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Freedom X Sinister ShrimpMay 15, 2023 02:25 PM


Freedom

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Vim could see the red creeping onto Sir Constance’s face, his flushed cheeks and the vagueness of his gaze, and it reminded him of his own first drink. He had been around twelve. He could still remember the extreme nausea and overwhelming urge to either vomit or pass out. He could imagine that was how Sir Constance was feeling now. Vim was honed in on every word the group exchanged with Constance, making sure the interaction went the way he wanted it. Constance was still struggling to appear in control, which was nothing less than Vim had expected. Though Vim continued to remind himself that this evening of the score was strictly practical, a way of staying safe, he found himself rather glad that the knight hadn’t fallen under the influence of alcohol too quickly. It wouldn’t give Vim quite the same feeling if he didn’t get to watch Constance fight it first. The amused incredulity of the collected group meant Vim didn’t have to do anything but let things play out how they would. Some years ago, this would have been nothing to Vim. He would have done something like this as a palate-cleanser before his real dirty work began. So, really, it could be said that Vim was making great progress. People didn’t simply become saints overnight.

“It is. I’ve never really understood the appeal of drinking - I understand it far less now.” Vim could see by the looks of the people around him that this thought was even more outlandish to them than anything they’d heard so far. They laughed and exclaimed loudly that Constance must be crazy not to like alcohol. Vim hadn’t expected Constance to like alcohol - who in the world did when they first had it? Even if he had, surely the knight wouldn’t have humiliated himself by admitting it.

The group was digging into the food now, and Mercy, apparently in an attempt to be polite, said to Vim, “Aren’t you having any?” Vim murmured something agreeable and reached to the center of the table to grab a piece of pandemain. He watched Constance out of the corner of his eye, seeing him slipping farther and farther from reality. One of Vim’s necklaces with a simple metal band clinked gently against a plate as he leaned forward. “Oh, you have so many necklaces,” said Mercy, reaching out to take one of the symbols between her fingers. “They’re all religious?” Before Vim could reply, she launched into an explanation about her own religious journey. The man next to her groaned and rolled his eyes, as though he’s heard this story one too many times. Vim feigned polite interest, but quite suddenly a voice cut her off.

“Please - everything coming out of your mouth is so mind numbingly dull that even I’m willing to pray to a deity of sound to shut you up.” Mercy stopped mid-sentence, looking greatly offended. The rest of the group roared with laughter, and Creed gave Constance a friendly slap on the back. Constance went on. “Faith isn’t something you go looking for anyway, it’s something that finds you in your darkest hours.” A few of the group scoffed, and Mercy looked even more offended. She glanced at Vim as though hoping he would back her up, but he kept his gaze on Constance. Though he was, at the moment, inclined to disagree with anything Constance said on principle, he was curious if the knight would elaborate. Though he didn’t like to think Sir Constance knew more than him about the subject, it seemed the man had found a religion he really believed in, something Vim had yet to achieve.

Constance, however, went on to talk about the Heroes, and Vim checked his curiosity, bringing himself back to a state of mild interest. His next words were rather worse. Vim didn’t bat an eye, though he felt a prickle of disease. The group laughed, as he had figured they would, but he didn’t think that would be the end of that. Mercy, obviously still miffed at Constance, exclaimed loudly, “Chosen!”

The knight, in a dizzy delay, responded with a drunken scowl. “You think this is a joke?” Constance turned to look at Vim, and Vim prepared himself for whatever Constance was about to ask or demand of him. “Go ahead and tell them Vim - we’re chosen, aren’t we?”

Vim took a sip from his mug, giving himself a moment to overcome his immediate urge to openly disagree with Constance. Oh, he would have loved to do that. But he was still traveling with this man, and he had to stay on his good side. “Yes,” said Vim mollifyingly. “We’re chosen.” He waited until the moment Constance took his eyes off of him, and cast a glance in the direction of the person sitting nearest him, giving a wry look and roll of the eyes that clearly indicated: He’s got a screw loose. The group laughed again, then redoubled their laughter when they realized Constance didn’t know what they were laughing at.

