Den of Stars. Christopher Byford
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Sunway Boarding House – all of it – was offered immediately, seeing that securing the survivors of the Gambler’s Den was sure to raise the landlord’s profile. The bragging rights alone would secure passage to prominent dinner parties and social functions for its owner, something excitedly speculated about, which indeed came to fruition. The actual cost of their lodgings was never brought into consideration. The women insisted they paid their way of course, but this was for naught and any expenses were covered by a number of generous, anonymous benefactors.
The door front clattered open allowing the previous employees of the Gambler’s Den to trickle inside. They flowed from space to space, finding seat and sofa to rest weary feet that noisily dragged over floorboard, rug, and carpet. Kitty brought up the rear, holding the door ajar, the shortest of all those in attendance though her contagious spark more than made up for her lack of stature. With it she may as well be seven foot tall. Her glittering blue eyes narrowed at the causes of the daily noise in Windberg’s streets and the immediate surroundings:
The legion of horses pulling goods to the docks, carts rattling with every turn of the wheels.
The busker on the street corner playing a guitar, strumming vigorously for coin.
The gaggle of children who chased one another into patches of alleyway shade, manoeuvring around someone who had stepped out for a late morning smoke.
At last coming inside, she drew the door to a close.
‘I need something to drink.’ The small blonde woman shuffled off into the kitchen and set about rummaging through the cupboards for something to cure her headache.
‘I need plenty more than just the one. I was not ready for that, none of it. Kitty, dear, fetch the coffee would you? The good coffee,’ Corinne clarified. ‘The northern stuff.’
‘It’s costly, that.’
‘Can you think of a better occasion?’
‘Incredibly expensive blend it is, then.’
Corinne took heavily to a lounger. With a flick, she relieved her feet of her shoes and began firmly rubbing the ache that had settled in her heels. She watched the kitchen spring to life as Kitty got to work at the counter, withdrawing cups and setting them in a line. Ground coffee beans were scooped into a coffee pot and set atop a hotplate. The blonde woman leant over the counter to continue the discussion whilst waiting for the tell-tale spats of boiling water to dance from the pot’s lip.
‘That was a lot of people. Plenty more than I imagined would turn out,’ Corinne contemplated.
Kitty thoroughly agreed, her normally cheerful demeanour subdued. She leant back with a sigh. ‘I never thought what we did touched so many lives. I mean I never thought we touched anybody in such a fashion but, wow …’
‘How many were there?’ Kitty wondered aloud.
‘Too many to count. I couldn’t even guess. I’ve not seen a bigger gathering since, well, ever. It’s like half the city turned out.’
Kitty skimmed white cups across the counter top, filling them in turn from a silver coffee server. Another of the women took it upon herself to distribute the much-needed beverage, offering cream and sugar where appropriate. Only one rejected the offer, instead deciding to drink something taken from behind the bar in passing.
‘Jacques. How are you faring?’ Kitty eyeballed him from the kitchen. ‘You’ve been uncharacteristically quiet all morning.’
Lying quite ungraciously over the length of a leather lounger, the roughly dressed man gripped the neck of a wine bottle as if it were his only anchor to common sense. It gifted him clarity with every mouthful, or so he believed, each one sending droplets rolling down his scraggy beard and soaking into his shirt collar. The bottle was released from his lips begrudgingly.
‘You figure I had something worthwhile to say?’ He grunted.
‘Just surprised you’ve not shared your voice yet, that’s all. I don’t mean nothing by it.’
‘In answer to your consideration, little one, I’m just grand. Doing a damn sight better than the lot of you, I’ll have you know.’ The container was lazily wagged to those around him. ‘I’m glad it’s all over and we can move on with things. All this commotion is dragging my mood down. I’ll fare better once the sun goes down, that’s for sure. That’s when the exciting people come out.’
Everyone in the room watched with concern as he messily drank the bottle’s contents. Katerina shuffled in her chair, inhaling the aroma that came from her cup in the hope that it would assist in making her feel less groggy. She had put herself at a small side table on a straight-backed chair. Her peach-tinted nails drummed onto the veneer much like a rabbit would do with its foot when warning others of danger.
Curiously she hadn’t been as emotional as she thought she would be. Sure the sight of the Gambler’s Den itself took their collective breaths away, but it didn’t rouse the tears she had feared. What did gnaw at her temperament was the conversations she overheard this morning and the faces of the grief-stricken who knew the dead only by reputation.
‘Did you see what they were doing?’ She stirred her coffee, depositing a silver spoon on the accompanying saucer. ‘Sticking those notes on. One guy was speaking to his son who was asking why. Couldn’t have been any older than seven and was missing an arm. Memories, I overheard the man say. Then father kneels down to him and says that they were good memories that deserve acknowledgement. It’s not like we got much else.’
‘That’s hard.’ Kitty gave a whine, now busying herself with the preparation of food, the woody aroma of sizzling smoked bacon significantly welcomed. Cockatrice eggs were struck on pan lips, joining the crescendo of noise performed by bubbling fats. Nobody had asked for anything to eat of course, but it didn’t need to be said.
‘Nice to know that we did well at some point in our lives.’
‘Comforting, I say.’ Kitty prodded the eggs about.
‘What do you remember best about those two? Misu and Franco I mean.’ Katerina sipped a good half of her drink and placed it oh-so-carefully on the perfect veneer of the cherry-wood tabletop.
‘The bickering, mainly. The boss had plenty of problems with the way Misu put things to him when he had a bad idea. Don’t take that the wrong way. I loved Franco for what he did but boy, he could be a pain in the ass.’ Corinne sipped her coffee, exhaling its heat. ‘Such a pain in the ass, I tell you.’
A ripple of laughter reached the edge of the room, encouraging all those it met.
‘That he was. But Misu wrangled him and kept him in check whenever he was too demanding. He was a perfectionist. There’s nothing wrong with that, but … I mean …’ Kitty juggled a line of frying pans, knocking the contents around, struggling to find the appropriate words.
‘Hard work at times,’ Corinne chipped in.
‘Exactly. Hard work.’
‘A break wasn’t such a bad thing to give us! What, was he afraid we would run at the first opportunity? Sometimes I just wanted to let my hair down, find some back alley street vendor