by C S » Fri Aug 26, 2016 12:28 am
At the next day's dawn, three women, two marked by fresh bruises, began their transformations from shadow-walking soldiers to harmless damsels. They had left the city the first time with a cache of civilian wear to hide away out on deployment, preparations for the trip back. They had slipped out of the gates under the cover of night, no different from Gryerwun, knowing that the return would not be so clearly set.
Bulky clothes stuffed into a large carrying case made for difficult going, mostly for Baaz. She was glad that the infernal thing that made climbing and vaulting so difficult was going to be abandoned an hour's walk away from the walls of Niyera. The rangers had chosen a field of tall grass to drop the case in, and marked its location with an inconspicuous trail of pebbles on the snowy ground. They took care to add an element of chaos to their trail, so that on the odd chance someone were to happen across it on the edge of the stalks, they wouldn't think anything of it.
The build of the coats and pants they slipped over their suits added to their visual lie. Leather stuffed with a layer of fluff and patch-stitched and rimmed with fur. The kind of clothing one would wear going up a mountain, or out into a tundra. Layered over already form-fitting clothing made the ensuing heat a cruel and unusual form of torture.
"I never thought I'd be hoping for a blizzard," Valeria muttered after her disguise was completed.
"Keep a stiff resolve, Trupont. This portion of toil is almost at an end," said the squad leader. Internally, and she would never admit this to anyone even if asked, Chandra regretted choosing a place this far out from the city. It was secure, yes, and they had taken every precaution to reach this point in the health that they were, but sometimes human conditions whittled away at the most staunch of people.
"Mm," grunted Baaz, her head poking up over the tops of the pale gray blades blowing back and forth in the lazy morning breeze. The location was all wrong, but she had enough time in the desert to know that no matter how bad it got inside her clothes, there were soldiers hunkering down in the belly of ships wishing for such a respite. "If the gatekeepers start asking too many questions we can ask to be led to the nearest bathhouse, make a few disingenuous promises, get out of our own sweat, then make a quiet escape while they're still waiting on three naked women to beckon them in."
"Good plan." Valeria's sidelong look and monotone were telling of how she really felt. "What happens if they're women as well?"
"Odds are still in our favor," Baaz assured her without actually looking at the rookie. The roads were clear, and she told Chandra as much. "On your order."
"Yes. Idle chit-chat's not going to get distance underneath our heels. Let's get a move on," Chandra replied, shuffling up past Baaz and patting her on the back, her hand thumping against the case she dutifully carried, bruises and all.
The axeman came across a village in the days after taking a life. He did not take it to mean he had found his way back. It took one look to confirm that wherever he had walked to wasn't there.
It was a place with buildings on either side of a single avenue that ran through the place, gates on either end, and a thicket of forested land around it. The posts that held up the signs that welcomed visitors to "Wickendale" over the perimeter fence were covered in lichen and all other stringy flora. Ivy was prevalent, dangling from anything with any height. Walls laced with vines and tiny flowers.
"I've gone too far south," Rutgers had commented to himself even as he approached the guards and delivered his spiel in that pleasant persona of his. It was automatic, how he dealt with those who approached him, who asked him questions about where he was from and what he had seen on the way. A closed in bunch. All the while, his thoughts went back to Copper. His little haunt?
On a whim he inquired about the strange character as a distant observer. "Any of you know about a man with a thing for black clothes? An odd sense of pleasantries?"
The one who told him the most was a young woman he had come across sitting on a patio drinking something that Rutgers did not bother to investigate past face-value. In truth, the man was tired enough to not care any great deal about this Wickendale, or the people who lived in it. That same simmering beneath the surface that burned after the meeting with the red woman burned again for Copper, and it was his only motivation. Copper's death was not a satisfaction. To know that he had touched the lives of others while slipping into the grave himself was something Rutgers could not let lie, despite having no means to do anything about it.
What was he supposed to do? Drive his axe into the necks of everyone the one-time assassin ever spoke to?
"Copper was a drifter, like you, until he decided to settle down." the woman told Rutgers. "At first he was investigating strange occurrences around the village. Disappearances. Missing children."
"The usual plights of places tucked in the middle of the woods," the axeman had noted with a grittiness he did not intend.
"No one knows how he did it, but he went off into the yonder and came back with all the lost ones... nothing could have been done for them by then. Far too late. It gave the families an answer as to what happened to their beloveds, though. And then, once he stuck around, the killing stopped. People weren't afraid to leave their houses at night."
"Hubris." Rutgers let that one remain silent.
"Copper did a lot for Wickendale. I can't really say he was a friend of mine. A good acquaintance, maybe."
"I know the type."
"You said you saw him out on the road?"
"Yes."
"Did he mention anything about what he was doing? Or when he's coming back?"
"No." Rutgers told the lie without a twinge of remorse.
"Oh. That's a shame. But fate has been kind with the drifters that have come Wickendale's way. Anything I could do to help you feel at home, or help you get going on your way?"
"I'll manage myself, thank you."
Rutgers was through with getting too fond of villages, named or otherwise. The traveling ate at him, but the mission of finding his way back gave his life some basic purpose. Killing monsters was a shaky pillar, threatening to crumble into dust and plunge the axeman's sanity, his control, into the abyss inside his heart. Crimes of passion created beasts. Always on that red-painted line.
