Once again, I found myself garbed in these damned rags, with my golden treasures weighing heavily on my arms, constricting my blood flow. I stood by the door of my prisoner's carriage, the air crisp as we waited for the journey to begin.
My cold, fat shackles weighed down my wrists while I absentmindedly fiddled with a thick piece of dark wood I had picked up on our way back from the Merchant Guild's camp.
I analyzed it with an urge I hadn't gotten in a while.
If only I had something sharp...
"Hey Alith," I called to the woman standing beside me on the carriage steps, having accepted my current lisp and predicament of talking weird. I forced myself too much earlier, trying to look like less of an idiot in front of my openents and stuff. It was just Alice now, the worst she could do was make fun of me.
Earlier, I had spoken with Melissa in a secluded corner.
"Remember. You may not have fully atoned, but that man's life is saved because you made the right decision in the end." I fixed her with a resolute stare, her blonde hair shining dully in the light. Melissa, the middle-aged woman, had complied with the urgent request that me and Commander Blert had made—to let me borrow her identity.
"L-Lying is a sin," The woman's green eyes were swollen. "I deserve to go to prison. W-We all do."
This, perhaps, explained why she was sitting in my prisoner's carriage bawling her eyes out.
"Right, lying is a sin," I retorted, my tone hardening, "but drinking and endangering the lives of those you were sworn to protect is fine."
Too many lives had been at risk because of this woman.
"Listen, I'm not asking you for a favor. Hiding what happened here is the only salvageable decision you can make here. It's either that, or you get me, the commander, yourself, and everyone else involved a death sentence. Is that what you want?"
"... No." She mumbled.
"Your Kopra saw what you did here," or was it Korpa? "He knows your intentions and he witnessrd how this scheme saved lives. I'm sure he's forgiven you already."
She opened her mouth as if to speak, then closed it, her expression sorrowful. There were traces of tears on both of her cheeks, and despite myself, I felt a pang of sympathy. I can never stand to see people cry.
"Now wear your clothes and go live your life." I kept my expression stern. "Keep your powers disappearing a secret. Play ill or take a vacay or something."
"... Play ill?" She repeated.
"Feign illness or take some time away." I explained. "Oh, and a vacay is holidays." I remembered to add.
"... Alright." She said in a small voice.
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