《Questing: A Failed Tale》Chapter 3: Dancing Lessons at the Tavern
Advertisement
“Hey! Cara! More beer over here!” The drunkard paused, swaying. “Harr, made a rhyme, I did!” His companion smacked him upside the head, though the effort almost sent him spinning into the nearest hightop table. “Shuttup, y’idjit. Next thing y’know, you’ll be singin’ songs for supper and then we’ll never get nothin’ to eat around here!” He glared at Cara as she approached with their mug. “Not that we’d been orderin’ much before now. Where’ve you been, then?” Cara kept her eyes low and her clenched fist hidden in the folds of her skirt. “Been about the room—you’re not the only ones here tonight, you know.” It was even true. Every table hosted a body or three and at least as many dirty mugs, waiting for the barmaid to pick them up. Waiting for her. Cara stifled a sigh and snagged the handle of the closest mug. “Would you like to order anything while I’m here?” “I’ll take the pie and another beer.” Cara eyed the nearly full pint clutched in his meaty fist. “Darn thing’ll be dry by the time you make it back here.” The guest took a hearty swing while staring her in the eye, daring her to contradict him. Her tongue would be worn to a nub by the end of the evening. “The shepherd’s pie and another beer it is, then. Anything for your friend?” The man turned and slapped the drunk one on the back just as he was taking a drink, resulting in a fit of coughs. “What about it? Anything you want?” The drunkard hiccuped. “Nothing that comes in a bowl,” he said, then giggled like a toddler sneaking a frog into bed. Cara felt her cheeks tingle. Drat. “None of that here unless you head to the stables, which is where you’ll end up with your head in a barrel if you keep drinking at this rate,” she said. Cara turned on her heel, stalking back to the bar and the door to the kitchen beyond. Of course, her dramatic exit would be ruined by tripping over another drunk’s foot, which had her flying to displaying her skirt-clad bum to the entire room. The drunkard clapped and hooted at the free show. Her palms sang with pain. Cara cursed under her breath when she spotted the dots of crimson swelling through the scabs. Her fall at the blacksmith had only just healed over before her shift, and now they’d open back up. Quickly, Cara picked herself up and—ignoring the catcalls of what must’ve been half the village—ducked beneath the bar to escape into the kitchen. It was hot and crowded with counter space, but it was mercifully free of alcohol. Jeffrey wouldn’t let a drop pass while there were still patrons to be served and catered to in the common room. The only exception was drink for medicinal purposes—and that required furniture to be broken. The innkeep-of-all-trades faced away from the door, humming as he stirred a pot that simmered and spat in the main hearth at the back. His braid of iron grey hair swung to the rhythm of some internal beat. Cara smiled absently as she headed to a pile of kitchen rags, kept in a basket by the row of buckets that hosted scores of soaking crockery and flatware. “Busy out there tonight, then?” Jeffrey half-sang as he spotted her rooting in the rags. “Yes, but not too bad. They’ve started singing Wolf in the Weeds, and they're only on the second verse, I think.” She didn’t add that they’d be on the third by now, if they hadn’t been distracted by her trip to the floor. “The pie’s good tonight, Jeff.” Jeffery’s barrel chest swelled further with pride, threatening to snap his apron straps like so much string. “It better be! Was Molly’s own recipe, once upon a time. I don’t make it near as well as she did, but a body makes do with what he can.” He eyed Cara as she quickly wound strips of cloth around her palms. “Get into a scrape again, did you?” “Not exactly.” Cara used her teeth to hold one of the straps as she tied a knot. It gave her a moment before she had to respond. “Just fell this afternoon, is all, and the cuts opened up again.” “Oh, really now?” Jeffrey leaned against the outermost edge of the wide mantelpiece that served as a warming station for the prepared food. He ignored the heat that flushed his left side. “Anything you’ll be wanting to tell me?” “Yes, really.” Cara grunted a bit as she tightened the cloth. She looked up, hands neatly tidied, and found herself flushing a bit under the almost fatherly gaze. “I promise, it was an accident. I tripped over something while visiting the blacksmith.” Jeffrey relaxed. “Ah, well, he’s always been a bit of a slob. What were you doing down that way, anyhow?” “I…” Cara cleared her throat. It wasn’t like she could tell her current employer that she was applying for another job, even if it were just a temporary freelancing gig. “I just thought I’d ask for a favor from him, that’s all. The latch on the chicken coop’s not been closing right,” she improvised, then shrugged. “He was in one of his moods, so after a bit of chitchat, I didn’t think I’d ask about it after all.” “That was right thoughtful of you, Cara, and no mistake.” He started to say something else, but the kitchen door swung open again. The other two barmaids crammed into the doorway so fast, they nearly popped from the threshold. “It’s a madhouse out there!” one gasped. She fanned herself with the apron over her skirt. “They’ve gone absolutely insane! What’d you put in that pie, Jeff?” “’Twasn’t the pie that did for ‘em, Liza, and you know it.” The second maid glared at Cara. “That little stunt riled the whole room up something fierce.” “Stunt?” Jeffrey echoed. He raised one eyebrow at Cara, whose cheeks burned again. “Oh, gods all bless!” Hurriedly, she picked up an empty mug and sloshed