The Heroes of Fannen-Dar, Chapter 20
Chester set his cup back on the counter with a satisfying clink of fired clay on polished wood. He slid it forward and placed two silver coins next to it for the bartender to scoop up. "Another," Chester said, crisp and quick. He looked around at the town center market while the thick-bearded bartender refilled the cup with a piping hot, dark brown liquid. The outdoor bar looked out over the booths and stores that circled the well in the middle of Fannen-Dar. At an hour before noon, hundreds of people milled the market, shouting for deals and tyring to trick the others out of their money. Chester saw an urchin slip his hand into the pocket of a silk tunic worn by a dragonborn locked in bargaining with a jewelry merchant. He started to stand up, but stopped himself and grabbed his cup, slouching over the counter.
"There's no use fighting for good in this town," Chester said to the froth in his drink. The bartender raised an eyebrow. Chester took another sip and squinted into the sun as he looked again over the crowd. "The only criminals we can catch are the ones whose capture benefits worse criminals. The rest are protected by bribes and debts."
"Did you say something, pal?" the bartender asked.
Chester blinked. "I think so. Is this coffee stronger than usual?"
"I don't get all the beans from the same place," the bartender said, pouring another cup for a twitching elf who had just snagged a stool. "But it's a pride of mine to keep it on the menu."
Chester chuckled. "Your pride, my weakness. I'd managed to go without for months now, but I just couldn't take the stress of the job anymore. THe captain benched me, knowing I was on the right track. He's helping the very people we're meant to stop. I needed something to settle my nerves."
"Coffee does the exact opposite of that."
"Then I needed something to keep my nerves preoccupied."
The bartender wondered why this young guard didn't have a more normal addiction, like ale or gambling. "You know," he said, "I've always thought of the city as a force of nature, and crime is just part of the natural order. The guard is there to keep the peace, but to actually try and stop all crime is a futile endeavor. It'd be like trying to stop the birds from singing in the morning. You might get some, but there are always more, and people sort of rely on that."
Chester shook his head. "Birds don't threaten people by singing, and nobody relies on getting mugged. I can't accept that." He swigged the last of his coffee. "Get me another."
He looked back out at the milling throng, watching as vendors cheated their customers and thieves plotted their next targets, and he was just supposed to sit by and let it happen. He nursed his third cup of coffee. What good was following the law when the law was wrong?
Chester's eyes snapped to a particular face in the crowd, someone who looked familiar for some reason. She was being dragged around by an elf, shoving past the shoppers with more fervor than most. They were practically tripping over themselves. Chester then noticed two others catch up to them around the well. They looked panicked. He scanned the crowd to see if anyone else noticed, and spotted several thugs who had just entered the market and were trying to look over the heads of townsfolk, as if searching for someone. Chester saw colored tattoos on one in the symbol for the Bloodroot gang. The four around the well, seemingly fleeing from the gangbangers, started climbing into it. Chester nearly choked on his drink.
After the other three had climbed in, the woman looked over her shoulder in Chester's direction, and the realization hit him, much like she had the night before.
"The woman from the orphanage attack!" he said, shooting up from his chair. He looked back at the thugs. They hadn't seen where teh woman and her cohorts went, and they weren't paying attention to Chester since he wasn't in uniform. It might have been the coffee, but Chester started walking towards the well. He quickly swiped a couple of daggers from a weaponsmith as he passed.
After all, if the law wasn't working, he'd need to break it in order to put it back together.
<< Prologue, Heroes
<< Chapter 19, Ladder
Chapter 21, Team >>
There is a place among the dimensions where heroes are born and die each day, where gods and mortals struggle to coexist, and where there are at least seven kinds of magic but only two of them can conjure tasty desserts. Yes, it is a tough world to live in, but it is also one of adventure and fantasy galore. This world is Calemor.
Sunday, May 28, 2017
Saturday, May 27, 2017
Ladder
The
Heroes of Fannen-Dar, Chapter 19
Robin
jogged through the Columns, her tongue lolling out the side of her
mouth as she panted for breath. No one had bothered to give chase
once they realized she hadn't actually stolen anything, but she still
wanted to get back to the relative safety of the Plinth as soon as
she could.
She
pulled open the trapdoor and leapt down into the hideout, scraping
her hand on the rough wooden floor as she landed. Hudtan stood up
from Anzo's chair, looking at Robin with wide eyes. "You're
back! I thought..." She paused. "Well, it's a good thing
Anzo was right."
"What
happened?" Robin said. "Why are you back here? Why did the
trading house open so early?"
