Proper Villains

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Proper Villains Page 2

by Erik Scott De Bie


  In truth, the entire scheme had occurred to him seconds after Gorm told him about the hoard, but

  he’d given it some time to crescendo in his mind, the different parts of music falling into place. He

  couldn’t play a symphony alone, however, and he hoped the crew gathering in the Bloody Fang would

  be exactly what he needed.

  A man came tumbling in the swinging doors, rolled several paces, then lay groaning. The big Ulfen

  warrior who stepped in the door after him had pale skin and hair and many woad tattoos carved

  across his honed frame. If the show of force and muscle weren’t enough, the hooked axe strapped to

  his back proved sufficient to discourage any would-be challengers.

  “That would be Arlif, I reckon.” Fat Gorm stumbled over the name. “They say his tattoos depict the men he’s killed. Well—the memorable ones, at least.”

  “He must have killed a goodly number,” Tarrant observed. “Where did you find him?”

  “Mercenary. Been cracking heads around the island for about a year now. No one’s ever heard him

  speak, but by Torag is he strong. And you did say you needed a tough.”

  “That is what I said.”

  Arlif dropped his chit on the table, waved for mead, and sat in brooding silence.

  The sneak came next, though he didn’t make nearly the entrance Arlif had. The halfling’s silhouette in

  the creaking doorway looked like that of a child, but the worldly gleam in his eye belied that

  impression. Also, no boy-child, no matter how ludicrous his taste in fashion, would wear such a hat,

  with its sweeping red and gold feather.

  “Eram Many-Fingers.” Tarrant sighed. “I should have known you’d bring him in.”

  “I thought you liked the halfling. You’ve pulled many jobs together, right?”

  “Oh indeed. More than even he can count.” Tarrant nodded to where the halfling was indicating the number of drinks he wanted on his six-fingered left hand. “That doesn’t mean you should trust him.”

  “Of course not,” Gorm said, offended. “But we can trust him to be untrustworthy.”

  “Ah, my friends!” the halfling said. “I almost thought I’d come to the wrong place, but oh joyous day, here I find you! I’m off for a drink, you want something? No? Well then!”

  The enthusiastic halfling headed off to find the nearest server.

  The magic arrived next, in the form of a feminine shape in the Fang’s door. The other patrons quieted

  and looked, but when Gislai drew back her hood to reveal her lank black hair, greenish skin, and small

  tusks, most glanced away. She smiled and stretched languidly, revealing the three daggers of Calistria

  on an amulet around her neck.

  “Gorgeous Gislai?” Gorm said. “Why, Akayn? Why do you do this to yourself?”

  “Have faith. Half-orc or no, Gislai is the best cleric for any heist I’ve ever worked.”

  “You mean you worked her.”

  “I’ll not deny I like green.” That made him think of the other night, and the way Ephere’s leaf-scale armor clung to her body. “Besides, it’s in the past. We’re strictly professional now.”

  “This is going to go badly.”

  “Do you want to do this, or shall I sell you into indentured servitude right now?” Tarrant asked.

  “Maybe Doreset will discount you—he might just take your hands as payment.”

  Fat Gorm paled.

  Ephere seems to be the center of attention wherever she goes.

  “There he is.” Gislai strode to their table. “Liespinner, the city of Absalom did herself a disservice letting you out. Better to keep you sealed up there with the other thieves and traitors.”

  “Greetings to you too. Apologies for not writing—I was a bit chained up at the time.”

  “Good.” The half-orc eased into a chair and put her boots up on the table. She toyed with one of her shuriken and nodded to Gorm. “Who’s this? The coin?”

  “The empty purse, actually.” Gorm gave Tarrant an uneasy look. “Your take, your gang—have it your own way. But have a care too, yes?”

  “Mm?” Tarrant asked. “Sorry, I was too stricken with Gislai’s disarming looks. Anger serves her complexion admirably.”

  The half-orc glared at him. “And the spinning begins already.”

  Arlif watched the exchange in silence.

