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Nights of Villjamur - Mark Charan Newton [165]

By Root 1038 0
was no longer so easy.

He slid his other arm from under Eir’s neck.

“You going somewhere?” she whispered, still facing the wall.

He moved her short dark hair away from her ear, with no specific purpose, just tenderness. He kissed her arm. “I have to go and pay the cultist today. I’d almost forgotten.”

“Of course. I’ll get you the money.” She looked up, smiling softly.

Randur felt awkward as he thanked her for the four hundred Jamúns, though she insisted impatiently that money meant little to her. A month ago he would have called her a spoiled brat for being so reckless with it. Funny, he thought, how love can affect your outlook so quickly.

Tomorrow, she reminded him excitedly, was the Snow Ball. To spend a wonderful evening with a man she chose to love. Even someone as cynical as Randur was surprised to find he, too, was looking forward to it. He made a note to examine the latest fashions in the city, then to push it on a bit more, as it was his secret mission to enhance the unadventurous trends of Villjamur.

Down the steps of Balmacara he strode, a sack of Jamúns under his cloak, then out across the raised platform offering views of a fogcaked city. He couldn’t see half as many spires as yesterday, but at least it wasn’t snowing. A garuda sailed overhead, disappearing into the white, but there weren’t as many people out and about these days.

For a quarter of an hour he sought out the street of the cultists, searching his memory for the way there amidst the deceptively surreal routes of the alleyways. Eventually he arrived at what seemed the right location, and frowned to see no door any longer, only a cloaked figure standing guard.

“Morning,” Randur said, trying to skim past her.

“Get out,” the woman spat.

“I need to see Dartun,” Randur protested. “I’ve something for him. We had a deal.”

“He’s not here,” the woman replied sourly.

“Anyone from the Order of the Equinox?”

She stared at him angrily. “Why d’you want to know?”

After he explained, he was taken inside to be questioned further.

Randur was ushered into one of those dreary underground chambers that Villjamur possessed no shortage of—with minimal light and no warmth. He was instructed to wait on an uncomfortable stool in the corner. Randur was beginning to panic, having all these months assumed that all he need do was hand over the money to the cultist, and his mother would be miraculously saved.

There were sounds: the clattering of a metal door opening, the shuffle of footsteps, heavy breathing nearby. Then someone grabbed his shoulder, pushed him back against the wall.

Another female voice snarled, “Why are you here to see Dartun?”

Randur squinted through the darkness, the fingers tightening on his shoulder. “I was just coming to make him a payment as agreed. And I find out he’s not here, and there’s some weird shit going on. Now will you let go of my shoulder, and tell me what has happened to him?”

“He won’t be coming back to Villjamur.”

“But … what of the rest of his group of cultists?” Randur was getting desperate. Dartun should have been here.

“They’ve either gone with him or been arrested. The Order of the Equinox is now outlawed throughout the territories of the Empire.”

“Shit,” Randur gasped in alarm, then further explained his situation.

“I remember you now,” the voice said. “You’re the boy I pointed in his direction as a favor, for saving my life. But I can’t help you anymore.”

“You must. You have to. That’s the whole fucking reason I’m even in this city.”

“I’m sorry. But you’re free to go.”

“Can’t any other cultists help me? I’ve got money—I’ll show you.” Randur stood up but found, after a lengthy silence, that he was now totally alone. Torch light entered the chamber and he was escorted out.

His world had imploded. Lying on Eir’s bed later, he felt he wanted to vomit, but instead he cried like a ten-year-old as he told her everything. She sat next to him waiting for him to finish—he knew that, and he felt ashamed, to expose his emotions like this. But, despite her age, she possessed an unexpected motherly quality. He

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