"What did you do?" Caine asked.
Janie hadn't really noticed him come in. He was leaning in the doorway watching Janie blow out the candles in front of the mirror. She was disheveled and flushed after watching Bella work her oral magic on Captain Vex, and she definitely did not expect an audience for what she was thinking about doing next.
She was recovering from being startled, but Caine didn't give her time to reply. "A customer says you stiffed him?"
"That isn't true at all!" Janie said. "I did not accept his money."
Caine's brows furrowed as he watched her and thought for a moment. "Are you alright?"
"Yes. Well, no. Not completely, but I will be fine. Things got out of hand, but he did not hurt me. I suspect he isn't happy with me though," Janie sighed.
"That's for sure. Why don't you tell me what happened." Caine said past the lip of his tankard.
"The mirror. We used it to watch Bella and Captain Vex..." She struggled with the words. "They were... together. John thought they didn't know we were watching, but they did."
"John?" Cain asked.
"The customer," Janie explained.
"That isn't his name," Caine said, looking confused and a bit amused.
"I know," Janie sighed.
"Nevermind. That's not the important part. Keep going," Caine said.
"He thought he was watching them without their knowledge. I was trying to get him to see that was wrong and leave. I... had a whole reward planned for him, but he just kept watching. Eventually I realized he liked that they didn't know he was watching. It made me upset," Janie said through pursed lips.
"So you argued with him, refused his money, and sent him packing?" Caine asked.
"Yes," Janie said firmly. "He is not a good person."
Caine watched her for a while, then let out a sigh. "You're probably right. You're still wrong though."
"What?" Janie looked confused and a bit defensive.
"Ethically, I'm on your side," Caine shugged. "Anywhere else, I wouldn't be talking to you about it because you're right. Here, things are different."
"I am not sure I agree with that," Janie said slowly, her eyes narrowing a bit in confrontation.
Caine sighed again. "Janie, this is a brothel."
"Yes? So? Consent seems like should be especially important here," Janie retorted.
"It is. That's the point. He didn't go spy on anyone on his own. He came here. Everything he did, you offered to him," Caine said. "The whole thing was a fabrication. Bella and your Captain friend, they knew, right?"
"Yes," Janie said warily, starting to see where Caine was going with this and not liking it at all. "But he did not know that."
"You don't think so? He's not stupid. He just played along with the fantasy you'd built. He's a regular. He's never caused problems before with anyone. Now, he's talking to Chance about how you tricked him." Caine shook his head and took another drink.
"I don't feel like I tricked him. I gave him every opportunity to do the right thing and leave," Janie shook her head angrily.
Caine took another drink and thought for a bit, taking another pull off his mug. "We cater to all kinds. Some of it gets pretty complicated." he sighed, trying to figure out how to get his point across. "For instance, there's a thing called consensual non-consent. It's about creating a fantasy of violation. Usually it's something we make customers sign very specific contracts about. The only people who offer those services are veterans who really know what they're doing." Caine said sadly.
"That sounds horrible," Janie said, suddenly much more uncomfortable.
"It can be, and that's the point," Caine shrugged. "There's a lot that can go wrong in a fantasy like that. It's definitely not something you should be creating on the fly on your second day."
"You think I did that?" Janie asked. "Created a... fantasy of violation?"
"Didn't you?" Caine asked.
"Yes. I suppose I did. The purpose was to make him see the violation and refuse to participate," Janie said. She sounded like she wasn't even able to convince herself anymore.
"I don't think he understood what you were going for," Caine said quietly.
"Clearly," Janie sighed.
"Remember the rule about how no one gets tricked?" Caine asked.
Janie felt defeated. She nodded.
"I'll keep Chance off your back, but no more customers for you, alright?" Caine asked.
"That's what I wanted anyway," she said sadly.
"Good," he said with a small smile. Then he ducked out of the curtains and was gone.
________________________
The crowd gave Jack and her entourage plenty of room. The Centurion immediately shifted his focus to the biggest threat. He moved much faster than one would expect from someone in heavy armor. With a gliding quick-step that seemed almost like a dance, he covered the distance to put himself right between Jack and the two priestesses. He stared right through his transparent shield, his eyes intense and warning. His hand began to raise towards his shoulder and Jack's large gun went from a relaxed but ambient threat, to her shoulder, aimed right at him.
"Try it," she said. Her smile never reached her eyes. The right half of her face was painted into a sinister looking skull now, which added to her grim demeanor. It looked like it hadn't been finished, but enough of it was there to give her an intimidating countenance. "My bet is, the flames wash right around your fancy magic shield, and cooks you and everyone behind you too." The Centurion stopped. His eyes flicked towards the priestesses. "What, that ward of thiers doesn't stop fire?" Jack asked. "Seems like you have a problem."
"Jack, back off!" Will called out. She ignored him.
"You'll burn him too," the Centurion cautioned.
"Why do you care? You think he's some kind of monster anyway," Jack shrugged.
"Jack, you're not helping!" Will said loudly.
"Shut up, Will!" she snapped, her eyes never leaving the man in the golden helm. Something felt off. It nagged at the back of her head, but she didn't have time to think about it.
"I don't care, but you do," the Centurion said. His hand creeped a little closer to the stock of the firearm slung on his back.
"I already did the worst thing I could do to him. A few burn scars won't be much to add to the list," Jack shrugged.
"She's not bluffing!" Will shouted.
Jack took a step to the side to get a better angle on the priestesses. The Centurion stepped with her, his hand blurring and coming down with his weapon. It was a rifle with a short, thick barrel and a long bayonet attached to the end. It rested in his shield hand with professional ease. The barrel and bayonet protruded right through the shimmering field of his shield.
As soon as the Centurion's weapon came to bear, Quinn moved. He stepped in front of Jack and ducked beneath her gun so it rested on his shoulder. One of his swords was suddenly in his hand. The Centurion's bayonet was only a few feet from him. Jack raised her eyebrow at the Centurion. "How high do you want to escalate this?" The Centurion didn't answer.
The priestess who had ahold of Will's rope continued hauling on him. He was digging his heels in, but with the way the rope resisted him also, she was winning the tug-of-war. He tried to just go limp and turn himself into dead weight, but the rope felt like it was locked in the air. It didn't fall with him. Instead it held his arms where they were. Trying to collapse to the ground just wrenched his shoulders painfully.
The crowd had closed in enough to block the priestesses retreat. They were looking cagey and a bit panicked. People were starting to shout "let him go" and "Magistrate get out." The throng of costumed people, many of them with brightly glowing skeletons painted on their bodies, was impressively intimidating.
"He's not human!" the Hammer priestess in purple barked. A bottle crashed into the ground next to her, shattering into shards at her feet. Apparently the shimmering ward didn't stop improvised projectiles.