Valkyrie's Shadow - Chapter 6The Paladin of the Holy Kingdom, Part III: Act 3,
The Paladin of the Holy Kingdom, Part III: Act 3, Chapter 6
Chapter 6
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âShowing up with a bottle of wine to a single womanâs home at night after showing off your beautiful wife to her the same day. You sure know how to play with a girlâs heart, Liam.â
âI donât have any gold to pay you,â Liam said.
âAlright, now Iâm angry. Or am I? HmmâŠis this what it feels like to be desired?â
Liam rolled his eyes as he placed another crate atop Raquelâs counter. House Restelo paid him in scrip, so the only way he could buy things from the city was to pay with goods purchased from the camp.
âSo,â Raquel leaned on her elbow as she examined a bottle of liquor, âwhat are you looking for?â
âI saw a bunch of things that might be useful earlier today,â Liam said. âBefore any of those, thoughâŠdo you have something that will help me see in the dark?â
âSure do.â
âYou do? That was unexpectedâŠâ
Raquel turned around and started rummaging through a cabinet.
âAbout five years ago,â she told him, âthe Royal Army wanted to try some out for their night patrols. They didnât work out, though.â
âWhy?â
âUnreasonable expectationsâŠ? Anything goes with magic in most peopleâs heads. Someone thought that a Darkvision item would allow them to see at night as well as one would during the day, which is sort of true, but they ignored the fact that most Darkvision items only have a ten to twenty-metre range. Demihuman hunters ambushed the patrol, picked them off outside of their Darkvision range, and the army lost their investment.â
The mage pulled a small case out of the cabinet and placed it on the counter between them. She opened the lid to reveal a selection of jewellery.
âI made a few extra thinking that people might show interest after the army bought some,â Raquel said, âbut since it was a failure, Iâve been stuck with them ever since.â
âWhy not market them to the local artisans?â Liam asked, âIf they can see in the dark, they donât need to spend money on fuel.â
âOh, I tried,â Raquel answered with a shrug. âAll I got was an endless stream of excuses. Sunlightâs free. Lamps are cheaper. Itâs not natural. Half of the people I approached thought I had some ulterior motive, like corrupting their minds through a ring or something ridiculous like that.â
âHow do you even make a living here?
âI was doing pretty well before the war. The secretâs to offer the same enchantments that the Temples do. Thatâs why I became an Abjurer. The Temples canât come close to meeting the countryâs demand for magic items, so making the same stuffâs a lucrative ânicheâ that no one questions. In everyoneâs minds, if the government issues magic items, those items are from the Temples.â
Liam picked out a brass band from the case. He could tell that it was far more valuable than a mundane item, but he had no idea what it was.
âWhatâs this one?â He asked.
âA Minor Ring of Protection,â Raquel answered. âKnow what that does?â
Though he did know, he shook his head. Being too knowledgeable would arouse suspicion.
âMagical protection is divided into different categories,â the mage said. âAll Rings of Protection provide whatâs called a âdeflection bonusâ. To put it simply, it makes attacks âmissâ. Arrows veer off the mark; solid hits become glancing blows; glancing blows miss entirely â that sort of thing. A minor enchantment isnât much on its own, but, when you add it with all the other effects and throw on some decent armour, youâll find yourself with better protection than a suit of full plate.â
âHmmâŠso how do I pick what goes where?â
âAdventurers spend years cobbling together sets of equipment from what they can find, but thatâs not necessary. If you have access to masterwork equipment, an enchanter with the right spells, and the materials needed for everything, you can be pretty flexible with your items.â
âIf thatâs true, then why donât Adventurers do that?â
âBecause theyâre weird. Theyâre all obsessed with finding some amazing magic item and then building a set of equipment around that magic item. Most of them even start building those sets before they get their hands on that item because theyâre so damn convinced that theyâll somehow get that one thing they heard legends about growing up. The more amazing â and rare â magic items they have, the better, so they hold out for those, as well. Itâs kinda like a disease. In reality, they just die trying to do that when they could have just started with a basic set of magic equipment and worked their way up from there.â
Now that she mentioned it, Adventurers were like that. The Sorcerous Kingdomâs Adventurer Guild was full of people aiming for the craziest items in the guildâs âpoint catalogueâ. Lord Mare put them through a lot of pain before they finally capitulated and went for something less ambitious.
