scarlet trail left by her cut foot was bright in the yellow light from a nearby lantern, slowly washed away by the rain as she ran, and Koshka snarled another curse into the streets. 

Born in them, she should have expected she'd bloody die in them.

Looking above her, Koshka saw row upon row of hanging fabrics, the dingy overhang of this pathetic corner of the Dock Ward's market. Koshka had stolen misshaped fruit and dodgy meat from this corner of Waterdeep since she was a child. As she made the move to the dead end street she knew was coming, she had a grin on her face. She'd had her first kiss under one of the little stalls here, one dreary winter afternoon, an awkward snog with the baker's son in exchange for a hot cross bun, until they'd been caught by the boys dad and he'd chased her down the street. Damn good bun that had been, worth it. 

"Stop her!" Koshka heard Tormyr bellow, and Koshka heard the lurch of the spell before she even registered the strange words intoned by the leather clad man. 

The spear of fire soared overheard, lancing through the wet night and spreading fire with it to the overhanging drapery. The flaming materials dropped to the street before her, a wall of fire that seemed for a moment to obscure everything else. 

Koshka heard the thudding footsteps coming behind her, the impending crash of a body on her back, and without any further thought, she leapt through the raging fire into the alley beyond.

Tormyr swore and with a great swing of his arm, jabbed his armored elbow into the groin of his man. 

"Bloody Tieflings!" he snarled, leaving his man to groan in pain on his knees, "Do something helpful, you fool." 

Tormyr tightened his grip on his axe, and made to follow Koshka through the blaze. 

Taking his hands from his bruised balls, the leather clad man took up the sending stone from his pocket, and placed it to his mouth.

-

Koshka had decided it was time for her to reexamine her relationship with the Gods. 

Just as she leapt through the flames, her Tiefling skin feeling barely a summer's day scorch, she'd given her blissful thanks for her underwear once again somehow surviving catching alight, and had sped into the familiar alley, expecting to see the wide crack in the lower wall, that ancient old flaw that led a lithe street urchin to safety on the other side more than once, and found that after all these years, after all this time, someone had finally taken the effort to fix the crack.

Koshka was standing, arms hanging limp at her side, in the dark and dead-end alley as Tormyr stepped towards her. His face ruddy and red from the heat, his beard scorched and curling at the edges, his face lit with rage and fury. 

"Ready to stand the fuck still now are you?" he snapped, taking a step forward to stand firm. 

Koshka, wet from the rain, her silken underwear sticking to her red flesh, blood seeping from her foot, stood silently, watching the Dwarf. Trapped into the alley by the burning remnants of the market drapes, they stared at each other.

"I got to bring you to him, girl, you know I do," Tormyr said finally. The rage in his face had boiled out, and slowly his breath returned to normal.

"You don't have to, I could...slip away, right? I could've... almost did."

"Gave us the bloody run around, for sure. But I get everyone eventually," Tormyr smiled, taking one more step forward. His eyes looked up, left, then right. No escape.

"I suppose you bastards'll keep coming anyway, right?" Koshka asked, and Tormyr shrugged.

"If you weren't at the Portal, was gonna go to your place next. Yeah, I know where it is. If not there, your little boyfriend Errol, at his shop..." He let the threat hang in the air for a moment before continuing, "In the long run, it's better it ends here and now, isn't it? Life on the run isn't much fun, girl."

"Don't I know it," Koshka smiled giving him a knowing nod, "Spent my whole life running from one street to another."

Koshka took a step towards him, raising her hands together, as if to hold the Dwarf at bay. 

"Who am I, Tor?" she whispered.

The dwarf stared Koshka down, his heavy brow furrowed, grip still held steady on his axe.

"I don't even know who you are, Koshka," he said finally. Koshka, arms still raised in defense, nodded. 

"Exactly. I'm nobody. I'm a girl from the streets of Waterdeep. A half-breed, a tea-leaf, a guttersnipe. I sing in shitty bars for enough copper to eat, I fuck strangers in the trade ward for enough to pay debts. I'm nobody," Koshka said. 

She lowered her arms to her sides, slowly. Her hair was hanging heavy about her bare shoulders, twigs and leaves stuck among it's pale curls. 

"Lots of people are nobody, girl," Tormyr grunted. 

