DargonZine | Volume 20, Number 3 |
sta finished changing out of her rough work clothes by pulling on
her soft blue tunic over her best leggings, sure of her privacy in the
small storage shed on the barge where she worked. She brushed out her
long, brown hair and then tied it back while she contemplated how she
would spend her free days in Dargon. Ista knew that once the barge
docked, which would be in about half a bell, she would be heading as
fast as she could across the city to the Lulling District. An
anticipatory smile spread across her face as she thought about the
delights available at places like the Lederian Carpet. The barge would
be returning to Kenna in three days, and she knew she just might spend
all of them in the Carpet's basement.
There was another reason besides privacy that Ista had decided to
change her clothes in that shed, one that would increase her enjoyment
of her first day in Dargon. She turned her attention to the small chest
that rested on a short stack of crates against the shack's back wall.
Burned into its lid was a circle that was only three-quarters complete
with a chevron in the center of it, crossed by a horizontal line with a
circle on each end. She didn't know what it meant, but she didn't really
care, either. She was far more interested in what it held.
She opened the lid to reveal the strange contents. The small chest
was filled with little twists of what looked like thin parchment wrapped
around a hard lump. If the chest had been sealed, she never would have
opened it the first time, back near the start of the trip down river,
and if there hadn't been so many twists just lying there she never would
have tried one then, either. She had heard of the new drug which was
just beginning to be available, and hadn't been able to resist sneaking
a free sample.
Ista plucked out another little packet and closed the lid. She put
the twist into her mouth, parchment-stuff and all, where it began to
dissolve. She wondered what the stuff was that wrapped the twists as she
walked out of the storage shed into the lowering dusk of the fall day.
In about a bell, well after the barge was docked and she was making her
way across the city, she would feel the same happy effects of the twist
that she had the first time. She knew that this was going to be a
memorable visit to Dargon.
Darrow opened the door to his room and found his friend Murlak
rushing around, stuffing things with cheerful abandon into the rucksack
hanging from his shoulder. Darrow took a bite of the meat pastie in his
hand and watched as the last of Murlak's possessions vanished from the
room.
The tall, redheaded Murlak finally turned toward the door and said,
"Oh, hey there, Darrow."
"Hello, Murlak," Darrow said, stepping into the room and closing
the door behind him. "Ready for work?"
Murlak grinned and said, "Of course I'll be there. Eventually."
Darrow's fists clenched in anger, the remains of the meat pastie
making a mess as it was crushed. He was sick and tired of Murlak's
irresponsibility. He shouted, "You're going to be late again? You've
been late almost every day since Sferina got us these jobs. You won't be
able to count on her favor forever, you know."
Murlak shook his head, still grinning, which only made Darrow even
madder. "I won't be very late. Just gotta run an errand for Narok first,
then take my things over to Joden's. I'm gonna stay with him for a
while."
Darrow's anger vanished under growing concern. "Why are you having
anything to do with someone like Narok?"
"What do you mean? There's nothing wrong with Narok."
Darrow shook his head sadly at the so very Murlak-like statement.
"He runs a whorehouse, Murlak, among other things. He's not the kind of
person who is likely to do you any good in the long run." He winced at
the trite phrase, but it was the way he felt.
Murlak's cheerful grin turned into a frown. "I don't much care
about the long run, Darrow. He pays me to do errands for him and he
doesn't mind that I do them in my own time. I'm tired of having to be
where someone else wants me to be when they want me to be there. Narok
says he'll be able to hire me on full time soon, and then I won't have
to worry about whether Sferina likes me or not!"
"But you've only had this job for a month!" Darrow stepped aside as
Murlak stalked over to the door and put his hand on the latch. He
sighed, and continued, "Who's this Joden you're moving in with?"
Murlak turned and said, "He's one of Narok's workers. His place is
bigger than this one, and besides, he doesn't snore. He doesn't act like
he's my older brother, either."
Darrow thought that someone needed to be responsible for Murlak,
since his friend wouldn't do it for himself. He tried to reason with
Murlak one more time. "You've got to grow up sometime, Murlak. You have
a steady job in Sferina's warehouse, with good pay. Don't waste this
opportunity on the likes of Narok and his type."
Murlak pulled open the door and said, "That's what I mean," before
slamming it shut behind him.
