Suleos practically swallowed the entire flagon of ale in a single gulp. He put the mug down, "Another."
The elven girl's silver bell jingled as she curtsied, "Yes, sir."
A gold bell, like his own, meant he was a free citizen. A silver marked her as a slave. She was allowed outdoors, and to go unescorted to various places, but she was still a slave.
He hadn't met many enslaved elves inside the borders of the Golden Mountain.
"What's her story?" He waved to the tavern keep, who did recognise him from the night before.
The elf was timid and respectful, "Sindi? She was my cousin's sister, sir. But my cousin got sick. The plague, sir. Already had debts. I couldn't bear to see her sold off, so I bought her."
"Didn't free her."
The elf winced, "There's still debt, sir. My cousin left things to her, sir."
"I see." Suleos grunted. A slave can't inherit. She was being protected, albeit in a hamfisted sort of way. Ruining her life to protect her against a life in prison or being resold as a slave, again.
She returned with his drink, and he flicked her a silver tile. "You're agile, aren't you, girl?"
She squeaked and bowed her head, "I'm just a waitress, sir."
"I'm a hunter. Need someone who can run in the trees." He replied, "Someone I can teach. Ever held a bow?"
"Sir." The tavern keep interrupted, "I don't think I stressed how significant the debt -"
He stopped talking as Suleos produced a platinum coin and put it down deliberately on the tabletop. The coin was worth enough to buy the building they were in, and the contents, including the girl, and still have some silver leftover.
Almost as insane as the fact he could produce such a coin at all, was the lack of an explanation to where it came from. They'd undoubtedly searched his body after killing him.
Suleos nodded at the waitress, "Ever held a bow, miss?"
"Yes sir." She nodded, "I used to help my father go hunting in the forest. Rabbits and rats mainly, sir."
Suleos rubbed his chin, "Useful, but you are an elf, using a bow is to be expected. The kinds of things I hunt tend to be the things that hunt me back. Do you think you could watch my back, if I teach you?"
"I... Am not inclined to violence, sir." She struggled to understand him.
He smiled sadly, "Can you fight, if you're backed into a corner? Can you survive, when everything goes wrong? Things going right is peaceful. I'm interested in the crisis."
"I have fought so that I might run, before, sir."
"Good enough." He nodded and looked at the tavern keep, "If you wouldn't mind fetching the magistrate. So I can clear your cousin's debts and purchase his sister."
After the man left, Suleos relaxed a little and looked at the waitress standing around nervously. He lifted his wrist, showing his bell, "I hate these things. Having to prove I'm free. I expect you hate yours, for a different reason."
"I'm... Not allowed to talk about it." She said hesitantly.
He shrugged, "Far as I'm concerned, you're mine, now. I don't mind what you talk about. Including that I'm an asshole for expecting to just be able to buy you."
She sniffled, and shook her head. Unable to talk about it because she was about to burst into tears.
"What cocksacking wanker dared to get me before midday!?" An angry man shoved through the door.
Suleos dropped his hood back, revealing his horn, and turned to him. Smiling tightly, "M'lord. It's been a while."
"Lord Suleos." The magistrate said, turning as white as a sheet, before falling to his knees and touching his head to the ground, "My deepest apologies. Please forgive my outburst."
He shrugged, "I'd be drinking, too, if I weren't trying to buy this cute little thing. How much debt am I trying to clear, here?"
The magistrate raised his head hesitantly, "This woman? Oh. Eh... Three gold coins. But the estate is only in holding."
If he cleared the debt and bought her, then he would inherit the entire estate. Which could be anything from three square paces of land to as far as the eye could see.
Might come with servants, responsibilities and a house, or nothing at all.
"Done." He tossed the platinum coin to the ground, "Consider the excess a donation to the legal office. Paperwork, please."
The magistrate tucked the coin away carefully and stood up slowly. Another man who had followed him in unfurled a scroll of paper, and wrote in a few names.
The man looked up at him, "Lord Suleos, do you have any other title by which you need be recognised?"
"Honoured Saint of the Golden Mountain." The magistrate hissed angrily at the man, as if he were incompetent to even be asking.
The elven girl darted her eyes to him, staring, before she fell to her knees and bowed her head. He groaned and rubbed tiredly at his face, "Oh, don't you start, too. Stand up. I ain't into the submissive shit."
The scribe held out a quill towards him.
Suleos rolled his eyes and snapped his fingers. A signature burning itself into the page. He picked up his empty flagon and looked at it sadly, and then up at the girl, "Mind getting me one more, as your last act as a waitress?"
She stood up, taking it with shaking hands and made her way behind the bar.
"Honoured... Saint...?" The tavern keep who had watched him be killed the night before stared in horror.
Suleos shrugged, "Just a title. Worn a few of those in my time. It's far less exciting when you're older than the empire. Human and elf. But, I did a favour to the empress a while back, and she acknowledged me."
The magistrate took the scroll and tucked it away, "The documents will be filed with the capital at the next mail run. The girl is yours, as is the estate. Do you need a guide, sir?"
"I need to do anything with the estate?" He asked glumly.
The magistrate shook his head, "To be frank m'lord, no one would mind if you burned it down. Though it would probably refuse to catch fire."
He heard the shatter of the mug as Sindi dropped it.
Suleos pulled out another coin and tossed it to the tavern keep, and stood up, "Ah, oh well. Was hoping for one more for the road. Sindi, mind coming over here, darling?"
The elf meekly obeyed.
Suleos looked at the magistrate, "You're a witness. Feel free to take note. The estate and everything is mine, now, right?"
"Yes, m'lord."
He took the woman by the shoulders, and spoke firmly, "Disenchant."
There was a crackle and smell of burning air, and then the bell on her waist fell away. A silver belt falling to the ground before dissolving into ashes.
She looked up at him in surprise.
He shrugged, "I do still need an apprentice, if you're interested. And if you'd care to show me to this house I just bought, I'd appreciate it too. But... You're free."
He didn't wait for an answer, pulling up his hood and heading into the street. Something in the room had smelled off to him, and he'd learned to listen to that instinct.