Contracts
Mentions: @divergent-lines @savianblackwood @neiablackwood
With the door closed behind him, Jacorek decided that it would be better locked from the outside. Not that he believed anyone would be snooping around, but, simply because, he didn’t trust anyone in these walls.
Its bad luck is what this is, he started to himself, making his way along the hallway. I knew Madivh wouldn’t be happy with any of this, but it still hurts, even if the swords are taking pretty much all that emotion away. And that woman finding out about Savian, bah, a snarl came to his lips as he walked. The one time that nobleman decides to punish me for leaving for a day without notice, he puts her in charge. Why couldn’t he just ignore it like he did all those other times?
Jacorek quietly envisioned stabbing the man in the gut and, since he was at it, the whole operation.
His feet took him outside, under a large tree in the corner of the property; the same tree he had spoken to Savian on the first day he had meet the kid. A cigarette had appeared in hand and was already lit and in his mouth before he remembered dryly how the swords would take away that pleasure.
The only pleasure they allowed him was that of killing and the thrill that came from that bloodshed; the feeling was surely amplified in some way to make it feel better than anything else the world could provide.
Parasites.
He didn’t give the swords a single look.
Jacorek enjoyed his cigarette anyways. A lifetime of smoking at least gave him the brief memories of what they used to give him. Plus, he knew the drug was still affecting him, the swords simply removed the feeling of the effect. His muscles would relax, and his mind would grow a little slower, a little less inclined to feel pain and emotion a like. A little more lazy in everything he did.
He enjoyed his taste until it was no bigger than a length of a finger joint before tossing it away with a quick extinguish of ice magic.
Jacorek went back to his office, where a stack of new recruits, paperwork, and an envelope with his name written on it, front and center, sat on his desk.
He opened the letter.
Captain Jacorek Blackwood,
Over the course of your time here working for me…
Jacorek folded the piece of paper up and tossed it into the fireplace; the cold wood would be getting warm soon enough.
He spent the rest of the day filing away recruits, reaffirming what his men had already told him in their verbal reports of the worgen and kobolds that seemed to want to make his life more difficult, and the demands of the nobleman telling him exactly what shipments were coming in, which needed to be checked, and where they were going to be stored.
Things he was certain his other employees should be doing; he was just a Captain of the Guard of his little estate, why did it matter if he needed to send men to double check inventories and make sure they were stored properly?
Those papers went into the now roaring fire, engulfing the material in a puff of smoke.
Once he was done with the paperwork, the sun was beginning to lower in the sky. Jacorek glared at the lowering sun with the single thought of half a day wasted.
Through the second part of his duty, the men on guard were alert and well confident. Zach and the other had seemed slightly concerned upon his approach, but answered his questions and said nothing unneeded; a wise decision.
The only issues he ran into was the training grounds. The men he sent for training were lazing about, unaware of his presence for a solid several minutes before he made his presence known. A quick scatter put these men into their places and the last bit of his day for the afternoon was over.
These men in training were still in no shape to be anything but their own lives, and that included his grandson.
As the day shift switched to night, Jacorek informed the patrol route that he would be accompanying them, and that they were on standby and should make sure there weapons were sharp and their mindsets ready.
Now all he had to do was wait for Samantha to return. He did not doubt that the woman would be back before the end of the day. She would want her mad dog put under leash as soon as possible before changing his mind. Before making a risky endeavor. And he had thought of it, several times in his mindless walk around the estate. It would be easy too just kidnap two kids, dump them in the middle of the mountains, and disappear.
Sure Mey and Madivh would be in a horrible way, but at least, they didn’t have them.
Ah, but, there would be no questions on their part. Mey would have his head, and he wasn’t necessarily against her taking it.
As he made it back to his office, whisky in mind, he was only faintly disappointed to see Samantha sitting on his desk, with his own personal glass and amber liquid at her lips as if she was purposefully insulting him.
“Make yourself at home.” He said as the door closed.
Two men in dark leathers made themselves known at either side of him, still as statues against the walls, eyes sharp on his back.
He gave them each a nod as Samantha spoke, “As I own you, this is technically my room. So yes, I will.” She downed the rest of his glass. The whisky container she sat the glass down next too was a quarter of what had been in there beforehand.
He scowled. “I see we are celebrating already. Please, why not drink the rest?” He motioned to the bottle.
She scoffed, sliding off the desk and patted her hand on a piece of paper laying there; a pen in waiting.
Jacorek took in a deep breath, now noticing that a shadow in the darker area of the corner had taken on the form of a man in black with a staff point sticking over one shoulder.
“Don’t trust me?” He mused as he stood beside her. The paper was already prewritten, and he could feel it drenched in magic.
The words he did not care for. They could say whatever they wanted, but he gave them a cautionary look and was not at all surprised to see that in summary it was a binding contract that even a slave would find as a demotion in rank.
“Safety,” was all she said. “Sign, and we can go on our separate ways.” She poorly hid her excitement with a growing smile.
“Hopefully,” he said as he picked up the pen, his finger poked at the end of it, and he began to sign. “This is all you’ll ever want,” he said as the swords removed the pain from his finger.
He set the pen down.
Samantha immediately swept the paper up and walked over to her mage. He gave it a look over, his hand trailing over his signature. There was a single nod.
“Yes,” she no longer hide the giant smile on her face. “Indeed. For now, I won’t get in your way, but,” she rolled up the paper and waved it at his face. “I’ll have a job for you, a little test, just so you know whose in control.” She spun, red hair trailing after her as she made a straight line for the door.
The mage, her black guard dog, and lastly the two rogues fell in behind her before they closed the door.
Outside, he felt the energy of magic bloom and disappear.
Jacorek gave a short sigh, taking in the glass she had drank from. He held the glass in hand, giving it a wide grin. “A shame. Which do you think is stronger? My blood or my soul?” he looked over his shoulder to the door. “We’ll see eventually, won’t we?”