Murlak clattered down the stairs of Darrow's rooming house and
slammed out the front door. He stopped there for a moment and wished he
hadn't gotten so mad at his friend. He felt strange, itchy and twitchy
inside, and he wanted to run and run until the twitching and itching
stopped.
He looked across the swamp in front of Darrow's place to the ruined
causeway and remembered the crash a month ago, and falling into the
water, and struggling to save himself from the wreckage and the Coldwell
itself. He'd had a lot of time to think, walking around Sferina's
warehouse every night since then. When he and Darrow had surrendered the
black statue to that guard, Edmond, just after removing their contraband
from it, Edmond had been shocked and stunned and ... scared, he thought.
Murlak had talked to Darrow about it, and about the plague of bad luck
that had first followed the barge, and then had overtaken the city
itself for a few days. His friend had made the connection first, but
Murlak seemed to have taken it to heart: somehow, maybe, the statue had
caused the bad luck, and their meddling had let it do so.
Murlak looked at the causeway again, and the itchy twitchiness
grew. He turned away, but there were still signs of the mishaps and
disasters everywhere around him. He gave in to the feeling, and started
to run.
As his feet pounded on the stones of the road, sounds echoed in his
head. Re. Spon. Si. Bil. I. Ty. A word he had only just learned, a word
he was trying hard to run away from. Responsibility. Running from
Darrow's grown-up ways, running from Sferina's job, running from the
misfortune he had helped cause.
He ran and ran, but Dock Street and the barge wharves weren't
nearly far enough away from the rooming house to give him time to work
out all of the itchy twitchiness. There was only one barge tied up there
when he arrived at the docks after tenth bell had rung. Murlak walked
over to the person directing the unloading work and said "I'm here for
Narok's cargo."
The tall, thin man looked Murlak over, frowned, and held out his
hand. Murlak's first thought was that he wanted some kind of bribe.
Then, remembering his instructions, Murlak fished the folded parchment
Narok had given him out of his belt pouch and handed it to the man.
The tall, thin man unfolded the parchment, read it over carefully,
looking up at Murlak and back down at the parchment several times.
Finally, he shrugged, turned, and called out, "Ista! Bring out the small
chest at the back of the shed!"
Murlak looked around, and saw a young woman with long brown hair
and wearing a blue tunic come out of the single shed on the barge's
deck. She was carrying a small chest that was maybe as long as a
forearm, half that wide, and a hand deep.
Murlak held out his hands as she walked over. Ista looked at the
foreman, who nodded, then handed the chest to Murlak. He noticed as she
did so that there was a streak of blood on her forearm. He took the
chest and glanced at her other arm in time to see some blood just appear
there and start to flow. His eyes widened in surprise, and he glanced to
her face. She was just starting to frown, and blood was starting to
appear on her cheek, her jaw, and at the corner of her eye.
Murlak backed away, clutching the chest. Ista stepped back as well,
blood flowing from more and more points, her tunic and leggings
beginning to darken, even her hair beginning to streak. Murlak couldn't
see any actual wounds, even though she looked like she had been the
target of a dozen or more arrows. She gasped when she looked at herself,
then her eyes rolled up and her lids closed. She screamed next, blood
oozing faster and faster, painting her red all over.
Murlak had backed all the way to the road. When Ista screamed again
and opened her eyes, she launched herself at the foreman, tackling him
and flailing at him with her fists and feet. Ista's first scream had
attracted the attention of everyone around, and when she attacked the
foreman, everyone but Murlak charged in to help.
The screaming continued and blood got everywhere. The other
bargefolk and dock workers were trying to restrain Ista, while she was
attacking anyone who came near. Murlak saw that as more and more blood
ran, coating the woman from head to toe, or so it seemed, she lashed out
more and more slowly.
Finally, the screaming stopped. Slowly, the others moved away and
stood up, streaked with blood. Ista alone didn't follow suit. She lay on
the dock, very still. Blood still oozed from her, pooling on the wood.
Murlak was sure she was dead.
Murlak turned from the spectacle and walked away. He wondered what
had just happened, and then quickly decided that he didn't want to know.
It was none of his business, after all. He was glad he hadn't
joined in with the others, though. He knew that blood would have ruined
his tunic, and it was his favorite.
Joden was expecting the knock even though it was after the first
bell of night. He said, "Yeah?" When his new roommate walked in, he
said, "Hi there, Murlak."
