Theft Of Swords: The Riyria Revelations

“When was the last time you had anything to eat?”

 

 

Thrace stood thinking, her eyes shifting back and forth as she tried to remember.

 

“Never mind.” Hadrian turned to Royce. “This was once your city. Any ideas where we can get help for a young woman in the middle of the night?”

 

“It’s a shame we aren’t in Medford. Gwen would be great for this sort of thing.”

 

“Well, isn’t there a brothel here? After all, we’re in the trade capital of the world. Don’t tell me they don’t sell that.”

 

“Yeah, there’s a nice one on South Street.”

 

“Okay, Thrace is it? Come with us, we’ll see if we can get you cleaned up and perhaps a bit of food in you.”

 

“Wait.” She knelt down beside the unconscious man and pulled her purse from his pocket.

 

“Is he dead?” she asked.

 

“Doubt it. Didn’t hit him that hard.”

 

Rising, she felt light-headed and darkness crept in from the edges of her vision. She hovered a moment like a drunk, began to sway, and finally collapsed. She woke only briefly and felt arms gently lifting her. Through a dull buzzing she heard the sound of a chuckle.

 

“What’s so funny?” she heard one of them say.

 

“This is the first time, I suspect, anyone has ever visited a whorehouse and brought his own woman.”

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 2

 

 

 

 

 

THRACE

 

 

 

 

 

Shines up purty as a new copper piece, that one does,” Clarisse noted as the three looked through the doorway at Thrace, waiting in the parlor. Clarisse was a large rotund woman with rosy cheeks and short pudgy fingers that had a habit of playing with the pleats of her skirt. She and the other women of the Bawdy Bottom Brothel had done wonders with the girl. Thrace was clothed in a new dress. It was cheap and simple—a brown linen kirtle over a white smock with a starched brown bodice—but still decidedly more fetching than the rag she had worn. She hardly resembled the ragamuffin they had met the night before. In addition to giving her a bed to sleep in, the women had scrubbed, combed, and fed her. Her lips and eyes were even painted and the results were stunning. She was a young beauty with startling blue eyes and golden hair.

 

“Poor girl was in awful shape when you dropped her off. Where’d you find her?” Clarisse asked.

 

“Under the Tradesmen’s Arch,” Hadrian replied.

 

“Poor thing.” The large woman shook her head sadly. “You know, if she needs a place, I’m sure we could put her on the roster. She’d get a bed to sleep in, three meals a day, and with her looks she could do well for herself.”

 

“Something tells me she’s not a prostitute,” Hadrian told her.

 

“None of us are, honey. Not until you find yourself sleeping under the Tradesmen’s Arch, that is. You shoulda seen her at breakfast. She ate like a starved dog. Course she wouldn’t touch a thing till we convinced her that the food was free, given by the chamber ’a commerce to visitors of the city as a welcome. Maggie came up with that one. She’s a hoot, she is. That reminds me, the bill for the room, dress, food, and general cleanup comes to sixty-five silver. We threw in the makeup for free, ’cause Delia just wanted to see how she’d look, on account she says she’s never worn it ’afore.”

 

Royce handed her a gold tenent.

 

“Well, well, you two really need to drop by more often, and next time without the girl, eh?” She winked. “Seriously, though, what’s the story with this one?”

 

“That’s just it; we don’t know,” Hadrian replied.

 

“But I think it’s time we found out,” Royce added.

 

Not nearly as nice as Medford House back home, the Bawdy Bottom Brothel was decorated with gaudy red drapes, rickety furniture, pink lampshades, and dozens of pillows. Everything had tassels and fringe, from the threadbare carpets to the cloth edging adorning the top of the walls. It was old, weathered, and worn but at least it was clean.

 

The parlor was a small oval room just off the main hall with two bay windows that looked out on the street. It contained two love seats, a few tables crowded with ceramic figures, and a small fireplace. Seated on one of the love seats, Thrace waited, her eyes darting about as if she were a rabbit in an open field. The moment the two men entered, she leapt from her seat, knelt, and bowed her head.

 

“Hey! Watch it, that’s a new dress,” Hadrian said with a smile.

 

“Oh!” She scrambled to her feet, blushing, then curtsied and bowed her head once more.

 

“What’s she doing?” Royce whispered to Hadrian.

 

“Not sure,” he whispered back.

 

“I’m trying to show the proper reverence, Your Lordships,” she whispered to both of them while keeping her head down. “I’m sorry if I’m not very good at it.”

 

Royce rolled his eyes and Hadrian began to laugh.

 

“Why are you whispering?” Hadrian asked her.

 

“Because you two were.”

 

Hadrian chuckled again. “Sorry, Thrace—ah, your name is Thrace, right?”

 

Sullivan, Michael J's books