The old mill became such simply because it was never meant to last. It was the first mill created in the area to provide lumber for the first steps towards beating back the frontier in this region. Then, as the years passed and the need for homes gave way to a greater need for industry, it was replaced by a larger facility miles downstream. This place was well-maintained so that when there was a spike in demand it could be met, but with winter closing in around Erette, such an increase in demand was unlikely, so, in winter, it ended up being used by anyone that happened by. It was a meeting place, hunting lodge, and even a survival outpost for people caught out during the ravages of winter.
Inside it Etan Strannix huddled next to the fire, palms facing it until he could no longer stand the heat and then wrung his hands together or rubbed them up and down his arms, keeping an eye on the small metal chest he'd brought with him. It was habit more than anything else, especially here. It wasn't as if he could truly defend it if they wanted to take it, but there was more than enough in it to keep him in the shadows and fund his next steps. Soon, no doubt, Kav would get a message to him, appraising him of how the pieces had fallen in the aftermath and further fund him. For now, he couldn't wait until the heat finally began to warm the room. "Are you sure she's going to show?"
"She gave her word that she would be here, and I paid her well to ensure her arrival."
That caused Strannix to turn from the flames. "You did?"
"Well, you will have when all is said and done, but I fronted it on your behalf."
It was one more annoyance to add to the pile, but he didn't get anywhere in life by letting them get to him. "That's fine. As long as this gets fixed, I don't care."
Arik refrained from any response because he didn't know for sure if recrimination was being directed at him or if that was just what he heard. "It will take a new plan."
"We'll come up with one that will get the job done," Nax promised.
"A good plan was already in place. Perhaps the next one will be better executed."
Arik was just about to respond when he saw a woman cloaked against the chill closing the distance between them. "Here she is."
About time.
Strannix sought confirmation. "You're sure?" An unwelcome visitor at this particular moment would have been one bit of unplanned misfortune for all of them, especially the visitor.
"It's her," Arik assured him. Her appearance was different, of course, as expected, but he recognized the nuances of her veil. He knew she would come, but he was still pleased to see her, if for no other reason than, if she hadn't shown up, he might have had to consider her a potential liability and done something about that, even if Strannix hadn't insisted, and he was the type that may well have. He opened the window and called to her. "I thought perhaps you'd gotten lost."
"You said noon and it's not much past. Besides, I thought I'd give you enough time to start a fire. It's already winter out here."
"It's still mostly winter in here."
"Then close the window, fool."
Her perpetual disdain wasn't lost on him as he looked on contentedly for a moment before doing as he was told.
"Finally," Strannix said, standing and waiting for the last of the triad to enter. Footsteps clapped hard against the steps before the door flung open and she stepped inside, this version of Sylanna being different from all the previous ones Arik had seen. He had seen once and marveled at how she could walk down a street, smile politely as she made eye contact with people and literally shopped for features; this nose, those eyebrows, and even that ear shape and later integrate them in always pleasing ways. Her veils were their own artistry.
She closed the door quickly and looked around the room as she gave herself time to begin to get warm.
"Cold enough to freeze your tits off out there."
She looked to Nax. He could be crass sometimes, due to his youth mostly, but, in this case, he was quite right. "Indeed." She saw the tension emanating from the man who must be Strannix, not that he wasn't keeping a tight lid on it, or that she needed magic to see it. She just knew from putting on so many masks herself all the ways that people could hide themselves. Then she saw the tension between Arik and Strannix. "I seem to have missed something interesting."
"Nothing of import," Strannix said, puffing his chest out a bit and making certain he was at his full height as he approached the comely mage as he might one of the lovelier nobles and extended his hand. "Etan Strannix. I'm quite pleased to meet you under these somewhat unpleasant circumstances."
She left his hand alone in the air and looked upon him with the usual disdain she held for most of humanity. "Unpleasant for me in that there are rules I adhere to religiously when it comes to
not
meeting clients, so I would prefer not to be here at all."
He withdrew his hand in response to the chill and stepped back, while putting on a practiced smile "Yes, well, I hear Arik has compensated you nicely for this meeting and I'm sure I can make it worth your while."
Arik was satisfied with her presence. "That you're here tells me that payment was what you expected?"
Thoughts of the plant and the near endless possibilities it afforded pleased her in spite of the fact that it forced her here. "I am here and you're not dead for having tried to deceive me. But let us dispense with this waste of my time as rapidly as possible. Again, did I miss anything that matters?"
"Nothing, really," Arik said, a touch of ire returning and hardening his features. "Our client was blaming us for the plan he insisted we implement, completely dismissing the fact that I tried desperately to talk him into something smaller scale and with a better chance of success."
"I could have gotten that girl if that's what you wanted," Arik said. "Spend a few more weeks to learn the one or two officers that are closest to them, their patterns, then take
them.