Chapter 111: An Arid Goodbye
Argrave blinked open his eyes, staring up at the white ceiling above. He took a deep breath. His lungs felt back to working order, finally. He started to move and found his body happy to obey. He sat up, his head clear and everything in working order. He touched his chest, putting on a pondering expression.
Anneliese looked at him from where she sat at a table, reading a book. “You slept well,” she remarked.
Argrave ran his hand over his face. “Yeah… I guess I did. I feel pretty good, actually.” He turned to look at her. “Had a dream. Went to this barbecue place I always used to go to. You were there. Then it got weird,” Argrave shook his head.
“And you felt this was worth sharing?” Garm remarked.
Argrave turned his gaze to him. He had many choice retorts in mind, but what Anneliese had told him yesterday still stuck with him. He clasped his hands together and asked cheerily, “How are you doing, Garm?”
Garm could not move, but Argrave veritably saw him shrink away. “I’m… fine,” he responded awkwardly.
“That’s good. Sorry we couldn’t take you with last night,” he apologized. “I hope you understand why, at least.”
“…it’s fine,” he dismissed, closing his eyes so as not to look at Argrave. “Bunch of people eating, smacking their lips—wouldn’t want to be there, anyway.”
“Even still,” Argrave shook his head, then stood, setting aside the woolen blanket and grabbing his duster off a chair. “Where’s—”
The door opened, and Galamon ducked through.
“Speak of the devil,” Argrave said, throwing his duster on quickly.
“The sandstorm has cleared,” Galamon reported, and then slammed the door especially loudly.
Argrave furrowed his brows. “That’s good news, no? Something wrong?”
“…nothing,” he answered after a time.
Argrave looked to Anneliese, who returned his glance with an unspoken confirmation that something was indeed wrong.
“Right,” Argrave continued. “Well… we should find that merchant Tatia referred me to… his name was Titus, I believe.”
Anneliese shut her book, then came to her feet. “I shall get my things together.”
#####
Though Argrave didn’t wish to press Galamon as to what was bothering him, believing it might have something to do with his vampirism, Argrave found later that they did not need to ask.
When they made it to the central square, Argrave noticed there was a particularly large crowd around there. His first instinct was to avoid it, but curiosity drove him to see what they were gathering around. When he grew close alongside Anneliese and Galamon, he found it easy to look over the crowd of people ahead.
Chairs had been arranged in a circle around the fountain statue depicting Fellhorn. Argrave saw strange dark lumps on them but couldn’t immediately recognize what they were. They were many, numbering near fifty. He stared for a while, failing to discern what they might be. Gradually, though, he made sense of it.
They were corpses.
They looked like husks, in truth—the skin had become so dry it cracked at every point, curling inwards to reveal what lay within. Their mouths had not a hint of saliva, and they had shrunk so small that they could not weigh more than fifty pounds, even the largest of them. The flesh fell away at points, revealing petrified organs or bone. Wind carried bits of them away as little more than dust.
It smelled of nothing. Argrave supposed that without liquids in them, it had no reason to smell of anything. It was a vaguely disconcerting sight, but Argrave had been through the Low Way, and was not as fazed as badly as he might’ve been months ago.
He looked to Galamon, understanding what had made the elven vampire bothered so.
“They were executing them, earlier,” Galamon said. “I see, now, why you warned us against touching others’ skin.”
Argrave said nothing, turning his head back. He intended to look for only a bit longer and then move on, but he spotted someone standing by the chairs, and they locked eyes.
Mistress Tatia smiled when she saw Argrave and moved forward. The crowd parted for her, and she came to stand before Argrave.
“Hello!” she greeted happily. “A pleasant surprise, seeing you again.”
Her tone was jarring in the wake of the husks on the chairs, but Argrave managed to return her greeting, saying, “Yes, hello, Mistress Tatia.”
“Titus will depart soon, I suspect. He sells much of the dye we use for clothes, so we interact on occasion,” she noted, touching her purple dress. “You were on your way to meet him, I suspect?”
“That’s right,” Argrave answered quietly with a nod. He looked past her. “What happened here?”
“This?” she looked around, as though it wasn’t immediately obvious what he was referring to. “Ah. The jails were beginning to grow full. I decided to clear them out, stop procrastinating. A terrible habit of mine, you see,” Tatia laughed lightly.
“What did these people do?” Argrave questioned.
“You should know it well,” Mistress Tatia returned. “Some stole, some used magic within the city, some committed violence, some refused to pay their taxes, some dared to blaspheme against our Fellhorn… yet most tried to provide subsistence to those outside the city… the tribals. Many convert falsely, and then try to subvert our authority.” She placed a hand on her hip and turned around.
“When we welcome someone into our cities, we Vessels…” she strode up to someone in a crowd and tore them from the crowd—a red-robed woman. “…make them take Fellhorn unto themselves.” She pulled back the person’s sleeve, revealing a cross with four x’s on the tips etched in a strange, shimmering blue ink. It looked like the person had sapphires in their skin, almost, but Argrave knew it was magic.
Mistress Tatia released the person, who quickly cradled her wrist and returned to the crowd. “We know when they transgress. Yet if they are not reminded of this… they think we do not.” She stepped back up to Argrave. “Everyone needs a reminder, wouldn’t you agree?”
Argrave bit his lip for a second, not answering. Then, he slowly nodded. “I think I understand.”
“Good,” she nodded. “When you return from Argent, I would love to host you once more. Your stories were quite fascinating.”
No Comments Yet
Post a new comment
Register or Login