Jobe
10-07-07, 06:29 PM
(Closed to Krugor)
Darkness pooled and swallowed the landscape as night barred its fangs and took its rightful place as the sobering sun sunk low overhead. I was never particular to either time of day, but I was always fond of the twilight and dawn. As I watched the sun sink below the Coronian hills I found myself wondering the same thing every time I pick up an assignment and catching a moment like this. Is this the end of good ol'e Jack, or is it merely the beginning? And with that I came to the same answer: It didn't matter. One way or another, my mark was going down.
Sitting back against the comfortable leather seat inside an ornate carriage reminiscent of one of my daughter's playthings, I stared into the eyes of my employer, his features shadowed by the low overhead of the carriage, but I could just make out his lesser features. A balding pate with graying lamb chops stretching down the course of his face, his hooded eyes glowing under the burning cinders of the cigar he puffed nonchalantly away at. Thick lips ringed with a permanent red stain that no amount of washing could get off, always giving the appearance of a man who just tasted flesh for the first time and had forgotten to wipe his mouth.
" Mr. Jobe," he said eloquently, for as long as I've known him, Boss Frajalor, as his men simply called him, had always been straight-to-the-point and addressed a person's name like he was announcing someone's reputation to remind himself of it," I trust your aware of why I brought you here?", he said nodding out the carriage to a slumbering city cresting over to the west.
Nodding I offered a small grin and glanced at the city," Yah, but I don't understand why this place? I'm sure I could be of more use back in Radasanth, offing some of your competition," But judging from the Boss's face, I should tread more carefully. I've heard of other hitmen giving him lip and ending up on the wrong side of the gun, and I'd hate to kill an employer that pays so well.
Taking a long draw on his cigar, smoke puffed and hazed the mob boss's features as the fire glowing intently over his face made it look as if I was making a deal with the devil himself. Reaching into the shadows of his side of the carriage, the boss's hand disappeared and I felt myself reflexively palming my favorite knife secretly tucked away in one of the sleeves of my jacket. Regardless of how well Frajalor paid, I wasn't going to be caught off guard. Seeing the faint outline of a thick manila folder clenched in his short, stubby fingers, my grip relaxed and I took it kindly," How many?".
" Eight. Three are your marks, the rest of them are just bodyguards and yes-men who follow them around like cockroaches," he puffed again and then tipped his cigar at the edge of the carriage as he watched me turn the lamp on and begin to thumb through the pages. He continued once I got to the picture of a man startlingly similar to him if the Boss had been one hundred pounds lighter," That hawk-nosed bastard is muscling in on my territory, his name's Philip H. Holmes, calls himself Galmamene for whatever fucking reason. But despite what kind've shithole Cronelocke is, I don't take kindly to people taking business from me.".
The hawk-nosed man had deepset eyes covered up by steel-rim glasses, same balding pate, and he had to be in his late thirties, and judging by the photo he looked as if he was going to kick it before I even managed to get to him. Easy money, I guess. Reading through the pages I nodded," I see Morris is still doing work for you. Didn't think he'd be into this kind've stuff ever since he got into bed with that eldritch guy.".
Of course I was referring to Morris Locke, I must've seen his handwriting a thousand times, and I could probably tell it was his recon even if I was blindfolded and read the report. The truth was, Morris and I understood the business completely, and a lawyer and a hitman often were considered two sides of the same coin back where I was from. But, ever since he was assigned to negotiate with this guy, Saxon he calls him, who can bend shadows to his will, I've lost a little respect for the guy. I guess I was right when I first met Morris, being a lawyer on Althanas alone doesn't pay the bills.
The mob boss's brow crinkled in mild surprise and he said off-handedly," Yeah, he went back to Radasanth with a big fat wad of cash. This is bigger then we all thought.". Gesturing to the photo of several long-wise crates, big enough to hold a body in, stacked in rows in an unfamiliar warehouse. If it had been a couple years earlier, I wouldn't have thought to guess that there were actual stiffs in those crates," He's shipping those out as we speak, undercutting my price by twenty percent.".
" Seems to be a little big for a necromancer in a small pond, where'd he get the bodies?", I asked curiously. It was true, regardless of whether or not this 'Galmamene' was a grave robber, I couldn't see where he'd find all the bodies in Corone.
