Thursday, May 31, 2018

Chapter 4 (Part IV): Saber Lily

Azraea and Samantha worked their way through the residential area into the heart of Old Town. Unlike the southern portions of the city which had been slowly torn down and rebuilt between 150 and 50 years ago, the buildings here were among the oldest in Caelia, dating back to the reconstruction that followed the leveling of the original dwarven buildings. The elves who owned most of the property here had never allowed any development which would have involved demolishing the now historic buildings; unfortunately King Hylas’s father and grandfather had both thought the garishly festooned old buildings to be an eyesore, and had denied the ghettos many of the improvements provided to the rest of the city. Even basic maintenance had fallen entirely on the shoulders of Old Town’s residents.
Despite that, Azraea loved to come here, and once she was finally in a part of Old Town she recognized, she made for a hole in the wall Arbarii restaurant, Samantha still in tow. “Saber Lily” was closed at this time of the morning, but she went around back and knocked until she got the owner’s attention. The little Arbarii woman who ran the restaurant started to chase them off but stopped when she recognized Azraea.
“Salmon roll!” the little grey haired woman never remembered names, but she could remember her regulars by their orders, “I thought you graduated?! Come in, come in! Who is your friend? Where are Mammoth Steak and Chicken Fingers?”
“Samantha, this is Lily. Lily, this is Samantha,” Azraea said, “She helped me out of some trouble this morning.”
“What sort of trouble?” Lily said suspiciously.
“A dick-sack got handsy with Salmon Roll and caught on fire," Samantha explained with a dry smile, "It was a debacle, ma’am.”
“I see. I always knew that would happen eventually.”
Azraea laughed slightly, “Really? That specific thing?”
“Oh yes, I am very wise,” Lily nodded, “I might also have predicted that Salmon Roll would one day become the city’s most wanted, for sassing a dragon.”
“Ah!” Azraea gasped, “When did I ever sass you? I’ve never been anything but polite…”
“Exactly; your friends would carry on all sorts of ways, but you were always quiet, and I knew, I knew you were saving it for something special. You were saving it for something big. I told Gregor, I told him, and he said you must be saving it for a trip to our homeland. He said there was an ornery mammoth out there with Salmon Roll’s name on it, but I said, ‘No Gregor! Bigger! Much bigger than mammoth!’ and what is bigger than a mammoth but a dragon?”
“Well, did you predict any other surprising twists in my life?” Azraea laughed.
“I do not know – have you told Mammoth Steak you love her yet?” Lily quipped.
Azraea was speechless. She’d not only avoided acknowledging her feelings for Kaira until this summer, she’d lived firmly in the closet the entire time she’d resided in Kingstown.
“Well, I hope you have; you would make cute couple. Now, Salmon Roll, most infamous of my regulars, what does the Arbarii rebel of Kingstown need?”
“Food,” Azraea said simply.
Lily seemed disappointed, “Is that all? I hoped perhaps you needed a weapon, a stolen uniform, or falsified documents… something exciting. You mean to tell me, the dangerous young woman being sought by the dragon's personal guard is merely hungry?”
“Yes ma’am.”
“Well, then I will make you something.”
Do you have stolen uniforms?” Samantha asked.
Lily scrutinized her for a moment, “Why would you ask a question like that? That is a ridiculous question. I will make you some food as well, and you will not ask that question again, young lady.”
Lily evidently decided to spoil Azraea, making her a traditional Arbarii breakfast – caribou stomach, filled with tundra flowers, boiled with just a bit of salt and vinegar. Sam turned chartreuse when Azraea cut into it, but Azraea found the earthy smell nearly as revitalizing as the food itself.
“Do not dally too long,” Lily said as she poured some coffee, “someone outside will have seen you, and I don’t want you beating up on a pair of unfortunate guardsmen in my dining room. They are customers too!”
Azraea laughed, “I understand ma’am; I’ll eat fast. If anyone asks, my secret hideout is in the sewers underneath the warehouses.”
“Ah yes,” Lily winked, “very clever. I think one of those is used as a slaughterhouse now, isn’t it? Yes, if anyone asks, I will tell them you are hiding in the sewers beneath the slaughterhouse.”
“Oh, and warn them of traps,” Azraea said, “I’ve set traps. Lots of traps. Magical ones. Very hard to spot.”
Samantha looked slightly confused, and finally asked, “You two are joking, right?”
Azraea smiled, “No, we’re dead serious,” she winked.
Lily suddenly spoke in Arbarii. She was much more fluent in it than Azraea was, but Azraea still understood it well enough, <<Are you okay? Do you need real help?>>
Azraea was surprised, but answered back as best she could in her grandmother's language, <<I’ll be okay. I’m not alone.>>
<<Her?>> Lily asked in Arbarii.
<<She’s a stranger. But I have other people I trust.>>
Lily nodded and patted Azraea on the hand.
<<Will you be okay?>> Azraea asked, <<Have I caused you any trouble?>>
<<Yes,>> Lily continued in Arbarii, <<Much trouble. Normally I am in the bathroom at this time of the morning. Now my whole day will be off.>>
Azraea snickered because Lily said it so matter-of-factly. Samantha looked at the two of them suspiciously. Using a language barrier to exclude someone in the way they just had was generally considered to be rude and Samantha seemed at first insulted, but then brightened up. “Oh my God, that was a spy thing, wasn’t it?”
Azraea laughed, “She was just testing my foreign language skills. I don’t get to speak my grandparents’ language much otherwise.”
“No way, that was a spy message! You were passing plans or something!”
Lily pulled a meat cleaver out from behind the counter and slammed it down in front of Samantha, giving her a stern look, “You know nothing of our plans, and you will not speak of that which you do not know.”
Samantha nodded quietly, and Lily made an 'I’ll-be-watching' gesture with her fingers, before packing up a basket for Azraea.
<<I don’t want to know where you’re really hiding,>> she said in Arbarii, <<But there’s food for a few days, and the morning paper.>>
Azraea shook her hand and discretely passed one of the solid gold Gnoman coins to her, <<Be careful where you spend it,>> she said in their ancestral language, <<And thank you.>>  

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Chapter 4 (Part III): Snake Oil

