---------------Break ---------------
Derrek woke with a start.
He could still hear the echoing threat ringing in his head.
Immediately he reached for his crotch, sighing with relief to know
everything was accounted for. He then looked around, curious to find
himself in a familiar tiny room.
The rafters slanted
overhead, the beams musty with the smell of mildew and age. A small
wardrobe had been placed near the door just below the steps leading to
the alcove that contained the bed. A writing table was directly
across from the wardrobe.
However,
his papers were not stacked neatly upon them. Instead, his supplies
had been violently scattered across the floor. Dried ink ran down the
long leg of the desk and fragments of ceramic told of the containers
last moments. All his papers had been thrown about, caught in a small whirlwind that materialized with the apparent intent to destroy his stuff. The wardrobe
doors were pulled open and clothes thrown forth as if the cabinetry
had vomited them out.
Derrek
pushed himself till he sat on his bed. Then he quickly clutched his
head as the room began to swirl in his vision. He felt like he was
free falling through the air and the walls were spinning like a child's top. Strings
of pain laced across his brain. He immediately felt like lying down
again.
“Is
this what it feels to be hung over?”
Derrek
was not a stranger to liquor but possessed the enviable knack for
never suffering from his drinking the morning after. It didn’t
matter how much or little he consumed, he always woke bright and
cheerful with the start of each new day.
This
day, however, was far too different. He stomach seemed to flop within
him like a beached fish squirming with its last strength for the
safety of water. His body was sluggish and unresponsive, as if his
thoughts were unable to make the journey to his limbs.
He
turned to the window, immediately regretting the action as sharp pain
responded to the blast of light filtering through the torn curtains. He
immediately collapsed against his moth eaten pillow, seeking refuge
beneath its stained comfort.
What
had happened last night?
It
felt like a bad dream and nothing was distinct. He remembered
being surrounded by half naked men, really disappointing wine and
some questionable acting. There was something else that skittered
just at the forefront of recollection. A recognizable voice that made
him think peculiarly of spoiled fish.
Also,
there was something about orbs. Something that seemed important
enough to warrant further investigation.
Ignoring
the pounding of his head, Derrek tumbled from the twisted embrace of
his blanket, crawling pitifully along the floor until he found some
trousers and a decent tunic. Most his other clothes appeared in too
disrepair, either torn and covered in dirt and ink, to be wearable.
He pulled on his boots and
grabbed his lute and coin purse before stumbling feebly out his door.
He
had to lean heavily upon the rail as he nearly rolled down the
stairs. There was little activity on the main floor of the tavern.
The matron was puttering about, sweeping beneath tables covered in
chairs. There was a stirring behind the bar and Derrek stumbled his
way over.
“Innkeep!”
he hollered, his voice thick and slurred.
The
large man stood up from beneath his counter. Derrek couldn’t help
but reflect on how most innkeepers were often quite large and dressed
in similarly stained aprons.
“I
have a name,” the man grumbled.
“Your
finest meats and cheeses, if you’d please. I have a busy day
ahead!”
The
innkeep eyed Derrek warily.
“First,
I thought you said you’d given up on meat.”
“Your
finest cheese then!”
“Second,
you hardly look like you’re ready for any day, busy or not. Wild
night?”
“I
don’t remember,” Derrek said, slumping against the counter.
“Think you’d mind adding a mead to the order?”
“I’ll
give you water but I can charge you the same if it would make you
feel better.”
“Unlikely,”
Derrek replied, his lips flopping against the polished wood. He found
if he rolled his head at just the right angle, the pressure of the
counter seemed to alleviate sixty percent of the pain flashing about
his brain.
“Will
you be participating in the Challenge today?” the innkeeper asked,
eyeing Derrek’s lute.
“I
have aspirations,” Derrek muttered from the counter. He lifted his
head as a small tray of cheese and a great mug of water were slapped
down loudly beside him. “By the way, I didn’t happen to have any
visitors last night. Either while I was here or away?”
“Don’t
rightly know, I wasn’t working that late,” the innkeep said.
“Marta! Oi! Did this fine gentleman have any callers?”
The
Matron looked up, slapping the broom handle in her palm.
“What
do I look like, eh? Some sort of fancy herald?”
“Don’t
give me that lip woman! You know very well that he has been expecting
friends for a few days now. Would you turn away all potential
customers because you’d rather sit drunken before the fire?”
“Don’t
take that tone with me! If it weren’t for my work this whole place
would crash down about her piggish head!”
The
pair’s raising voices weren’t helping with Derrek’s headache.
He tried to politely wait it out by stuffing some questionable bread into his ears. He then focussed his attention on the aging
cheese and peculiar water.
“No
worry, it wasn’t important anyway.”