"And none of them, not one of them, could touch a man like Darrow. He's too rich, he's too strong. He's got the gold, he's got the magic, he's got the men who'll come for you and make people like me disappear. He knows that anyone who stands up to him has got to be somebody," Koshka spoke softly. Her voice was quiet, but without hesitation, without wavering, "Someone like me couldn't touch him."

"Unless he knows better," the Dwarf added. 

"And does he know better?" Koshka asked, one white eyebrow raised ever so slightly. 

The dwarf stared back at her for a long time, before finally giving the briefest shake of his head. 

"Because the only person, the only person who really knew, Darrow killed, right?" the Tiefling said, inclining her head. Tormyr looked down at his feet.

"He's got my cousin, girl," the Dwarf said, his voice low, "Standing right there, on his little desk. Trapped. Keeps him like a...like a trophy. All over a handful of gems he couldn't pay in time." 

Tormyr let the handle of his axe drop, to swing restlessly from the tips of his fingers. 

"Sometimes when I'm in there, in that room of his, I try to think how fast I'd have to be, to cut that scrawny throat of his, but no," Tormyr looked up, his brown eyes hard, "Guess I'm nobody too."

"Can't be nobody if you got friends though, yeah?" Koshka smiled, "Makes you somebody, at the least. You get your armour done in the Castle Ward right? Shop with the bad painting of the Wolf on the door?"

Tormyr frowned suspiciously, and the Tiefling gestured to his arm.

"Recognize the stitching, does it the same on everything. Old Wulf's shop. It's not actually authentic sword coast leather he uses, you know. He gets it in on the cheap off the boats from Calimshan."

Tormyr gave a curse, and muttered, "That bugger, I bloody knew it..."

Taking a step towards the Dwarf, Koshka extended a hand, her yellow eyes meeting his. 

"I may be a nobody, but this is my city. And If I ever get the chance, I'll help your cousin, and all those little toys on his desk, I promise."

Tormyr looked at the Tiefling's hand, red flesh bright in the firelight, and set his jaw in a hard line. He was opening his mouth to respond when all at once, as if it had been smothered in an instant, the fire around them went out. Without so much as a hiss to mark their passing, the flames simply flashed from existence and plunged the street into darkness. The sound of sharp heeled shoes clicking on cobblestones echoed down the alley, and Koshka's hand snapped back to her side. 

Striding swiftly towards them, his body hidden to the throat in a high collared royal blue coat bearing heavy silver buckles, was Darrow. 

He darted a look between the two, acknowledging the Tiefling's nudity with a brief frown of clear distaste. In the dim light, his tattoo leant his face a positively ghoulish appearance, as if the leering bony horror was truly staring out of the shadows waiting to pounce.

"One of your men summoned me, Tormyr, I trust he didn't waste my time," 

Tormyr looked to Koshka, her yellow eyes wide and staring silently into his, then back to Darrow.

"I'm sorry sir, we got into a scuffle in the street here. One of the boys let loose a scroll bit eager like. Lost our man in the confusion."

Darrow stared in silence, his face as if carved from some horrid stone. When Tormyr realized he wasn't going to say anything, the Dwarf continued. 

"Koshka here was helping us, she knows the streets well." 

Darrow slowly shifted his gaze to the Tiefling.

Koshka looked back at Darrow, his empty eyes staring back at her from dark circles, and gave a sigh.

"I'm sorry they dragged you all the way out here, Mr. Darrow, Sir. But I've no more information to give than I'm sure you've already heard. Tormyr knew I might know more about the Tiefling who supposedly intercepted the delivery, but it's not a girl I know. If we knew the colour of her flesh, maybe that would help narrow it down a little, there's not too many of us in Waterdeep. Still, no one I know would be so stupid as to rip you off, Sir."

Darrow stared Koshka down, his expression unchanging.

Tormy piped up, "Could be part of the thieves guild, they're all over the place."

"Skullport has seen ships from the Southern kingdoms, rumours of some shakeup from Icewind Dale." Koshka nodded.

Tormyr raised a finger as if he'd just thought of something.

"I heard the Xanathar has been stockpiling magic for war with the Zhentarim, imports could have been targeted."