The woman who’d been accompanying boorish young man retrieved Azraea's knife and handed it to her, “Well, I guess, he won’t be the first man to leave this neighborhood with a burning sensation down there,” she commented, “but I think people will be telling this story for a while.”
“I’m glad to provide some entertainment,” Azraea took her knife, “Thanks. Have a nice morning.”
“Wait up!” The woman said as she quickly walked to catch up.
“I’m just passing through,” Azraea said.
“I’m not trying to sell you anything,” the woman said, “I mean, unless you’re buying…? No? No, of course not. I just... are you the woman from the market?”
Azraea paused, “What woman?”
“You are, aren’t you?! You’re the one that mouthed off to the dragon in the downtown market!” That drew some interest from other passersby, but the woman hooked her arm through Azraea’s and hurried her further along the street like a client.
“How do you know about that?” Azraea asked.
“It was in all of the papers!” the woman explained, “Have you been hiding under a rock since then?”
“I nearly got into a catfight with a dragon,” Azraea said quietly, “Wouldn’t you?”
“Ha!” the woman said, “Fair point. Where are you going?”
“I was trying to find my way to Old Town…”
“Not spent much time in this part of the city? That’s okay, just follow me!”
“I wouldn’t want to interrupt your plans for the day…”
“Oh, don’t worry about that – my last shift ended when you cooked that John’s sausage.”
“I’m sorry…?”
“Don’t be; he paid half up front,” the woman pulled her briskly down the street, “I’m Samantha, by the way!”
“Hi Samantha… I’m Azraea… why are you…”
“Helping you leave as quickly as possible? My boss doesn’t really like it when new girls come in to the neighborhood, especially if they aren’t in his ledger. Really doesn’t like it when they light customers on fire.”
“Has that happened often?”
“Never, actually, but I think it’s a safe bet I’m right.” She slowed down as they entered another residential area, “But for real, you’re the one in the papers?”
“I haven’t seen the papers, but I guess so. What’s been going on?”
“Oh what hasn’t been going on?” Samantha said, “The heralds went crazy over all of that stuff. The Gnoman gold, the fire, the dragon getting angry – depending on which street corner you go to, you’re either a minor folk hero or a terrorist.”
“Well, if we could avoid the terrorist corners that would be good.”
“Huh? Oh yeah!” Samantha stopped, “Yeah, there’s people looking for you. There are posters of you and everything.”
“Ah, that’s how you recognized me.”
The woman laughed, “No. I’m sorry honey, but that poster they’ve spread around looks pretty much like every black girl in the city to me. It was the attitude you displayed back there that was unmistakable.”
“That’s good, I guess?”
“Oh, you’ll laugh when you see the wanted poster. I think the dragon must have been the one that provided the description. Under ‘height’ and ‘weight’ it just says ‘human’.” They walked a little further chatting when Samantha excitedly pulled Azraea over to a corner; there was a flyer pinned to the wooden wall with an arrow, to signify its importance. Samantha pulled it down to show her, “See! They don’t bother putting up many of these here in the north end but there are a few.”
Azraea took the paper from her and studied it as they continued walking. She was right; the picture of her was very generic. Kaira’s picture was a little more distinctive, simply because of her explicitly non-elvish hair, but with Kaira safely out of town, that was a nonissue. She read through the text; apparently they were both wanted for questioning in an investigation pertaining to a Gnoman plot to destroy Caelia’s economy through “terroristic alchemy”.
“There’s no reward offered,” Azraea said, “I feel a bit insulted.”
Samantha shrugged, “You ask me, she doesn’t want you brought in yet.”
“She?”  
“Oh, yeah, under-a-rock; right. The king’s appointed Syliva as his chief counsel, and put her in charge of investigating the conspiracy. These posters went up right afterward.”
Azraea paused for a moment. They had entered the residential portion of Old Town. It was a very different environment from the rough neighborhood Samantha had whisked her away from. While the streets in northern Old Town were technically public, they felt distinctly private and intimate. The buildings were so tightly spaced that laundry lines crisscrossed overhead, people shouted to one another from balconies, and children played safely on the cobblestone streets, which were too narrow for any carts or wagons to navigate. The neighborhoods south of Old Town were places where everyone knew everyone else – even though some of the people here shared her skin tone, everyone here would know she didn’t belong here.
“What makes you say she doesn’t want me brought in?”
“Oh, I’m not especially knowledgeable about these sorts of things, but it all seems a lot like a set up to me.”
“A set up?”
“Yeah, a hustle,” Samantha said, “My dad used to say that the two most important things you had to do to sell snake oil was to convince someone that they had a snake, and then to convince them that said snake was inadequately oiled.”
“Really?” Azraea was amused, but wasn’t sure if the young prostitute was trying to make her laugh.
“Oh, yes ma’am. Now, I’m no hustler, but I’ve bedded enough straight women and gay men to know that the premise is true. You want to sell something you got, you gotta convince people they need it, even if they don’t. The way I see it, she’s selling something, and needs people like you in the headlines to create demand.”
“People like me?” Azraea raised an eyebrow.
“Well, you know…” Samantha didn’t seem to know a tactful way to finish the sentence, so she just let it trail off.
Azraea didn’t know how to feel about this. She’d come here wanting to get Syliva’s attention; she'd wanted to rattle the dragon's cage and she had apparently succeeded greatly in that regard. She was also grateful that she hadn’t rattled Syliva out of the city yet, since it sounded like they weren’t exactly ready for her in Defiance. 
That said, she hadn’t intended to hand the dragon a quiver full of political ammunition. At this rate, she might as well be the reptile’s accomplice.

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Chapter 4 (Part II): And Things Went South From There

“Why is it that everyone assumes I need to have children in order to have an heir to my throne? I should by far prefer it to be the other way – let me find someone I can trust to take over my responsibilities one day, and then perhaps I’ll be ready to take on the challenge of fatherhood.”

“But how can one be prepared to rule if they are not born to it?”

“Kings and queens expect total devotion from all of their people – yet few ever venture beyond the bubble of safety that they were born into to know those people. I doubt, sometimes, that anyone born to lead can truly do so.” 

-        Caelus IV recounting an argument with his cousin Flaedin in a journal dated three years prior to Syliva’s arrival in Caelia.