" Civil war," he reminded me pointedly, his eyes glowing reverently as he mouthed the words, out of anybody who had made a profit on the Coronian Civil War, it had to be the grave robbers and the arms dealers. As long as it had kept on, Frajalor would be stuffing his pockets by the fist full as he supplied Althanas as a whole with bodies to every necromancer that dared to show his ugly face," I want him and his partners dead. I don't care how you do it, just as long as it's quiet. By the end of next week Cronelocke is going to be under lockdown until whatever squabble they're having with the soldiers is sorted out. Holmes will be shipping those bodies out by the ton before it closes, and if he is able to get those corpses on the market he'll ruin me.".
Nodding, I closed the folder and smiled apologetically," It should take about a day to get inside with security that tight. With the guard schedules here I should be able to slip in. Won't take more then three days to make Mr. Philip Holmes here into a corpse.".
The entrepreneur smiled at my jest, his eyes cold and hard with age. Bumbling along the road for so long I didn't notice we had gotten to my stop until I heard voices outside and the sudden stillness. Slowly one of Frajalor's boys moved to the sable-silk door and snapped it open, bowing low with a cocky look on his face. Moving to the edge I felt a beefy hand grip my shoulder. If it had been anybody but Frajalor I would've clobbered him," It's settled. Four days. Should you kill Philip, his partner Isaac, and his bodyguard Nathan Sykes, you'll be one thousand gold pieces richer, eh?".
Slipping out of the carriage with a nod, I pulled my stocking cap low over my ears; it was getting chilly this time of year. I heard the carriage door slam shut when I saw one of the boss's cronies stop me. Handling a thick, dark box the crony proffered it to me and nodded to the carriage," Boss wants ya' to take pictures of yer work and of the warehouses. Needs confirmation and the locations so he can start exportin' immediately. Told me to say if you did this, he'll give ya' a nice healthy bonus.".
Lugging the cumbersome case I growled, usually I wouldn't mind taking confirmation pictures of my work where back home there were digital cameras the size of a button were easy to smuggle, but as I knew the moment I woke upon the Coronian beachead, nothing about Althanas is ever simple. Slowly turning to the dusty streets I noticed the scaffolding and blocks of stone towering over the city buildings just a mile or so off the hill I was standing on.
It was then that I realized from the oil-lamps that hung low in the streets to the sentries that stood at attention that I needed to work quickly. Making my way down the dusty road I watched the carriage whizz past me and make a U-turn back to Radasanth. Not even Frajalor would be caught dead in a place like Cronelocke.
***
Darkness pooled and swallowed the landscape as night barred its fangs and took its rightful place as the sobering sun sunk low overhead. I was never particular to either time of day, but I was always fond of the twilight and dawn. As I watched the sun sink below the Coronian hills I found myself wondering the same thing every time I pick up an assignment and catching a moment like this. Is this the end of good ol'e Jack, or is it merely the beginning? And with that I came to the same answer: It didn't matter. One way or another, my mark was going down.
Sitting back against the comfortable leather seat inside an ornate carriage reminiscent of one of my daughter's playthings, I stared into the eyes of my employer, his features shadowed by the low overhead of the carriage, but I could just make out his lesser features. A balding pate with graying lamb chops stretching down the course of his face, his hooded eyes glowing under the burning cinders of the cigar he puffed nonchalantly away at. Thick lips ringed with a permanent red stain that no amount of washing could get off, always giving the appearance of a man who just tasted flesh for the first time and had forgotten to wipe his mouth.
" Mr. Jobe," he said eloquently, for as long as I've known him, Boss Frajalor, as his men simply called him, had always been straight-to-the-point and addressed a person's name like he was announcing someone's reputation to remind himself of it," I trust your aware of why I brought you here?", he said nodding out the carriage to a slumbering city cresting over to the west.
Nodding I offered a small grin and glanced at the city," Yah, but I don't understand why this place? I'm sure I could be of more use back in Radasanth, offing some of your competition," But judging from the Boss's face, I should tread more carefully. I've heard of other hitmen giving him lip and ending up on the wrong side of the gun, and I'd hate to kill an employer that pays so well.
Taking a long draw on his cigar, smoke puffed and hazed the mob boss's features as the fire glowing intently over his face made it look as if I was making a deal with the devil himself. Reaching into the shadows of his side of the carriage, the boss's hand disappeared and I felt myself reflexively palming my favorite knife secretly tucked away in one of the sleeves of my jacket. Regardless of how well Frajalor paid, I wasn't going to be caught off guard. Seeing the faint outline of a thick manila folder clenched in his short, stubby fingers, my grip relaxed and I took it kindly," How many?".
