DargonZine | Volume 3, Number 10 |
"
ir!" a young guardsman ran into Captain Koren's office.
Captain Koren and Lieutenant Kalen Darklen exchanged a look of
irritation.
"Did they ever teach you the polite way to deal with a closed door,
soldier?" Lieutenant Darklen stood up.
The guard quickly straightened himself out -- it was obvious he had
run a long way -- saluted his two superiors and asked for permission to
speak.
Kalen sat back down. "I want you to take a night shift for the next
two weeks," he said. "Perhaps I can inspire some manners in you by
keeping you near by. Hopefully you will remember that you should knock
before entering. You will start tonight."
"My current shift ends at sunset, Sir," the young guard protested.
"When I was your age," Captain Koren finally spoke, "and Dargon was
half the size it is now...and there was twice as much crime, we had a
shortage of guards and an abundance of criminals. I remember moving into
the guard house to supplement man power day and night. Now report before
I decide to give you a years worth of night shifts!"
Kalen hid a smile as the guard straightened out into exemplary
posture of attention.
"Sir, after last week's fire by the docks, the old building was
completely torn down and yesterday the men rebuilding it started digging
up the old foundation to put in a new one..."
The passive `so what?' expression on his superiors' faces made the
guardsman hurry up with his report. "This morning one of the workers
stopped the patrol I was with and showed us what they found. There were
skeletons under the foundation...and this..." He stepped forward and
handed Koren a metal pin.
Turning the pin in his hands, Koren stood up. "Kalen, have you ever
seen this before?" He handed it to his friend.
Kalen took the pin and examined it. "It's the same as the plaque in
the entry way."
"Do you know what it is?" Koren asked the guardsman.
"No, Sir. I recall hearing a noble once lived in this building,
before it was given to the town guard. I assumed that the pin belonged
to a noble... maybe one of those bodies."
"This building," Koren said, "belonged to the Ducal General, Sir
Connall Dargon, brother to Duke Anton Dargon. He gave it to the town
guard when he was awarded the Barony of Connall in 889, as at that time
it stood taller than most buildings and was made of stone.
"The pin and the plaque are symbols that the town guard once used.
They were changed over to the new ones on New Years Day, in the year
1000."
"But wasn't Fionn Connall the brother of Clifton Dargon the
second?" the guardsman asked. "Wasn't he the one awarded the Barony of
Connall?"
Koren sighed, disappointment deep within him. "And after your
patrol tomorrow, I want you to go down to the hall of records and find
out the history of the Barony, now County of Connall. I will be
expecting your written report in two days. If I feel it lacks quality,
we will discuss this further, understood?"
"Yes, Sir," the guard answered, no longer willing to talk or argue.
His mouth has gotten him into more than enough trouble for one day.
"That body has to be at least fourteen years old," Lieutenant
Darklen said when the Captain of the Guard looked back to him. "I'd like
to take a look."
Both men stood up and followed the young guard out of the office.
"You don't have to go, Kalen," Koren said, remembering Kalen had been
taking the night shift ever since the trouble with the provincial Mob
began. "You've been up for a while..."
"I am curious," the Lieutenant said. "Sounds like an old case."
Koren chuckled. "Then get my horse ready. I will be right there."
He stopped by a desk in the lobby. "Where is Lieutenant Shevlin?" he
asked the guardsman sitting there.
"He left on patrol a while back, Sir," the man answered. "He is
patrolling the market."
"And Lieutenant Milnor?"
"She hasn't come in yet, Sir."
Koren thought for a moment. "If either of them shows up, have them
meet me at the tavern that burned down last week."
"Yes, Sir," the guardsman nodded.
"Oh, and has there been any word on finding that crazy mage, what's
his name?"
"Cefn an'Derrin," the guardsman said. "Lieutenant Shevlin filed a
report yesterday. The owner said he was paid enough to rebuild and is
not interested in charging anyone."
"Listen to what I say, not to the owner," Koren answered. "If he's
spotted in this town again, I want enough men watching him to make the
King's personal guard look like a cadet convention! I don't want crazies
running around my city, setting fires to seedy joints. Next thing you
know, they'll be burning down the keep!"
