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Chapter Two: The Three Glass Towers Of Althrone As Loam marched down the rough cobblestone path that lead away from the castle, he turned his head towards the small barracks of guards that rested on the opposite side of a beautiful garden Loam was to distracted to appreciate. There were two men duelling outside with wooden swords as someone Loam couldn’t see shouted at them. Amidst several others on the sidelines a familiar face popped out at the prince. It was Sir Rostler, or Cede as Loam was told to call him. Rostler was four years to Loam’s senior, well liked by his father, and from what he had heard someone who you did not want to get into a scrap with. He once was stationed on the boarder between Althrone and whatever the name of the country lay to the south of it was four years ago, and rose through the ranks in a timely manor. Apparently however he did something that upset his military superiors, or the other way around, as he ended up back at the castle last year in August. Loam never dared to ask what it was, but judging by the fact that he was still alive it must have been something fairly unusual. Cede turned away, somehow sensing Loam’s arrival, and walked up to him. As he drew closer Loam could make out the details of his appearance. He had hair shorter than Loam’s by a little, and it was a darker shade of brown as well. Cede’s eyes mirrored the colour of the hair over them. He wore the same jacket and armour as Loam’s guard at the door, but corduroys rather than jeans, a green headband and a cape the colour of some particularly red dirt. Underneath the legs of his corduroys were powerful looking black boots designed for some kind of trudging. Specifically which kind Loam couldn’t say. On his belt were two sheaths, one served as a battery pack and charger for a large two handed blade, and the other which rested on the outside of the first looked like it held a non-electrical short sword. Probably made of wood, for the kind of duels that Rostler had been watching moments prior. Affixed to the other side of the belt was a small wallet, judging by how full the sac was, currently held around ten grams of mercury. Loam lamented that it wasn’t clear, he loved the beautiful metal swirl around. Another pocket on the belt looked like it held a few marbles, each measured out with varying amounts of mercury in them, labelled clearly on the surface by cuts in the glass. All in all he was carrying around twenty grams of it, which was enough for about sixty loafs of bread, or four nights at an inn. “Morning Prince, and where are you off to today?” Cede questioned casually. Loam was very used to people calling him by his title, but it felt odd when Rostler did it. For whatever reason the man was in an entirely different class of being than where Loam’s regular assertions would place him. Loam disliked soldiers in general, and capes as a rule, and people taller than him were on thin ice to begin with, but there was this honesty and earnestness in him that granted the knight Loam’s trust. “To the glade, but I have to pick up a book first, and maybe I’ll pop around to the market for a bit.” Said Loam, he loved the market. For the most part the regular people of the world treated him no dfferen’t than anyone else. They knew who Prince Loam was, but they didn’t really know what the man was supposed to look like. Although, being in the presence of a knight all the time usually garnered him strange looks. Whenever he went into town he would lie about who he was when it came up, but it rarely did, and whenever someone asked about Rostler he told them that he was just a friend or something. They never pressed him further than that. “That sounds quite dangerous, I should probably come with you.” Cede said sarcastically, although you wouldn’t be able to tell from his voice. He was a man of action, not words, and liked to keep to himself when he wasn’t needed. The two walked down the rest of the path in silence, as Loam stared up and smiled at the clouds. Cede admired Loam for being able to see beauty in mundane things, but the kid could be a bit air-headed at times. From what he had heard and seen Loam was a smart guy, but the lack of focus just seemed so debilitating to him. Cede always had clear goals and a path to them, on both macro and micro scales. Things often got in the way of his plans but he never became frustrated, in his mind there could be nothing but respect for worthy a challenge. Loam saw the world in a totally different way, it upset him when people were wrong, it upset him when people did evil things, these kinds of things could never upset Cede. To him morality was far more objective, at any given time all he knew for certain was that he wanted one thing, and his enemy wanted something different. Nothing else was of consequence. It didn’t matter if his enemy knew what he was doing something wrong, it didn’t matter what his reasons were for doing it, all that mattered was that he stood between Cede and his goal, be it peace or war or wrong or right or anything in between, and that was going to do everything in his power to end that. After pouring out of the wrought iron gates and into the wealthy district of the capital (bearing it’s state’s name) they headed north to the library. Loam plucked a volume from one of the shelves entitled “Out in the Twilight” and left a two gram deposit for it with a false name to the woman at the reception desk. There were five marbles in the breast pocket of his jacket at the beginning of each day, he rarely spent any of them. Rostler looked very disinterested to loam, he was wiping a great deal of dirt off of his cape which Loam hadn’t noticed was there. For a moment, Loam entertained the idea that his cape might not have been redish brown when Rostler first received it. The two exited the old wood building and walked further north towards the market. Loam and Rostler looked down on the bazaar from the top of the road that lead into it. There were shops selling all manners of goods, primarily farmers coming into the city to peddle their crops. To the sides of the central area were rows of established shops. Forges, weaves, bakeries, cobblers, and even the practice of a mechanist or two. They tended to be right up against the forges, occasionally partnering with them. The blacksmith manufactured whatever kind of hardware a customer wanted, and a programer could write into it moments after it’s assembly. It saved the buyer the trouble of picking it up and walking it across the street, than waiting a few weeks for the programer’s time to be freed up. Loam wasn’t a particularly astute economist, at least not in the small scale, but he had always been very interested in the practice of programming. In his younger life he was too busy being taught how to manage the country, and now he felt he was too old to simply enrol in an academy, and his schedule was far from free. He looked to the west at the three great glass towers (office towers as the ancients called them) in the tradesman’s district of Althrone. One served as a university, specializing high military training but teaching other things as well. The next as guild headquarters for most of the unions in the city, divided among the floors. The final tower, and perhaps the most grand, was the temple. It had a slight golden tint on the windows, and was a little taller than the university, tinted a rosy colour, and the guild tower, tinted an ocean esque green-blue. After waiting patiently for Loam to finish his thought, Cede entered the market behind him. Cede continued to follow loam as he walked around carts of fruit, inspecting each before deciding against buying it. How on earth could he be so attentive to fruit? Cede was asking questions where they didn’t need to be asked though, Loam was a good kid. He didn’t love his job, but he didn’t hate it either. He got to train in the mornings and evenings, sit in a court three days out of the week, talk with the king about politics in private every once in a while, and following Loam around town wasn’t a horrible chore. It was just boring. As if the spirits had heard his thoughts there was a loud thump as his charge accidentally kicked the stand out from under a large cart of an middle aged orchard keeper. Cede rushed to help the man rebalance his cart, and heaved it back up quickly, but not before about 40% of the fruit had spilled out onto the street. Loam apologized profusely to the man, but reaching into his pocket he found only the three one gram marbles, which was not going to cover it. Cede, seeing the look on Loam’s face grabbed his own wallet and asked the man for a price. Loam smiled up graciously at Cede, with an “I’ll get you back” sort of grin. “Oh, I don’t know, about five grams I suppose, what are you doing paying for him though? You are a knight, haven’t you got somewhere to be?” Cede was taken aback, he wasn’t nearly as quick of a Liar as Loam, he looked down at him for an answer. “He is my brother, and he is taking leave for the day. Thank you so much for being understanding about the fruit, and rest assured he will be repaid.” Spoke Loam, trying to sound both kind and dismissive in the same sentence. Cede was surprised, normally he was a friend, or drinking buddy, or at the most a cousin. The man looked back on the two puzzled, and a little frustrated. “I don’t believe it, you two look nothing alike. If he is on his day off, why is he carrying a blade? And by the way, what are you doing wearing that kind of suit and carrying around only three marbles for?” Loam, seeing that his charade was being picked apart like a flower in the hands of a frustrated teenager, fell back onto the truth. “Alright, fine. I am prince Loam, and this is Sir Rostler, my friend and guard.” He said in hushed tones to the man, trying to keep the onlookers from hearing. The man’s expression completely changed once he had heard that. He stepped back and bowed his head quickly. “Well in that case, your highness, the fruit is dust in the wind.” The man said enthusiastically. “My name is Scry, by the way. You can put that wallet away” He insisted to Rostler. “If you two would join me for lunch I’d call it even in a heartbeat.” Scry added, thrusting out his hand to Loam, which he took and shook. “I live right outside of town, it wont be a ten minute walk.” He claimed, seeing the reluctance in Loam’s eyes. “That sounds quite nice actually, we would be happy to.” Loam decided. Scry left the sale of his fruit to some associate of his, and the party walked south towards the gates together. Loam chuckled to himself, he should knock over people’s carts more often.
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