âThat doesnât make much sense to me,â Liam said.
âWell magic items donât make any sense to most people,â Raquel said, âso they donât think about them at all.â
âBut arenât there magic items that are useful for everyday life? Most people I know are pretty practical â shouldnât that win out over fear and superstition?â
âIf practicalityâs won out, no oneâs told me about it. Or my neighbours. Say what, since youâre so open-minded, why not buy one of those everyday items? I bet you and your wife could drum up some business for me in the camp.â
âIâll talk to Nat about it. She might have saved up enough to get something nice for her workshop. For now, I need stuff to help me out with my work.â
ââŠis it so dangerous in the city now that you need magic items to survive?â
âI havenât run into anything that dangerous in this jurisdiction,â Liam said. âBut they still make my work easier, right? Like being able to see in the dark when Iâm on the night patrols.â
While the army may have been disappointed with the performance of their Darkvision items, they were perfectly fine to use in the city. Twenty metres of Darkvision range was more than enough for the enclosed spaces and short distances involved when working in urban areas.
âI guess that makes sense,â Raquel said. âSo does that mean everything else youâre interested in runs along those lines?â
âMostly. Nat wants to get the armour pieces sheâs making enchanted because she keeps stabbing me in her imagination. How much for a Darkvision item?â
âHmmâŠhonestly, Iâm not used to bartering. This is a long shot, but do you have access to enchanting reagents? Those damn Demihumans snatched up nearly everything and ruined what they didnât steal.â
âYouâd have to be specific,â Liam said, âI donât know whatâs a reagent and what isnât.â
âI guess Iâll write up a list,â Raquel said. âAs for this other stuffâŠâ
The mage scratched her head as she examined the items arranged on the desk. In addition to the liquor, there were preserved foods, clothing, boots, shoes, tools, and some nice-looking accessories picked up from the labour campâs market. Between the scrip-based system of the camp, his appraisal abilities, and the crazy prices in the city, he had lost all sense of what was worth what.
âI suppose if you scrounge up ten times what youâve brought so far, itâd be worth a Darkvision ring.â
âTen times?!â
âHey, magic items are expensive! Donât act as if Iâm giving you an unreasonable quote.â
âIn that case, what would I need to carry around the least of to pay for everything?â
âYou can pay right now? Darn, I should have quoted a higher price.â
ââŠâ
Raquel raised her hands disarmingly.
âIt was a joke! Letâs seeâŠthe problem with bartering like this is that you can end up with a lot of stuff you canât get rid of. For example, these knick-knacks here might be more valuable than everything else, but Iâm not going to be able to sell them when people can barely afford food. Since Iâm already selling conjured food, itâd be easier for me to sell food that you trade to me. But since food is cheaper than those knick-knacks, that means youâd have to carry more stuff and that costs you more time and energy. Well, at least youâre not a horse.â
âSo if I wanted to barter for more magic items or enchantmentsâŠâ
âItâd have to be food,â Raquel told him. âI wouldnât be able to move anything else fast enough. Cider or ale would also work â barely anyone can afford wine these days.â
That would come out to a lot of food, but, if House Restelo wanted to start integrating their labour campâs economy with the cityâs, they would probably look positively on the transaction.
And, the more we do it, the more the other houses will want to stop us.
House Restelo needed to start gaining ground on their new rivals, so that was probably the best part. So far, no one had grown bold or desperate enough to attack their jurisdiction.
âI think I can do that,â Liam said. âYouâll have to give me some time to carry it all in, though.â
âCanât you just stick it all on a wagon? I can lend you my cart.â
He wasnât sure whether he could. House Resteloâs plans were still forming, so all he was going by was the gist of what they wanted to do. Spies might spot him bringing in all the extra food and react to the information faster than House Restelo wanted.
âWait,â Liam said, âhow much food am I bringing in?â
âLetâs say thirty times this crate here. Preserved food is fine. No fruit.â
Never mind spies, his own allies were going to give him strange looks.
âIâll try to bring everything in the morning after my shift is over. UmâŠdo you mind if I use the item right away?â
âSure.â
Raquel leaned over the counter and fished several accessories out of the case. Liam chose a plain steel band and slipped it on his middle finger. He looked into the shadows of the store, confirming the effect.
âIs there anything I should know about this item?â He asked.
