allegro/chapters/chapter-29.md

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2020-09-06 11:19:33 +00:00
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title: Understanding Music
teaser: >
Exhausted and tired, Linsan and Brook head back to the inn to sleep.
summary: >
Exhausted and tired, Linsan and Brook head back to the inn to sleep.
---
> They chose to honor Cros de Goslin, Bankol de Goslin, and Tamir of Kormar for slaughtering dozens of people and injuring hundreds! They rewarded this devastation because of the faux history of the game imitating war and not a sport! This is a game, not a bloodbath of epic destruction. --- *Bloodball*
Hours later, Linsan was exhausted, burned, and covered in debris. She had blood caked across the fingertips on her left hand and her right wrist ached. Her boots felt like stones as she struggled to made her way over the ridge.
Behind her, Brook was equally tired. She groaned as she clasped the branches of the bushes that grew wild over the ridge. Her dress was ruined and her gloves shredded. They had lost her hat somewhere in the field along with yards of lace that had torn off her outfit.
Linsan reached the top and turned around.
Brook gasped and strained at the bushes.
Grabbing onto a thick branch of a nearby tree, Linsan inched down and held out her hand.
Brook looked at it for a second. For a moment, Linsan didn't think she would take it. Then Brook shrugged and grabbed Linsan's hand. With a grunt, she pulled herself up the steep embankment.
As soon as they were closer, Linsan slipped her arm around Brook's waist and helped her up to the top of the ridge. With the more voluminous parts of Brook's dress gone, their hips bumped together and she could feel her companion's body heat against her skin.
"Fine," Brook said in a weary voice, "the heels were a bad idea."
"They were pretty."
"Right up to the point you missed and burned the laces." Brook held up her bare foot. Flecks of dirt fell from her wiggling toes.
Linsan cringed. She had bruises down her right thigh and shin from the same mistake. "That was not our best practice round."
With a gasp, Brook snatched her hand from Linsan's and turned away sharply. She leaned away from Linsan's grasp but didn't break out of the grip. "Not as bad as the time you set fire to your case."
Linsan glanced at her case. It was scorched and dented. She had forgotten to seal it shut but fortunately the white flames from their musical attack didn't last long. The case still protected her violin.
Then she realized her arm was still around Brook's waist. Slowly, she relaxed her grip and stepped away. Her fingers ran along the lace before they parted.
Brook looked at her, an unreadable expression on her face. Her cheeks were smeared with dirt and her makeup had run. It gave her eyes a smokey appearance, a hint of black and blue dusting underneath her eyes.
Linsan blushed. "What?"
Brook shook her head and looked away again. "Nothing."
Feeling uncomfortable, She let out her breath in a long shuddering gasp as she looked around. The public house caught her attention, there were a dozen wagons pulled in front of it and at least twenty people sitting in chairs between wagons and the front of the inn. "Brook, look at that."
"What's going on?"
"I don't know." Linsan watched another wagon pull up. "You got your room before we did this, right? I don't think there are any openings left."
"Two of them. One for me and another for you. Both of them were the best the place had to offer, plus hot bath services, and full meals. They don't know how to handle cars here, so I also paid for two horses."
Surprised, Linsan could only stare. "Not the cheapest room?"
"We're in this together, aren't we? Come on, I really could use a bath and a dress that isn't utterly ruined."
When Linsan noticed Brook limping, she held out her hand.
Brook stared at it. Her cheeks colored almost immediately. "No, I'm good."
"Come on, I'm tired and not walking well either. A little support would help both of us."
Brook's jaw tightened.
"It doesn't mean anything other than we're helping each other." She shook her hand once.
Somehow, that made the blush only hotter. Brook looked down to grab one of the strands of ruined lace. She stared at it as she toyed with the end.
Linsan pulled her hand back. "Sorry."
The gesture didn't seem to help Brook's sudden change in attitude.
"Come on," Linsan said in a soft voice.
After Brook nodded, the two of them walked out from behind the mayor's house and up to the inn. Their footsteps were ragged and unsteady. Every step dragged Linsan down.
The front of the inn had tables set up along the wall for the entire length of the walk. There were more clustered around the base of the stairs on each side. Each table had a couple chairs around them.
The inn's guests appeared to be local farmers, hunters, and workers. Most of them had a strange symbol on them, a blue shield with two white lines down the middle. Linsan caught some of the conversations about a ball game between Saint Gaveil and Tercar.
Brook drew even with Linsan. "What is crashball?"
Linsan leaned over. "A rather violent game in these parts. Two teams try to get a ball to the opposite end using fists, kicks, and magic."
"How do you know that?"
"*The Widow of Balls*, a short-lived play."
"Oh, your mother."
Linsan chuckled. "No. A playwright named Tabil in town."
"I know Tabil, he had gone to a lot of Daddy's parties."
"He's also a leech and keeps trying to bed my mother. H-He also owned the Sterlig my grandfather made."