“I’ve got the map to prove it- the map that leads to them. The Heroes.” The group laughed again, but a bit more quietly. A few of them were looking curious. Did he really have a map? They exchanged glances, and the other woman said in a serious voice, “I heard they sent some people from Victory to look for the Heroes. Only I heard there were more.”

“What happened to the others, did they get eaten by a wild goat or something?” Creed joked rather lamely, still looking interested in whatever was about to happen.

Vim knew for a fact that showing them the map was a bad idea. Though nothing had been said about them keeping quiet about this quest, he had taken it to be understood. Vim already had a bad reputation in Victory, and Constance was a High Knight abandoning his post. They were in competition with a group sent by the royals. Even if the king could accept this gross insult to his authority, he might not have the most favorable idea of their intentions. When Vim had set this little scenario up, he hadn’t been expecting Constance to spill all the beans. But he wasn’t panicking just yet. Constance gave Vim an order to get the map, obviously expecting nothing but obedience. Vim gave a quiet “of course,” and stood up. He picked his way through the crowd, having more trouble navigating now that he didn’t have Constance to clear a path for him. He stepped out into the evening air, and made his way towards the stables, where the two horses were waiting patiently. Vim moved in towards Templar, slightly wary. He wasn’t sure this huge, untamed beast was going to let Vim anywhere near it. He sidled closer to the horse, and reached slowly towards the pannier. Though Templar flared his nostrils and snorted, he didn’t make any move to kick, bite, or otherwise injure Vim. Inside the pannier was the map, rolled up neatly with Constance’s other belongings. Vim took it out and made his way with a quick stride towards the road, eyes peeled for any nook or cranny that would serve to protect the map while it was hidden from Sir Constance. He needed somewhere safe, but somewhere where it looked like the map could have fallen while they were riding. Somewhere they’d already passed. Finally Vim found the perfect place and tucked it in, pausing just a moment to second-guess himself. What if something happened to it? What if he couldn’t find it again? Looking around, he saw a small whitish-looking rock and set it near the map to mark the location inconspicuously.

As Vim wended his way back to their table, he could see the group watching his approach with keen interest. He paused for a moment to let a look of worry come over his face. He needed Constance to believe he hadn’t been able to find the map. He could even overdo it slightly - Constance, in this state, was sure not to notice, and the group would think Vim was lying. “Sir Constance,” Vim said in an anxious voice as he drew closer, “I looked for the map everywhere, I can’t find it.”

The group, who had been holding their breath waiting to see this heroic map, let out groans. “Chosen,” Mercy scoffed, giving Constance a patronizing look.

“What a crock!” said Liberty, rolling his eyes.

The group was back to laughing at Constance, and making such a racket now that a few people sitting at neighboring tables were looking over at them. Vim was still standing, waiting to see what Constance would do. He knew this was beyond a “little push in the right direction.” He was lying now, but if it was a choice between lying and revealing their quest to the whole inn, he would absolutely rather do this. He was fine with Constance weaving around drunkenly all night, but this was something else. Something Vim did not want an inebriated Constance dealing with. Now he was doing something Vim was going to be affected by. Which wasn’t the point. It was a matter of principles. But it wasn’t quite as harmless if it put Vim in danger.

Freedom X Sinister ShrimpFebruary 17, 2024 07:20 PM


Edling

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“I looked for the map everywhere, I can’t find it.”

An ever-shifting expression of alarm, exasperation, and broken humor composed of disbelief took the place of Constance’s smug countenance. Several seconds passed where the knight both processed this information and simultaneously stared at Vim as if attempting to will the other man to produce the map in hand and reassure him that this was all a tasteless joke. Although naturally, he was inclined to accept what Vim had just said judging from his face of concern. Mockery surrounding him at the table aside, Constance was earnestly unsure of how to mentally approach this dilemma when his head was fuzzy, and his thoughts were loose.

