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All Characters in the story are 18 years of age and above...
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Chapter Sixty Four: Targets...
"You'll have to forgive Levia. Years of teaching my daughter not to interrupt me when I'm talking to my guests have all been for naught, I'm afraid," The mayor spoke up. Though he was smiling and his tone light, Greg could tell that there was an undertone of actual disapproval from the man.
The spider queen, however, clearly didn't care. With an indifferent demeanor, she shrugged the comment off. "Oh, I just wanted to greet my host before I ignore you for the rest of the evening. I wouldn't want it said that I lack the social graces of the nobility," She stated before turning around and walking off.
It was a short interaction barely half a minute long. In that time, the woman had barely spared Greg a glance. Whether she had truly been late and hadn't heard about the fact that he was a mage, or she truly didn't care, Greg couldn't tell. Either way, he was glad for her departure as it allowed him to relax. It wasn't that Greg was afraid of the woman, instead, it was fear of inadvertently revealing something that he shouldn't know. They may act hostile to one another, but there was no doubt in Greg's mind that they would unite against him if he revealed that he knew she was the spider queen.
Still, Greg let out a sad sigh as he looked in the direction of the departing lady. "Is something the matter, Mage Roka?" The mayor asked looking at him with a mix of curiosity at his reaction and suspicion that every father has towards any man who has their eyes on their daughter for longer than three seconds.
"Oh," Greg pretended to come back to himself. "Forgive me, Mayor. But I recently lost someone close to me. Back when she was alive, my sister and I used to argue a lot over things that seemed important ... or at least they did back then," Greg let the dour silence hang in the air for a second before he continued. "Forgive me for spoiling the mood, it's just that, while she was alive, had you asked me if she knew that I loved her, I would have sworn to the high heaven that of course, she did! Now she's gone and... I'm not so sure anymore. Did she know that she was the reason I was working so hard? That even when my training was almost unbearable and I was on the verge of giving up, it was her that I thought of. That I never gave up because one day, when I was a powerful mage, I would come back for her. That I would take her out of the poverty we grew up in and put her in the biggest house she could ever dream of. That she would never have to worry about what to wear or what our next meal would be! What I wouldn't give to have just a few more moments with her. A chance to tell her..."
By the end, his voice was just barely louder than a whisper and clearly shaking. Greg's gaze, which had turned distant during his monologue, once again regained focus as he seemed to remember himself and where he was. The mayor was looking at him contemplatively, and though he kept a neutral expression, Greg could tell that he had been moved by his monologue. The man's wife had tears brimming in her eyes and if not for the fact that it would have been inappropriate to hug another man in the current setting, Greg was almost certain that the woman would have pulled him into a comforting embrace. Smiling weakly, Greg offered an apologetic smile before saying that he needed some air and asked to be excused. The mayor offered him a silent nod but Greg noticed the man looking in the direction that his daughter had walked off in.
"Be very careful what you say at the party! The people around you may seem like they are engaged in their own little conversations but trust me, they are always listening. It is a common saying at such parties that a comment made on one side of the room while moving will still get to the other side of the room before you can..."
As Greg stood before the garden, just outside the Mayor's house, he couldn't help but remember Zarra's admonition as they prepared for the party. "What he had just said to the Mayor hadn't been preplanned. After all, how could he have known that the spider queen was the Mayor's daughter or that they weren't on good terms? Still, he had seen a chance and taken it. Why? Exactly because of Zarra's warning. His identity as a mage had already gotten his foot through the door. A tragic backstory to the mysterious new mage, however, was the icing on the cake! If he could tug on the heartstrings of a few of the nobility and win them over before he even met them, this night would go far easier than it otherwise would have.
Greg stood out in the gardens for close to five minutes pretending to regain his composure. When he walked back into the party, Greg was elated to find that his gambit had worked even better than he'd even thought it would. While most of the men offered a few words of comfort but overall remained stoic, the noble women were just overflowing with words of comfort for the forlorn mage. Whether it was because of a pragmatic desire to make a connection to a mage or because they had some romanticized image of him in their minds, Greg couldn't tell. In the final analysis, he didn't care one way or the other. He just soaked up the attention as he kept moving from one noble couple to the next.
Out of everyone present, three in particular held Greg's interest. More than likely, his next attempt at this dungeon would involve one of them. At the top of his list was a potioneer. Lady Andreya was the only other individual in this dungeon that was even tangentially involved in magic, that Greg had encountered. From what Greg had gathered of her backstory, she wasn't an actual mage herself, but she had learned the art of potion-making from one. She could only make the weakest of potions seeing as the more advanced ones required precise mana control, of which she didn't have any. Given the fact that this was a city full of mundane humans, however, what potions she did make were enough to make her one of the most sought-after potioneers in the city. This was especially true because, like his teacher, Lady Andreya was very exacting in the standards of her work. She would sooner die than allow subpar work to be associated with her name.
Part of the reason Greg was so drawn to the potion-maker, apart from the arcane knowledge she might possess, was that, just like him, she thought that all the rules that the nobility abided by were tedious and wasn't afraid to express as much. With most others present, conversations felt like they were eighty percent flattery and flowery language and only twenty percent substance. Talking with Lady Andreya, however, felt like a breath of fresh air. If she liked you, you'd know it. And if she didn't, you were even more certain to know it. She wasn't crude or vulgar with her language, but her tongue was like a sharp sword that she masterfully wielded against anyone that earned her displeasure.
Greg was certain that the only reason she hadn't been shunned by the nobility and run out of the city was because it was next to impossible to replace her. In principle, the potion maker could easily take her work to some other city and still be welcomed with open arms wherever she went. Not that this mattered inside the dungeon where only a single day repeated ad-infinitum. As such, despite the straightforward and slightly abrasive manner of her speech, no one raised any issues with her.
The second individual that drew Greg's interest was a merchant called Sir Vikra. Apart from just being a successful merchant himself, he also happened to be the head of a conglomerate where several different merchants had come together to make a trading behemoth that controlled most of the goods that flowed in and out of the region. It, however, wasn't his trade that drew Greg to the man, but who his daughter was. For the second time this night, Greg found himself having to keep his face from betraying him as he found the blonde thief smiling and laughing with other members of the nobility. Looking at the natural way in which she was carrying herself, it would be impossible to associate this innocent faΓ§ade with the thief that bested the members of the spider gang. She'd even once slit Greg's throat simply for getting in her way.