72nd of Ash, 120
He could do it, it wasn't that hard. Arkash drew a shaky breath in the warm candlelight of his room, then carefully applied pressure to his jaws. The flesh very slowly gave way to the dividing glide of his ivory teeth. Though, by the time his jaws clenched together, the chunk of meat had already fallen into his palette. Arkash held his breath from that moment on, and tilted his head back to guide the piece of food to his gullet, then oh-so-carefully swallowed. The chunk of meat sank into his gullet, then stopped for a moment.
Arkash dared not breathe, and swallowed even harder around the piece in an effort to dislodge it... To no avail. Quickly, he snatched the jug at his bedrest, then knocked its contents back to swallow, and the flow of milk dislodged it, and sent to piece hurtling to his stomach. Arkash paused his drinking and breathed heavily while he recovered his breath, then set the mug down.
Why of all things did it have to be his throat that came out damaged? Eating had become such a tedious chore since he woke from his coma, as he found himself choking on nigh everything. Each bite took roughly two minutes from his day, and the bites were smaller to begin with. He couldn't skip meals, either. He needed to recover his body mass. If that meant nearly dying with every few bites, so be it. He'd come up with a system to cope with the change regardless, so the process wasn't as hard as when he'd first started eating again.
With a sigh, Arkash pushed the roast chicken platter to the side, then recollected his spyglass. With his thumb, he adjusted the length, then lifted the nozzle to his eye, where he aimed the lens at the estate of his target. Sir Edward Vogen; A nameless made celebrant for the betrayal of his master. A lack of loyalty was something Arkash couldn't sympathize with, not fully. Barry had stabbed him in the back too, once upon a time. For that, the human died. That, coupled with the fact that he tried to kill Arkash for stealing from him.
His eye was on the second floor, where he watched the tall glass windows of the estate for the routine shadows he'd recorded the day prior. From the west wing, one shadow moved down the hall, and to the east, two moved toward the west wing. Arkash furrowed his brow, then referred to the notes he'd taken on a scroll of parchment, complete with inkwell. Several crude drawings littered the page, along with some writing in vithmi. No human would know what he wrote, but it made perfect sense to Arkash.
He'd stated that four guards passed the halls in one of his prior writings, which wasn't true. Only one followed from the west wing, in place of two. After dipping his quill in ink, Arkash ran a line through four and etched three beneath. Perhaps the additional shadow he'd seen before was one of the guests? Sir Vogen did have company the day prior, after all. The page was littered with all sorts of corrections and amendments of a similar caliber, which only reflected the amount of time he'd been at it. He only had information on the happenings within the estate, however. The courtyard was unknown to him, which simply wouldn't do. The reason? The layout of the city. A row of houses blocked view of the estate's front lawn.
If he was to infiltrate the building, he needed the patrol patterns and the response time for the guards. How quickly they could rally and strike down a threat or an intruder was of the utmost importance, alongside details of the exterior. With a sigh, Arkash set his spyglass down and looked to the door a glance. While he stared, he unstrapped his steel, threatening arm and set it on the bed. An unarmed cripple was a lot less likely to rouse suspicion. With nothing but a dagger in his footwraps, Arkash made his way out of the room, locked the door, then pulled up his hood as he proceeded to the cold streets through the Inn's foyer.
A short trip through the Rien Alleys brought him to the street of the estate. It was even bigger in person, Arkash couldn't even begin to imagine what someone would need all that space for, but humans would be humans and take every inch they could get. It sickened him, but the commoners that surrounded such a place were no better. How could they be okay with someone living in such a wasteful way while they lived in squalor? For that, he faulted the nameless on their spinelessness.
Beliefs aside, Arkash had gone there for a reason. He inspected the grounds from the other side of the street while humans and elves walked by him. His one set of claws rested snug in his pocket his left sleeve was folded to show his weakness. He was a crippled, nameless lizard; nothing worth considering in a mass of able-bodied humans.
A low stone wall surrounded the courtyard, and protruded a tall wrought iron fence to keep the masses from the premises. Arkash's eye scanned the tips of the barrier, where iron spikes dotted the top in rows, and stretched on across the entire perimeter. A long stone path led from the barred front gate of the estate, framed by fields of snow. Of course the Rien Nobility could afford to salt their patios. The front doors were tall and broad, framed by white columns that supported a small snow-draped shelter. That was always an option for his entry if not for the lamps that hung there.
Arkash furrowed his brow, then looked back to the courtyard. Perhaps there was a back door? A point of access he was missing?
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