Once we were safely ensconced in the inn, with a room to ourselves and a chance to wipe off blood and bits of muck, the young dwarven lass who had become a part of our little party took a chance and explained herself. She had put the false beard back onto her face for the trip from the basement of the nightmarish P. Schuyler and Son's to the inn, but now that we were safe from prying eyes, Maggie Shalefist removed her false beard. Beneath, I got a chance to really contemplate the features of a female dwarf. It is well known that female dwarves are kept quite safe and secure from the outside world β though the reasons why are often left mysterious. Some claim that female dwarves are simply indistinguishable from male dwarves, with beards and muscles and fairly modest breasts and that all the talk of female dwarves being kept hidden away is just so much smoke and oakum. Others wagered that dwarven women were some kind of hideous, or inhuman, or strange in yet another way, and thus required to be kept far from sight or mind. But all that I could see on the features of Maggie β which might have been short for Margaret or Magnolia or even Magdalena β was the same echoes of the feminine one could see on the female of any race, dwarf, elf, human or orc.
"I wager you all want to hear the long of this, eh?" Maggie asked, her voice having risen in pitch to a charming contralto from the artificial tenor that she had used before. Her hands went to the still faintly sticky patches of skin where her artificial adhesive had kept her equally artificial beard in place. "Well, where to begin...well, I might as well begin with the curious nature of my
condition
. Dwarven women are, I'm told, fragile beasts; outnumbered between one in four to one in two by the men of our clans and families. More, actually
having
the, ah..." Here, her face colored and she waved her hand around her midsection in a vague way. "...it takes time, you see? And is as likely to not bring forth, um, any
issue
, if you take my meaning. And so, it became tradition among our people to keep the females of a family or clan locked up tight and protected. Thus, I spent my first century of life; in the second story of our home." She shook her head. "Well, I knew that I wasn't cut out for this by the second decade. The world outside the window was changing fast, and I
knew
in my heart that it was to be my destiny to find out where my clan is. We..." She paused. "My family does not
know
precisely where our mines are..."
Her hands went to the bracelet she carried. She started to fondle it in her hands, looking down at it with the tender affection that I would bestow to an electric light bulb or some other fragile piece of technological ephemera. Her sigh was soft. "And I've been hunting for clues ever since."
Virginia shook her head. "A century locked up in the second story of a house?" she asked, her former tones of irritation with 'Magnus' airs transformed instantly to tones of sympathy.
"It's dwarven tradition!" Maggie bristled. "And maybe it is fit for many of my kind. I say it's not for me. Not until I find my
people
." She nodded. "But..." She paused. "I haven't had any luck with it for quite some time. Pelonious Schuyler was my last lead for this bracelet." She looked up at me. "But enough about my tale. What brought you to that house of horrors? You said something about a ring, and Gilbert Bates?"
I nodded. "My story begins with the first lighter than air flying machine, the IFS
Zephyr..."
I said. I continued on, leaving only a few erotic details from my adventures out of the retelling. I told of the assassins, the mysterious notes left behind by Virginia's mentor, of the bandit attack on Shrouded Hills, even of Bessie Toonie's exceedingly valuable boot and how giving it over to the eccentric Ristezze had brought us here. "Now," I finished. "We need only figure out how to get a half-ogre wearing a burlap sack, a cross-dressing dwarf, a priestess in ratty robes, and a half-orc dressed far above his station into the mansion of the world's richest, most influential genius." I smiled. "A piece of cake!"
***
Virginia and Sally headed out, leaving me in the smoking room of the Wellington with a once more properly attired 'Magnus.' Virginia had taken the burly half-ogre off to find a clothier who would see fit to get her into some proper servant's clothes. Humans and half-orcs were not so different, and so finding a fine suit for myself was easy. But no one had ever thought to make frilly dresses for anyone with ogreish blood, even those of the fairer sex. And so, we had agreed that Sally would be best served if she was dressed like a body-guard for someone rich and famous. 'Magnus' could clean up nicely and serve as a dwarven assistant β or attache or ambassador if the position of fake assistant proved too lowly for our prickly dwarfess. Virginia too would be seeking out an armory, to find something more in keeping with her new lifestyle as bodyguard to reincarnated holy prophet.
And what was I doing?
I was
thinking
.
We had to find some way to introduce ourselves to Mr. Bates. Some method that would not have us simply thrown out on our ear. Virginia was a woman and not a wealthy one, so trying to pass her off as the head of our party would run into significant issues. I was a half-orc, and not a wealthy one, and while I had some technological aptitude, it was nothing next to the genius who had almost single handed ushered in an entirely new era of progress. I stroked my mustache while 'Magnus' read through a newspaper that some former visitor to the Wellington had left behind.
"Hurm!" 'Magnus' said, her voice once more dropped to a deeper tone. It was actually quite convincing when she was not distracted or shocked. She could have done quite well on the stage. I turned to look at her, wondering what it was that had drawn her attention. "It seems," she said, looking over the newspaper. "Some rich housefrau has lost herself a painting."
"May I see?" I asked.
"Aye, aye," 'Magnus' said, pulling the newspaper so that she could continue to read whatever story had caught her attention in the later pages. This left me with the front page: GARRINGSBURG HEIST! PAINTING STOLEN.
THIEVES STILL AT LARGE