As she’d promised, Azraea laid low for a couple of days in the shack in order to sell the idea that she’d left the city with Kaira.  There was only so long she could stay there, though; even if there had been enough food and water for indefinite seclusion, Azraea was simply not the type to stay idle. She made the best of the time in the shack she could; she meditated to try and connect more deeply with the spirits of Kingstown (and in the dirty, low end of town it was pretty easy to find restless spirits to commune with), and she intensely practiced every spell outside of necromancy she could remember. Fiddling with the blade Vinny had given her became a nervous habit in the confines of the shack, but after three days of fidgeting with it she’d gotten completely comfortable with its weight and balance. Perhaps it had been that comfort that emboldened her to break her self-imposed quarantine and venture out into the strife-ridden city.
Azraea had never been as far north in Kingstown as she was now. When the residents of southern Kingstown wanted a nice (and in their minds relatively safe) adventure, they often went north of Gate Street to “Old Town”, where all of Kingstown’s ethnic grottos had long ago merged into one very colorful community. For Azraea, Old Town was like a second home within the city, and in the midst of such turbulence it was where Azraea wanted to be. It had always reminded her of her home in Hermanelle, and she’d always felt it was the soul of the city. The wide range of cultures mashed together with tightly spaced, almost ancient buildings, created an atmosphere of mystery… no, not mystery. It was possibility. The crowded restaurants and cafes, the overflowing shops – no matter how many times she’d wandered through Old Town, she was always certain that she’d only ever seen a fraction of what was there.
Right now that sounded oddly comforting, but Vidi’s shack was well north of Old Town in the slums that abutted the northern wall of the city. There had once been open ground within the walls of Kingstown, perhaps for farming or maybe simply for leisure - Azraea didn’t know - but that area had long since been filled with tenement housing packed in around Kingstown’s warehouses and least reputable of businesses. The slums were notorious for being home to all sorts of inappropriate goings-on; within the kingdom, Azraea's hometown of Hermanelle had an unfairly exaggerated reputation for criminal activity, but it was a reputation that she was certain Kingstown's slums would have lived up to. They had regularly been a hot topic in discussions of urban renewal and addressing Kingstown’s ‘crime problem’. Kaira had made forays into the slums on many occasions, but Azraea had never felt safe doing so. Even after everything she’d endured in the past few weeks, the place still unnerved her. In fact, the smell of refuse, the filthy mud in the streets, the chaotic angles of the unplanned buildings, and the deep shadows now reminded her quite a lot of the Dark Dweller’s forest.
Yet, here she was, slipping out of Vidi’s shack in the early morning into the labyrinth of dilapidated structures, hoping to find her way to a hot meal in Old Town. Even now, she wasn’t brave enough to go out in the slums at night – she felt that she might be able to defend herself against one, maybe two assailants, but she honestly wasn’t sure she could find her way out of the slums in the dark, and imagined herself wandering about for hours in the labyrinth of chaotically placed buildings and filthy streets.
Homeless individuals were abundant here; they had been forced to the northernmost portion of the city but even here, amidst the minimalist shacks and rickety structures, many of them still couldn’t afford a roof over their heads. Most were curled up with travel bags and haversacks in corners and under overhangs, and ignored her passing. There were far fewer panhandlers and beggars than she’d expected, but as she walked past the rows of decaying shacks piled on top of each other, she realized what most of the people here already understood; begging for money in this part of town would have been pointless. A few children asked for food or the means to purchase it when they saw her but she was afraid of what might happen if she showed off the contents of her coin purse. One man followed her for a ways, shouting at her about Golon judging her for her apathy.
The only real orientation Azraea had in the maze of buildings came from the morning shadows and the glimpses she could occasionally catch of the northern wall. It was difficult, but she tried to keep the wall behind her, to ensure she kept moving south. At one point she realized she would either be forced to head eastward through the warehouses, or westward through what was, essentially, the red light district. There was a time when she would have erred on the side of propriety, and avoided being seen in a place of ill-fame. Being now slightly older and much wiser, she decided it was more important to go where there were people to see her; the warehouses would be an easy place to disappear.
The tenements gave way to flophouses and the sorts of shops that kept their windows covered and their doors closed, even during business hours. Many men scurried about hurriedly, leaving the cheap hotels in the early morning light with their heads held low, avoiding eye contact. A few men leered at Azraea, whistling or shouting for her attention, bragging about their physical abilities or shaking their coin purses. One man, accompanied by an ostentatiously dressed young woman, seemed to take her cold shoulder as a bargaining tactic and jumped in front of her to start haggling.
“I’ve got an hour before I have to be at work, baby, and a dark cup of coffee like you is exactly what I need.” He was a clean cut, young professional man – a tad disheveled from a long night, perhaps, but his appearance wouldn’t have shouted ‘sleaze’. She’d been harassed by all sorts of men, though, especially where alcohol was involved, and it was always a tossup which was the worst. She quickly pegged him as falling into the entitled-fratboy-who-thinks-women-are-a-commodity category. They didn’t take rejection well, but she was in no mood to tip-toe around his fragile feelings.
“Sorry, but I don’t pay for sex,” she said flatly as she swerved around him.
The young woman laughed at the turnabout and tried to lead the confused man away, but he regained his train of thought and rushed to intercept Azraea again.”
“Honey, I’m not selling, I’m paying,” he laughed. He jingled his money, “Coin purse in hand.”
“Then I suggest you keep everything else in hand as well,” she said as she walked around him again.
“Well, okay,” he reached out and grabbed her butt cheek tightly, driving a finger up between her thighs.
Azraea whirled, unleashing the Gnoman blade strapped to her wrist. Driven by reflex, it didn’t occur to her not to kill him, but thrown off balance by his manhandling she missed his throat.
The man cursed and grabbed her wrist. She twisted her hand to slash his forearm, but he didn't let go, he just twisted her wrist bones until her hand loosened and the blade dropped to the ground, clattering on the worn cobblestone. He grabbed her by the throat with his free hand and began to throttle her.
“Bitch! Are you fucking crazy?!”
The young woman tried to pull him off of Azraea, but he shoved the girl away. Azraea summoned a fireball in her free hand as she reached for the man’s crotch, setting his pants aflame. He released her, screaming and frantically trying to put out the fire. 
A few bystanders had gathered to watch the fiasco, but no one interceded to help the man, so Azraea finally closed her fist the way Kaira had taught her and belted the man straight across the jaw. The punch laid him out flat on the muddy ground and with a shove of her foot she rolled her assailant over onto his front, extinguishing the fire with a long hiss. 

Monday, May 28, 2018

Chapter 4 (Part I): Well, This Stinks

My dad knew a guy who worked with someone who was part of the wall repairs around the King’s Lake reservoir. You wouldn’t believe what he said happened to one of the guys who was there before him…
-        My cousin Elise, when I was eight years old, explaining why I shouldn’t swim in King’s Lake.