“You’re either funny, blind, or both,” the knight laughed, the sound both carrying a tune of humor and degradation. Vim’s further insistence of it truly not being in Templar’s pannier, however, began to bend the upturn of his lips into a thin line. All too suddenly the reminder of the kind of staple Jubilee was revered for settled over him. Running a tense hand through his golden hair, his fingers gripped a light fistful as he considered the absolute worst possibility of why the map was missing. Stolen. With his stomach curdling at the idea, his unstable focus shifted to the crowd. Jubilee ran rampant with criminals. A twinge of regret for not considering the risk of the map sooner broke through his haze just long enough for a seething anger to blossom.

“Someone stole it,” Constance made the declaration of the baseless accusation while his hands slammed on the table, and he stood with more stability than he had anticipated himself to be capable of at the moment. “Someone’s going to die,” was the growl that followed. It didn’t seem anyone at the table was entirely sure of the knight’s next move, and quite honestly, Constance wasn’t sure himself. Strangely, every decision and action right now was based on impulsive whim, and he had little time and concentration to discern whether that was liberating or grossly uncomfortable.

Making a series of hardly coherent curses and grumbles as he took an aggressive leave from the table, and with a subtle yet detectable impairment in the way he was walking, or more so shoving through clusters of people, he abruptly came to a stop at another table more centered among the tavern. After a brief lapse in balance in his attempt to get onto the table, eventually, he found his boots firmly planted on the tabletop, much to the very verbal dismay of those seated at his self-declared stage. “Excuse me,” Constance’s voice thundered with irritable demand. A wave of vertigo washed over him as his green eyes traveled across the crowd while he simultaneously stopped himself from giving into an unsteady sway. Gathering a sufficient level of attention, admittedly not exactly to the unfocused degree he sought considering the side conversations and varying degrees of laughter, he continued.

Somebody here stole my map. My. Map. I want it back. Now.” Armed with both a sword at his side and a superior confidence, he was positively certain that his demand would be more than considered as glances were traded around the room, and mild conversation continued. He was sorely mistaken, however.

“Oh, quit your crying!” A mocking call came from off to his side, and the laughter that erupted contributed to an utterly appalled expression on the knight’s face as he struggled to find the source of such blatant disrespect.

“Who said that?” With his demands unanswered, and people either carrying on with their own business or glancing and gossiping as if he were a pitiful spectacle, Constance punted a mug at his feet that had been on the table with the trajectory narrowly missing a passing individual. “I’m serious!” He shouted, though his tantrum only entertained the crowd. This was all utterly impossible to him. Where was the fear and respect he usually commanded just by being present in a room? While he was very well aware he was no longer in Victory, it was still far more leveling to experience the feeling of being regarded as a joke.

Ending his tirade and inevitable vow to disembowel every person within the establishment, those at the table he had been standing upon seemingly had enough as they rocked the table forward enough for Constance to barely catch himself by the time his feet hit the floor. Staggering forward, his body lurched to an abrupt stop as a rough hand fell onto his shoulder.

“Sit down and calm down, or you're out,” A gruff voice warned. Inclining his gaze from the floor, Constance’s eyes were level with the individual who had dared put a hand on him. The individual in question being an older man who was built exactly like a boulder as the knight observed through a series of blinks. Large, hardened by the years he’s endured, and completely unmoving against Constance’s shove that hardly landed with the amount of force he had aimed for.

“You can’t tell me what to do,” Constance scoffed harshly, “something of mine was stolen, and that something is worth more than any life in this absolute waste of a town,” the blond was subconsciously resting his hand tightly on the hilt of his sword, something that did not go unnoticed.

“I insist you calm down,” the brute of a man replied as if speaking to a stubborn toddler. The words only triggered Constance to fully indulge himself in a bitter rant, cursing everyone and everything that walked the earth, and ultimately trying to justify the genocide of everyone in the tavern in the pursuit of finding his map.

The man, feigning understanding with the drunk knight, had successfully redirected him to the door, and furthermore outside. It wasn’t until Constance fully registered that he had been greatly misled to the exit that he turned in a fury towards the man, who took little effort to push him back into the dirt outside of the establishment. “Don’t even think about coming back inside,” were the words of parting the man had left him with.

