
10th Glade, 4623
Thomas did not look forward to his job of administration the estate. He was unsure anyone could enjoy such activities. Still, it was his duty oversee things, to administrate, to add sums, and to clerk, so he did.
At the end of Frost he'd insisted that he assist Wendell with their taxes to the crown, and to his surprise his husband had actually relented and given him a stack of records to reconcile. He'd found some minor mistakes to rectify, all his, but nothing half as bad as when he'd mixed up the ledger for a spell and written in credits as debits and vice versa for fifteen solid minutes. He'd only discovered the issue because he spilled tea all over his account book and then had to go through and re-transcribe. Wendell had berated him for that pretty badly, and it hadn't even led to angry sex, so he'd actually been disappointed. After that incident, Thomas had tried harder, and to his dismay found that he was actually decent at the work despite how utterly dull he found it.
Still, as boring as the accounts were, his least favorite part was handling correspondence. He didn't receive anything, really, or almost never. Mostly, it was for Wendell, or Taelian, or any head of household. Thomas took care of his gallivanting husband's mail to the best of his ability, and also handled stuff that wasn't directly addressed to Wendell. It was rarely fun.
This, for example, was grisly. A request for a widow's sum to be paid out to a mine worker who had been killed in some kind of accident or injury in one of their loranium holdings. Thomas imagined her husband trapped in a cave in, gasping for air as his lips turned blue and shuddered. Ghastly work, that.
He almost just signed along the line when he saw something odd: the man's body had not been recovered. So how could they be sure he was dead? He wasn't even thirty and he'd faked his own death half a dozen times. While he was sympathetic to the widow wanting her due, with no proof of death, it seemed a bit premature. So he started looking in to the other correspondence from the mine and he understood why the request had been made. This man was the third to go missing from his post in as many months. The other two had been found, or pieces of them, but no trace of the third was located at all. It wasn't impossible that he'd killed the other two and then absconded, Thomas supposed, but that seemed a pretty gruesome and calculated way to fake one's own death. He could have just saved up money and skipped town; Lorien took good care of its citizens, so none of these people actually had to work if they did not feel called to do so.
Still, something about this was concerning. If something was killing workers in the mines, then... he scanned the operating ledger of the shaft where they'd been assigned, and sure enough, the property damage overhead was immense, five times that of comparable holdings. "Property damage" likely meant that Hollows were being attacked too.
This tugged on his heartstrings in a way that a human being dead didn't. People died all the time, but they were avenged, mourned, and remembered. Hollows did and the Rienese shrugged. As a Nameless, he'd been in a similar position.
So it was that he told Wendell he planned to personally investigate this issue, ostensibly to see about paying out the widow's sum. They both knew there was more to it than that, and that the real reason Thomas had chosen to do this was something that Wendell likely found baffling and infuriating, but they also knew now to bring it up. Why ruin a decent day by having an argument that would go nowhere?
So instead, Thomas went in search of Zilrud to tell him the good news: he was going on a journey to the North, and would love some company on the road.