Suspect
Hive Bitch
March 2, 2019
::: subchapter
"The bodies need to be guarded," the pink-scaled guard was saying to
Adwyn, "don't they? You're plenty big and strong sure, but I can watch
your back."
Didn't they hear me? "Who are you?" I asked again, a bit higher. I stood
somewhere behind Adwyn, beside Digrif, but I knew they could hear me.
The short, mouse-like dragon at last glanced over, frowned, and tossed
me a, "Ceian," before turning back to the schizon-clad adviser.
Hinte stood beside the orange drake. "Do we need a little fledgling
slowing us down?"
The guard glanced at her, and his frills popped open and there may have
been a gasp or mutter. "You're the alchemist's spawn!" they said, and
stepped back.
The wiver declined her head so that the shade ate her face, and at her
neck the amber goggles were regent eyes. "My name is Hinte."
You saw a pink head tilt. "Why do you have a name like that?" They had
the look and stance of some traveler guarding against a strange wraith
that wanted tea and dancing.
The fledgling alchemist said, "Because my mother --- why do you care?"
By now I was stomping up beside Hinte, saying, "Will no one tell me who
this weird little guard is?"
The guard turned a narrowed-brow gaze to me a breath before they
laughed, and Adwyn only sighed.
"Some orphan drake Mlaen's fond to, whom Rhyfel also has taken a shine
for. Quite the graspingly ambitious sort, which looks impressive from a
distance as much as it does nothing to endear him to me."
Ceian scoffed with his tail flicking and a forefoot smacking the gravel.
"And you're the sort who thinks he can bundle up a dragon in a few
breaths, Sofrani."
The adviser only smirked.
"Chance you could deign to inflict the same on this --- colorful
cast here? Never seen these jokes."
The orange drake looked back at my night-blue face, at the warm-gray
drake behind me, and at the dark-green wiver beside me. He sighed and
plainly he spoke:
"Back there is Digrif, an orphan without your luck. He works harder
than he acts. Beside me is Hinte. Ushra's daughter. A wiver raised by
money and the absence of limitations. And the other one is Kinri.
She's a sky-dweller if you omit everything that make sky-dwellers
noteworthy." He paused. "Which is a compliment."
Hinte looked at the orange drake, but shade still had her face;
meanwhile, Digrif, with sweet-tinged fangs, was back there softly
kicking bits of gravel. I didn't react: if I didn't act like a
sky-dweller, it was all a part of the act.
Over there Ceian was nodding vaguely at Digrif, but he settled on Hinte
and said, "She doesn't look bloated, or dress bloated. I'd even hazard
she doesn't act that bloated neither. Too jagged." His tone wavered
between unease and nothing in particular.
"She lives in Gwymr/Frina," said the adviser with a laugh. "That sees
something of a damper on that sort of thing."
Ceian flicked his tongue, brows narrow, but I saw him stop it and pull
it into his mouth.
Brightly he said, "So Sofrani! We decided you needed someone to guard
the cart with you, right? And as you can see:" --- the pink drake
waved at the guards letting the crowd into the east market, like a
strainer; where Ceian had stood among them someone had ran to fill his
place, and now glared at the drake, who was continuing --- "my spot
has been filled."
Adwyn tossed his head and said, blankly, "You have raised a gray
point." A forefoot had been lifted and tapped his horned chin. He
nodded once.
"No," Hinte said. "We will be slow enough as it is. We do not need
another drag."
"He's nice, though." Digrif slipped up beside me, looking at the wiver.
"He'd make sharp company."
"Maybe, maybe not." I shook my head at the warm-gray dragon. "This is a
serious mission, Digrif. You can't just bring someone along because
they seem nice."
Hinte gave me a look.
"What?"
Adwyn said to Ceian, "It's a gray point, but I am entertaining my own
solutions." He turned, regarding us and our little brewing argument.
"And alas, you've stirred a certain discord we could do without. It's
nothing against you, you must see. It's only Hinte is awful when she
doesn't get her way."
With a starfallen pink drake behind us, with Hinte scowling and Digrif
frowning, with Adwyn lugging the weight of the holey pumice cart on, and
with waxing unease curling onto my fangs, we marched forth wordlessly.
I could look at the silly side of things, find something to cheer
someone up.
I glanced at Hinte, and shook my head. I was walking behind everyone
now, Digrif between me and Hinte or Adwyn.
We entered the market proper like that.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The first thing you saw in the market was food, our food.
This was the start of the gray season, and now almost all of the foods
on sale had grown here, been prepared here, without owing more than
their names to something outside the cliffs. After all, no merchant
would trudge through the Berwem, through dust clouds and eruptions, just
to sell in the land of glass and secrets. To Anterth/Gwirion? Maybe.
