Font Size
15px

The fog had thinned overnight. Not gone. It was still up there along the north corridor ceiling, drifting slow, back and forth. The kind of movent you get when two doors are open and the draft can’t decide which one wins.

I’d checked it at dawn while I was putting fresh towels by the room.

The towels were fine.

The fog looked at .

I looked at the fog.

We ca to an understanding. It could keep drifting if it stayed above head height and didn’t touch the linen.

That seed reasonable.

So I went to make porridge.

Kern was asleep at table four when I ca downstairs. Arms folded. Chin tucked to his chest. The sort of sleep that happens after a long night and poor decisions.

Renner was awake across from him with a cold cup in his hands. He had the look of a man who’d checked the corridor, then the ceiling, then his cold cup, and repeated that process several tis hoping the results might eventually change.

The journalist had already reclaid the east window. He was writing steadily. Pen down, moving without pause.

I checked the porridge.

It needed salt.

I added so. Tasted it. Added more. Considered the result carefully and decided that was probably correct.

Then I brought two bowls to table four.

"Morning," I said, setting them down. "There’s salt this ti."

Renner lifted his eyes from the corridor.

"We’re still here."

"I noticed," I said. "I didn’t charge you for the rooms since you didn’t use them. Felt fair."

"We didn’t leave," he said.

He said it while looking at the door.

"Door was unlocked all night. Still is." I nudged a bowl toward him. "Eat sothing. You’ll think better."

Renner elbowed Kern.

Kern ca awake instantly. One hand went for the sword he wasn’t wearing, because nobody wore their sword to cards night. Then he froze, looked up at the ceiling, glanced toward the corridor, and finally settled on .

"The fog is still up there," he said.

"It is," I said. "But it’s a considerate fog. Staying above head height."

I pulled up a chair.

"The guest is particular about keeping things tidy," I added. "I appreciate that in soone."

"Aldous."

He said my na the way people do when they want the na to carry the work of a much longer question.

"What was it."

"Guest," I said. "North room. Paid in full. Surcharge included."

"It ca in with fog."

"So do." I shrugged a little. "The Abyss-adjacent ones especially. They tend to travel with their atmosphere. It’s just how they’re put together."

I took a sip of tea.

"I’ve got a clause for it in the guest agreent. Section four. I ntion that not to be difficult, but I’ve found it’s easier for everyone if the financial side is settled before people start asking harder questions."

Kern looked at Renner.

Renner had turned toward the corridor entrance. The wood paneling there had developed a grain that ran in two directions at once soti around midnight.

It was one plank.

One plank shouldn’t be able to do that.

The plank was doing it anyway.

Very calmly.

"The wood," Renner said.

"I’ll sand it when the guest checks out," I told him. "Mostly costic."

I poured myself a cup.

"Last spring a traveling rchant stayed three nights and the window fras on his side of the building grew a second layer of glass."

I nodded toward the east wall.

"Very clean. Excellent insulation. I kept it."

Kern studied for a long mont.

Then he picked up his bowl and started eating. The porridge was hot, and Kern was a practical man. So questions don’t have useful answers before breakfast.

Renner watched him for a mont.

That was how Renner worked. He needed to see soone commit first.

Then he picked up his bowl and ate too.

Once Renner commits, he’s fully in.

They ate.

The fog drifted.

The journalist’s pen didn’t stop.

Officer Davan arrived at half past nine with his report ledger already open.

He was young for his rank. He had the posture of a man whose morning had been carefully organized and the expression of a man whose morning had just stopped cooperating with that plan.

"I’m Officer Davan," he said. "Third Ward, Abyss Periter Division."

I nodded.

"That’s a very thorough title," I said. "Have you eaten?"

"I’m fine," he replied, in the professional tone of soone who had rehearsed this sort of conversation. "We’re conducting routine inquiries following last night’s alarm event. An unclassified pressure reading in the eastern district."

He looked at .

"Did you observe anything unusual?"

"Late check-in," I said. "North room. Paid in full. Very agreeable guest."

He wrote sothing in the ledger.

"Can you describe the individual?"

"Tall," I said. "Bit foggy."

I leaned on the counter.

"Hasn’t asked for breakfast yet, but I’ve left the option open. So guests need a day to settle before they want anything. You know how it is."

"You ntioned fog," he said.

His pen paused above the page.

"Atmospheric residue," I explained. "Standard for guests coming in from the Abyss side."

I tapped the counter lightly.

"It’s in the guest agreent. There’s a clause."

He wrote more.

This entry took longer.

Behind him, the fog had drifted another foot out of the corridor.

Where it passed over the entrance, the wood grain moved with it. Running one direction, then the other. Following the drift.

It did this without any hurry at all.

Davan turned around.

He looked up at the ceiling.

Four full seconds.

Across the room, Kern had gone completely still with his spoon halfway to his mouth.

Renner was watching Davan the way a person watches soone walking toward a step they haven’t noticed yet.

Davan looked back down at his ledger.

Then he looked at the ceiling again.

Then he started writing.

This entry took longer than everything else combined.

When he finished, he closed the ledger and looked at .

"If you observe anything further," he said carefully, "you should report to the Third Ward office on Callen Street."

"Of course," I said warmly. "Sure about the porridge? I have a lid for it. Travels well."

He declined.

Then he left.

The door closed behind him.

Kern slowly set his spoon down.

"He wrote down nothing unusual," he said.

"Almost certainly."

"He saw the ceiling, Aldous."

"He did," I said. "But ’nothing unusual’ is a much shorter form to fill out than the alternative."

I picked up Davan’s untouched cup.

"The Third Ward has a lot of open incident reports this month," I added. "He’s being practical."

Renner watched steadily.

"How do you know how many incident reports they have open?"

I stood up and carried the cup away.

At the east window, the journalist closed his notepad.

He settled his tab without saying a word and walked out into the grey morning with the stride of a man who had sowhere to be and didn’t have ti for the stairs to slow him down.

I watched him from the window.

He turned the corner onto the main road heading toward the print houses on Vessel Street.

The system logged sothing just after he disappeared from view.

[SYSTEM LOG]

Rumor Thread Initiated: Eastern District, Unclassified Incident

Legend Resonance: Minor Fluctuation Detected

Inn Recognition: Status Updated

New Classification Pending: Abyssal Waypoint (Unconfird)

I read it once.

Then I went to check the corridor and see if the fog wanted anything.

It was still drifting.

Sa stretch of ceiling it had been drifting across all morning. The sa few feet, back and forth.

That was fine.

The important thing was it wasn’t touching the linen.

You are reading The Retired Abyss Innkeeper Chapter 2: The City Watch Came About the Alarms. I Offered T on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.