Somewhere in Waterdeep...
”Bets! Place yer bets here! Last chance, you drunk’n louts!”
The shouts of a bookmaker pierced the din of three score carousing men crowded together in a subterranean room. Pipe smoke choked the air above their heads, mingling with the rank odors of ale, bodies, and blood. In the center of the room there was a sunken pit a yard deep where two burly men beat on each other with bare knuckles. Whenever one staggered back against the wall from a particularly sound blow, the spectators above urged him back toward the center with yells and kicking feet.
”Up, up! Ye miserable dog!”
”My mawmaw hits harder ’n that!”
”Waste’ve coin.”
”Bite him! Bite him!”
Along the far wall a group of distinguished-looking men spoke with one another in sibilant tones, somehow able to communicate despite the raucous betting. None were dressed opulently, but the crisp tunics, bejeweled fingers, and silent, towering footmen hovering over the shoulder of each bespoke of nobility and privilege. While a few watched the pit with eloquently bored eyes, the rest merely waited for the main event.
Weaving between the drunken throng, a plainly dressed figure sought a better vantage point. Feminine visage shadowed by the angles of a weather-beaten tricorn, the woman sipped a drink and scanned the crowd. Had this been a different day on a different mission, she might have fit in with the wealthy cadre, showing them up with flashy clothing and flashier boasts just for the fun of it, with a crew of hardened sailors at her heels. But tonight she was alone, armed with nothing but her wits, a dagger, and a hidden cache of golden trade coins sewn into the lining of her corset.
The tip given by one of her informants in Avanthyr had been a bad one, or so it was shaping up to be. Talk of an unremarkable sloop with a plainly-named captain that never seemed to take cargo in or out fairly screamed ”Cartel” to Evelyn’s over eager mind, and she set off in pursuit of the ship’s next port-of-call in Waterdeep. Bribes and information gathered from a few friends in port afforded her access to a local black market event, one night only, and so here she found herself, underneath the root cellar of a dockside watering hole, already given up on the prospect of locating her target.
It was a flimsy excuse, she knew, but she’d jumped at the chance to shirk her fine clothing, buy passage on a trade vessel dressed as a vagabond, and throw herself again into a world where her name meant nothing and the ability to survive meant everything. Time spent on Sundren’s shores had left her restless, and her simultaneous betrothal and kidnapping at the hands of the insane Aurelianus instilled her with a sense of helplessness. Here she was in complete control of her fate, for better or worse.
”Gentl’men, we have a winner! Claim yer winnin’s here!”
Though it was difficult to see through the thick veil of smoke, Evelyn could make out the prone figure of one combatant being dragged out of the pit by his boots into a darkened tunnel leading out of the pit into another portion of the cellar. The crowd surged as people crowded around the bookie to trade coins before most wandered back upstairs to the tavern above, either to spend their winnings or drown their sorrows. A few takers, seemingly better-off than the rest, stuck around, but suddenly Evelyn found herself among no more than a dozen noblemen and their bodyguards.
Some stared at her.
She stared back.
Not one to be intimidated into admitting she was out of place, Evelyn straightened her posture to summon all the haughtiness she could muster, coolly sipping her rum and hoping it made up for her decent but inexpensive tunic and breeches. She watched a tavern worker douse the pit floor with a bucket of water to clear away most of the blood. Gradually the others lost interest in her, and she in them.
Before long, a fellow in a brightly colored doublet emerged from the pit doorway, a parchment in hand. His white hair was slicked back above a plump face and rosy complexion.
”Fine sirs, gather, gather! We are ready to begin. As usual, it's one hundred to increase, and twenty five when I no longer have that. Are there any questions?”
There was a tense moment of silence when several more of the bidders glanced her way, but she feigned nonchalance as the auctioneer waited.
”Excellent.”
Without warning, a large half-Orc entered the pit leading a row of chained people. Mostly human males, there were also a few elves and one woman, totaling fifteen in all. They were manacled separately but shuffled along in linked foot shackles. They came to stop in a semi-circle, taking up one half of the pit wall while the bidders looked on speculatively.
”Number one. Calishite male.”
The half-Orc growled softly as he unlocked the first shackle encircling the right ankle of a middle-aged man with coffee-colored skin. He was hauled toward the center of the pit, head bowed. The slave master cuffed him under the chin.
”Stand up straight!”
The slave complied, not looking at any person present. His skin was sallow but his shoulders were broad.
”Shall I open the bid at one hundred? One hundred. Do I hear one hundred? Found just last week, a fisherman. Good for labor! One hundred to the man with the good brooch. Two hundred? Where is two hundred? Where is two hundred? Two to the black hat! Three, do I have three? Three? Where is three? Two twenty-five? Do I have two twenty-five? Two twenty-five back to the gold brooch. Do I have two fifty? Do I have two fifty? Going once, two twenty-five. Going twice. Sold to the good brooch!”
