Thanks everyone! And there I was thinking it was a piece of crap... Shows what I know
@
H.e.R.: i had no idea, thanks for pointing that out. I prefer to use correct terms so I changed it accordingly.
Chapter6: Questions
On the way the way back, they hardly spoke. Halfway, they stopped at a small river to clean themselves of all the dirt they gathered up crawling on the forests’ wet soil and the blood from the men they had slaughtered. Pilatus’ right arm was completely covered in blood, just as the largest part of his upper body. Crusts were drying up in his fur, staining it almost black.
The cat looked in disgust as the elf threw himself into the river and submerged completely. Clappering his teeth he emerged the river, cold but content and clean.
There they also decided the armour they took from the dead was too hot to keep or sell so threw it in the river so it wouldn’t be found easily. Maybe they could sell it to the Thieves’ Guild but it was too heavy to carry around until they would be able to get in touch with the guild. Besides that, it wouldn’t be of any use to the outlaws anyway. Hargeth was too tall to wear an Imperial’s armour and the Khajiit, well; the Legion didn’t hire Khajiiti so it was useless as a disguise.
A little while before they reached the camp, one of the legs of the horse Pilatus was riding went limp. It had stepped into a pothole hidden by vegetation. Even though the hole hadn’t been that deep, it was enough for the horse to break its ankle. They both knew that was never going to heal so they put the poor animal down. The bags it was carrying were transferred onto the other horse. To keep the pace up, the men decided Hargeth would ride the horse and the Khajiit would run next to it.
‘Now the Legion will be really on our hides when they find their collegues dead. Hope you got a good plan.’
Pilatus briefly shook his head in denial. ‘Those weren’t guards. Those men were hired mercenaries, Blackwood Company. Remember the vials we found?’
‘Yeah, they smelled funny, even with the cork on.’
Pilatus nodded, ‘That’s because they contained Hist Sap. It smells rather strong and I wouldn’t advise you to drink the horrid stuff. Heard some very uneasing stories about people under Hist Sap influence.’
‘So that’s why you are so sure those guys we killed weren’t Legion soldiers?’
Pilatus nodded shortly. ‘I had the pleasure of dealing with those…Blackwood thugs before, I recognised that foul smell half a league away.’
Pilatus almost spat the word Blackwood out, it was clear the Khajiit hated them even more than the notoriously corrupt Imperial Legion regulars. ‘Besides, guards wouldn’t have had a wanted poster with them.’ The bandit was right. The Legion would have persued them until they dropped and would never have made camp. ‘Blackwood Company? Never heard of that.’
‘You must be joking?’ was the cat’s reply. The Elf shook his head.
‘Fraid not.’
‘So, how long have you been in prison then?’
‘Hmmm, couple of months, maybe close to a year, hard to keep track of time when every day is the same.’
‘True,’ Pilatus replied in a melancholic tone. ‘The Blackwood company must be after the Fighter’s guild jobs. They must be really desperate.’ Hargeth gave him a non-understanding look. ‘Why? What d’ya mean?’
‘They came after you didn’t they?’ Slowly it was starting to make sense to the puzzled Elf.’..Because they took a job from the Legion?’
‘Exactly!’
‘That means…’
The Khajiit completed the sentence:’..that the Legion had nothing to do with it. It’s Avidius’ private contract. And when they find out they’re dead, there is no way Blackwood Company will send more recrutes after us.’
‘Afraid they will all end up dead, right?’
‘Right.’
A few moments later they were both laughing until it hurt in their sides. Avidius would be furious.
When they finally arrived at the camp Rhialla had made in their abscence, the deer Pilatus shot was already sputtering and dripping with grease above a campfire. The delicious smell made their mouth water. It awoke their stomach, reminding them it had been at least over half a day they had eaten. They were truly starving. Pilatus impatiently reached to take a piece of the deer still cooking but a fire-spitting glimpse of Rhialla convinced him to wait so he sat himself down and awaited for the cook to give him a piece.
For the starving men it seemed like hours before they could eat. Hargeth hadn’t eaten that good in years. In his opinion, even the meals the Talos Plaza hotel couldn’t beat the meal he was having now. In fact, he couldn’t remember having a better dinner ever. The day of fleeing hadn’t spoiled the meat at all. Knowing nothing about hunting or preparing food, little did he know game needs to ripe. He’d just call it plainly rot. To flush the meat away, Rhialla unveiled an expensive bottle of wine. It tasted nothing like the cheap, red fluid, also referred to as wine, he had drunk before. The only comparison was the rich, darkred, colour.
