Open The Slups Debt Has it's Benefits.

Heskel died. Not with a cry or a shout, but a sickening gurgle. Silvertongue didn't know how to process it. He had always thought that the slavemaster would one day be overrun by the beasts he had lorded over. He didn't have time to think about it, as he was guided away by the enforcers.

As for the other three pirates... perhaps they were not so lucky to still be alive. "H-hey, Silvie, come on!" The big brute Boris said. "I never treated ye wrong, did I? Remember all those times I carried ye around on me shoulders when ye were a kit? Ye thought it was hilarious!"

Silvertongue went to speak, but he found himself hesitating. He couldn't find the right words to say. "I-I'm sorry, Boris... it's out of my control now."
 
Falun glared at Silvertongue as he stopped to talk to one of the prisoners. "Inside, now," he barked, his tone making it clear he wasn't brokering dissent today. He waited until the fox was inside before cracking his knuckles as he looked over the captives. "Alrigh'," he declared, blood and brains still dripping off his iron knuckles, "here's the deal. We 'ave one open spot in our organization fer someone wiv' a sense a' self-preservation an' secrets ta share. So, if ya wanna tell me why yer out 'ere chasin' Silvertongue, who it is 'oo wants 'im so badly an' what their deal is, then I'll consider 'at yer application. Fer the rest a' ya... well, I'm sure I'll find out what ya have t' say eventually. So," he raised his bloodied weapon, "'oo's feelin' talkative?"

Marianna, inside the tavern, listened to the lynx's explanation and the fox's nervous prattle, idly making a small gesture to the bartender that resulted in a gin and tonic swiftly being poured for her. Normally when she was drinking for pleasure, she preferred something fruity, but for business, a serious drink was required. "It is a pleasure to make your acquaintance, Ambassador," she addressed the cat. "I assure you, we will honor your presence and your service both. Please," she invited, including the todd in the invitation. "Order anything you like. Tonight, you are our guests, both of you."

Her eyes fixed upon Ruffano as she added, "You have nothing to fear from me, or my brother... at least in this instance. To answer your question: I do not fully know why these ruffians are so intent upon capturing him, other than claims that he was once one of theirs." The corner of her mouth twitched as she raised her drink to her lips. "I think these pirates will swiftly find they met a foe even more possessive than they are." She took a long sip before setting her drink down on the bar. "What surprises me," she stated, "is that you rushed to the aid of a total stranger, both of you. In Bully Harbor, that is a most unusual level of chivalry. I feel like there must be quite interesting stories behind beasts so bold."
 
Ruffano visibly relaxed at Marianna’s assurance, settling deeper into his seat within the Lilting Lily like a fox who had successfully dodged both death and responsibility. He exhaled long and slow, as if letting go of the weight of an entire premier’s worth of tension.

“Ahhh… sanctuary,” he purred, casting a paw lazily toward the ceiling. “No blades, no bolts, no burly bruisers with body odor and abandonment issues.”

At Marianna’s question, he blinked once, then leaned forward slightly, ears tilting with a sheepish charm.

“Well… if we’re being honest, and I do hate honesty when it’s inconvenient...I stepped in to impress a vixen.”

His eyes widened.

“Svetlana!”

He bolted upright, tail puffed in panic. “I left her back at her home...alone! In the middle of a bloodbath!” He looked toward the tavern door, preparing to make a gallant, if belated, dash.

But then he paused mid-stride. His expression soured with sudden clarity.

“Though, really... she didn’t even offer me a cloth for my paw when I spilled the brandy. And that little comment she made after, completely off-beat... I carried that entire scene.”

He turned back around with a dramatic spin, flicking his tail behind him as he returned to his seat.

“Let her find a lesser fox to under-rehearse with.”

Settling back in, he smoothed his whiskers with practiced grace and snapped toward the bar.

“Spiced rum, if you please. Neat. Twist of citrus.”
 
The three pirates were stricken with terror, when suddenly there was a rushing of paws as Greeneye came clambering into the alleyway. "I heard dere was trouble-!" He wheezed, doubled over.

"It's his fault!" Boris pointed at Greeneye.

"Boris? What der hell are ye doin' 'ere?!"

"It's all 'is fault!" Boris repeated. "Ye see, 'is farder is a big pirate Cap'n, and Greeneye ran away wif' Silvertongue ter get married, because der Cap'n didn't approve of it, not one bit-"

"Oh, yew piece o' shite! Shut up!"
Greeneye snapped, but Boris kept going.