"Xanathar, Zhentarim, even Thay has Wizards in the streets. I saw one at the Yawning Portal asking questions. Waterdeep is a nest of snakes, Sir. I know it better than anyone."

Darrow's mouth opened, as if to speak, and snapped shut again. One of his hands rose and, almost inadvertently, clutched at his throat, as if feeling something that might hang there under his clothing. 

"What kind of questions, child?" Darrow snapped, his voice curt. Koshka made an exasperated flourish.

"I didn't hear much, the usual I suppose, where is this, who's in charge, how do I find that. He gave old Durnan, that's the bartender over there, quite the working over. And they're never interested in anything I've got to sell, let me tell you."

Darrow's gaze was on the floor before him, his nose flared. Koshka decided to push.

"If you need eyes and ears on the street, I'm your girl. I'm everywhere. I play in all the bars, sleep in all the beds, sit at all the windows. If anyone breathes a word about something you want to know about, you won't find better in Waterdeep than me. No one pays attention," she smiled, her fangs showing at the corners of her lips, "I'm nobody."

Darrow gave a single, sharp nod, and with a tilt of his head to Tormyr, turned fully about.

"Don't waste my time again, Tormyr, tell your man I expect payment for the scroll," he said. Torymr gave Koshka a look somewhere between disbelief and respect, before Darrow turned with a jerk of his hand, pointing a finger at the Tiefling.

"And I trust you haven't forgotten, Koshka. 60 gold, you have two days remaining."

Koshka spread her hands apart,

"No sir, I'm good for it." she said. Darrow hesitated, briefly.

"...make it 55. Get yourself some clothes," he said, turning. With the cracking of his heels on the cobblestones, he was gone.

Tormyr was left standing looking after him in the street, and turned to Koshka. The Tiefling was standing tall, her ragged hair a mess, one hand upon a cocked hip. 

"You got the talk, girl. Give you that," Tormyr grunted. Koshka shrugged. 

"Everyone's got something, eh?" she said with a smirk, "Got great tits too." 

Tormyr gave a bark of a laugh,

"Aye well, if you like 'em on the skinny side," He stepped forward, and offered a hand to Koshka. The Tiefling took it.

"Thanks, Tor. I'll make it up to you," she said softly. The Dwarf nodded. 

"You make digging a debt a noble profession, girl. But I'll remember that." 

Together, they began to slow walk from the alleyway, Koshka limping ever so slightly, Tormyr's axe resting on his shoulder. 

"Get you back to the Portal eh? Warm up?" he sniffed, rubbing his nose. Koshka nodded, rubbing her wet shoulders. 

"First though, you know anyone I can steal 55 gold from before tomorrow night?" she asked.

Tormyr immediately gave a huff that sent his moustache to quivering, "Oh, loads!" 

"Good, In that case Tor, I need a favour..."

-

Epilogue - A Change in the Weather

Darrow looked up from his work to find a small, smiling face, stood just barely tall enough to peer over from other side of his desk. Even among Gnomes, Treave was particularly tiny. 

"Good day to you Mr. Darrow," the Gnome nodded, giving a little bow. In his hands he gripped a rolled package.

"And to you, Treave," Darrow said, placing his writing implement aside and folding his hands together on the desk, "Tell me, to what do I owe the pleasure? If I do find myself in need of a painting of some spread eagled Elf girl you can rest assured I'll reach out. No need to go door to door."

Treave gave another jolly bow and inclined his head even lower, chuckling at the comment, even though Darrow's emotionless face made it impossible to judge whether the man was actually joking or not.

"Glad to see that my well deserved reputation precedes me, my work hangs on the walls of Waterdeep's finest, as I'm sure you know. If an Elf maiden is not to your taste, I have had so many wonderful models sit for me, Dwarves, Aasimar, a particularly beautiful Goliath who had the most amazing..."

"Your pornography collection aside, why are you taking up my time, Treave?"

Treave gave a chirp and approached the desk, bearing higher the rolled package. Without waiting to be invited, Treave placed the package upon the desk. Darrow looked down at it, his dark eyes unchanging, and gave an almost imperceptible raise of one hairless eyebrow.  

Treave unrolled the package, and the revealed bracers gleamed silver. Darrow's eyes narrowed, and he reached partially towards them, curling his hand almost to a claw. Treave remained silent, the glint in the Gnome's eye remained as warm and humorous as ever, but there was something else there too. Shrewdness, knowingness. 