"We didn't touch anything, Captain," the work foreman said, taking
Koren directly to the skeletal remains. "We couldn't. Your men told
everyone to leave and remained in the pit. I hope you can finish this
soon. The fresh lumber will be brought tomorrow and we're already a day
behind schedule."
"Stop rambling, Tarnak," Kalen told the foreman.
The group came up on a narrow wooden stair leading into a ten foot
pit.
"You'd better go first," the foreman said. "They drew steel on me
when I tried it."
Kalen tested his footing on the stairs and went down first. He was
met by two guards who saluted him and remained at attention until
Captain Koren stepped down. "Which way?" he asked, brushing the dust
from the stairs off his uniform.
"Right this way, Sir," one of the guardsmen pointed to the opposite
wall.
"Lead on," Koren told him.
"When was this building built?" Kalen asked the foreman as he edged
past the remaining guard on the stairs.
"I don't exactly know," the man said. "Depending on who built it,
there should be records in the town library or in the archivist's
possession in the keep. Judging by the design and condition, I'd say
about twenty years ago."
"That sounds right for what the Captain was saying."
Koren and the two guardsmen with him reached the shallow pit first.
It was some ten feet across and three deep. In it lay two skeletons.
Koren hopped down into the hole and started looking around. The other
four men stood on the edge waiting.
"What was this?" Kalen asked.
The construction foreman shrugged. "A grave, no doubt. This all was
covered over by the foundation. It's not even necessary for the
building. Wood a good foot deep was used to cover this over, to take the
weight. Whoever laid it knew there were bodies under here."
"Kalen!" Koren called out of the pit. "I want a doctor to look at
these skeletons and a mage too."
Kalen gave an order to one of the men and jumped down into the pit
after his Captain. "What did you find?" he asked.
"Nothing," Koren shook his head.
"Tarnak says whoever built this building knew the people were under
it," Kalen reported. "I hope they were already dead."
"I hope so too, Lieutenant, but we may never find out. Right now I
want to check when this tavern was built, by whom and if any
disappearances are recorded for that time. Guards in particular."
"Tarnak guesses it was built twenty years ago," Kalen said. "Did
many guards disappear back then?"
"No more than now," Koren said. "Maybe one or two a year. It
happens. This is a dangerous line of work we're in."
Kalen knelt next to his superior, studying one of the bodies. "Did
you find something?"
"Look at the forearms on this one," Koren pointed.
Kalen took a closer look. "His hands were cut off!"
"So we've got two dead men, one quite possibly a guard, buried
under a building twenty years ago. Which one had the pin?" Koren called
up to the guard on the edge.
"Neither one of them really had it," the man said, jumping down
into the pit to show Koren where the pin was found, but at that time a
woman in a uniform similar to Kalen's appeared at the edge of the pit.
"Captain Koren," she called down. "I was told to drop by here
before going on patrol."
"Ah, Lieutenant Milnor," Koren looked up. "Are you with your men?"
"They're up on the street waiting for me."
"Do you have a medic among them?"
"Yes, Sir. Is someone hurt?"
"Everyone's fine. I just want him to take a look at these bodies."
Ilona Milnor looked down the side of the pit, seeing how to get
down best without getting her uniform dirty. Kalen hurried to her aid.
"Right here," he said, reaching up. The woman accepted his hands and
jumped down.
"Get Moor for me," she told the guard in the pit.
The guard nodded and after telling Koren where the pin was found,
climbed out and ran off.
"What happened here?" Ilona asked, looking at the two skeletons.
Kalen quickly told her the story of the mornings events while
Captain Koren examined the area again.
"Anything?" the two younger officers joined their superior.
"Nothing," he shook his head. "The clothing is too old to tell us
much," he said, pointing to a mostly decayed rag lying by a wall.
Kalen attempted to pick it up, but the cloth crumbled into dust at
his touch. Beneath it he scooped up a few rusty buttons and handed one
to Koren.
The Captain again shook his head. "Upper class, definitely. I
wonder which of these bodies it belonged to..."
There was sound of running footsteps and two guardsmen appeared at
the side of the pit. Jumping down, they saluted the officers and awaited
instructions.
"Moor, I want you to take a look at those bodies and make a report
before they are moved," Koren ordered. "Urone, go find records for when
this place was built and by who."
