“I kind of stumbled into those essences,” Jason said. “They came quick, but they didn’t come easy.”
They joined a queue of wagons at one of the city gates. The line moved quickly, the guards barely glancing at the contents of his wagon.
“You’re not carrying anything restricted are you, Jory?” a guard asked.
“Just the usual, Hugh,” Jory said, then turned to Jason. “You’re not restricted, are you?”
“Not that I’m aware of,” Jason said.
“You have a good day, Jory,” the guard said. “I’ll bring my mother to the clinic, now you’re back. Her leg again.”
“Always welcome, Hugh.”
Jory drove the wagon through the gate and into the city proper. Most of Old City was built from the same red and yellow stone Jason had seen in the desert, although many buildings were painted in colourful whites and greens. They were mostly one or two levels high, but three wasn't uncommon. Over the rooftops, he could see the occasional building that jutted five, six or even seven storeys high. The streets were teeming with people, even right in front of the gate. The air was filled with voices and the smell of spice.
“What’s that I’m smelling?” Jason asked as Jory let the wagon confidently into the street, people flowing around it like water.
“It’s called chittle,” Jory said. “It’s cheap, strong and grows all over the delta, so the street vendors all use it. It can take some getting used to.”
“No, it smells good,” Jason said. “I’ll have to do some wandering around.”
They reached Jory's combination home, alchemy lab and medical clinic; a large, three-story building. A sign above the door proclaimed it as the Broad Street Clinic. Although the street was crowded, the building was given a wide berth as two people brazenly vandalised the front of the building in the middle of the day. Rather than hooligans, however, they were wearing bright white robes hemmed with blue, yellow and green. They both had ceramic pots of red paint and were writing the word ‘HERETIC' across the door. There was a small crowd of passers-by who had stopped to watch the show.
“Ah, dammit,” Jory said wearily, pulling the wagon to a halt.
“Who are they?” Jason asked.
“They’re from the church of the Healer,” Jory said.
The two men spotted him on the wagon, putting down their pots and brushes to march over and confront him.
“So, the heretic is back,” one of them said. They were both young, around eighteen or nineteen.
“Is this really necessary?” Jory asked, still atop the wagon.
Jason could sense from their auras that both men were essence users. Iron rank, like Jory and himself.
One of the two opened his mouth for a sneering remark but was pre-empted by Jason.
“Who are these pricks?” Jason asked loudly as he hopped down off the wagon. Walking around the two men, he picked up one each of the pots and brushes they had put down when Jory arrived. Jory and the two men watched him, unsure of what he was doing.
“Who are you?” one of the men asked.
“I asked first,” Jason said. “Is it a local custom to write what we think of people with paint? I’m not sure I can fit ‘self-important turd nugget’ on your robes. Do you have a smaller brush?”
Still sitting on his wagon, Jory groaned, running a hand across his face. The two men turned red with fury, lunging at Jason. He threw the contents of the pot over the first one and threw a fist at the other. The paint landed but the punch did not. A short time later Jason was curled up on the ground. He could have tried using abilities, but he knew both men were iron rank. He was afraid that pulling out powers would be like pulling a knife in a bar fight, escalating things to the point of genuine danger. The clean one was satisfied with having laid Jason out with a punch, but the one splattered with paint was still getting kicks in.
“Come on,” the other one said. “We came to send a message, and the message is sent.”
The painted man gave Jason a final kick, picked up the other pot of paint and tipped it over Jason.
“Now it's sent,” he said, and the two started walking off. The crowd of onlookers hurriedly parted to let them through, but the pair stopped when a voice called out to them.
“Hey!” Jason yelled. The pair turned to see Jason, barely back on his feet, doubled over, but flashing them a bloody-toothed smile.
“You guys kicked the crap out of me pretty good,” Jason groaned. “I don’t suppose you can point me to a church of the Healer?”
The man covered in paint lit up with fury, his face almost matching the red paint splashed on him. Sprinting back with thundering steps, he brought a fist down on Jason’s head. Barely able to stand, Jason’s only defence was a bloody-toothed grin. The fist came down and he crumbled, out cold before he hit the ground.
36
The Island
Jason regained consciousness on a cushioned table, like an examination table in a doctor’s office. He’d been stripped down to his boxer shorts and his skin was covered in healing unguent.
“I think I’m weirdly getting used to this.”
“To getting knocked out?” Jory asked. He was at a sink, washing out empty potion vials and placing them on a drying rack.
“It’s been a rough couple of weeks,” Jason said.
“Two acolytes of the god of healing, beating someone unconscious, though,” Jory said. “That’s unusual.”
“Not for me,” Jason said. “It’s mostly been cultists, but generally religious figures of one stripe or another.”
Jason groaned as he shoved his legs off the table, pushing himself up to a sitting position. He looked around what he assumed was the inside of Jory’s clinic, which was surprisingly similar to a medical exam room from his own world. Tiles and cabinets; clean, white surfaces. There was a plain chair next to the exam table, with his clothes folded neatly on it, along with a towel.
“Is that for me?” he asked.
“I put the ointment on you,” Jory said. “You can wipe it off yourself. You know, goading those two into kicking the snot out of you was the single dumbest thing I’ve ever seen. But what really impressed me was that you immediately topped it by standing up and doing it again. They weren’t mucking about that second time, either. The one you dumped paint on kicked you square in the head.”
“I don’t remember that,” Jason said.
“It was kind of a passing shot as they left,” Jory said. “I think you were already out.”
“Harsh,” Jason said. “I’ve been knocked out a lot this last week.”
“I believe you,” Jory told him. “You owe me for the healing potion I tipped down your throat, by the way. And two tins of healing ointment I used for the bruising.”
“No worries,” Jason said. “That’s actually why it wasn’t a stupid thing to do.”
Jory placed the last potion vial on a drying rack.
“This I want to hear,” he said, turning around to face Jason.
“Well, if someone beats you up, there’s healing potions,” Jason said.
“If you have the money,” Jory said.
“Valid point,” Jason acknowledged, “but in my case I do. Which means I can take a beating and the repercussions don’t last so long.”
“I don’t know about the rest of it,” Jory said, “but I will admit you can take a beating.”
“If you stay quiet when you wished you’d said something,” Jason said, “that regret builds up. Starts eating you from the inside, and there’s no potion for that.”
“Sure there is,” Jory said. “It’s called liquor. Another alchemist friend of mine has a distillery not too far from here.”
“That’s not a cure,” Jason said. “That’s setting yourself on fire to ward off the cold.”
“I’m not sure you're the guy I’m going to for advice about consequences,” Jory said.