A series of several blinks consisting of disbelief passed before the knight even attempted to stand back up and dust himself off. While the heavy buzz he was on blurred the humiliation he just experienced, both panic and overwhelming dread began to fester in his head. The map was still gone. His thoughts and ability to deduce how he needed to act were tangled in a web of clouded judgment and an ever-growing sense of fatigue. Deciding to navigate himself back to where he had left Templar, Constance gave the horse an earful as he fervently searched for where he knew he had placed the map in the pannier. Blanching and taking a few steps back, the wall of the stable caught him as he reeled from a dizzying onset of anxiety. “No, no, no,” he murmured to himself. How could this all be going so terribly when the quest had hardly begun?

Only feigning a facade of composure he had no true ability to maintain upon hearing what he had assumed to be Vim looking for him, his hand slid down the length of his face, as if it washed away the turmoil he was experiencing. Venturing out of the stables and zeroing in on Vim, the blond began talking in a rushed assault of words before he even fully made it to Vim. “I’ll wait outside the whole night, I’m going to slaughter every man and woman that steps foot outside of this poor excuse of glorified ruins. I’m going to find the map, I have to find the map.” Whether his unhinged babble had the threatening and determined delivery he intended for it to have was incomprehensible to Constance. Blinded by the tunnel vision idea that someone currently residing in the tavern had the map was the only thing he could concretely settle his thoughts on.

Freedom X Sinister ShrimpMarch 11, 2024 05:57 PM


Freedom

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He hadn’t intended things to turn out this way, and perhaps they were getting a little dangerous. But that danger was giving Vim an exhilarating thrill. He watched the impact of his words wash over Constance’s face. The corners of Vim's mouth began to curl up, but he quickly stifled his smile. Instead, he furrowed his brow and frowned, looking to Constance as though he expected him to take control of the situation. He wanted that weight of responsibility on Constance’s shoulders, even as the knight's head spun. Even as Vim became more sure that it was him who was in control. The knight laughed at Vim, as though it was a tasteless prank, but Vim kept pushing. “It’s not with Templar, not on the trail, not in the stables. I don’t know where it could be.” All the same, Vim shot a few more side glances at the group, who tittered in amusement. Constance seemed to register the information sluggishly, the cogs of his brain turning slowly.

And then, quite suddenly, the knight slammed his fist on the table and stood, announcing that the map had been stolen. The group screamed with mirth, and as Constance turned his gaze away Vim allowed himself a fleeting smile. But Constance went on, “Someone’s going to die.” The group quieted down, exchanging uncertain glances. Vim stirred in his seat, not yet scared of what Constance was going to do but still curious. The knight was drunk, certainly, but he was still armed, strong, and well-trained - and as much as he was savoring his delightful revenge, Vim didn’t want anyone to get hurt, nor for Constance to wind up in trouble with the local authorities. Constance staggered away from the table. Vim stood, offering a polite nod to the group, who were watching the knight. “Excuse me for a moment,” Vim said to them quickly, and he weaved his way through the crowd towards Constance. He was sure he’d be able to calm the knight down if it was needed.

But before he could reach him, Constance’s loud and commanding voice piped up. “Somebody here stole my map. My. Map. I want it back. Now.” Vim paused, and heard a jeering voice call out in return, and the raucous laughter of the patrons. Vim fell back, amusement playing on his face as Constance shouted at nobody in particular, doing nothing but further entertain the crowd. He was tempted to push through them to get a front-row seat to Constance’s righteous outrage, but he’d already done one reckless thing to land him in danger today. With great difficulty he managed to stay put. He could see Constance’s head as the knight climbed up on a table. The knight’s tirade carried through the room, and people stopped their conversations to look around and join in the tides of glee. Caught up in the fervor of a wildly laughing crowd, any doubt Vim might have had disappeared and he rocked onto his feet. The mob mentality carried him away, yes. But more than that, he reveled in the idea that he had caused all of these people to turn on Constance.

