July 9
th
, 1885
The town of Stillwater appeared, after the past week of marching through sticky, humid temperature and the occasional flurry of summer rains, like a paradise upon the gods green earth. I, Virginia, Maggie, Sally, Gillian, the ever faithful Dogmeat and the members of the Stonecutter clan who had decided to emigrate back to the Wheel Clan all trudged into town stinking of long travel and the still omnipresent smell of zombie. As we came to stop near the central statue that marked the middle of the town, watched by all the gathered villagers, I turned to face Herod Iron Heart.
"So, again," he said, his voice anxious behind his beard. "I am sorry about all the nonsense involving the zombies and the reanimated dogs and the insane golem and-"
I mutely pointed off to the east.
The dwarf we had been sent to deliver nodded, turned, and hurried off with the rest of his clansmen.
A gentleman in the uniform of a Tarantian constable walked slowly over towards us, eyeing the party that did not immediately set off for the Wheel Clan's hidden stronghold. He opened his mouth, clearly about to ask a question, but I raised a grime splattered hand. "I don't want to talk about it," I said.
The only member of our party that seemed happy with their current state was Dogmeat – and that may have had something to do with the sheer number of bones he had gotten to play with while in the depths of the Stonecutter clan's mines. The constable shook his head slowly, then jerked his thumb over his shoulder.
"The Bleeding Rose has beds and baths for a few crowns," he said. "With hot water, too."
"Oh praise Nasrudin," Virginia groaned as the constable took his leave.
"You're welcome," I said.
Virginia kicked me in the shins.
The innkeeper himself – a blustery faced, balding halfling – looked quite askance at the lot of us until I laid out the golden coins that I had. They were becoming an increasingly motley example of the financial practice, as several bore the bespoked icon of the Wheel Clan, several were ancient Black Mountain coins, and the rest were a combination of Tarantian and Caladonian mintings. However, each weighed about the same, and they had a salubrious effect on the halfling, who held out a set of keys to us.
Something small wriggled in the back of my mind – a half remembered thought. It was only once I took the key did it spark in my mind: "Oh! Some months ago, an older human woman with hazel eyes, a facial scar and the robes of a Panarii priestess must have visited. Has she remained staying here?" I asked, recalling the descriptions of the Elder Johanna that Virginia had given me. Virginia started at the mention of her mentor – clearly, she had forgotten as I had that Johanna had said to seek her in Stillwater in the telegram we had received months before.
The innkeeper's eyes brightened. "Ah! You are Virginia?" he asked, looking at Virginia, who nodded quickly. The innkeeper held up a single finger. "Beg pardon, I must retrieve something from the lockboxes."
He turned and scampered into the back rooms. As he did so, I murmured to Virginia. "Seems we missed Johanna again."
Virginia nodded, her eyes impossible to read. The halfling emerged from the back of his inn and brought with him a thickly bound red book with a clasp that was sealed with a tiny key. Held against the cover with his thumb was also an envelope, sealed in wax. He held both to Virginia, who took them with a quiet thanks. Thus equipped, we all headed back to our rooms. Feeling absurdly bashful, I entered into the room I had acquired for Virginia and I, trying to ignore the salacious smile sent our way by Sally Mead Mug. Once within, I took stock. The room defined rustic and pleasant – bringing to mind the room at the Shrouded Hill's inn. Though, unlike that, this room lacked corpses.
Virginia shucked off her traveling coat and tugged off her chain mail, wearing only her cotton undershirt and her leather leggings. "So, uh, what does the letter say?" she asked as she walked into the rear of the room, where an iron wrought tub sat, already filled with water. She put her finger into the water and hissed with happiness and pain both, jerking her hand free. "Piping hot."
"Who gets the bath first?" I asked.
"Oh, uh...you!" Virginia said, her cheeks darkening.
"Nonsense!" I said. "You're my bodyguard. Shouldn't you...bathe...first?"
"That is poppycock and...and folderol!" she said, flipping one hand. "I can't protect you in the bath!"
"And I won't have you catching a cold after I soak all the heat out of that bath," I said. "This is the mountains, you know."
"In
July
?" Virginia crossed her arms over her chest. "I'm afraid I must insist, sir, you get the bath first!"
"Absolutely not," I said, setting the book down on the bed. "I offered it, and it would be priggish and ungentlemanly to simply take the honor from you. After all: Ladies first."
"Oh, I'm a lady now!?" Virginia asked.
"...yes?" I blinked.
"I mean...like...I'm..." Virginia spluttered. "Fine!" She grabbed her shirt and tugged it over her head with some fierceness, throwing it directly into my face. It was rich with her scent – unfortunately, her scent included the now week old gore of several zombies she had decapitated while delving in an underground dungeon. I tugged it from my face and threw it to the ground in time to see that Virginia had sunk up her chin in the bath, her knees drawn almost to her nose. Her hair had been frazzled by the progress of her shirt, giving her a wild-woman look to match the peevish glare she sent my way, which contrasted sublimely with the poorly concealed look of bliss that came from soaking in a piping hot bath. She groaned quietly as I sat upon the bed, opening the wax seal on the letter with one fingernail. I tilted the envelope and found more than just a folded piece of paper covered in cursive scrawl: There was also a tiny golden key with a death's head motif on the bow.
"What does it say?" Virginia called from the bath.
"Give me but a moment, old girl," I said, using a thumb to open the letter up and hold it before me. I tilted it to catch the light from the oil lamp in the room.
V.
The men trying to kill you seem to be the remnants of the Molochean Hand, who, long ago, were assassins for the Order of the Dead (Derian Ka). I found this ancient but incomplete text concerning their history...they don't seem to be bad fellows, perhaps just a bit misdirected. Things are too dangerous right now...I shouldn't have even had you come here. I'll find you.
-J
I finished reading it aloud to a loud snort from Virginia. "Not
bad
?" she asked, sloshing in the bath slightly. "What, pray tell, do these fellows have to do to be villains? Kick puppies? Drown kittens in the bathwater?"
I chuckled. "Well, let us see what we can see..." I said, lifting the book and checking the spine – only to find that the lettering had worn away to indecipherablity. I pursed my lips, then tried the key on the clasp. A faint
click
sounded and the book opened before me and I saw what the Elder Johanna had meant by 'incomplete.' Large swaths of the book were illegible – the page eaten away by time, or damaged by water. I turned even these useless pages with great care, not wanting to harm the tome anymore than it already had by time. At last, I came to some text I could read – and began to do so aloud.