© Antidarius 2023
------------------------------------------------
A PALADIN'S WAR
CHAPTER TWELVE
------------------------------------------------
--------------------------
A Trap
--------------------------
The cobbled streets of Cartuga's Merchant's District were quiet as Sara walked them in the deepening twilight, the shop fronts and stalls closed for the night. The few people that did pass her eyed her oddly, for a young woman walking the streets alone at this hour surely was odd. And foolish. That would pass, with time, but for now, most Cartugans were unaware of how their lives had just changed. Already, in the hour since she'd stepped away from Rendric's mansion in the Master's District, three groups of men had tried to nab her, hoping to fetch a pretty price for her from Lady Elhorn or one of the other traders. She had spared their lives, of course, but they would all be nursing broken bones for a while. Still, three attempts was less than she'd expected. A week ago it would have been double that at least.
Reaching the end of the street, she stopped in the paved town square and stared up at the huge - and physically inaccurate - statue of Lord Eldred, the current governor of Cartuga. Eldred's life would be changing tonight, too; the man had run his course.
A stiff gust of wind tugged at her cloak and rippled the skirts of the thin white silk dress she wore beneath, but she paid it little mind as she studied the thirty-foot mountain of marble carved into the image of a handsome, broad-shouldered man, gripping his lapels in strong hands and his chin lifted nobly. The fact that Lord Eldred was short and fat in reality made the whole thing ridiculous, even more so for the two bare-breasted marble women kneeling at his feet and gazing up at him as if he was Aros made flesh.
Shaking her head, Sara continued on, crossing the wide square and taking another street that would lead her to her first stop of the night. Scattered clouds scudded quickly across the sky, briefly covering the stars as they made their journey, silhouetted in a golden-silver halo by the fat moon rising, its rim just peeking above the rooftops in the eastern districts. She smiled as approached the red brick building on the corner of a wide intersection dividing the Merchant's District and the Master's District, light and music spilling out of the open doors, the first signs of merriment she'd seen in some time. Not the raucous and wild din that you would likely hear down near the docks, but true, genuine laughter, the clinking of glasses rather than smashing. Two burly Orcs stood by the doors, their brown arms bulging where they were folded across their chests. They watched her approach but offered no barrier as she passed them. They were here to stop fights or prevent unwanted patrons from entering, no more.
Stepping into the Lucky Stallion, her smile deepened to see the place stuffed with patrons of all kinds. Mostly Humans - though there were a few Orcs, Dwarves and Elves present, as well as an odd-looking fellow with a serpentine face and black scales across his cheeks and forehead - sat at the tables across the floor or in the booths, many in fine or at least well-cut clothes, no few bearing the medallion of the Merchant's Guild. That was one guild Sara would be leaving alone for the most part; the rot in Cartuga was elsewhere. The stools along the wide bar on the left side of the room were also full, but that was well; she wasn't here to drink, and she'd just eaten. On a stage in the back corner, a rotund man puffed on a series of wooden pipes that produced a hollow, whistling tune she rather liked while a woman beside him softly slapped some tall, narrow drums. Together they played a peaceful yet lively tune.
In a crowd such as this, she kept her
vala
well contained, and not just for the usual reasons. "Sara!" she heard the voice before she located its owner. A dark, beaming face appeared a moment later, and then she was being hugged fiercely. "It's you!"
"Hello, Lennise," she replied warmly, hugging the other woman back. "How are you?" Pretty and buxom, she wore her frizzy hair pinned back against her head tightly, but it fanned out in the back. The style made her big, dark eyes seem even more so. She wore a green silk dress that accentuated her generous curves, and a stout necklace of gold and emeralds rested on her plump cleavage. Sara was surprised to see her dressed so, so soon after her recent ordeal.
"Never better!" she said happily. "Look at this place!" she threw an arm out to take in the room. "Word is spreading! This is all because of you!"
"Hush, my friend," Sara said kindly, lowering her voice and taking her gently by the shoulders. It was nice to see Lennise so happy. A week ago, she had been firmly in the clutches of the
mor'haim
. "I suppose people will know who I am soon enough, but not just yet, hey?"
Lennise's eyes widened and she nodded quickly. "Oh! I am sorry!" she said in a hushed voice. "I'm just excited, is all! Nobody has seen a..." She left the next word out intentionally. "For over a week now!"
