Chapter 57: Without a Price...
The elf’s laugh was high, musical... wrong.
It shattered against the stone walls, reverberating until the air itself seemed to crawl. Cold followed in its wake. "That does nothing but sharpen my appetite... I want to gobble you up more." they purred, the words smooth as silk, sharp as teeth.
Their smile stretched just enough to mimic something pleasant... though pleasantness never belonged anywhere near that face.
The torchlight caught in the gleam of their eyes and made them seem to move of their own accord, glimmering and sliding in the shadow until the dance of flame and darkness made it impossible to tell where the light ended and began.
The stale dungeon air suddenly felt unnatural, as though something had slipped into the corners and was breathing with them.
The elf’s hand came up slowly, deliberately, and their fingertip traced the pale skin of their own forearm where Keiser’s sigils lay.
The carved runes flared under the touch like coals fed wind, red heat crawling along the grooves, veins of light pulsing outward. The mark burned bright enough to cast a faint wash of bloody color across the elf’s fingers.
The elf let out a pleased hum. "But," they murmured, voice slick as oil, "I’ll be collecting my payment first."
It was not a negotiation.
The sentence was a decree wrapped in civility. The prison walls seemed to lean inward as the torches guttered and the scent of iron and singed linen filled the cell.
Keiser stared back without flinching, every inch of him coiled, thinking faster than his still recovering body wanted to allow.
Payment.
Of course... nothing in this place was ever without a price.
He could feel Lenko’s breath hitch beside him, the boy trembling with rage and a terror Keiser knew meant he was on the edge of action.
But Keiser stayed still. Let the elf believe they had the advantage. His voice was calm, even, though his heartbeat rattled against his ribs.
"What deal?"
The question sank into the air like a stone into water, and the silence that followed was suffocating.
He could feel it... the prickling stares boring into him. Tyron, Jim, Jill... and Lenko.
Lenko’s nails were digging into the bandaged flesh of his arm, his blood seeping fresh through the cloth of his hand, his other hand still wrapped around the rusted key. The faint drip of it onto the stone floor was louder than the crackle of the torches.
The elven, for a moment, was speechless.
The cruel smile it had worn faltered, slipping into something stranger... an expression of pure amusement, lips curled in quiet delight. Its elongated face tilted, eyes gleaming as they fixed on Keiser’s right eye with predatory focus.
"The deal’s already struck," it purred, voice dancing with mockery. "Now it’s your turn to pay."
Keiser’s hand twitched. He lifted the key, its edge catching the dim light. The dungeon seemed to hold its breath.
"This one?" His voice cut clean through the silence as he dangled the key, then let it fall.
The clatter of metal against stone echoed through the corridor, sharp and final.
"That wasn’t a deal," he said coldly. "You lent them to us."
He didn’t look back, but he didn’t need to.
He could hear the collective hitch of breath... the shock from those behind and beside him. The sound of realization spreading through his companions was louder to him than the falling key had ever been.
The elven’s long ears gave a sharp twitch, the mirth on its face tightening ever so slightly. "Oh, really?" it drawled, though the cadence was thinner, less fluid than before. "I’m sure that was a transaction."
Keiser caught it... the subtle tick at the corner of its eye, the stiffness creeping into its smile.
It was the smallest crack, but he recognized it for what it was. Most men would step back here, avoid pressing further. He knew well the wisdom of not poking a dog when it was eating, or when it was angry.
But Keiser wasn’t the man doing the poking. He was the dog. The Mad Dog.
So he tilted his head, and in that cool, measured way, shook it. "We didn’t shake hands for a deal. Nor did we agree to one. I only asked you to give the key."
The words landed like a knife.
From the corner of his eye, he caught Lenko staring at him with the most blatant ’are you serious right now’ expression, his mouth pressed thin in disbelief.
Tyron looked worse... his lips pale, his throat working as he let out a strangled ’emmp,’ desperately stifling what might have become a scream for help.
The two wagon drivers... Jim and Jill... merely exchanged a glance. One of those quiet, heavy looks between the condemned. As if, in the space of a heartbeat, they were already saying their goodbyes.
For a breath the elf looked almost stunned... then its amusement shattered like glass.
The laugh that followed started bright and brittle, but it died on the air as if the sound had been burnt away.
In a slow, fluid motion it leaned forward, closing the space between them until Keiser felt the heat and the elf’s breath mingle in the same air.
With only one working eye, Keiser’s world narrowed. Depth faltered and edges blurred.
He had to squint to take in the face so close, the pale, impossibly smooth skin, the thin crescent of a smile that didn’t reach those gleaming eyes, the way the elf’s nostrils flared slightly as though tasting something in the dungeon’s stale air. Up close the teeth were too sharp at the corners, the cheekbones too sharply cut... lethal all at once.
The change in the elf’s demeanor was everything.
Gone was the languid, mocking grace, where ease had been there was now focus, cold and bright. The voice that slid out this time was a whisper, honey-laced and knife-thin, so close that Keiser felt it on the skin under his hood.
"You’ll have to pay."
The elf’s voice slithered low, the syllables stretched like a blade dragged along whetstone.
Then... slowly, deliberately... their hand lifted, a single finger pointing toward Keiser’s chest.
The sharp nail pressed against his tunic, pricking through the fabric as though it could pierce skin, bone, and heart alike.
"With your life."