  As Gorm slipped away, his stealthy tread seeming more of a waddle, Eram arrived with a tray of

  libations. Tarrant knew better than to take any—the halfling’s thirst was legendary.

  “Greetings.” Tarrant spread his hands wide. “No doubt you’ve heard something of this already, but let me fill in the rest of the story. First, the reward is fantastic. Lord Doreset chartered a group of

  adventurers on a delve to uncover ancient treasures in what was supposed to be a deserted ruin. It

  turned out to be a dragon’s lair, complete with a dragon—which the heroes slew—and a fabulous

  hoard. Once His Corpulentness learned of the hoard, he decided the original terms of the contract

  were far to unfavorable to himself, and immediately dispatched his good friends, the Blackscale Blades

  mercenary company, to make things right by claiming the entire hoard for Doreset. They’re even now

  bringing the treasure back to Absalom to be stored until it can be appraised.”

  “Stored, you say,” Gislai said. “Stored where?”

  “Blackscale Hall, right?” Eram said. “Please say Blackscale Hall.”

  “Not quite,” Tarrant said. “Doreset’s stronghold: Hawkthorne’s Shield.”

  Eram coughed out some of his rotgut, then drank it again. “What?”

  “I thought you were insane.” Gislai shook her head. “Now I know you are.”

  Arlif nodded slowly.

  “No no no,” Eram said. “When I agreed to this job, I thought we’d take it en route, not from gods-damned Hawkthorne’s Shield!”

  “I know robbing the tower may seem difficult,” Tarrant said. “Walls of stone a spear’s length thick, iron doors reinforced with steel bands, and every window, sewer grate, and rat hole sealed up tight

  with the best magic the Doreset family can muster. Not exactly a comfy place to live, which is why His

  Lordship houses his apartments elsewhere. But as a secure storage facility, it can’t be beat.”

  “That’s even worse than I thought,” Gislai said. “What’s your plan? We talk our way in? You, a notorious criminal, and we, your known associates.”

  “Yes,” Tarrant said. “And while notoriety appeals to me, ‘twould be kinder to my pride if you used the words ‘suspected’ and ‘alleged’ in your description.”

  “I stand by my words.” She tossed a shuriken a hand’s width into the air and let it sink into the table.

  “Maybe you want to try a ‘raving lunatic’ game? It would fit.”

  “Because you’re mad,” Eram said. ” Mad! ”

  “Leaving that aside for the moment,” Tarrant said. “Even if we get in, and even if we manage to steal the treasure, getting out won’t be easy. That place is as much a prison as a fortress.”

  “I have a ring that will teleport us,” Gislai said. “Limited use, but it can potentially get us out. Or in, technically, if we know where we were going.”

  “Alas,” Tarrant said. “Lord Doreset has the vault warded against such things, necessitating that the Blackscales bring the items in by hand. Not to worry, though.” From within his tunic, he took a red silk bag little bigger than a coin purse, into which he inserted his entire arm, then withdrew it. “I lived in the tower for nearly a year, once upon a time—I know exactly how to get in and out again. Follow my

  plan, and there’s no way we can fail.”

  “Plan? What plan?” asked Eram.

  “Remember the ‘helpful peddler’ job we pulled in Cassomir? And h
ow you owe me?”

  Eram shuddered. “You said you’d never bring that up again.”

  “I’m the Liespinner, Many-Fingers,” Tarrant said. “We do this one the same way—haversack and all.”

  “We’ll need luck,” Eram said. “Sure you don’t want to go seduce a priestess of Desna into this game?”

  “Calistria can kiss as well as sting,” Gislai said, scowling at the halfling. “We make our own luck. And no one’s seducing anyone.”

  “Pity, that,” Eram said.

  Arlif had been watching, but something drew his attention past Tarrant.

  “All seeming madness aside,” Tarrant said. “My plan requires a blade, a thief, a caster, and a face—

  that’s the four of us. Now we just have to find a lure. A means of distraction.”

  “You’re still mad,” Eram said. “We…” He trailed off and followed Arlif’s gaze.

  “A lure,” Gislai said. “You think that’s all we need?”

