The accuser was stammering. He looked to his friend, who seemed even more ill at ease and helpless against the sudden turn of events.
"And I'm thinking that the two of you should be going," said the accused knave.
"And quick," added another of his rough-looking friends.
"Sir?" Jarlaxle asked the guard. "I was merely trying to take some repose from my travels in Vaasa."
The soldier eyed the drow suspiciously for a long, long while, then turned away and started off. "You cause any more disturbances and I'll put you in chains," he warned the man.
"But…"
The protesting victim ended with a gasp as the soldier behind him kicked him in the behind, drawing another chorus of howls from the many onlookers.
"We're not for leaving!" the man's companion stubbornly decreed.
"Ye probably should be thinking that one over a bit more," warned one of the friends of the man he had accused, stealing his bluster.
It all quieted quickly, and Jarlaxle took a seat at the vacant table, waving a serving wench over to him.
"A glass of your finest wine and one of your finest ale," he said.
The woman hesitated, her dark eyes scanning him.
"No, he was not falsely accusing me," Jarlaxle confided with a wink.
The woman blushed and nearly fell over herself as she moved off to get the drinks.
"By this time, another table would have opened to us," said Entreri, taking a seat across from the drow, "without the dramatics."
"Without the enjoyment," Jarlaxle corrected.
"The soldiers are watching us now."
"Precisely the point," explained the drow. "We want all at the Vaasan Gate to know of us. Reputation is exactly the point."
"Reputation earned in battle with common enemies, so I thought."
"In time, my friend," said Jarlaxle. His smile beamed at the young woman, who had already returned with the drinks. "In time," he repeated, and he gave the woman a piece of platinum—many times the price of the wine and ale.
"For tales of adventure and those we've yet to make," he said to her slyly, and she blushed again, her dark eyes sparkling as she considered the coin. Her smile was shy but not hard to see as she scampered off.
Jarlaxle turned and held his glass up to Entreri then repeated his last sentence as a toast.
Defeated yet again by the drow's undying optimism, Entreri tapped his glass with his own and took a long and welcomed drink.
CHAPTER FOUR
NOT SO MUCH AN ORC
Arrayan Faylin pulled herself out of her straw bed, dragging her single blanket along with her and wrapping it around her surprisingly delicate shoulders. That distinctly feminine softness was reflective of the many surprises people found when looking upon Arrayan and learning of her heritage.
She was a half-orc, like the vast majority of residents in the cold and windswept city of Palishchuk in the northeastern corner of Vaasa, a settlement in clear view of the towering ice river known as the Great Glacier.
Arrayan had human blood in her as well—and some elf, so her mother had told her—and certainly her features had combined the most attractive qualities of all her racial aspects. Her reddish-brown hair was long and so soft and flowing that it often seemed as if her face was framed by a soft red halo. She was short, like many orcs, but perhaps as a result of that reputed elf blood, she was anything but stocky. While her face was wide, like that of an orc, her other features—large emerald green eyes, thick lips, narrow angled eyebrows, and a button nose—were distinctly unorclike, and that curious blend, in Arrayan's case, had a way of accenting the positives of the attributes from every viewing angle.
She stretched, yawned, shook her hair back from her face, and rubbed her eyes.
As the mental cobwebs of sleep melted away, Arrayan's excitement began to mount. She moved quickly across the room to her desk, her bare feet slapping the hard earth floor.
Eagerly she grabbed her spellbook from a nearby shelf, used her other hand to brush clear the center area of the desk then slid into her chair, hooking her finger into the correct tab of the organized tome and flipping it open to the section entitled "Divination Magic."
As she considered the task ahead of her, her fingers began trembling so badly that she could hardly turn the page.
Arrayan fell back in her seat and forced herself to take a long, deep breath. She went over the mental disciplines she had learned several years before in a wizard's tower in distant Damara. If she could master control as a teenager, certainly in her mid-twenties she could calm her eagerness.
A moment later, she went back to her book. With a steady hand, the wizard examined her list of potential spells, discerned those she believed would be the most useful, including a battery of magical defenses and spells to dispel offensive wards before they were activated, and began the arduous task of committing them to memory.
A knock on her door interrupted her a few minutes later. The gentle nature of it, but with a sturdiness behind it to show that the light tap was deliberate, told her who it might be. She turned in her chair as the door pushed open, and a huge, grinning, tusky face poked in. The half-orc's wide eyes clued Arrayan in to the fact that she had let her blanket wrap slip a bit too far, and she quickly tightened it around her shoulders.
"Olgerkhan, well met," she said.
It didn't surprise her how bright her voice became whenever that particular half-orc appeared. Physically, the two seemed polar opposites, with Olgerkhan's features most definitely favoring his orc side. His lip was perpetually twisted due to his huge, uneven canines, and his thick forehead and singular bushy brow brought a dark shadow over his bloodshot, jaundiced eyes. His nose was flat and crooked, his face marked by small and uneven patches of hair, and his forehead sloped out to peak at that imposing brow. He wasn't overly tall, caught somewhere between five-and-a-half and six feet, but he appeared much larger, for his limbs were thick and strong and his chest would have fit appropriately on a man a foot taller than he.
The large half-orc licked his lips and started to move his mouth as if he meant to say something.
Arrayan pulled her blanket just a bit tighter around her. She really wasn't overly embarrassed; she just didn't give much thought to such things, though Olgerkhan obviously did.
"Are they here?" Arrayan asked.
Olgerkhan glanced around the room, seeming puzzled.
"The wagons," Arrayan clarified, and that brought a grin to the burly half-orc's face.
"Wingham," he said. "Outside the south gate. Twenty colored wagons."
Arrayan returned his smile and nodded, but the news did cause her a bit of trepidation. Wingham was her uncle, though she had never really seen him for long enough stretches to consider herself to be close to him and his traveling merchant band. In Palishchuk, they were known simply as "Wingham's Rascals," but to the wider region of the Bloodstone Lands, the band was called "Weird Wingham's Wacky Weapon Wielders."
"The show is everything," Wingham had once said to Arrayan, explaining the ridiculous name. "All the world loves the show." Arrayan smiled even wider as she considered his further advice that day when she was but a child, even before she had gone to Damara to train in arcane magic. Wingham had explained to her that the name, admittedly stupid, was a purposeful calling card, a way to confirm the prejudices of the humans, elves, dwarves, and other races. "Let them think us stupid," Wingham had told her with a great flourish, though Wingham always spoke with a great flourish. "Then let them come and bargain with us for our wares!"
Arrayan realized with a start that she had paused for a long while. She glanced back at Olgerkhan, who seemed not to have noticed.