Thank you for this opportunity.
Chapter 1, Part 1
(Note: this chapter has a Maturity Warning for profanity and sexual assault ("mild" as far as things go))...
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Llew didnât break stride as she kicked the empty glass bottle aside, barely giving it a thought. Litter was the least of the hazards in Cheerâs streets at night. She walked with her head down, hands thrust deep in the pockets of her coarse brown trousers, blending in with the eveningâs wildlife. With hair in dire need of a trim, there was always a risk that the disguise wouldnât hold â but it only had to hold until she got home. She would cut the offending locks in the morning.
A commotion broke out up ahead at Camilleâs Cathouse. Some john lacking the financial means to sate his desires by the looks and sounds of it. Perhaps he should have thought about that before buying such a large bottle of whisky. The townâs men hunted gold by day, oblivion and pussy by night, and sometimes the two nocturnal aims conflicted. Both could spell danger for Llew.
She approached the still cussing man, stepping into the road to give him a wide berth. At this time of night at least one didnât need to be so cautious about steaming piles in the middle of the dusty streets; all the horses were asleep in their stables or paddocks or waiting lazily outside a bar or brothel.
âOut for a good time, boy?â The old coot stepped in front of Llew, stopping her in her tracks. âIâll share one wiâ yer.â
Llew tried to side-step him, but he shadowed her movement.
âItâs still five miras each. Two men, ten miras.â The half-dressed madam on the porch folded her arms across her chest and stared down at them.
âYou said five miras per girl. We only need the one.â His arm snaked across Llewâs shoulders drawing her in to him. If she hadnât already been cursing staying out late with Kynas, she sure would have started now. âWhat dâyou say? Iâll let you go first. I wonât even watch. Sure you wonât mind me listeninâ, though.â
Llew struggled to find her voice â her deeper, more boyish voice. She shook her head.
âFive miras per . . . service.â The womanâs eyes narrowed. âYou want cheap, Renny, you go down see Hedyâs girls. Theyâll look after you real nice.â
âAw, but Hedy donât have your wee Tamra.â Renny pulled Llew closer to his mouth. His breath reeked like it was coming from the other end of his body. âWee Tamraâs my favorite,â he confided in a loud whisper.
âTamraâs busy, anyway. Now scoot.â Camille waved the back of her hand in a brushing motion at Renny, dismissing him. âAnd donât come back till youâve got some cash.â
Still clutching Llew, Renny waved his bottle, miraculously not spilling any liquor.
âOh, youâre a hard woman, Cammy.â
âBetter a hard woman than a limp dick any day, Renny.â The woman flashed a gleaming white grin at them. âMaybe next time youâll rethink the whisky. Or at least buy it here. Then we can talk discounts. Loyalty is rewarded at Camilleâs.â
âOh, aye.â Renny turned Llew with him to dawdle back the way sheâd just come. âWomen, eh? Never give nothinâ for free.â
Llew didnât know anyone who gave anything for free and didnât see why the brothel girls should be any different.
âWell lad, shall we try Hedyâs?â Renny squeezed again.
Llew tensed the second his step faltered.
He regained his composure almost instantly and squeezed her shoulders once more, this time looking down at the way her shirt bunched across her chest. Two small but distinct peaks appeared as her shoulders rounded under the pressure.
âWell, well. Looks like my luckâs on the up ân up.â His arm reached around her shoulders so his hand could feel the soft flesh beneath Llewâs shirt. He sucked back a glob of spit, took a swig from his bottle, and tried to bring her around in front of him. Llew pushed back and ducked under his arm. But he was quick and grabbed the loose waist of her shirt.
âHey! We was just gettinâ to know each other.â He tugged and Llew bounced against his chest.
She used the momentum to break free of his grasp, turned and ran. The whisky hadnât kicked in as much as she thought, because he was soon on her heels. She focused on keeping her line straight down the middle of the road. A straggling group of men leaving Pollyâs Bar farther down the road made no moves to let her pass, seeming to find the spectacle of a young boy running from an older man interesting verging on downright hilarious. Some of them reached out to slow Llew, but they didnât go so far as to stop her. Fearing that the men would turn on her, Llew didnât plead for their help but pumped her limbs even harder, and a few moments later she was past them. Unhindered by the group, Renny caught up to her, knocking her into a narrow alleyway between McNultyâs Bar and Barber Piersonâs.
The crash of the half-full bottle against the wall rang out as Llew fell to the ground. Quickly regaining her feet, she found herself facing jagged glass and Renny looking pissed off.
âThat bottle cost me a night with wee Tamra. Come âere,â he said, flinging both arms out in some sort of drunken embrace. He missed, but the bottle swung dangerously close and Llew hopped back deeper into the alley. âYou owe me the price of a bottle oâ whisky, girlie. And maybe a bit more.â
âYou broke it, you drunk bastard.â Llew dodged the manâs next lunge and made a pass for the alleywayâs entrance.
He brandished the bottle at her. âThat ainât the language of no young lady.â
âWho said anything about being a lady?â
They danced side to side, Llew looking for a gap, Renny blocking.
âOh, you like playinâ at it like a boy, eh? Well, I ainât picky. Turn around, we wonât even have to take them pants right off.â He paused to grab his crotch.
