quoria
20 posts
Current Chapter: No Sleep For The Sick Updates: Every day, until backlog is empty! A fantasy/detective webserial detailing the often supernatural adventures of conman-turned-detective Colton McKinley as he tries to make an honest living in the bustling city of Quoria. General content warnings include injury, violence, and body horror. Begin Here Table of Contents Cast Miss Fortuna's Horoscopes
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
Chapter 2.2: Actions Have Been Known to Have Consequences
Colton woke to a dull, throbbing headache and the sound of Judeâs voice from downstairs. He laid in bed for a few minutes, listening to her talk and trying to will his headache away. It didnât work. Trying to focus on anything Jude was saying, or who she might have been talking to only made Coltonâs head hurt worse. Giving up, he finally levered himself into a sitting position, and from there out of bed entirely.
Colton took things slowly, not wanting to bring on yet another dizzy spell. Or worse, end up vomiting all over his floor again, like he had his first night home from the hospital. It had been a week since heâd been discharged, and his concussion was getting noticeably better, but he still felt ill if he straightened up too quickly or turned too fast. He couldnât help but wonder if it had something to do with how tall he was. Would he feel better if he was lower to the ground? As it was, he felt as if he were some sort of newborn giraffe, stumbling about the best it could without knocking into anything.
Realizing heâd zoned out, Colton (carefully) shook his head to clear it and shuffled towards his closet. The hardwood floor was chilly against his feet, and he the rest of the apartment wasnât much warmer. That was one good thing about the poor insulation; it kept the apartment nice and cool during the summer months. He absentmindedly nudged aside a shirt and tie that had been haphazardly tossed to the floor, picked some fresh clothes out of his closet and started to get dressed.
His one and only suit had been taken in as evidence by the City Watch, on account of all the blood and the fact that heâd been nearly murdered in it. Theyâd paid him back for it, but Colton hadnât had time to go buy a new one what with being in the hospital and all, so he was stuck looking woefully underdressed until the suit heâd ordered from Reilley was delivered. He still didnât know how Reilley had gotten his measurements, but heâd decided he wasnât going to ask.
Haphazardly buttoning his shirt, Colton had a brief scuffle with his suspenders before straightening them out, pulling on a pair of mismatched socks, and deeming himself presentable. Somewhat presentable. At the very least, he didnât look as though heâd been dragged through a back alley and shaken down for spare change. A quick glance in the bathroom mirror as he brushed his teeth confirmed that much.
His hair was a wreck, even more so than usual, but he didnât have the time to fix it. Jude was still talking downstairs, which meant that whoever had come in hadnât left yet. He hoped another reporter hadnât shown up, looking for a scoop on what was surely turning out to be one of the biggest diplomatic incidents of the year. Spurred by that thought, Colton hurried out of his room, and took the stairs two at a time.Â
âHey, Jude, whatâs going on?â he asked, making the mistake of glancing at the man Jude was talking to over the bannister. A familiar glimpse of wavy, dark hair and too-white teeth was enough to ruin his concentration. He slipped the very next step. Bracing himself for the fall, he screwed his eyes shut - but someone caught him.
Kaleb. The man was stronger than he looked, and much closer than Colton wouldâve liked him to be, on account of the fact that heâd suspected Kaleb of theft and lied to him about a diplomatic incident just before being kidnapped by Kalebâs very own cousin. Today was not looking like a good day for him.
âWatch your step. It would be a shame if you suffered another concussion,â Kaleb said, righting Colton and brusquely dusting off his shoulders, even though he hadnât landed on anything to dirty his clothes.
âIâll, uh, Iâll do my best,â Colton said, wide-eyed and stiff. He had a sinking feeling in his stomach that he was about to be in a lot of trouble. Colton remained frozen in place, feeling as though Kaleb was pinning him to the wall with just his eyes. The moment Kaleb looked away, he skittered past him to join Jude behind his desk, seeking safety in numbers. Jude looked none too pleased with Kalebâs presence.
âYou two look like Iâm about to eat you,â Kaleb joked, reaching into his jacket.Â
For a brief, hysterical moment, Colton thought he was going to pull a gun on him. Guns were rare, sure, but Kaleb was rich enough to own several, with money to spare. But what he pulled out instead was an envelope, which he held out for Colton to take.
âWhatâs this?â Colton asked, hesitantly taking the envelope and wedging a finger in one of the seams, tearing it open. Inside was a thick stack of colorful bills, money in various denominations. Enough money to pay his rent for a couple of months, if he had to guess, if not more. It was more money than heâd ever been paid for a case in his life.
âConsider it a thank you from my family,â Kaleb said at Coltonâs questioning look. âThis⌠incident has been very trying, and we appreciate you not speaking to reporters and making an even bigger mess for us to clean up.âÂ
Ah, it was hush money. A lot of hush money. It made Colton wonder just how badly this whole incident reflected on the king of Citarik if the royal family was willing to pay a simple private investigator so much money to shut up about it - but then again, it was very likely that this was nothing more than pocket change to Kaleb.
âYeah, uh, okay. Happy to help,â Colton agreed. He had a feeling that turning down the money would make him an enemy of Kalebâs family, and he wasnât about to do that. Not that he could afford to turn the money down in any case. Maybe now he could actually hire Jude to help mind the front desk, rather than rely on her kindness until he was back on his feet.
âIâm glad to hear it,â Kaleb said. For a moment, his smile was almost too wide, like he was baring his teeth. It gave off the impression that he hadnât quite forgiven Colton.
Was Kaleb upset that Colton had suspected him in the case and lied to him? Or that heâd inadvertently caused Sashaâs death? That wouldnât be very fair of him, considering the fact that Sasha had tried to kill him and all, but love wasnât fair, and it was impossible for him to say how close Kaleb might have actually been to Sasha. Not close enough to know what Sasha had been up to, but that wasnât saying much. Thieves and murderers didnât tend to advertise their work.
âFor what itâs worth, Iâm sorry things turned out the way that they did,â Colton said, avoiding Kalebâs gaze. It felt like Sashaâs eyes were on him, looking through him again, not Kalebâs, and he could barely stand the feeling. He felt Jude give one of his fingers a gentle squeeze.Â
âI didnât come here for your apologies,â Kaleb said a little flippantly.
âThen what did you come here for?â Jude asked, crossing her arms.
âTo hire Colton, of course. Iâve found myself in need of a detective. Iâll be sure to pay you handsomely. More than whatâs in that envelope,â Kaleb said, fishing out his wallet. Before Colton could object, heâd handed over another small wad of bills. âItâs ten percent in advance, isnât it? That should be close enough.â Colton didnât even count the money. He didnât have to. It was more than his going rate, more than heâd ever asked of anyone, and that made him very nervous. What sort of case was worth so much money to Kaleb? There was a sinking feeling in his gut, and he knew he wasnât going to like it.Â
Kaleb waited for Colton to respond, but when Colton didnât, he continued. âWhether or not you solve the case, thatâs yours to keep. For your efforts.â
âWhat is it, exactly, that you need me to do?â Colton finally asked.
âSashaâs body has gone missing. And I want you to find it.âÂ
The room was silent, and Colton felt faint. His vision swam, and he did his best to blink the dizziness away. He wondered if Kaleb was messing with him, but kept the thought to himself.
âWhat the fuck,â Jude said.Â
âMiss Baer, watch your language,â Kaleb said, clicking his tongue disapprovingly.
âDonât tell me what to do. Iâm not in your little fight club anymore. You canât just come in here and bully Colton-â Jude started, before Colton interrupted her.
âItâs okay. Itâs fine. Iâm fine,â Colton said, giving Jude what he hoped was a reassuring smile, but in actuality was more of a pained grimace. Jude raised her eyebrows at him, skeptical. He turned his attention back to Kaleb. âDoesnât the City Watch have Sashaâs body?â
âThey had it, yes. It was due to be shipped back to Citarik for a proper burial this morning, but apparently itâs gone. As you can imagine, this whole debacle is putting even more strain on the relationship between our countries.â
âAnd you think I could do a better job of finding the body than the City Watch?â he asked, hoping that Kaleb would come to his senses and let the proper authorities handle this.
âTheyâre the ones who lost Sasha in the first place,â Kaleb said with a roll of his eyes. âNo, I think Iâm better off with you. Even if you canât find Sashaâs body, Iâd still like to know what happened to it in the first place. Surely you can manage that much.â
Colton glanced to Jude, hesitant.
âYou donât have to take the job if you donât want to,â Jude reminded him, frowning.
âThatâs true! But it would be nice if you did. Especially after that stunt you pulled when you sent me all the way to the Embassy for no reason,â Kaleb pointed out.Â
Colton had been hoping that Kaleb would have forgotten about that, or at the very least would take pity on him for almost being murdered by his cousin, but it was clear that wasnât going to be the case. Financial need was certainly one way to motivate him, but it was doubly as effective when paired with guilt.
âI might not find anything,â Colton reminded Kaleb, resigning himself to his fate. âThe City Watch is pretty tight-lipped, and I have no idea where to even start looking for Sashaâs body. It could be a big waste of money.â
âThen itâs a good thing Iâve got money to waste, isnât it?â Kaleb asked. His eyes were shiny with interest - or maybe it was mirth, like he enjoyed watching Colton squirm.
âYeah,â Colton said faintly. âGood thing.âÂ
Chapter 2.1 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 2.3
0 notes
Text
CHAPTER 2.1: Right Place, Wrong Time
People always assumed that the first body a new constable encountered would be that of a murder victim. They were wrong. The first body was usually the result of an accident. Mabre had seen nine different bodies before sheâd so much as caught a glimpse of her first murder victim, and Oliver had managed eleven. Today was his twelfth time seeing a body, as far as Mabre knew, and this one was definitely a murder.
Someone had pushed a student off of one of the many stone balconies that littered the university courtyard, and Mabre knew because sheâd seen it. She and Oliver had been called to the scene because of a supposed scuffle in the courtyard, and had arrived just in time to hear a scream, look up, andâŚwell, Mabre didnât want to think too hard about what had happened next. Not with the studentâs blood spattered across the front of her uniform. And the ground, and the tree the student had hit on his way down.Â
Thankfully, Mabre took comfort in the routine that came with being present at the time of a murder. The forensics technicians had promptly arrived and set up a thick, plastic tent near the crime scene, ushering Mabre inside once everything was cordoned off and deemed secure. She carefully stripped out of her contaminated uniform and handed them off to the technician who had accompanied her, who immediately sealed the bloodied clothes away in neatly labelled forensics bags. Then came a towel (which she used to clean herself off with) and the silent condolences of every other constable that had been called to the scene. It was never fun being the one in the tent.
Mabre had been in the tent enough times now that she knew the routine by heart, but she hadnât always. Her first time in the tent had nearly ended with a broken nose; sheâd been shaking so badly that sheâd tripped over her own two feet and fallen flat on her face while trying to pull on a spare pair of pants. She was hoping that Oliver would handle it better than she had, but she doubted that was going to be the case. Theyâd be lucky to get through the night without a trip to the station infirmary.
An old duffel bag was presented to Mabre, jarring her from her thoughts. The lab techs had recently taken to lugging around a bag of spare and lost clothes for situations like these, and Mabre happened to be granted the privilege of rummaging around in it. She wasnât picky, and pulled out whatever would fit. It seemed tacky to wear a sweater emblazoned with the school emblem of the very university she had just witnessed a murder at, but it beat wearing the blood of one of the students.
Mabre looked very much like a student herself by the time she stepped out of the tent in the borrowed sweater, and a pair of slacks sheâd chosen. She wasnât even wearing shoes. There hadnât been any that fit, and forensics had confiscated hers, along with the rest of her clothes. The grass was cold and tickled the bottom of her feet, and she couldnât help but think it was a shame that sheâd never see her old clothes again. It didnât feel good, losing her uniform like that. It was a symbol of who she was and the morals she tried to uphold, not to mention that not wearing it set her apart from the other constables. She looked like a helpless victim, and she just hated that.
Oliver shuffled into the tent after her, and emerged in what felt like mere moments wearing entirely different outfit. The clothes were too big on him, and the shoes too small. Mabre knew him well enough to tell that much at a glance.Â
Mabre reached over to straighten Oliverâs tweed jacket, which was so long that the worn out sleeves covered his hands. He looked dazed, almost glassy-eyed, and Mabre couldnât help but wonder if sheâd looked like that just a moment ago too. She hoped not. She was supposed to be the tough one here, and she couldnât go setting a bad example for Oliver. Frowning, she shook Oliver gently by his lapels to get his attention.
âSomething hot to drink and a good night's rest, and youâll feel better,â she said, brusquely.
Oliver finally looked up at her, dangerously teary-eyed. He was trembling inside his jacket, like a turtle trying to hide inside its shell. âMabre, that boy⌠he...â
âOllie, it wasnât our fault,â Mabre said sternly. She had to be firm with Oliver now, otherwise he was just going to blame himself for what had happened. Sheâd nearly blamed herself after witnessing her first murder victim too. Sheâd told herself that there was something she missed, something she could have done better, or faster - but no, murder didnât work that way, and her pop had told her as much. This was no oneâs fault, no one but the person who had pushed that student.Â
The warm spray of blood from when the body had fallen onto the cobblestone path mere steps from her was burned into Mabreâs memory - and Oliverâs as well, she was sure. Time had felt too slow, and then too fast, and then as though sheâd been standing there watching blood and gristle sink into the gaps between the cobblestones for weeks. Mabre couldnât breathe, and then all of a sudden sheâd been breathing too much, and everything smelled of iron and dirt, and -Â
Mabre took a deep breath. Seeing someone die in front of her wasnât the same as finding a body and trying to figure out who was responsible for it. There had been a life there, and then suddenly it had been extinguished. It made her feel small.Â
âThere was nothing we could have done.â Mabre said as she picked up where sheâd left off. âThe only thing we can do now is catch the person who did that to him. And we will. I promise you, we will.âÂ
Mabre sounded confident because that was what she needed to be. If she didnât believe in solving this case, then there was no way that anyone else would. Justice was going to be done, whether anyone liked it or not.
An inordinately tall, brown man suddenly appeared with two cups of piping hot coffee, startling Mabre. He pushed a cup into her hand and then did the same for Oliver, looking pleased with himself when Oliver took a careful sip. Lalliâs hair was an ash-brown mess, sticking up at all angles like a bird had tried to make a nest in it. If she hadnât been so focused on Oliver, Mabre wouldâve seen him coming from anywhere in the courtyard. It struck her as odd that she hadnât, and now that she thought about it, it was even odder that he was here at all.
âWho called you over? I doubt magic is involved in this,â Mabre demanded, craning her neck to look up at Lalli.Â
Lalli shrugged. Mabre frowned, and glanced around for Teddy instead, taking in the courtyard for the first time since the murder. It was large and grassy, with thick trees around the perimeter and a cross-shaped cobblestone path that cut evenly through the center of it all. There were stone benches here and there, and a fountain in the middle. It would have been very pretty if not for all the blood, and the corpse in the midst of it.
And there was Teddy, talking to a few constables over near the (thankfully covered) body. He was never too far from Lalli, and acted as Lalliâs handler of sorts. Mabre was just about to call out to him when Oliver nudged her in the side with his elbow.
Mabre turned, and Lalli was gone. Instead, a much more familiar figure was approaching the two of them. Inspector Darcy Darling was tall and broad, with salt and pepper hair and the beginnings of circles under his eyes. He had thick scars that ran from his ear down to his neck before being hidden by his uniform, as if someone had tried to blow the ear right off his head. Given how little of his ear was left, theyâd obviously succeed in some capacity. The most striking thing about Darcy, though, was his eyes; dark blue and intense, as if he were trying to take in all of the crime scene at once and memorize it.
âHey, Pops,â Mabre said. If Darcy was here, then things were obviously more grim than sheâd thought.
âHello, Inspector Darling,â Oliver squeaked next to her, and Mabre patted his shoulder in what she hoped was a comforting way. Oliver had been her best friend ever since theyâd first been partnered up, but he was still nervous around her pop. It was funny, in its own way.