  “With the plan I have? Yes. And—” He saw what Eram and Arlif were looking at. “Ah.”

  Sure enough, Ephere had entered the Bloody Fang and sat at a table ten paces removed. Her

  presence drew Tarrant’s senses like a lodestone. He could smell her from here, like a sweet earthen

  incense, and see the faint green light of a tune she was singing under her breath.

  Gislai followed his gaze, her frown deepening. “Who is she?”

  “Inspiration.” Tarrant got to his feet. “Pardon a moment, fellow conspirators and lady.”

  “Where are you going?” Eram turned to Gislai. “Where is he going?”

  “I was wrong about the seducing bit.” The half-orc shook her head. “He’s always an idiot for a woman.”

  “Speaking from experience, are we?” Eram asked.

  Gislai nodded gravely.

  Tarrant made his way to Ephere’s table. Without speaking or even looking up at him, she laid the

  Bloody Fang chit he had given her back at the Open Palm on the table.

  Tarrant’s heart sped up with everyone watching them. Every day of his life, he trod upon a stage for

  his enemies, and he loved every deadly hour of it.

  Mindful of appearances, Tarrant swept a wide, attention-gathering bow. “Twice I have the honor and

  pleasure of your beauty, Lady Ephere.”

  “Liespinner,” she said without looking at him. “I am in your debt for the service you did me last time we met.”

  “Did you remember my offer and come to test my tongue? With your true name, that is.”

  “Saleae Epheldera,” Ephere said, the elven words falling from her lips like rain. She listened for his pronunciation and nodded in approval. “You speak my tongue well for a human.”

  “I travel,” he said. “Now that we’ve been properly introduced, I’ve come to offer you a proposition.

  Ah!” He smiled broadly as she bristled at the word. “Apologies for my ill speech. I assure you, I intend nothing scandalous, but…” he took her hand and bent to kiss the ruby on her gauntlet, pausing to

  look into her eyes. “I will admit that my intentions are entirely dishonorable.”

  Ephere made no sign of backing down. He wondered again what she saw. His arrogance, certainly, but

  his earnestness? His desire for justice against Lord Doreset, a noble leech who’d grown fat at the

  expense of the weak and powerless?

  At that moment, the doors flung open, and a tiny ball of flame sailed into the chamber. “Akayn!” came a shout.

  Tarrant threw his arms around Ephere and sang of racing stallions on the far-away tundra. Feathers of

  golden light flowed from his lips and encircled his feet to hasten him as he carried Ephere past the

  table and out an open window.

  The Bloody Fang exploded in flame behind them as they rolled out into the rainy darkness. Tarrant

  found himself lying side-by-side with Ephere, their faces close. He managed to look away long enough

  to see two familiar Hellknights near the front of the tavern, standing among a crowd of folk shouting

  for the watch or for water. Between the knights stood a tall blonde woman in severe black armor, who

  held aloft in her barbed gauntlets the source of the blast: a wand that smoked slightly.

  Altara the Hound: Hellknight, hunter, and his favorite regret.

  “Akayn!” she cried. “Show yourself!”

  Excitement shivered through him. He thought that if he’d been on his own he might have liked to face

  Altara then and there—but he had Ephere to worry about. She might kill one or both of Altara’s

  minions and then there would be trouble.

  The elf shifted, and he put a hand on her breastbone to signal her to wait. He felt the heat radiating

  from beneath her armor. She stared at him dangerously.

  Tarrant sang a quick spell his mother had written about him. Magic sculpted the smoke into an illusory

  likeness of Tarrant himself—tall, dark-skinned, with piercing eyes and a wry smile—which nodded to

  its creator and ran off down the street. Altara barked an order, and the Hellknights gave chase.

  Ephere’s eyes gleamed. “Yet again, you’ve caused me trouble, then saved me from it. What is it you

  want, Tarrant Akayn?”

  “Well.” Tarrant saw movement near the tavern. His allies had escaped—Gislai in particular was glaring at him.

  He smiled. “How would you like a job?”

  ∗∗∗

  “Intriguing offer,” Altara said as the sun rose outside Lord Doreset’s manor. “But no.”