âItâs just a magic item,â Raquel answered with a shrug. âThe thing isnât going to steal your soul or make you grow a tail or anything.â
âAlright. Thanks.â
He left Raquelâs shop through its back entrance, accustoming himself to the range of his freshly-bestowed magical vision. Hoburnsâ magical lighting was limited to its most affluent districts, and rationing limited House Resteloâs jurisdiction to the lighting of each patrolâs torches. He already missed having Darkvision as soon as he started his assignment in the Holy Kingdom, so it was a great relief to have it back again.
I wonder what I should get next.
There was an Alchemist next to the tanneries, but things hadnât escalated to the point where he would need potions yet. As far as utility items went, Raquel had provided an invaluable hint as to how he could seamlessly equip himself. So long as he employed items that produced magical effects considered ânormalâ to the people of the Holy Kingdom, it was more likely that they would want to purchase a similar item for themselves than question his use of them.
The other limitation was that he needed to stick close to peoplesâ perception of a âthief-taker. If he started flinging Magic Arrows out of a wand or tucked a dozen healing scrolls into his bandolier, it would attract unwanted attention.
But I should still get my hands on a healing wand. I can hide one under my bracer. Sending multiple agents is well within the other housesâ capabilities and Iâm bound to get injured trying to defend my turf against them.
While he was much stronger than the average person in the Holy Kingdom, he still wasnât at the point where he could reliably take on groups of enemies alone. Dealing with large groups would involve stringing them out and healing himself between fights.
Liam climbed onto the rooftops and checked his Darkvision on the alley below. It was more than enough to cover the stretch directly below him. He visualised the matrix of streets and alleys under his charge and headed to the first spot that intruding Rogues would consider âsafeâ from the street patrols.
Wow, thereâs someone there.
Two someones, in fact. Both appeared to be slightly older than he was. He knelt on the eaves directly above them, straining his ears to make out their hushed conversation.
âAlright, I think we got in unnoticed.â
âWhat now?â
ââŠâ
ââŠâ
ââŠwe look for evidence.â
âLikeâŠa body? A demonic ritual?â
ââŠâ
No plan, I guess.
As with Esme, it looked like they had been blindly dispatched as scouts with only their preconceptions as a guide. Since that was the case, either the house they worked for had no spies feeding them information on potentially compromising activities or the spies couldnât find anything to point to.
âA corpse would smell in this heat. Maybe theyâre using the stink of the tanneries to hide one.â
âYâknow, I heard from a guy that some of the shops here have materials again.â
ââŠso theyâre using Human leather? Those sick bastards!â
Liam scratched his head as the two urban scouts crept off with their newfound sense of righteous indignation. He went ahead of them, checking for the location of the nearest street patrol. When the two stopped inside an alley entrance to let the patrol pass, Liam dropped a roof tile behind them. They jumped at the sound of shattering clay and fled into the street.
âWho goes there?!â
âYou ainât skinninâ us, Restelo Demons!â
The two scouts drew their daggers. The patrolmen drew their swords. The scouts took a moment to reconsider their challenge before running back into the alley.
âAfter them!â
âLift that torch higher!â
âWhereâs Liam?â
Argh.
It would be nice if his allies didnât just give away his name while also announcing his presence in the area. He shadowed the two scouts, watching them feel their way through the darkness after running into a back lane. The patrol stopped at the alley junction, bunching up as the lead man poked his head cautiously around the corner.
âIs there a trap?â
âI donât know! Give me that torch.â
âI donât see anythingâŠâ
âYou fool! It wouldnât be much of a trap if we could see it.â
âThose damn Rogues!â
Liam dropped into a courtyard nestled in the centre of the block. He tripped the first scout as he left the alley, knocking the second out when he stopped at the sound of his stumbling partner. The two men were already bound by the time the patrol appeared. Despite the novice behaviour of the two agents, they still would have made a clean getaway if he hadnât stopped them. All things being equal, the other houses would have had few issues gathering information if House Restelo didnât step things up.
âOh, Liam,â the patrol sergeant said. âGood work.â
âTheir equipment's over there,â Liam gestured to the pile on the opposite wall. âCan you handle them from here?â
âNo problem.â
Four men came forward to take the scouts out of the alley. Liam frowned as he watched their well-practised movements.
âHow did you handle this sort of thing back when you were in the army?â Liam asked.