âHello Mabre, Oliver,â Darcy said, inclining his head to each of them in turn. âIâm here to pick you up. Iâm sure Detective Ikeru will want your statements, but that can wait until morning, I think.âÂ
He stepped between Mabre and Oliver and placed a hand on each of their shoulders, steering them gently down the nearest path and towards the entrance to the university.
âShouldnât we talk to Teddy while our memories are fresh?â Mabre asked, frowning again, but allowing her pop to push her along regardless.
âGenerally speaking, yes,â Darcy agreed. âBut we have a more pressing issue to deal with first. Detective Ikeru will understand.â
Lalli had somehow gotten all the way back to the entrance, and was waving them off. Darcy smiled briefly at him, and continued pushing Mabre and Oliver along.
âWhat sort of issue?â Oliver asked, sounding defeated and tired.Â
Mabre could relate. It had been a rough night, but she was more worried about Oliver than herself. He was gentle at heart, and she wasnât sure how much more bad news he could take in a single night.
âThereâs been an unexpected development in the Mirazykh case,â Darcy said simply.
âWhat sort of development?â Mabre asked at the same time Oliver said, âIt wasnât actually a murder, was it?â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean, not actually a murder?â Mabre said, frowning at Oliver.
âYou know what I mean! The tailor didnât premeditate it, and neither did that detective we found.âÂ
Mabreâs blood boiled at the mention of Colton. That idiot had gone and sent Oliver away after sheâd specifically told Oliver to protect him, and then heâd almost died immediately after! And if that wasnât enough, heâd gone and swallowed what was almost certainly a piece of evidence in the hospital - and then had the gall, the nerve to pass out before anyone could make him spit it up.
âThat detective couldnât premeditate his way out of a paper bag,â Mabre snapped. âAnd that tailor-â
âSasha Mirazykhâs body is gone,â Darcy said, interrupting her.
âWhat?â Mabre asked, stunned and angry. âWhat do you mean gone?â
âWasnât it meant to be shipped off to Citarik tomorrow?â Oliver asked nervously.
âThe body was locked in the forensics lab, but it isnât there anymore.â Darcy said.
âBut - but it couldnât have gone anywhere! Thereâs no way into forensics unless you have a key, and that door locks automatically from the inside,â Oliver said, sounding increasingly anxious. He was tense, pulling his too-big jacket tighter around his shoulders.
âI donât see how anyone couldâve snuck a body out even if they had gotten access to the room.â Mabre argued. The watch station was never empty, so surely someone would have seen something. âItâs not like he got up and walked out. The whole back of his head was smashed in!â
âTheoretically, youâre both correct, but the body is gone. We donât know who took it or how it was done, but itâs not there anymore,â Darcy said. âWhat we do know is that we need to find it. Quickly.âÂ
Chapter 1 Epilogue â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 2.2
1 note
¡
View note
Text
Miss Fortuna's Latest Horoscopes! Find them in a paper near you.
1 note
¡
View note
Text
CLICK HERE to be redirected to ECHO, the interactive Chapter 1 Epilogue. It features Lalli, a mage and nominal member of the City Watch, investigating the scene of the crime with his partner, Teddy. Yeah, that crime.
Standard Quoria content warnings apply.
Chapter 1.15 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 2.1
2 notes
¡
View notes
Text

Chapter 1.15:
Colton woke to the nauseatingly strong smell of antiseptic and bleach. His head was still throbbing, with an ache that had worked its way closer to a migraine. Screwing his eyes even further shut, he grimaced and tried to worm his way deeper under the somewhat scratchy, linen sheet that covered him. When he finally forced himself to crack his eyes open, he could barely tell where he was.
The hospital room came to him in pieces. The too-bright lights left Colton stunned, his eyes watering until his vision adjusted. His bed was situated in the middle of the room, and there was a window with a radiator pushed up against it to his left. A pop of color drew his attention to the nearby nightstand, which displayed a vase of colorful flowers, and several cards that Colton assumed were sympathetic.
An IV drip was on his other side, connected to his right arm. It took a long moment for him to realize that it was tugging at his skin, preventing him from comfortably burrowing under the covers. Colton tried to remember how heâd gotten here, and each step in the right direction took a monumental amount of effort. His head ached at the memory. Thinking was difficult, like his thoughts were surrounded by a thick syrup.
The necklace. Oliver. The motel. Sasha. The dilapidated motel room, and the feeling that he was about to drown. His blood staining the carpet. The necklace in his hand. Reilley.
Reilley.
He had to find Reilley. If anyone could tell him what had happened, it would be Reilley. Carefully levering himself into a sitting position, Colton winced as darkness crept into the edges of his vision. The room spun, and he closed his eyes, waiting for the vertigo to subside before trying to move again.Â
It was a frustrating, endless process. Heâd manage a couple of inches before vertigo and nausea swept over him like a wave, leaving him breathing raggedly and clutching the bedsheets with sweaty palms. He wanted to give up, he truly did, but now was not the time for that. Not with so much at stake.
Seconds dragged into minutes, and it felt like an eternity before Colton managed to toss one of his legs over the side of the bed. He screwed his eyes shut in anticipation of the latest inevitable bout of sickness, balling up his hands in the sheets.
âOh, sweetheart! You shouldnât be up!âÂ
An unfamiliar, uniformed nurse scurried into the room, and Colton startled when his leg was suddenly lifted back up onto the bed. Vertigo hit him hard, and he felt dangerously close to throwing up on the nurse as they pushed his shoulders down to lever him back against the mattress. He squirmed weakly, and the nurse released him, but their hands were back just as soon as he tried to sit up again. The nurse wasnât even pressing down hard. It was agitating and a little humiliating to be pushed around so easily.
âI gotta go,â Colton slurred, his tongue feeling as if someone had run sandpaper over it. The nurse was blurring in and out of his vision, pitching back and forth as if rocked by the waves of a ship.
âNo, no,â the nurse said with a polite, if strained smile. Colton couldnât read the name on their badge. All of the words seemed out of focus.Â
The moment the nurse backed off, Colton pushed himself right back up into a sitting position and nearly toppled right off the side of the bed. A pair of familiar, strong arms caught him. A handful of words were exchanged, and Colton was left with a calloused hand pressing down on one of his shoulders, lowering him back down to the bed. When he finally managed to open his eyes again, Mabre was leaning over him. And she looked angry.
âWhat in godâs name do you think youâre doing, McKinley?â she demanded, scowling. It took Colton far longer than he would have liked to process the question.
âWhich god?â
âPick one,â Mabre said, her expression dangerously close to a snarl. âPick one and pray, because you are in so much trouble. I told you to come to me if anything happened, I told you-âÂ
âWhereâs Reilley?â Colton asked suddenly, interrupting. Mabre paused, brows furrowed. She was still angry, that much was clear to Colton, but apparently putting himself in the hospital had earned him a little extra consideration.Â
âAt the station. Heâs been taken in for questioning regarding the death of Sasha Mirazykh,â she said.
The news knocked the wind out of Colton. It hit him just as hard as a physical punch to the gut would have, if not harder.
âThatâs not Sashaâs last name,â he said, because it was all he could bring himself to say. Sashaâs betrayal was so fresh, and it hurt at least as much as his head. He was so disappointed in himself, so upset that he hadnât seen through Sasha sooner. Stupid, stupid-
âIt is his last name,â Mabre said, jarring Colton out of his train of thought. âHe was using the last name of his cousin while he was in Quoria. I assume youâre familiar with Kaleb Strizhakov?â She didnât wait for Colton to answer before continuing. âHeâs been helping us deal with the fallout of all of this. A foreign prince dying here in Quoria doesn't look good.âÂ
Colton didnât know if Mabre was aware of the fact that heâd sent Kaleb to the embassy as a distraction so that he could meet with Sasha, but he decided not to volunteer the information. He was in enough trouble as it was.
âWhat happened, Colton?â Mabre asked plainly. She was back to using his first name, and relief swept through Colton.
âAfter I caught Oliver tailing me,â he said slowly, still feeling plenty ashamed of turning away the help when heâd actually ended up needing it, âI went to a hotel to meet Sasha. It was scheduled for demolition in old town.âÂ
âThatâs where we picked you up,â Mabre confirmed. âWhy were you meeting Sasha there?â
Colton had a decision to make. He could continue to lie to Mabre to hide the fact that he had been working for Madeline, or he could come clean in the hopes that it might help with this case. He remembered having the necklace at the crime scene, but it was gone now. Did the city watch pick it up? Did Mabre know about it? If anyone found it, there was no telling what sort of assumptions they might make. Magical items were coveted, and often dangerous - or in this case, deadly.
âI was doing a job,â he said miserably, ignoring the flash of guilt that pooled in his chest as he decided to leave Madelineâs name out of it. It didnât feel good to lie to Mabre when she was so concerned about him, but couldnât bring himself to drag Madeline into all of this. âA client lost a necklace. It was very important to her, and probably magical. I thought Kaleb took it, and Sasha agreed to help me get it back. I was meeting up with him for a hand off.â
Mabre looked angry again, and Colton could assume that she had a fairly good guess as to who his client was.Â
âAnd then?â she asked, tone more than a little clipped.
âAnd then Sasha hit me. I was going into the office to meet up with him, and then⌠I woke up on the floor.â It was surprisingly terrifying to think back and recount the events that had landed him in the hospital bed. It must have shown on his face, because Mabreâs expression softened somewhat.Â
âI could hardly see, and I remember feeling like I was drowning. Sasha was in the bathroom, filling up the tub. I donât know why. We talked, but I donât remember what we said. He kicked me in the head,â Colton said, wincing at the memory. âReilley showed up after that. I donât know how he got there, but Iâm glad he came, because otherwise Iâd be dead.â His throat felt tight, and he forced himself to take a few shaky breaths.
âWhat happened after Reilley came?â Mabre asked with as much tact as Colton thought she was capable of, which was not much. Her eyebrows were furrowed, and she had a funny little frown, like she wasnât sure what expression she ought to be making. It was almost enough to put Colton at ease, to know that this one thing hadnât changed when the world itself seemed as if it had flipped upside-down.Â
âThere was splashing,â Colton recalled. âAnd slipping too. The whole bathroom must have been full of water. I thought Sasha was going to drown me in the tub,â he admitted with a choked, watery laugh. He didnât realize heâd been crying until Mabre fished a handkerchief out of her uniform and offered it to him.
âSorry,â he said, wiping his eyes.
âYou donât have to apologize for crying. Youâve been through a lot,â Mabre said stiffly.Â
Colton hadnât just been apologizing for his tears, though. He was sorry for not cooperating with Mabre, sorry for sending Oliver away, sorry for any numbers of things that had caused him to end up in that hotel room with Sasha, hurt and alone and afraid. Mabreâs kindness only ended up making him cry harder.
âDetective Darling, donât tell me that youâre bullying poor Colton in the hospital. Heâs had a difficult day,â Reilley said from the doorway. Oliver was standing next to him, looking somewhat apologetic.
Before Mabre could open her mouth, Reilley strode into the room. On the side of the bed opposite Mabre, he carefully took the handkerchief from Coltonâs hand and wiped Coltonâs tears away for him.
âYouâre doing an awful lot of crying today, my dear detective,â Reilley said with a smile. He took Coltonâs hand and gave it a squeeze, at the same time pressing a small, round object into Coltonâs palm. Colton stiffened in surprise, but otherwise forced himself not to react. âYou should be at the station,â Mabre finally said, accusatory.Â
âHavenât you heard? Iâm a witness, not a suspect. It turns out that acting in self-defense isnât as illegal as I feared it was.â Reilley said smoothly. âSashaâs death was an accident. As I told you at the crime scene, he slipped on the wet floor during our scuffle and hit his head. The coroner apparently agrees with me.â Reilley smiled. âConstable Goodkind is here for my safety, as I understand it. Iâve been told tensions run high during diplomatic incidents.â Mabre seemed unsatisfied with Reilleyâs answer, and while she grilled him on the details, Colton took the chance to look at what Reilley had given him. It was a round crystal, mostly devoid of color. There was a crack down the middle that spiderwebbed into a smaller cracks throughout, and for a moment he lost himself in trying to follow the pattern. This was the marble-like crystal from the middle of Madelineâs necklace, it had to be. Colton hadnât thought for a moment that Reilley would have picked it up, but it was a relief that he had.
âWhat have you got there?â Mabre asked, snapping Colton back to reality. She was staring at the marble. Reilley raised his eyebrows at Colton as if asking him if heâd really gone and exposed what heâd snuck in.
Colton paused. Then, concussed and panicked, he acted on the first idea that came to his mind. He quickly brought his hand to his mouth and let the marble drop inside, swallowing it like a pill.
The room went silent, and then burst into an uproar all at once. Mabre was yelling, nurses came running, and even Reilley looked stunned. All the noise made Coltonâs head hurt even worse, and he allowed himself to do the only thing that would allow him to escape the situation.
He passed right back out.
Chapter 1.14 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1 Epilogue
0 notes
Text

Chapter 14: No Getting Out Of This
Colton awoke to find his cheek pressed flush against dusty carpet with a faded pattern that was more than a few decades out of date. One hesitant breath filled his lungs with enough dust to warrant the violent coughing fit that followed. When the coughing finally died down to a gentle wheezing, he rolled himself over to stare at the water stained ceiling; a mistake, judging by the immediate and intense pain on the back of his head. Colton struggled to sit, and the room spun, making his stomach churn. He gagged and squeezed his eyes shut, trying to force the bile back down his throat.Â
When he deemed it safe to open his eyes again, he did so gradually. There was an imprint in the dust where heâd been laying, and two bloodstains. One was where his head had been when heâd rolled over, and the other, more vibrant stain traced the line of his neck, as if the blood had dripped down from his head and pooled there. He pressed a hand to the back of his neck, and his fingers came away red and sticky.
Coltonâs glasses were gone, leaving the bulk of the room a blurry mystery to him. There was a mattress nearby that had been stripped bare and stained with mysterious, long since dried fluids, making him grateful he couldnât see in detail. The curtains were patchy with moth-eaten holes, and let absolutely no light in. It was almost certainly the type of window that was pressed up against a neighboring building, which destroyed any chance of escaping through it.
The sound of running water came from beyond the open door to his right, and Colton was sure he wouldâve noticed it sooner if his pulse hadnât been pounding in his ears like an over-eager marching band. Deciding it was high time to get to his feet and book it to the nearest payphone, he pushed himself off of the ground. As he straightened up, his vision flickered, and he found himself on the floor again, almost exactly where heâd started.Â
His head felt as if it were trying to split in two, and he curled in on himself, choking back a sob. When the pain dulled enough that he could think again, he found himself managing nothing more than choked little gasps of air, eyes wet with tears.Â
Someone was laughing at him. The laugh was that of a child delighted with their holiday gift, the sort of laugh friends made when reminiscing together. It was a good laugh. A kind laugh. But Colton had no doubt that the owner of that laugh was laughing at his pain. What sort of person could laugh so innocently while watching a grown man writhe on the ground, in so much pain that he was in tears?Â
âYou made this so much harder than it had to be, but you did not suspect a thing, did you?â
An expensive shoe landed dangerously close to Coltonâs head and he flinched. Stars popped behind his eyelids at the sudden motion, leaving him out of breath and helpless until the pain subsided.Â
âYou even got what you came for. Arenât you glad?â Someone was kneeling next to him, pressing something into his hand. Something wooden. Madelineâs necklace? It was hard to make out the details of the personâs face, but that blond hair and Citarian accent made him unmistakable.
âSasha?â Colton asked, hoping desperately that he was wrong. This was so, so much more severe than a con gone sideways. Heâd trusted the wrong person, and now Sasha was going to kill him. Had already tried to kill him, if he had to guess. His chest felt tight, and his breath came in uneven stutters.Â
Sasha simply crouched next to him, smiling as he leaned over to get a better look at Colton.Â
âI- I donât-â Colton stammered, instinctively trying to shy away from Sasha and locking up when it hurt. He licked his dry lips before trying again. âI donât-â âUnderstand?â Sasha interrupted. âI did not expect that you would. What Miss Fortuna saw in you, I will never know.â Colton did not like that Sasha had taken to talking about him in the past tense. He broke out into a cold sweat as he tried to think of a way out of the mess heâd thrown himself into, his already quick pulse hammering in his ears. He was well past the point of his limited conflict de-escalation skills.
