"Quite the show," Kayden remarked to Calliope. "My lady," he added as an after thought. She had informed him he needn't the pleasantries while they played chess and conversed strategy and philosophy, but it was good to continue the titles in public. They stepped onto the cobbled streets of the town as the sun waned, and both Morrsleib and Mannsleib loomed in the distance. Mercifully, Mannsleib seemed the greater this approaching evening.
"Not be design," The Lady Blackwood replied, though a look at Kayden's amusement had her give a ghost of a smile. "It seems wherever I go, there is a bit of theater."
"No complaints on my end. Though if they see how many men I have under my command, there might be a bit too much theater." He reminded her with an insouciant smile. "If you recall, I have quadruple what you told the good Baron."
"Worry not, for you'll only be bringing in a few at a time to Bonnershaven. But enough to give the illusion I was off by a few dozen, not a few hundred." She temporized, turning the corner with her retinue and Kayden. A wagon of grain stopped before them in an almost dangerous swerve when they saw the heavily armored knights that scowled at the teamster.
"I take it this Von Wrolf is your old acquaintence who has an item you wish to re-acquire, my lady?"
"Astute as always." She said, sighing. Evidently it was going to be more difficult than she had originally anticipated. "I'll have to arrange a meeting where neither of us can surprise the other. In the meantime, see to your men, Captain."
Kayden turned to her, his cloak whirring extravagantly as he gave her a courtly bow. "As the dark lady wishes." He said, in a way so solemn she could grasp a hint of waggishness in his tone. Otto lifted his head as if to say 'be off, peasant,' but as usual, Kayden ignored him, and stalked off with his pair of guards to make his way back to the camp.
Within the next few hours, as night fully fell, Kayden returned with twenty five of his men, without their surcoats and only knives and more concealed weaponry, so as not to appear under arms. The gates, luckily, stayed open all night.
"State your business, sir." A night watchman asked, his face glowing like an ember in the flames of his torch.
"I am Kayden, a man of Lady Calliope Blackwood. We are simply coming in to taste the hospitality of your fair town." Kayden informed him from his horse. The man glanced behind him to the ragtag group of men who looked casual but alert. Neil waved jovially, and one of the few brettonian men spit onto the ground. After another moment of appraisal, the guard pursed his lips and nodded.
"Right, off you go, then. I suggest you try to the Boar's Head. Got enough room for all your lads." He said, waving them in. Kayden gave the man a nod and set his horse into a canter, the men following behind. Kayden saw his men to the establishment. It was three stories high and well built, with a stone base and warm light inside. As its name suggested, a huge, stuffed boar's head the size of a horse's chest was mounted above the front archway.
"I don't know about a boar, but I'll see if I can find some head in here." A voice quipped. He recognized the voice.
"If you get into trouble, I'm not bailing you out, Neil." Kayden remarked over his shoulder. There were a few chuckles and some murmuring voices, before he saw them off into the common room. Neil was shoved, and he shoved another man back as they stumbled into the alehouse. As the last man stepped in, scratching his ass and closing the door to mute the raucous voices within, Morek was the only one left who stood beside Kayden's mount.
"You don't want to join them?" Kayden asked, raising an eyebrow.
"Beer'll be piss poor." Was Morek's only explanation. The Prince remembered they still had some Bugman's XXX back at camp, so he saw the wisdom in it. He dismounted his horse out of respect for the dwarf, knowing he would easily outpace him even if he slowed his mount to a crawl.
"Well, let us check on the lady before we make it back. See if she's in need of anything." Kayden said. Morek shrugged, as fine with trekking there as anything. Dwarfs weren't fast, but they were tireless, something he had learned from long marches beside the Ironbreaker. Kayden directed his steed by the reins, and the two mercenaries turned northward and headed up the main drag of Bonnershaven, past the street lamps glowing with camphine lights and the few residents still out past dark. He knew he didn't have to be on high alert. There was little to fear for the two of them, armed and tough. Well, armed, and at least Morek was both. However, as they passed an alleyway, Kayden saw another pair of figures conversing in the shadows. He might not have noticed them, if the bright colors of the watchmen's tabard weren't caught by the wan light of Mannsleib. Kayden halting has alerted the dwarf, and he nodded for Morek to take a look. The dwarf turned his attention to the alleyway with mild interest. The pair of them were not very close, across the breadth of the cobblestone street, and they'd not be able to pick up finer details even were it daylight. However, Morek had better nightvision than Kayden.