âIâve never had anyone pull a dagger on me before,â the patrol sergeant said, âbut something like this. The armyâs thief-takers did most of the work in the shadows and weâd book their catch at the local office.â
And now all of those thief-takers are out of the country.
He wasnât sure if this particular âperkâ of sending the army away was a part of the royalistâs plan or simply a coincidence. The former seemed increasingly likely the more he encountered the domestic vulnerabilities opened up by the Noblesâ political manoeuvring. Everything that they did was done with the aim of removing the checks and balances that hampered their activities.
Liam shadowed the patrol until they reached the gatehouse. They were far more cautious handling men than they were women. His Ijaniya training asserted that this was common for races where males were stronger than females, but he couldnât believe that anyone could be so negligent with women until he saw it with his own eyes.
They should get betterâŠI hope.
The more mistakes they made, the better he looked in the eyes of their superiors. However, if House Restelo wanted to expand its influence, it had to be able to protect what it held. Everyone had to do better if they wanted the house that they served to rise: it was both common sense to those accustomed to rural power structures and, ironically, a source of frustration to people like Sir Luis. It helped that the other houses were in the same situation, but chaos would break out as things escalated in Hoburns if they remained at their current levels of competence.
Which is fine, so long as that chaos doesnât affect usâŠso doesnât that mean we should be going on the offensive?
If he wasnât in the Holy Kingdom, it would undoubtedly be the best move. His superiors in House Restelo, however, would probably disapprove.
Additionally, the houses in Hoburns werenât stupid â they were simply inexperienced. Much as it was with direct combat, Rogues and Assassins sought to keep their opponents on the back foot until they could finish them off. Since things were developing so slowly, he would essentially be teaching his enemies all sorts of things that he didnât want them to know every time they regained their balance.
The next group of scouts he discovered were three pairs from different houses conferring in a cul-de-sac formed by the yards of five workshops. After listening to them for a while, he decided that they were no more successful than the first pair in digging up dirt on House Restelo.
Six versus one was dismal odds, so Liam left them to their conference to look for the nearest patrol. He found Marim and his squad two blocks away, going down an avenue toward the western plaza. A pair of men raised their torches as he approached them from the front.
âLiam,â Marim said, âwhatâsââ
Liam raised a finger to his lips. Marimâs men instantly assumed defensive stances, looking all around themselves.
âWe can talk,â Liam said in a low voice, âbut keep it low. There are six guys at the end of the alley behind the shops facing the western plaza.â
âAre they dangerous?â Marim asked.
âNot unless they try something crazy,â Liam answered. âItâs just three pairs of sneaks from three houses trading information and rumours.â
ââŠso we just walk up to them?â
âTheyâre on the ground, so you donât have to do anything fancy to reach them. Iâll be watching from above.â
Marim nodded and turned to issue instructions to his squad. Liam climbed back onto the rooftops, looking down at the alley as he backtracked to the group of intruders. To his dismay, they were already on their way out.
He checked the progress of Marimâs patrol, but they would be too slow to cut the scouts off. With no other way to warn them without giving his position away, he picked up another roof tile and tossed it in front of the scouts.
Hoburns is going to run out of roof tiles, at this rate.
As one, the scouts ducked at the sound of shattering clay. Marim and his patrol did, as well. The patrol recovered quickly, however, advancing down the alley at a faster pace. Liam cursed as the scouts drew their daggers and waited around a corner as the torchlight of the patrol cast long shadows on the walls in front of them.
Itâs turned into an ambushâŠshould I let it happen?
A brawl in the alley was the perfect chance to implicate three houses in an attack on House Resteloâs jurisdiction. Marimâs patrol was about to be set upon by what was probably six Rogues, however. The squad would still win, but a Sneak Attack in a vital area was potentially fatal for the weaker men in the patrol.
Ugh, whatever!
Liam picked up another tile and flung it at the scouts, catching the rearmost in the shoulder.
âARGH!!!â
With an unnecessarily loud cry of pain, the man collapsed to the dirt.
âMarc!â
The man nearest to Liamâs victim turned and knelt to tend to him. Liam flung another tile at the ambushers, catching a second man in the hip. A second later, Marim and his squad barrelled around the corner.
Two of the scouts flung themselves forward with a shout, stabbing wildly as they bowled Marim and another man over. A spear came in to impale one of the attackers through the ribs. Another patrolman ran in to pummel the second attacker with the pommel of his sword.