"And most people never will again," Sara added firmly. Rendric and the others had been given firm orders on the matter, and they would not disobey her.
Lennise's bright expression became one of deep gratitude. "I can never thank you enough," she said, eyes suddenly brimming. Sara decided to change the course of the conversation lest Lennise start crying right here in the middle of the tavern.
"I'm happy to see you working," she started to say, then stopped herself. That was not really a change in subject, but Lennise perked up at once.
"Oh, I couldn't stay away!" she replied, tucking her arm through Sara's and leading her further inside, toward the bar. "Besides, you know how Barnett is. Now that he's got me back, he's not likely to let me laze about!"
Sara chuckled. She didn't really know Lennise's brother; she'd only met him once. "I think he just wants you close by for a while."
"You're probably right," she said with an exaggerated sigh as she led Sara past the bar where a couple of women with warm smiles were serving customers. Lennise took her through a door at the back of the room near the stage, which led into a short hallway with more doors. "Barnett will want to see you," Lennise said as she pulled open the door at the end of the hall and ushered Sara inside.
The room was small, with a simple desk and a couple of chairs and not much else in the way of furniture. An iron lamp hanging from a chain dangled above the desk, providing light enough to see. Barnett was sitting at the desk, looking over some papers as they came in. His bald, dark head came up, his face splitting in a broad smile. "Sara!" He was up and around the desk in a heartbeat, his large, muscular frame tightly wrapped in a red silk shirt. He deftly navigating the chairs as he approached. "I have been eagerly awaiting your visit." He surprised her by pulling her into a mighty hug. She rather enjoyed it; he was a fine-looking man, with strong arms and a deep chest.
"Hello, Barnett," she greeted him as they hugged. "I would have come sooner, but other things have demanded my attention."
"No doubt," he said, releasing her. "So much has changed already. Please, sit." He gestured to one of the padded chairs, but she shook her head. The music back in the common room changed to a more rhythmic, pulsing beat, and feet were stamping in time as people danced.
"Thank you, but no, I must be moving on soon." There was much left to do this night, but she'd wanted to see Lennise and her brother first. "Did the Elf come to you? Gaivanya?"
"She did," Barnett replied, his face growing serious. "Shaking and laughing and crying all at once. She was all but naked, too. I thought she was mad at first, until she settled. What in the Hells happened to her?"
"Where is she?" Sara ignored his question for now.
"She is gone," Lennise answered. "She had a room here for two nights, then on the third morning she was nowhere to be found."
"She was better the last you saw her?"
Lennise and Barnett exchanged a brief look. "As far as we could tell," Barnett said slowly. "But High Elves are difficult to converse with at the best of times."
Sara hoped she had done enough for the woman. Gaivanya had been under Rendric's control for a long time. Centuries, maybe. Who knew what being released so suddenly might do?
I did what I could,
she told herself firmly.
With luck, she is well.
"Thank you for taking her in."
"There were others, too," Barnett said. "None stayed here, but the town is still talking about the ones who came running from the Master's District that night. They all fled town, best I can tell. Some may have gone into hiding here, but I have heard nothing of that."
Sara wished she had thought of how to help the poor people beyond just releasing them from their binding, but that night had left little room in her mind for it. She could see the questions in Barnett's and Lennise's dark eyes, so she offered a brief explanation they would understand. "They were under a spell cast on them by the Masters," she began. Lennise shifted uncomfortably at just the mention of it, so Sara kept it short. "Some were only recently taken -" she gestured at Lennise "-and found themselves again easily once released. Others were under the spell longer, and it may take them some time to recover." She hoped that was it. It would be a sad thing if their minds were broken. Yet another crime to lay at the hands of Rendric and the others. He would spend the rest of his days paying for the last thousand years. Sara would make sure of it. Barnett and Lennise nodded slowly, their faces grave. Sara put on a happier face. "So, how is the town? I see the Stallion is thrumming."
"The people are growing less nervous," Barnett replied brightly, resting his bottom on the desk and taking his weight on his hands. "They whisper they have not seen a nightcloak for more than a week now." Nightcloak was one of the terms used for the
mor'haim
, as they often got around swathed in black cloaks.