He was almost disappointed when Sir Constance ended his rant and was ousted from his position on the table. Vim was just getting ready to wriggle over there and “save” Constance, just rub salt in the wound, when he saw a large man talking to Constance. They seemed to be arguing, and the man was slowly steering Constance towards the door. Seeing where this was going, Vim watched as the knight was unceremoniously thrown out, still fuming and shouting. Vim paused for a moment, then turned back to their table and made his way to the group. “So sorry you had to see that,” he said lightly, gathering anything they’d left at the table. “Please, feel free to finish up the food. I’d best go after him - before he goes screaming down the street for his map.” They were hearty and in good spirits again, and delighted with Vim’s little joke. He stepped through the door out into the crisp evening air.

Constance was next to his steed, feverishly searching for the map. As soon as he spotted Vim, he hurried over, still letting out a ceaseless string of threats. Vim nodded as if in understanding, peering up into Constance’s eyes with an expression of great concern and even pity. “The miscarriage of justice in this kingdom is staggering,” he said, keeping his voice even and low to counter Constance’s blind anger. “But . . . you don’t suppose the thief has already gotten away?” He maintained eye contact as well as he could with Constance’s frantic energy. “Back doors, side exits - they wouldn’t dare come out here with you, would they? I imagine they’re already running back home with their little treasure. Maybe if we hadn’t given them so much warning, made so much noise about it. But what’s done is done, isn’t it?” His dark eyes gleamed, and he leaned in slightly. “I never would have expected it. Stealing from you, of all people. I certainly wouldn’t have thought they could get away with it so easily. And on your quest, too. After all you’ve done for the Heroes, you were so close to doing the very greatest thing. It’s such a shame about the map. But it’s my fault, really. If I’d known what would happen, I could have intervened. Could have gotten the map back before it was too late.”

He leaned back again, watching Constance with narrowed eyes. As always happened, now that he was out of the lively atmosphere and his little revenge was drawing to a close, the thrill was dwindling and dull reality was setting in. But it wasn’t quite there yet, and Vim could still ignore the little voice buzzing at the back of his brain. As he leaned back, he felt the metallic weight of the Eye of Judgment weighing on his chest, and felt an explosion of irritation and resentment. He glanced down at the symbol, looking up at him in unblinking bronze. He took ahold of it and pulled it back so it was dangling down his back and he could no longer see it. He was saving his own life, he thought viciously, feeling the sudden need to justify himself. He was saving the mission that meant so much. The ends justify the means, right? He took a quiet breath and then looked back at Constance, concern still painted on his face. He craved the man’s response, whatever it was. Vim would get the map, of course. He would only string Constance along for a little longer, and then he would “find” the map, and the only consequence would be perhaps a bit more humility on the knight’s side.


Edited at July 28, 2024 11:56 PM by Freedom
Freedom X Sinister ShrimpJuly 28, 2024 09:32 PM


Edling

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While Constance could not say he expected Vim to magically resolve the dilemma of the missing map, somehow he found himself sinking further into the sea of disappointment and despair with Vim’s counters of logic. A feeling of helplessness began to numb his bones, strangle him into a tense silence, and direct his already impaired vision toward the tavern. In any other scenario, even the slightest insinuation that Constance’s approach had been a factor in this grossly disturbing predicament would have been answered with more blind fury than he had already displayed. However, something he could only recognize as guilt thrummed within his chest, further flowing through his being with each wild pump of his heart.

To remain steady and dependent on himself, Constance’s hands came to rest on his hips while his fingers absently drummed against his frame. He had uncontrollably tuned in and out of what Vim was verbally relaying to him. It’s not like there was anything in what the other man was saying that would provide Constance with what he desperately wished to hear though, so what good would attentively listening do? He had found his attention trading Vim out for looking over their immediate area, a confliction of thoughts and a lack thereof now becoming the primary source of his maintained silence. If the thief was already gone, what was there left for him to do? This was not a place he could tear down brick by brick until he was reunited with the object of his obsession. But he had no weight of an oath to this place, and he could rationalize himself that whatever deeds done that strayed from his oaths to the Heroes could be forgiven through prayer. Desperation is an ugly source of motivation, Constance was learning, and for perhaps the first time in his life, even for just a second, he understood what drove people to do such horrendous things.

