THE TATTOOED WOMAN - Chapter 37
Apologies for that month-long hiatus, but here we are again. Hopefully, you guys didn't lose patience with me. No idea why, I just had a bit of a dry spell. Guess it happens.
As said, I'm glad folks appear to be enjoying my yarn. As always, please leave comments, as criticism, both positive and constructive, is inherently useful. Plus, I really like reading comments, so that's cool.
Once more, a shout-out goes to Avicia for their suggestions and much-needed help with editing this.
The Tattooed Woman Volume 3 - Chapter 37: Fury, Wrath and Vengeance
Cassie stopped dead in her tracks, and the incredulous look on her face caused Hildegard to wince, "What?!"
"I'm sorry, Cassie, truly! It was never meant to come to this, I swear! But things just got a bit... out of hand, I suppose," she finished lamely.
"But... The dungeon?"
"I know! Please, don't look at me so. But Narissa wouldn't come, and we had to... um, well, you see..."
"We kidnapped her," Garrow added helpfully.
Cassie looked up at the towering creature. She wore a short-sleeved toga-like garment that was belted at the waist and ended at her mid-thigh. Her long, unkempt hair framed her face like the mane of some wild and untamed thing, and her skin was well-oiled. The obvious muscles of her arms and legs held the promise of significant strength, yet for all her size, she moved with the rangy wolf-like grace that Cassie knew was common among Orcish folk, and she had that same feral gleam in those inhuman yellow eyes.
"I'll wager she didn't take kindly to that?"
Hildegard blushed, "No, she did not. Look, I tried to talk her into it, really, I did! But she's so bloody stubborn! And, well, there was a bit of a... um..."
Garrow chuckled, "Fight? Brawl? A tussle if you will, mayhap a melee if you're feeling a touch melodramatic. It was all jolly spirited," quipped the Half-Orc with a grin, "she's got quite the temper on her, you know, and for a wee pixie of a lass she's no shy of getting stuck in. Damned near stove my head in wi a barstool so she did. Must confess, I've quite taken to her."
"Garrow, you're not helping!"
"Sorry, I just work here. If ye'd wanted me to fib to the wench, you should have said."
Cassie shook her head with a sigh, "Well, she's been a wee bit testy since she was murdered. She didn't kill anyone, did she?"
The two women paused as they took in the words, "Sorry, what?"
"I asked if she killed anyone?"
Hildegard frowned, "Ah, no, I mean, look... that last bit? Say that again."
Not noticing their boggled expressions, Cassie continued, "I think getting killed gave her a wee scare. Hardly surprising really. I mean who wouldn't get fright from such a thing? But it has made her a bit leery of folk of late. I'm hoping she gets over it in time."
Garrow turned to Hildegard with a deadpan expression, "You know, I recognise every one of the words she just said and yet somehow, when she strung them together like that, none of it made any fucking sense to me whatsoever."
The handmaiden shook her head, "Me neither. Cassie, when you say she was "murdered", you don't mean that whimsically, do you, like she was mayhap given a sound beating or somesuch?"
"Nah, a Drow killed her. But she got better, so it's fine."
The Half-Orc snorted, "Just look at her cheeky wee grin! I swear she's doing that deliberately."
Hildegard frowned, "Cassie, are you jesting with us? That's not like you."
The younger woman looked up at them both, "Well, you're the ones going to throw me into a dungeon, so I'd say you deserve it, but no, 'tis no jest. She was stabbed to death by a Drow, and Adair brought her back. I wasn't there, but I heard tell it was quite a...
thing
. And I have seen the change it brought to Adair, so I suppose it cost her some, but she did it nonetheless."
"We are not going to "throw you into a dungeon" Cassie. I wouldn't do such a thing to you anyway, but even if I was a mind to, Mistress Aventine was adamant that you not be treated so."
"Why?"
"What?"
Cassie sniffed, and the distinctly canny look she gave Hildegard surprised the woman, "Why would she care a whit about me not being thrown into her dungeon? What am I to her?"
Pursing her lips, Hildegard considered the question, "I don't rightly know Cassie, but in truth, she might surprise you. She's probably the most Dark Elven Dark Elf I've met since we got here, and she's definitely playing the long game. But while she'd likely peel us all like grapes without a second thought if it suited her purpose, I don't think she's inclined to needless cruelty beyond that," she paused and drew a breath, "I suspect she's very much like the Captain, to be honest. She'd not hurt someone or lift her hand against you on a whim or for simple spite, but get on her wrong side, and Gods help you."
Garrow sniffed and cocked a thumb at the sky, "I'd bet buttons to bollocks it's got something to do wi that Dragon. The monstrous thing is what took Cassie here, and if it's made some claim on the lass, then I'd rightly be wary of treating its pet roughly in case it provoked the beast."
The reaction to her words caught the Half-Orc by surprise as the diminutive human whirled on her, "Ellén is neither beast nor monster! And I'll thank you to keep a civil tongue in your head when you speak of her, you green-skinned jackanapes!"