"An' ye see, Cap'n has been chasin' after Greeneye an' Silvertongue until we got 'ere. So, really it's Greeneye's fault that we snuck onto der mainland, tracked Silvertongue down, and beat the shit out o' 'im and planned ter kidnap 'im ter lure Greeneye back to his farder's ship where der Cap'n was gonna kill 'im anyways to teach Greeneye a lesson-"

"Do ye REALLY think this is helpin' yer case right now, ye damned idiot?!"

"Yea, 'e said 'e wouldn't kill me if I spilled der beans-"
 
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Rakan was somewhat an enjoyer of fine drinks, he already got himself slightly familiarised with the local ways of enjoying oneself. A fair reward for his duty to his gods and nation. Besides, land of chaos like this also offered hedonistic pleasures that Rakan simply couldn't pass on. "Anythinkh? Well, any sort of liquor made of your fruits, mixed with condensed milk and any sort of spicinkh, maypre cinnamon or chilli." The Lynx requested. A fair mixture of local products with what he knew from his home. A drink worthy of someone his rank for sure.

Tal'Rakan grinned at the words of this vixen. Not exactly smiling, but also not exactly snarling. Her words confirmed what he already knew, that acts of order were rare in those lands here. Nonetheless, in the eyes of Phoenixes, he did what was right. That was what mattered to him the most. Listening to the fox made him realise that these two must already have known one another. So he wasn't just a mere stranger. More than that, while he could approve of flamboyant act he did to impress a lover, Tal'Rakan was slumped that it was his only motivation. Better than none and much better than inaction but... it still felt wrong. Was this entire nation really lacking any spine to act in the name of greater cause?

"I come from a land where most would act upon such act in puprlic. Such heinous crime akhainst any of the Phoenixes children is more than enouff to prinkh punishment of the others. I am perplexed really that preasts here care not for one another, despite them all sharinkh oritchin, land and resourcs." The Lynx have responded to the Vixen. That was both an answer and a test. He could judge, based on the previous encounter with High Priestess Dusk, what was the position this one occupied.
 
Falun listened, his face as stern as a granite edifice, as the ferret shared all of the history surrounding Silvertongue and Greeneye. His gaze only flickered to Greeneye once when he interjected to tell Boris to shut up, but he didn't speak, letting the ferret finish his explanation. He put up a pawfinger to hush them both as he spoke. "I did say we 'ad a position open," he allowed, "an' I was lookin' fer a beas' t' fill it." His eyes went to the other two pirates, who had turned rather sallow. Crimson on their fronts, at first just spots, was now beginning to blossom across their chests as the wounds inflicted by the wildcat caught up to them. As they each turned pale and then finally fell over on the cobblestones, their life trickling out of the holes in their chest, Falun knelt before Boris.

"So," he said, his tone measured as he put a paw on Boris's shoulder "'ere's yer new job. I need a messenger, summon' smart enough t' relay a message word fer word. The beast I need ya t' find is named Vito Furotazzi. I need ya t' tell 'im that Falun is gonna do righ' by 'im, alrigh'? I'm gonna make th' Family more powerful 'an 'e ever did." His pawfingers closed into a fist, the bloodied iron knuckles settling in his grip. "Jus' try t' keep 'at message in mind," he advised. Then, pulling back his paw, he drove it into Boris's face, repeating the motion until he'd verified that there was nothing left in Boris's mind.