"What do you make of that?" Kayden asked him. Even as he spoke, the more darkly clad figure that spoke to the watchman hurried off, and the Bonnershaven man strode out as if he had just finished a routine patrol.
"Not sure. I didn't like the look of it. He was armed but, probably not our business." Morek said. Kayden looked at him, and Morek shrugged. "Yer right," he conceded. "It's probably our business."
Twenty minutes later, and after a short roundabout way, making a circuit around the townhouse Calliope had procured for herself, Morek had spotted three men in the same dark cloaks conversing in hushed tones behind a grain storehouse just across the way from where Calliope and her men were holed up for the night. Kayden and Morek hid behind a cart a few dozen paces away, crouched down with blades drawn, silent as the grave. A night watchman strolled across the street, and a rat scurried out of his way, but otherwise this part of town was as dead as Morr's realm.
Whatever the cloaked figures were arguing over, the men had come to some sort of agreement. As one, they began to move and crept up the outer stairway of the grain house. It was a spiral that led to an overlook that would be relatively equal to the third floor of the townhouse. Kayden rightly guessed it was where Calliope would be, as nobility often took the bedroom at the top floor, for safety reasons and as a vague gesture of their heightened status. Even with his human eyes, Kayden could see they held large crossbows as they ascended.
"Me first, then you." Kayden whispered to Morek. The dwarf usually went ahead, as he could take an inhuman amount of punishment, but his heavy boots might raise the alarm and Kayden wanted to be quick and silent. Kayden and the dwarf hurried across the cobblestones, and the Prince stepped up the stairway with soft steps on the balls of his feet. As he moved up, the more lights in the distance he could see across the township. Bonnershaven might be a full fledged city in a few years, if it prospered any further.
Finally, he made it to the highest level, and slowed himself. Sweat beaded on his forehead, and as he moved like a thief, he saw the townhouse come into view. From this vantage, he could see the various armored clad figures on the bottom floor, and a handful passed intermittently between light sources on the second and third, save for at the center, where the largest window stood. Kayden glanced to his left, and saw one of the men placing a bolt on a crossbow quietly, as another pulled the string back on his crossbow to prepare. Kayden couldn't guess where the third was, until he heard a whisper from behind him.
"Clever, but not clever enough."
Kayden expected to feel a knife enter his back, but instead he felt more than heard a strangled gasp, and he spun to see the cloaked figure stricken, his cowled face wide eyed. As he fell, Morek stood behind him, yanking his axe out of the man's back. Kayden gave him a nod in thanks, and then rushed forward, sword bristling. Just as he turned the corner, he heard one of the assassins whisper something, a confirmation perhaps, and Kayden saw Calliope step into view. She was accompanied by the low, appreciate whistle of the assassin, and Kayden saw her shapely silhouette in the light. She wore naught but her undergarments, stretching in the light, a movement that only enhanced her charms. Kayden's mouth was dry, but he realized he was gawking.
He took a hold of his senses, and leaped out of the shadows behind the corner. His arming sword chopped down on the man's right arm, his blade cutting into bone. The man let out a started cry, and the crossbow loosed. Its bolt struck the window, two feet to Calliope's left. She spun, eyes wide, and with a flash of her hands, darkness obscured the room. The lights could not have gone out. It was a deeper black than that.
The assassin shouldered Kayden, and yanked his crossbow back to bite him in the side. But the Prince pommeled him in the face, and swung his sword at the other assassin who lifted his crossbow to end Kayden's life. His sword clove through the string, and the crossbow snapped. Its string whipped about as Kayden finished the first assassin off by grabbing his legs and upending him over the balcony. Kayden heard him breath in as he began to flail, and screamed the two dozen meters to the ground.