Vinny didn’t see Vidi or Kaira on his ride into Kingstown. He had taken a more backward path to be cautious, and as he scouted about the outlying area he decided that was a wise move. He had discretely negotiated a room in a tavern outside Kingstown just so he could spend an evening listening to the traders going in and out of the city and get an idea of where things stood.
Rumors of the altercation in the market had circulated widely, with quite a lot of inconsistency. Most people had now heard that the dragon had foiled a 'Gnoman terrorist plot,' which was an all but worst-case scenario for Vinny. Besides making his job more difficult, the fact that his people were now being implicated in subversive action against a foreign power meant he had seriously cocked up his mission.
Everyone had also heard that Syliva was being praised as the hero of the hour. That’s not to say that very many of them actually did praise her, but that was what they had heard. Everyone seemed to have the impression that everyone else approved of her actions. There was one herald that had, surprisingly, gone hard against the others. They didn’t levy any accusations but simply provided an impartial, all but sterile account of the confrontation in the marketplace, based on eye-witness reports, and even an anonymous interview with one of the guards that had been involved. The conversation between Azraea and Syliva had been related almost word for word, as had the part where Syliva had flown off in a tantrum without actually doing anything decisive, let alone heroic.
Despite being a major herald, it had been largely drowned out by their competitors, who all began carrying stories about how Syliva had declared the dissenting herald to be a source of misinformation. Calling them stories was an overstatement too. The only story was that the dragon had said it. There was no supporting investigation or analysis, just wall to wall reports on what the dragon said, and she had started saying some pretty aggressive things. She was now going so far as to call the unsupportive herald an “enemy of the people”. That phrase chilled Vinny. He had heard it before - on one occasion he’d even been the one to personally interject it into a volatile political situation - and it was almost always a precursor to violence and anarchy.
Vinny was definitely off-mission now. Fortunately, the Empress understood that infiltration and manipulation wasn’t an exact science, so the fact that things had gone pear-shaped might still be forgiven if things played out in the Empire’s favor. At minimum, he at least had Meingen's weapon and research as a prize. He'd spent one night behind closed doors in a tavern studying the impressively detailed notes, committing them to memory as best he could, and figuring out how to arm the weapon. 
As much as Meingen's plan to blow up the city to kill the dragon appalled Vinny, Vinny also recognized that if Syliva forayed south of Caelia's border thousands of Gnomans would die before the Empire could devise and implement a plan to kill her on the wing. Vinny was privy to many details of Gnoman history that were generally kept under wraps, and knew that Syliva wasn't the first dragon the Empire had dealt with. Unfortunately, the poor sod they'd encountered before had been a fairly well meaning fellow that the Gnomans had taken down through manipulation and betrayal so cruel that the story even left Vinny with a bad taste in his mouth. 
There was no chance that Syliva could be defeated through that sort of basic duplicity, so Vinny had reluctantly decided that Meingen's weapon was his backup plan. He had completed the weapon and then stashed it in one of their team's dead-drops, sans a key piece of the precisely machined trigger mechanism. With that done, he'd sent copies of the notes to his homeland by secure (albeit slow) channels. Ochsner had been shaken by the device’s destructive potential, and feared its power so greatly that Vinny could imagine her walking a thousand miles to pitch it and every shred of information about it into a volcano. Vinny felt much the same, but reasoned that if it could be invented once, it could be invented again. Eventually, every nation would have such weapons, and if that was a possibility, the empire needed to have them first.
With the weapon dealt with, Vinny's next priority was getting into Kingstown and rendezvousing with his asset before she decided she was tired of waiting and started doing things herself. He was pleased that her self-confidence seemed to have risen to match her competence, but like any local asset employed in an operation like this, the stronger she became the harder she was to manage. Vinny would have loved to simply let her go and see what she accomplished on her own, but the Gnomans now had too much at stake for him to simply take a seat in the audience.
Unfortunately, getting into the city was problematic. The guards were scrutinizing Gnomans carefully, requiring proof of citizenship and subjecting them to intense questioning. Of course, Vinny had the documentation; no agent provocateur worth his salt would embed in a foreign country without the papers to support any of three different identities. The only people the 'enhanced security measures' would inconvenience would be absent minded traders, undocumented farm workers, and native-born Gnoman descendants who’d never had a reason to carry identifying documents with them.       
No, papers weren’t a problem, but questions were. Thanks to Syliva personally taking control of the investigation, her privately recruited guardsmen now held the power to ‘legitimately’ shakedown any Gnoman that crossed their path. Vinny could play his best game, but even if he gave all the right, most convincing answers, there would be no guarantee he would walk out of an interrogation with his belongings, if at all. Carrying a vital and practically irreplaceable piece of an arcane super weapon on his person, Vinny wanted to avoid that. Fortunately, thanks to a little study of history, he knew a way into the city that most were unaware of. It was dodgy and unpleasant, but it would suffice this once.
Vinny left the tavern via a window in his room at about midnight. and slipped down to Mudville’s docks where he stole a small row boat. It was hard to find one small enough to suit and he had no doubt that the vessel he found must have belonged to a kinsman; either that or someone had taken up canoeing.
Given his small size, rowing across the lake was taxing, especially with the current that pulled everything to the lake’s outflow through the Old Wall to the south. He made it across, though, and found himself at Kingstown’s outer wall. The water ran right up to it, with no bank. Now came the brilliant but risky part.
It was well known that two hundred years ago Caelus IV, seeking a confrontation with Syliva, had snuck back into his own castle via a secret passage. It was also generally accepted that the “secret passage” was probably just a drainage culvert that emptied Kingstown’s sewage. Such a thing would be necessary, since otherwise the high walls of Kingstown would make it a giant, filthy soup bowl.
What most people didn’t realize, though, is that back then the Old Wall hadn’t extended across the Gykien River. The dwarves who had built the Old Wall after rebelling against the Feguncians had originally placed a bridge-like fortress with a massive gate at the river entrance. That fortress had survived the elves' subsequent invasion of Caelia, but had finally been toppled when human and orc rebels led by Caelus I deposed the elves. The dwarven fortress had been so massive that its collapse had partially blocked the river, flooding the land upstream. The debris had finally been cleared away during the reign of Caelus I's grandson but - ironically - it didn't take long for the people of central Caelia to begin lamenting the loss of the accidentally created reservoir. Besides providing for some good fishing, it had helped the local farms survive a nasty drought in the last year before it was drained.
During Caelus IV’s time, the kingdom had begun construction on a dam to recreate the conditions following the collapse of the fortress. It was a contentious decision at the time not only because it was costly and displaced some of the area's farmers, but because of the impact it would have on trade and diplomacy with the lands down river. To account for that, Caelus IV had also intended to construct a series of locks that would have allowed merchant ships to bypass the dam. Although the dam was completed after his untimely death, the locks were left only half-finished. As a result, Caelus IV's attempt to appease the conflicting interests of his kingdom had generally done more harm than good; an unfortunate legacy for the king.
For Vinny, this convoluted history all had one important implication – when Caelus had broken into his own castle two centuries earlier, the lake hadn’t been reformed yet, meaning that the reason no one had found the drainage culvert since then was likely because it was underwater now. Somewhere beneath Vinny there was a submerged entrance into the capitol that hadn't been used for 200 years.
Unfortunately, his guess at the culvert’s location was imprecise, and it seemed that the culvert was hidden even in the driest of years, meaning that, in a wet year like this, the culvert would be very far down. And of course, even assuming it wasn’t buried in sediment or covered by rusted iron bars, however far down he swam, he’d have to swim back up at least as far, and that swim would be through a dark, mysterious pipe. It would be an impossible feat for an average human, but for a Gnoman spy, well, it was all in a day’s work. When strength of body failed a covert agent of the Gnoman Empire, he or she could always fall back on the innovation and ridiculously large budget of the Sinister Legion’s quartermastery branch.
