The words are like a snake.
They strike from nowhere, unexpected, and yet…
And yet…
The impact isn't there. There's no bite to it. Just a faint chill and the sound of distant rain. These words have no surprise in their nature. Yet the meat is shocked.
Why? Why so rattled by something that isn't a surprise?
You left it long ago.
"Oh."
That is all he says in response to the proclamation by Officer Smith. There doesn't seem to be anything else to say. No 'why' comes to him, nor even a 'what'; which is interesting, indeed. He is a wizard. Makes sense, says the head. It nods in approval. They seem to be expecting more of a response and so he continues.
"... that's good to know…?"
It is not the response that they want. Their shared glance is rife with unsaid things.
Too late to escape now, boss.
"Were you aware that you are a wizard, Mister du Bois?"
Apparently. Or at least the news, while shocking, isn't a surprise. All it does is make him shiver, for some reason.
They didn't even bring any cake this time.
"Do you have cake?"
This request comes by way of the stomach and the mouth delivers it dutifully in time with a deep and abiding rumble of the belly region. Given how lean that area is he suspects there hasn't been much cake in his past. The bulge is the result of rampant alcoholism, not over-eating.
"Ah… no. Harrier, are you… alright?"
Smith tries to make what he probably thinks is a subtle gesture to his partner. The other man approaches and with a flick of his little stick creates a light that he waves back and forth in front of the face. Their eyes meet an-
Sign says closed.
No entry.
Begone.
-d Tightface reels back with a hand on his head. At first Smith looks shocked and his own little stick slides from his sleeve into his hand-
Yew, twelve inches, springy.
But Brown waves it off with a familiarly self-deprecating chuckle. He straightens his back and retrieves a cloth with which to wipe his forehead.
"Definitely not a No-Maj. That
hurt, Mister du Bois. Still, no hard feelings?"
Yeah, boss. No problem. Just let it pass.
Absolutely not! He tried to read our mind, chief. Let him have it!
What anger could be justified by so meagre a thing as this?
There is no value in what you guard.
Nothing worth being upset over.
"I'd be surprised if you got anything from me anyway."
It's true, as well. His head still feels like it is gripped in a vise and his throat cries out for relief. He stands and puts the badge back into the little pocket.
The badge. Not
his badge. That seems important, too.
"You said you were… looking. For me? Not just because of the wallet? Why
did you have it, actually?"
Jury is still out on whether or not it's actually his, though. There should be a mirror in the bathroom, but-
A web of pain and blood forms as the first strikes the silvered surface. What was there is obscured but all kinds of tears are visible between the cracks.
He had a feeling that was inaccessible. Smith is talking again now while Tightface Brown examines the neatly stacked tower of bottles. His eyes dart from side to side with precise movements; he's counting them.
"That's… perhaps something to discuss back at the Department."
He goes for the proper noun, too. It has a meaning above and beyond the word.
Camaraderie. Honour. Justice.
Yeah, that's the stuff, chief. That's where we belong. Let's go!
No, no! We don't want any of it, boss. Only bad things that way.
Brown isn't pleased with the result of his count. It's all over his face. There are quite a few. How long is it since he started? Three days? Four?
Five hundred eighty-six, but who's counting?
Lots of bottles. They are impeccably stacked. Ten per layer or so then four layers… oh, plus that one over there… there's glass shards, too, so he must have smashed some. Lots of bottles. So many bottles. Yet somehow not enough.
A trail across the city. Discarded and shattered against walls and in alleyways.
Not nearly enough.
"Have you still got your wand, Mister du Bois?"
He's the formal one. Partner is informal. Familiar, easy, neither of them calls the other on it. It's a routine. One to put him at ease, one to put him on edge. Not quite on edge. Still friendly. Close and distant might be better.
Close is usually your job, chief. Everyone opens up to you.
This is just avoiding the question, though. It's not hard to guess why he's doing it. The 'wand' they're asking about isn't on his person. If it was then he'd have found it in his clothing. This doesn't rule out another concealed pocket, but…
Right pocket, chief. Crinkle crinkle.
Just toss it, boss. No good'll come of it.