The last man took out a knife to defend himself, but he found himself face to face with a sword pointed at his head, and an angered dwarf behind the dashing captain.
"You can die now, or be questioned." Kayden said menacingly, letting his words sink in. "I suggest the latter."
"Not be design," The Lady Blackwood replied, though a look at Kayden's amusement had her give a ghost of a smile. "It seems wherever I go, there is a bit of theater."
"No complaints on my end. Though if they see how many men I have under my command, there might be a bit too much theater." He reminded her with an insouciant smile. "If you recall, I have quadruple what you told the good Baron."
"Worry not, for you'll only be bringing in a few at a time to Bonnershaven. But enough to give the illusion I was off by a few dozen, not a few hundred." She temporized, turning the corner with her retinue and Kayden. A wagon of grain stopped before them in an almost dangerous swerve when they saw the heavily armored knights that scowled at the teamster.
"I take it this Von Wrolf is your old acquaintence who has an item you wish to re-acquire, my lady?"
"Astute as always." She said, sighing. Evidently it was going to be more difficult than she had originally anticipated. "I'll have to arrange a meeting where neither of us can surprise the other. In the meantime, see to your men, Captain."
Kayden turned to her, his cloak whirring extravagantly as he gave her a courtly bow. "As the dark lady wishes." He said, in a way so solemn she could grasp a hint of waggishness in his tone. Otto lifted his head as if to say 'be off, peasant,' but as usual, Kayden ignored him, and stalked off with his pair of guards to make his way back to the camp.
Within the next few hours, as night fully fell, Kayden returned with twenty five of his men, without their surcoats and only knives and more concealed weaponry, so as not to appear under arms. The gates, luckily, stayed open all night.
"State your business, sir." A night watchman asked, his face glowing like an ember in the flames of his torch.
"I am Kayden, a man of Lady Calliope Blackwood. We are simply coming in to taste the hospitality of your fair town." Kayden informed him from his horse. The man glanced behind him to the ragtag group of men who looked casual but alert. Neil waved jovially, and one of the few brettonian men spit onto the ground. After another moment of appraisal, the guard pursed his lips and nodded.
"Right, off you go, then. I suggest you try to the Boar's Head. Got enough room for all your lads." He said, waving them in. Kayden gave the man a nod and set his horse into a canter, the men following behind. Kayden saw his men to the establishment. It was three stories high and well built, with a stone base and warm light inside. As its name suggested, a huge, stuffed boar's head the size of a horse's chest was mounted above the front archway.
"I don't know about a boar, but I'll see if I can find some head in here." A voice quipped. He recognized the voice.
"If you get into trouble, I'm not bailing you out, Neil." Kayden remarked over his shoulder. There were a few chuckles and some murmuring voices, before he saw them off into the common room. Neil was shoved, and he shoved another man back as they stumbled into the alehouse. As the last man stepped in, scratching his ass and closing the door to mute the raucous voices within, Morek was the only one left who stood beside Kayden's mount.
"You don't want to join them?" Kayden asked, raising an eyebrow.
"Beer'll be piss poor." Was Morek's only explanation. The Prince remembered they still had some Bugman's XXX back at camp, so he saw the wisdom in it. He dismounted his horse out of respect for the dwarf, knowing he would easily outpace him even if he slowed his mount to a crawl.
"Well, let us check on the lady before we make it back. See if she's in need of anything." Kayden said. Morek shrugged, as fine with trekking there as anything. Dwarfs weren't fast, but they were tireless, something he had learned from long marches beside the Ironbreaker. Kayden directed his steed by the reins, and the two mercenaries turned northward and headed up the main drag of Bonnershaven, past the street lamps glowing with camphine lights and the few residents still out past dark. He knew he didn't have to be on high alert. There was little to fear for the two of them, armed and tough. Well, armed, and at least Morek was both. However, as they passed an alleyway, Kayden saw another pair of figures conversing in the shadows. He might not have noticed them, if the bright colors of the watchmen's tabard weren't caught by the wan light of Mannsleib. Kayden halting has alerted the dwarf, and he nodded for Morek to take a look. The dwarf turned his attention to the alleyway with mild interest. The pair of them were not very close, across the breadth of the cobblestone street, and they'd not be able to pick up finer details even were it daylight. However, Morek had better nightvision than Kayden.