âFuck you.â
Llew lunged and Renny blocked her path again, grabbing her and throwing her to the ground. He scrabbled at her feverishly, trying to get her trousers undone. Llew kicked wildly, she punched, she clawed, and when he hit her back, she grabbed his face, digging her fingers close to his eyes and returning the pain. Renny slashed at her with the bottle, slicing her shoulder. Llew pressed her hand against his chin, pushing him up and closing her wound. He screamed and slashed again, cutting into her arm. Llew grabbed his wrist, healing this new scratch.
Renny cried out again and now swung the bottle blindly, hysterically, cutting Llewâs cheek, neck, chest, forehead, shoulder, ear, nose, eye, throat . . .
Somewhere in all the chaos, a strange peace overcame her. She relaxed and let it take her.
Llew woke to the scent of blood, the jaunty tinkle of a piano being played nearby, light spilling across a wood-plank wall, and a heavy feeling in her chest. No. Not in her chest. It was on her chest, and it was sticky and damp.
Smell of blood. Heavy thing. Sticky and damp.
She pushed up. The corpse â she couldnât feel any breathing other than her own â lifted, teetered, and then the strength in Llewâs arms failed. She fell back and the body dropped down with her. A shudder ran through her body. A glass bottle smacked to the ground and rolled across the ground, scraping the stones. Dim candlelight from the uncovered window above reflected from its shattered edge.
A broken bottle. The dead man.
Remembered pain flitted through Llewâs mind. He had attacked her and now he was dead. The events between those two points were a blank. Her shirt was wet, almost certainly with blood.
Mustering all her strength, she wedged her hands under the manâs shoulders and heaved again, pushing higher on one side. His shoulder slid to the ground, easing the weight off her. Bracing herself on her elbows, she kicked and slid, freeing her legs. Clambering to her feet, Llew shook herself, trying to rid herself of the dead manâs touch. Her near-white shirt looked black in the low light. Foul. Only slightly less so with the knowledge that it was her own blood. She could just make out his face, frozen in an expression of horror, in the flickering candlelight from the window above. There was no outward sign of injury Llew could see â apart from all the blood, of course.
She couldnât be found there with the body. The Farries would hang her without question. She turned and ran deeper into the alley, emerging alongside the front entrance of The Diamond Duster, the last of Cheerâs bars to close for the night, and even then, usually only at the Farriesâ specific request.
âBit of a rough one, there, lad?â someone called after her.
Llew kept to the shadows; not that there were many Cheer locals out this late in the dark folds of night, but she had no way to explain her blood-soaked state if she did run into anyone.
The distance back to her hovel by Big River seemed greater than normal, but finally dusty dirt road gave way to swathes of tussock punctuated by the occasional matagouri or lancewood. She pushed her way through long grasses and past branches heavy with yellow bell-shaped flowers, now gray in the early morning light, past her thatched, thigh-high hovel, before pulling off her shoes at the stony bank and wading straight into the water, not bothering to remove her clothing. To have any chance of washing the blood from them, she would have to soak them now.
The swift current carried away the sensation of the manâs weight lying over her even as it lifted the blood from her skin and washed it away. It was her blood. It was all hers. He had killed her, and now he was dead.
She had never killed before. Probably because she had never died before. Healing, yes, sheâd done that. She knew what must have happened, and yet couldnât bring herself to admit it. Surely, she couldnât do that: she couldnât come back from the dead. No one came back from death.
She pulled the shirt over her head, then squeezed it under the water, rubbing it and rinsing it and rubbing again. The cold glow of dawn crept across the sky. And the browned blood could not be washed from the garment. She had left Kynasâs late, but not that late. How long had she lain unconscious â or dead?
Llew cursed and threw the shirt to shore. She only had one other shirt, and she was almost certain it was getting too small. She would have to spend a good deal of her earnings on a new one or take the risk of stealing more than her usual quota. But she maintained a quota for a reason. After all, she only needed what she needed, and being greedy got you caught.
Already half undressed, she fought with her trousers until they jerked free of her body. They, too, were stained with her blood. Damn it! Clothing wasnât cheap. She could feed herself for free but, if she wanted to mingle with the general public, she had to buy clothes. While she knew how to use a needle and thread, her skills in that department only went as far as basic repairs.
She dug her hands into the riverbed and then, with handfuls of sediment, scrubbed the last of the blood from her chest, her face and her arms. Now acclimatized to the waterâs chill, she waded in a little farther and dunked herself under, emerging a few seconds later to wipe her eyes clear of water and slightly-too-long hair trailing over her face. She pressed her feet through the muddy sediment, feeling it erupt between her toes, and took the time to appreciate the warmth beneath its surface. Strange how that little bit of heat always remained, somehow not leached by the rushing water above. Like her own sense of worth, somehow not drained by living beneath the flow of Cheerâs society.
Cheer. Named for the happiness the first settlers experienced when they started digging gold. The gold was gone. As was the cheer. But Cheer remained.
She peered at her hands in the rippling water. A man had died at her hands. But she had died at his hands first. It was little consolation, but it made forgiving herself easier.
Her fingers began to tingle and sting from the cold and she made her way back to shore, wiped herself down with handfuls of grass, returned to her little hovel and wrapped her woolen blanket about her. Despite having spent however many hours unconscious, she needed sleep. There were only a couple of hours before the market started. She drifted off, reveling in the aromas of dew-soaked grasses, damp stones, and thyme.