“It would be easier to burn this town to the ground overnight,” Constance tautly spoke through a clenched jaw. “If I can’t have the map, no one should. I don’t think I would regret the kind of decisions I’m willing to make right now.” Finally finding his gaze fixated back on Vim, he was only capable of a deep exhale through his nostrils. “I’m not leaving this place and neither are you until we either get the map back or die trying,” the blond affirmed, deciding Vim’s fate for him. While he wasn’t sure he felt physically well enough to carry out everything he was burning to at the moment, the only thing that made sense to him was to remain in Jubilee and go about searching for the map through any means necessary.

“If you were a thief, where would you go?” Constance asked Vim, expecting him to do the hard part of contemplating how to proceed from here for him. Reliance on anyone disgusted Constance to a level that penetrated the armor of his soul, but he was not so foolish enough to think he was capable of laying out proper ideas to propel them into the direction they needed to go. Time, he knew, was of the essence. While it wasn’t hard to know that any thief is more inclined to sell what they steal for profit, where would a thief even go to sell something like the map? Likely not an open market, but a black market of sorts seemed likely in Jubilee, although Constance had no idea how to infiltrate a foreign land's shadier inner workings.

“Thieves usually take everything of value they can get their hands on,” Constance had spoken in a brief moment of clarity, “nothing else, as far as I cared to look, was taken from Templar’s pannier. Would a common thief even be able to recognize the importance of the map we had?” Thinking out loud, Constance was trying to grasp at details that were becoming less and less tangible from the messy composition of his thoughts. Pinching the bridge of his nose in an expression of frustration with the situation, himself, and everything in between, the knight took a step back. “Being angry is exhausting,” he mumbled to nobody in particular with a subtle shake of his head. It had been more or less decided on in his current state though that either the map was going to be in his possession soon, or he would stain the streets red by any means he had to use, as long as it meant no one else could utilize what was his.


Edited at July 28, 2024 09:33 PM by Edling
Freedom X Sinister ShrimpAugust 16, 2024 07:58 PM


Freedom

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The high was wearing off, and Vim hated the feeling. That same feeling he always got, when the adrenaline faded and he had to deal with the consequences of his own choices. So he was messing with Constance a bit, so what? The man had openly threatened Vim multiple times. Was this any worse? It was only fair. The knight had unbalanced Vim, and he was returning the favor. But as Constance stated it would be easier to burn the whole town down, Vim felt a hint of unease. Of course, he was sure Sir Constance wouldn’t do anything so drastic. But Vim had seen that he wasn’t someone to sit back and let things just happen to him. And combined with his first and very potent drink, this could go south quickly. Even if Constance didn’t wind up hurting someone else, he might get hurt himself, and that would surely make their quest a lot more difficult. “We either get the map back or die trying.” Vim just listened, not wanting to push Constance any farther. It’s fine. I’ll get the map back and the whole thing will blow over. He started to gravitate towards the hiding place, but stopped as Constance addressed a question directly to him. “If you were a thief, where would you go?”

Vim furrowed his brow slightly, trying to decide how to respond. Part of him wanted to give an answer, even if he was just making something up. He loved the fact that Constance had to rely on him. And what would Sir Constance even do if Vim didn’t know? He would have no aim, no purpose at that moment, and Vim suspected that might lead the knight to do something rash, something Vim would have to clean up after. Vim hesitated a moment, leaving an opening for Constance to keep speaking. And to make a rather astute observation. No, a common thief wouldn’t have taken the map, he was right. Vim could only hope that Constance, drunk as he was, didn’t realize the significance of what he’d just said. This was going too far, and more importantly, Constance was straying dangerously close to the truth. And to whatever he was going to do to Vim if he found out. Vim needed to steer this conversation in another direction, and quickly.