Falun straightened up, slipping the iron knuckles of his paws and handing it off to Greeneye. "Clean this," he ordered curtly, ignoring the bits of brain matter caught on the rough edges. "The rest of you, clean this up. We're here to keep these streets clean, after all." He pulled out a handkerchief, one already turned more pink than red from repeated botched attempts to get the blood from it, and left a fresh red stain on it as he attempted to wipe the blood from his paws. His eyes went to Silvertongue standing nearby, and he approached, somehow managing to loom over the fox despite little height difference between them. His paw went to Silvertongue's shoulder, his grip firm as he tried to catch the fox's elusive gaze. "D' ya understan' why I couldn' let 'im live?" he asked, his voice quiet and... not quite tender, but at least not as full of fire and steel as usual.

~~~

The bartender moved with a professional's speed and grace, quickly retrieving a bottle of spiced rum that looked far too expensive for a bar like this to afford and quickly poured it out into a glass, then retrieved an orange and rapidly peeled a strip to garnish the glass. This he set in front of Ruffano, then turned to the task of mixing a drink for the wildcat. For this he chose a rich elderberry liqueur and retrieved a bottle of condensed milk, an import from a city on the Mahsterious Sahthern Cahntinent*. This was mixed with powdered cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and ginger extract, stirred, and, for sweetness, garnished with a slice of the same orange used in Ruffano's drink. The concoction was set before the wildcat without comment, then the remainders of the orange put on a plate in front of Marianna, who idly began to peel it apart with her claws.

"It certainly sounds as if you could do with a vixen who appreciates true drama when she sees it," she mused, her eyes briefly considering the fox before moving away. She'd tried actors before and, admittedly, hadn't found them quite to her taste either. It seemed she was just as bad as Svetlana in that aspect. Besides, she'd learned the hard way what came of juggling more than one lover at a time. Ivo was certainly enough to keep her busy... and satisfied. She took a sip of her gin and tonic to hide her blush before addressing the fox again. "Perhaps," she suggested, "an investment in the arts would not be misplaced. After all, clearly you have a talent for the avant garde, and as a connoisseuse of the arts writ large, encouraging more innovative and bold expression sounds like a wise use of our gilders." She didn't have much to invest yet; the Obsidian stocks were still yet to take off, and she was relying on this upcoming heist to make the Furotazzis rich again.

The vixen's gaze moved to the wildcat, considering his perspective carefully. It seemed he came from a highly structured society, one where acts of violence were swiftly and brutally punished not just by the law, but by the community writ large. She toyed with the orange, dropping pieces of wedges she'd freed into her drink as she spoke. "The major priests of the land," she stated measuredly, "whether by design or dereliction, have been set at odds with each other for centuries. It has made them, and our land, inefficient. After all, a government that cannot cooperate cannot conquer the challenges set before it. That ethos flows down to the people." She waved a paw broadly to indicate the Slups writ large. "The misery of this city could easily be ameliorated if only its denizens would work together for the public good. Violent crime, sanitation, public safety, food distribution - all of these are problems that can be solved with a little organization.

"Since most beasts lack the vision to act collectively without some greater incentive," she continued, finishing with one half of the orange and moving on to the other, "and since the ministries are too distracted by their petty squabbles to act, it falls to us, the Furotazzis, to have that vision. We were created originally to provide security to beasts in this area, since the Fogey Police would not act - at least, not to protect the beasts who live here. My predecessor built an enterprise that reached into every aspect of this city, providing a way to manage its concerns, to provide what the beasts here demanded when the government failed." That so much of that demand had been for narcotics, alcohol, and other substances was a distasteful aspect of the business, but one that Marianna accepted as a symptom of the city's ailments rather than a cause. The corner of her mouth twitched as she remarked, "In a way, you could call us priests of diversion - we provide what the beasts here need to endure the misery and neglect the other priests inflict upon them." She gave a small shrug as she added, "Who knows? Perhaps someday, we will be strong enough to challenge the other priests again as we once did, to bend them into service to the public welfare once more. For now, we do what we can with what we have." It was a far more noble vision of their organization than Falun would ever endorse, but Marianna saw no contradiction in it. To act outside of the law was criminal, and in Bully Harbor, most beasts couldn't rely on the law to take care of them. The Furotazzis were simply closing the gap between the two sides.

*What exactly was being milked was specified nowhere on the label or the shipping manifest; most beasts found it better not to think about it and just enjoy the taste.
 
Ruffano took the glass with both paws and gave it a reverent sniff, the warm scent of spiced rum and citrus wafting up like a curtain rising on Act II. He gave a quiet hum of approval and took a sip, just enough to savor it. Smooth. Fragrant. Dangerous.

He exhaled through his nose and cast a sidelong glance at Marianna, eyes twinkling over the rim of his glass. “Insufferable, they are. Surely.”

He let the silence stretch, giving the drink its due. Then, gently, he swirled the liquid in the glass and considered her words. Investment. Encouragement of “bold expression.”