The remaining two scouts fled, their terrified shrieks bouncing off the alley walls. A second spear lanced out to catch one in the calf and one of Marimâs men leapt forward to tackle him. Liam tailed the remaining man from above while four men from Marimâs patrol pursued him into the street. There, he had the misfortune of running in front of another patrol. Liam winced at the solid clunk that rose into the air when the patrol sergeant swatted the final scout to the ground with his shield.
âWhat the hell is going on here?â The sergeant shouted as the scoutâs pursuers spilt out of the alley.
âLiam reported a gang of Rogues in the alley, but we ran into them while they were on their way out.â
âIs everyone alright?â
ââŠI donât know. It all happened in seconds.â
âTch,â the patrol sergeant turned to his men. âYou six, make sure this crook doesnât go anywhere. The rest of you, with me.â
Pained groans greeted the second patrol as they closed on the first. Marim looked up from where he was propped against the alley wall. A bloody hand lay over his stomach and a dagger stuck out from between his fingers.
âDiogo.â
âMarim! By the godsâŠâ
The second patrol sergeant knelt beside the first. Marim punched him when he reached for the dagger.
âDonât pull it out, you idiot! Wait for the Priest to get here first.â
âDid you already send for one?â
âYeah. Gods, what a mess.â
Three men were bound and under close guard â the two that Liam took out with roof tiles and the one that had been speared through the calf. The two that had ambushed the two patrolmen were lying on their backs. The other patrolman that had been ambushed was lying alongside them.
âLiam,â Marim breathed, âyou there?â
âYeah.â
âWeâre going to have to work on that communication bit. Smashing roof tiles isnât going to cut it.â
Two Priests from the temple at the western plaza arrived with a pair of men from Marimâs patrol. Marim yanked the dagger out of his gut, eyeing the blade as the glow of healing magic washed over him. In the end, the only fatality was the scout who was speared through the ribs.
Liam accompanied the two patrols as they made their way back to the gatehouse with five prisoners and one corpse. Sir Jimenaâs only reaction to their entrance was a long frown.
âWeâll need a real prison for these ones, sir,â Marim said.
Sir Jimenaâs long frown grew even longer as he received the different reports about the incident â including the one from the Priests. He left Liamâs report for the last, rising from behind his desk after the other men were ordered to return to their duties.
âIs there something missing from their reports?â Sir Jimena asked.
âThey reported a lot of things I wouldnât have thought to report, sir,â Liam answered. âAs for my side of things, that group wasnât doing anything special. Each pair of scouts probably encountered one another and they stopped to share information or at least tried to find out what the other houses knew about us.â
âWhat about what Marim said about poor communication?â
âHeâs right,â Liam admitted. âIf we had worked out a way to communicate in advance, I donât think this would have happened. Marimâs patrol came in expecting to go up against some Rogues. The scouts were being cut off from their escape route. Everyone just decided that a fight was inevitable and they fought as if they believed that only one side would be walking out of that alley alive.â
Now that he had plenty of time to review what had happened and listen to the other partiesâ perspectives, Liam realised that he had committed a string of critical errors. Despite the unexpected movement of the intruding group, it was a fight that didnât have to happen at all. A relatively painless arrest could have been made if Marimâs group had simply waited for the scouts to come to them.
Instead, they had gone in on Liamâs word, suffered multiple casualties, and ended up with a dead man on their hands. Assassins made for terrible Commanders.
âI see,â Sir Jimena said. âWell, thatâs the hand weâve been dealt. We just have to work with it.â
âDoes House Restelo plan on using this incident?â
âWeâd be fools if we didnât. No matter how you cut it, our men were attacked in our jurisdiction by the other houses. How it played out wasnât ideal, but it still works in our favour. Not only will it take those three houses down a peg or two, but it will help balance out those bad rumours surrounding the incident with Iago Lousa â especially with the city folk. Thereâs nothing better than a threat at home to take oneâs mind off of threats abroad.â
âBut someone died,â Liam said. âThis is going to put us in an even worse spot with the other houses. The next time they send people in, it may not just be to snoop around.â
âYes, well,â Sir Jimena replied with a stony look. âAs I said, thatâs the hand weâve been dealt. Weâre just going to have to be better at dealing with them than they are with us.â
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