" Eight. Three are your marks, the rest of them are just bodyguards and yes-men who follow them around like cockroaches," he puffed again and then tipped his cigar at the edge of the carriage as he watched me turn the lamp on and begin to thumb through the pages. He continued once I got to the picture of a man startlingly similar to him if the Boss had been one hundred pounds lighter," That hawk-nosed bastard is muscling in on my territory, his name's Philip H. Holmes, calls himself Galmamene for whatever fucking reason. But despite what kind've shithole Cronelocke is, I don't take kindly to people taking business from me.".
The hawk-nosed man had deepset eyes covered up by steel-rim glasses, same balding pate, and he had to be in his late thirties, and judging by the photo he looked as if he was going to kick it before I even managed to get to him. Easy money, I guess. Reading through the pages I nodded," I see Morris is still doing work for you. Didn't think he'd be into this kind've stuff ever since he got into bed with that eldritch guy.".
Of course I was referring to Morris Locke, I must've seen his handwriting a thousand times, and I could probably tell it was his recon even if I was blindfolded and read the report. The truth was, Morris and I understood the business completely, and a lawyer and a hitman often were considered two sides of the same coin back where I was from. But, ever since he was assigned to negotiate with this guy, Saxon he calls him, who can bend shadows to his will, I've lost a little respect for the guy. I guess I was right when I first met Morris, being a lawyer on Althanas alone doesn't pay the bills.
The mob boss's brow crinkled in mild surprise and he said off-handedly," Yeah, he went back to Radasanth with a big fat wad of cash. This is bigger then we all thought.". Gesturing to the photo of several long-wise crates, big enough to hold a body in, stacked in rows in an unfamiliar warehouse. If it had been a couple years earlier, I wouldn't have thought to guess that there were actual stiffs in those crates," He's shipping those out as we speak, undercutting my price by twenty percent.".
" Seems to be a little big for a necromancer in a small pond, where'd he get the bodies?", I asked curiously. It was true, regardless of whether or not this 'Galmamene' was a grave robber, I couldn't see where he'd find all the bodies in Corone.
" Civil war," he reminded me pointedly, his eyes glowing reverently as he mouthed the words, out of anybody who had made a profit on the Coronian Civil War, it had to be the grave robbers and the arms dealers. As long as it had kept on, Frajalor would be stuffing his pockets by the fist full as he supplied Althanas as a whole with bodies to every necromancer that dared to show his ugly face," I want him and his partners dead. I don't care how you do it, just as long as it's quiet. By the end of next week Cronelocke is going to be under lockdown until whatever squabble they're having with the soldiers is sorted out. Holmes will be shipping those bodies out by the ton before it closes, and if he is able to get those corpses on the market he'll ruin me.".
Nodding, I closed the folder and smiled apologetically," It should take about a day to get inside with security that tight. With the guard schedules here I should be able to slip in. Won't take more then three days to make Mr. Philip Holmes here into a corpse.".
The entrepreneur smiled at my jest, his eyes cold and hard with age. Bumbling along the road for so long I didn't notice we had gotten to my stop until I heard voices outside and the sudden stillness. Slowly one of Frajalor's boys moved to the sable-silk door and snapped it open, bowing low with a cocky look on his face. Moving to the edge I felt a beefy hand grip my shoulder. If it had been anybody but Frajalor I would've clobbered him," It's settled. Four days. Should you kill Philip, his partner Isaac, and his bodyguard Nathan Sykes, you'll be one thousand gold pieces richer, eh?".
Slipping out of the carriage with a nod, I pulled my stocking cap low over my ears; it was getting chilly this time of year. I heard the carriage door slam shut when I saw one of the boss's cronies stop me. Handling a thick, dark box the crony proffered it to me and nodded to the carriage," Boss wants ya' to take pictures of yer work and of the warehouses. Needs confirmation and the locations so he can start exportin' immediately. Told me to say if you did this, he'll give ya' a nice healthy bonus.".
Lugging the cumbersome case I growled, usually I wouldn't mind taking confirmation pictures of my work where back home there were digital cameras the size of a button were easy to smuggle, but as I knew the moment I woke upon the Coronian beachead, nothing about Althanas is ever simple. Slowly turning to the dusty streets I noticed the scaffolding and blocks of stone towering over the city buildings just a mile or so off the hill I was standing on.
It was then that I realized from the oil-lamps that hung low in the streets to the sentries that stood at attention that I needed to work quickly. Making my way down the dusty road I watched the carriage whizz past me and make a U-turn back to Radasanth. Not even Frajalor would be caught dead in a place like Cronelocke.
***