Brook's jaw tightened. "Your mother's pride?"
Linsan nodded. Then she slowed as she noticed that conversations had died around her. The other customers were staring at the two of them, their eyes scanning them from head to toe. She could imagine what they were looking at, two women who looked like they gone through a battle.
With a blush, she hurried to the door and through the open door.
Inside, the main room was packed with more people wearing the blue and white. Almost as one, they looked up at the two women and the conversations trailed off.
With her cheeks burning, Linsan headed toward the side where there was a bar with bottles behind it.
One of the men in the chairs stood up. He was an older, balding man with weathered skin and rough hands. "Hey, Hab, you said the good rooms were taken by a pretty lady?"
A man behind the bar looked up. "Yes, Cal, and if you make our guests uncomfortable, I'm going to kick you and yours out for the season. Given that every pub and inn is filled for ten leagues around Gaveil, you're going to either be sleeping in that wagon of yours or driving a long time and will miss the game."
Cal looked at the bar. "How could you say that, Hab? I come here every game, every time. You know I'm good."
Hab gestured to Brook. "Not tonight. She got the room first. You're going to have to share your cousin's room like everyone else. Why do you think I'm not serving beans tonight?"
A ripple of laughter filled the room.
Linsan cringed and glanced around.
Cal cracked his knuckles and looked over Brook. "Well, welcome to our humble little village, Dame." He took a deep bow to her.
Brook nodded curtly.
"Though, I'd be honored if you be willing to share your room with me," he said with a grin. "I'm a considerate lover."
"Shut your mouth, Cal," Hab said with a warning tone. "She's a lady and you are not to speak to her like that."
Brook held up her hand. "Additionally, I'd rather sleep with a venomous snake on a bad day than get anywhere near you."
Linsan cringed at her sharp tone.
Cal looked at her and then laughed. It was a booming laugh but no one else in the room had joined him.
A man at his table patted his hand. "Just sit down and shut up."
Cal looked around at the silent room. "No, I've choked on my words enough." His voice was darker. "I'll come back when I've sobered."
"That would be best," said the bartender.
Pushing himself away from the table, Cal walked past them. "My apologies," he said curtly before leaving.
Brook strode past Linsan and headed straight for the bar.
Linsan didn't know if she should follow or remain in place.
At the bar, Brook spoke the bartender for a few moments before coming back. "Do you want the hot bath first? There is only one tub upstairs and it takes about an hour to heat."
Linsan looked at Brook's ruined outfit. "No, you. You need it far more than me. I can wait."
"Thank you." There was something else she was about to say. Linsan could see it in her eyes. Brook closed her mouth and sighed. Shaking her head, she finally said, "I-I should go."
Linsan waited until Brook headed upstairs for the bath before she looked around. The room was crowded. Even Cal's seat had been taken by someone else.
Holding her violin case close, she headed out to find a table to wait it out. The tables outside were just as crowded except for the furthest one where Cal sat on the edge of the lights.
Linsan toyed with the idea of taking a walk but then decided she was tired of trails or sitting in the Glasscoaster. She headed to the table with Cal.
"Don't worry, I won't say anything else," he said in a low voice. "I've been coming here since I was a boy, I'm not going to make myself any more of a horse's ass."
"It's been a long day for both of us. A lot of travel and then...." She had no idea how to explain their practice.
"We heard." Cal chuckled. "We could also feel it through the ground. Whatever you were doing behind the mayor's place was pretty loud."
She didn't know how to explain or even respond. She sat down gingerly and set the case in front of her. Without trusting Cal, she rested one hand on the surface after wrapping the strap on her other hand.
"That a music maker?"
"Yes, a violin."
"I don't know what that is."
Linsan shrugged. "It's used in plays, orchestras, and other music. Think of it like a fiddle."
"Plays? You known what? Tomorrow you should head over to the north side and look for an old goat in a cabin."
"Old Gab?"
He smiled broadly and nodded. "Ah, Gab. She is the sweetest woman in the entire world."
Linsan gave him a hard look.
"Of course, she is also wrapped in a thick layer of thorns, poisonous berries, and thistles," he ended with a snort.
Linsan could help but smile also.
Cal sighed. "I'll tell you what, Mum was happy to leave this town. We may have started here in town, but now only Old Gab and Mis are left in town."
"Mis?"
"My cousin, the blacksmith."
When Linsan didn't say anything, Cal spoke up again. "You play?"
"I'm learning how to busk."
"Play."
"It's been a long day."
He reached back and pulled something out of his pocket. He pushed it across the table to her. It was a money clip with a bundle of bills. "Please? Show me what Old Gab hears? She's been talking about it for years but I never understood. I never had the ears for it, but I have a feeling you do."
Linsan stared at the money clip for a long moment. She was exhausted and tired, but the lure of music called to her. She didn't care about the money as much as feeling the bow hum in her hand.
She unlocked her case and pulled out her instrument.