The two men started at their respective tasks. Koren thoughtfully
looked on as the medic examined the remains. He turned over in his hands
the broken forearms of one body, all along shaking his head, then took a
closer look at the skull.
"Sir?" Kalen put his hand on Koren's shoulder.
"Uh? Yes?" The man turned around. "What is it?"
"Just the way you looked, Sir," Kalen said.
"Oh, it's nothing," Koren sighed. "I was just wondering if that was
someone I knew once. It will be twenty-five years this winter since I
first came here, you know. All those boys who never came back home from
their patrols..."
"It's a dangerous job," Kalen said. "You said it yourself. It could
happen to any of us."
"That it could," Koren sighed again and went over to the medic.
Behind him Kalen felt Ilona wrap her arms around his torso. "It
scares the hell out of me when he starts eulogizing like that," she
whispered.
Kalen turned and put his arms around her. "Don't let it get to you.
Let's go see what they're doing."
"I don't know about this skull," Moor was saying to Koren. "It's
missing teeth, but I don't know if they fell out or got knocked out. I
don't even feel competent enough to guess..."
Kalen knelt by the second skeleton before Moor got to it. This one
did not appear to have any broken bones and the teeth seemed to be all
in place.
"I can tell you this one is male," Moor went on. "Or rather used to
be..." He turned to the second body and looked up at Lieutenant Milnor.
"A lot of help I am," he smiled.
"I already sent for a doctor," Koren said, "but you may as well
take a look first. One learns to take initiative in this job."
Moor got back to work and Ilona bent down next to Kalen to better
see what was being done. She leaned with her hands on the ground to keep
her balance and immediately brought them back up. "Oh!"
Everyone looked at her as she picked something up from the ground.
It was a finger bone with a silver ring still around it. She removed the
ring, turned it over in her hand and gave it to the Captain. He examined
it, turning it over; a silver ring with a crimson red stone and small
letters engraved on the side. It struck him as very familiar and then a
deep pain made it obvious what it was. He turned away from the others,
kneeling on the ground, tears building in his eyes. There was only one
person that skeleton could have been.
Kalen and Ilona exchanged a look of confusion, then Kalen got up.
"Captain? Are you all right?"
Adrunian Koren wiped his eyes and brushed back his grey hair. It
was not fitting for his men to see the Captain of the Guard this way. He
turned. "I am fine," he said. "Lieutenant Milnor, resume your patrol.
Darklen, go home. Get some rest. The Duke doesn't like having to pay
extra." He walked over to the other side of the pit and started pacing.
Ilona stood up and walked over to Kalen. Moor got back to examining
the skeletons, pretending he did not see the exchange.
"Go ahead," Kalen told Ilona. "I'll make sure he is fine before I
leave."
She kissed him quickly and he helped her out of the pit. "I'll come
for you after your shift."
Ilona Milnor left in the direction of a lone guard pacing by the
staircase.
Kalen turned and leaned against the edge of the pit. His
relationship with Ilona was more than professional, but Koren never
seemed to mind that. Kalen even suspected at one time that Koren
promoted her because he did not want stories of a Lieutenant seeing a
mere guard. Ilona, of course, proved competent in her position and
affair between equals wasn't enough for others to gossip about.
Kalen watched as his Captain measured the pit back and forth,
wondering what that ring Ilona found was. Could it have belonged to a
lady Koren loved? He couldn't recall any useful stories about the
Captain's past and saying a quick prayer to the Goddess Randiriel for
Ilona's safety, walked over to Koren.
"Sir?"
Koren looked over. "Didn't I tell you to go home?"
"Yes, Sir," Kalen said, "but I was wondering if you had breakfast
yet."
Koren shook his head. "I eat over paperwork."
"So that's where the stains on my reports come from..."
Koren smiled grimly.
"Would you care to join me for breakfast?"
The Captain grumbled for a bit, but with some more convincing on
Kalen's part, finally accepted the offer and they went to a small tavern
a couple of blocks away.
"Kalen, I know what you're trying to do and I am very grateful,"
Koren said after placing his order.
Kalen ordered as well. "Do you wish to talk about it, Sir?"