The red-haired young newcomer set his rucksack down by the door and
carried a small chest over to where Joden was lounging on his bed.
"Where can I put this until I get back from the warehouse?" Murlak
asked.
"Just set it in the corner," Joden said, waving in that direction.
"It'll be fine there. Is that the shipment Narok is waiting for?"
Murlak set the chest in the corner, then said, "Yes. Should I take
it to him before going to work?"
Joden snorted, and said, "Nah, not if he didn't ask you to rush it
over. Narok doesn't expect people to guess what he wants, so if he
didn't say it, you don't need to imagine he might have. Besides, he's
not running short of twist."
"Twist?"
Joden stood and walked over to Murlak and the chest. "You've never
tried it?" He opened the chest and plucked out two of the tiny twisted
packets. He straightened up, letting the lid fall closed, and handed one
to Murlak, then popped the other into his mouth.
The redhead looked at the drug in his hand with trepidation. "Go
ahead," urged Joden, "try it. It'll make you feel really good. Just put
it in your mouth. That's not parchment it's wrapped in, so it will
dissolve just fine." Murlak lifted his hand to his mouth and closed his
lips around the packet.
Joden continued, "It will take a while to start working, but you'll
know when it does. This is the first shipment from Narok's new supplier.
I hope they're as good as the others I've had." He knew that Narok was
paying less for this new drug, so it had better work or his boss was
going to be unhappy. Narok would be able to undercut the competition
because of the new pricing, but if it didn't work, no one would want to
buy it.
Murlak drew Joden's attention by saying, "Thanks for looking after
the chest, Joden. I'd better get going."
"No trouble at all, Murlak. See you later." He didn't see his new
roommate leave because he was staring at the chest. He debated the
wisdom of taking another twist against the opportunity in front of him.
He made his decision, and returned to his bed with a few more twists in
his hand. He didn't have anything else planned for the evening, and he
didn't think that Narok would miss them. And he had always wanted to
know what a double dose of twist would feel like.
Birds chirping in anticipation of dawn accompanied Murlak as he
headed back to his new home after work dragging his feet and not feeling
a bit like running. The night hadn't begun well, what with Darrow
yelling at him for being a bell late, but that was normal. Shortly after
that the dose of twist had begun to work and everything had gotten
bright and sharp and clear, and nothing, not even the boredom of
patrolling Sferina's warehouse, could keep him from being very happy for
almost half the night. He had even laughed at the rats scurrying out of
the crate of tubers, though he had gone back later in the night to make
sure they were all gone.
After the twist had worn off, though, things had only gotten worse.
He had gone from stupidly happy to inconsolably sad, and
remembering the previous good feelings had only made him feel sadder,
and stupid on top of it. Who laughs at rats, after all? He decided that
he never wanted another dose of twist, and couldn't understand the
attraction of the drug in the first place.
He didn't bother knocking when he got to Joden's, figuring that his
new friend was probably asleep. He opened the door and gasped at the
scene of chaos he found.
Blood was everywhere, not least covering his roommate, who was
laying on the floor, red from head to toe with it. The bed was torn up,
the single chair and the small table were smashed, and the remains of
those, as well as the walls and floor, were streaked with blood. Murlak
saw that Joden's dead finger pointed to a dose of twist lying next to
the wrecked bed.
Murlak knew he wasn't as bright as Darrow, or as good at business
as Narok, but he had some street smarts from his days as a shadow boy,
and he didn't believe in coincidences. Ista from the barge had died
covered in blood after delivering the chest of twist to him. Joden had
also died covered in blood with that same chest in his room. Murlak had
never heard of anyone dying like that before, and yet in one day he had
seen it twice, and both had to be connected to the twist drug from the
chest.
He took a step back and closed the door, thinking as hard as he
ever had. He remembered how many little twist packets had been in the
chest, and he knew that it contained a lot of death. He had to do
something about it, and his first impulse was to let someone else take
care of it. The chest belonged to Narok, so it was Narok's problem.
Murlak decided to let the whorehouse owner know about the poisoned drug,
because after all, who would knowingly sell death to his customers?
Narok was having a bad day, and first bell had only just rung. Two
of his whores were ill and the news had gotten around, and the new man
on the late night door was stealing from the till. As he stood in a back
corridor of his whorehouse, the Lederian Carpet, he knew that the two
men in front of him were only going to make his day even worse.
