Chapter 9 - New Life
Atzi
âWe are robbing the Branek Bank again.â
Atzi remembered the explosion. The magical device she was given to blow open the safe - something went wrong. It glowed red hot and burned in her claws. She only had moments to decide. She tossed it, fearing for her life.
Atzi escaped injury, but not everyone did. She didn't fully remember what happened next, it was all a blur of screaming and heat. At some point, the guards dragged them all away.
Almost a year in jail. One day, a prison break. Atzi luckily escaped.
Her life had been awful since.
To get another chance, to do it right? It was everything she wanted. But what if she screwed it all up again?
Atzi swallowed the poison and drool building in her mouth.
âB-Branek Bank? You want⦠me, for that?â
V placed the coin on the middle of the desk and steepled their fingers over it. âYes. I believe my superior funding now should make the endeavor a success this time. Iâm even putting the old crew back together.â V smiled. âWonât that be fun?â
But theyâll want to kill me! âTh-the same crew and all? Wonât⦠wonât they, um, after it ended there was a lot of blame going around, a-and umâ¦â
âOh, yes. Make no mistake, Atzi. They all hate you, still.â
Atzi shrank in her seat, making a pathetic noise. âThen⦠why hire me? Iâll do it! Iâll absolutely do it!â Iâm not scared, Iâm just⦠âBut I figured, nobody would want me thereâ¦â
V looked up to the ceiling of the room. Atzi followed their gaze, but saw nothing but the wooden trusses. A stray cobweb. Closer to the middle of the room, a closed attic hatch.
After a moment Vâs gaze lowered, and Atzi did the same. âYou could say I felt nostalgic. You might say I wanted to prove we could have succeeded. Perhaps I think you are skilled enough to do the job regardless of your mistake. All of these are true, to a degree.â
Iâm skilled? I mean, I know I am, but V thinks so?
âThe important part is, I want you all for the job.â V pushed forward the second gold coin. âEither youâre in, or youâre out.â
Things havenât been⦠the dream I chased, or the life I wanted. Iâm barely surviving, let alone living.
Atzi took the coin. âIâm in.â
V stood. âThe job is the thirteenth. Night. I believe the festival should be in full swing then, providing the group maximal distraction. We will be having a meeting, here, to go over the important details on the night of the eleventh.â
It was currently the seventh. Three days before the festival week began, four before the meeting, six before the job. Plenty of time.
âOh, and Atzi?â
âYes?â she replied quickly.
âCoraline will be there, too. I got her to come back to the city.â
Atzi swallowed. Cory⦠Of everyone Atzi knew back then, she missed Cory the most. After weâre rich, what if we stayed together⦠âG-great!â
V stared at Atzi, saying nothing. Atzi tried not to stare back, but Vâs gaze was too intense. Am I meant to stand up and goâ¦? Is there something else to be saidâ¦?
âYou may leave,â they finally dismissed her.
Atzi darted from her seat and fumbled with the door before making it out. She furtively stalked out of the mansion, getting her dagger back on her way out, absentmindedly thinking about the direction her life was taking.
Donât screw this up. Donât screw this up. Donât screw this up. Ahhhh theyâre gonna kill me. Donât screw this up. Donât screw this upâ¦
She didnât even think to go straight to the inn for a better room. She was so caught up in herself that she went all the way to the slums.
She noticed most of the refugees had cleared out, probably spreading more throughout the slums and city.
When she entered her home, she found stooge one laying on the ground.
âH-hey, this is my house! What in the hells are you doing here?!â She prepared to scare him away, arching her tail.
The blonde haired man quivered his lip. âAh, but Iâm injured and donât have anywhere else to stay⦠Iâm sorryâ¦â
It was the worst acting for sympathy Atzi had ever seen. Sure, Braun had put the guy on his ass, but he looked fine to her.
Suddenly, Atzi had an idea. What was this guyâs name againâ¦? âListen, Lance-â
âVance.â
âWhatever. I know a place you can stay.â
Vanceâs eyes brightened. âYeah?â
âThereâs an inn - itâs a good inn, too - and the ownerâs been having problems with assholes vandalising the place. She canât afford actual security yet, and the guards donât care.â Atzi paced as she spoke. âSo you can help out with guarding the place and maybe sheâll let you sleep there. Howâs that sound?â
Vance shot up. Up close, Atzi noticed he was more than a foot taller than her. âWhatâs the inn?â He asked, excited.
Hereâs the hard part⦠âItâs the One Eye Open. The ownerâs a cyclops.â
Vanceâs eyes twitched. âA cyclops! Those fuckers-â
âOh come on!â Atzi shouted in his face. âSheâs been living here for a long time! She didnât blow anything up! Thatâs why sheâs having trouble! And the foodâs good and itâll suck if I had to find somewhere else to eat for cheap. Do you think I like eating burnt chicken at a tavern?!â
Vance scratched his head. â...Do you think sheâll feed me too?â
Atzi huffed. Selfish asshole. âMaybe. I dunno, Iâm just figuring this out. But itâs the best idea Iâve got.â
Vance hummed, considering it.