Vinny packed his boots into his travel sack, and bundled it up with his cloak as tightly as possible. Satisfied that the backpack would be as out of the way as possible, he finally donned his ace-in-the-hole, a thin, suffocatingly tight hood. The fabric clung to his face, plunging him into darkness and completely cutting off his air. Scrambling about for a heavy rock he’d put in the boat, he grabbed a hold of it and fell backwards off the boat.
As soon as the water hit the tight fitted hood, its enchantment kicked in. The total blackness Vinny had been in was replaced with a dim red vision of the rock clutched in his hands, and the alchemical enchantment in the cloth transformed the water that flowed through it into breathable air. It was uncomfortable – it felt like having a wet towel plastered to his face – but it worked. He could breathe nearly unhindered, and as he neared the bottom he could make out plants on the lake’s floor, and he could see the stone wall extending right down into the sediment.
Alarmingly, that wasn’t all he saw – directly beneath him a vague shape, at least seven feet long, kicked up a cloud of dirt and sand. At first Vinny thought it was a shark, but he soon realized it was a catfish. Even at its considerable size, it probably wouldn’t have been a threat to a human being, but for the three foot tall Gnoman, it was a real predator.
Vinny’s gut tightened – he had only a moment before he’d land right on the beast, and he had no idea how many more there were hanging around in the darkness. He really had only one option – hit it hard enough to scare the daylights out of it.
He plunged through the cloud of silt, and felt the rock land on the scaly beast with a soft thud. The creature thrashed about, startled and annoyed, but as it turned about on Vinny, he slipped the blade out of his sleeve and took a swipe at its face. The razor sharp blade sliced into one of the long thin barbels extending from around its mouth. He cut deep into the sensitive tendril and that was evidently enough for the catfish – it bolted away with a surge of its tail, kicking up a violent cloud of dissolved mud.
Vinny searched around looking to see if there were any other challengers and, indeed, he could see some vague forms in the red glow of his hood. They were closing in cautiously, circling. Vinny guessed they’d probably been kept at a distance by the big fellow who’d been squatting here, and were now even more wary of whatever small thing could send their rival off in an instinctual panic.
But was it Vinny they were interested in, or something else? The air flowing through the hood smelled foul but that wasn’t especially unusual for a lake bottom. There was an exceptional amount of growth here, though – stones were covered in thick algae and some sort of shellfish. Vinny moved carefully, trying to avoid kicking up more filth, and then found what he’d been hoping for – the culvert in the wall.
The bad news was that the sewer pipe was mostly filled with sediment – the good news was that it left just enough space for Vinny’s small body to squeeze through. He quickly took off his pack, tied it to a short length of rope, and swam down into the pipe. Between the ceiling of the pipe and the collected sediment, Vinny barely had enough space to breathe, and thanks to the curve of the pipe's ceiling, his arms and legs were badly restricted. More than anything he might encounter, this put his training to the test. He remembered the days packed into tight hot boxes, barbaric torture chambers imperial agents willingly endured to prepare them for interrogations and inhospitable conditions. The key was always to remember, ‘this too shall pass’ and to take the time to figure out the fastest way to make that happen. After testing his range of motion, Vinny reached forward with both hands, and put all of his effort into short but consistent little kicks that propelled him slowly but steadily against the current flowing down the pipe.
Unfortunately, the hood he was wearing wouldn’t last forever. Eventually the magical solution that converted the water to air would wash out, but after sometime in the long pipe, he lost his sense of time and couldn’t guess how much longer it might last. The other problem was if he hit a blockage now he was pretty sure he physically couldn’t turn around, even if the mask would last long enough for him to swim back. Vinny wasn’t the sort who liked taking chances, but risks were an inevitable part of the job – at a certain point, no amount of preparation could get you past having to make a gamble. Still, despite his apprehension, Vinny knew that the pipe should be angling upward, and with the consistent flow outward, there should be less and less sediment backing it up the further he went.
Indeed, that proved to be the case. As the moments dragged by, he found himself with more and more room, and found himself fighting less and less of a current. Eventually, he was swimming freely down a pipe large enough for an armored man to crawl through, as Caelus and his knights must have 200 years ago.
The pipe exited into a larger chamber a moment after breathing started to become difficult. Vinny pulled his things out of the pipe, making sure they weren’t tangled, and he swam hard upward. The hood still provided the faint red vision he’d relied upon, but initially there wasn’t much to see. Finally, he spotted a submerged stair case winding up the inside of the round stone chamber, and though it didn’t promise anything, that felt somehow encouraging. Vinny took one last gulp of air through the failing mask, and with a final push, swam upward as quickly as possible. At last, he felt his fingertips, then his hands, and then his head break the surface. He pulled the bottom of the hood up to uncover his nose and mouth, and took a deep breath. It was foul, but it was air.
He scanned his surroundings – it was a large round room with a domed ceiling. Vinny was impressed – it rivaled Gnoman stone work and architecture. It obviously wasn’t supposed to be this full, doubtless flooded as a result of the lake’s creation, but there was still plenty of air in the chamber, and many of the stone tunnels leading into the room had enough head room for Vinny to travel through without holding his breath.
At first, Vinny figured he’d be walking out by trial and error, but then he noticed that the top of the round room had a massive relief – a compass symbol was set into the ceiling indicating North, South, East, and West. Vinny swam over and climbed up into the northernmost tunnel, and set out following it under the city.    
Vinny came up to a tunnel running just beneath the stone street near dawn, and he heard a horrific noise coming down through the drainage grates above him. There were angry shouts and chants; another protest was happening, and Vinny wondered if it wouldn’t end up just like the one outside the college. He made his way to a partially broken grate, pulled himself up to it, and squeezed through the remaining bars onto the street about half a block from the noise.
The crowd was chanting, “Free the heralds!” over and over again. Vinny wondered if that demand was literal or figurative, but either way it seemed like a bad portent. He backed off the street into an alley to watch a little bit longer. There were some guards in armor with shields and clubs, but they were horrifically outnumbered. Fortunately, the crowd seemed surprisingly disciplined. Outside of being loud at an extremely early hour, they were exercising great restraint.
They were, though, oblivious to something that Vinny saw right away – hooded figures came out of alleyways near the crowd. They were garbed in generally nondescript brown tunics and tan trousers, with their faces obscured by scarves under their hoods. Their identities were effectively concealed, and when anonymous protesters show up to a peaceful demonstration it’s a safe bet they don’t intend to keep it peaceful. The first window broke only seconds after they blended into the crowd, then another, and then a street sign came down. A rock from the middle of the crowd struck a guard, so the guards reacted by assaulting the protesters nearest them, including one woman who’d stopped to see if the guard who’d been hit was okay. The crowd reacted to the attack defensively, and within moments the peaceful protest had turned into an angry mob.
  Vinny wondered which side the anonymous protesters were actually on. This sort of thing was the epitome of what it meant to be an agent provocateur, and Vinny had been on both sides of that game. Vinny had destroyed foreign rivals by emboldening anti-establishment groups, but he’d also eliminated internal threats to Gnoman allies by discrediting them and giving the establishment a reason to ‘deal’ with them. The hoods and scarves were so obvious Vinny couldn’t help but see what was happening as “amateur hour” but it seemed to be enough to get the job done. A few minutes after the protest turned violent, the clatter of armored boots rounded the corner at the end of the block; there was no way that the guard could respond so quickly to the change in circumstances – they had to already be on their way down before the protest turned violent. As if on cue, the hooded figures wormed their way back out of the anarchic crowd and disappeared down the alleys, leaving the rest of the townspeople to suffer the brunt of the guard’s violence.
Vinny would have liked to have caught up to one of the rabble rousers and extracted some information, but there was no way to get across the street with the rioters turning to face the approaching guardsmen. Vinny disappeared down his alley and made his way to Vidi’s safe house.  

