The skies were dark. They were always dark here, the hovering miasma of dark magic blotted the light of the sun from view, only the fading ire of its watchful glower visible over the span of the horizon. Soon it would choke out entirely and be snuffed like a candle in the wind. It didn't make his skin prickle and crawl - not anymore. Not like it did when the first inky trails began to weave overhead when he was a youth. Not like when his sister had clawed almost desperately at his shoulder to drag him back inside where they would fearfully watch the occurrence from their windowpanes. That was before they lost their house in better neighborhoods. That was before his hands were stained and defiled. That was before they knew their parents would never return home for being in lieu with the old aristocratic family. Fingers would sift through the sack of coins, a mental tally that counted an approximate amount of the total he was given. Collection day at its finest. A bellowing scream cut the air like a knife, a brazen plea from help torn from vocals that he refrained from acknowledging. His only reaction was to shift the duality of his sharp stare from the strings of the drawbag he was closing to the previous owner. "You'd do best to shut her up." He commented, his vocals dry as the woman would again call out from beyond the bars of her holding cell. The sound echoed eerily within the catacombs, bouncing wildly from the entrance to reach his ears once again. Brows rose, a vague look of disappointment clawing over his scarred countenance. "I'm not responsible if anyone hears this and takes your shipment." The warning was point blank as he passed the satchel from his palm to his pocket. The man who had paid him looked far too nervous to be in this line of work. A far different visage than what he was accustomed to meeting with as well, though Gaughn had a bad habit of losing his temper and, as a result, losing hands to toil for him. He could only assume this was a replacement, one that was eager to breach this type of work, but hadn't foreseen the type of labor he would endure. He gave the man a simper, one edged with amused cruelty. The smirk twisting the edges of his scars, pulling slightly taut at the corner of his stare. "G' luck, by the way." With that, he departed, listening to the vermin scurrying back to the opening that housed the newest merchandise for his boss, back to where the cries were becoming so desperate and high pitched that even as he walked away, he couldn't exactly leave the place. It wasn't until other sounds began to weigh in that he fully forgot the meeting spot. Carriages jostled along their paths, hooves of beasts of burden sodden on the muck and mire of more-dirt-than-cobble-roads. The wet squelching only added to the pleasant charm of Anderstel, disgusting as it was. Having little interest in returning to Shanton at present, his steps would find purchase on the stairs of a tavern pub, its sign long since illegible swinging in the breeze and cawing like some bird of carrion upon rusty hinges. The door produced a similar keen as he passed through it, though the crowd within was boisterous enough to drown it out. His weight would settle upon the edge of a barstool, the haggard man behind the counter sparing him but a solitary glimpse before reaching for his usual drink, pouring it before moving to the next hand hammering heavily onto the rough of splintered wood. |
Jahi