Sasha had been watching Colton go through what appeared to be the five stages of grief in less than half a second, and he smiled.
âYou donât have to do this,â Colton said, voice strained. Each word felt as if it were rattling around in his skull. âI wonât tell anyone.â âI know you will not.â Sasha said cheerfully, which was not the answer Colton had been hoping for.
âSasha, I thought we were friends,â Colton tried again. It was a pathetic, last-ditch attempt to save his own skin. Heâd really thought Sasha was on his side before heâd woken up to all of this, which made him feel even worse.
âFriends?â Sasha laughed, like Colton had told him the funniest joke heâd ever heard. âNo no no. We are rivals, if we are anything.â
It took Colton a long minute to puzzle it out, and a second to make the words. He could tell Sasha was getting impatient with him.Â
âFor M-â
âFor Miss Fortunaâs attention, yes,â Sasha finished impatiently.Â
âAnd you think that this will get her attention?âÂ
âOf course it will!â Sasha smiled brightly.
âSheâs going to hate you,â Colton managed. He watched Sasha straighten back up, momentarily confused, when suddenly that expensive shoe was flying right at his head. And then he didnât have time to feel much of anything at all. His head felt as though it were full of hot tar, and some of it dribbled out through his nose. He tasted iron, and his throat felt raw.
âOh, hush hush hush hush. I did not mean to,â Sasha said, dropping to his knees to clap a hand over Coltonâs mouth, muffling the horrible scream Colton had managed. âIt is just making me so angry when you talk. You are like the rest, you know nothing of Miss Fortuna, yet you speak as if you do. So disrespectful.â
When it was clear Colton was done screaming, Sasha released him and stood up, looking down on him for a long moment before hurrying out of sight. Judging by the dismayed little sound he made, and the sound of splashing to his right, he had gone into the bathroom.
Lukewarm water lapped at Coltonâs neck and back, soaking into the carpet. Any stray droplets that made contact with his head wound stung horribly, but he couldnât bring himself to move. The thought that Sasha might be preparing to drown him was terrifying.
The sound of the door to the suite opening was masked by the noise Sasha was making in the bathroom. Colton didnât recognize who had stepped silently into the room, and frankly, he was on the brink of unconsciousness as it was. But clearly this newcomer didnât want Sasha to hear him, and that was enough to ignite a little spark of hope in his chest.
Colton silently prayed that the newcomer was here to help him, casting his wish in the hopes that anything or anyone would somehow hear his silent cry for help. He prayed in much the same way any decent gambler at a casino would blow on a pair of dice for luck before rolling. There was nothing he could do but leave his fate up to chance. If there were ever a time for the stars he was born under to come in handy, it would be now.Â
The newcomer stepped over to him, chancing a glance down as he pressed himself up against the wall outside the bathroom. No matter how hard Colton tried to look, his eyes refused to focus. Whether that was a result of his head injury or his missing glasses didnât bear thinking about.
The moment Sashaâs footsteps started to splash towards the door, the newcomer stepped out of Coltonâs sight. Colton didnât have to strain himself to hear the startled yelling and the splashing of two pairs of feet in the bathroom. Even more water lapped at him, as if trying to pull him inside.Â
There was a heavy thump as someone was forced back against the wall, or maybe the tub, and then a splash, followed by a wet, sucking noise. Bigger waves of water pushed at Coltonâs back, soaking into his clothes and leaving him in a puddle of wet carpet.Â
Coltonâs mystery man returned, and knelt to press something up against Coltonâs bloody nose. Something fabric, maybe a tie or a handkerchief. Colton hadnât even noticed that heâd started crying until a careful hand reached down to wipe his tears away, which only made him cry more.
âYouâre going to be alright. Itâs going to hurt worse if you cry. Try to take some deep breaths, my dear detective.â
âReilley,â Colton managed, recognizing the voice, and choking out another sob. The relief that someone had found him was overwhelming.
âDeep breaths.â Reilley said. He said a few other things too, but his voice was starting to get awfully distant. That was okay. His hand was still there, and his tie. Reilley shrugged out of his jacket and folded it up, ever so gently shifting it beneath Coltonâs head.Â
It was only when Colton realized that he couldnât feel the fabric that he stopped thinking entirely, his vision pitching black around the edges.
Chapter 1.13 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.15
0 notes
Text

Chapter 1.13: Fake It 'Till You Make It
Just as Sasha had predicted, Kaleb was on the southern shore of the massive river that divided Quoria - although calling it a true shore was generous. The original sand and silt had eroded away over a century ago. The city had done its best to preserve what was left of the shoreline with a low, sheer wall of concrete concrete; but when that had proved an eyesore, theyâd covered it up with cobblestone.
Colton could relate. At times he felt heâd never truly escape his past, and that people who looked closely couldnât help but find the rough patches where the conman in him shone through. He could only hope that Kaleb wasnât one of those people.
âKaleb!â Colton called out, straining to focus on the situation at hand. He couldnât stop thinking about finally getting the necklace back, about this case finally coming to a close. It had only been two days, but it felt as though it had lasted months.Â
Kaleb had been leaning on the railing of the retaining wall, looking out at the river. The hustle and bustle of the city was nothing more than distant background noise here. He turned when Colton called, looking briefly surprised to be addressed. âColton! What a pleasant surprise. I didnât take you for someone who likes to slow down and enjoy the scenery.âÂ
Kalebâs tone was cheerful, friendly even, but Colton couldnât help but think that Kaleb sounded suspicious of him. Was he projecting, because he knew Kaleb was guilty? He hoped so. The alternative - Kaleb knowing that he was up to something - was too nerve wracking a thought to linger on.Â
âI was looking for you, actually!â Colton said, because all the best lies started with a kernel of truth. He hurried the rest of the way over to Kaleb, and lowered his voice as if he were divulging a secret. âI saw you at the bar last night, and didnât see if you got out okay when the watch rolled in.âÂ
âI thought I saw you there. You were with Jude, werenât you? She throws a good punch.â Kaleb said with a laugh.
âYeah! And you were with, uh - I donât actually know who you were with.â Colton said, with a veneer of forced cheer.
âIt doesnât matter,â Kaleb said dismissively. âI was just there for the entertainment.âÂ
Colton didnât like how Kaleb described betting on (or against) Judeâs match as entertainment. His palms felt sweaty, and there was a bad taste in his mouth.Â
âBut you did make it out okay?â he forced himself to ask, repeating his initial question.
âOh yes, Iâm perfectly fine,â Kaleb assured him. âSomeone erased the scores from the wall before the watch could get a good look, so there was no solid evidence of an organized fight. They kicked a few people out for being drunk and disorderly, but there was no real harm done.â
Normally, Colton rooted against the watch. They stuck their nose in everyoneâs business, and frankly, as an ex-conman, some habits (like fleeing from the authorities) were hard to break. But in this particular case, he was disappointed that no one had seen any real consequences. After meeting Jude, it was obvious to him that the bulk of the fighters were only participating because they desperately needed the money. There was no sport in something like that. Not unless one happened to be the sort of wildly rich person who enjoyed watching poor folks beat the snot out of each other. Few people who were down on their luck had the skills to be a conman like he had been.
âThatâs a pretty lucky break,â Colton said, wondering just how long he could hold Kaleb here with conversation alone. Another minute or two at best, if he had to guess. That wasnât nearly enough time for Sasha to get back home, let alone search Kalebâs room.
âIt was,â Kaleb said, smiling briefly. âThank you for checking in on me. It was nice seeing you again.â
âIt was nice to see you too,â Colton said. It was clear to Colton that the conversation was rapidly dwindling down to obligatory pleasantries. He needed to think of something, and fast. He was certain that Kaleb trusted him to some degree, and he could exploit that trustâŚbut Kaleb was also a politically powerful individual, and if anything went wrong with his and Sashaâs plan, there would be hell to pay for it.
On the other hand, Kaleb was getting ready to walk away. If he said anything, it would have to be now.Â
âOh! I almost forgot - Sasha said he was looking for you? I met him outside Miss Fortunaâs place. Someone smashed all the windows in, and he was pretty upset about it. It was actually a little scary,â Colton admitted with a sheepish laugh. âI was so glad to see you werenât in lockup that it slipped my mind.â
Kaleb was frowning, but Colton had his full attention. Presumably because Sasha was terribly sweet on Miss Fortuna, and had enough political power to start real trouble over it. The lie had just enough truth behind it to hold some real weight, although the implication that Sasha was about to start a whole mess of trouble for Kaleb helped too. People didnât look too closely at the details when they were panicked.Â
âDid he say where he was going?â Kaleb asked. Colton didnât think heâd ever heard Kaleb sound so concerned before, and he wouldâve felt bad about it if he wasnât certain that Kaleb had been the one to smash Miss Fortunaâs windows in the first place. It wouldnât look good for Citarik to have two of their nobles starting an incident abroad, and it would look even worse for the guilty party involved.Â
âIâm not sure. He kind of ran off in a huff,â Colton said apologetically. He tried to look as though he were thinking awfully hard. And he was! But he was thinking about how sending Kaleb on a hopeless errand would buy more time for Sasha. âI think he mentioned something about the embassy?âÂ
âThank you,â Kaleb said quickly. âI should go see if he needs any help.â
âGood luck! I hope you catch whoever broke those windows.â Colton said on reflex, immediately mad at himself for being so cheeky. He hoped it had come out sounding genuine.
Thankfully for him, Kaleb left in too much of a hurry to pay his comment any mind. It could still come back to bite him later, but if Sasha worked quickly, then it wasnât something he was going to have to worry about.
Colton lingered to watch Kaleb disappear in the direction of the Embassy before starting towards the meeting place Sasha had picked out; An old building that was due to be torn down any day now. Construction workers wouldnât be a problem on weekends like today, and they wouldnât have to worry about the building coming down around their ears either. Plus it was secluded, which was the most important part. If anyone saw Sasha handing off the necklace, they might get the wrong idea. Or worse, tell Kaleb what they saw.Â
The historic district of the city was littered with old buildings, and Colton saw more and more of them as he made his way further in. Lots of brick buildings and old gas lamps that had been refitted with light bulbs. A lot of preservation work went into the main street, but not so much the side streets and the old suburbs. There was even a famous old city watch station still in operation, although he went out of his way to avoid that.
Still, Colton couldnât shake the sense that he was being followed. At first his nerves made him think it was Kaleb, but that didnât make sense. Kaleb had believed him so completely that heâd practically run off, and in the right direction too. That meant someone else was tailing him, or he was developing a sense of sudden, onset paranoia.
Likely the latter. And if he was wrong, well, that was something he could get looked into. In an attempt to lure out his pursuer, Colton ducked into one of the many worn out alleyways that littered this district. As soon as he was sure he was out of sight, he sprinted to the other end and turned the corner, pressing himself back up against the dirty wall.
A pair of footsteps stopped at the mouth of the alleyway, and then suddenly started up again as someone sprinted down the end of the alley. Bracing himself for the worst, Colton waited until they had just turned the corner to jump out in front of them.
Oliver shrieked and tried to course correct, but ended up tripping over his own feet and sprawling onto the ground.
âOliver!â Colton said, immensely relieved to find that the man was not Kaleb, or some cutpurse with a knife. Jumping out in front of a potentially armed stranger was a terrible idea.
âDonât jump out at people like that!â Oliver said as he got to his feet, dusting off the front of his uniform. Judging by the way he was moving, he had a few new scrapes beneath it.
âDonât tail people!â Colton shot back. âWhy are you following me?â
Oliver flushed red up to the tips of his ears, embarrassed. Clearly getting caught had not been a part of the plan. And there was no way to deny what heâd been up to either, not after following Colton down a deserted alleyway in the middle of old town.Â
âIâm just doing my job.â He said weakly.
âYeah? Who told you to follow me?â Colton demanded. Oliver was silent, so he tried again. âThereâs no way itâs legal for you stick your nose in my personal life without a reason. Itâs harassment, at least.â
âItâs not!â Oliver said, visibly unable to contain himself. âMabre said you mightâve gotten yourself into trouble, and that I should watch you. Itâs like protective custody, without the custody part.â
âI didnât ask for your help. And I donât want it.â The fact that Mabre knew something was amiss was troubling. But even so, this case was about to be solved just as soon as Oliver minded his own business. That was the watch for you. It was like they were making it their personal mission to bother him.
âBut-â
âNo! Go back to Mabre right now and tell her to knock it off, or Iâm going to file a formal complaint with the watch captains.â Colton was not going to do any such thing, but apparently the threat of getting the captains involved at all was enough to make Oliver back down.Â
âWe havenât done anything wrong. Filing a complaint will just make a lot of paperwork,â Oliver said, wilting somewhat at the idea of it.
âItâll leave a mark on your records if it goes through,â Colton said. âAnd Iâm willing to file as many complaints as it takes. You canât just follow people around without asking! Itâs- Itâs unethical!â He had no idea if that was true, but he was upset, and he knew that officers hated having words like unethical and immoral thrown at them. Especially in writing.
âI donât think it isâŚâ Oliver said, looking more and more worn down as the conversation went on. âIâm just trying to help you, Colton.â
âAnd I appreciate that, I do. But I donât need your help right now. I donât know what you and Mabre think is going on, but I donât want you following me around like some sort of criminal. Itâs not a good look, Oliver! I get that I used to be a conman, but Iâm trying to do better now, and getting followed around by an officer in uniform is not going to help me. People are going to think Iâm up to something, or that Iâm dangerous!â Despite Oliverâs bad timing, he was genuinely upset about being followed without his consent. The watch had made him plenty nervous back when he was actually doing cons, and that anxiety had never gone away.
âIâm sorry,â Oliver said, defeated. He looked very much like a dog that had gotten into the bin and been caught in the act.Â
âJust go. I need a little time alone right now.âÂ
Oliver looked like he wanted to say something else, but he closed his mouth and shuffled off towards the main street.
Colton waited for Oliverâs footsteps to fade into the distance, and took a few deep breaths. In, out. In, out.
He could be upset about this later. Right now he needed to find Sasha.
The feeling that he was being followed lingered even after he course corrected and started moving again. He stuck to the back alleys the best he was able, even though he knew that heâd caught the person tailing him already. A few extra twists and turns made him feel more secure, so he took them wherever it was possible.Â
The meeting place was an old, brick hotel that had long since fallen into disrepair. Colton lingered in the nearest alleyway, but plucked up the courage to enter after one last glance behind him. He hurried to the front door and pushed it open, stepping inside.Â
Dust was everywhere, and he could clearly see a set of footprints on the floor. Sashaâs, he hoped. He followed them behind the front counter, past the abandoned keyrack, and into the manager's office.
There were footprints everywhere in this room, as if someone had been pacing around the old desk in the center. He noticed that one set of footprints went behind the door.
He turned to look, but something hard smacked into his temple. His vision flickered as he fell to the floor, and he caught a glimpse of expensive, leather shoes before everything turned to black.
Chapter 1.12 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.14
0 notes
Text

Chapter 1.12: I'm Having A Hard Time Coming Up With Chapter Titles That Aren't Spoilers But Trust Me It's Good
Colton needed to find Sasha.Â
Thankfully, Sasha was not a hard man to find. Colton knew that Madeline was with Jude, but Sasha didnât, which made his first stop Madeline's shop. He didnât remember exactly when Sasha had made his next appointment, but he knew Sasha was sweet on Madeline. Being in love made people do silly things, like pretend to forget appointment times just for a chance to talk to their crush for a couple of minutes.
Sasha was right where Colton had expected him to be, but he looked uncharacteristically worried. One of his hands was covering his mouth, and he took a shaky step back, a stray piece of glass crunching beneath his shoe. He looked helplessly from Colton to the store front and back again.