"What do you make of that?" Kayden asked him. Even as he spoke, the more darkly clad figure that spoke to the watchman hurried off, and the Bonnershaven man strode out as if he had just finished a routine patrol.
"Not sure. I didn't like the look of it. He was armed but, probably not our business." Morek said. Kayden looked at him, and Morek shrugged. "Yer right," he conceded. "It's probably our business."
Twenty minutes later, and after a short roundabout way, making a circuit around the townhouse Calliope had procured for herself, Morek had spotted three men in the same dark cloaks conversing in hushed tones behind a grain storehouse just across the way from where Calliope and her men were holed up for the night. Kayden and Morek hid behind a cart a few dozen paces away, crouched down with blades drawn, silent as the grave. A night watchman strolled across the street, and a rat scurried out of his way, but otherwise this part of town was as dead as Morr's realm.
Whatever the cloaked figures were arguing over, the men had come to some sort of agreement. As one, they began to move and crept up the outer stairway of the grain house. It was a spiral that led to an overlook that would be relatively equal to the third floor of the townhouse. Kayden rightly guessed it was where Calliope would be, as nobility often took the bedroom at the top floor, for safety reasons and as a vague gesture of their heightened status. Even with his human eyes, Kayden could see they held large crossbows as they ascended.
"Me first, then you." Kayden whispered to Morek. The dwarf usually went ahead, as he could take an inhuman amount of punishment, but his heavy boots might raise the alarm and Kayden wanted to be quick and silent. Kayden and the dwarf hurried across the cobblestones, and the Prince stepped up the stairway with soft steps on the balls of his feet. As he moved up, the more lights in the distance he could see across the township. Bonnershaven might be a full fledged city in a few years, if it prospered any further.
Finally, he made it to the highest level, and slowed himself. Sweat beaded on his forehead, and as he moved like a thief, he saw the townhouse come into view. From this vantage, he could see the various armored clad figures on the bottom floor, and a handful passed intermittently between light sources on the second and third, save for at the center, where the largest window stood. Kayden glanced to his left, and saw one of the men placing a bolt on a crossbow quietly, as another pulled the string back on his crossbow to prepare. Kayden couldn't guess where the third was, until he heard a whisper from behind him.
"Clever, but not clever enough."
Kayden expected to feel a knife enter his back, but instead he felt more than heard a strangled gasp, and he spun to see the cloaked figure stricken, his cowled face wide eyed. As he fell, Morek stood behind him, yanking his axe out of the man's back. Kayden gave him a nod in thanks, and then rushed forward, sword bristling. Just as he turned the corner, he heard one of the assassins whisper something, a confirmation perhaps, and Kayden saw Calliope step into view. She was accompanied by the low, appreciate whistle of the assassin, and Kayden saw her shapely silhouette in the light. She wore naught but her undergarments, stretching in the light, a movement that only enhanced her charms. Kayden's mouth was dry, but he realized he was gawking.
He took a hold of his senses, and leaped out of the shadows behind the corner. His arming sword chopped down on the man's right arm, his blade cutting into bone. The man let out a started cry, and the crossbow loosed. Its bolt struck the window, two feet to Calliope's left. She spun, eyes wide, and with a flash of her hands, darkness obscured the room. The lights could not have gone out. It was a deeper black than that.
The assassin shouldered Kayden, and yanked his crossbow back to bite him in the side. But the Prince pommeled him in the face, and swung his sword at the other assassin who lifted his crossbow to end Kayden's life. His sword clove through the string, and the crossbow snapped. Its string whipped about as Kayden finished the first assassin off by grabbing his legs and upending him over the balcony. Kayden heard him breath in as he began to flail, and screamed the two dozen meters to the ground.
The last man took out a knife to defend himself, but he found himself face to face with a sword pointed at his head, and an angered dwarf behind the dashing captain.
"You can die now, or be questioned." Kayden said menacingly, letting his words sink in. "I suggest the latter."