Let Them Sing
EXP: 155,108, Level: 17
Level completed: 18%,
EXP required for next Level: 14,892
You’re just scum!
Castigar filth! We don’t want your ilk here!
You led us to ruin. Where were you when Arius came?
The new mayor of Whitevale has decreed that the Brotherhood cannot coexist with the township. You are hereby ordered to leave this town forthwith. Don’t come back!
“Shinsou, the tea.” Remy’s voice sliced through his reverie, returning him to reality just as the copper pot began to boil over on the stove.
“Ah, shit!” The hiss of boiling water meeting naked flame rang in Shinsou’s ears. He hurriedly grabbed the handle and moved the kettle to the cooler granite work surface next to him.
“What is up with you today?” The woman, slender and with a face framed with clean caramel hair, squinted at the Telgradian as the mid-morning sun poured through the kitchen window. Shinsou met the question with a small sigh as he placed two cups down, and filled both with freshly boiled broth from the copper pot. A small, silver spoon lay lazily in the one nearest to him. He took a long look at it as it submerged in the green liquid, and for the briefest of moments, his mind wandered back to the Whitevale wreckage. The phantom of that child’s hand tightly gripping the utensil was burned into his mind like a brand, and once again those tiny, charred fingers served to remind him of his hubris.
Remember the spoon.
“Hey.” Remy clicked her fingers under the spellsword’s stubble chin. “Are you with it? What’s the matter?”
“Nothing,” Shinsou lied, rubbing his stubble shadow with the back of his hand and gently brushing away her finger. “I’m good. I was just making a mental list of things to sort out before we leave for Fallien, and I realized that we’ll need a gods-damned translator while we’re over there.”
Remy shrugged. “You have the gold, so no issue right?”
“Gold's not the problem in this equation.” The Telgradian replied at length. “Adding any outsider to the party gives us another unknown quantity to consider, another variable. But, we can't go ahead without a translator. So we’ll need to vet carefully, and be smart about our business. Offer no more than the going rate so as to not attract the wrong sort of attention. Get someone with a wife and kids who has more to lose than someone without. That sort of thing."
“Don’t you think you’re overthinking it? It’s just a translator.” The scrape of ceramic on the worktop accompanied a single sip of tea as Remy settled into a chair alongside the kitchen table. “What about me? I'm an outsider, technically. Are you and this Storm guy-“
’Storm guy?’ Don’t let him catch you calling him that…” Shinsou reproofed, leaning up against the counter before sipping his tea.
“…Sorry, Storm Veritas, ” Remy replied diffidently, a small smile playing about her lips. “…going to have to vet me too? You might know me, but he doesn’t, and I get the impression he’s not the sort to overlook loose ends.”
“We’re both cautious, but if I vouch for you I suspect he’ll accept that at face value. Maybe.” Shinsou shook his head with a knowing smile. “But, for one, Storm might not even come. Two, going back to the translator for a moment, let’s not forget that Fallien is a developing country and we’re bringing with us a piece of jewelry that could attract thousands on the open market. Translators are well paid, but not []that[/i] well paid. All it takes is for someone to get greedy, to get a whiff of the ring we’re carrying, and before we know it they’re off through the desert and that’s the last we see of it.”
“Fuck it, maybe I should just sell it and get you a bigger place?” Remy grinned, her slim features wreathed in mirth so contagious that Shinsou found it difficult not to smile back. “But seriously, who is dumb enough to cross you guys?”
“Someone who knows the desert and the surrounding areas better than us, because they have lived and worked there for centuries?” The Telgradian shrugged, “All our power equates to shit all if we get lost in the desert. It’ll be even worse if we’re out lost in the dunes, and some opportunistic bastard has made off with what could be an extremely dangerous piece of kit, never to be seen again. This is why we have got to get the right guy for the job.”
“I think you’re overthinking it, for sure.” Remy lolled her head back, allowing her hair to tumble down her ruby-robed shoulders.