Darrow folded his hands once more, restraining the urge to reach out and take the bracers, and instead stared up at Treave.  

"Just fell into my lap, and I thought 'what luck'," Treave said.

"What do you want for them, Treave?" Darrow whispered.

The gnome clapped his tiny hands together, and Darrow watched as the Gnome's eyes darted around the room briefly. Quick glances at the wands strapped to the side of Darrow's chair arm, to the seemingly normal cloak that hung from the wall behind the desk, to the little figures that stood silent nearby.

Trave allowed his hands to fall to his side, and awarded Darrow with a beaming smile.

"No charge." 

This time Darrow's brow really rose, he remained silent, and Treave continued.

"Shall we say that, should I ever need a favor, I can count on a man of your... unique talents to assist as required?"

Darrow stared up at him for a moment longer, before he reached to roll the package up once more, and take it in his arms, cradling it. 

"Done," Darrow said. Treave gave a flamboyant bow, and spread his hands wide. 

"So wonderful to do business with you again, Mr. Darrow," he said as he turned to leave. As he strode, he stopped to look at the far wall.  

"This wall is very quiet, Mr. Darrow. Needs something to spice it up. I have a lovely painting of a Tiefling, by the way. I'll send it along, on the house."

Tuesday, April 13, 2021

Little Miss Queen of Darkness

The Yawning Portal saw the usual clientele of Waterdeep souls tonight as Koshka performed. Her eyes were closed, and the tall sitar was held in her hands, braced against one upright knee, folds of her skirts spread out upon the tiny corner stage. Occasionally she'd crack one dark yellow eye to observe the crowd, watching as she sang softly. 

It was an uninspiring night, and apart from a blonde-haired old Dwarf nursing his third huge tankard of sour smelling ale who actually seemed quite absorbed in the performance, there were few eyes upon the Tiefling as she played. A yawning human couple sat closely, more invested in each others eyes, three halflings sat around a table trading bawdy stories and occasionally laughing loudly. Koshka saw Durnan behind the bar, looking around the room with his eagle old eyes as always. 

It was a quiet song, low tempo, of slowly spiraling sitar strums that echoed about the room, a voice low, sad.

Naked Ruby cries
A painted alibi
She fell onto her knife
Naked Ruby cries 
All night

The blonde dwarf raised his tankard and drunkenly nodded his head slowly, as if in agreement with the lyrics. One of the halflings finished what must have been the punchline to her story and screeched with high pitched laughter. 

At the waters edge
Ruby grips the bed
She knows she's going to die
If she can't swim to the other side
Naked Ruby cries
All night

Another guffaw of laughter split the quiet song, and two brawny stevedores began exchanging noisy words concerning the proper way to tie a bowline knot. Koshka opened her eyes and found Durnan looking at her, giving her a spread of his great calloused hands and giving her the unmistakable hand gesture of 'give me something here'.

Koshka allowed the rest of her song to go unsung, trailing off the last strings of her sitar quietly. The quiet in the tavern went unnoticed, and no faces turned up to see what had happened to the music, other than one dwarf who still looked on expectantly. 

Koshka leaned to glance into the brown purse placed down in front of the stage, to see a scant handful of coppers had filled it since she began, and rolled her eyes. Nothing else for it then. 

Koshka turned to the lad who ran drums for the other bards, knowing he knew how to keep a beat when required. 

"Boy, get behind your drums here. We're gonna have a sing along," she said. The boy got up from his place and clambered behind the two large drums that sat behind Koshka. 

With a flowery wave of her skirts, Koshka stood, swinging her sitar around to balance over her shoulders. 

"Bit quiet in here tonight isn't it?!" she called out. A few faces turned towards her, a few eyebrows raised, "You all come from a funeral?"

A one-eyed old soldier in the far corner gave a snort of derision and called back, "Aye, yers if ya keep playin' that bloody dirge, half-blood."

There was a roar of laughter, Koshka cocked her hip and extended a pointed fingernail in his direction. 

"Oh we're all having a go now are we?" she asked, "Think you lads could do me better?"

There were a few shouts, mumbled retorts, at least one brief attempt to supply another cutting remark that fell short.

