Author's Note: Since I'm a hideous incompetent who should be whipped through town with a leather belt, I have made two unforgivable errors. Firstly, the first chapter of this series erroneously stated that it begins June 3
rd
when this adventure begins on January 3
rd
! Secondly, I stated that there was a Kingdom of Caladon. Alas! The
city
of Caladon is the capital of the Kingdom of Arland.
But with these things corrected, on with the adventure.
*****
Standing outside of an inn's back room while two corpses rotted within was not the most opportune moment to have a heart to heart talk with your companion. But as the front of the Shrouded Hill's one and only inn sounded as if it was the center of some attention and the only other route out was through a barred and locked window, I decided that now was a better time than any other. Maybe if we lurked here, the people who were conversing in the front would decide to spend their time out in the sunshine.
"Virginia, old girl," I said, sliding my thumbs underneath my suspenders. They were exposed, as my entirely ratty suit jacket had been shredded most frightfully during my long trip in the wilderness and I had decided to leave the whole sorry thing in the first trash-bin I had noticed in Shrouded Hills. This meant I was only in the rumpled, much stained undershirt and my tie. Feeling choked in the stuffy, close corridor, I reached up and started to adjust the tie.
Sally, though, bulled through the question I had hoped to bring up more diplomatically: "Your friend fucking killed two people with her bare hands." She cracked her neck by twisting her head one way and her chest the other, keeping her palm flat against her expansive, gray-green shoulder to keep herself rooted. "Who the fuck is she?"
I sighed, then spread my hands apologetically. Sally Mead Mug, as could be attested by her conduct during the brawl that served as our introduction, would come to a point with the graceful elegance of a rampaging dread lizard. Virginia sighed. Her normally bright and cheerful eyes grew pensive and she looked out the window as best she could, considering the closed slats and boards. She shook her head. "The Elder Johanna was...she found me..." She shook her head again. "It was a hard time in my life, but I trust her to the ends of Arcanum itself. If she says that we need to be on our guard, if she says we need to get to Tarant, we need to get to Tarant."
"All roads do lead to Tarant after all," I said, nodding.
Sally stuck her finger in her ear, twisting it. "'Innit it Dernholm? I always heard the saying was 'all roads lead to Dernholm?"
"Not anymore," I said.
"Hah!" Sally laughed, then slapped my back. "Lets get a drink!"
We walked together to the front of the inn – and I saw that the barkeep was standing behind the counter, though the rest of the front was still somewhat a shambles. I stepped forward, seeing no one else. But then a soft cough made me turn. Leaning against the wall to the left of the door leading to the back of the tavern was a man in a tweed jacket, a rough leather belt, green dyed leggings, and the most ferociously bristling mustache I had ever seen in my born days. My hand went of its own accord to mine, to check and make sure that it was still neat and trim. The man had no sheriff's star nor constabulary uniform, but he still had a holstered revolver at his hip and a steely look in his eyes that was a mirror opposite of the watery, ever fearful gaze of Constable and Mayor John Owens.
"Well, well, well," he said, his voice holding a thick Cumbrian burr. "What do we have here?"
I crossed my arms over my chest, feeling his suspicious gaze. I beat down the prickly response tingling at the back of my tongue. "The name's Rayburn Cog, sir. And you..."
"I'm the town doctor," he said. "The name is Roberts. Doctor Edward Roberts." He clicked his tongue in his mouth. "Have I seen your face 'afore, boy?"
The bristling came thicker and faster now. There was a reason why I so often crossed my arms over my chest, or slid my hands into pockets. It meant that I wouldn't show the fists I so often clenched. My voice came out low and hard. "I'm new in town, my good sir, and unless you happen to be a master of divination or a spiritualist, I don't rightly see how you could have seen my face."
Doc's eyes flicked up and down my body, from my head to my cussed boots.
"Hm," he said. "Rayburn Cog you said? You sure it wasn't Resh Craig?"
It took a titanic effort of will to look puzzled. "Who?"
Doc made a quiet 'hurm' noise. "See here, boy, the Bowden Gang has been spotted back in this area. I just got word that they're planning to come through the town, since we're all fired up worried about the bandits on the bridge." He stepped over to the bar, leaning a hip against it. Casually, he pulled a small tin carton with PROUDFOOT TOBACCO stenciled on the front and a beaming halfling farmer painted on the top. He popped it open with a finger and tucked a wad of it beneath a lip. He chewed speculatively, then spat in a brass spittoon on the bar, letting me twist in the wind as he enjoyed his self.
"You wouldn't happen to know anything about that, would you...boy?" he asked.
Behind Doctor Roberts, I saw Virginia clutching her staff, her knuckles white, and her eyes narrowed. Sally was standing next to her and I saw, over the Doctor's shoulder, Sally lifting up her hand. She mimed bringing her fist down in the same way that one would hammer down a piton while climbing a mountain. I subtly shook my head while Doctor Roberts focused on his tobacco.
"I wouldn't," I said, casually. "Though, have you read the latest journal by the physiologist Dr. John Beddos? He says that tobacco is linked to a quite frightful array of deleterious effects on the lungs and heart of all known non-gigantic races."
Doc Roberts paused in his chewing. Slowly, he spat another brown line into the spittoon. "Now isn't that the damnedest thing...an orc with a vo-cabulary," he said, quietly. Seeming to decide that this was all he might gain from this conversation, he stepped away from the bar-top. Glancing back, he saw Sally, who hastily concealed her hand behind her bulk and put on a rather large, simple smile. Doctor Roberts pointed his finger at her. "Mead-Mug, I don't want to see you in this here bar again. Understand?"
"Doc!" Sally squalled.
"If ya do, I'll get the constable to toss you into the jail cell and I will make sure he throws away his key, understand?" Doctor Roberts said.
Sally looked aggrieved. Well, as aggrieved as a seven foot tall half-ogre could.
Doctor Roberts walked out, with one last spit into the spittoon. I sighed, and Virginia strode over, bristling furiously.
"Resh Craig! Resh
Craig
," she snarled. "To intimate you were some kind of low life bandit."