The shop windows were broken, every single one of them, and the frames were on the ground floor were cordoned off with rope barricades. They were normal windows, not the type used for glass storefronts, but breaking all six of them couldnât have been easy. Small bits of glass fell down from the second floor, and Colton shielded his eyes, taking a step back and waiting for the wind to die down before he dared to look up.Â
At least two of the windows on the second floor had holes punched through them, and cracks were spread across the glass like a spiderweb. It looked to him like someone had thrown a brick through them, or perhaps a rock. Coltonâs heart sank until he was sure it was somewhere near his feet. Glass was harder than it looked. Throwing a heavy object hard enough to break a distant window was no easy feat, and someone had done it twice.Â
The telltale tinkle of glass drew Coltonâs attention as someone dusted a little glass away from the edge of the windowsill from the inside. A member of the city watch, judging by the glimpse of a brown tunic Colton could see from down on the street. The watch tended to work fast. Mabre had more or less told him that she was the lead on this case, too, which meant she wouldnât be happy to see him here. Heâd promised to call if anything came up with Madeline - although to be fair, Mabre had presumably beaten him to the shop this time. A guilty part of Colton wondered if that wouldâve still been the case if he hadnât slept in or taken so long eating lunch with Reilley.
âDonât worry, Ma-Miss Fortunaâs safe,â Colton said, quickly correcting himself when Sasha glanced back to him again, not wanting to let Madelineâs identity slip. The man looked like he was feeling every possible negative emotion simultaneously, and Colton was compelled to help put him at ease. To try, at least. He couldnât exactly do a lot of good in the face of such a targeted attack on Madelineâs business. Sure, he had a good idea of who had done it, but the idea of trying to get a member of the royal family of Citarik arrested was laughable.Â
âShe is?â Sasha asked, relieved. âBut where-â
âWith a friend,â Colton said, cutting Sasha off. He quickly stepped forward to link his arm with Sashaâs and lead him away from the crime scene. It was best to get going before the good members of the city watch noticed him. âI ran into her last night, and she mentioned it to me. I doubt she knows what happened to her shop.â Heâd done more than run into Madeline, but he had a feeling that Sasha wouldnât be pleased to learn that heâd gone out to a bar with her, what with his poorly concealed crush.Â
âThen we should be telling her,â Sasha said, frowning. âOr the city watch.âÂ
âWe canât. Not yet.â Colton said. Sasha looked like he was about to object, so he quickly picked up where heâd left off. âI think I know who did it, but if word gets out, he might destroy the evidence.âÂ
Sasha frowned, and dug his heels in, forcing Colton to stop in the shadow of a nearby building. Madelineâs shop was still visible down the street, the rope barricades and broken glass making it more prominent than any other building.Â
âSasha-â Colton started, only for Sasha to cut him off instead.
âNo. It is my turn to speak. What is going on here, Colton?â Sasha stared Colton down, refusing to budge so much as an inch as Colton pulled gently and fruitlessly at their linked arms. Colton wasnât that strong, but heâd thought he was at least stronger than Sasha.
âOkay, okay, okay.â Colton said nervously, more aware than ever that he was speaking to someone directly related to the King of Citarik. He steeled himself for Sashaâs reaction, whatever it might be. âThe necklace I told you I was looking for? Itâs Miss Fortuna's. Someone stole it. Afterwards someone started breaking her windows, and now its escalated to this. She asked me not to tell anyone. She didnât want to worry her clients.â That wasnât the full story, but it was close enough, and Colton was sure it would be enough information to satisfy Sasha. Heâd just gone and told one of her most influential clients exactly what heâd been told to keep a secret - the least he could do was only share what he absolutely had to.
âSomeone is targeting her? Who? Tell me who dares!â Sasha demanded, stunned, then furious. Colton had never seen Sasha angry before, and he thought he could go without ever seeing it again. He was thankful he wasnât the one whoâd stolen that necklace, because the way Sasha was suddenly glowering made it clear that someone was going to pay dearly for it. His usually kind, blue eyes now looked more like he had two chips of ice in his skull, and his white, white teeth were more visible than ever.
âShh! Calm down!â The look Sasha shot Colton was withering, and he quickly backpedaled. âIâm upset too, but we canât go around looking like it. Heâs gonna get away with this if we canât act naturally.âÂ
Sasha appeared to accept Coltonâs point, even though he didnât like it. He took a few deep breaths, clenching and relaxing his hands as he forced himself to relax his expression. Colton was more relieved than he could put into words, and he didnât try.
âIt was Kaleb,â Colton said, bracing himself for the inevitable indignation and anger Sasha would undoubtedly feel. People didnât like to hear that their close friends or relatives were responsible for their missing objects, or petty crimes.Â
âKaleb?â Sasha said, eyes wide. He looked like he couldnât believe what he was hearing. It was a genuine sort of shock, the sort that was impossible to fake, and Colton felt bad for him.Â
âI know itâs not easy to hear something like this, but I need your help to make it right. I think Kaleb took the necklace and broke all those windows to stop you from going there. He hates the occult, and we both know about his violent little club.â Colton talked fast because he was nervous, and because he wasnât sure how much time he had until Sashaâs shock wore off.Â
âI think heâs been doing all of this to stop you from visiting Miss Fortuna. I donât know how things are back in Citarik, but maybe he thinks a member of the royal family visiting a fortune teller makes everyone look bad. Or maybe he just really, really hates the occult. But heâs got motive, means and opportunity.â
âPerhaps I should have taken my appearance into more consideration,â Sasha said almost guiltily. âI suppose it would not look so good from Kalebâs point of view⌠But even so, that is no reason to torment Miss Fortuna.âÂ
Sasha seemed to be coming to terms with what Colton was saying, however slowly. âYou said you need my help?â he asked hesitantly. Colton sympathized. This was a lot to take in.Â
âI do. I need you to find the necklace. Itâs made of wood, with a crystal embedded into it. Thatâs the evidence we need. Iâd get it myself, but thereâs no way I could get away with breaking into the house of a foreign dignitary, even if it was for a good cause.â
âSo you want me to find and take this necklace while youâŚdistract Kaleb?â Sasha asked. Colton had to give him credit, he caught on fast.
âThatâs the plan. I find him and keep him busy, and you grab the necklace. Then we can meet back up and give it back to Miss Fortuna.â Theyâd have to decide on whether or not to loop in the city watch, too, given Kalebâs position in Citarik. How had finding one necklace put him on the verge of starting a diplomatic incident?Â
âBut you have to find him, first...â Sasha pointed out. âAnd I think I might know where he is.â
Chapter 1.11 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.13
0 notes
Text

Chapter 1.11: My Dear Detective
Colton dashed down the street, woefully underdressed, with hair that was still damp from what had been the fastest shower of his life. Heâd been forced to forgo his one good suit for dark slacks and a shirt that werenât covered in a visible layer of grime. His socks were mismatched, and one of the straps of his suspenders had been twisted around the wrong way.
The Lionâs Head Pub was too close to warrant waiting for a trolley, but far enough that he had to have been nearly twenty minutes late by the time he spotted the brick building. The storefront was practically all windows showing off the many tables inside, and even the door was made of mostly glass, with the name of the pub in vinyl lettering near the top.
In his hurry to meet Reilley, Colton wrenched open the door and ran right into someone who was exiting. He apologized profusely, stepping out of the way and tuning out the manâs scolding as he looked around the room for Reilley. Thankfully Reilleyâs blonde hair made him easy to pick out of a crowd, and Colton found him sitting at a table for two near one of the windows, staring right back at him.Â
Colton flushed and hurried over, sliding into the seat opposite Reilley. There was a glass of water and a glass of soda on the table, both clearly having been there for awhile, judging by the condensation that had gathered on the outside of the glass. He instantly felt worse about making Reilley wait, and took a drink of his somewhat watery soda as he tried to catch his breath enough to apologize.
âDonât worry, I can tell you didnât intend to stand me up,â Reilley said, looking Colton over.
âI didnât mean to - I would never,â Colton said, floundering.
Reilley laughed. âI didnât think you would, my dear detective. You had a rather hectic evening, if I recall.âÂ
âI did, yeah,â Colton said, feeling even more flustered all of a sudden. My dear detective, that was a new one.Â
âIâm glad to see that you got home in one piece. Iâll admit, I was somewhat concerned.â
âIs that why you made up plans with me?â Colton asked. He was getting some mixed signals from Reilley about whether or not this was a date, but everything with Reilley made him feel like he was out of his depth. He had a feeling that was how Reilley liked it.
âLetâs just say that if you hadnât shown up, I wouldâve known exactly who you were with when youâd gone missing.â Reilley said, smiling around the rim of his glass as he took a sip of water.
âThatâs- well, thatâs actually pretty clever.â Colton said, pausing as thought about it. He seriously doubted that Sasha of all people was a threat to his safety, but Reilleyâs line of thinking was sound.
âThank you. I do try,â Reilley said with another polite smile. It looked to Colton as though he mightâve had something more to say, but the waitress drifted over, bringing the conversation to a halt.
âWould you like a refill on that?â The waitress asked, motioning to Coltonâs glass. Somehow heâd managed to drink the entire thing over the course of his conversation with Reilley. Running all the way to the pub was thirsty work.
âPlease. And I could I get an order of fish and chips as well?â He hadnât eaten anything since the night before, he just hadnât slowed down enough to realize it until just then. Hadnât so much as glanced at the menu, either, but any self-respecting pub in Quoria had fish and chips.
âSure thing, hon. And can I get anything for you?â she asked, turning to Reilley.
âIâll have the shrimp and lemongrass soup, please.â
âGood choice. Let me grab that refill for you,â the waitress said. She took Coltonâs glass after she finished scribbling down their orders, and returned with a full glass only moments later. She placed it in front of Colton with a smile before hurrying off to check on her other tables.
âSo, you wanted to make sure I got home safe? Thatâs nice of you,â Colton said, refocusing on Reilley.Â
âI think it was a reasonable concern, considering you were chased into one of my dressing rooms last night.â Reilley said, smiling wryly.
âThings got a little out of hand with that case Iâm working on.â Colton admitted.
Reilley raised his eyebrows. âOnly a little? I would hate to see what it would look like if things really spiralled out of control. I hope you at least found a lead for all your trouble.â
âI did, actually!â Colton said, immediately perking up. He lowered his voice and leaned forward, not wanting anyone else in the pub to overhear what he was about to say. âIâm pretty sure Kaleb Strizhakov stole the necklace Iâm looking for.â
âMy, my. And you still let Sasha walk you home last night?âÂ
âSashaâs harmless,â Colton said defensively. âJust look at him. The guy couldnât hurt someone even if he wanted to.âÂ
âLooks can be deceiving.â Reilley said.
âYou canât really think Sashaâs dangerous. Donât tell me youâre jealous?â Colton said, taking the opportunity to tease Reilley, a poorly hidden smile tugging at the corners of his lips.
âPerish the thought,â Reilley said, perfectly composed as always. âI assume youâve given up on getting that necklace back?â
âWhat? No. Iâll figure something out. Arenât you arenât going to ask me how I know it was him?â
âDid you want me to?â Reilley asked, sounding amused. He laughed softly at Coltonâs expression, clearly having caught him off guard. âIâm only kidding, detective. Tell me, how do you know Kaleb is your culprit?â
Colton was embarrassed, but not embarrassed enough to keep his mouth shut. Not when Reilley was going out of his way to indulge him - although he was careful to keep Madelineâs name out of his explanation. âHeâs got motive, means and opportunity. He doesnât like my client or their work, and heâs strong enough to have vandalized some of their property. With his connections, he could have easily done it without getting caught - and heâs familiar with my clientâs place of business. He knows his way around, so he could have broken in and found what he was looking for relatively quickly.â
âAnd heâs the sort of person to solve his problems with violence, I suppose?â
âYeah. Heâs into bloodsports. Fight clubs, that sort of thing. He likes betting on them, itâs how he gets his kicks. I saw it myself. But how did you know that?âÂ
âLucky guess,â Reilley said with a shrug. âResorting to vandalism on top of theft implies a certain amount of anger is involved.âÂ
âYouâre right about that,â Colton said with a sigh, running a hand through his hair. âItâs not going to be easy to get the necklace back from him. How do you accuse the royal family of theft?â
âI would say youâre better off giving up.â
âThat isnât very helpful.â Colton frowned.
âNeither is picking a fight with the royal family. Iâd suggest telling your client what you know and leaving it at that, for both of your sakes. Nothing good ever came of causing a diplomatic incident.â Reilley said, with the tone of someone who had caused enough of them to know better. Heâd caused at least one, Colton knew that much. Reilley had admitted as much when theyâd first met over lunch.
The conversation came to a halt a second time as their waitress returned with their food, and Colton picked at his fries, thankful for the extra time to think of a response. Yes, going after the royal family was foolish. Downright stupid, really. He would end up starting a diplomatic incident if he got into trouble, or worse, Kaleb might try to hurt him. But he couldnât stand to let Madeline down, especially not now that he knew the culprit. One way or another, he was going to get that necklace back.
âJust try to be careful if youâre determined to do something foolhardy,â Reilley said, surprising Colton yet again with how adept he was at picking up on nonverbal cues.
âIâll be careful. Iâm not about to do anything outrageous.âÂ
Reilley eyed him doubtfully.
âI can be careful,â Colton said, just a touch defensively. âIâll be the most careful man this side of the river. Youâll see.â
âThe whole point of being careful is not to be seen.â Reilley pointed out, finally starting in on his soup. âDo try to remember that.â
Chapter 1.10 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.11
0 notes
Text

Chapter 1.10: New Friends In High Places
âSorry about all this,â Colton said, walking almost painfully slowly so that he could keep pace with Sasha. His legs were so much longer that his usual stride would have left the much shorter man in the dust. Even the most well-lit streets were awfully dark this time of night, and he didnât relish the idea of finding himself alone in them. People were bolder in the dark, where people couldnât easily identify them, especially criminals. And he couldnât always talk his way out of a bad situation, that was a lesson heâd learned a long time ago. The guttering streetlamps felt awfully ominous, like a scene out of a radio drama, and he was more grateful than ever to have Sasha with him. There were plenty of better targets than Sasha, people who werenât as well known, and wouldnât be missed. And Sasha would be very, very missed.Â
âThere is no need for apologies. Anyone with a heart would do this,â Sasha assured him, waving off the very notion with an air of what Colton could only assume was nobility. His movements were fluid and graceful, like heâd been practicing them all his life. Colton was sure he looked gangly and awkward by comparison, and found himself slouching so that he was closer to Sashaâs height.Â
Colton found himself at a loss for what to say next, and was grasping for any appropriate conversational topic the way a desperate, drowning man wouldâve grasped at a life preserver. Sashaâs royal status was intimidating, especially now that it was all that stood between him and a night in lockup. He had to watch what he said, especially with how perceptive Sasha seemed to be. Usually he avoided people that he felt could see right through him, but this was a special case. One that left him at a deeply uncomfortable loss for words.
âYou might have to pick Kaleb up from the station.â Colton said, and immediately regretted opening his mouth.Â
âOr, I mean, he couldâve talked his way out of an arrest,â he added, hurriedly.
âHe will be fine,â Sasha said with a heavy sigh, apparently unconcerned with Kalebâs whereabouts. Colton couldnât help but think that being a member of Citarian nobility had a lot more benefits than heâd originally thought. âI do not think the watchmen will be arresting him. A report would have to be filed at the embassy, and it is too much work. Not that I would be minding so much if they did. His endorsement of bloodsports is shameful. A night in a cell might do him good. Maybe he will rethink this fighting club he attends - and if not, at least he will not be bothering me about visiting Miss Fortuna so often.â He laughed softly, and the gentle sound carried in the empty streets.
âKaleb bugs you about that?â Colton frowned, glancing down at Sasha. He was supposed to be leading the way to his building, but he found himself terribly distracted by the conversation. With luck, he wouldnât trip over the cracked, uneven sidewalk.