some water in it. “That wasn’t on purpose, Emily, and you know it. The man tripped me up!” “Right. Of course.” Emily sniffed and shook out her skirts. “And now that you’ve flashed your bum at all the men, you’ll be getting all the tips.” And all the squeezes, and all the pats, and all the offers and orders to come by their rooms after work. Cara rubbed her temples, feeling the makeshift bandage on her palms scrape her forehead. “You want the tips so bad, you take ‘em tonight.” Emily narrowed her eyes. “You funnin’ me?” “No, it’s fine.” Cara rolled up her sleeves and grabbed a dry towel that looked reasonably clean. “Someone should help Jeffrey with the dishes, anyway. I’ll stay back here for a while, I think, if you two can handle the crowd.” “Sure and we can handle the main room, if you’d rather stay back here.” Emily tugged her bodice lower. “We’ll need some bread and three orders of that pie before we go back out on that floor, though.” Liza nodded as she dipped mugs of beer out of the barrel. Cara opened her mouth to scold the girl for not using the dipper and getting the whole mug sticky before the patron got it, but sighed. They were probably too drunk to know any different, anyway. Instead, she turned her attention to the tub of plates and grabbed the topmost one lurking just beneath the suds as the two girls gathered their dishes and left. “That was right kind of you, Cara.” Jeffrey’s voice was casual, but Cara felt her spine stiffen. She kept her voice light and her eyes on the pewter plate in her hands as she polished it dry. “It was self-defense. I don’t much care to go back out and be manhandled, and you know that’s what would happen.” “Do I need to knock some heads about?” The gruff offer shocked her, even as it warmed her belly. “No, no!” Even as she said it, she winced. That sounded too panicked, she thought. Jeffrey’ll think something’s wrong. Cara cleared her throat and tried again. This time, her voice didn’t crack. “No, thanks. They’re just being drunk, that’s all. And Emily will appreciate the extra money that comes of a bit of riling.” “No doubt.” A pause. “Perhaps you’d care to learn to cook, stay back here all the time.” Cara couldn’t help it. She laughed. “Me? After I burned an entire week’s baking the last time I tried, and me staring at them rising in the oven, too! I’d burn the inn down in a fortnight.” “Well, maybe not cooking,” Jeffrey allowed. “But maybe the rooms? They’ve not had a good scrubbing since my Molly…” He coughed. “Since spring, anyway. They could use with some tidying, and it’d get you out of the main room.” Cara hesitated. She hated being down around all the folks in the common room, it was true. She hadn’t grown up in the village, hadn’t toddled about with the men’s sons and daughters. She was a stranger, and a woman, and that made her safe for… suggestion… in a way that Liza and Emily never could be. Emily fussed about it, thinking Cara courted the attention on purpose, but Cara’s personal experience with that side of life was limited to flirtation with the local farm hands and apprentices. Let her try being a barmaid in the next town over, Cara thought with grim satisfaction. Then, she’ll see just how hard she’ll have to work to avoid the grabbing! But working as a barmaid let her get more money than an inn’s maid would get, and that money was being saved for— Her thoughts were interrupted by a warm, callused hand on her shoulder. Cara tilted her head back to look Jeffrey in his open, honest eyes. “You’re a hard worker, girl, and fact is, I’d like to keep you on, permanent-like. So whatever we need to do to make that happen, well, you just tell me and we’ll see what we can do.” Cara’s mouth lifted at the corner. “Even with my two left feet?” “Even then.” Jeffrey’s smile was whole and untarnished. “You just need some new dancing lessons, that’s all.” Dancing lessons, Cara thought later that night, turning the offer over in her mind as she crouched in the undergrowth, watching the flock of cockatrice bob and duck and weave through brambles. She already knew a dance or two, in a manner of speaking, and the Dance Of The Spiffiest Maid In All Grunwood didn’t exactly appeal to a body after running through the patterns of a Warrior’s Waltz. Her palms ached as she clutched the leather strap of her sling tighter, waiting for the cockatrice to settle in after a night spent foraging for beetles and small scurrying things. She might not get paid for the gig, but she’d not pass up the chance to practice at the tune she loved best.
Advertisement
Advertisement
- In Serial45 Chapters
The Dungeon of Evolution
The greatest mage and researcher in the universe, Ian Irwin, known to only his closest friends died at far too young an age. For their own goals and to give the mage another chance at life, the Gods and Goddesses reincarnated him into a dungeon. Most would shudder at the thought, in fact Ian did, but not for the same reasons. The plants, animals, fungi, and monsters that inhabited dungeons fascinated Ian in a way nothing besides his wife had. Ian had studied everything he could about dungeons and now he could be one. Traumatising Content: Besides the purpose of dungeons, the presenting of evil morals as a positive is not present in this novel. Evil morals themselves, however, are present. Combined with the gore tag, there will be imagery present that could be considered traumatising. The absence of the sexual content tag means there will be no scenes of that nature. I, the author, apologize to any previous readers that, due to my previous clarification, read the story with the belief that scenes of disturbing imagery would not be present.