Thursday, May 24, 2018

Chapter 3 (Part IV): Info Wars

"That was about the time we started running our 'Fact Check' series at The Kingstown Herald. At first I wondered if no one was reading it, but eventually I came to understand that circulation wasn't the problem. It turns out, there're two types of facts. There are objective facts, based on events, actions, and physical certainties - the 'facts' journalists are interested in - and then there's an alternative set of facts rooted in the subjective reality of the individual - these are the 'facts' that politicians are interested in. Unfortunately, our competitors were more successful at politics than we were at journalism."
               - Cupe Anders, writer for the The Kingstown Herald.

Syliva didn’t regret her decision to 'fire' Millon. Although the Loche brothers didn’t take well to the disappearance of the tenured editor, the suddenness of his departure seemed to drive home a point for both them and The Vulpine’s staff. The vacancy was filled internally by someone far more agreeable to Syliva’s way of doing things, and far more amenable to Baryd’s way of doing things. Before long the Broad Beard Press and The Vulpine Post were operating like two halves of a whole. In fact, Syliva was considering merging them – if she orchestrated it right, she might end up with complete (and entirely aboveboard) control over the amalgamation.
The two heralds inundated the streets with news about the riots, the investigations into the university, and the investigations into the former staff and students. They raised calls for more investigations, more scrutinizing investigations, and at every turn reinforced the idea that these demands came from the people, rather than from the publishers or the dragon that owned them.
They also commented extensively on matters pertaining to the kingdom’s laws and governance, with ‘educational’ pieces that dramatically reinterpreted, or altogether disregarded, the kingdom’s actual legal framework. Much of this ended up targeted at King Hylas – relatively normal acts of governance were suddenly criminalized, even declared treasonous, by the Broad Beard’s writers, and The Vulpine Post’s writers relentlessly criticized him for his failure to do things that, legally, he did not have the power to do.
 Most of the other major heralds were afraid to go head to head with Syliva’s tag team, but there was one exception – The Vulpine Post’s main competitor, The Kingstown Herald. The Kingstown Herald’s staff didn’t write anything seditious, they simply refused to present the altered 'facts' that the dragon provided as news. Particularly aggravating to Syliva though, was that, occasionally, The Kingstown Herald would present anonymously contributed ‘letters of concern’ or art that reminded their audience that while Syliva was powerful, she didn’t have any formal authority within the kingdom’s government. It was plucking the same nerve the woman in the market had struck during their argument.
As far as Syliva was concerned, that had reached the point of intolerable within days, with the writers becoming increasingly unkind and abusive towards her. It frustrated her ultimate goal to establish herself as a legitimate, legal authority in Caelia, and it aggravated her to allow any such opposition to pass.
Baryd felt certain that many of the most scathing attacks came from former scholars. Most of the those who’d survived the fires weeks earlier had simply dug in and kept their heads down or discretely left the city altogether. A few, however, threw in with The Kingstown Herald, contributing letters and editorials, and others were actively getting out in the streets trying to persuade the people that the dragon was causing their kingdom’s problems. Baryd claimed this was a positive development, as their opposition ‘maintained the established narrative’ that Syliva was an enemy of the intellectual elite, but Syliva was personally annoyed. She’d burned down the university to put a stop to this sort of thing.
Baryd had done his job, though. The more intense the opposition, the more material he was able to create for the Broad Beard’s writers to work with. A small group of the Beard’s most ardent supporters took to calling themselves “Nationalists”, and the Beard glorified their small movement, exaggerating its size, extolling their virtues, and giving them a platform for their rhetoric.
The Nationalists helped revive the claims that the scholars had used arcane knowledge to sabotage the economy and cried passionately that they’d been put up to it by the Gnoman Empire. Scholars, they said, were not just crooks but traitors, and foreigners were not just unwelcome, they were dangerous. When the Nationalists’ line gained the credibility of being covered in the Vulpine Post, their numbers swelled. People who’d quietly had an inclination towards the same mindset eagerly joined in, dragging or pressuring many others to support their cause.
The Nationalists ran wild like a horse that’d slipped its reigns in a crowded market, growing beyond Baryd’s control. The category of ‘scholar’ gradually broadened to include anyone with an education, and the category of ‘foreign’ likewise broadened to include anyone who wasn’t a white human or, as they liked to put it, anyone who was a “non-person.” Though Syliva’s lackeys no longer steered the movement, they still proved useful, championing the moral rectitude of the movement in everything that followed, while blaming and demonizing their opposition.
Of course, the Nationalist’s antipathy towards ‘non-persons’ was of immediate concern to Syliva. Politics was not her native game, but she knew she couldn’t very well gain legitimate authority in the kingdom if she was declared a second-class citizen. Her agenda required she position herself squarely on the ‘right’ side of history, lest she be the target of malice from both sides. For the time being, the best way she saw to do that was to make it clear to the Nationalists that she was the enemy of their enemy.