âOh yes, he loves to tell me that I am wasting my time there. He does not like the occult, you see. He thinks it is all a con to take the money of believers. I do not think he likes her very much at all,â Sasha explained. There was real magic, no one could doubt that, but there were plenty of frauds in the world, and witches had a bad enough reputation as it was. People loved the convenience of magic, but the folks who used it were often seen as volatile and dangerous.
Colton laughed nervously, and tried not to think of the times heâd pulled off that exact con. He had no doubt that Sasha would disapprove of the fact that heâd preyed on guileless people like him in the past. It wasnât something he felt good about, these days.
âDo not tell me you are of the same opinion?â Sasha asked, sounding disappointed.
âNo, Iâm not!â Colton said hurriedly, already feeling bad about the misunderstanding. âI mean, I think there are some people who take advantage of others like that, but I donât think Miss Fortunaâs one of them. Sheâs so dedicated to her work, she has to be the real deal.âÂ
Sasha was silent for an agonizingly long moment, and then hummed his assent.Â
âYou are right, of course,â he said, and Colton breathed a sigh of relief. âBut of course you would be. You are a detective! You must be good at seeing through lies.âÂ
âI like to think that I am,â Colton said as they rounded the corner closest to his shop. The dark lettering on the door was barely visible in the dark. He fished around in his pockets for the keys, instantly reminded of how grimy his suit was. Filth clung to his fingers in a thin, greasy layer, and he very nearly dropped his keys just as soon as heâd found them.
âThanks for walking me home.â The key slid into the lock with minimal fumbling, and the door swung open. Suddenly, he was exhausted, and wanted nothing more than to crawl into his bed after the nights misadventures.Â
âIt was no trouble, as you Quorians say,â Sasha said with a smile. âI could hardly be facing Mr. Briscoe again if anything happened to you before your date.â
âItâs, uh, itâs not a date. I donât think itâs a date⌠Is it a date?â Colton asked, pausing halfway inside to turn back around and look at Sasha. Somehow he felt nervous, hopeful, and sick to his stomach all at once.
âI do not know! That is for you to find out, my friend,â Sasha said with a laugh, gesturing for Colton to head inside. âBest of luck either way. Try to get some rest now.â
Colton nodded and retreated inside his darkened office, waving Sasha off through the windows. As soon as Sasha was out of sight, he made his way upstairs, shucking off pieces of his filthy suit as he walked, leaving a messy trail of discarded clothing behind him. When he finally crawled under his blankets, he fell asleep in his underwear and socks, with his glasses askew, as heâd forgotten to take them off at all.
[***]
A constant ringing intruded on Coltonâs consciousness. Four long rings, an uneven silence, and then four more rings. He curled in on himself, pulling his blanket over his head. When that didnât muffle the noise, he tried burying his head under his pillow. The ringing continued, and eventually he woke up to recognize the sound for what it was: his phone.
Colton shot out of bed, racing for the door to his flat, yanking it open, and abruptly closing it again upon realizing how little he was wearing. He rushed to his closet to grab a button-up shirt, glancing around the room for a pair of clean slacks. The pair heâd tossed to the floor at the edge of his bed - not the dirty pair from last night - were relatively clean, if a little wrinkled. He pulled them on and made for the door, taking the stairs two at a time all the way down to his office as he pulled on his shirt.
The phone rung again, and this time he managed to answer it, practically throwing himself over his desk to do so.Â
âHello? McKinley Detective Agency,â he said, winded.
âFinally. I was starting to think you were dead,â came a tired, rather monotone voice from the other end of the line. âThis is Jude, by the way,â she added, much to Coltonâs relief, because he hadnât instantly recognized her voice.
âJude! Hey! No, Iâm not dead. I had a run in with the Watch, but I made it home in one piece. How about you guys? Is Madeline still with you?â
âYeah, sheâs upstairs. Iâm calling from my dormitory. The other girls are going to be mad at me for hogging the phone all morning.âÂ
âSorry about that,â Colton said, sheepishly. He didnât know how long heâd tried to ignore the phone while he was in bed, and frankly, he didnât want to.Â
âItâs fine. So, Madeline gave me your business card. Youâre a detective? Were you looking into something at the bar last night?â Jude sounded interested, but not overly eager.Â
âI wasnât, but I ended up finding something anyway.â Colton paused, turning an idea over in his mind. He had a pretty good idea about who might have a grudge against Miss Fortuna after his chat with Sasha, but he still had to actually catch Kaleb before accusing him of anything. âDo you think Madeline could stay with you for another day? I really hate to impose, but I think Iâm about to solve a case, and I donât want her to get pulled into it.â
âSure,â Jude replied instantly. âYou risked a lot to get me my camera back, and you didnât have to. I donât even remember if I had time to say thanks, so consider this my thank you.âÂ
âYou donât owe me for that,â Colton said, although it mightâve been easier on him if he hadnât. âI donât want this to be a transactional thing. I did that because I wanted to help, not because I had to.â
âAnd Iâm doing this because I want to help, not because I have to,â Jude shot back evenly. âGo solve your case, Mr. Detective. I canât stay on the phone all day. The cafeteriaâs about to open for lunch, and Iâve still got to go grab Madeline.â
There was a sinking feeling in Coltonâs chest. It was heavy, and cold, and he realized heâd forgotten something important. A glance at the clock confirmed his fears: it was less than five âtill twelve, and the Lionâs Head pub was halfway across town.
Chapter 1.09 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.11
1 note
¡
View note
Text

Chapter 1.09: I Keep Hitting Escape But The Cops Are Still Here
Colton clambered on top of the dumpster, pulse pounding in his ears. He tried to ignore the flaky, crusted grime that covered the lid, and reached down to help pull Jude up. He offered Madeline his hand next, and Jude followed suit, helping him pull her up alongside the two of them.
âH-hey!â Someone yelled from The Hard Times Bar and Saloonâs back door. Oliver, maybe, if Colton had to guess - but he wasnât going to wait around and find out for certain. He hopped off the back of the dumpster, landing on the street next to the bar. There was a commotion coming from the front of the bar, just out of his line of sight - yelling, and the sound of a bottle smashing against the ground. Colton hurriedly turned around to help Jude and Madeline down, only to find that they had already made it to the ground.
Ignoring the constableâs shouts to stay put, Colton took off with Jude and Madeline in tow. He knew the back alleys of the city better than most, and he knew which side streets led where. If they were being followed by anyone competent, it wouldnât be enough to throw them off, but it would buy a little extra time.
âWhy are weâŚrunningâŚ? We didnât doâŚanything wrong,â Madeline managed, gasping as they came to a stop at the end of an alleyway. It split into two smaller paths going in opposite directions, and was a decent enough place for everyone to catch their breath. The commotion from the bar was still audible, the sound carrying through the empty streets.
âWell,â Colton said after a few gulps of air. âI lied to Mabre about helping you out, and she is going to blow her top if she finds out. Iâm also pretty sure that fight club was illegal.âÂ
âYeah, it was illegal,â Jude agreed. Colton was surprised to see she had barely broken a sweat.
âI cannot go to jail, Colton. Do you know how bad that would look?â Madeline asked, brow furrowed, her teeth worrying her bottom lip.
âReally bad?â Colton offered, unhelpfully. He backpedaled after a glance at Madeline, who was glaring at him. âItâs fine, Iâve got a plan. Theyâre only looking for one group of people, so we should split up. Iâll head off in one direction and try to lure the watch away, and you two go off the opposite way. That way even if you do get caught, you wonât be half as suspicious with me gone. You can make some story up about Jude getting mugged.â
âWhat are you going to do if you get caught?â Madeline asked.
âIâm not going to get caught,â Colton said with more confidence than he actually had. He could hear footsteps in the distance, and they were getting closer. âAnd we can find each other tomorrow. Hurry, someoneâs coming!âÂ
Jude took Madeline by the hand and took off down one of the side paths, cutting off whatever objection she might have had. Colton turned on his heel and went the opposite way, bringing his feet down hard on the concrete and knocking a glass bottle off the corner of a nearby dumpster to make some noise.
When he was sure someone was following him - the city watch, hopefully, and not a stranger who was going to knife him in a back alley - Colton took off running in earnest. He dodged garbage cans and discarded beer bottles, and even squeezed through a narrow, grimy space between buildings when he felt that whoever was chasing him was starting to get too close. His suit was quickly becoming something that only a dry cleaner could salvage.
The market district was a great place to hide during the day, always bustling with crowds and vendors, but at night, it was eerily silent. Most shops had long since closed for the day, and the only real source of light was from a corner store at the end of the street. Two people in awfully recognizable tunics stepped out of the doorway, and Colton knew he was in trouble. Clearly the city watch was in better shape than heâd thought, to beat him all the way here. And they were damn good at their jobs, seeing as they managed to spot him in the dark.Â
âHey! Stop right there!â the constables called, already making their way towards him.
Colton ran. Wandering around the market district in the dark was terribly suspicious, no matter what way he looked at it. There was no explanation he could give that would excuse his being there. He would look like a thief, or worse, and seeing as he was already on the run from the law, there was no point in stopping.
The constables werenât close enough to grab him yet, but they were steadily gaining ground. Colton turned a corner, then another, trying to shake them, but it wasnât working.Â
Just when he thought his legs might give out, a beacon of hope appeared in front of him. A tailor shop of hope, more specifically. The neon sign in the window was simple and generic, but as he drew closer, he was sure that he recognized the figure behind the counter, speaking to a customer. Colton burst in, dashing past Reilley and the person at the counter, and practically threw himself into a dressing room.
Silence fell over the shop, and Colton was sure that his heart was beating so loudly that everyone in the shop could hear it. He couldnât even hear himself breathe over the way his pulse pounded in his ears.
âSorry to disturb you, but have you seen anything odd tonight?â someone asked, and Colton felt his heart drop. Oliver. Colton hadnât even heard anyone come in behind him, and chances were, if Oliver was here- âWeâve had reports of a suspicious figure in the area,â said Mabre.
-then so was Mabre. Colton barely dared to breathe, terrified that Reilley or the customer heâd seen was about to give him up. It wasnât like he really knew either of them, and running into the shop with the city watch on his tail was not a good look by any stretch of the imagination.
âI have seen no one but Reilley,â the customer said, a Citarin accent coloring his words. Colton was surprised to recognize the voice as Sashaâs. âI assume he is not the one you are looking for? We have been here maybe an hour. I was getting fitted for a new suit.âÂ
âAnd you havenât seen anything either?âÂ
Mabre didnât sound like she believed Sasha, and it was making Colton terribly nervous. It sounded like one of the two constables was walking around the shop, and he crammed himself onto the little bench at the end of the dressing room in the hopes that his feet wouldnât be visible through the gap between the door and the floor.
âNot a thing, besides Sasha. Taking measurements is awfully precise work. Iâm ashamed to admit that I wasnât keeping a proper eye on the rest of the shop, let alone the windows,â Reilley said, sounding apologetic.
Colton held his breath as a pair of boots came to a stop just outside the dressing room heâd managed to cram himself into. Time seemed to stand still, leaving him with nothing but his own pulse pounding in his ears and the faint hope that the flimsy door separating him from the rest of the shop would remain closed. And then, suddenly, the boots stepped away, and he could breathe again.
âPlease give us a call if anything comes up,â Oliver chirped, and the pair of boots - probably his - made their way back over to the front counter. âWeâll get out of your hair now. Sorry to interrupt!â
The front door opened, and shut again, leaving the shop in relative silence. Colton didnât dare speak, or open the dressing room door, worried Mabre and Oliver might come back any second. A minute dragged on, then two, then three.Â
âYou can come out now, Colton,â Reilley finally said.Â
Colton made his way out of the dressing room, moving like a wobbly, newborn foal trying to stand for the first time. All that running and crouching had his legs feeling like jelly.
âWhat was that all about?â Reilley asked, raising his eyebrows.
âI was investigating a case,â Colton said, leaning heavily on the front counter.
âIn such a way that the city watch needs to be chasing you?â Sasha asked, looking at Colton with his big, blue eyes in such a way that Colton was sure heâd see through any lie in an instant.Â
âThey had bad timing. I was talking to a lead over at BBâs place and there was a fight club going on out back. Kaleb was there. Or he was before the city watch got called. They might have caught him, I didnât stick around long enough to see.â
âOf course he was,â Sasha said with a heavy sigh. âHe is always getting into trouble. He partakes in betting on this shameful fighting ring, I am sure.âÂ
âThatâs what it looked like he was doing,â Colton agreed. âI donât know if he couldâve talked his way out of that one.â
âI take it you found a lead at Harlowâs?â Reilley interrupted, looking amused.
âI did, actually, thank you very much. You could have told me they were like that,â he said, frowning.
âYou like Harlowâs too?â Sasha asked. âI go there often. What were you looking for? Maybe I have seen it.â
âA necklace,â Colton said without thinking. âA wooden one, with a little crystal embedded in it. But instead I found a creepy little doll.â
âAh, you must be referring to Dalton. He is a little spooky at times,â Sasha said. âI have seen him plenty, but never your necklace.â He sounded genuinely apologetic, and frowned a little.
âIâm sure Iâll find it eventually,â Colton said, trying to cheer Sasha up. He hadnât been expecting much, but the lack of leads was still disappointing. If someone who was into the occult like Sasha hadnât seen it, then what chance did he have? But that was hardly Sashaâs fault, and he wasnât about to take it out on him.
âAt least let me walk you home. I remember, you are the one who saved Miss Mopsy, yes? It is the least I can do. The city watch will not bother you if you are with me,â Sasha said.
âI donât imagine they would bother a member of the royal family,â Reilley said wryly.
Suddenly, it made sense why Mabre and Oliver had given up so easily. Colton had entirely forgotten that Sasha was related to the current king of Citarik.Â
âUh, sure. Thatâd be great,â he said, grateful for what was sure to be a quick and safe trip home.
âColton, donât forget, weâre meeting at the Lionâs Head pub for lunch tomorrow,â Reilley said.
âYeah, of course,â Colton said, trying not to stumble over his words, because heâd made no such plans with Reilley. But for such a reminder to come out of nowhereâŚit felt like the sort of thing he ought to play along with. Something that had to be kept from Sasha, for some reason. âIt was noon, right?âÂ
âThatâs right,â Reilley said, looking pleased.
âOh! I did not mean to be stealing your thunder,â Sasha said, glancing back at Reilley.
âDonât worry, youâre not. Just make sure he gets home safe for me, will you?âÂ
âOf course! He will be the safest detective in the city,â Sasha assured him. It was almost comical how short Sasha was compared to Colton, but he seemed determined to protect him regardless. Admittedly, it was endearing.
âIâm sure he will be,â Reilley agreed, waving the two of them off.Â
Chapter 1.08 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.10
0 notes
Text

Chapter 1.08: SINK OR SWIM
âSink or Swim?â Colton suggested, much to Madelineâs obvious dismay. He could feel her nails digging into his arm.Â
âYeah, alright,â the scorekeeper agreed, fishing a cigarette out of their pocket, along with a lighter. âJude, go get some dice, wontâcha? And a deck of cards while youâre at it. Pretty sure Roccoâs got some.â
âBenny-â Jude started, only to have them cut her off.
âGo on, now. Iâd hate to see you lose your camera.âÂ
The threat was implicit. Jude didnât say anything else, instead turning and heading for the man that had been speaking with Kaleb.Â
Colton felt bad for her. Asking her to go talk to the man whoâd just beaten her in a fight was just rubbing salt in the wound. He looked away, focusing on Benny instead. They were tall, but not as tall as he was - but then again, most people werenât. Their hands were smeared with chalk, their hair slick with pomade, and they were dressed simply in a white button up, suspenders and brown slacks. Benny grinned at Jude and Rocco when the two glanced over, lighting their cigarette and taking a quick puff.