  “No?” The would-be betrayer looked shocked.

  Lord Doreset, who was snoozing by the fire, smiled. “That is what she said.”

  “But—” Eram Many-Fingers sputtered. “But I’m handing Tarrant Akayn to you on a platter! Trussed up like a goose and delivered to your great, lovely, and honestly somewhat intimidating majesty!”

  Altara yawned. “Do you know how I spent the last year? This year that the master you would so

  eagerly betray spent in prison here in Absalom?”

  The halfling shook his head.

  “Reading,” she said. “Interviewing. Thinking. I’ve hardly slept nor ate. When my knights woke me to tell of a traitor at my doorstep, I’d only been abed an hour or so.”

  She rose, and the halfling flinched.

  “I know this man,” she said. “I know everything about his games here in Absalom, and I know all about your dubious allegiances. If you would betray your friend, what would stop you from betraying

  me? No.”

  She nodded toward Eram, signaling her knights to flank him.

  “No deal, thief,” she said. “The law will be satisfied in the law’s way, not through the treachery of a sneak seeking to protect himself. In the end, I’ll catch you all. And I will destroy you.”

  The halfling tensed just before the first Hellknight laid hands on him, then twisted free. His would-be

  captor overbalanced and tripped over the halfling, who seized the opportunity to jab the other knight

  with his dagger.

  Lord Doreset spoke up. “Might as well let him go. Let the Liespinner think all remains well. Many-

  Fingers will tell him nothing.”

  “And if he does?” Altara asked.

  “What, that he tried to betray him? No.” Doreset laughed. “Unless of course this was part of Akayn’s scheme, and he sent Many-Fingers himself. If so, he knows nothing significant.”

  “True.” Altara—who had been drawing her sword—sighed and sat back in her seat. “Again, I counsel you to unbind my hands, and let me take Akayn by force. There is naught to be gained by playing this

  game. He will defeat you.”

  “And again, I remind you of our agreement.” Doreset sipped his morning tea. “You almost spoiled my plan with your little fireball assault earlier—no more
rash action. Akayn is a creature of great

  arrogance—he will come at us anyway. And when he does, we will be waiting.”

  Altara snorted. “Many have sought to outwit Akayn, and all have failed. How do you know he’ll not

  make such a fool of you again?”

  A smile spread across Lord Doreset’s perpetually greasy lips. “Because I have my own secret knife to wield at the right moment.”

  He waved. On cue, a tapestry moved aside, and someone stepped into the chamber. Altara was

  confused until she saw the brand burning on the newcomer’s chest.

  She knew Tarrant Akayn—knew his strengths, and especially his weaknesses.

  And this would be the end of him.

  Chapter Three: The Caper

  Humming anxiously under his breath, Tarrant watched as the last cart of treasure arrived from the

  docks as the sun set. This time was always torture and ecstasy for him: he could hardly stand the

  waiting, and yet he could not help his excitement for the game to come. Tarrant shadowed the cart

  from the docks to Hawkthorne Tower, then slipped around the back.

  It was time to begin.

  With all the activity around the front gate, where the Blackscale Blades were delivering the great

  treasure, the servants’ entrance stood only lightly guarded. Two armored men flanked the back door,

  one of whom wore the key around his neck as a badge of office. Tarrant was familiar with Lord

  Doreset’s favored mercenary company and knew their procedures.

  Tarrant swaggered out of the alley. A thick brown cloak dipped in low-class swill covered his identity.

  As he approached, Tarrant sang a dwarven song in a low-pitched, slurred voice, crafting bubbles that

  floated through the air toward the man with the key.

  “Shove off, you!” shouted the other guard. “Go be drunk on your own—Drohn?”

  The guard’s partner smiled like a child and plucked at the bubbles of song that floated around him.

  When he saw Tarrant, his smile widened, and he stared.

  “Magic!” hissed the first guard. He reached for his sword, but a different spell caught him before he could draw. He blinked, swayed on his feet, and looked confused. He pointed his sword at Tarrant

 

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