Having statisfied his appetite he made himself comfortable by leaning back. A rock spoilt it. With an uneasy look on his face he reached between his back and the ground to remove the rock that had poked in his back in a very unpleasant manner. Annoyed he threw the rock a far end of where it had been, into the forest. Still, he wasn’t happy, where the rock used to be was now a hole. It wasn’t going to get any better.
‘What am I doing?’
Remembering the spare bedrolls they found in the saddlebags, he jumped up and went to the single remaining horse and took out a spare bedroll. The thought not having to lie down on lumps and holes brought a boyish grin to his face. When he returned to put the bedroll down, where he sat earlier, Pilatus rolled his big, yellow eyes and made a face, ‘Cityfolk…’
Hargeth made a face back. ‘I think I’ve slept on stone long enough,’ he replied on Pilatus’ pun while sitting down and removing the tight, leather boots borrowed to him. As soon as they were of, he sighed in relieve.
‘Speaking of which, how did you get out anyway?’
‘The long or the short version?’
‘The short version will do.’ The story ended when the Khajiit, in laughter repeated Hargeth. ‘You what? You stabbed Avidius with his own bottle?’ A flashback brought the Elf back to the fight they had. He had been right, the bandit did have a strange sense of humour.
‘Wish I could have seen it.’
‘I bet you would.’ The questions he’d been meaning to ask where burning on his tongue. He had awaited an appropriate time to ask, this was it.
‘Now, tell me something, was our … encounter coincidence? It was Rhialla in the cell next to me a couple of months ago, wasn’t it? Why are you helping me? Surely not because you hit me in the foot or because I was broke? Or maybe because I was so damn nice to her in jail? A real bandit would have killed me anyway. You two,’ he made a headgesture towards Rhialla, ‘aren’t really bandits, are ya? ‘Cause if you are, I am eating this old robe,’ he fired his questions while pulling on the fabric of the, probably moth invested, robe.
‘The big question remains: If you aren’t bandits, then what are you? I suppose I can leave out the Legion because the Legion doesn’t hire Argonians or Khajiiti. That only leaves the Thieves’ guild or Fighter’s guild. From what I’ve gathered, the Dark Brotherhood is some sort of Daedra worshipping idiot’s cult pretending to be assasins and you don’t strike me as idiots.’
Rhialla and Pilatus shared a couple of awkward looks. The Elf definitely wasn’t gullible. They would have to come clean and tell him the truth. Not sure Hargeth could be trusted enough to know the whole story, Pilatus decided to tell him the need-to-know things only. They needed to know what Hargeth knew.
‘Did you know the Emperor and his sons are all dead? The Empire is at war.’
‘So, that’s why the prisoncompound was nearly empty when I escaped. The Legion is pre-occupied?’ Hargeth didn’t seem too bothered or shocked with the news.
‘This still doesn’t explain how you knew where to find me. I am pretty convinced you knew who I were even before you attacked me and hit me in the foot. That wasn’t an accident either, was it? What do you want from me?’ Hargeth’s voice had become slightly hostile. He didn’t like being played a fool and had a feeling he had been played.
‘Yes, we knew who you were before our encounter,’ Rhialla reluctantly admitted. Hargeth’s face turned to Rhialla, his eyes spread wide. He hadn’t expected her to answer. With a raised eyebrow he glanced at Pilatus who just, barely noticable, nodded. Shaking his head in disbelieve he directed his attention back to Rhialla. ‘I knew something was up, I had a feeling Pilatus wasn’t entirely telling the truth about you. How did you know you I had escaped and was heading your way? You are a lot more powerful than you showed, right?’
‘Partially, yes. I noticed your approach about half an hour before you encountered my brother. Sense life is a wonderful skill, don’t you think?’ she asked in a tone dripping with irony. ‘We didn’t know it was you until you actually met, I swear.’
He had no reason not to believe that. Why would she lie about that after all they had done for him? He decided to give them the benefit of the doubt ‘Go on,’ the Elf encouraged her.
‘When you two entered the camp I had a feeling you were my neighbour in prison.’
‘Then why did you raise your bow?’
‘A feeling doesn’t mean I was right,’ she answered with a smile but there was no amusement in it.
‘I see your point. That still doesn’t explain why you helped me.’