Syliva had Baryd arrange for some provocative street violence to stoke the Nationalists flames. Guards reported being attacked, and the Broad Beard pinned it on the minorities dwelling in Kingstown’s north end. Shops had bricks tossed through their windows, street vendors were harassed, homes were defaced, and it didn’t take long for the Nationalists to retaliate in kind. Of course, the men and women the Nationalists threatened responded in kind, and before long it became a self-sustaining cycle of outright street violence. Syliva ensured that the responsibility for handling that problem fell squarely on the shoulders of King Hylas, and when that happened, she invited Hylas to the castle to discuss the problem.
“Invited” – summoned may have been a more appropriate term. Hylas did his best to look important, of course, arriving with a full retinue not only of his personal guard, but many city guards for good measure. It was a meaningless gesture to Syliva, of course, but she imagined it must have made the king’s walk to the castle gates less embarrassing.
Hylas was a soft man, even by human standards. Caelus IV’s brother had never possessed the special qualities a people seemed to expect in their king, and over two centuries it seemed to Syliva (and others) as if the bloodline had been thoroughly watered down. Syliva had ensured the royal family retained a measure of affluence without the burden of responsibility, however. Because of that, Hylas was usually as docile as any domesticated animal, but for once, it seemed as if the squishy little thing was actually upset with her.
“You need to get your papers under control!” Hylas said, “Not just Broad Beard, but The Vulpine as well!”
“Why?” Syliva asked, “What harm is there in an informed public?”
“None, but there’s a great deal of harm in a misinformed public! The sensationalistic 'news' they print has turned a handful of rumors into a political catastrophe, and I’m being blamed for not preventing something that didn’t happen that I didn’t have the power to prevent!”
“Hylas,” Syliva hissed, “The Vulpine has always been as favorable as possible to the royal family. Your cousins have seen to that, and their father before them.”
“Which makes it all the more vexing that it has turned on us now!”
“You’re not suggesting you’ve been somehow betrayed, are you?” Syliva clutched her scaly chest as if she’d been stabbed through the heart, “As I said, The Vulpine has always been loyal to the royal family… but there are limits. When the royal family fails to protect the well-being of the country, surely The Vulpine can’t be faulted for saying so?”
“I have failed to do nothing!”
“As far as the people are concerned, you’ve failed to do anything.”
“Because that’s the story you’ve manufactured!”
“Oh, and now you think I’m somehow attacking you personally… I hope you don’t intend to take such preposterous accusations beyond these walls; paranoia doesn’t suit you Hylas.”
“What do you want, Syliva?”
“Brass tacks, then?” Syliva quirked a brow, “Good for you. I just want to do what I’ve always done – help the kingdom prosper by lending my wisdom and experience to the throne.”
“And?”
“And I want formal recognition for it,” Syliva said straightforwardly, “No more whispering and nudging and informal suggestions. I want an office – not a physical one, of course, but a title that properly acknowledges my role in holding this kingdom together.”
“For Golon’s sake, is this really because you suddenly feel underappreciated?”
“Well!” Syliva balked, “When you speak to me like that it certainly does! Really, Hylas! What would your family have without me? Without my protection? My resources?”
Hylas sighed, “What exactly are we talking about, then?”
“As I said, personal recognition in the form of a formal title – you can make one up if need be – and the authority to use the kingdom’s resources as I see fit, in order to quell the unrest in the streets.”
“If you want to quell the unrest, then just tell your heralds to stop fomenting it!”
Syliva laughed, “And how would that look to the Nationalists, hmm? If the king appointed me to an office and two of the kingdom’s major sources of information suddenly dropped the biggest story of the decade? That would be more provocative than anything.”
“Then what do you intend to do?”
“Give a big story a big ending,” Syliva said honestly, “and give the people closure. Do what the Nationalists want and see the investigations through. Deal with any… problems that emerge, and put people’s fears to rest.”
“You’re asking me to put the guard under your command?”
“Well…” Syliva decided to throw Hylas a bone, “If it would be more acceptable to you, simply give me the power to allocate funds for a special investigative force. I already have considerable manpower at my disposal – if they were, for a short while, on the kingdom’s payroll they could be temporarily deputized to officially participate in the investigation with legal authority.”
“You want me to pay for a whole new guard force?”
“Not you, the kingdom,” Syliva corrected, “In fact… here’s what we’ll do: I’ll continue to employee them personally, but contract their services to the kingdom part time at very low cost – in the name of patriotism, of course. And if that’s a problem I can obviously loan some money to the kingdom to cover the cost. As I said, it’s only a temporary arrangement, so it should be easy enough to pay back…”
“And I have your assurance this will be a temporary arrangement?”
“Of course. In fact, if you do this I’m sure we can have this problem dealt with within a matter of days.”   

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Chapter 3 (Part III): Mass(acred) Media

"I just love Caelia so much, and I fear for my country."
- William Alexander Shawnitty, content creator for The Vulpine Post criticizing a proposed tax increase to restore Caelia's failing roadways and bridges.