Hudtan
raised an eyebrow. "I do not know what you are talking about."
She and Robin sat on the floor, with Robin trying to catch her breath
after her wild dash. "The job did not go well, to say the least.
I got ready in my hiding spot, which should have been imperceptible,
I might add..."
"It
was behind a trash barrel, wasn't it," Robin said. Hudtan
scoffed but nodded. "I would've done the same," Robin
added.
"Well,
the drug dealer had brought along some muscle, and one saw me hiding
and grabbed me from behind," Hudtan continued. "Anzo
insisted on identifying as Bedlam instead of Bloodroot, so the dealer
got suspicious and wanted to cancel the trade. We were both captured,
but I remembered that birdfolk (the dealer was birdfolk, by the way)
are susceptible to high-pitched noises. It hurts their ears."
"That's...just
not true," Robin said. Hudtan glared at Robin with her empty
white eyes, and Robin shut her mouth.
"Well,
I let out a high whistle, and the dealer turns to me. I suppose maybe
he just wanted to see if I was calling backup, but I'm sure it stung
his eardrums a little bit. Anzo took it as an opportunity to break
free from his captor. Chaos ensued, I got free as well, but Anzo lost
his weapon and the gold."
"Did
you get the bloodroot? Did you kill the dealer?"
Hudtan
shook her head. "We were lucky to escape at all. Gwynt caught up
with us, saying that you and he had become separated, and he couldn't
find you. This meant that we hadn't gotten any replacement gold
either. Anzo and Gwynt went to meet the leaders of the Bloodroots and
Night Lotus, respectively. Anzo told me to wait here for you, but I
thought..." She trailed off.
"What?"
Robin said.
Hudtan
sighed. "I thought you had quit. The gang, us, everything. It
seemed like it was too much for you. I apologize; I was wrong."
"Well..."
"So
now we have to be the ones to tell the leader of the Axe of Justice
that we let our target get away."
"Wait,"
Robin said, "we aren't seriously going to do that, right? Can
you imagine what that dwarf will do to us when he finds out we
failed? His entire gang, or club, or cult or whatever you want to
call it, is based on the idea that criminals should be killed!"
Hudtan
smirked. "Are you saying that you are scared?"
"YES!"
"Then
stay here," Hudtan said. "You can watch the base while we
are gone." She climbed up the ladder but stopped and looked over
her shoulder when she was halfway up. "Unless you want to truly
abandon us this time."
Robin
shook her head, but couldn't come up with a better plan. She hoisted
herself up into a hammock after Hudtan closed the trapdoor behind
her. As Robin stared at the ceiling of the Plinth, she thought about
her escape from the trading house. Had she really been so captivated
by the jewel she found that she hadn't noticed two hours pass, or
even the sounds of the merchants and workers starting their business?
And why hadn't the workers noticed her until the trading house had
been busy long enough for everyone to get set up? Something about
that crystal was strange, and Robin wanted to find out.
This
time, the hours stretched on as she waited for the rest of Bedlam to
return. She took a nap, but then started getting bored and rummaged
around for something to do. She poked around the remnants of Gwynt's
alchemy station, but nothing seemed salvageable. She went through the
bits they had stolen from the orphanage, wishing it were something
more valuable. She removed the cloth from Anzo's stool to find that
he was carving something out of a block of wood, though she couldn't
really tell what. She covered it back up with the cloth.
She
was hanging from a hammock and trying her best to exercise when Anzo
burst down through the door. Robin yelped and slipped from the
hammock, bonking her head on the floor. Anzo helped her up, eyes wide
with urgency.
"Robin,
we must move, now!"
"Urgh,"
Robin groaned.
"NOW!
Negotiations did not go well. Broos Bellinger is incredibly irate,
and he's going to come here to finish us off for ruining his plans!"
Robin
let Anzo drag her out of the Plinth and they both set off running.
They practically trampled Gwynt as he was heading the opposite
direction.
"Gwyntmarwolaeth,
the Plinth is not safe!" Anzo said.
"I
was coming to tell you the same thing," he said as they
continued running. "Rivka thinks she ought to try out a new
poison on us for failing to follow through with her orders."
"I'll
bet Hudtan'll say the same thing about the Axe," Robin said
while trying to keep up.
Sure
enough, Hudtan was dashing down an alley when she saw them pass, and
ran towards them to catch up. "We're in trouble!" she said.
Angry
shouts started coming from behind them. Windows on the nearby
buildings were shut in response. The people of the Columns were
familiar with gang violence erupting in their streets, and they knew
that if they shut their doors and locked up, it would all go away
eventually. For Bedlam, it meant that they no one would keep them
hidden, for fear of bringing the wrath of a gang leader down on their
home.