"Just Adrunian," Koren said. "We're not on duty." He fell silent
for a moment, then started talking again.
"Let me tell you a story..."
Deanir knocked on the boss' door and entered. Seadon Rohden
followed him in. "Lord Rohert," Deanir said, bowing to his uncle, "the
shipment just left."
Jaipena Rohert, a grey haired man in his sixties, looked up from
the book he was reading. "Any trouble?"
"One sailor said he would report us to the town guard when he found
out what the cargo was," Seadon reported. "The Captain promised to throw
him overboard when they get far enough out at sea."
"Fine, fine," Rohert said, laying the book down. "Now I want you
two to put together the group to raid the caravan leaving tomorrow.
Deanir, I want you to make sure Seadon knows his way around. We'll be
doing this a lot now."
The two men bowed again and left. "How big is the caravan?" Seadon
asked outside in the corridor.
"Twenty wagons at last count and still hiring guards. I had Liriss
sign up on it. He'll keep us informed until we're ready."
"Can we do it in one day?"
"No. We have to be ready in a few hours. I was thinking of
ambushing them."
"I don't think we'll make it," Seadon groaned. "Do you want me to
sign on as well just in case?"
"No, no. That's all right. "One man is fine. I'd rather put
together the party that will ambush them. I'll start gathering the
people right away. I want you to find Liriss and see how the caravan is
doing. Meet me after sunset at the Hungry Shark. Alone."
The caravan grouped in a large camp just outside the town gates.
People ran back and forth in preparation for the next day's departure.
There were at least two dozen wagons standing around, together with at
least that many tents. A few armed men wandered among them.
Making his way between the wagons, Seadon spotted Liriss sitting by
a small fire with two other men. A fat pig hung on the spit over the
flame and periodically one or the other of the men would poke it with a
stick and then turn it over. Seadon hesitated as to whether he should
approach Liriss with other people around, but soon decided it would be
less obvious if he would call him aside, rather than simply stand by a
wagon, having people walking by stop and look at him.
"Liriss?" he called out, approaching the fire.
The young man turned to look behind him, then recognizing Seadon
said a couple of words to his companions and got up. Seadon waited a few
feet away, not wanting to let the other men have a close look at him.
"New plans?" Liriss asked him.
"No. Just getting last minute information," Seadon answered.
"We're still leaving at day break," Liriss said. "We're supposed to
have twenty-eight wagons by then and about forty guards."
"Forty?" Seadon asked. "Rohert only has twenty-two men total!"
"Well, I told you last week he's too old for this line of work,"
Liriss motioned. "Things aren't how they were when he was our age."
"In this town you either work with him or against him and the town
guard is after you either way."
"I want him to retire," Liriss said. "Even if I have to convince
him myself. I think I can turn this business around, make a big profit."
"That's between the two of you," Seadon shrugged. "My only concern
is how we're going to take forty men."
"I've been working on that," Liriss smiled. "The two I was talking
to are all ready on our side."
"Rohert won't like you adding people to the take."
"They're not taking anything."
"So what did you promise them?"
"A piece of the action," Liriss smiled, taking the hilt of his
sword. He pulled it up from the scabbard, "and this is the action." He
slammed the sword back down. "They'll be of use."
"We'll need more than two men," Seadon said, "providing they stay
with us long enough."
"I also took the liberty of obtaining some poison for the guards,"
Liriss said. "We will need no more than a dozen men."
"Poison?" Seadon asked. "For forty guards and all the merchants and
travelers?"
"Just enough for the guards on the night watch. We only need to
catch the caravan off guard for Rohert's attack to work."
"All right then. Make sure you're on duty tomorrow night. I'll tell
Deanir your plan."
"Good. I'll be ready."
Seadon scanned the caravan. There'd be more to take on than Liriss
thought. "See you tomorrow night."
The two men walked off in different directions, Liriss putting
together his plans and Seadon pondering how to stop them. Poison was a
new twist. He slowly walked through the city gates, looking at the two
guardsmen patrolling along the road.
Seadon walked over to the side of the road and slowed his pace. One
of the two guardsmen started down the road towards him. Seadon smiled to
himself. "Your place at midnight," he whispered as the guard passed by
him.
Seadon made it to the designated meeting later than he should have.