Shinsou frowned, placing the cup on the table ahead of him. Lacing his hands, he recited. “Ok, think about this hypothetical scenario – the translator travels with us, and at some stage we’re going to have to ask him or her to describe the ring to someone and explain why we are there. By the end of this trip, they’re going to have some idea of what we’re ferrying about and why. They’re probably going to understand the ring’s value. So, what happens then? Do we let him just wander back to his friends at the port with that information? Are we going to-“ he stopped, slowly drawing his hand across her throat, “you know, offthem? Then what about the Valtiell? Do we do them as well?”
“I’d prefer not to off anyone,” Remy murmured in reply, “One translator probably wouldn’t be missed, but wanton slaughter wasn’t what I had in mind either. Could you pay them off?”
“Me neither, and buying silence only shuts mouths for so long, and does not guarantee said person won’t come for the ring themselves. So, we have to be smart about the way we handle business.” Shinsou tapped his temple with a finger, “Also, a translator is just one part of it. There’s still the logistics of traveling a desert to consider.“
“Well, we won’t go thirsty.” Remy smiled. “So, there’s always that.”
“Mizu Jotei, of course.” Shinsou nodded in sudden realization of what she was referencing. Remy was also a Telgradian. Being a Telgradian meant that, like Shinsou, she had a unique Senkei sword much like himself that gave her the abilities she wielded. Whilst his Enpera allowed him to control dark matter and the shadows, Remy’s blade Mizu Jotei allowed her almost complete control over the elements of water and ice. Whilst it had been almost ten years since he had seen Mizu Jotei in action, Shinsou recalled that she was able to manifest and purify water from the tip of the blade, as long as she had the energy. Her other abilities were closely guarded, and not widely shared with anyone in Telgradia, which made him think they were extremely dangerous.
For a moment, Remy kept her eyes focused on the town of Tylmerande through the kitchen window. It was as if she was searching the wood and stone for answers she could not find elsewhere. It was not forthcoming. “Is life always this intense for you?”
“Nature of the beast,” Shinsou said with an exaggerated stretch. “You get used to it after a while.”
Remy smiled a curious small smile. “What if you didn’t?”
“Meaning?”
“What if you didn’t get used to it, I mean. What if it wasn’t intense? What if you just retired? The Brotherhood’s given you money, property and years to live. So, why not?”
“I don’t –“ Shinsou paused, trying to think of a way to phrase his response. “I mean it’s a fluid situation, my day-to-day. I don’t know what’s coming around the corner. You know, maybe one day, when things have calmed down. I don’t know. This isn’t exactly a job for me, you know? It’s more of a “needs must” thing.”
Mere mention of the subject stalled the conversation. Neither wanted to be the one to broach it further, so the silence grew until it engulfed the pair of them like a voracious maw. The wind gave a sigh at an open window, disturbing their melancholy and blowing a light breeze into their faces until Shinsou eventually got up and closed it.
“Anyway, I wouldn’t worry about what I said for now.” Remy shrugged, “I can hardly force you to give up this lifestyle, can I? I’m not exactly your wife.”
Shinsou didn’t respond for a moment. His eyes narrowed, then flitted about the room as if some sort of cosmic trigger had been pulled in his mind. Memories started sweeping back into the forefront of his brain, and an idea quickly formed.
“Something I said?” Remy asked.
“Yeah. You can’t force me to do something,” Shinsou said, hurriedly leaving the kitchen and shouting back through the hall as a confused expression swept across Remy’s face. “But I can force someone else, like a translator, to do something.”
“How? I mean - what?” An even more puzzled Remy shouted in reply through the doorway. There was a sudden racket as a cacophony of metal and wood collided together, and the sounds of heavy items thudding on the floor upstairs reverberated throughout the house. Cupboard doors were opened and shut until, finally, the noises ceased and Shinsou’s searching stopped.
“Stygian.” The Telgradian yelled downstairs.
Remy raised her eyebrows, and nodded slowly to herself while sipping the remainder of the hot tea. Dabbing the corner of her mouth carefully with the end of her robes, she carefully pushed back from the table, and stood at the kitchen door.