”Bets! Place yer bets here! Last chance, you drunk’n louts!”
The shouts of a bookmaker pierced the din of three score carousing men crowded together in a subterranean room. Pipe smoke choked the air above their heads, mingling with the rank odors of ale, bodies, and blood. In the center of the room there was a sunken pit a yard deep where two burly men beat on each other with bare knuckles. Whenever one staggered back against the wall from a particularly sound blow, the spectators above urged him back toward the center with yells and kicking feet.
”Up, up! Ye miserable dog!”
”My mawmaw hits harder ’n that!”
”Waste’ve coin.”
”Bite him! Bite him!”
Along the far wall a group of distinguished-looking men spoke with one another in sibilant tones, somehow able to communicate despite the raucous betting. None were dressed opulently, but the crisp tunics, bejeweled fingers, and silent, towering footmen hovering over the shoulder of each bespoke of nobility and privilege. While a few watched the pit with eloquently bored eyes, the rest merely waited for the main event.
Weaving between the drunken throng, a plainly dressed figure sought a better vantage point. Feminine visage shadowed by the angles of a weather-beaten tricorn, the woman sipped a drink and scanned the crowd. Had this been a different day on a different mission, she might have fit in with the wealthy cadre, showing them up with flashy clothing and flashier boasts just for the fun of it, with a crew of hardened sailors at her heels. But tonight she was alone, armed with nothing but her wits, a dagger, and a hidden cache of golden trade coins sewn into the lining of her corset.
The tip given by one of her informants in Avanthyr had been a bad one, or so it was shaping up to be. Talk of an unremarkable sloop with a plainly-named captain that never seemed to take cargo in or out fairly screamed ”Cartel” to Evelyn’s over eager mind, and she set off in pursuit of the ship’s next port-of-call in Waterdeep. Bribes and information gathered from a few friends in port afforded her access to a local black market event, one night only, and so here she found herself, underneath the root cellar of a dockside watering hole, already given up on the prospect of locating her target.
It was a flimsy excuse, she knew, but she’d jumped at the chance to shirk her fine clothing, buy passage on a trade vessel dressed as a vagabond, and throw herself again into a world where her name meant nothing and the ability to survive meant everything. Time spent on Sundren’s shores had left her restless, and her simultaneous betrothal and kidnapping at the hands of the insane Aurelianus instilled her with a sense of helplessness. Here she was in complete control of her fate, for better or worse.
”Gentl’men, we have a winner! Claim yer winnin’s here!”
Though it was difficult to see through the thick veil of smoke, Evelyn could make out the prone figure of one combatant being dragged out of the pit by his boots into a darkened tunnel leading out of the pit into another portion of the cellar. The crowd surged as people crowded around the bookie to trade coins before most wandered back upstairs to the tavern above, either to spend their winnings or drown their sorrows. A few takers, seemingly better-off than the rest, stuck around, but suddenly Evelyn found herself among no more than a dozen noblemen and their bodyguards.
Some stared at her.
She stared back.
Not one to be intimidated into admitting she was out of place, Evelyn straightened her posture to summon all the haughtiness she could muster, coolly sipping her rum and hoping it made up for her decent but inexpensive tunic and breeches. She watched a tavern worker douse the pit floor with a bucket of water to clear away most of the blood. Gradually the others lost interest in her, and she in them.
Before long, a fellow in a brightly colored doublet emerged from the pit doorway, a parchment in hand. His white hair was slicked back above a plump face and rosy complexion.
”Fine sirs, gather, gather! We are ready to begin. As usual, it's one hundred to increase, and twenty five when I no longer have that. Are there any questions?”
There was a tense moment of silence when several more of the bidders glanced her way, but she feigned nonchalance as the auctioneer waited.
”Excellent.”
Without warning, a large half-Orc entered the pit leading a row of chained people. Mostly human males, there were also a few elves and one woman, totaling fifteen in all. They were manacled separately but shuffled along in linked foot shackles. They came to stop in a semi-circle, taking up one half of the pit wall while the bidders looked on speculatively.
”Number one. Calishite male.”
The half-Orc growled softly as he unlocked the first shackle encircling the right ankle of a middle-aged man with coffee-colored skin. He was hauled toward the center of the pit, head bowed. The slave master cuffed him under the chin.
”Stand up straight!”
The slave complied, not looking at any person present. His skin was sallow but his shoulders were broad.
”Shall I open the bid at one hundred? One hundred. Do I hear one hundred? Found just last week, a fisherman. Good for labor! One hundred to the man with the good brooch. Two hundred? Where is two hundred? Where is two hundred? Two to the black hat! Three, do I have three? Three? Where is three? Two twenty-five? Do I have two twenty-five? Two twenty-five back to the gold brooch. Do I have two fifty? Do I have two fifty? Going once, two twenty-five. Going twice. Sold to the good brooch!”



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