He spent the evening at the tavern, discussing the plans with Deanir and
later dodged back and forth across town, trying to lose the spies
following him around.
Seadon Rohden was not a criminal. Just the opposite, he was a town
guard. A new one -- only three weeks on the job -- but none the less, a
guard. He came to Dargon when a childhood friend, Glenn Aposhyan, known
here as Adrunian Koren, sent for him a message saying that new guardsmen
were needed at this frontier town, to which he had come some five years
before.
Seadon, a mere two years younger than his friend, spent his early
years working as a mercenary for hire and guard for a week. It was just
the experience needed to become a town guard, particularly now, when
crime was on the rise and people needed to fight it were looking for
easier, quicker ways to make money.
When the Captain of the Guard heard that a trustworthy man, unknown
in Dargon, was available for hire, it was arranged that a guard would
meet Seadon in Tench, brief him and leave everything else to fall in as
a lucky `coincidence'.
And so Seadon embarked on a month long journey, first to Tench and
then to Dargon, where he would join the criminal underworld and aid the
town guard. It all went well, except that a few days before reaching
town, his wife, Nadya, gave birth to their first child, a baby girl.
Seadon almost turned back to Tench, willing to forget his new job
and duty, but was reminded by his wife that what he was doing was more
important and she and the girl would manage. This appeal to his sense of
duty convinced Seadon to go on to Dargon, but he could not stop cursing
himself for agreeing to the job when he had a family to think about.
Having set up his wife and daughter in a boarding house in an area
that happened to be safe, but cheap, Seadon started his job, at first by
watching the market and the docks and later following people he thought
were the individuals associated with the local underworld. On his fourth
day in Dargon, Seadon made contact with a man named Liriss, a
professional cutthroat in his mid twenties, who, by chance, failed at
his attempt to relieve a merchant of his gold and was nearly apprehended
by a pair of guards.
With a lot of luck and careful timing, Seadon aided Liriss in his
escape and having made this friend, was soon pulled into the world of
the underground.
By this time he had done a couple of jobs for the organization and
reflected well in the eyes of Jaipena Rohert, an elderly man who
appeared to be everyone's grandfather on the surface, but on the inside
was the undisputed boss and practically owner of Dargon's underworld.
Of course Seadon's successes were insured by the town guard. One or
twice each week he would meet with a Lieutenant or even the Captain of
the Guard and make a full report, including plans and projections. They
were all very small, up to now. This was going to be the job in which
Rohert and his men were to fail miserably. The planned raid on the
caravan was just the large event that the Captain had been waiting for
and now, being able to plan for it was going to make all the difference
in the world. The next two days were to deliver the blow that was going
to destroy large scale crime in Dargon.
Seadon walked past the door he was to enter, throwing a careful
glance back. With the street seemingly empty, he turned back to the
building and knocked twice. The door was opened by a plump elderly woman
who quickly ushered him in and rebolted the door. Inside were four
guardsmen, including Adrunian Koren and the Captain of the Guard, a
dignified woman in her late forties with lightly greying hair.
"Where you followed?" she asked Seadon as soon as he was inside.
"I don't think so," he answered. "Deanir has been sending men to
follow me all week, but I think it's sheer jealousy. He wants to impress
his uncle with his good work."
"Is that how you make a report?" Adrunian mocked him.
Seadon straightened out to stand at attention and repeated what he
said, appending a "Ma'am" on the end.
The Captain smiled. Formality was not her concern for the moment.
She indicated a chair. "Take a seat." One of the guards helped the old
woman out of the room. She was there only to make it look normal for
passers by outside.
Seadon sat down at the desk next to Adrunian and the Captain sat
opposite to them. The other two guardsmen remained standing.
"What happened? Are they getting ready?"
Seadon shifted in his seat. "The caravan is to be attacked on its
first night out. The plan is to poison the guards and kill those
sleeping."
"How many men are involved?"
"A dozen. Most of them are on their way already. I am to leave
first thing tomorrow morning. They gave me the night to make an excuse
to my wife. They don't know she knows."
"Good. I'll have the caravan master informed tomorrow," Captain
Byer said. "Anything else?"