Koshka placed her sitar down, resting against the wall, and bending down, neatly undid the ties on her boots. 

Barefoot, the Tiefling hopped neatly onto the nearest table, causing the incumbent half-orc to snatch up his wobbling cup, and raised her hands up.

"Who knows 'Upon Returning from Icewind Dale?!'"

There was a great cheer from the assembled room. Koshka met them with smile, baring her fangs, and in a loud, melodic voice, she began.

We all set sail for Icewind Dale
The place where good ale flows
Where the maidens are fair
In the chill summer air
And they sing songs that everyone knows

Reaching behind her, Koshka gave a tug of the lace that held her bodice tight, and opened the back of it with a jerk of her shoulders.

But Gods help you if you are a human
'Cause you better learn to drink quick!
For those damn Dwarven lasses
They drink their ale in flashes
And they'll drink it all before you take a sip!

Koshka tossed her bodice in the air as the boy began a rolling sea shanty beat, and with a drunken roar, a dozen of the occupants of the bar joined in for the chorus, tankards banging on tables and suds spilling.

We've been kicked out of every pub in Icewind Dale
We've been beaten within inches of our lives
For we act like asses to those fair Elven lasses
It's a wonder any one of us survived!

Koshka leapt to the next table in the line, her bare feet landing between the laughing Halflings, unlinking her outer skirt with a whip of her hand and depositing the garment atop the head of one of the little folk. He emerged from beneath it with a laugh of support and reached up at Koshka's leg as she danced out of reach to the next table.

Well it was there I was drinking one fine mornin'
Flirting with some pretty goblin fun
When behind me there loomed such a shadow
That I fled out from my seat for to run!
Well I swear it was a mountain of muscle
That kicked my arse and threw me out the door
But 4 foot 7 was her height
And her anger gave her might
And she looked big when you're lying on the floor!

Her white shirt next to fall behind her as she skipped to another table, Koshka found the air around her seemed to glow, lights that were following her, dancing as if in time to her swinging hips, her rolling shoulders. Flicks of glowing lights flashed and glimmered around her fingertips as she deftly unlatched the buckles on her heavy second skirt and sent it falling about the heads of the singing folk at her feet. 

With only her meagre silk undergarments remaining, Koshka raised her voice, and the lights beamed with more energy still. 

Like whiskey and bitters are to moth and to flame
A more volatile mixture can't be found
For when you go a-travelling
If that bodice you're unravelling
Belongs to a Tiefling be prepared!

Her bare red flesh gleaming in the light from the hearth, Koshka leapt back upon the stage as the chorus continued to be belted out by an entire room of roaring drunks. The lights that followed Koshka were throbbing, seeming to feed off her energy, her confidence, punctuating her performance with every movement.

Her fingers twirled at her hips, Koshka deftly began unlacing the tiny silk knots that kept her remaining garments on. With a roll of her hip, about to whip the entirety of it from her body, she heard Durnan yell across the bar at her.

"For Tyr's sake Kosh, keep sumthin' on at least!" the bartender growled. There was a general groan of disappointment from the audience. 

"There goes yer bloody tip barkeep!" cried the blonde dwarf, sat staring up at Koshka by the stage, resulting in a resounding cackle of laughter. Koshka made a show of retying the knot and spread her hands wide in a great shrug of apology, her face lit with a playful smile.

When the last repetition of the rousing chorus finally died down, Koshka stood with hands on her bare hips, looking about the crowd. With a little kick of her bare foot, she kicked the purse clinking down onto a table in the middle of the room.

"Right... any requests?" 

The bar exploded into noise immediately, calls for 'Down among the Dead Men', 'Bound for south Serpentes', 'Calimshan Girls' echoing all over. When the old Dwarf quietly suggested 'Kisses in Skullport', one of Koshka's own ballads, she leaned over him to tussle his hair and make the old man blush. A good few drinks worth of silver and even a few glinting gold coins clinked heavily into the purse as more songs were suggested. Koshka gave a wink to Durnan as he slowly shook his head, returning to cleaning his glasses and wishing he'd stuck with the quiet raga. 

The strange lights continued their effervescent illumination around Koshka's deep red skin, swelling with her mood and her smiles. Later, drunks would trade stories all down the dockside about the evening, with the intensity of the strange magic display, and indeed, the state of nudity of the Tiefling performer growing ever more exaggerated with each telling.