“I’m not a thief, so I don’t know where any thief would have gone,” he said firmly, stepping in front of Constance and looking him in the eye in an effort to get the man to listen to him. “But you’re right, it seems implausible - impossible, almost, that somebody would have taken just the map, nothing else. So maybe … there’s another explanation?” Vim didn’t expect Constance to put two and two together in his current state, and didn’t want to further agitate him, so he immediately elaborated, “Do you think it’s possible you’ve misplaced it?” Vim knew Constance might take it personally, but he felt safe all the same. Right now Constance was focused on the map, their common goal. And this was likely the only chance Vim was going to get to say things like that to the knight and get away with it. Or maybe - if this had worked well enough - he would be getting away with a lot more from now on.

“After all,” Vim continued, starting to back up towards the road, hoping Constance would follow or at least keep his attention on Vim instead of spiraling into destruction. “It seems unlikely that anyone here would steal from you, of all people. Maybe it’s just around here somewhere. We didn’t look very hard, did we? How silly of us to overreact.” He kept his voice light, though he couldn’t suppress the hint of glee. He was sure Constance wouldn’t notice, so he didn’t really try. He was about to find the map, save the day, and prove Constance wrong. He was about to be the one who was leading this quest, proving himself useful. Vim glanced around quickly for the white rock he’d used to mark the location. It was getting dark, but the white shone through the night. How clever of me to mark it with that, he congratulated himself. He stood in front of the spot so that even if Constance did believe him and started digging around he wouldn’t stumble upon it. “Wouldn’t that be something?” Vim asked soothly, a gleam in his eyes. Constance was going to have to show Vim some respect now. Just a little bit. That wasn’t so much to ask, was it?

Vim turned and swept his gaze across the foliage, pretending to search. He spotted the cream-colored paper of the map quickly. Excellent. He would find it and give it back to Constance. The knight would settle down, give up on his notions of violence. They’d go back into the inn. And Constance will show it to everyone. Vim stopped, feeling a prickle of alarm. The knight would want to show it to everyone, wouldn’t he? Would he? Surely he’d want to prove he wasn’t lying, and show off their mighty quest. But what else could Vim do? If they didn’t find it, Constance would lose his mind, he had said himself he was willing to do anything to get it. Vim couldn’t let anyone else get blamed or hurt. He certainly couldn’t take the blame himself, even if it was his fault. The knight would stop wanting to burn the world down, yes, but then he’d only want to burn Vim down. Maybe he could just tell Sir Constance to sleep on it, that they would look tomorrow when the sun was out. But he knew the man wasn’t sleeping tonight until he found resolution, one way or another. Vim could try to lead him on a wild goose chase, but what good would that do? It would only put Vim at risk, and in the end it would be down to the same thing. Either Constance was getting the map tonight or he wasn’t.

Vim turned away from where the map was and looked at Constance. The knight was looking for a scapegoat, and it wasn’t going to be Vim. He could be the hero. So what if people saw the map? What were they going to do about it? In fact, Vim felt more certain now that he could convince Constance not to show anyone in the first place. It sounded much easier than trying to deal with whatever temper the knight would fly into if they didn’t find it.

Turning on his heel and looking into the leaves, Vim let out a small laugh to get Constance’s attention and draw him over. “See, there.” he said, putting on a small fake smile without thinking. Don’t do that. He morphed his expression into something more neutral, though his eyes were still wrinkled with mirth. “Getting all worked up about nothing,” Vim told Constance, bending down to pick up the map. “See? You must have dropped it. Just a little mistake.” He knew he was rubbing it in, but he was feeling confident now. So much so, in fact, that he walked over to show Constance the map and put a hand on the man’s arm. He started to steer the knight back towards the stables. “No harm done.” He paused, and then slowed to a stop and came around in front of Constance to talk to him. “But it occurs to me that perhaps we shouldn’t show this to anyone. Maybe they're not supposed to know. After all, it’s our quest, isn’t it? Not theirs. We were chosen for this.”


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