“Look,
woman! Now you’re upsetting the clientele!”
“Me?
He looks positively sick after eating that foul mess you call food!”
“Well,
we could serve some decent meals if you learned to cook like a proper
wife!”
“Just
add it to my tab,” Derrek smiled, pushing himself to his feet and
staggering towards the door.
“Hold
on a sec,” the Matron called. “There were some folks asking
around for you the other night I believe.”
“A
woman and two men?”
“I
don’t remember all of them,” the lady replied, scratching her
frazzled mane. “But I do remember the fat one. Carried an
instrument like yours. Seemed to suggest you were old
friends or the like. Wouldn’t have let him near your room
otherwise.”
Derrek
nodded.
“Much
appreciated. Oh, and if the three I described before do come, tell
them to wait for me up at the Academy.”
Derrek
stumbled out the door.
He
wasn’t sure where he was headed but given his present state of mind
he wasn’t sure of anything. He mostly acted on the urge to find
some decent drink and the growing certainty that if he didn’t find
some money soon his current room and board would catch on that he
couldn’t afford the tab he was quickly accumulating.
And
so he did the most foolish thing one could possibly do in the City of
Roads.
He
wandered.
It
was a well known idiom that even if one knew where they were going it
was unlikely they would get there in Etreria. The streets had the
knack of swallowing up the aimless. Citizens treated the lost posters
as just another form of decoration, often besetting on the poor
pamphlets with their brushes and paints to make them more decorative
than actually participating in any search for the lost souls.
Likely,
there was little effort made for the vanished because most knew it
was pointless. To say there was a seedy underbelly in Etreria would
give the mistaken impression that there was a respectable body to be
blemished. Because of so many clashing cultures, no one knew how to
properly regulate them. Most foreigners arrived with their own
preconceptions of what the laws of the land should be. It was joked
that Etreria was home to the most courts and fewest magistrates in
the lands.
The
original fort still stood, a tiny bastion of lawfulness that, instead
of attempting to clean up the bursting civilization growing around
it, merely just walled itself in and hid from the ever growing
problems. If anyone was ever caught breaking the law, it was almost
impossible to figure out how to punish them.
Instead,
the wealthiest merchant families turned to hiring their own guards
and mercenaries to protect their interests. Thus the main artery
roads that saw the most trade were heavily watched but the further
one strolled from those main thoroughfares, the more the laws
descended into the rule of the wild.
“Und
stratz mit ze uldensackt, flutens.”
Derrek
paused, noticing his addresser emerge from beneath the tattered
remains of a long abandoned stall.
“Hello.”
“Lost, fluten?”
The
man was a dirty sort; the kind that found his bed beneath the awnings
of forgetful merchants at night and sorted through the wastes for his
food. He had distinctive tattoos printed upon his face in pale
imitation of the markings of the eastern gangs. Though his clothes
were grimy and worn, his fur rimmed hat looked perhaps the most aged.
A
startling wave of nausea washed over Derrek and he tipped, leaning
against his confronter and looking up at him with bleary eyes.
“You…
you look travelled.”
“What
are you on?” the man asked, his eyes narrowing as he pushed Derrek
back. Derrek leaned against the stall to keep himself upright.
“Leboe.
Dian. Take.”
It
wasn’t perhaps his most comprehensible sentence, but he hoped the
message still got across.
The
thug looked at Derrek with confusion. He drew a rusted knife from his
belt.
Derrek
shook his head.
“No.
No, need Dian…”
He
would have continued more but felt the muscles of his throat begin to
contract and he turned, the remnants of his breakfast and whatever he
had consumed the evening prior ejecting upon the ground.
The
thug merely turned to his compatriot waiting in the shadows and nodded his head further down
the dank alleyway. Derrek just waited, still hunched over as his
digestive system worked over what little else it was holding.
However, after ridding himself of the undigested food, he begin to
feel a slight alleviation in his headache and his stomach felt less
like it was tossing on the open seas.
Soon,
the sound of stamping feet echoed down the back alley. There was
incomprehensible grunting and one of the men pulled Derrek upright.
He wavered before a rather rakish individual with much cleaner
clothes and a large black patch tied over one eye.
“Take
him,” came the stern reply.
Almost
immediately, Derrek was hoisted upon someone’s shoulders and
bounced down the alley. He really couldn’t gather where he was
carried, but there was the sound of a scratching gate before he was
pushed through a door into a dank basement.
He
heard orders shouted as his lute was pulled from him and he was
hoisted upon a table. Hands pinned his limbs as old One Eye appeared
above him, peering down with its concerned namesake.
“Drink.”
A cup
was lifted to his lips as a hand opened his mouth. Derrek felt the
burn of the liquid wash against his throat.
And
then he felt nothing.
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