Seadon shook his head. "A dozen men is about half of Rohert's
resources. If you take them, you'll probably take him...or hurt him
enough to stop him, in the least."
"All right. You did well. Go along with their plan until you know
we're present. Try not to kill anyone."
"Yes, Ma'am," Seadon answered.
"Dismissed, soldier," the Captain said and got up.
Seadon and Adrunian got up as well. "Almost over," Seadon smiled.
"We'll have a lot to talk about when it is," Adrunian said. "Five
years is a long time to catch up on."
"And this time you won't drink me under the table," Seadon laughed.
"I've learned to hold the liquor well."
Adrunian chuckled himself. "It's hard to believe you already have a
daughter. You'll have to age quicker now. Be more responsible."
"I wish I could be home more often," Seadon sighed. "I feel like
I'm hurting them by doing this."
"You best go then," Adrunian told his friend. "You'll be away for a
few days."
Seadon looked over to Captain Byer talking to the two guards. She
nodded her consent for him to leave and he went to the door.
"Give my greetings to Nadya," Adrunian slapped Seadon on the back.
"See you at the raid."
Captain Koren took a lengthy sip from the glass. "That was the last
time I saw him."
"And you never found out what happened?" Kalen asked.
"We suspected," the Captain said, "searched, asked questions...
Rohert's nephew had a problem with new people. He was paranoid as hell.
I guess Seadon was followed that night after all... Strange thing is we
never heard of Deanir again either. He must have been frightened off by
the raid."
Kalen nodded. He had no way to comfort his friend's deep wound.
"I'm sorry, Sir."
"Don't call me `sir' in here, Kalen. I chose to have breakfast with
a friend, not a subordinate."
Kalen hid a smile by taking a swallow from his glass. "So you're
sure it's him?"
Koran dug into his pocket and pulled out the ring he found on one
of the bodies. "This is Seadon's wedding band. It's identical to the one
Nadya wore...she was found floating in the ocean a few days after the
raid. Her ring is in my office."
"Maybe we'll learn what happened now that we found the bodies,"
Kalen said. "We need to identify the other one."
"I hope so," the Captain said. "I want you to reopen the case,
Kalen. I want their killer and I want to know what happened to their
daughter."
"I'll get on it as soon as we get back to the guard house," Kalen
said.
"No you won't," Koren repocketed the ring. "I wasted your entire
morning. Go home and get some rest. I'll leave you instructions for the
evening."
"Yes, Sir," Kalen answered mockingly. He handed the money for the
meal to a passing bar maid and the two men left the tavern. As they
passed a table near their own, the man sitting there studiously looked
down at his half finished meal, then got up, paid and quickly left.
"So they finally found them," Liriss smirked to Kesrin. "I'm glad
you told me. The town guard is so slow these days, you almost forget
they're out to get you."
"Just doing my job, Lord," Kesrin answered. "It sounded like a
story you might want to know...but obviously you already do."
The crime lord leaned back in his chair, a crooked smile frozen on
his face. "Let me tell you, Kesrin, I am that story. It was the high
point of my first few years on the streets.
"After my parents died, I was left to mingle with the slime in the
alleys, until one of Rohert's men made the yearly urchin collection.
Those that could be used were left, myself included; the rest were sold
or drowned -- no one seemed to mind back then and Rohert considered it a
public service -- you couldn't get away with it these days. The guards
keep a firm inventory of the urchins now.
"After some time of picking pockets and picking locks and climbing
through open windows, I gained a position of trust and some power and
started seeing things I did not like. Rohert was soft. It was like a
mouse doing the cat's job. He lost money and people right and left and
his nephew, Deanir, a remarkably ambitious fellow of my years was just
waiting for the family business to fall into his hands.
"I never believed the old man had what it took to control crime and
his little heir was far too greedy to expect reasonable improvement..."
Deanir paced the room in a nervous frenzy, waiting for his uncle to
appear. It was the middle of the night, a day before the biggest job and
he just caught a spy in their ranks. It would be hard to top a night
like this.
"My Lord," a man entered, "we have the prisoner's wife downstairs.
Do you want them together?"
"No, but make sure that they know we have both of them. Cooperative
prisoners are easier to deal with. Let them know they have a lot to
lose."