The hand is already emerging with the scrap of paper inside. It's hard to read for some reason. So was the license, now that he thinks of it. World is as fuzzy as his head. Everything in soft focus. He squints and manages to make out a receipt. Looked like… three and five and… seven? But of what?
We got robbed there, chief. Less than half the original price.
"I think that I... may have sold it."
He glances over at some of the bottles and doesn't add that it was most likely for alcohol. That much seems obvious. Although it could have been for cigarettes, he admits to nobody. Maybe even something stronger than either.
Can't do the job without it. Who ever heard of a sober hero, huh?
Tightface knows. The set of his jaw says everything. Smith suspects but he's being nice about it. He pats the body on its shoulder and tries to adopt a placating tone.
"That's alright, Harrier. We'll find it, I'm sure. You've got the receipt right there. So why don't you and I just go and pick it up, then we'll all head back to the office together."
The head can tell that he's humouring them. How could any wizard
sell their wand? Well, perhaps if they were destitute. But he has a feeling he isn't quite there, for some reason. It's hard to place just why. Besides, why has he not sold his coat as well? That ought to be worth a few sickles, surely. Though he isn't sure what farming implements had to do with anything.
His neck is doing the nodding thing but Tightface does not seem especially pleased. He steps over to Smith and without so much as a word aside pulls him away to speak in hushed tones. There's only one or two words that he can make out over the increasingly loud throbbing in his temples but they're having one of those fights that you're not meant to have in front of the suspects. Tightface is going to win.
"Fine, fine. Have it your way."
Smith lifts his wrist and taps his stick, his
wand, on the watch there three times. Then he says, in a loud clear voice;
"Smith, inbound."
He stares at the watch for a moment and suddenly vanishes with a sharp crack that causes a painful flash to cut across the eyes. It isn't a
real one, although his hand grasps at his belt anyway, and the moment passes quickly enough. Tightface eyes him up, shakes his head and then gestures at the door.
"Come on then, Mister du Bois."
The man has nothing else to say to the sad, unkempt drunkard. They walk out of the apartment together and don't bother to lock the door; he isn't sure where his keys are anyway. On the way out the young lady looks up anxiously from her desk and waves to them.
"Is everything alright offic-"
Her query is cut off when Tightface glances sharply to either side and turns to conceal his body from the open door to the street. The wand in his hand glows for a moment and then the girl's expression turns vacant.
"Could be trouble if she remembers the police visiting you; eh, Mister du Bois?"
His tone is faux-jovial and is not matched by his expression. The man did not enjoy what he just did but felt like it was necessary. This thought bounces around inside the head for some time until it feels a tug on its arm. They're pulled out into the street by the increasingly irritated Tightface. Something from earlier surfaces as the cold air hits their face.
"Are your names really Smith and Brown?"
Tightface shoots him a look of disbelief and breaks it quickly to glance up at the darkening sky. It isn't raining yet but it may soon. Somehow he's sure that it hasn't been for the past few days. His jacket would still be damp otherwise.
"Yes. Why wouldn't they be? Here, give me that receipt."
The paper is proffered and snatched away immediately. Brown checks it, looks up, frowns and then checks it again.
"You sold your wand for three galleons?"
His tone is incredulous.
Told you, chief. We got robbed.
"I suspect that I haggled."
Not well, if that number's anything to go by. It's quite possible he lowered the price. Brown doesn't sigh this time but it's clear that he wants to.
"Come on. It's close enough to walk. Might clear your head a bit."
It does not clear his head any. There's a particular odiferous quality to the air that only exacerbates the skull-cleaving ache currently assailing the head. Not helped when they pass a food cart and the delightful stench of sizzling grease makes the stomach rumble. The man behind the cart grins and offers something meaty and warm wrapped in a sad-looking bun. At that moment it is nothing short of heaven incarnate.
He scrabbles for his wallet, locates it and stares blankly at the bills inside. After a moment he pulls one out and offers it to the man who laughs at him. Brown elbows in and snatches both wallet and bill from him. He flips through them, frowning all the while, and pulls out a different one to give to the food seller. A handful of coins and another bill are returned in exchange alongside the sweet ambrosia.