"Anzo,
where are you leading us?" Hudtan said. Loud footsteps were
echoing from the direction of the Plinth.
Before
he could answer, dark shapes suddenly stepped out of the shadows
ahead of them. Anzo skidded to a halt, the other three bumping into
him. Robin peered around Anzo's waist to see agents of Night Lotus
blocking their path. The footsteps behind them caught up, and she
looked over her shoulder at the men and women wearing the Axe of
Justice insignia on their armor. The two rival gangs saw each other
over Bedlam.
"Stay
back, Axes!" a Night Lotus assassin declared, pointing his sleek
dagger at the head of the pack. "This scum has betrayed Night
Lotus and must pay for their actions. We know you, you'd just kill
them and be done with it. We have plans to drag out their suffering."
"Betrayed
you?!" an Axe of Justice cavalier bellowed. "They were
working for us, and they couldn't perform a simple execution!"
He turned to Anzo. "You double crossed us?!"
"You
were meddling in our affairs?" the assassin shot back.
"We
got there first, probably!" the cavalier replied.
Suddenly,
there were more shouts from both sides. Members of the Bloodroot
gang, combing the Columns after finding the Plinth empty, had found
their enemies on both sides and, in typical Bloodroot fashion, had
immediately started a fight. The Axe and the Lotus members turned to
return the favor, leaving Bedlam stuck in the middle with no way out.
Anzo
knocked on the door of the nearest Column, but there was no answer.
He looked around at the fighting. "Whoever wins this, it means
we're going to be next!" he said. "We've got to find a way
out!"
Hudtan
moved up to the house and started picking the lock. Robin heard a
faint gasp and crying from inside. She felt her stomach sink as she
grabbed Hudtan's arm and pulled her away from the door. Hudtan looked
at Robin with a furrowed brow and a frown, but Robin shook her head.
"We can't do that to whoever's inside. They don't deserve to be
dragged into this."
Hudtan
blinked, then her shoulders sagged. Gwynt stepped up and started
climbing the ladder that was connected to the Column. "If we
can't go through it," he said. "Then we'll have to go over
it."
Anzo
grunted but grappled the ladder and started climbing behind Gwynt.
Hudtan followed, shooting up with ease. Robin looked up at the
building. The tip was so far up it seemed pointed, and it appeared to
be swaying in the wind. Whether that was a result of the faulty
architecture or Robin's vertigo from looking straight up, she
couldn't tell. She put one foot on the bottom rung, then heard a
shout from one of the gangsters behind her. "Hey! Don't let them
get away!" Robin started putting rungs below her as fast as she
could.
Gwynt
swung from the ladder above them, confident he wouldn't fall. He
looked around at the layout of the slum. Shorter stacks of houses
created longer alleys that the taller columns overlooked. "If we
go down the other side, we should be able to lose them!" he
shouted down to the others.
Robin
looked down to see what he meant, and immediately regretted the
decision. They had climbed much higher than she had noticed, and
although her grip tightened around the ladder, her vision swayed and
her stomach fluttered. They had to be at least seven stories above
the ground, much higher than the two-floor drop she risked back at
the orphanage. She then noticed that members of the Axe of Justice
(or maybe it was the Bloodroots, it was hard to tell when they looked
so small) were starting to climb up after them.
"We're
expecting company!" she squeaked to her comrades above her.
"Maybe you shouldn't shout our plans for them to hear!" She
tried to catch up to the others, but couldn't climb as fast as before
now that she had seen the lack of ground near her feet. She had to
double check with each step that one of her hands was holding on.
Gwynt
reached a platform that marked another separate house on the pillar.
A window snapped shut by whatever brave soul managed to live at this
height. Careful to keep close to the wall, Gwynt began shuffling
around the side of the building.
"Gotcha!"
a voice shouted, and Robin felt a hand tug on her leg. Her arm
wrapped around the side of the ladder, catching on the rung and
keeping her secure, but her other foot slipped. She dangled by her
arm while the gangster below, a burly wood elf with several missing
teeth, tried to pull her down. She yelped and kicked with her free
foot, bludgeoning the elf in the nose. His hand flew from her foot to
his face, and Robin fled from the ladder to the nearest platform.
Hudtan joined the other two on the floor above her while the elf that
had grabbed her started fighting with a rival gang member on the
ladder below. If she returned to the ladder, they might try to pull
her off again, and while Robin loved being on the ground, she didn't
want to return to it very quickly.
