The stench of the slave market clawed at Phieldâs sinuses, a sour assault that made his eyes water. The miserly traders were worse than leechesâthey wouldnât spare a single copper for a bucket of water to wash their merchandise. Five or six slaves were crammed into cages barely large enough for two, forced to eat, sleep, and relieve themselves in the same filthy space.
No privacy. No dignity. Not even the right to end their own misery.
Cages set out in the open air held young women stripped of every scrap of cloth, their bodies displayed shamelessly for passers-by. It was a crude but effective marketing ploy. Every day, gap-toothed vagrants and leering creeps lingered to gawk, though few ever bought.
"My lord, care to purchase some slaves? Essential for any estateâhard workers, every one of them!"
"Rare elven stockâjust a thousand gold!"
"Grand opening sale, my lord! Come take a look!"
Phield cut a respectable figure in his tailored black robe, a fine steel longsword at his hip, his features sharp and refined. To the slaversâ eyes, he screamed money. They swarmed like flies. Nobles were their favorite customers: deep pockets, unlike the riffraff who only came to ogle, and notoriously hard on their slavesâmeaning repeat business in a matter of days.
To most aristocrats, a slaveâs life was worth less than a good hunting hound.
Phieldâs gaze swept over the iron cages. The captivesâ eyes were dull voids, devoid of spark. Matted hair, filth-caked facesâit was often impossible to tell man from woman at a glance. Livid whip scars crisscrossed their skin. When one briefly met Phieldâs eyes, they immediately dropped their gaze and shrank back, trembling.
"How much?" he asked, scanning for the green dot while pretending casual interest.
"Prices vary wildly by race, my lord."
A gaunt-cheeked trader with a sly glint in his eye rubbed his palms together. "Goblins, halflings, and pigmen go for ten silver each. Demi-humans twenty. Orcs sixty. And if youâre after something... recreational," he leered, "the skyâs the limit."
Grinning, he gestured toward a large indoor cage. Pride of place went to the elf priced at a thousand gold.
She was breathtakingly beautiful, draped in gossamer veils that revealed far more than they concealed, her snow-pale skin luminous even in the gloom. Yet her eyes were vacant, lifelessâlike a doll with its strings cut.
"This oneâs been thoroughly broken in by goblins," the slaver chuckled. "Birthed at least twenty-six of their whelps. Still prime goods, though. Iâm sending her to auction soonâwonât fetch a mere thousand there. Care to make an offer before she goes?"
"Not interested."
The dot wasnât on her, and Phield didnât have that kind of coin to spend on a plaything anyway. He shook his head. "What about human slaves?"
"Humans are clever and obedient. Males forty silver, females twenty-fiveâgood for labor. But if itâs pleasure you want, I still say go elf. Even if you tire of her body, her flesh makes fine eating or excellent ritual components."
A chill crawled up Phieldâs spine. This worldâs nobility werenât the refined, courteous lords of storiesâthey were brutal feudal monsters.
Elven blood and meat were said to restore vitality and vigor. Proud, near-human elves had swiftly become delicacies on aristocratic tables.
While the slaver prattled on, Phield finally located the dot. His eyes slid to a cage tucked in the corner. The marker hovered above it like a quest indicator in a game.
A demi-human. A White Wolf demi-human.
Crimson eyes, wolf ears, and a bushy tail to match.
She lay curled in the damp, frigid cage wearing nothing but rough burlap, utterly stillâexcept for the occasional furtive glance toward the keys dangling at the slaverâs belt.
"Rare specimen from the grasslands," the trader boasted. "Our capture team lost good men breaching their stronghold. Savage bastardsâfought like demons to the last." His smug grin masked casual cruelty. "If you fancy sampling a White Wolfâs charms, my lord, bring servants to hold her down. One lapse in attention and sheâll bite clean through yourâ"
"Beast-eared girl?"
Phieldâs pulse raced. A red-eyed beast-eared girl? He had zero resistance to that. None whatsoever.
Like petting a wary cat, Phield cautiously extended his hand, reaching to stroke the top of her head.
A low, rumbling growl rose from her throat.
"Grrrr..."
"Youâd do well to be careful, my lord," the
steward Kaor muttered, brows knitted in concern.
The beast-eared girlâs crimson eyes glinted with menace. Captain Connorâs hand was already on his sword hilt. "Lord Phield, Iâd advise against touching them. Iâd rather not have trouble before we even reach the Nightfall Domain."
"No need to be so on edge. Sheâs rather cute, actually." Even as he said it, Phield was sensible enough to listen. He withdrew his hand at once. In those scarlet eyes he saw defiance mingled with despairâadorable and pitiable all at once. Straightening his robe, he asked, "How much?"
"Just three gold coins!" The slaver, sensing desire, named an outrageous sum without hesitation.
One gold coin equaled a hundred silver; one silver, a hundred copper.
Phieldâs eyes narrowed. "You told me demi-humans go for twenty silver. Now you ask three gold. Are you trying to mock a noble?"
"Ah, but sheâs special, isnât she? Look how beautiful she is. Captured only recentlyâguaranteed untouched, never ogled by the filthy eyes of commoners. She was destined for the auction block. With features like hers, itâs a shame sheâs only a demi-humanâan unclean creature. Otherwise I wouldnât part with her for less than three hundred gold."
"Fifty silver," Phield countered coolly, arms folded across his chest. His tone turned coaxing, almost conspiratorial. "Iâm on my way to take possession of my new territory. The slaves and playthings I buy wonât stop at just one girl. One transaction today... or countless in the future. Iâm sure you can weigh which is wiser."
The merchant sucked in a sharp breath, greed flickering behind his eyes.
He wrestled with himself for a moment.
Cultivating ties with a landed nobleâone with real authorityâcould prove immensely profitable. At last he gritted his teeth. "That depends on how many youâre buying, my lord."
The steward Kaor shot Phield a puzzled glance. The old Phield would never have haggled; heâd only have pitied the merchantâs hard lot.
After careful selection, Phield purchased a hundred human slaves and a hundred demi-humansâ120 men among them in total.
Adding the beast-eared girl heâd set his heart on, the final tally came to fifty-three gold coins.
"Here are the soul contracts, my lord," the slaver said, handing over rolls of parchment.
"All verified by a Divine Chosen."
"Contracts?" Phield accepted the sheets, scanning the long lists of names.
"Yes. Oaths sworn in the slavesâ own blood. Anyone who defies your will is consumed by divine flame and reduced to ash." The merchantâs smile was oily as he passed over the ropes tied to the captives. "So you may do whatever you wish with them. Enjoy yourself, my dear customer."
"I intend to," Phield replied with a dismissive wave, eager to be done with the manâs prattle.
In the cursed lands ahead, the only way to survive was to stay sharp and ruthless.
"Unhappy" playthings would end up corruptedâor simply dead.
...