The Festival
The Marketplace
People milled about in crowds, walking the streets with little care for the world around them. It was time for Festival, and people flocked to the city of Lundros from the surrounding countryside. They brought their wares and their stock, things made and things grown from their farms. Stalls lined the main street, turning the whole central area of the city - normally reserved for a park - into a massive marketplace which sprawled as far as the eye could see in every direction. The city center, circular in design to facilitate the flow of traffic, lined with merchants of all types. The more affluent and strange of them taking center stage in the midst of everything. The more mundane, normal merchants lined the streets. Many storefronts lined these streets, and most of them were open - though their owners had stalls of their own.
The denizens of Lundros were engrossed in their own worlds, focusing on their shopping - buying pretty jewels and trinkets for their lovers and their children. Many cloth vendors sold their best silks and linens. Dressmakers sold the gaudiest of things. Blacksmiths made shoes for horses and weapons for the rich, farm tools for the poor. It was a time of joy and happiness for most. For some, though, it was just a pain in the ass. The people in the city were mostly good, wondrous people who came simply for the happiness of festival. But some, though, some came for more nefarious purposes. During the time of Festival, crime in the city nearly doubled. Mostly petty theft and cutpurses. It disgusted Cerwin.
He sat on his balcony, feet crossed and his hands cupped around the back of his head. He looked out over the crystalline railing, fingers laced together watching the suns move through the sky. The commotion below in the marketplace annoyed him, but not enough to ruin his good mood today. Even the thought of the cutpurses who made his job harder than normal couldn’t spoil his mood today. Just the night before, in the blackness of the night he’d made a killing. Of course, the town watch was up in arms about it. They couldn’t figure out who’d robbed The Shining Gem, a high-end jewelry shop.
Cerwin pulled the gems from his pocket, figuring they were worth at least a small fortune. In fact, he knew they could pay for his house a thousand times over. The problem with gems, though, was finding somewhere to sell them. He couldn’t offload them in the city, not yet anyway, the heat was too much. And besides, the only person who could reasonably afford to buy them happened to be the one he’d stolen them from to begin with. Of course, he didn’t steal them for the money. He had plenty of that, more than enough to feed a few hundred families for a few years.
He stole them for the thrill of stealing them, in fact, he was already contemplating how he could return them without being caught. He’d only stolen them to prove he could, after all. The braggart made unfounded claims that his security couldn’t be beaten. His people were the best, he said, unable to be outwitted. The magic protecting his house couldn’t be breached! Cerwin proved that wrong, in about fifteen minutes of his time. He tossed the gems into the air, deftly catching them before placing them back in his pouch - which he buried beneath the dirt in a flower pot by the balcony door.
Looking back over the city, Cerwin sighed. It had been harder than necessary, though, the guard was pulling double duty with the influx of visitors. Actually breaking in took him no time, but escaping and getting back home without being caught was a bit harder. Still, he’d managed it - and now he was up bright and early despite the late hours he kept. His meeting for the day should be arriving any minute, and while not the most important meeting - it was a meeting he agreed to a week ago.
“Isla is our friend here, yet?” He asked.
“Yes sir, he arrived five minutes ago. I thought you might want to take a few minutes to prepare before I let him and the Banker in.”
“Yes, yes. I’m ready for them, Isla. Send them in, I’ll see them now.”
Cerwin settled in at his desk, pulling some papers and a quill out. His feet didn’t even touch the floor in this chair, he hated it - they didn’t really have the equipment for him when he furnished this place. The custom order was almost done though, he’d been told. Settling in comfortably, he folded his hands around one another. Isla, tall and slender and beautiful in her own way, showed the two men into the office. They each sat across from him.
“Good morning, Gentlemen. I know we’re here to discuss funding for a new development of land outside the city walls, yes? I’m assuming you both have taken the time to study my offer for funding, since you’ve decided to take this meeting.”
“Yes sir, and we do have an issue with the time frame for repayment. The interest rate is a little steep, as well - but we can live with that. However, a one year repayment plan seems kind of short-lived. We’re not sure we can make the payments that kind of frame of time gives us. Can we, maybe, negotiate for a longer term?”
“I suppose that could be considered, given the undertaking and the project you’re taking on. See, the problem is, your upfront payment is kind of small. There’s no guarantee your project is going to pan out, and I have to be sure I’m going to get a return on my investment. I definitely need something of value, if you want to extend the loan term and make smaller payments.”
“I have some family heirlooms. Things of value they’ve gathered over the years. Jewels and the like. A few swords said to have magic properties that the Lore Wardens have said we could keep. There’s even some…other things. I’m not sure of their value, but we could look through them and you could judge. I’m hesitant to speak to much of them currently, though. I know you’re a collector of…antiques, yeah?”
The way he said it piqued Cerwin’s interest, canting his head to the side and thinking about it for a moment. “Yes, yes I am. If you happen to have some of these antiques, I would very much like to see them.”
The details of their next meeting were sorted quickly, a dinner between the two of them later that evening. In his home, of course, as Cerwin didn’t enjoy leaving his home after dark the other man knew. In fact, the whole city knew. Leaving at night was dangerous, especially with the festival coming through the city. Notorious cutpurses and ne’er-do-wells roamed the streets in the cover of darkness.
Cerwin smiled as he shut the door behind them, reaching into his pockets for a moment and feeling the gems he’d procured the night before. Pulling the few stones he carried on him from his pocket, he tossed them into the air and deftly caught them one-by-one as they began falling. “Isla, I need you to handle something for me.”
“Yes, sir?”
“Take these gems, and the few buried in the secret compartment on my desk and return them to their rightful owner. And make sure you get the reward money, for yourself of course. You’ll come up with the usual excuse, I assume? Something simple, but effective. Can’t have you getting yourself locked up, and the watch is hot after these things. They spent the better part of an hour and a half chasing me through the streets last night. Well, they think they were chasing an urchin twice my height, but you know how that goes.” Cerwin laughed, remembering the foot chase through the streets.
As Isla gathered everything, Cerwin walked back to his main living space - settling down and sipping on his tea. He thought about the night before, and then he thought about the coming dinner. Antiques and collectibles were things of value, things he could definitely take as collateral on the loan. Especially if they were anything like what Cerwin wanted them to be, what he longed for.
His fingers ran along the edge of his table, flipping the hidden level which pushed the two halves apart and lifted the platform from inside. A bit of a hidden stash, books lined the interior of the table - held perfectly in place and preserved by his limited amounts of magic. He looked through them, touching the pages reverently and carefully. He couldn’t read them, the language was foreign and ancient. But, he knew what they were. The most valuable assets in his whole collection, though not ones he could often speak about. The collection and keeping of these books was taboo. One of the most heinous crimes in the land, even. They were relics of an age long before his life, or of any living creature currently walking the streets of Lundros.
Hopefully, the books his new friend brought tonight were akin to these. Relics from before the Breaking. Eventually, he might learn to read the books and find out the true history of their world. What caused the world to break and change, and become the thing it was these days. He knew, in times long past, the people’s magic was far stronger - and their tools far beyond their current comprehension.
“Gods, I need to find someone that can read these.”