30th trial, Ashan, Arc 718
Foster's Landing
19th break
Foster's Landing
19th break
"I-I-I-I didn't tell-tell them anything, I swear!"
If Kasoria had his doubts before about the necessity of his task before, they vanished once he heard those words. Not just the panicked tone that spoke of a natural coward, which was bad enough. No, it was the words themselves that came from the mouth of the sweaty, fidgety man standing opposite him. Roy wasn't a brave man, and he wasn't expecting that from him. He was a business owner, like many he'd met over the years. He could crack the whip over his employees, or treat them like family. It just depended. He could cut a favorable deal and knew enough about his profession to make smart decisions.
But he wasn't a man of violence. He'd never grown up like Kasoria had. Never taken his beatings and grown hardened to pain and the specter beyond it. Never taken a life and taken another and another until one day, the fear of his own being taken was... oddly detached from his mind. It was a factor, a possibility, and inevitability, for sure, but... not nearly as much as it should be.
Roy was not that man. And he'd already told Kasoria far too much.
"Them"?
"I know you haven't," he lied, leaning closer to the man and keeping their words low and private. "But my master still wanted me to send you a message. And... make you an offer."
Roy nearly bolted right there when the butcher's hand vanished under his cloak. Because that's damn well what he was. He'd walked by the wharf the Charon was tied to the trial after this slight, short, quiet man had done his business. He'd watched body after body carried off under white sheets, stained and bloodied. One of the sheets had fallen off and Roy had seen with his own eyes the... things, that man had done. He'd slept under his roof and eaten his food then gone out and slaughtered them like animals.
Now he was back and Roy knew there could only be one reason. It had barely been a full season after that atrocity and there were people asking around about it. Not Black Guard, Roy knew them of old from Etzos, but... they acted like they were Black Guard. He'd not heard about any special mandate or policy from the Council, but there they were. Marching around town, roughing up people, trying to find out the truth.
Then he looked over at an empty table one night and saw it wasn't empty. There was a familiar face behind it, just watching him. Waiting for their eyes to meet and jutting his chin towards the rear of the Happy Trout. He'd almost dropped the tray he'd been holding and it took Doris poking him in the stomach to snap him out of it.
"Oi? S'matter with you, Roy?"
"I... Noth-Nothing. Just..." The little man got up and made his way through the crowd. Low and quiet and humble, just like before. "Um... gonna be a bit or two, love. Keep the animals watered, eh?"
"As bloody always, boss."
He managed the ghost of a smile and spun on his heel, before the tension threatening to split his face in two could show. He was sweating by the time he stepped out into the alley behind the tavern. His legs were weak when he saw the man standing off to one side, half in the blackness cast by the stables. He walked over, because he knew he didn't have a choice. Every step, every crunch and squelch of gravel and dirt and mud... Roy felt a memory rattle through his brain with each one. His childhood. His daughter being born. His first wife saying "yes". Him saying "yes" to Vorund. The last step saw Kasoria's face flash before his eyes, in his room, a season ago-
And there he stood again. Waiting for him. Alone.
He blurted out those words, right away, just to reassure the man. The killer blinked a few times before he gave his response, but Roy knew - he just fucking knew - that it wouldn't matter. Any man that could massacre a crew of salty dog bastards like what populated the Charon... well, Roy may have been imprudent in some areas of his life, but he never fancied himself a hard man when he knew damn well he wasn't. He took a step back, contemplated running or crying out, even thought that would only hasten his end and instead his lips moved in a plea-
Which was deemed unnecessary, when he saw the purse in Kasoria's hand.
"I... I'm sorry, what-"
"My master knows you are a valuable asset, and you have never denied his requests. Never missed a payment, never made him question your loyalty." He pressed the purse into the slack-jawed man's hand and closed his fingers around it. "A hundred nels. You'll get another later on tonight, and you'll get the same every season, as long as you stay quiet about everything... and you tell me everything about anyone that's been asking questions."
Kasoria could see the fear in Roy's eyes melting away under the heat of his greed, not to mention sheer, breathless relief. He'd marched over to him with the piss-soaked resignation of a man who new he was about to die, and saw no point in prolonging his fear by running. Survival instincts useless, he'd walked up to Kasoria and waited for the inevitable. But he'd not expected money, of all things. Nor glowing words, almost tinged with pride.
But the money was the key to it. Words were just noisy air, in Kasoria's world. Unless you backed them up with coin, or blood, or both, that's all they remained.
They have their used tonight, though.
"Of-Of course! Well, um, there were three-"
"Shhh, no, not here!" Kasoria was hardly a born thespian, but he knew how to sell his role. He waved an angry hand and cranked his voice down to an urgent whisper. "Not... Not where people could be listening. You know the barn around the corner? Old place, red paint?"