-

Durnan was wiping down the bartop with a rag as Koshka sat nursing a drink at the far end of the long wooden bar. The last dregs of the occupancy were either helping each other leave, or snoring in corners waiting to be prodded by Durnan's broom. Not long before the first light of dawn would shine over Waterdeep. 

"Why so glum looking, Kosh?" Durnan asked. The Tiefling, lost in her thoughts, took a moment to respond. 

"Not been a great week for... I guess anything." she replied quietly, her voice hoarse from a night of loud and ever-rowdier shanties. Her clothes were in a pile on a stool beside her. 

Durnan reached over to give the purse that sat beside her a prod.

"You made 13 gold in one night, girl, usually you'd be bouncing off the  walls," he said. Koshka gave a shrug, staring into her drink. The old warrior gave a sigh, and leaned in closer to her.

"Look girl, I known you since you were knee-high to a grasshopper. I know when you're upset. If it's something I can help with, let me know. Yeah?"

Koshka put down her drink, chewing her lip. 

"I know... It's just... I gotta see Treave is all, he said he'd meet me here. Things'll be fine once he gets here."

"Well, you know what's best, I'm sure," Durnan grunted, and Koshka saw his chin rise as he looked over her shoulder, "We're closed lads, open up again for libations late morning."

"Oh this won't take up much of your time, barkeep," came the gruff brogue from behind Koshka. She felt a chill down her spine, and slowly turned. 

Behind her was a particularly broad Dwarf, an axe on his hip, flanked by two men in leathers. 

"Koshka is it?" said Tormyr, "I need a word with you."

-

'Naked Ruby' lyrics by Katiejane Garside.

Part 4

Saturday, April 10, 2021

Behind Blue Eyes

Koshka approached the little wooden door and stood quietly for a moment. The cobblestones beneath her boots were wet, and the Tiefling glanced to either side down the dark alley. Echoes from the docks could be heard dimly over the crowding buildings. Clutched against her bustier was the pouch of coin. 

Her dress was heavy with the rainfall, and water glistened on her curved horns as she took a breath to steady herself, before she knocked firmly three times on the door.

There was a moment of silence before the little window slid open with a crack that made Koshka jump, and from it gazed the large black eyes of the Half-Orc bodyguard. He was having to learn awkwardly to see through the small window, and frowned down at Koshka. 

"I'm here to see Mr Darrow," she said, hesitantly. 

The Half-Orc gave a snort, and the window slammed shut. Koshka shifted uncomfortably. Pulling at her dress and tugging her shirt from it's uncomfortable wet hold around her neck. 

Finally the door swung open, and the guard stood aside to allow her in. He was huge, and Koshka felt his gaze on her back as she stepped down the little hallway towards the office. The hallway was long and tight, and should someone stand at either end with a crossbow, Koshka was painfully aware there was nowhere to go. 

Her boots echoed noisily down the hall, and it seemed a long time until the Tiefling finally turned the corner to enter the office. It was small, the ceiling seeming to encroach on headspace, and Koshka held her hands clutched in front of herself as she waited to be addressed. 

Darrow was seated behind his desk as always. Papers and coins cluttered around. Multiple heavy scrolls were lined up in a row near him, and he appeared to be in mid-transcription when his gaze finally crawled up Koshka's body to look at her. Every time when Koshka thought she was prepared, that she was used to it, she'd look into those eyes, deep and big and blue, staring out from that awful face, and immediately feel her stomach turn.

Koshka automatically turned her eyes from his gaze, and tried to look elsewhere. Her gaze found the little statues on the corner of his desk, and the awful feeling of tension in her gut started again. Glancing at the scrolls, she didn't want to be accused of snooping, so instead she settled on looking around her at the items on the walls instead. The pictures, the paintings, the many collected items that had found their way to Darrow's office. 

"Koshka," Darrow said, his accent extending the first syllable into an unpleasant hiss, "You're wet."

Koshka tugged at her skirt uncomfortably. 

"Yes...It's raining," she said. 

Darrow's face, his true face, was as unreadable as ever, and Koshka tried again not to stare at it as the human extended a hand to gesture at her.

"You're treading water on my carpet, girl." 