Suddenly,
the window next to her snapped open. “What's all this ruckus?” a
voice said.
“Old
Man Scruthers!” Robin said. She hadn't noticed which column they
had climbed.
His
eyes widened as he saw the raggedy woman on his doorstep. “You!”
he screeched. “You’ve come to take over my house! I knew it!”
“We’ve
got a problem!” Gwynt shouted from above. He had his hand on the
ladder as if he were about to proceed down. “They’ve surrounded
us.”
Robin
instinctively looked down again and wished she had learned her lesson
the first time. She took enough of a glance to notice that the gang
violence had found its way to the other side of the column. She then
steadied herself by grabbing onto the ladder. The others on the next
floor up were discussing their plan.
“We
can make it to another column in this row, and maybe they’ll be
distracted enough with each other that they’ll lose sight of us and
we can climb down…” Anzo was saying.
“Assassins
are already closing in on us!” Hudtan said. “They’ll catch us
in no time. We have to get to another row.”
“That’s
twenty feet away!” Gwynt said. “Even I can’t jump that far.”
As
if to support Hudtan’s argument, a hand latched onto the platform
Robin stood on, and a girthy human started to pull himself up. He
then grunted in pain and was flung backwards by a sword from a rival
gangster just below him. Robin tried to will herself to keep
climbing, but she was frozen to the ladder in fear.
She
felt something jab into her side, and turned to see that Old Man
Scruthers was reaching his cane out of the window to push her away.
She moved to the other side of the ladder so that his cane only
thudded harmlessly into the wood. The geezer was stronger than she
expected, making the ramshackle ladder lurch and shake with each jab.
Robin was horrified to realize that the 25-foot ladder was only
secured by being set into grooves in the wooden platform and tied
with a single rope two floors above her.
“GIT!”
Scruthers howled. “SCRAM! Get off my house!”
Robin
looked again at the gangsters climbing up after her, then back at Old
Man Scruthers.
“Make
me,” she said.
Scruthers
shouted incoherently, and Robin summoned her courage to climb the
ladder to the top. She passed Anzo, Gwynt, and Hudtan as they tried
to figure out what to do. She took out her dagger and cut the rope
securing the ladder. Meanwhile, Scruthers was still using his cane to
shove the ladder with all his strength. Without the rope, the ladder
began to tilt backwards. Robin clutched to the handle for dear life
as she fell backwards off the column.
Anzo
shouted and reached out, but his fingers fell short of the rung.
Robin closed her eyes.
She
felt the wind rushing past her suddenly stop as she was jerked to a
halt. The ladder bounced, then settled back down. She slowly opened
her eyes to see that her insane plan had worked; the ladder was now
spanning the gap between the two columns, and she was within arms
reach of the platform.
Robin
looked back at the other three, who were all staring at her with open
mouths. She tried to tell them to cross the ladder and escape, but
all that came out was a sound like a goat bleating. Still, they got
the message, and once the shock of seeing their newest teammate
almost fall to her death wore off, they scrambled down to the base of
the ladder. Anzo was the first one down, by way of gripping the ledge
and swinging himself onto the lower platform. He kicked an Axe of
Justice on the way down, sending him into Old Man Scruthers's wall.
Scruthers yelped and snapped his window shut. Gwynt and Hudtan
lowered themselves down more slowly as Anzo walked up to the Axe
member.
“We’re
gonna punish you for-” the Axe started. Anzo punched him in the
face.
Gwynt
and Hudtan started crawling across the ladder. A small skirmish had
broken out between the Bloodroots and the Night Lotuses on the
platform below, allowing Anzo to start following when there was room.
The three bodies moving across the wooden ladder caused it to buckle
and shake, so Robin quickly latched onto the new column and pulled
herself up. She crawled over to the other edge and peered over.
Nobody was in the street below, and it was inaccessible from the one
where the fight raged.
Gwynt
was then next to her, urging her to follow him down to the ground.
Robin gladly obliged, Hudtan and Anzo right behind her, happy to
start getting closer to a nonlethal falling distance.
***
The
Night Lotus agent dispatched the filthy Axe of Justice, pushing his
limp body off the column. She and her cohort then climbed up to the
next platform, where the base of the ladder was still balanced to
create a bridge spanning the space above the street.
“Here
now, we can still catch them!” the other assassin said, but the
first agent put a hand against his chest.
“No,
fool! If we go across now, they will reach the other side before we
do. Then they will be free to toss the ladder off balance, sending us
to our deaths!”
The
other assassin blanched. “Of course. Good thinking.”
