by Diana Winchester 23rd June 2019, 6:15 pm
Stiletto tried to read the sign but had difficulty because of the sign's poor condition. Another factor working against her was that a sandstorm had just kicked up and was blowing sand that threatened to get into her eyes. Since she forgot to include sand goggles in her supplies, the best she could do was raise a hand to protect against the blowing sand and turn her back to the wind as soon as she could. The mage protected herself against the blowing sand the best she could and struggled to read the wooden sign.
After a few minutes of intense focus the sandstorm let up long enough for her to get a good look at the writing on the sign. According to it, the Tri-Council City was 250 kilometers to the west. That would be a lengthy hike, but if she wanted to get to the Tri-Council City and search for the slaver rumored to be living there, there was no choice but to make the lengthy hike. Turning her back to the wind, Stiletto began to put one foot in front of the other and started the trip towards one of the only bastions of civilization in the entire region.
-75 kilometers into the trip-
Stiletto walked along the barely visible trail marked by stones set on both sides of the trail and the occasional sign telling how much further the traveler had to go before the Tri-Council City was reached. She walked until she heard the creaking of a cart and the clomping of hooves on the sand approaching her. She strained to see the oncoming traffic, but when she did everything about the setup screamed "slaver wagon."
Stiletto stood in place as the wagon screeched to a halt in front of her and a portly, black- bearded man holding the reins brandished a scimitar. All of them were dressed in tan robes and white turbans, a stark contrast to their poorly dressed "passengers." Their cargo was dressed in ragged attire and had their hands shackled together. Their cargo was also in the back of the open wagon with thirty-six people crammed into a wagon that could comfortably accommodate eight people.
"Get out of the way!" The man urged her. Stiletto remained in place as two armed horsemen rode up to her menacingly in an effort to force her to move. While Stiletto killed for money, she was not going to let a wagon full of slaves ride by without making an effort to free them. Besides, if she killed the slavers, she might be able to find out where their cargo was going and get a ledger from them.
Stiletto remained silent and placed her right hand behind her back. She summoned her Suppressed Handgun and waited for the right time to spring the trap on the slavers. They thought that she would be another addition to their cargo, but they would get an unpleasant surprise for their trouble.
"Get out of the way unless you want to go in the wagon!" The driver threatened her. Stiletto felt one of the riders put a hand on her. That was Stiletto's time to act. She grabbed the offender with her left hand and yanked him off the horse, throwing him to the sand. She jammed the pistol against his forehead and fired twice, then turned to the second horseman and dumped him from the saddle with three shots to the chest.
The portly driver who had threatened her now reconsidered the wisdom of his threat, but it was too late. Before he could wheel the cart around she shot him in the head twice. He lurched right and fell from the cart, kicking up a cloud of dust when he hit the sand. Stiletto strode past the wagon and switched from her handgun to her Suppressed Assault Rifle to gun down the remaining horsemen before they could close with her or harm the slaves. Four of them charged at her with scimitars held high and curses on their lips.
Stiletto aimed carefully and dumped one from his horse with a Three-Round Burst to the head. She knocked a second rider down with a Three-Round Burst to the head, then shot one man out of the saddle with a single shot to the chest. The surviving rider had almost closed with Stiletto when the tan-clad mage aimed carefully and dropped him with a shot to the head. His horse whinnied and rode past her with the dead rider being dragged into the distance by a foot stuck in the stirrup.
Stiletto let the dust settle before she walked over to the dead portly slaver and took a ring of keys off of his corpse. She located a man with black stubble and a bruise on his forehead and handed him the keys.
"Thank you, thank you! You saved us all!" The man exclaimed as he fumbled for the key to unlock his shackles. After a tense minute he found it and unlocked them, then threw them to the sand and passed the keys to a dark-haired young woman wearing a ragged tan dress. Stiletto dispelled her weapon and watched the horizon for the arrival of more slavers looking to reclaim their cargo.
-Thirty-five minutes later-
Stiletto took sips from her hydration pack while the newly freed slaves armed themselves with the weapons their former captors carried and drank from the water supplies the slavers had brought with them. Those who knew how to ride horses mounted the five horses that were left from the battle with the slaver's armed escorts. All of them were grateful to her for saving them from a lifetime of backbreaking forced labor in the mines of Desierto. She watched as the first man she had freed approached her.
"Thank you, whoever you are! You saved us all from a terrible fate!" The man gratefully thanked her.
"It is no problem." Stiletto said to him in an altered male voice. She had struck a small blow against slavery and had hurt some human trafficker's pocketbook. Now she needed to find the bigger fish in the Tri-Council City.
"Where will you go from here?" Stiletto asked the man.
"We will go to the village of Berreb, from where we were taken. There we will be safe." The man answered. An old woman walked up to him while holding out a worn brown ledger.
"I found this book in a bag the slaver was carrying." The old woman said to them.
"May I look at it?" Stiletto asked.
"Certainly." The old woman answered, handing Stiletto the book. The disguised mage took the ledger and read it carefully. It was the ledger of a slaver detailing from where he had gotten his cargo and the amount that each person had cost to purchase.
[Word Count: 1,150]
[Total Word Count: 1,778/3,500]