Ash 53rd, 120
Sil'norai gathered at some ill-begotten pub to reminisce on what they'd left behind. Refugees, the lot of them, and Alphonse knew their plight well. It didn't matter how many Dranoch she slew, since she knew they'd never fully come around to trust her. They just weren't like that. Hope wasn't really in their vocabulary, and yeah, they appreciated having their trash taken out, but the vast majority were jaded save for those loyal few who clung to the Remedy as if the Revolution was already at their doorstep--and it was: Alphonse was proof of that.
Pulling up a seat in the private back room she was alloted to keep her out of trouble, Alphonse ordered her meal for the day--food was expensive here in the slums, especially good food, but she needed the meat to keep going. The job paid just enough to keep her going, but little more. Hunched over a plate, she ate her disappointing dried haunch of salted cow in silence, chewing slowly.
Turning the corner, a wry young man with a red bow tie, pointy ears, and ashen skin started a walk towards her just as she'd started gnawing on the bones left over. She was in the middle of carving the marrow out from the bone with her teeth when he stood before her. "Alphonse, another gentleman bares the Sigil--he says he's a part of your Black Remedy," he murmured, trying to be discreet. "I've got him out front."
Gulp. Hck. "Chff, send h'm in," said Alphonse with a swallow. She tilted back and pulled her scabbard from where it was leaning at the table, thumbing up the crossguard 'til the blade began to show its Enkindled colors, its warm glow casting a light over the dreary, weakly lit room.
Who the f'ck's 'ere to see me?
Probably some pansy courier.
Gonna send me 'cross the damn continent again.
I swear to Malek...
"Hck." She pushed away the plate to make room, tilting her head with a singular menacing eye staring up at the doorway. She was a hulk of a woman behind the glow of her partly drawn flamberge, and she was clad in blackened chain maille over a thick, cushy gambeson, a cloak to hide much of the raiment. She had two chairs to sit on, not one, which the establishment had procured from the refuse piles outside and strung together with twine just for her. A tail dangled behind the chair, visible beneath the legs, lashing with a curious agitation.