"Thank you for the food."
The man behind the cart nods and grins some more as the hands stuff it right into the mouth a moment later. It is terrible, but in a beautiful sort of way. This symphony of gristle and wheat product is exactly what they needed. Brown pushes them back into motion and tucks the money back into their wallet.
It isn't until half of the meal, which is theoretically a sausage although evidence isn't bearing out that hypothesis, has vanished into their stomach that he is able to breathe again. Hunger is a rather overpowering sensation once you've acknowledged it. The grease has exacerbated the overall sensation of 'worn-outness' but satisfied something more primal.
"You have over eight hundred dollars in your wallet, but you pawned your wand to buy hooch. How does that happen, Mister du Bois?"
That is a very good question, but it does slot neatly into the overall mental picture that they have been building thus far. There are, after all, far more bottles in that apartment than your average destitute alcoholic could afford. This suggests certain
things.
"I think I
might be rich. Somehow. Maybe I don't have as much, uh… 'wizard' money?"
More, actually.
The thought comes with a memory. Pure, unrestrained joy and a pile of glittering gold. It is a childish moment, from a place that is far away and long ago. One which will not return. Tightface snorts and it is clear he is not interested in purchasing this particular explanation. Shopping around, perhaps. Never buy the first answer the suspect gives you even if you know it's right.
How many times did we tell them that one before it stuck, chief?
They change the subject quickly.
"I thought it was too normal. Your names. For wizards, I mean."
At the time, at least. Now that they think about it again that idea feels… off. Brown clearly agrees given how he rolls his eyes as the only response. Aren't wizards just people? Some people have normal names. Stands to reason.
He stuffs the rest of the alleged food into his face and picks up his step; taking the turn before Brown reaches it. The legs are working on their own now and take him down an alleyway that's remarkably clean and nice. All the other people that are walking on the street pay no mind to them and don't seem to notice the presence of this tiny slice of city. No bins are present nor any evidence of those temporarily between domiciles sleeping here.
There is rubbish, though, of a sort. Some sort of wooden frame and some pieces of broken furniture are in a neat pile against the right-hand wall further down. Brown gives them an irritated glance as he enters the alleyway too before fixing his gaze upon the body.
"Well, this is a good sign that at least you're not a squib."
The way he says the word rankles at the ears. They protest to the head who considers the complaint dutifully. It's not like the other thing they said, which also meant 'not-a-wizard'. This means that too, but in an unpleasant way. It has been seen associating with awful accusations and terrible slurs.
Brown moves past the briefly frozen body and pushes open a work of art that, upon closer inspection, seems to be a door. The letters on it blend together, and are quite shiny to boot, but proudly declare this place to be 'Turlok and Winkes, Pawnbrokers'. Underneath it says, 'Established' but lacks any particular date. Just in general, then.
A treasury of smells is discovered as they step across the threshold. All kinds of scents that trigger tingles across the body which say, without a doubt, 'Oh yes, this is
the place'. Though what kind of place that is remains up for debate. The purveyor is white of hair, long of nose and wrinkled of skin.
Goblin. Don't trust him.
They look discomforted with the presence of what is quite clearly law enforcement in their store. The reaction they have to spying the body, however, is far more telling.
"Oh
no."
It is a response that drips with despair. They leap onto the counter with wand in hand and wave it firmly across the room. In response the shelves, stuffed full of all sorts of fascinating items, retreat decisively into the floors and walls. Brown regards this with one raised eyebrow that he directs first at the shopkeep and then back at the body.
"Seems he recognises you, Mister du Bois."
This elicits a shrieking laugh from the crooked creature on the counter. They hop down from it and start waving their hands vigorously at the body.
"Of course! How could we forget? Three shelves toppled, oh yes, and still wouldn't leave until we bought their-"
They pause and look nervously at Officer Brown; who is rather pleased, in a stern sort of way.
"Listen,
officer, we didn't
want to, alright? But they kept holding it under their chin and saying
awful things and we were, frankly, doing them a good turn. Gave them a fair price, too!"