8 220 - In Serial8 Chapters
God of Stories
If a human became a god and rewrote the world to his liking. Expect terrible execution, perhaps decent ideas, and chapters shifting around. Cover Art by Jack0fheart. Not really what I was going for but whatever, everyone has their own imagination.
8 189 - In Serial20 Chapters
Sword of Savage Desires
While using the unorthodox path of cultivation, the Demonic Cultivation Technique to attain immortality, Xie Zhelan loses his powers and ends up destroying himself. Zhelan, by luck, is granted another chance to correct himself and is thrown into the mortal world with no powers to aid him. With nothing but a saber to help him achieve his goals, Xie Zhelan sets out to reach the peak of cultivation and attain immortality. On his journey, he meets Liu Yang who has met a similar fate as him and the duo join hands to get back all that they have lost. However, Liu Yang is not an ordinary cultivator. There is a secret about him, a secret so grave that Zhelan might be pushed into a fathomless abyss. Furthermore, the path to immortality does not seem as easy as he thought it to be, especially when there are enemies who want him dead. At every step, he faces danger and the only way to protect himself is by trusting no one, not even himself.
8 126 - In Serial29 Chapters
Second Wind, legend of Pandemonium (Finished/Incomplete)
The developers of the worlds leading VRMMORPG Edge Online have decided to shut down its servers after over a decade. Shugireth Darkstar, the leader of Pandemonium, Edge Online's top guild, suffers from a deadly disease and his end is near. He hasn't left his VR pod for 5 years, as the medical nanodroids at the hospital takes care of him. Without Edge, he will die, because his physical body has already been all but destroyed by the sickness. Seeing no light at the end of the tunnel, Shugireth Darkstar, the Master of Pandemonium, stubbornly stays behind as the servers shut down... If that was all, we could end this story right here. However, that was only the beginning of the legend of pandemonium. The prelude to the movement, if you will. Shall we see what happens next? -------------- Some notes from Me (The author, gasp surprise): I first wrote this (100k) as an experiment. I saw the advice about having foils for overpowered MCs, and I watched quite a few lectures on writing. I wanted to test things out for myself and see if I could carry a story through other ways than only relying on physical conflict like some thrillers do. Thus this might lean a bit towards slice of life with a romance subplot, but I don't want to give my story away so read it if u want to know more. This was basically never intended for anyone else's eyes but my own, and written to explore writing as a process. This wasn't my attempt at writing a good book, but it turned into something that I think might interest some people, so I decided to pop it up here. It is slightly old so my style and writing skills have advanced considerably since I first started this thing. Having said that, I think it's pretty readable, but I am very interested in how other people will receive this. Please feel free to criticize it and just in general shoot me some feedback on what you think. It contains light Litrpg elements, not heavy table spam, it's just the basis of the world. Although I like that sort of thing, this was written before I even knew of Royalroad and hadn't considered litrpg much. Some of you may recognize that it was slightly inspired by Overlord. Also, the Tags for sexual content and traumatizing content are there as a precaution on all of my stories pretty much, even if my story does not contain any of that at the moment. I can't really know what the future will bring, but in the case of this story I do know a little bit, since I wrote 100k words before posting it here. And I just posted it on a whim because I figured some readers on Royalroad might enjoy this story.
8 145 - In Serial21 Chapters
Crimson Gloom
Crimson Gloom. The time when the moon turns crimson, illuminating the landscape with its crimson glow. The time when the ‘doors’ to the Crimson Abyss open. One shall gaze into the abyss and gain its secrets and powers. Concurrently, the abyss also gazes into oneself, gaining one’s sanity and humanity. Dimensional rifts appeared spontaneously on Earth, bringing otherworldly demons along with the Crimson Gloom. Bloody battles were fought, noble sacrifices were made. Humans eventually sealed the rifts and successfully defended their homeworld. Alas, the seals were not perfect. The Crimson Abyss continued to exist, slowly influencing Earth and its inhabitants. Half a century of relatively uneventful years passed… humanity slowly descended into corruption, and the majority of them knew nothing of the effects of the Crimson Abyss. Is there only the dreadful gloom left to the world? Can one find brightness in the increasingly gloomy world? The youth who had gazed into the Crimson Abyss had no answer, nor did he care. He only wanted the Crimson Gloom to end, to forever seal the Crimson Abyss. A mistake and a twist of fate led the youth into a seemingly totally different direction. Will he forget his lifelong goal? Will he instead step back onto his initial path that he fervently pursued? Disclaimer: I do not own the image on the cover. Image edited on canva.com. This piece of work, after all, is only a first draft and by no means an end product by an amateur (beginner) writer. Mistakes are bound to happen. With that said, I will strive to improve as I write. Feel free to point out errors and inconsistencies as you read. I thank you for your time. Finally, I pledge to not rewrite this novel until the first draft is completed.
8 149 - In Serial27 Chapters
I have so much to say, but you're so far away (Synyster Gates sequel)
Okays here's the sequel to I'd rather trade it all while somehow saving you! Bare with me (:
8 181

