Spring 22nd, 511 AV
“Closing time, Ned.”
It was harder to rouse the drunk from his perch without Laszlo and his uncanny ability to command the man—through a stern voice, or djed-laden suggestion—but another early morning passed without incident, and Ned shambled from the Stallion’s Rear, shoes scraping defiantly against an aged hardwood floor. A murmured good-night was exchanged with an unintelligible grunt. Seven was behind him, threading an iron key through an old latch once the door had thumped shut; Ned’s lumbering outline was soon lost to the crushing darkness of Alvadas’ streets.
Four bells rang from a distant clock tower.
Seven all but collapsed into the nearest chair, still drawn out from its home beneath an unpolished table. His tired ankle had swollen, but relief washed over his heels and toes in a glorious, dull ache. Forehead met tabletop, with little regard for room-warm crescents left behind by enthusiastic wooden mugs. There he sat, for several breaths, listening to the sound of his own heart, the progress of vermin in their thin walls, the howl of wind against uplifted shingles. He let sleep tease him, weigh his arms against his lap and pour comfortable black ink into the edges of his vision. He let invisible violet coalesce and shimmer around a burned leg; it was a promise of protection as much as it was a perversion of practicality.
Get up, fool.
He rose with a start, shook bleariness from his face, and grabbed and flipped the chair legs-up on the table. Bare feet slapped a lopsided path to a locked door at the back end of the long and narrow tavern. The fire had gone to angry red embers. Winter still lingered in the dead of night. Seven bent to a modest pile of timber, when nebulous black shifted just beyond the fire’s sight.
A gasp caught in his throat. He nearly stumbled. “Gods,” a log rattled against the back of the hearth, sending a flurry of orange out and up, dying before they could light a broken ceiling. How could he have missed someone? Seven’s thumping heart was in the back of his mouth when he tried to swallow it down and stand. His mouth opened and closed a few times, a wet pink cave with venomous stalactites. Then, he managed to make a sound; his voice cracked.
“You—the tavern’s—I’m sorry, I didn’t see you.”
“Closing time, Ned.”
It was harder to rouse the drunk from his perch without Laszlo and his uncanny ability to command the man—through a stern voice, or djed-laden suggestion—but another early morning passed without incident, and Ned shambled from the Stallion’s Rear, shoes scraping defiantly against an aged hardwood floor. A murmured good-night was exchanged with an unintelligible grunt. Seven was behind him, threading an iron key through an old latch once the door had thumped shut; Ned’s lumbering outline was soon lost to the crushing darkness of Alvadas’ streets.
Four bells rang from a distant clock tower.
Seven all but collapsed into the nearest chair, still drawn out from its home beneath an unpolished table. His tired ankle had swollen, but relief washed over his heels and toes in a glorious, dull ache. Forehead met tabletop, with little regard for room-warm crescents left behind by enthusiastic wooden mugs. There he sat, for several breaths, listening to the sound of his own heart, the progress of vermin in their thin walls, the howl of wind against uplifted shingles. He let sleep tease him, weigh his arms against his lap and pour comfortable black ink into the edges of his vision. He let invisible violet coalesce and shimmer around a burned leg; it was a promise of protection as much as it was a perversion of practicality.
Get up, fool.
He rose with a start, shook bleariness from his face, and grabbed and flipped the chair legs-up on the table. Bare feet slapped a lopsided path to a locked door at the back end of the long and narrow tavern. The fire had gone to angry red embers. Winter still lingered in the dead of night. Seven bent to a modest pile of timber, when nebulous black shifted just beyond the fire’s sight.
A gasp caught in his throat. He nearly stumbled. “Gods,” a log rattled against the back of the hearth, sending a flurry of orange out and up, dying before they could light a broken ceiling. How could he have missed someone? Seven’s thumping heart was in the back of his mouth when he tried to swallow it down and stand. His mouth opened and closed a few times, a wet pink cave with venomous stalactites. Then, he managed to make a sound; his voice cracked.
“You—the tavern’s—I’m sorry, I didn’t see you.”