A lesser fox might have bowed or simpered. Ruffano gave a tragic little shake of his head, as if she had just offered him a sunrise he could not keep.

“While I would love nothing more than to be your darling of the avant garde, I’m afraid I’ve been rather... excommunicated from the Ministry of Niceties.”

He raised his glass slightly in mock salute.

“Out on my tail. Blacklisted. One moment you’re gracing the velvet boards of a state-sanctioned theater, and the next -poof!-your name’s been struck from the playbill and your dressing room swept clean.”

He gave a shrug that might’ve been overdone if it weren’t so perfectly timed.

“I do, however, have something of a knack for the underground stage.”

He took another slow sip, watching her reaction from behind the amber sheen of the rum.
 
The lynx in the room pondered deeply the words of the crimson furred vixen as well as this flamboyant fox. It gave him a rather extensive picture of who they were, as well as providing Rakan with insights that had very deep consequences. Here he was, sitting at the table with what as he could gather were rebels. Something he spent a larger part of his life fighting. They were clearly ones that have tried to uproot the way everything worked in here. That was not something he should be endorsing, in fact, as per Red Phoenix words and doctrine, he should right now go and inform the High Priestess of this land that they have an active rebellion brewing.

Should was the key word here. Tal'Rakan was sympathetic to order. Raised with respect for his role in society and then trained to fit a new one so he could lend his talent back to it. The foxes here, if they were to be believed, were outcasts because they wished for order, while their nation, people and system were fixed on chaos.

Torn between his obligation and his beliefs, Rakan decided that his drink would be the best place to start. Taking a long sip, he was positively surprised with it. Local fruit were tangy but tasty. The spices were making him feel more at home... and the milk was weird. It was sweet and dense, but it missed familiar coconut aftertaste to it. Rakan could only ponder what the local milk was made of.

But his mind returned to the matters at paw. Finally he spoke, breaking a short moment of silence. "Truly, your land is khivinkh me a headache. I thoukht it was a duty of all preasts here to sow chaos whenever they can. And here I am hearinkh there is at least an attempt at pringinkh order and community to this mess." His words were thoughtful, for he now realised a very sound strategy he could attempt. One that could clear some paths for the future. Thus, he continued with a small grin. "While I cannot openly support you, since my duty to Phoenixes is more important than my respect for your efforts, I cannot deny certain noprility of your efforts. There is an impendinkh treaty, one that hopefully your Empress will sikhn. It would settle a lot of matters includinkh trade. Prut, Phoenixes will not just accept anyprody to trade within our lands. Not anymore. Yet as fellow preasts of order, there is to say the least... a potential for preferential treatment."
 
Marianna listened to her guests with some degree of amusement, first that the fox assumed that being unlicensed would be a deterrent to her investment, and then at the wildcat's befuddlement. Well, it seemed that there were all sorts of misunderstandings afoot, weren't there?

"If you wish to insist upon such treatment," she advised the cat, reaching into her pocket, "then I can give you a name: Obsidian." She pulled out a small stone of a polished black substance, smooth and shiny as glass, and set it on the bar before him. "That is the name by which we operate. We handle shipping and delivery of a... delicate nature. I can assure you," her eyes gleamed, "anything you wish to send to the Imperium, even that which perhaps our Empress would prefer not to receive, will find its way into grateful, receptive paws." An official contract with a powerful foreign market, by which perhaps illicit goods could be smuggled in and out of the Imperium, would be an immense financial boost to the family, one sorely needed at the moment. Obsidian's newest investors were expecting an impressive return on their stocks, after all, and Marianna would have to make a good showing if her ObCoin project was to get off the ground.

Her eyes slid to Ruffano, considering him carefully. A charmer and a vixens' todd, it seemed. A younger, more foolish Marianna would have fallen for him in a heartbeat. Well, there was a use for such beasts for sure. "If I may," she suggested, "perhaps I can propose an alternative for you. I am aware of an upcoming party at the Vermillion Estate, just outside of town. I have it on good authority that the entertainment for the night is going to come down with a bad case of food poisoning at the last minute. Perhaps, if I were to drop your name, you would be willing to perform to a crowd of the Vulpinsula's oldest noveau bourgeoisie as a way of showing your gratitude?" It would be another way of getting some of her crew inside the gates; while the Cravat Crew had their own ways in, and Falun and his heavies could quite literally punch a hole in the security cordon to make an escape route, they would need a distraction. If this Silvertongue could be persuaded to assist in the entertainment, providing musical accompaniment to Ruffano's drama, then all eyes could be kept on the stage and away from the Vermillion Vault.
 
Silvertongie looked at Falun or more acurately he just stared at his bloodied fists, since he couldn't bring himself to look the golden fox in the eyes.
"Yea... I understand. If they got away, they'd just bring more pirates and cause more trouble..." He rubbed his shoulder a bit. "You had no other choice."
 
Falun squeezed Silvertongue's shoulder firmly, just enough to be slightly painful. "No," he stated, his voice grim. "That were part a' it, sure. The real reason is 'at anybeast wot hurts what's mine 'as ta be dealt with. An example needed to be made, so everyone would know:" his grip became painfully tight. "No one takes from the 'Tazzis. No one takes ya from me."
 
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