"Boss," said the short, fat, balding one, "I brung Heirk like you
said. He wuz down the docks, lookin' fer a berth."
Narok looked at Heirk, bruised, scared, cowed, being held firmly in
the grip of his much shorter captor. "Trying to run, Heirk?" he asked.
"I loaned you that half-Mark in good faith, and all you had to do was
pay me back a full Mark yesterday. You never showed up, and Tulit had to
chase all over the city to find out why. So, why?"
"I ... I ... I made a, a, a bad ...," Heirk stammered.
"You know," Narok interrupted, "I've decided that I don't really
care. I doubt it would be anything I haven't heard scores of times
before." He stared at the captive man, watching the fear grow in his
eyes, watching the sweat bead up on his forehead and crawl down his
face. It didn't make him feel any better, though, so he finally said,
"Tulit, take Heirk away and kill him. I hate people who break deals."
Heirk squeaked something, but Tulit's hand covered the captive's
mouth before he could really cry out. As the short man started dragging
Heirk away, Narok turned and found the young red-haired friend of
Joden's standing there staring at him wide-eyed. He remembered that he
had sent the young man, Murlak was his name, after the new shipment of
twist yesterday. The boy had nothing in his hands how, which was why he
asked, "Where's the chest?" without even considering what Murlak might
have just witnessed or the image he had been trying to impress on the
redhead to lure him into his employ.
"I ... ah, it's back at Joden's," said Murlak. "I, um, forgot --"
"Well, it had better be at Joden's," Narok said, turning away.
"Because if it isn't, if you've lost it, you're going to owe me quite a
lot of money."
"Owe you?" Murlak squeaked.
Narok's face stretched into a grin that wasn't one of his friendly
expressions. He turned back to the youth and said, "Yes, owe me. You
were sent after the shipment, and that means that you're responsible for
the money it represents to me. So, you either deliver the chest, or you
work off its value." He eyed Murlak up and down, reevaluating the kid's
potential and liking what he saw. "We need more dancers downstairs, and
you, well, you could probably work off the debt in a year, maybe less."
"I ... I'll go get it," said Murlak, then turned and ran.
Narok watched the boy go. He couldn't decide whether he wanted the
chest, or Murlak as an employee. The new shipment of twist was
significantly cheaper than usual, so he stood to make more money off of
it. But once he got Murlak working for him, he was pretty sure that the
boy wouldn't quit after only a year. Well, he won either way, didn't he?
Murlak walked slowly back to Joden's rooming house because it
wasn't far from the Lulling District and he had a decision to make. He
sighed as he walked, thinking that he hadn't gotten away from
responsibility even here.
He now knew that Darrow had been right; Narok wasn't the kind of
man Murlak had thought, and he certainly wasn't likely to do Murlak any
good, long run or short. He could take the chest to the man anyway, but
his newfound sense of responsibility wouldn't let him believe that any
deaths the twist caused wouldn't be his own fault as well as Narok's.
He could tell the man that the drug was poison, but he wasn't at
all sure that Narok didn't already know it, or at least wouldn't make
use of it in a different way, not after seeing that confrontation with
Heirk. If Narok knew that Murlak knew about the poison, he could be in
even bigger trouble. And there was still that responsibility thing to
get around.
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Third bell was ringing out over the city as Murlak pounded the last
few doses of twist with a rock, powdering the stuff inside. He was
sitting on the rocky shoreline of the promontory that hosted the
Sailors' Shrine, doing what had to be done. He was taking every care he
could, worried about the fact that he had taken one dose himself, but he
didn't seem to be having any reaction to the smashed drug.
The twists were finally mostly flat, and he swept them into his
hand and then dumped them into the water. He watched the strange
parchment-like wrapping dissolve, followed by the powder inside. He
checked the chest one last time, then closed the lid and heaved the
empty thing as far out over the water as he could.
He stood up and watched the floating chest for a while, then turned
back toward the city and started walking. The guard would soon be
dealing with Joden's corpse one way or another, since Murlak had sent a
shadow boy over there with a message after leaving the door open on his
way out. Either the shadow boy or someone else was sure to rob the
place, and eventually Joden's corpse would be reported. That left Murlak
two things to do: tell Narok that he had lost the chest, and ask Darrow
if he could move back in. Truthfully, he wasn't sure which encounter he
dreaded more.