To Dyfnder/Geunant? Of course. But to Gwymr/Frina? The only dragons
who would care to were the mountain-dwellers, and they had better things
to sell than crops or livestock.
In a word, Gwymr/Frina was obscure --- and because of that, I'd
decided to settle here instead of the skip mountains or the hovering
shores. Most exiled sky-dwellers ended up in either of those, and I
knew why. I loved the Constellation's open skies, its immense
heights, and everything. I just couldn't live where I would be reminded
of them everyday. Nothing could compare to the sky, so I decided it
would be better to forget about it, if it came to that.
So I had fallen to the cliffs. Yes, my brother had suggested it, but I
decided it.
Rubbing the singed scales around my headband, I glanced at the stalls
around me; they were simple things, easy to build and tear down, and,
being made of rough paper drapped over bamboo rods, they sat somewhere
between flimsy and not. They weren't ugly; but I didn't look at them,
either.
Each stall around us wafted some delicious aroma. Gwymr/Frina's clifftop
outskirts were dotted with small farms; and there they raised cliff
goats, gigantic land snails, fourteen-legged caterpillar cows, Hägre
hogs and tidbit chickens. And dillers and turts, too, but you shouldn't
eat those. Here, meat from those animals scented the air with a lure
restrained only by their price tag.
And one stall, it sold fish! I waved my tongue, yet before I could
slink after it, Hinte'd broken away herself and slinked over to that
stall selling Hägre hog pork. Before I'd even unclouded my eyes she'd
bought a whole roast. Being from a smaller kind of hog, about knee-high
and half as long as a dragon, it sat clumsy and tottering in Hinte's
cloaked wings. She tried to place it in her bag, but it wouldn't fit.
She kept trying, so I giggled, stepped over, and said, "Just put it on
the cart, Hinte --- is too big," I said, waving over to where Adwyn
carried the cart.
Rust-orange eyes peered at me from under her hood. She flicked her
tongue once, but took my advice. She placed the roasted hog on the
cart, away from the tarp-covered bodies.
Hinte broke off two of the hog's six legs and offered one to me. I took
it with a murmured thanks, even as I turned away to bite into it. It
was polite, but Hinte didn't really have a sense of those things. I
took another bite and tasted again the crisp, almost-sweet flavor of
roasted Hägre hog.
"Hey!" Digrif said. "What about me?"
Hinte hissed. I prodded her with a wing (or rather, tried to prod her,
failed, tried again, failed again, then finally turned around to aim
true). With Hinte's attention I nodded at her. She snapped her tongue
at me, but relented. Returning to the cart, she broke a third leg off
and passed it to Digrif. I looked at Adwyn, tilting my head and raising
the hog leg in my foot.
He shook his head. "I am not hungry," he said.
"And I would not have given one to you if you were," Hinte said between
bites.
I gaped at her, but Adwyn laughed. Shaking my head, I settled into step
behind everyone else again.
We walked on for a bit, roaming the stalls and crowds. I'd seen larger
crowds before, at House parties or Constellation assemblies, but none in
Gwymr/Frina. It didn't take twenty steps to remind me why I avoided
them; scattered gazes all around lingered or stared, some almost
glaring. I kept my head down, and tried not to scratch at my
scales --- they felt like they were molting.
At one point, Adwyn stopped suddenly, saying, "Allow me to find
somewhere to hide this cart. I won't be lugging it around."
The orange dragon turned and strode toward one of the cliff walls.
Digrif and I trailed after him, but he brandished a wing at us. "Go. I
am not your minder, and this diversion is as much for your own benefit
as mine."
I flattened my wings and stepped away at once.
Foots sounded, and I glanced at the warm gray dragon coming up at my
side. "Hi, Digrif," I said.
"Huh? Hey Kinri."
Looking away again, fangs damp, I found Hinte a ways behind us. When
did she get there? Then I moved my gaze to her wings --- she'd doubled
back to wrench her roast from Adwyn's cart. Roast in wing, she was
low-walking away. With another prodding glance to Digrif I shot up and
half-glided, half-flew to Hinte. I planted down beside her first ---
no question of that --- but Digrif wasn't more than a few breath cycles
behind me.
Together again, I walked between the two friends. I brushed my wings
against them as we waked, but that only pulled brief, puzzled glances
from each of them, so I sighed and looked around at the crowd, then back
at Hinte, then around again.
Surrounded by the gazes of strangers, I curled tighter in on myself. No
one noticed.
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The crowd writhed and spilt over itself. Like pillars in the chaotic
mass, wherever we looked there were guards in high-
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