âBesides, you owe me. You have a rep. Guards were snooping around here asking about you.â
His face went pale. â...They were?â
âI donât snitch, so I didnât mention you trying to rob the old guy and getting your ass beat. But yeah.â
Vance laughed. âThank you for your discretion, friend.â
âThank me by helping out at the inn.â
Vance strolled out of her home. âLet me grab my buddies.â
âOh. Right, those guys.â They probably wonât be any help in guarding things, hopefully this wonât create a problem⦠wait, I still have the short guyâs dagger. Well, this is still my home, so...
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Atzi took her dagger and hid it under the floorboards. Perfect, then I can come back for it when I get a chance.
Vance came back shortly, stooges two and three in tow. He pointed to stooge two, the short one. âThis is Karl.â
Karl gave a grin that made Atzi feel like her scales itched. Creepy.
âAnd this tough guy is Marco.â Vance thumped Marco on the shoulder, and Marco almost fell. Vance chuckled.
This is a good idea, right�
-
Atzi entered the inn, the three men behind her.
Hemm perked up. âAtzi! You brought friends?â
âSort of. Theyâre, uh, without a place to stay. Theyâre refugees. You said you needed some protection, though, so I figured maybe⦠they need a place to sleep and something to eat, and they keep away guys causing trouble here? Maybe fix it up a little?â
Hemm raised her eyebrow at them. âWait, refugees? You donâtâ¦â
Atzi shook her claws in front of her. âDonât worry, I made sure they understood. The fact theyâre refugees should even help, so others donât mess with them, see?â
Hemm ran over. âOh Saintess, thank you!â She wrapped Atzi in a hug.
Atzi gave a stupid laugh. Does this mean free food? She smells nice. Did this idea really work out? âUh, youâre welcomeâ¦?â
Hemm let go and staggered back. âAtzi, um, as thanks⦠how about a free⦠bath?â
Atzi nearly choked. âRight! Iâll go do that! Where is it?â Her tail wrapped around her leg.
Vance laughed.
âYou three will take one next,â Hemm said. Then she turned her attention back to Atzi. âUpstairs, end of the hall. Wait there and Iâll bring up some hot water.â
-
Some time later, all four were clean, and eating a free meal to celebrate. Atzi internally cheered that she got a free meal, after all.
Marco was interested in helping with cooking, too. Though he didnât have a lot of experience, Hemm was willing to train him anyway. Apparently her old chef had ran out on her once things got dangerous.
After the food, Atzi took out a gold coin. âCan I get a room?â
Hemm smiled brightly. âOf course!â Then she hesitated. âAh, how long? Iâm afraid I donât have a lot of changeâ¦â
âHow much do you have?â
âSixty bronze. I had just donated most of my profit to the temple before⦠this.â
Thatâs why you shouldnât give to charity! âWell⦠how about I stay seven days and eat two meals a day. So forty two bronze.â Thatâs enough to get me through the job.
Hemm nodded. âThank you.â She took Atziâs coin and handed her back a sack of fifty-eight bronze, and a key. âThird room on the right upstairs.â
Atzi happily took her money and the key. She rushed upstairs and opened the door, running into the room with the door slamming behind her, and flopping on to the bed. It was so comfortable, she sighed. Having slept on the wooden floor for years, she was the happiest sheâd been in a while.
A bed! Food! Money! The job!
Atzi quickly passed out, smiling. That night, it rained.
===
She woke up a little later than usual, the insulation of the inn keeping her from waking up before she wanted to. As she got dressed, she realized her clothes were old and smelly. She decided to buy some new ones today.
She went downstairs. It was still empty. She figured itâd take a while for people to come back. The smell of food hit her, and she followed it to the bar, peering into the kitchen.
Hemm was guiding Marco on how to cook. He was trying to fry something in a pan. At least heâs not burning it. Hemm leaned over to show him how to do it right, and Marco blushed.
Atzi snickered. Novae boy blushing over a cyclops, whoâd have thought it. Even if justified⦠âHowâs he doing?â
Hemm called back, âHeâs trying, which is more than I can say for the other two.â She left Marco by himself and came to talk to Atzi. âThey left this morning and havenât been back since.â
âThey didnât say where they were going?â Atzi asked, confused.
âNo. Hopefully itâs just a one time thingâ¦â
âWell⦠Iâm sure they wouldnât forget their buddy here, at least.â I can already tell theyâre flakers, but this guy seems too nervous to be one. âMarco, any idea where they ran off to?â
âThey donât usually tell me thingsâ¦â he replied.