Vidi had been partly right about journalism in Kingstown. Indeed, Syliva held a controlling interest in one of the most influential heralds, The Vulpine Post, sharing control primarily with two of King Hylas’ maternal cousins, Edward and Carl Loche. It had proven an excellent investment over the years, both because it gave her a fair bit of influence over the information flowing out of Kingstown into the surrounding countryside, and because it kept the ruling family’s fate tied to her own.
Of course, there were times when the Vulpine’s editors imagined themselves to be too respectable to run a story the way she wanted, or when the Loche brothers felt a particular story was too negative towards their family. For those circumstances, Syliva had The Broad Beard Press, a gossip rag she had acquired years ago and begun reinventing to suit her purposes.
The Beard’s writers and editors had, essentially, no standards to speak of – in fact, even before selling out to Syliva their motto had been, ‘The Story Always Comes First’ – facts, evidence, and reason came in as distant seconds. The small local periodical had been regarded as a joke by most of Kingstown’s citizens, a font of conspiracy theories and demagogic editorials, but that had changed under Syliva’s patronage.
One of her sharpest moves, in this regard was embodied in one of the men who stood before her now, Mikhail Bran Baryd. Baryd was known in polite circles as “scum”, but to Syliva he was a valuable tool. She wouldn’t have said he was worth his weight in gold - but possibly silver. She loomed silently as Baryd argued with one of The Vulpine’s editors, Millon Crasell.
“Don’t get all noble now, Mil,” Baryd said, “The Vulpine needs the Beard now more than we need The Vulpine.”
The Vulpine’s readership and listeners eclipse the Broad Beard’s audience by a hundred fold. You’re tabloid is a joke in this city.”
“A hundred fold? Don’t kid yourself, Mil. And you won’t keep that edge long if you stop featuring Beard staff as commentators.”
The Vulpine Post had been Syliva’s herald-of-choice to promote the story about the alchemists’ plot against her, but it had been writers for the Beard who had taken that premise, linked it to the university, and inflated it into a grand conspiracy against the kingdom. Syliva had leaned on The Vulpine many times in the past year to circulate the Beard’s editorials and personal commentaries as ‘shared content’. Being shared by The Vulpine gained the Beard’s writers’ greater credibility and wider distribution than they could have achieved alone.
“Well it’s done,” Millon said, “we never should have started sharing another publisher’s content in the first place. That’s not how journalism works.”
Syliva hissed, “Millon, Millon, Millon… do we need to have this conversation again? Covering other publisher’s coverage as news is what finally put The Vulpine ahead of The Kingstown Herald. It made The Vulpine the final word in news – why listen to The Kingstown’s criers or pick up their papers, when everything of value would be summarized in The Vulpine? It simply saves people time… and has nearly starved out The Kingstown Herald.”
“Well they used to call it plagiarism!” Millon said.
“You always cite your sources,” Syliva said, “It’s not as if The Kingstown Herald’s work goes unrecognized – it just goes unpaid for.”
“Regardless, I’m done ‘sharing’ garbage from the Broad Beard, and I’m done giving their writers space in our printings.”
“It’s not given,” Baryd pointed out, “Madame Syliva pays for those commentaries to be printed.”
“On a piece by piece basis,” Millon said, “So it pleases me to formally refuse any further contracts involving the Beard’s writers.”
“I really think this hostility towards my staff is unwarranted,” Baryd said, “the Beard’s stories sell - you know it, everyone knows it - especially to audiences outside the city.”
“Because people outside the city don’t know what a shit reputation you have!”
Baryd feigned shock, “We have an excellent reputation Mr. Crassel. Do I need to remind you that we broke the story about the university riots?”
“Because you started the riots!” Millon shouted.
“That accusation is just absolutely ridiculous; the worst sort of liberal garbage. Really? Blaming us for the actions of a bunch of entitled brats!”
The accusation wasn’t ridiculous. In fact, the riots had been a great example of what made Baryd so much more valuable than the typical human. Baryd had once worked for Caelia’s guard doing undercover work, and though his career had come to an unfortunate end due to his… initiative, the same qualities which had him shunned from law enforcement made him ideal for the sort of journalism Syliva valued. Baryd didn’t just look for stories or investigate them, he was forward-thinking enough to go out and make them. Any of the Beard’s writers could simply make things up, and they frequently did, but Baryd and his former partner, Medes, who’d remained in the guard, could bring at least some measure of reality to even the most ridiculous of fictions.
Millon seethed silently for a moment, before responding, “I will be frank. The Vulpine Post appreciates Madame Syliva’s role in our community and her generous patronage, and has thus far repaid that generosity by communicating her thoughts on matters to our very large audience, both inside and outside of Kingstown. We have done this despite the fact that it’s led many people to regard us as little more than her personal public relations department, and while our readership continues to grow, many individuals working at The Vulpine, including myself, are not deaf to such accusations. Being pressured to provide that same sort of service to the hacks at Broad Beard Press does not sit well with many of us, and it never has. The sorts of things you’re asking us to run now have more than crossed the line; I will not allow it.”
“So?” Baryd asked, “You do remember you’re just an editor..?”
“An editor who was working at The Vulpine while you were still learning your ABCs, Baryd,” Millon said, “That may not mean much to Syliva, but it does to Ed and Carl, and between them they still control The Vulpine.”
“Oh?” Syliva quirked a horned brow, “You feel that, given the opportunity to make your case to the Loche’s, they would side with you?”
“I know they would.”
Syliva nodded thoughtfully, and then snapped forward like a heron plucking a fish from a pond. Her jaws snapped shut around Millon’s torso, the pressure crushing the air from his lungs and stifling any screams or cries for help. He writhed in her maw, skewered on the few, large spike-like teeth that lined her beak. His struggling splattered blood about the area as the smaller, razor-sharp teeth that filled the inside of her mouth sliced his flesh.
Syliva inhaled sharply through her nostrils and then, with a huff, spat him from her jaws in stream of flame that propelled him high into the air. He came apart midair, but most of the burning pieces cleared the castle wall and fell down to the lake below.
Syliva sat contently for a moment, cleaning the blood spatter from her jaws and outer teeth, as Baryd looked on. The man was definitely less distressed than the average member of his species, but still clearly unsettled. He finally asked, “What are you going to tell the Loche brothers?”
“That The Vulpine needs a new editor, of course,” Syliva said calmly.
“And when they ask about what happened to Millon…?”
“I’ll tell them the truth,” Syliva said, “I fired him.”