"Um, y-yes. Murphy's place, only he hasn't got around to-"
"Meet me there after you finish tonight. I'll be waiting. You'll tell me everything about them, and then you'll get the other hundred nels." He reached out and laid on his masterstroke. He placed his hand on the pudgy man's shoulder and squeezed firmly. Then realized he was hurting the man and backed off a little. Bloody soft wanker. "We're not done with you, Roy. We're gonna keep you paid, and keep you quiet. What did you think, I was here to kill you? Why would I show up in the tavern, for everyone to see? Why would I give you money? Why would I have waited this long?"
He laughed. It was a strange exercise of his lungs and throat. It didn't come easily and took a few breaths before it sounded like something more jovial than a storm drain being cleared. But Roy's relief blinded him to all that: he only saw a man that valued him, and paid him, and spoke for a man far more powerful and dangerous who thought the same, and that was all he needed to see. After a few trills he was chuckling right along with Kasoria, waving a hand in the air above his head.
"Just... I dunno... silly."
"Aye, well, I understand. Business I'm in-" Kasoria managed a shrug and a grimace "-people assume the worst. I've kept yeh long enough. See you at the barn."
"Oh, yeah, you will!"
The rest of the night passed by as genially and brightly as Roy could have hoped for. Doris could see that whatever clouds had dogged him as he'd left were gone by the time he'd returned. In fact, he almost looked... happy. Smiling and clapping shoulders, telling jokes and remembering names of old customers. But it was when he waved away payment from a vagrant for a bowl of soup that she marched up and said, "All right, Mister Sunshine, what happened? You're practically gliding over the bloody floorboards."
"Doris, my darling," he said, an endearment that nearly make her squawk like a hen. "I've just got some good news, and it's good news for both of us." His kissed her forehead and murmured into the fleshy skin there. "I just can't tell you about it. Private business, y'see. But it's all good. All fine."
Doris had no bloody clue what that was all about, but Roy didn't much care. She was a fine wife but she had no head for business, like most women. She had a certain low shrewdness to her, it had to be said. It was admirable, and useful, but Dealings with men like Vorund... no, it was beyond her. Best she didn't know about things that would just bother her. So between the two of them and the bar maids, they went about their jobs that night, serving and cooking and clearing and cleaning and flipping a couple of rooms for paying travelers.
It was a profitable night, and yet Roy grinned on his way to the barn a few breaks later, because he knew it wasn't over. All the dirty and mismatched coin they'd made that night was a trifle compared to the purse he'd be getting, and the purse he already had. Two hundred gold nels a season, just for... keeping quiet?! Sign him the fuck up for that kind of deal!
Murphy's Barn loomed above him as he rounded the corner. Not that you could tell the bloody ruin belonged to anyone. He knew Murphy still held the lease, but his son was in charge of the place and... Daniel wasn't as thrifty as his father. Or as hardworking. Or as sober, come to think of it. So the building cracked and crumbled and Daniel drank away the money for repairing it, focusing more on the larger stables they had down the street. He made his excuses, mainly that it cost too much money to keep the place open, but Roy always sort of sighed when he heard that.
You could rent this place out as storage and still make something, he reminded himself with a shake of his head, opening one of the two front doors and walking inside. Closed it behind him, of course. Secret meeting, after all. He squinted in the dark, interior of the barn lit only by spears and shafts and shards of moonlight that pierced the holes in the roof and walls. Bales of hay were stacked and rotting around the place. The floor was covered in dirt and... bottles, as his stumbling feet soon found.
Piss and shit and it wasn't all animals. The vagrants were using the place as a bloody outhouse. Roy shook his head and held his nose as he walked further inside.
"Sir? Mister... um... I didn't catch your name? Are... It's me. Roy!" he was trying to shout as much as he could while whispering, and was so blinded by another full purse that he didn't notice. All he did was keep walking and peering into the silent shadows. "You... You said come to meet you here and here I-"
Then he saw movement. Right in front of him. About the same height as his head and swinging gently in the breeze all the holes and neglected openings provided. Going from black and formless to corn-colored and rough and-
Rope.
In the form of a noose.
Hanging right in front of him.
Waiting for him.
"... am?"
Something moved behind Roy. Everything snapped into focus, into the clarity of awful, fatal truth. Every lie and vanity and willful stupidity he'd let himself believe. All blown apart and replaced by the reality he'd walked into. Hell, he'd even closed the door behind him.
There was a whoosh of movement, of flapping fabric and feet scraping across a dirty floor. He never even got a chance to scream.