âSo, which kind of Sink or Swim are we playing?â Colton asked, and continued once Benny shrugged at him. âI was thinking two dice and a deck of cards, with a three round set.âÂ
âThatâs fine by me,â Benny said with a shrug, much to Coltonâs relief.Â
âIâve seen a couple of games, but Iâve never actually played before,â Colton admitted sheepishly. âIs it as easy to play as it looks?â
âOh yeah, itâs real simple,â Benny assured him, taking another puff as Jude returned with the dice and cards. They were polite enough to exhale away from the group, leaving a trail of smoke to drift towards the dumpsters. âIâll even lay out the rules real quick for you, if itâd make you feel better.â
âIt really would,â Colton said, practically exuding gratitude. It wasnât hard to fake, especially once Madeline loosened her vice-like grip on his arm.Â
âAlright, so, hereâs the deal: Weâre gonna roll two dice, one black, and one white,â Benny said, helpfully holding up the dice Jude had fetched as an example. âThe white dice is worth points, and the black dice subtracts âem. Goal is to get as close to fifteen as you can without going over, because if you do, you lose the whole set.â
Colton listened attentively, watching Benny with a certain wide-eyed earnesty that had come after years of practice. âWhat about the cards?â
âYou can draw a card between each round, if you want. Hearts and diamonds, you gain points. Spades and clubs, you lose points. We take out the face cards before we play, so donât worry about those.âÂ
âThat sounds simple enough,â Colton agreed. âAny other rules I should know about?â
âNo, youâre all set. Let me go dig up something flat for us to roll the dice on. Donât go anywhere,â Benny said in what was undoubtedly meant to be a friendly tone of voice, but actually came off as threatening.Â
âDo not blow this,â Madeline hissed into Coltonâs ear the moment Benny was out of earshot, having to stand on her toes to do it.
âYour lack of confidence wounds me,â Colton said, frowning a touch dramatically.
âYou donât even know how to play!â
âOf course I know how to play,â Colton replied quietly, voice dropping to practically a whisper as Benny made their way back over. They had a thick piece of cardboard tucked under one arm, and they tossed it to the ground in front of Colton.
Taking the hint, Colton took a seat, silently hoping that whatever was on the ground of this alley wouldnât require the help of a dry cleaner to remove from his clothes. He watched Benny shuffle the cards after theyâd taken a seat opposite him, trying to discern if they were cheating from they way they moved the cards around. It didnât look like it, but it was also awfully dark out, making it hard to tell for certain.
âIâll let you go first, seeing as youâre the beginner,â Benny said generously.Â
Going first was both a blessing and a curse, and it was obvious to Colton that Benny was trying to get him to make a mistake early on in the game. The chances of winning first were low, but the chances of losing? Much higher. And if he lost, Benny wouldnât have to take their turn at all. Theyâd just get a free win.Â
âThank you,â Colton said, forcing himself to smile as he picked up the dice. He tested the heft of them in his hand, and shifted them around like he was shaking them, when in actuality he was maneuvering the dice to the numbers he wanted, and trying to keep them as far apart as possible. It was dark, and he was quick, gently tossing the dice onto the cardboard.Â
The dice rolled twice, and then the black dice rolled a third time, by itself. So close. The cardboard was either a harder surface than Colton had assumed, or heâd thrown with too much force. It had admittedly been awhile since heâd tried to manipulate dice by throwing them, and these werenât dice he was familiar with, but heâd had years and years of practice.Â
Still, a white five and a black four was not the start heâd been hoping for.Â
Benny whistled. âTough break.âÂ
Colton drew a card to try to make up for his roll, only to draw the ace of clubs, leaving him with a grand total of zero points. His face fell, and Benny laughed.
âItâs only the first round. Lighten up a little,â Benny said, undoubtedly cheered by Coltonâs terrible first turn. They rolled a white six and a black two, leaving them with four points. There was really no need to draw with a great roll like that, so they didnât bother. Didnât even pretend to consider it.
âGood roll,â Colton offered, trying to sound optimistic as Benny pressed the dice back into his hand. âSure hope some of that luck rubs off on me.âÂ
He tried to manipulate the dice again, but he only had so much time to do that without looking suspicious. The result was a white four and a black two. Better than his first round, certainly, but Benny still had quite a lead on him.
âThatâs better, isnât it?â He heard Madeline ask Jude from somewhere behind him.
âBetter than zero,â Jude said simply.Â
Benny rolled a black two and a white one. A roll that knocked them down to three points, putting them that much closer to Colton. It was the sort of roll that Colton wouldâve chosen to draw on, and Benny seemed to consider it, staring at the top of the deck intently before passing the dice wordlessly off to Colton.
âNot gonna draw?â Colton asked, raising his eyebrows.
âNah. Iâve still got one point on you,â Benny said, grinning.
Colton rolled a black two and a white three. Finally, he was tied with Benny. He drew a card, hoping to pull away with a lead, only to end up right back where heâd started. The three of spades. Zero points.
âTough break,â Benny said, as though they were aware of an inside joke. They rolled, and came up with a pair of ones. Snake eyes.Â
âLooks like this round is mine,â they said, obviously pleased with how things had played out.
Colton wondered about the card heâd drawn, and resolved to keep a closer eye on the deck going forward. It just seemed strange that Benny hadnât wanted it, not even when it might have been advantageous to them, and he liked to think he knew a con when he saw one. It couldâve been paranoia, of course, but if the deck was markedâŚÂ
He took the dice and started the next round off smoothly. Black two, white six. Four points. That was more than heâd made in the last round combined. Deciding to risk it all, he drew a card from the deck too, and breathed a sigh of relief when it turned out to be the four of diamonds.Â
âEight points! Better watch that you donât go over,â Benny said as Colton examined the card for just a moment longer than necessary before adding it to the discard pile.Â
Colton passed the dice to Benny, and with a black six and a white five, they ended up with negative points. That was, until they drew a card from the deck. They hadnât even hesitated, like theyâd planned to do so all along.Â
âLooks like Iâm at eight too,â they said, setting a nine of hearts down in the discard pile. The design on one of the corners was peeling.Â
Colton rolled again. This time, he ended up with an extra three points, setting him at eleven. He didnât dare draw a card, not when he was still trying to figure out how they were marked. Passing the dice off to Benny, he chanced another look at the deck as they rolled, desperately trying to commit it to memory.
âThatâs ten for me. Iâm catching up,â Benny warned Colton, pulling his attention away from the cards. The dice were being pressed into his hands, and he hadnât even looked to see Bennyâs total. Since when had he gotten so sloppy?
âIâd better watch out,â he agreed, trying to focus on keeping the black dice low rather than maneuvering the white dice. He was really only in trouble if the white came up as a six, and even then, only if the black dice was a one - which was what he was aiming for.
It seemed as though his dice rolling skills werenât gone after all. The black dice came up as a one, and the white came up as a four, leaving him with a grand total of fourteen.Â
âI think Iâm gonna stay with this,â he said, and Benny frowned.
âYeah, I would too,â they admitted, taking their turn at the dice. Their frown deepened when they rolled a black five, and a white three, leaving them with only eight points. Apparently whatever card was in the lineup next was safe to draw, and they did so, leaving Colton very, very nervous.
Just when Colton thought his heart might leap up his throat, they sighed and set the card down. The five of hearts. That meant heâd won the round, if only by a single point. He could feel Madelineâs hand on his shoulder, squeezing gently, and he took some comfort in her touch.Â
Silently, he took the dice and rolled.Â
A white six, and a black one. Five points. The best possible roll in the game. If he drew a ten along with it, then he could win the whole game in one fell swoop - but the card at the top of the pile looked pristine. There was no wear on the edges, no peeling design, and no way Colton could take that risk.
âNot gonna go for a quick win?â Benny asked, raising their eyebrows at him as they took the dice. They seemed almost disappointed.
âItâs not much of a tiebreaker if you donât get to roll too,â Colton pointed out.Â
And roll Benny did. A black three and a white six. They chose not to draw as well, which made Colton feel certain that heâd made the right call.
They continued to roll without drawing any cards. Black three, white three. Black four, white two. Colton stared much too hard at the dice before making his last roll, desperately hoping for the same roll heâd made at the start of the round.
Perhaps it was because he had Madeline with him. Miss Fortuna, Lady Luck herself, was truly helping him, because he rolled exactly what heâd needed. A black one, and a white six.
Benny looked terribly frustrated when he handed the dice back over to them. Their final roll fell just shy of Coltonâs, leaving them with eleven points to his thirteen. They shoved the camera at Colton, and he fumbled, trying not to drop it.Â
âI won? Arenât you going to draw?â Colton asked, feigning innocence.
Benny gave him a dirty look, and drew a card, tossing it down onto the cardboard without looking at it as they got to their feet. The four of clubs stared back up at them, silent, almost mockingly so.
Madeline tugged Colton back to his feet, and took the camera from him as if concerned he might drop it, quickly handing it off to Jude.Â
Jude seemed to be struggling to find the right words when the sounds of breaking glass attracted the attention of everyone in the alley. There was another loud smash, like someone had broken a tankard over one of the tables, or perhaps dropped it on the floor, and then another. And another.
âCity Watch! Nobody move!â Came the dull roar of Mabreâs voice from inside the bar. There mere sound of her activated Coltonâs fight or flight response. He grabbed Madeline and Jude by the wrists, and took off towards the dumpsters that sealed off the end of the alley.
Chapter 1.07 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.09
0 notes
Text

Chapter 1.07: BAD TIMES AT BIG BARTONS
It was dark by the time Colton and Miss Fortuna - Madeline, sheâd insisted after sheâd changed into something more casual and less recognizable - made it to the bar. The Hard Times Bar and Saloon was a big place, popular and crowded. Booths ringed the edges of the room, and tables were set up near the dance floor in the center. A handful of musicians were tuning up their instruments in one of the corners, presumably the nightâs entertainment.Â
Big Barton, owner and proprietor, stood behind the main counter. He was built like a fridge - muscular, with a fat stomach, and a thick beard. His brown hair was looking more gray than brown these days. When Barton smiled, his whole face lit up, and he smiled often. His two missing fingers alluded to a checkered past, but he was on the straight and narrow now, same as Colton.Â
Barton grinned and waved as Colton walked past, and when he noticed Colton wasnât alone, he shot him a thumbs up and a wink in silent encouragement. His easygoing nature hadnât changed for as long as Colton had known him, not even when heâd been running his own gang. Thankfully his temperament was more suited to bartending than it was to highway robbery.Â
âItâs not a date,â Colton hissed under his breath as they passed the bar in search of a table, a little flustered at the mere idea of a date. Bartonâs big, booming laugh faded into the ambient noise of the room as they passed him.
Madeline took the initiative to order their drinks, leaving Colton to find an empty table for them. The room was filling up fast, but thankfully he managed to snag one of the few remaining booths against the far wall, near the back door. Hints of smoke filtered in from out back whenever someone walked in or out of the building, and Colton coughed a little as he tried to get used to it. Not the best seat in the house, but any seat was better than none.
Reappearing with a drink that was so vibrantly mint green it hurt Coltonâs stomach just to look at it, Madeline made herself at home in the seat across from him. She pushed a glass of brown pop across the table to him, and he nearly took a sip out of habit, pausing with his mouth halfway to the straw.Â
âItâs not-âÂ
âItâs not alcoholic,â Madeline interrupted, finishing his question and answering it all at once. âI figured it was better than water.â
âOh- Thanks, Colton said, surprised. He paused to take a sip of his drink, enjoying the familiar, sweet sensation of the carbonation against his tongue. Heâd had a soda with lunch, but his day had been so hectic that lunch felt as though it had happened a week ago.Â
âYouâre welcome, darling,â Madeleine said as she sipped at her own mint green concoction - a grasshopper, probably. She looked stressed and tense around the edges.Â
Colton thought that she might be less stressed if she let him work on the case instead of dragging him out for drinks, but he assumed that she hadnât felt safe being alone. With the possibility of one of her own clients after her, it made sense that sheâd want to get out of the shop for a while, and dress down so that people wouldnât recognize her. Not that doing so was going to solve any of her problems. Sometimes people were funny like that, seeking comfort in the wrong things.
âYou come here often?â he asked, wondering why sheâd chosen this particular bar.
âNo, not particularly,â she said, making a valiant effort to invest herself in the conversation, even though her heart clearly wasnât in it. âNot that this place isnât nice, itâs just that I wanted to go somewhere new.âÂ
âYou picked a good place. Iâve been here once or twice, and itâs always pretty packed. People pressed together like sardines in a can,â Colton said, pressing his hands together to make his point. âI donât think anyone is gonna be looking for you here.âÂ
He hoped that was the right thing to say, the right issue to address. There was a lot of pressure on Madeline from both herself and her clients to constantly maintain her image. And now that her image was the center of all this new trouble⌠It complicated things.
Madeline smiled, and Colton relaxed for all of half a second. Then the back door opened as someone stepped outside, and he happened to hear a few words in what was becoming an all too familiar voice.Â
Coltonâs heart sank. Of all the bars in Quoria, why had Kaleb had to choose this one?
Naturally, Madeline had heard Kaleb too, and shared a glance with Colton across the table. She nodded towards the door, silently asking if they ought to go take a look. The door swung open again, and this time the sound of a meaty smack, like someone had taken a particularly hard punch, came through.
Colton scrambled to his feet and made a beeline for the door, leaving his soda abandoned on the table. Madeline was hot on his heels, and nearly ran into his back when he stalled the moment heâd stepped outside.Â
The space outside the back of the bar was roomier than any alley Colton had ever seen. Dumpsters were pushed off to one side, blocking the space off from the street, which may have had something to do with it. A few folks were smoking near the door, and a couple were playing dice by the dumpsters. What had caught his attention was the fifteen or so people had formed a loose semi-circle around the back of the alley. There were a few cheers, a few whistles, and Kaleb was there, looking thrilled to be a part of the action. If Colton strained, he could hear the sounds of a fight happening.
He hurried over to join the crowd - mindful of Madelineâs hand on his arm - and pushed his way to the front. Two people were going at it, using the crowd as their fighting ring: one a lean young man who was quick on his feet, and the other a short-haired young woman with a bloody nose and the start of what appeared to be a black eye. There was a smeared collection of tally marks on the wall. Someone was keeping score.
âAnd, youâre out, Jude,â said a person holding a stick of chalk as the woman - Jude - took another hit. They drew another neat tally on the wall, leaving the latest score at five to two.Â
Jude sighed, and fished her wallet out of her pocket, counting out the few bills she had.Â
âFine. Here,â she said, her expression somehow neutral despite her injuries. She held the money out for the scorekeeper to take, and Colton risked a glance at the other brawler. He was talking to Kaleb, and they were splitting money between them. Kaleb had enough money that this was undoubtedly nothing more than entertainment for him, but there was no telling what everyone else's stakes in this little fight club were.
âHey- you canât take that,â Jude protested, drawing Coltonâs attention right back to her. She and the scorekeeper had moved off to the side where several bags were pressed up against the wall, presumably for safekeeping. âI need my camera. I lost, I paid up - I need that for school.âÂ
âThatâs rough,â the scorekeeper said, unsympathetic. âConsider it a down payment, okay? You can keep fighting the rest of the night on this. Otherwise, Iâm gonna have to kick you out. You donât even have enough to cover your last loss.â
Jude stalled at the threat, and Colton saw his chance to jump in.Â
âHey, how about I play you for that camera?â he said, acting without thinking, as usual. âJude- Judeâs a good friend of mine, and she really needs that for school. Youâre not gonna deny her an education, are you?â He was really laying it on thick, and hoping desperately that Jude would keep her mouth shut.Â
âYou want to go up against me for it?â the scorekeeper asked, glancing Colton up and down appraisingly.
âI want to play you for it,â Colton corrected them. âI wouldnât have a shot against you in a fight. Look at me, Iâm all bones. You could tear me apart,â he said, gesturing to himself. He was tall and twiggy, and unsuited for fighting. Madeline seemed to think so too, judging by the way her grip on his arm tightened. She was trying to subtly tug him away, but Colton was having none of it. Playing up his own weaknesses and making the scorekeeper out to be the stronger opponent was boosting their ego, he could tell. âA smart fella like you plays dice, right? What do you say? One round, winner takes all?â
âSure, alright. I guess I can indulge you,â the scorekeeper said, like they were doing Colton a favor. âBut what do I get if I win?â
âTen dollars,â Colton said, regretting it as soon as the words were out of his mouth. That was all the money heâd been paid at the start of his job. It was supposed to last him a week or so, until he could close the case. That way he didnât starve, and his lights didnât get shut off by the power company again.
