his jaw tightened as she slipped her arm through his like they were old companions rather than strangers in the dark. the scent of spice clung to her, too warm, too inviting, and her words poured out in easy rhythm, bright and sweet as honeyed wine. edrick bolton did not drink sweet things.
the wind tugged at the banners strung between the rooftops above, faded cloth rippling with each gust that swept in from the harbor. gulltown’s cobbled streets glistened underfoot, damp from sea spray and the scattered dregs of spilled ale. lanterns bobbed overhead, their flickering glow casting long, shifting shadows across the press of bodies still winding through the festival. music echoed distantly, pipes, drums, a woman’s voice raised in a song about sailors and saltwives.
edrick kept his stride even as they walked, letting the crowd swallow them again. he didn’t try to shake her off, at least, not yet. it might’ve drawn more attention. her grip was light, almost absent-minded, like this was all perfectly ordinary.
“leather,” he answered at last, eyes scanning a row of stalls where a fire-eater gathered a small crowd. “dark brown. worn smooth at the edges. half-full, give or take. no sentiment.” he paused, then added, “but it was tied tight. whoever took it was fast.”
he didn’t sound angry, only matter-of-fact. the kind of man who’d catalog a problem rather than rage at it. his eyes moved as he spoke, sharp and restless, watching pockets, fingers, the subtle shifts in movement that might betray a cutpurse. but he didn’t look at her.
“you’re right, though,” he said after a beat, tone softening just slightly. “this lot’s thick with thieves. people travel from all over for the harbor festival, sailors, sellswords, half the dregs of the narrow sea. no one notices a missing purse in the middle of a song or a crowd leaning toward fire.”
he glanced her way then, just briefly, the corner of his mouth tugging into something that might’ve been a smile if it weren’t so fleeting.
“still. generous of you to help a stranger. most would just keep walking.”
he let that sit a moment, the clamor of the festival rising behind them, bells chiming, a pig squealing in the distance, someone shouting about oysters. edrick tilted his head toward the next lane, narrower and quieter, but no less busy with tables full of wears and idle chatter.
“you’ve a name, i expect. or should i just call you luck?”