As the man turned to leave, Rohert entered through a door across
the room. "You hold on there, Bradan," he stopped the guard and turned
to Deanir. "What happened?"
"Seadon Rohden is a spy, uncle," the young man answered, doing his
best to appear relaxed. "I had him followed to a meeting with the town
guard."
"Really?" Rohert paused thinking. "Bring Liriss here. I want to
know just how this man made it in."
"He is with the caravan, uncle. He will lose his job."
"Good. If he loses this one, it will go much worse on him. They'll
be short handed, so they will hire on someone else without checking him
out. Go now! No. You go, Bradan. I need to speak with you, Deanir."
Liriss nodded grimly to the information Bradan revealed to him. The
old man was weak, but better not to be crossed. "We have to make our
move tonight," he finally said, having heard all there was to hear.
"Take care of Deanir, then have one of the men loyal to Rohert take my
place with the caravan. The town guard can help me take control."
"What about Rohert?" Bradan asked.
Liriss smiled. "By morning Dargon will be mine."
The two men soon reached the building Rohert made his base in and
went in different directions, each thinking of how best to accomplish
his task and gain the rewards that a job well done would bring.
Liriss reached his target first. He found Rohert in his office,
sitting in his chair, seemingly asleep. `This is too good to be true,'
flashed through Liriss' mind. He spotted Rohert's eating dagger lying on
the table and picked it up. He contemplated the irony of dying by one's
own tools but as he made it to the other side of the table, the old
man's eyes opened. "You should not leave these unattended, Lord," Liriss
handed the weapon to his superior.
Rohert eyed him, took the dagger, but did not say a word.
"I was told you wanted to see me," Liriss went on. "Did something
happen?"
"Rohden contacted the town guard."
"Are you sure?" Liriss was surprised at his own surprise. He knew
the facts. It has been quite a surprise when he heard it himself for the
first time from Bradan and that he was able to duplicate that reaction
pleased him.
"Why don't you tell me a little more about him?" the old man went
on, ignoring the counter question.
"He helped me avoid the town guard," Liriss said. "I took him to a
bar, bought drinks. We talked. He told me he was new in town and looking
for a job. I arranged a meeting between him and Deanir. He's got a wife
and daughter. That's about it."
"Did you check on him before arranging that meeting?" Rohert asked,
replacing the eating dagger on the table.
"No, Sir," Liriss said. "I always thought it was the job of the man
doing the hiring. Besides, he was in town for only a few days. There was
no one to ask."
Rohert got up. "And so it is. Rohden is from out of town. He did
not have a rep. Now he does."
"How do you want to handle it?" Liriss asked, realizing Rohert had
no ill plans for him, but it was too late to change his plan. Another
opportunity may not come any time soon.
Rohert went over to the window overlooking the market. It was the
window Liriss would get to know well in the years to come. "We can't
take the caravan if the guards know..."
Liriss picked up the dagger off the table and walked over to the
window as well. "What about the men you sent out yesterday?"
"Send someone out to intercept them," Rohert sighed and turned. The
dagger in Liriss' hand found it's way to the old man's stomach.
"Didn't I tell you not to leave this lying around?" he grinned.
Having sent a man to take Liriss' place, Bradan made his way to
Deanir' personal quarters. In just a few hours these luxurious
apartments would be his very own. The verdict on the current master was
all ready out. It was time for a change of ownership.
As he knocked a young woman opened the door. "Can I help you?"
Bradan drew his sword. "Guess." He followed the woman inside, only
to find Deanir undressed and in bed. The coward gave up so easily that
there was not even a story left to tell to the grandchildren. Everything
simply fell into place.
"And that's all there is," Liriss finished telling the story.
"Rohden was obviously working for someone, though he did not admit it.
He was a strong man. Didn't even crack when we tortured his wife. I
finally had him buried alive under a building. I'm sure his character
made a solid foundation."
A partial smile escaped Kesrin's lips. "What about the other one,
Sir?"
"The other isn't even worth a mention," Liriss said. For some
reason his voice had a pleasant, self gratified tone. "Deanir got on my
nerves so much over those few years that I had him beaten until he was
purple all over, cut his hands off personally and buried him with
Rohden. Let it be said they died in the same war.
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