âDeal,â the scorekeeper said, snapping up the opportunity before Colton could back out.
Chapter 1.06 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.08
0 notes
Text

Chapter 1.06: Time To Sell Some Fortunes
The bell above the front door rang, the sound echoing throughout the shop and cutting Miss Fortuna off.Â
âI hope we arenât interrupting anything,â Kaleb said as he entered the parlor, holding the door open for another, smaller man who hurried in behind him.
âNot at all,â Miss Fortuna said with a practiced smile. Colton couldnât help but be impressed with how much effort she put into running her own business singlehandedly and making it look, well, effortless. âItâs nice to see you again, Sasha,â she added kindly.
The man behind Kaleb - Sasha, presumably - flushed at the attention.Â
âIt is n-nice to see you as well,â he stammered, his Citarin accent very pronounced. He clearly came from money, probably foreign money, if his accent was anything to go by. His windowpane suit was expensive, and hand-tailored from the looks of it - nothing mass produced ever fit quite that well, especially not when someone was as slender as Sasha. Just like Kaleb, his teeth were so white that they practically shone when he smiled.
âHe could hardly wait to get here, heâs been talking about it all day,â Kaleb said, unhindered by the betrayed look Sasha sent his way. âHis birthday is coming up, you know. I think heâs hoping for a good fortune.â
âQuiet, Kaleb,â Sasha hissed, embarrassed, accent thicker than ever. He elbowed Kaleb gently in the side.
âHoping for good fortune is nothing to be embarrassed about, darling,â Miss Fortuna said easily. âIt would be a sad day if a client ever came in hoping for a bad future.âÂ
She gestured for Sasha to join her, and linked arms with him, leading him over to the armchair Colton had been sitting in just minutes ago.Â
âI trust you two don't mind waiting in the lobby?â she asked Colton and Kaleb, in a tone that implied it was not a request.
âNot at all,â Kaleb said with a smile, leading the way out of the room.
Colton hurried out of the room on Kalebâs heels, catching just the beginning of Miss Fortunaâs appointment with Sasha.Â
âDid you want to ask about anything specific today?â she asked, voice already starting to fade behind him.
âLuck in love?â Sasha asked, nervously tucking a strand of curly, blond hair behind one of his ears. Miss Fortunaâs response was cut off entirely as Colton closed the door behind him, now alone in the lobby with Kaleb.Â
Much like the interior room where Miss Fortuna took her appointments, the lobby was decorated with plenty of draping wall fabrics, all bright, welcoming colors. There was a desk near the door where she presumably signed in her clients, judging by the clipboard and pens nestled on it between various crystals and pamphlets on different types of fortune telling. Colton assumed she could afford a receptionist, what with how popular her business was, but all of the notes and reminders were in Miss Fortunaâs handwriting.Â
âI didnât think Iâd be seeing you again quite so soon,â Kaleb said, taking a seat in one of the plush chairs that littered the lobby. He got comfortable, crossing one leg over the opposite knee before continuing. âI do hope youâll keep my little trip to Harlowâs between us. That gift I bought was for Sasha, and Iâd rather not give it away.â
âMy lips are sealed,â Colton said automatically, sitting in the chair nearest Kalebâs. âIs he a friend of yours, orâŚ?â He remembered that Kaleb had mentioned buying a birthday gift back at Harlowâs, although he hadnât said who it was for.Â
âMy cousin,â Kaleb said. âHeâs got a terrible fascination with the occult. Hardly a week goes by without him going out to get his fortune read.â
âIs magic big in Citarik?â Colton didnât know too much about it, other than what heâd learned in school: That Citarik was a small, mountainous country that exported a lot of ore, and had serious laws in place about damaging the few trees that had managed to grow there.
âOh, not really. I think thatâs just him. Thatâs not to say we donât have stories back home; People like to tell their children about vengeful spirits to encourage them to behave. Old ghost stories, you know how it is. Or perhaps you donât - have you ever been to Citarik?â
âIâve never found the time,â Colton said. Or the money, but he had his doubts about whether or not Kaleb would understand money being an obstacle to travel. Everything from the way he spoke to the way he held himself radiated power and privilege. Nobility, most likely. Citarik did have a king. The only king with any real power over their country - the only king period, probably. History hadnât been his best subject in school, but he remembered Citarik was in outlier in more ways than one. Most of the world had left monarchies behind them in favor of elected government officials well before he was born, and a number of revolutions had ensured that things stayed that way.
âDonât fret, you arenât missing much. Itâs terribly cold in Citarik, and the mountain passes close up in the winter, so we donât get many tourists. Iâm not surprised you havenât visited,â Kaleb said. He sighed, shifting in his seat. âIf you ask me, most people there arenât very friendly. No one to act hospitable for, I suppose. Nothing to do but play in the snow, and that gets awfully old once someone gets frostbite.âÂ
Kaleb didnât seem terribly connected to his homeland. In fact, Colton thought Kaleb might have outright disliked Citarik, but he was smart enough not to make that observation aloud. If Kaleb really was a part of the ruling class, it wouldnât be good to offend him.
âIs that why you came to Quoria? Not a fan of the snow?â Colton asked. But before Kaleb had a chance to answer, the door to the parlor opened and Sasha emerged, Miss Fortuna just a few steps behind him. That didnât seem right. Surely a fortune-telling session should have taken much longer.
âIt was lovely seeing you again, Sasha, darling,â Miss Fortuna said with a sweet smile.
Sasha nodded, but he looked a little forlorn, with just a hint of jealousy when he glanced over to Kaleb and Colton. It seemed out of place, and Colton took note of it. Then again, he had barged in unannounced just before Sashaâs session.
âI will schedule another appointment soon,â he promised.
âI already know. I saw it in the cards,â Miss Fortuna said with a playful wink that seemed to bolster Sashaâs spirits a little. âHow does next Tuesday sound?â
âPerfect,â Sasha said, not even stopping to think about it. He glanced at Colton again, uncertain. âUnless you are busyâŚ?â
Miss Fortuna followed his gaze. âWith Mister McKinley? Heâs that detective I mentioned, the one who found my friendâs darling little kitten.â
âMiss Mopsy?â Sasha asked, his gaze softening. âI can see why you went out of your way to meet him. There is no finer cat.âÂ
Colton tried very hard not to think of the claw marks on his arms that would undoubtedly scar. If he faltered, he felt that Sashaâs big, blue eyes would see right through him.Â
âShe was a real sweetheart,â he lied.
For a few seconds, Colton swore he could hear his pulse pounding in his ears as he stared back at Sasha. Usually people didnât make him so nervous, but there was something about Sasha that threw him off - probably the fact that he was also foreign royalty, come to think of it. Finally, Sasha looked away to say his goodbyes, and Colton breathed a sigh of relief. He weakly waved the two cousins out from his seat, and practically melted into the plush cushions the moment the door swung shut behind them.
âYou couldâve warned me they were coming,â he told Miss Fortuna as she took a seat at her desk, presumably jotting down the details of the appointment.Â
âYou were the one who came running in here demanding to talk to me,â Miss Fortuna pointed out. âIâm not obligated to warn you of the consequences of your own actions.â
She was right, but Colton didnât like that she was. What a difficult client. âJust who was that anyway? He sure seemed to like you.â
âSasha Strizhakov, one of my very important clients. He comes at least once a week, sometimes more. Heâs sweet on me,â Miss Fortuna said without looking up from her notes. âI do wish his cousin wouldnât encourage him. Asking for love fortunes is a silly way to ask someone out for a night on the town, and it never works. Itâs just not in the cards for us.â
âYouâve turned him down before?â Colton asked, suddenly interested.
âSort of. Heâs never actually come out and asked me anything. Just danced around the subject and implied that heâs sweet on me. His luck in love fortunes are always terrible, youâd think heâd get the message by now,â she said with a sigh. âSome clients are just harder to get through to than others. Itâs happened plenty of times before. Iâve been told Iâm easy on the eyes,â she said, winking at Colton, who made a noble effort not to blush.
âHave any of these men given you problems before?â
âDonât forget women. Iâm quite the hot commodity, darling,â she said with a laugh. âSometimes my clients take a fancy to me, but they donât usually give me any trouble beyond disappointed looks. I donât date any of my clients, and I try to make that clear. They tend to catch on pretty fast, but not always,â she said with another, longer sigh.
Colton considered this. Sometimes, people felt entitled to other peopleâs time and attention - and sometimes that turned people into something ugly. Something violent and possessive. It wasnât something he often saw escalated to this degree, but Miss Fortuna was something of a celebrity.
 âDo you think the person who took your necklace could be a client of yours? A regular?â he finally asked. âIt could be the same person breaking the windows. Maybe that was just a cover up for taking the necklace, some way to divert your attention.â
âOne of my clients? I seriously doubt it. My regulars see me plenty without trying to break into my shop,â Miss Fortuna said, frowning. âYouâre not trying to imply that Sasha did all that, are you?â
âWhat? No,â Colton said, quickly. âI donât think he could have. He doesnât look strong enough to go throwing bricks through your window. Or angry enough, if Iâm being candid. But Iâm sure you have other regulars who are stronger than Sasha, and more volatile. Itâs worth looking into.â
Miss Fortuna was silent for a long moment. âYou could be onto something, but I can hardly be expected to interact with my regulars normally if theyâre all suspects. I just want my necklace back, I donât care who took it.â
âYou should care. If they took it once, they could take it again - and if itâs the same person whoâs been breaking your windows-â Colton started.
âThen Iâm in trouble, yes, I know,â Miss Fortuna interrupted tiredly. âThis has all turned out so much more complicated than Iâd hoped. I think I need a drink. Or several.â She paused, briefly considering an idea. âYou should come with me, seeing as youâre so concerned for my safety. Iâm sure I could use a chaperone in these dangerous times.â
âI donât even drink,â Colton objected.
âThatâs the whole point of a chaperone, darling. Do try to keep up.â
Chapter 1.05 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.07
0 notes
Text

Chapter 1.05: You Are About To Experience The Wrath of a God, Little Man
Colton straightened up and put on his best smile.Â
âI tripped,â he said, pushing himself up and away from the files heâd been hunched over. Thankfully he hadnât gone over to Oliverâs side of the desk, or the situation would be unsalvageable.
âYou tripped right into an open file? I donât think so,â Mabre said. Her tone implied that Colton was about to experience the wrath of a god if he didnât come up with a better excuse than that. Then again, maybe that was just her normal tone. Mabre was known to be intense at the best of times.
âThis office is so tiny Iâm tripping over my own feet, here. And itâs not as though thereâs any other part of the desk to grab,â Colton said, gesturing almost playfully to the deskâs cluttered surface. There wasnât a single free inch of space. âIâm lucky I didnât knock everything off of it.â Every good lie had a kernel of truth to it, and this particular kernel just happened to be that the desk looked like a tiny tornado had raced across its surface.
Colton straightened up and put on his best smile.Â
âI tripped,â he said, pushing himself up and away from the files heâd been hunched over. Thankfully he hadnât gone over to Oliverâs side of the desk, or the situation would be unsalvageable.
âYou tripped right into an open file? I donât think so,â Mabre said. Her tone implied that Colton was about to experience the wrath of a god if he didnât come up with a better excuse than that. Then again, maybe that was just her normal tone. Mabre was known to be intense at the best of times.
âThis office is so tiny Iâm tripping over my own feet, here. And itâs not as though thereâs any other part of the desk to grab,â Colton said, gesturing almost playfully to the deskâs cluttered surface. There wasnât a single free inch of space. âIâm lucky I didnât knock everything off of it.â Every good lie had a kernel of truth to it, and this particular kernel just happened to be that the desk looked like a tiny tornado had raced across its surface.
Mabre clearly wasnât buying his excuse: her posture hadnât relaxed in the slightest, and there wasnât an iota of trust in her gaze - a telltale sign of a failed con. Luckily for him this wasnât a con. He didnât need Mabre to buy into anything he was saying, he just needed to prove that there was room for doubt, and hopefully that would be enough to get him out of the mess heâd landed himself in. Multiple files were open and scattered across the desk thanks to him, and the desk had been a right mess to begin with. It wasnât as though he could change his story - that would be admitting that heâd been going through the files at all. He didnât know what sort of trouble that would land him in, but he wasnât eager to find out.
âGive me the file you were looking at,â Mabre demanded.Â
âI wasnât looking at any of them,â Colton objected, though he did move to hand her one of the files. Not the one on Miss Fortunaâs place, naturally.
âNot that one. The one closest to you,â Mabre said, sharp as ever.
âThis one?â Colton asked, as though he didnât know exactly which file she was referring to. This time he did hand over the file on Miss Fortuna, as reluctant as he was to do so.
Mabre took the file and skimmed it, frowning a little at the details.Â
âYouâre not involved in any of this,â she said. Like she was telling Colton to mind his own business and let the watch do their job. Fat chance of that.Â
âIs that supposed to be a question?â he ventured.
âItâs supposed to be an order. The watch is handling it, and even if we werenât, this isnât a job for a conman.âÂ
âIâm a detective,â Colton protested. âIâve been on the straight and narrow for ages. Donât hold my youthful indiscretions against me!âÂ
âThese cases arenât games, Colton,â Mabre said, frustrated. âItâs different than tracking down lost pets, or catching cheating spouses.â Colton opened his mouth to respond, and Mabre shut him down instantly. âNo. Shut up, listen to me. These are real crimes, and you could get hurt. Do you understand?âÂ
What a way to instantly ruin Coltonâs mood. He felt as though he were a child being scolded by a teacher, and the feeling was made doubly worse by the fact that Mabre was visibly younger than him.Â
âI wasnât even looking at that file, or any file,â he said weakly, but he could tell that Mabre didnât believe him. Not that he could pinpoint exactly why. He wished he had the opportunity to look at the file again, to see what might have made her so suspicious, but his chance had long since passed.
âFine, you werenât looking at the file,â she said, with a heavy sigh. âBut if you just so happened to see anything in it, I want you to stay out of it. Promise me youâll call the watch if anything comes up.âÂ
âAnything happens, Iâll call. I promise,â Colton lied as sincerely as he could manage. He could tell that Mabre didnât entirely believe him, but that was alright. As long as he didnât end up spending the night in a cell, a lot of things were alright.
[***]
âWhy didnât you tell me your shop got broken into!?â Colton demanded, throwing himself into the plush armchair across from Miss Fortuna. Heâd gone straight to her shop after heâd left the station, looking for answers. Thankfully she hadnât had any appointments just then.
Colton glanced around frustratedly, noticing the room for the first time while Miss Fortuna tidied up the cards sheâd strewn across the table in surprise when heâd barged in. Rich fabrics in a variety of cool colors were draped across the walls, and there was a crystal ball on the table between the two of them. A deck of cards lay carelessly off to the side, and the whole room smelled faintly of herbs, or perhaps incense. There was a large window on one side, blocked off by thick curtains.Â
âHow do you even- no, donât answer that. I clearly underestimated your detective skills,â Miss Fortuna said, frowning. âI didnât think it was necessary to tell you about it because it was such a minor incident. Just some drunken vandalism. If you hadnât noticed, my shop is near several pubs.âÂ
She was withholding information, trying to shut down Coltonâs line of questioning as quickly as possible by feigning indifference. She didnât even seem upset about the fact her shop had been vandalized. In fact, she didnât seem to feel any sort of way about it at all. It was a type of lying that would have fooled the city watch, but it wasnât good enough to fool him.Â
âWe both know it was more than that. What kind of drunk goes out of his way to find a hammer to smash the window with? The first two incidents, maybe, but not that one,â Colton said. He was frustrated, but even more than that, he was worried. Finding Miss Fortunaâs necklace wouldnât mean anything if she got attacked in her own shop and he couldnât give it back to her.