‘True, let me explain. We are with a secret group who has the best interests of the Empire on their agenda. Officially, we don’t exist. We do the jobs this group can’t. Have you ever heard about the Blades?’
Hargeth nodded, ‘Maybe once or twice, long time ago though.’
‘Good. It has come to the Blades’ attention there is a traitor of the Empire. And not just anyone. We have reason to believe someone in the council is a traitor. We think this particular… person,’ she didn’t trust Hargeth enough to name him yet, ‘was behind the Emperor’s and his sons’ assassination.’
‘The Emperor was assassinated? Now that would have been a job,’ he replied with a sly smile. Now it was Rhialla’s turn to shake her head in disbelieve. She gave Hargeth a piercing look and then continued: ‘He wasn’t just the Emperor; he was the last of the Septim bloodline. With him dead, the Empire could fall in disarray if the situation isn’t adressed properly.’ With pain evident in her eyes, she added:’Even the threat of civil-war is linguiring above our heads.’
‘Soooo, what in Oblivion has that got to do with me?’ He didn’t really like where this was going.
‘We need someone with your particular…. skills.’
‘Pilatus seems well up to the job,’ he said while shrugging.
‘If only it were that simple. He is too well-known for what we have in mind.’
This remark hightened Hargeth’s interest. ‘Why? What’s so special about this job? And what do you mean Pilatus is too well-known?’
‘We want you to…. remove the traitor. Pilatus can’t do that because, well, the council knows him through me.’ Rhialla had to take a difficult decision; she had to confide in the Elven assassin. The last few days it had become apparent to her this might be the person they had been looking for. Sheer luck had brought him to the Khajiiti siblings. He wasn’t as honourable as she would have preferred but, in his own way he was honest and trustworthy. Pilatus had told her how their grisly job had proceeded. He had performed outstandingly. Like the men had been working together for years rather then they had known each other for a few days.
‘I used to be the Archmage’s scribe before he was elected High Chancellor.’ Hargeth couldn’t believe his ears; she was talking about Chancellor Ocato. Politics weren’t really his interest but rumours about Ocato’s rapid rise to the top, few years ago, had spread like wildfire. Fast, and uncontrollable.
‘When I was still his assistant, some day I found a crumpled note underneath his desk. At that time it didn’t seem that important. All it mentioned was something about a job being taken care of. Quite random actually. However, when I mentioned the note, he reacted rather strange. Initially he was really angry, swearing and cursing and just as sudden he turned calm, as if nothing had happened,’ she shrugged and continued: ‘In all the years I’ve served him, I never seen him act like that. Ofcourse, in hindsight the note turned out a lot more grim and, obviously, a lot more important than I could ever have suspected. That very same week someone tried to kill me. Unfortunately for the would-be killer, he ran into him,’ she said while pointing at Pilatus, ‘So, now we are in voluntary exile.’
All he could do was frown and smirk at that remark. And then burst out in sincere laughter that wouldn’t subside until he ran out of breath.
Rhialla was as nuts as Pilatus. Both had the same weird sense of humour, which he found refreshing, he had noticed many people tend to take themselves way too serious. This was a nice change. But, in his opinion, their plan was even wackier than their sense of humour. How the hell where they ever going to accomplish this feat?
Hargeth flew up from the bedroll he was sitting on, almost kicking over the expensive bottle of wine next to his feet. Abscentmindedly he grabbed the bottle and took a large swig of the crimson wine. ‘You want Ocato dead?! You want me to assassinate the High Chancellor? A known master wizard? Are you completely out of your mind?!’ Hargeth never avoided a challenge but even for him, this sounded ridiculous. Stupid even. Heroes would call it bravery. Where does bravery end and stupidity start? He had never been able telling the two apart.
‘That’s where we come in. I will teach you the magical skills necessary to defeat a powerful wizard and he will teach you the skills to fight your way out, should you get caught.’ Rhialla calmly explained.
‘And what’s in it for me? Don’t tell me, the honour and knowledge I helped save the world?’ he asked pointedly while rolling his eyes. ‘You might have noticed, honour doesn’t fill an empty stomach.’ The Khajiiti siblings shared a few glimpses.
‘We have indeed noticed,’ was her dry reply.
‘I’ll have to think about it.’
‘Naturally.’
‘This wine is terrific.’
This post has been edited by Remko: Apr 1 2010, 11:48 AM