Russians don’t get drunk. They just don’t.
That was Niska’s reasoning for why he allowed himself to go into work when he was in such a sorry state as he was. Given, “going into work” mostly meant walking down a flight of stairs to stare at the walls on the first story shop as opposed to the walls in his second story apartment. Last night had been rough, but then again so were most nights nowadays. It had been ages since he’d had a proper night’s sleep and even longer since he’d been able to even go down without a drink or two. Alcoholism was tricky like that. He knew he was in a bad place but he also knew he wouldn’t be able to function without it. Too many things were going wrong right now. First his ward went missing and then his idiot brother followed after her to the place he assumed was hell. It’d be half a year before long and it wasn’t getting any easier, especially with the Ministry investigation putting a hold on his other business.
But he’d given up on the search the moment he took it up. People who didn’t want to be found usually had good reason and he wasn’t about to dig those two sorry souls out from wherever they had gone. But dammit, he wasn’t going to follow after them either. He couldn’t just stare emptily at the ceiling forever. No, he needed to go somewhere, do something.
So he hauled his hung-over body heavily from the bed and trudged down the stairs and to the secret passageway that led into his shop. Instead of being unproductive in his apartment, he would just be unproductive in his shop and give himself that little morality push he needed. Opening the store just meant unlocking the door and turning on the lights, since there was really no need to clean or reorganize. No one came in here for the stuff, it was all a front for the fights. Niska sat behind his long, ornate desk, propping his injured leg up on a stool and resting his “walking stick” (it was a cane but far be it from the proud ex-merc to admit that he needed a cane to get around like some old man). His injury from a few months ago was acting up and it was just another reason he wasn’t able to sleep at night. Old age was catching up to him and it made him mighty uncomfortable that he wasn’t going to be able to outrun it, especially not with this bum leg of him.
Seventy-three minutes and forty-eight seconds later, the Russian was fast asleep, his head lolling back in his chair, his scruffy mouth agape as he snored loudly, probably shaking the whole shop. First his finger twitched. Something…something was coming. Still in the grip of a heavy sleep, Niska took a deep breath, the dusty metallic smell filling his nose and shaking him from his slumber immediately. He was on his feet in seconds, teetering unsteadily as his body adjusted to being jerked awake so suddenly. This smell was strong, almost overpowering. It took him back to Romania, to his time as a gravedigger working for a man who looked like death itself. But he’d also put that man into the ground himself, burned the body too, to keep all that creepiness out of the world for good. There was no way. The bell over the door rang ominously and Niska spun around—
”Hello.”
Niska felt his muscles burn as he stopped his body mid-lunge, his complicated rolling maneuver to duck behind a nearby suit of armor ceased the moment he laid eyes on his visitor. No, it was not a man with skin white as ash and a body like a stretching shadow. It was a girl, small and blonde and with an accent he picked up on right away. Russian? Bulgarian? Russian, for sure. But there was no mistaking the scent. His eyes flashed amber and he took in the dusty crimson smoke that seemed to surround the small girl. It tasted acrid, like a cavity that had broken open or dirt from deep, deep underground that had calcified and turned to stone. Her magic was nearly a carbon copy of one of his professors from his school years, and far too much like the man (okay, one of the men) he’d left buried under a mound of dirt in Romania.
“Can I help you?” he asked, the Russian rumbling from his chest in a familiar and sort of strange way. He didn’t hide the suspicion in his voice or the way his eyes searched her body for weapons. “It’s not every day I meet a necromancer of your skill level. What sort of mischief will you be bringing down on my little shop today, little one?”