âI donât see what this has to do with finding my necklace,â Miss Fortuna said, moving to shut Colton down yet again. He saw it coming, because of course he did. He used to be a conman for goodness sake, he could pick a fellow liar out of a crowd.
âWe both know that isnât true. Whoeverâs been breaking in probably took it, and we both know it, so cut the act.â
Miss Fortunaâs frown deepened, and she almost glowered at Colton, upset that he was pushing the issue. She crossed her arms and leaned back in her chair, refusing to speak for a long moment. When she did finally open her mouth, she didnât look happy about it - but more than that, she looked tired. âDo you know how bad it looks when a fortune teller has her shop broken into? Three times in a row? Because it looks downright awful. Iâm an independent, future-seeing woman, and if it gets out that I have some sort of vandalist stalker, it could destroy my reputation. This is my livelihood, not a game. I canât afford to have someone breaking my windows and scaring away my regulars.â
She had a good point. Several good points. Enough good points that Colton wouldâve felt bad snooping around in her business if she hadnât paid him to do just that.Â
âNow that weâve got everything on the table...â he said, giving Miss Fortuna a pointed look, to which she did not respond. âMaybe we can catch this vandal and find your necklace. Two birds, and one less stone through your window.â
Miss Fortuna couldnât help but laugh at that - a bit of dark humor could do wonders - and her expression became decidedly less surly.Â
âI certainly hope youâre as good as my friend says you are,â she said, âor weâre both going to end up with rocks through our windows.â
âThat just means weâre in this together, now,â Colton said.
âI suppose we are,â she agreed, smiling wryly.
Chapter 1.04 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.06
1 note
¡
View note
Text

Chapter 1.04: Charisma vs. Perception
After Detective Darling had hauled Colton off to the station, sheâd vanished into one of the interview rooms with Harlow and left him in another watchmanâs (hopefully) capable hands.Â
âColton,â the constable said as he entered the room, relieved. His brown hair was neatly parted at the side, and pale freckles spattered his cheeks. He was lanky, and he moved with all the confidence of a teenager trying to adjust to a sudden growth spurt. âIâm Oliver. Oliver Goodkind. I mean, Constable Goodkind. Sorry to keep you waiting. I was looking to see if we had a file on you,â he explained, taking a seat behind the cluttered desk across from Colton. The office was dim and cramped, and Coltonâs chair was wedged between the wall and the front of the desk with hardly any room for his legs. âNo offense intended! I just thought thought we would. Considering, you knowâŚâÂ
He trailed off helplessly, trying to regain his conversational footing.
âThe ex-conman thing,â Colton said, and the constable flushed.
âRight! Of course. So sorry, mister- ah, Detective- er-âÂ
âJust Colton is fine,â Colton cut him off, determined to save the constable from himself.
âI donât suppose you could tell me why Iâm here?â Colton asked, as kindly as he could manage. âOh! Yes. Detective Darling said she brought you in for questioning. Harlow isâŚwell, we see a lot of Harlow around here, on account of all the dolls.â Oliver winced, and Colton winced sympathetically, porcelain faces burnt into his memory.Â
âPlease tell me they arenât actually haunted,â Colton said, with feeling. He was still terrified of the things, and they werenât even near him anymore.
âTheyâre not! At least, we donât have any evidence that they are. Itâs just that Harlow advertises them as haunted and they canât prove that they are, so it should be a case of false advertising. Only they started writing âFor entertainment purposes onlyâ on the bottom of the receipts, so itâs all technically legal. Itâs kind of a mess,â Oliver explained. He sounded stressed, and his desk was littered with case files, paperwork and old receipts. The one nearest to Colton was from Harlowâs, funnily enough.
âSounds rough,â said Colton, who got the feeling that he shouldnât have been hearing any of this in the first place. But information was information, even if it wasnât the sort that he needed just then.
âIt is - but Iâm getting off task here. I have a couple of questions to ask you, if thatâs alright with you.â
âI didnât know you needed my permission,â Colton said, raising an eyebrow.
âWhat? Why- oh, no. Iâm so sorry, I thought the detective explained. You arenât under arrest, youâre here as a witness. Detective Darling saw you were in Harlowâs shop and wanted to know youâd seen anything strange during your visit.â
Colton considered this. âIs âeverythingâ too broad of an answer?âÂ
The constable groaned in response, and he knew that he had immediately cut to the heart of the issue.
âItâs not a helpful answer, but youâre not wrong, either,â Oliver said, sounding pained. Investigating a shop like Harlowâs for contraband or magical items was quite possibly the worst case Colton had ever heard of, and he pitied Oliver for having to work on it. Empathized with him, even. Heâd worked similarly difficult cases before, and he wouldnât wish them on anyone.
âDalton was awfully creepy,â Colton offered - unhelpfully, because Harlow had done him a good turn, and he was not a snitch.
âYeahâŚweâve heard a lot about Dalton,â Oliver said with a heavy sigh.
âDid you read about the matches thing? Because Iâm concerned, personally. It doesnât really have any matches, right?âÂ
Poor Oliver looked very tired. âI did read about the matches thing, in fact. It made me wish I was still on leave.âÂ
That explained the messy desk and frazzled demeanor. Oliver mustâve been gone up until recently. Now Colton understood why heâd been so out of sync with Detective Darling, despite working directly with her.
âYou were on leave? Mustâve been a right mess coming back to this,â Colton said, taking the opportunity to steer the conversation into safer waters. Even if Harlow managed to incriminate themself to Detective Darling, the Watch wasnât going to get anything out of Colton. He still took some pride in his conman skills, as misplaced as that pride was.
âMedical leave, yeah. I was out of commission for a little over a month,â Oliver explained.
âDid you get hurt on the job? I didnât think Harlowâs was that dangerous,â he joked.Â
âItâs not⌠We think. The medical leave was an entirely separate thing. I was recovering from surgery,â Oliver said sheepishly, like he hadnât meant to make Colton so worried.
âI take it everything went well, seeing as youâre back and all?â
âIt did, thanks for asking!â Oliver said, tone rapidly shifting from sheepish to cheerful as Colton asked after him. Colton was good at changing the tone of conversations to suit him without it seeming like he was trying too hard. âItâs a relief, honestly. A real weight off my chest, you know?â
âI bet,â Colton said. Surgery was awfully stressful, even with magic and science helping things along these days. In some ways it was helpful: There were faster, more accurate surgeries designed to put less strain on the body, with faster, smoother recovery, and magical tools. But sometimes magic interacted badly with people, or caused unforeseen complications, the same as anything else could.
âSo-â he started, only to be interrupted by a loud knock on the door. Oliver shot him an apologetic glance as he wormed his way out from behind his desk to answer it. Colton couldnât see who it was, with the door blocking his view, but Oliver leaned back after a moment of hushed conversation so that Colton could see him again.
âWould you mind waiting in here for a moment? Something, ah- somethingâs come up,â he said. From the other side of the door, there came the sounds of a scuffle; yells, hurried footsteps, and the heavy thump of a someone being bodily thrown to the ground. Rather than wait for Colton to answer, Oliver stepped out and shut the door behind him.
Colton waited for an entire minute with baited breath. When Oliver didnât return, he hurriedly helped himself to some of the files on the desk. Just because Harlowâs had been a dead end didnât mean that there werenât other shady shops and smuggling operations to look into. Stolen magical items didnât sell themselves. He hurriedly sifted through folders, shoving some receipts off to the side. The desk was already such a mess that he doubted shuffling some papers around was going to make much of a difference.
All of Oliverâs files were unhelpfully numbered, and Colton couldnât make heads or tails of what was supposed to be contained within each one. One had witness testimony, and the next had evidence pertaining to a murder. Feeling just a little queasy at the sight of crime scene photographs, Colton set that particular file aside as fast as possible and handled the rest with slightly more care.
One report in particular finally stood out: repeat vandalism. A shop on Ness and Hyde had repeatedly had its windows broken from the outside - twice with bricks, and once with a hammer. The blurry close up of the shattered window looked familiar, so Colton kept reading.
Madeline Ikeru - sole proprietor of Miss Fortunaâs - insisted that nothing was taken. She claims it was merely bad luck due to her shopâs prominent location, and insisted to the watch that she could handle herself. An investigative follow-up-
The door slammed open. Colton jumped, feeling very much like his heart was about to leap out of his throat. He was still half-bent over Oliverâs desk, obviously going through what were probably confidential files, and looked up, only to meet the gaze of Detective Darling. Mabre narrowed her eyes at him.
âYouâd better have a damn good explanation for this, McKinley.â
Chapter 1.03 â˘Â || ⣠Chapter 1.05
0 notes
Text

Chapter 1.03: Hope You Like Haunted Dolls
Harlowâs Curios and Curiosities was stuffed to the brim with all manner of paranormal paraphernalia, the most immediately visible of which was an antique doll displayed near the front door. There were narrow rows of shelves along the wall stuffed with dusty books, making the room seem smaller than it was. Several doorways led further into the store, giving the building an almost maze-like quality. The doll was positioned in such a way that one would have to move past it to have access to the rest of the store, and Colton stared it down with a growing sense of unease.Â
The doll, Dalton, was chock-full of malicious energy, according to the neat, block letters on the paper label. It supposedly contained the soul of a murderer. Some of its hair was missing, leaving only a short, blond strip right down the middle, and the pale paint had worn away around the porcelain joints. Its gray eyes almost seemed to be following Colton as he picked up the label for a closer look.
Squinting at the small print, he read: âIf he wants, he gets. Collects matches!â The price was jotted down the corner, almost as an afterthought: ten dollars.Â
Colton set the label back down and hastily retreated further into the store, where Dalton couldnât see him. Not that a doll could see him -- he was probably psyching himself out. In his hurry, he bumped into another patron that was leaving the shop, and nearly shrieked.Â
âSorry,â he stammered, looking briefly anxious, and then immensely relieved as he realized heâd bumped into another living person.
âItâs no trouble,â the man assured him, with a flash of pearly-white teeth. He reached out to pat Colton on the shoulder. âDaltonâs a little creep, isnât he? I donât know why Harlow puts him near the front door like that. Itâs like they want to scare away all of their customers.âÂ
He spoke in a stage-whisper, as though sharing a secret with Colton. His tone was low and soothing, and his voice had just a hint of a Citarian accent.
âHe is a little intimidating,â Colton agreed.
âMore than a little,â said the man with a disbelieving snort. It wasnât very elegant, but the rest of him certainly was. Now that Colton got a good look at him, it was obvious that he was someone who came from money, and a lot of it. He was handsome, with dark, wavy hair, and teeth white enough that he could pay to keep them that way. His suit was the sort that cost more than what Colton made in a month.Â
âOh, but where are my manners? Iâm Kaleb. Kaleb Strizhakov,â he said, sticking his hand out.
âColton McKinley,â Colton said, shaking his hand.
âA pleasure,â Kaleb assured him. He shifted the package under his arm, a thin box wrapped in paper and tied with twine.
âYou didnât buy, uh-â Colton started, but Kaleb cut him off.
âA doll? Oh, gods no. Not on your life,â he said with a laugh. âYou couldnât pay me to take something like Dalton home. This is a board game, as far as I understand it. Figured it might be worth a laugh as a birthday gift.âÂ
âThat is a spirit board used for communing with the dead!â Harlow called out from somewhere deeper in the store.
âYes, well. It was a pleasure meeting you, Colton,â Kaleb said, ignoring Harlow with a roll of his eyes. Heâd obviously had quite enough of the shop for one day, and he stepped around Colton, making his way outside without so much as a backwards glance at the doll guarding the door.
The prospect of navigating Harlowâs shop alone was a daunting one, and Colton wished he could make a hasty escape, too. A frankly unreasonable amount of dolls was watching his every move, and it was making his hair stand on end. He didnât bother reading the labels, but he assumed they were all haunted, just like Dalton.
As Colton approached the front counter, someone popped up from behind the it, like a hellish jack-in-the-box. He screamed. Clutching his chest, he wheezed in terror as the person held their hands out at about chest height in a transparent attempt to soothe him.
âYouâre kinda jumpy to be looking âround a paranormal shop, aintcha? Donât worry, I promise everything here is safe as can be! Even Dalton, the rascal,â Harlow said fondly, with a gap-toothed grin. They lowered their hands as Colton calmed himself, and he couldnât help but think that they looked a little haunted themself. Their pale skin gave them an almost ghostly appearance, and stood out in stark contrast to their unkempt dark hair.
âSo, whatâre you in for?â they asked, jarring Colton out of his thoughts.
âI- ah- I was looking for something a little strange,â he started, pausing when Harlow grinned at him.
âThen youâve come to the right place,â they said, gesturing to the rest of the shop. âI gathered,â Colton said. âItâs jewelry. A necklace. Itâs wood, with a pale crystal in the center.â He paused, chewing his lower lip, trying to decide how much of the truth he ought to tell Harlow. Miss Fortuna had been pretty clear about keeping this quiet. He settled on a sort of middle ground, a white lie. âI lost it a couple of days ago, and I was hoping that youâd seen it.â
âI do get a lot of weird jewelry in here, donât get me wrong, but it usually ainât cheap stuff,â Harlow said, much to Coltonâs dismay. âAinât much use for cheap jewelry other than magic or cons, and wood ainât foolinâ no one. Neither is crystal, come tâthink of it.â They sighed, and ran a hand through their messy hair. It was a miracle their fingers didnât get tangled in it, Colton thought. âCanât say Iâve seen anything like that recently.âÂ
âBut youâve seen something like it before?â Colton asked, desperate for any lead he could get.
âYeah, sure, once or twice. Usually the wood is cut into a shape like a star or a crescent, engraved all intricate-like.âÂ
âDoes the shape matter?â
âNo, not really, but itâs not like I make âem. Iâm not a witch,â Harlow said, with a laugh. âAs far as I can tell, theyâre supposed to enhance latent magic, or something. Nothing I could get away with selling in here. If you havenât noticed, Iâm up to my ears in haunted and magical items.â
âI noticed,â Colton assured them seriously. It felt like the many dolls in the shop were watching him, and it took all of his self control not to turn around to check. âDo you, uh, get witches in here often?â
âMaybe!â Harlow replied mysteriously, before laughing again. Colton got the feeling they were laughing at him, but that couldâve been the dolls making him paranoid. âI have no idea, to tell you the truth. Most witches donât exactly advertise it. I know we got a couple covens in the city, but itâs all hush hush. You know how it is. We love magic, but weâre terrified of the people who use it. Ainât that always the way?â
âYeah,â Colton agreed, distracted. He was beginning to get the sinking feeling that Miss Fortuna hadnât told the city watch about this necklace because it wasnât exactly legal to own. Owning magical contraband came with steep fines, and sometimes even jail time. He regretted telling Harlow heâd lost the necklace now. Any connection to it could land him in hot water, and his reputation with the watch wasnât stellar. He didnât run cons anymore, but theyâd had some inkling of what he was up to back in the day, even if they could never prove it.
âIf you want my advice,â Harlow said, snapping Colton out of his thoughts, âit might be best to write that necklace off as a lost cause. That sorta thingâs only gonna bring trouble, yâknow?âÂ
The sinking feeling in Coltonâs stomach intensified. If the person who ran the shop full of actual haunted dolls thought the necklace was bad news, then he was in trouble.
The door to the shop banged open, and Colton jumped. Harlow, to their credit, only turned to give the woman who walked inside a lazy smile. She was tall, and wearing a crisp leather tunic - the sort the city watch wore, with copper highlights and fastenings. She had a face full of freckles, a scar on her jaw, and an intensity in her eyes that was stronger than the stare of all the dolls in Harlowâs store.
âHey, Constable,â Harlow greeted. âWhat can I help you with?â
âItâs Detective,â the woman said, with a frown that suggested she and Harlow had had this conversation many times before. She looked briefly surprised to see Colton, but her expression smoothed over quickly. âIâm going to need you both to come down to the station for questioning.â
Chapter 1.02 ⢠|| ⣠Chapter 1.04
2 notes
¡
View notes