Chapter 6
E
mory stalled at the cross section of Quartz street and some nameless alley, backlit by the hanging lanterns that surrounded a natural end point to the street. The outside of the Hung Buzzard looked as if it'd been slopped together with tar and planks more paint than wood any more. He easily imagined the whole place swaying if the breeze hit it right.
Why would a daemon- or anyone as rich as Glysless want to hang out in a place like this?
The inn was nestled among the other rot like so much garbage, the light spewing through the double doors cast a thick sickly orange tint over a terrace ringed by wrought iron the color and smell of wet rust. As Emory got closer he swore he heard the tortured metal groaning warning of its impending death-- whether by the machinations of a daemon or structural failure, he wasn't quite sure.
But as soon as he stepped through the door all that faded away; the inn had a surprisingly pleasant atmosphere with big wood pillars shod in iron bands and brightly glowing lamps who's flames danced over all kinds of hunting trophies and paintings of people with massive creatures. Some fought them toe to toe, some stood or knelt in front of them like proud captors. The place even had a mezzanine with the skeleton of a monstrous bird of some kind dangling from the ceiling-- full and complete as if in the act of landing with its wings spread from one side of the building to the other. Its eyeless skull stared at the open doorway contemptuously, daring its presence to be ignored or its majesty to be tarnished by the rot of Quartz Street.
In some twisted way it was starting to make a lot more sense why Glysless liked the place. What did it say about her, though? Emory adjusted the bag at his waist and went looking for his client. He half expected her to be at the bar among a half dozen other patrons, but she'd found a corner to nest in with her back to the wall and a stool too big for the table she was at. An impressive spread of meats were arrayed on the table around a pitcher of beer and a bottle of wine- both half empty. She glanced up at his approach with bleary eyes and a toothy smile.
His breath caught when he saw the dress she was wearing.
He'd been thinking about what he was going to say from the moment he'd left the corsetiere's. He'd planned out this elaborate song and dance to give her money back, but now?
Seeing her there draped in thick bands of satin that started around her throat and swept down her breasts leaving plenty of cleavage tucked between them, he lost his nerve. The fabric outlined her form with slavish devotion to every twist and turn of her powerful musculature until it could do no more and pooled helplessly around her waist and over the stool in a tumbling fall of glimmering dusk.
Her wings were spread so that the muscles of her back threatened to stretch the dress beyond its means to contain her; it was a statement: at any moment and with the merest flick of her body she could be free of all that confined her-- she was contained by choice. She'd removed the gold paint from her horns giving them the same crow's feather shades as her dress and for just a moment- just one, Emory swore to himself, he imagined her blonde locks tangled up around those horns and his hand playing among them.
Glysless gave him this wry, knowing smile backed by the ageless wisdom he'd only ever seen in Lindress's face. Was Emory staring? Had he committed some kind of daemonic transgression? Maybe there was a way to save this. He rifled through every compliment he could think of. Non offensive, not too suggestive and not too familiar...
In his infinite wisdom, his brain shat out a specific kind of brilliance: "Sorry, I don't mean to stare, but when you told me I should only believe half of what goes into your mouth, I wasn't expecting so much of it would be meat."
They stared at each other.
"Uh....c- can I try that again?"
"Probably for the best." Glysless poured a beer for him. Was she smiling?
Emory cleared his throat. "I get tongue tied around staggering beauty."
"That's more like it," the daemon woman said as she slid the beer over and invited him to sit. "Help yourself to whatever you like."
"With all due respe--"
"Ah, ah, ah. You're my guest, let's assume you're sitting at my table presupposes mutual respect and we..." She motioned as if grasping for the word. "You got here before I was
entirely
drunk, I'll take that as a sign you're willing and able to keep my respect. So we can speak plainly, hm?"
"Ah- s- sure." Emory fidgeted a little. This was just a business transaction, there was no reason for his heart to palpitate! He had this under control. "You look incredible..."
Glysless sipped her own beer. "And you played that card already."
"I'm trying to find that point where I want to bite off my own tongue to avoid further embarrassment-- I'm still in the nibbling stages, but I think I'm getting there pretty quickly."
"There are more constructive things you can do if you're so bent on nibbling, mister Emory." Glysless leaned forward casually so her cleavage plumped against her sculpted biceps. She caught his glance, smiled languidly as her eyes flickered orange. "Are you always this coy?"
"Ah- coy. Not really. You uh....you have a presence that most don't? It can be a bit much."
She sipped from her beer, watching him patiently. Expectant but casual.
"Sorry, I don't speak to many daemons; I mean no offense, but it's not often I get the privilege- honor."
Another sip. More time dragged by.
Emory's gaze drifted to his own beer for several quiet moments. Distantly he could feel parts of himself becoming more aware of the woman's presence as if she was a heavy mist on a warm day-- something primal in him wanted to meet her gaze confidently and smile. Lay out all the plans he'd made and show off just how damn capable he was. He and Keline had put so much time and effort into their designs, why shouldn't he have been confident that their client would like their work? He wasn't wrong to be proud of that!
He took a deep breath, a sip of bravery and pulled the designs from his satchel. "Speaking of privileges, we've been working to create some designs I hope you'll enjoy. It's been a real treat working on--"
Emory's voice died on his lips when he saw her looking at him with sharp orange eyes. That beautiful icy blue had given way to the searing heat of a dying sun melting his soul. She was smiling faintly as she plucked the designs from his hand.
"You know," she said in a purr. "You are
very
attractive when you're pleased with yourself."
Emory downed more beer as his client looked over the stack of designs. "You've given me a lot to think about today."
She glanced up at that. Winked.
"I uh, I don't mean to pry-"
"Emory," Glysless said in warning. "Don't go from sugar to sap. Speak plainly." She squinted at the design while she sipped her drink.
"I was wondering who this is meant for. If I knew more about them, I could customize some of the tooling and design to match their personality if that's what you're going for."