Ah, heâs the loser of the group. Well, I wouldnât know anything about that, so heâs on his own. âIâll keep an ear out for them. See you around, Hemm!â
âHave a good day, Atzi! Thanks again!â She went back to teaching Marco how to cook.
-
Atzi bought a lot of things. First, she got herself several new pairs of clothes, including a nice dress to party in. The flirty lizard merchant had told her it looked great on her, and she bought it right up. When Atzi suggested she needed help trying it on, the merchant just gave her a wink and a âmaybe laterâ. Oh, sheâs into me!
She also bought a bunch of tail-bags from the same seller. They wrapped around the base of her tail without being uncomfortable, giving her plenty of pouches to store things in. At first she didnât believe it was the right size for her, the band looked way too big, but it fit snugly.
Outfitted, she dropped her clothes off at the inn, had a meal, and then went gambling. She lost enough money she started to get suspicious, then outright caught Frank cheating with his dice, having used three and taken one out. She yelled and screamed enough to disturb all the other customers, and got her money back. I knew it! Iâm never going there again!
Later, she visited her favorite prostitute, who looked like Cory.
By the time she was done, she was down to less than a gold left. It didnât bother her at her all, she knew sheâd have more than she ever needed after the job.
She hadnât heard a word about Vance or Karl, and they didnât come back to the inn, either.
The next day she went out again, thinking about gambling on a fight at the arena.
On her way she saw a strange looking person sprinting through the streets. They were wearing a black robe ripped at the sleeves and just above their knees. Their arms, legs, even their face looked sculpted, closer to a statue than a person, without a singular flaw. Yellow paint surrounded their eyes, and messy white hair flowed behind them as they ran. A loaf of bread hung from their mouth. A dozen guards chased them.
I hope they make it out. Dumb guards donât deserve to catch anybody.
The strange sculpture-person leapt towards a nearby stall. They grabbed a wooden pole holding up a corner of a tarp, swinging around it, and launched themselves into the air.
Atzi gawped, amazed. They landed on a roof and ran out of sight. The guards all stopped, exhausted. It was the best thing Atzi had seen all day.
This remained true when she lost twenty bronze gambling at the arena. Aww, câmon! Well at least there are better fights next week⦠Iâll win then.
Trodding back through the streets, she saw her second strange sight for the day. A goblin.
There was a raunchy novel Atzi had owned years ago, before she'd been forced to pawn it for food, about a traveler getting lost in the distant north, rescued and 'taken care of' by a group of goblin women. This one didn't seem nearly as short or voluptuous as the story made them all out to be, but she did have the green skin and flowers sprouting from her hair.
The goblin woman was asking questions to a merchant. âAh, you havenât seen any other goblinsâ¦?â
âFirst Iâve seen is you,â The merchant replied.
âHmmm⦠where did she goâ¦â
All types here for the festival, I guess.
She paid another visit to âherâ prostitute, indulging the rest of her day away.
Before heading back to the inn, she got an idea. Well if those two stooges arenât going to come back anyway, I should get the dagger. Hells, maybe theyâre at my shack. Lazy guys, running away from work!
She took a trip to the slums - better be my last - and arrived at her shack.
In the corner of the room, she saw a chicken pecking at the floorboards.
âUgh, what are you doing there? Shoo! Stupid bird!â It merely wandered over to the side a bit, and Atzi sighed before grabbing her dagger. She swung her dagger in its direction and hissed. âGet lost!â
The chicken bawked, flapping its wings in a panic. It ran directly into the cracked wooden post holding up the roof.
The post seemed to shift, letting out an ominous, high-pitched creaking sound. Exactly like the sound of wood that was about to snap...
Atzi dove out of her home, panicking, expecting the roof to come crashing down on her at any moment. Only when she was well clear of the door did she look back to see her house not, in fact, collapse. The post merely wobbled and the chicken ran out.
âWhew!â Close one! She sat up and brushed herself off.
Then, a pain like a thousand knives pierced every inch of Atziâs body. She made a choking noise, unable to cry out from the sheer agony. She writhed, and then her muscles seized. She could not think. She could not breathe. She could not see, as her vision went darkâ¦
-
Atzi woke up in a void of pitch blackness, the only thing within it a woman in the distance, floating in the nothingness, eyes closed as if dead.
Atzi tried to speak, âWhatâs going on?!â and her words came not from her mouth, but from every direction around her. She tried to move, and ended up shifting the mass of void. She was the lack; there was nothing to move.
The mysterious woman slowly opened her eyes. Her skin was a pale and sickly green, but there was a strange beauty to her as well. Her hair seemed to flow in every direction, far longer than it should be, framing her body.
The woman stared at where Atzi wasnât, directly into her eyes that didnât exist.
âHelp meâ¦â she spoke. Then she sank into darkness.