Notes: 1) My thanks to Arec for reading over this and giving me a few things to look at and adjust! 2) If you see
this
version of the story anywhere other than Literotica it isn't supposed to be there. 3) Because of shorter chapters, this is being posted in chunks.
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*Eight*
The Storm Cauldron's exit wasn't exactly well kept. Syreilla had to draw power from the stone Odos had given her to jar the mechanism enough to make it work. Still, it only opened enough to slip through. She closed it behind her, certain the old man could find his way out as surely as he'd found his way in.
What to do now. Stowing her goods would be wise, and then visiting Imos. The bag she took back to the lodgings she'd secured for herself first. It wasn't a place any sane person would leave anything of real value, or sleep too deeply. It was however a place she'd stayed at before and she knew the little hiding places that could be discreetly used and warded and how to get to safer spaces.
As she was marching into the Hollow Jester, the innkeeper stopped her as she was headed toward the stairs. "Where do you think you're going?"
"To the room I paid for." Syr tilted her head as he barked a laugh.
"A pretty thing like you, I thought you'd found work in a brothel by now. I'll let you warm my bed for the price you paid." His leer faded as she narrowed her eyes and let her lip curl in disgust.
"I will have my room. Go rouse whoever you sold it to."
"He paid more than you did, little whore. You-EEEEEEEEIIIIIIIIII!" The shriek as she cast a ward at his feet, making him burst into flames that extinguished as quickly as they appeared and leaving him singed and staring in horror, caused a stir above them.
"The next time you call me a whore will be the last time you stand in the land of the living. Now. Do I need to repeat myself?"
"N-n-no." He moved to the stairs at speed.
"What's going on down there?" a voice growled with annoyance.
"A matter that's being remedied. Unless you're the one in my room I'd suggest you go back to bed because it doesn't concern you." Syr called up cheerfully.
"M-master Dwarf-" It sounded as if the singed proprietor were trying to enter a room.
"No, you don't. You'll leave my things where they are."
The proprietor backed down the stairs looking as pale as if he were caught between two horrible fates. Syr had to smile as she saw the dwarf advancing in his nightshirt with an impressive axe at the ready. "You can go, innkeeper. If we need you to resolve the matter we'll let you know."
The dwarf glowered down at her, remaining on the stairs. "You're the Hammersworn girl."
The proprietor bolted.
"No, I'm the Rook." She watched his hands loosen on the haft of the axe. "You knew Syreilla Hammersworn?"
"Everyone knew Syreilla. After what she did for Aledelver, word of the half-elf who married a dwarf spread. Her circumstances were made known."
"That we were split in two?"
"How is it you're here and not chained to Vezar Edra." He eyed her suspiciously and gestured for her to come up.
"Family disagreement. My uncle and I don't get along well." Syr shrugged and mounted the stairs. "What did she do for Aledelver?"
"Took back what Tirnel Acharnion stole. With a vengeance."
"I'm amazed Tirnel would dare take anything from her dwarves. She made it clear where her loyalties lie, and that she could outwit him even if she couldn't outrun him."
The dwarf snorted as she called them her dwarves, "When she was whole. Halved, she said she was less quick, less sharp. Whole, she must have been a thief without equal." He sat on the bed and gestured for her to shut the door.
"Only Master Odos was better. She told me she felt less like she wanted to work before we parted ways. She wanted to go home and stay."
"And you?"
"I have trouble sitting still. I need the challenge and being locked in that hole nearly drove me insane." She gave him a bright smile and watched his eyebrows rise.
"That hole?"
"I used to like mines, but Uncle's home isn't one, it's a prison. He tried to keep me confined to a single chamber. You can't blame me for getting restless and finding ways to entertain myself."
"You don't like mines anymore?" He laid the axe on the bed next to him.
"I haven't been in one in a long time." Syreilla lifted the heavy bag off of her shoulders and set it down at her feet before moving to get her smaller purses from the hidden warded space between the wall, dresser, and bed. "What clan are you? What mine are you from?"
"I was wondering when you'd ask." He smiled as he watched with interest. "You still seem to have a fondness for dwarves at least."