“Out
of the way!” They were shoved aside by two Bloodroot brutes, who
started rushing across the ladder towards their targets.
The
Night Lotus grinned. “I suppose we could employ the same tactics I
just mentioned.”
Her
cohort chuckled. “Good thinking.”
***
Robin
turned the corner where Anzo had just run and was suddenly grabbed
and pulled up against the back alley wall of a small shop. They were
out of the Columns, and the sounds of the fighting had given way to
the busy din of the town marketplace just around the corner. Robin
scrabbled against the grip at first, but then saw that she was being
held by Anzo, who was listening for their pursuers. She quieted down,
even though her heart was still racing a mile a minute.
“It
seems we have lost-” Anzo began, but suddenly ducked as a dagger
embedded itself into the wall where his head had just been.
“Consider
that a warning shot,” Rivka said, standing up from behind a chimney
on the roof above. “The next one won’t kill you either. But
you’ll wish it had.”
“We
did what the Night Lotus asked of us!” Hudtan said.
Rivka’s
eyes narrowed. “Yes. And the Bloodroots. And the Axe of Justice.
Both groups our dread rivals, and you dare to assist them in their
schemes.”
“But
if he hadn’t, they would have killed us!” Gwynt complained.
“That’s
the plan!” came the voice of Broos Bellinger. He was standing in
the alley in the direction of the Columns, walking quickly towards
Bedlam. Rivka jumped down to block his path.
“We
got to them first, so back off.”
“Actually…”
Hudtan said, but was interrupted by a guttural roar. Robin couldn’t
see down the alley it came from, but she knew that Tasgall, the
leader of the Axe of Justice, was on his way to kill first and ask
questions never. Rivka’s eyes darted to the side when she heard his
shout, and Broos took the opportunity to attempt to shove past her
towards the four cowering against the wall. Robin was the first to
take off in the other direction, and the rest of Bedlam followed
towards the town center.
Robin
burst out into the marketplace and was immediately shoved aside by
the bustle of several people shopping the stalls and looking for
deals. Vendors shouted their prices and voices responded asking for
better deals. Robin pressed on. She felt someone grab her hand and
started until she realized it was Gwynt. He tugged her forward and
she quickly followed.
She
heard Tasgall yell again, coming from right behind her. Gwynt yanked
her off to the right, diving into a group of chatting farmers. They
huffed but couldn’t say much before the two were gone again. Gwynt
jumped to get a quick vantage of the crowd, then changed direction
again. “Rivka and Broos split up and are encircling us!” he said.
They
skidded to a halt at the center of the marketplace, where the Well of
Luck stood. The smiling statue of the goddess on the roof over the
well seemed to be looking down directly at Robin, even though its
eyes were closed. It seemed to say, “You’ve run far, but you’ve
run out of me.”
Anzo
and Hudtan ran in from the opposite direction. Anzo blinked. “Wait!
If you’re there, and they were chasing us from behind here, then…”
“We’re
surrounded!” Hudtan growled, and pounded her fist on the threshold
of the well.
Gwynt
looked through the crowd for a way out, spinning around on the spot.
Anzo mumbled to himself, trying to think up an escape plan. Robin
just stared at the statue, then looked at the bucket hanging over the
entrance to the well. The rope hung over a pulley and was attached to
a crank so that the bucket could be raised and lowered.
Robin
grabbed the crank. “Get in,” she said.
Hudtan
peered down the well, listening to the rush of water below. “It’s
a long way down. The underground river likely is not that deep.”
“Grab
the rope! It will slow our fall,” Robin said.
Anzo
nodded. “Sudden impact with rock is preferable to whatever the
Night Lotus and others have in store for us.” He held out his hand.
“After you."
Gwynt grabbed the rope and nodded to Robin, who turned the crank so that the rope would lower the bucket and make room for Hudtan, then Anzo. By the time Anzo grabbed on, she could barely hold back the crank any longer. She released it, letting the bucket fall the rest of the way. She looked around as she heard shouting; their pursuers were closing in. Stuck threw one foot over the wall of the well, then the other. She gave one last look at the statue, said a little prayer to Luck, and slid down the rope into the darkness.
Gwynt grabbed the rope and nodded to Robin, who turned the crank so that the rope would lower the bucket and make room for Hudtan, then Anzo. By the time Anzo grabbed on, she could barely hold back the crank any longer. She released it, letting the bucket fall the rest of the way. She looked around as she heard shouting; their pursuers were closing in. Stuck threw one foot over the wall of the well, then the other. She gave one last look at the statue, said a little prayer to Luck, and slid down the rope into the darkness.
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