Koshka stepped back onto the bare stone quickly, tutting.

"Sorry, sorry I didn't mean to..." 

"Towards me, girl, where I can see you," Darrow said. 

Koshka took a breath to steady herself, and stepped around the red carpet to stand before Darrow's desk. 

"Do you have something for me?" he said. 

Koshka suddenly remembered why she was there, and fumbled the little coin purse from her bustier. Almost dropping it, she extended it to place on the desk before her. 

Darrow's hand shot out, fast and deft as any thief. Snatching Koshka's extended hand and gripping it tight around the purse. Darrow's nails were neat and trimmed, the cuticles of his fingers red and sore looking.  

He waited in silence until Koshka raised her gaze to look into his eyes. 

Those blue eyes. It was so hard to look into them. Koshka's breath was shallow. 

Darrow was a more horrifying sight than any bodyguard he could possible employ. 

Darrow's skin, where it was visible, was a pale and pasty white. Years without sun had made his flesh like parchment, the skin around his eyes dark and sagging. Every inch of visible flesh upon the man, and Koshka could only assume, upon all the rest of his flesh currently covered by a plain and simple black shirt and breeches, was tattooed in excruciating detail of a demonic horror. As if superimposed over his own body, the demon seemed to regard Koshka as Darrow looked at her. Around his thin lips were leering, grinning fangs, tongue lolling black down his chin. Horns so elegantly designed they seemed almost to bulge from his forehead. All the way to his hands, where individual bony claws stood upon every finger, each knuckle meticulously covered. When buttons on Darrow's shirt had been loose, Koshka had seen glimpses of of bony ribcages, black against his pale flesh. 

"Little small, isn't it?" Darrow hissed, dragging Koshka from her horror, "You owe me 60 gold, Koshka."

Koshka stumbled over her words for a moment, before she found her confidence. 

"It's 25 gold, I...I had trouble this week. Things didn't go as planned."

"Yes well things rarely do if you plan poorly, don't you find?" Darrow said, without an ounce of humour. He continued to hold Koshka's hand in a surprisingly firm grip, "I find to take care of things I often have to do things myself, so that I don't have anyone else to blame. Tell me Koshka who do you have to blame, hm?" 

Koshka hesitated, "No one."

"No one? So you are squarely to blame for failing to provide what you owe? 60 gold by this week Koshka, my spells don't come cheap, you know that."

She nodded firmly.

"Yes, yes I know. I'm sorry, I'll have the rest by next time, no question."

"I have your word, girl?" Darrow said, his blue eyes narrowing. Koshka had the sensation of being crushed, her ribs tightening, her breath short. For one awful moment, as she stared at his face, she had the sudden impression of one curving tattooed bone twitching, ever so slightly.

"You have my word, you'll be paid in full."

"Trust is all we have in this business, Koshka. I don't have to warn you what happens when someone fails to honor an agreement with me, do I?" 

Koshka's gaze fell to the little statues upon the desk. Each one so real looking, so detailed. Almost impossibly so, like they'd start moving any moment. One, a dwarf, looked like he was in the process of beginning to swing a weapon, beard flailing, the tiny face twisted in rage. The newest one there was a woman, dark skinned, naked, long curling braids about her shoulders, an expression of shock on her face and one hand raised as if to defend herself. Koshka recognized the woman from the Yawning Portal, a known thief. 

"Yes, I know," she said. Darrow allowed her hand free, with a deft turn of his fingers, he slipped the purse loose and, without looking into it, placed it into a drawer behind his desk. 

"You have until three moons from now, or I'm making space on my desk." 

Koshka gave a nod, and was about to turn to leave when Darrow's head tilted to one side, clearly listening. His face twisted, briefly, into a scowl, before his usual unconcerned demeanor returned. 

"He doesn't have it?" Darrow suddenly snapped, responding to a conversation only he could hear.

Darrow spread his hands flat on the table, his face suddenly a mask of concern, "Hold him there until...No, send him back here, both of them. Now." 

Koshka made to leave, but Darrow's voice snapped sharply, he was pointing to the corner of the office room.

"You. Stand there. Face the wall. Silence. Understand?" 

Koshka hesitated, and Darrow raised his voice a small but noticeable amount. 

"Now."