"Of course. No dwarf has given me a reason to change my mind." She studied his face, stowing her money in the larger bag and waiting.
"Juddri Grimgrip, Clan Orefinder of Bhiraldur. I never expected that it was Syreilla the Rook I was intended to meet when I was sent here. I've heard a few things about you since I arrived, you have quite the reputation." Juddri chuckled as she bowed. "What's in the bag?"
"Everything I need to make dragon's fire." It was her turn to laugh as his eyes trained on the bag with apprehension. "It isn't mixed yet and my plans for mischief don't involve any mines."
"Mischief and dragon's fire shouldn't belong in the same thought, much less the same sentence, Rook."
"It's just so pretty, Juddri, and I think it likes the mischief as much as I do. Have you ever seen it?"
"Once. I asked Syreilla Hammersworn to mix it in my presence." He looked up from the bag with consternation, "After what I saw, I made her promise she wouldn't do it again."
"Did she botch it? Burn herself?" Syr crossed her arms leaning next to the small window's frame.
"No, it was done flawlessly. The look on her face was awed as she said, 'I would almost swear it's alive, it reaches for you. It reminds me of the way Oduil reaches up from his cradle.' It gave me chills."
"That was enough to make you forbid her from mixing it? That doesn't seem-"
He held up his hand with a scowl, "It was immensely dangerous and she was a mother with a young child."
"If she agreed, that argument must have carried some weight with her. It's an incredibly useful tool." She tried not to return his scowl.
"She loved her husband and her children more than anything else."
"Children?" That sparked her interest. "She had more than one?"
He blinked. "You don't know?"
"No. I wasn't exactly allowed to keep track of her. Vezar got upset at the thought of me going near the mine."
"He didn't want you to go back to your husband." Juddri shook his head and rose from the bed moving to a large bag. "Dragons guard what they take jealously. She said he considered you his golden treasure."
"He did, and he does. He's not thrilled that I'm out and about without him." She smiled wryly, "It's a practically elvish arrangement but he can endure me at my worst and I've come to love him."
"HA! Kin-fuckers, I remember Syreilla Hammersworn calling them that. I wouldn't have thought you could get past that easily." He tossed her a hunk of dwarf bread.
"It took some getting used to but once he understood that he had me, he was patient. He's always been affectionate with me." Syr took a bite, it tasted different than the bread she'd had earlier, and the bread she remembered having before. "This doesn't taste quite right."
"A different recipe than what you're used to. Syreilla Hammersworn-" He stopped speaking as she tossed it back to him and made herself gag.
Something about his smugly pleased face told her she shouldn't have swallowed it. Making herself vomit was the best way she knew to deal with poison immediately. She wiped her mouth with her hand eyeing him distrustfully.
"Syreilla Hammersworn did exactly that. Not the most trusting woman." Juddri looked amused.
"Unearned trust gets you killed." Dragging her bag a little bit away from the vomit, Syr studied him. This was a pleasant distraction but it was still a distraction. She had things to do. "I wish you well, Master Grimgrip."
He took a bite of the bread and shrugged, "I can promise you, Rook, I didn't try to poison you. If you need to leave." Juddri gestured at the door. "Send the innkeeper to clean that up."
"Summon him yourself. I stay in this room for a reason." Putting her bag in place across her shoulders she faced the window and pulled the frame open from the side. If anyone who didn't know the trick tried it, the window would seem securely nailed shut. "I'll be back later to chat about her children and I'll be annoyed if you seal my spare door, Grimgrip."
Juddri began to swear about rusted nails in dwarvish as she slipped out and pulled it closed by a tiny finger hold in the corner. The bag hung heavily behind her as she climbed up the wall on crumbling wooden slats nailed almost haphazardly to the side. There used to be a walkway of sorts up here.
Syr looked around with dismay. The old walkway, as haphazard as it had been, was gone. A wheezing laugh greeted her from a neighboring rooftop. "I knew it. I knew you'd go looking for the old ways of tucking things away. That's too much to carry and too valuable to leave just anywhere."