Awful things? Like what, exactly, is the first question that comes to mind.
Just a little joke, chief. Nothing worth minding about.
We were trying to cut back on those. They stopped being funny before the first time.
Nonsense, just a tiny bit of harmless fun. Kills at parties.
Wand under throat, big grin, then scream at the top of your lungs-
"Abracadabra."
Both other parties in the room blanch and turn as one to glare at him. The pointer of the two does what he does best and aims one long finger at the offending mouth.
"Don't you start that again! What if another one of our patrons hears you!"
The empty store is accusatory enough on its own that the suggestion echoes hollowly. Brown closes his eyes and keeps them that way just long enough for a calm, measured count to ten. They open again and he raps his knuckles on the countertop to gain the owner's attention.
"That's enough, Turlok. I'll write you a receipt for the wand; just take it down to the treasury office and they'll reimburse you the cost, alright?"
A piece of paper emerges from his coat with a flick of his wand and he is just starting to fill it out when he notices the nervous expression on the goblin's face.
"... do
not tell me that you sold it."
Brown's glare must be just as stormy as his tone, though the head can't see it from this angle, because the proprietor backs up several steps with his hands raised defensively.
"We wouldn't, we wouldn't! Knew he'd have regrets and be back so we kept it under the counter, nice and safe. Only… only…"
They swallow hard and tug at the neck of their clothes with one hooked finger.
"... a friend of Snapwick's stopped by and was in the market for a wand, you see. Very
firm. Wouldn't accept no for an answer. So… yes, we did sell it, in the end."
The officer puts the paper away again with a stiff motion and nods to the little person in an equally controlled fashion.
"Of course. Thank you for your help, Turlok. We'll be on our way."
He turns to leave and grabs the body by the arm as he passes by. Together they exit the building and it is only then that Brown pauses, releases the arm he was gripping so firmly and then proclaims his assessment of the situation in a tone of succinct doom.
"Well
fuck."
This tiding is summarily ignored by the body because they have caught sight of the large, antique mirror that has been left on the other side of the alleyway. They'd caught sight of the frame on their way in but focus had been redirected to the door. Now, though, they see
it. The horror in the mirror.
It gazes back with a
particular expression that doesn't fit on the face at all. Everything's distorted at the edges, which is as much the fault of the warped mirror than anything, but it can't hide the ruin. Bedraggled, wispy black hair so out of control that it's hard to tell where the beard begins. Stains on the leather along with out-of-place patches; sewn shut by hand rather than magic. Heavy bags under the eyes, which are bloodshot to boot, and a certain redness to the nose.
Nah, chief, forget about all that. You're still on top.
It isn't as bad as it looks, boss. You're just tired.
Couple more uppers and you'll be right as rain, chief.
Do not fool yourself.
You are only alive because magical liver cures exist.
You are only alive because you think they still need you.
You are only alive because you are too cowardly to end it.
You are too great a failure to fail correctly.
The face of Harrier du Bois smirks back at him from the mirror. This is who he is, now. He's the kind of man who smirks at mirrors. At everyone, apparently. When he tries to stop the expression it doesn't stop; like it knows some big joke that he's not getting.
"Mister du Bois. Mister du Bois.
Harrier!"
He's cut out of the moment by the sharp tones of Tightface Brown who looks uncharacteristically worried. The man is holding a cup of some kind, who knows where it came from, and is pressing it into his hands.
"Drink this. You're clearly dehydrated."
It's full of cold, tasteless liquid that nevertheless soothes the burning sensation in his throat. In
Harrier's throat. Brown supports him and moves him so he can lean against the nearest wall. Once he's securely in place the officer starts pacing.
"What's-"
He takes a deep sip and swallows hard.
"The matter?"
Tightface stops moving his feet and lives up to his assigned name with how sour his expression is at that moment.
"Because, Mister du Bois, of who acquired your wand. I don't know how he found out it was here, but…"
The officer actually lets himself sigh this time and folds his arms.
"Your wand is in the hands of Sedge Snapwick. A goblin crime boss."
Oh.
Bugger.