Koshka stepped to the corner, staring in confusion at a coatrack as she head hurried footsteps coming down the little hallway. She heard Darrow whisper under his breath. 

An odd feeling came over her, a strange, cooling sensation her entire body over. In shock, she realized she couldn't see her own eyelids when she blinked. She had become invisible. 

Koshka stood, silent and invisible, in the corner of the office, as two figures entered the tiny room with a commotion.

"Darrow, Darrow mate I'm so sorry I don't know how it happened but there was a problem with the trade off, they're all gone," came the gruff and panicked voice from the newcomer. From the height the voice came from behind her, Koshka could tell it was a Dwarf. 

"You lost the satchel," Darrow said, his voice like ice. 

The Dwarf stuttered, and another voice began. Koshka's breath burned in her throat, and her eyes widened in shock and recognition. 

"There was a miscommunication, at the tradeoff, Mr Darrow, sir." the voice said. The same voice Koshka had heard whispering sweet things into her ear a night before, "I think, I think someone knew about the meet."

"And you, a professional courier, gave my package to the wrong person." Darrow asked.

There was a huff of breath, and Koshka could picture Finn's trademark shrug and careless rolled eyes.

"Professional hazard, always. I'm sure it can be found, after all, I remember everything I..."

Darrow cut him off by slamming his open palm on the desk with a slam that made everyone in the room jump.

"You allowed yourself to be tricked. To be fooled. To be taken for an idiot. To have MY PROPERTY STOLEN FROM YOU," Darrow's voice boomed, raised to an echoing yell. 

There was silence for a moment, held breaths. 

"I do so love having someone to blame, don't you?" Darrow said, coldly. 

"Mr Darrow, surely we can..." the Dwarf began. Koshka's eyes hurt suddenly, and sickly green light filled the room. There was a moment of horrible screaming, and then nothing. Koshka stared into the corner in terror, waiting.

"You'll find my satchel by the end of the week, is that clear, Tormyr?" 

"Yes Mr Darrow, yes sir, you have my word, all the best on it already." 

"Go." 

There was movement, the shuffle of a single pair of feet down the hallway. Silence.

Koshka felt herself return to normal, the feeling of chill replaced by the sudden awareness of being visible again, and the unexpected feeling of vulnerability it caused. 

Darrow was seated behind his desk, hands spread. There was no one else in the room. 

"Three moons, girl. Clear?"

"Yes...Mr Darrow... sir," Koshka whispered, breathlessly.

Darrow gestured at the door, and Koshka left. 

Heart hammering in her chest, Koshka strode down the hallway and stood before the bodyguard. The Half-Orc placed a finger to his lips briefly,  The last echoing footsteps were echoing down the alleyway, and when they fully disappeared into the night, he slowly slid finger from his lips, and opened the door for Koshka to leave.

-

Rain hammered down on Koshka as she walked through the streets, heels clicking on the cobblestones. 

An awful weight hung in her throat. She'd made a terrible mistake. The only person who had seen her face was gone, but she knew, somehow, somewhere they'd be onto her, seeking her out. 

Koshka looked down the rainy streets towards home, and instead turned in the opposite direction. Treave, she had to go to Treave. He'd know what to do.

-

Darrow sat in his office, his hands spread and gripped to the table in front of him. His breath was heavy, heaving in his chest, and he thrust out a hand to fumble with his drawers. 

There was a roaring in his head. A hunger. A hunger that had to be sated before something terrible happened. 

As he reached out, the claws of his tattoo rippled, for just a moment. The awful bone-white claws tatooed onto the backs of his fingers leapt fully from his flesh to scratch lines into the wooden desk. Darrow turned aside, trying desperately to contain it, but he was running low. 

His store exhausted, he tugged one of the rings from his own fingers. Powerful magic, but no other option now. Holding it in his hand, he tried to concentrate, to quell the roaring deep behind his eyes. The creature staring out of his skull hissed a threat into Darrow's brain. 

He concentrated, the magic ring quivered, and burned away to nothing in the palm of his hand. Magic surged through him, calming, quieting, sating.

Darrow leaned back in his chair, sighing in relief. It was quiet for now. 

Darrow slammed shut the drawer and hissed. He was running out of wondrous items. Soon there would be nothing let for him to devour. 

-

Part 3