“What the fuck is a Stygian?” She mumbled to herself.
**
It felt as if the sun always took its time to rise in Tylmerande.
Shinsou leant back casually against the massive stone archway that marked the entrance to the docks where their vessel to Fallien, the Destiny, was moored. Remy sat cross legged at its base, a sack of their belongings at her feet, and stretched. Dawn was breaking, and the town was only just waking up to the young sunlight dissipating the ocean mist and casting itself upon the gabled rooftops. The first meandering rays of light flashed against the cream walls of the port authority building, carving long sharp shadows beyond it into the town square behind.
He looked down once more at the letter that he had received two days prior; a piece of parchment that held familiar notes of the cherry tobacco that his friend often smoked. The reply he’d received was characteristically short, but in the affirmative.
Storm Veritas was coming down to join their expedition.
Shinsou couldn’t help but smile. There were few people, if anyone, who knew the Telgradian as well as the electromancer. Whilst Remy was good company, even she didn’t know his quirks and his ways as well.
From somewhere beyond the city walls, a Cockrel cried to greet the sun. The sound greeted a feeling in the pit of Shinsou’s stomach; the pulsing of his senses that told of a familiar presence. It was far too early for more than a scattered handful of tradesmen to be up and about, much less walking the streets, and there was no mistaking whose energy the Telgradian was sensing.
“He’s here.” Shinsou nudged a bleary eyed Remy with a quick tap of his foot. “Or, will be in a minute”.
A fresh breeze soared off the brightly dancing waves and through the empty cobbled streets, pausing to tarry briefly at his feet before a clattering of hooves echoed throughout the port. There was no mistaking the horse; the proud, magnificent steed Atilla, and upon the saddle the lithe and deadly electromancer Storm Veritas.
It had been a while since he had seen his friend, and it took a moment to adjust to the obvious physical changes that age brought humans. Storm’s dark hair had greyed somewhat, and ruffled gently about his ears as he adjusted his position in the saddle. To the eye, the Veritas seemed thinner, but still dressed in well-fitting finery that spoke to his wealth and his character. Atilla paused its canter long enough to croon something at his rider, and Storm replied with a gentle pat prior to dismounting, subtly shifting position so that his heavy cloak protected him from the worst of the morning’s chill.
In times gone by, the Telgradian might have made an acute observation about his friend’s outward physical condition. Perhaps he could have made a playful jibe at Storm’s expense about having too much time and money on his hands instead. He thought about it, just for a moment, and decided not to in Remy’s presence. As he walked, she held back just slightly, scanning Veritas carefully whilst waiting for an introduction. She could feel a power from the man that reverberated through her own senses; different to Shinsou, but more refined and focused. She could sense that Storm harbored a slight skepticism towards her presence, but this was to be expected given the circumstances.
“Well,” Shinsou approached with a smile, extending a hand to the politico, “It looks like the good women of Radasanth are helping you keep the pounds off anyway. Good to see you, my friend.” The Telgradian then pivoted and sidestepped, bringing Remy into the fore. He gestured towards her with an open hand. “This is Remy Krystanthia.”
She nodded, a muted, barely visible nod that almost escaped Shinsou’s attention. “Good to meet you. I’m looking forward to working with you on this trip. Your journey was comfortable, I hope?” The inflection in her tone was almost formal, so much so that it jarred Shinsou. “Anyway, I make it not far past seven. We’ll need to embark soon, gentlemen. I’ll see to the provisions and meet you both on deck.”
With that, Remy hulked the large canvas bag up onto her shoulders and disappeared through the archway, leaving Shinsou and Storm alone for a brief moment.
“You look like shit.” The Telgradian finally spoke freely, breaking the fragile silence with an characteristically sculpted expression of neutrality on his face. He stood beside Storm, both men looking towards the Destiny in the distance. Shinsou breathed deeply of the fresh morning air and let his trademark white coat trail out in the breeze as he placed a hand on the electromancer’s left shoulder. “But I’m damned glad to have you here. What did you make of the ring?”