Chapter 21: The Aggrieved Executioner
Although it had been just under a week, it felt like forever since Quentin had seen the Colosseum. Making his usual trek around sundown, the dim shape of the Colosseum was a welcome landmark as he traversed the emptiness between it and the city. There was always this irrational fear whenever he took a few days off to heal and rest, that heâd show up to work and the job wouldnât be his. Or heâd suit up and then suddenly forget how to fight right as Amicus shouted for them to begin. It was silly, but it was all part of the pre-work ritual, getting into the right mindset before he put on the mask.
The familiar anxieties came and for once, didnât linger. Quentin was too happy to be back in a place where everything made sense and he knew his place. It was easy to forget the chaos of the past several days when he was back where everything was familiar and orderly. Despite being the place where he put his life on the line, the Colosseum was safe. Quentin circled around the outside, eyesight returning in the shade of the sun, until he was let through the servantâs entrance.
This close to sunset, the stands were filling and the crew was getting everything in place for serving thousands of people. Quentin pushed his way through the crowd and made for his office. The clamor of work faded away as he climbed upwards, until the only thing Quentin could hear was the faraway sounds of people finding their seats outside his window. Just as he expected, a scroll awaited him. Quentin shed his cloak and sat down in his well worn chair, unrolling the scroll and taking a look.
Attention! By the decree of His Imperial Majesty Emperor Caragalla, GRAHAM CALHOUN is to be put to death in the Grand Colosseum.
The writ of execution went on to detail Grahamâs crimes and the penalties associated with each. This prisoner was sentenced to death nine times over. The more he read, the more Quentinâs lip curled in disgust. Most of the time he couldnât quite ignore the guilt that came with taking a life. Every so often he relished the chance to dish out justice. This was one of those times.
He put away the scroll. That was one thing taken care of for the night. Having read over his crimes, it also meant there was no way in hell he was going to spend any extra time showing him kindness. All that was left was talking to Demetrius and getting some practice and exercise in, to stay on top of his game.
The door creaked open slowly. Quentin looked up to see a small, scared looking face peeking at him through the crack. Upon being caught, those eyes widened and the door quickly shut again. Quentin sighed and called out, âGiselle, please come in here.â
Silence, and then the door opened slowly and the young slave entered. Giselle kept her eyes on the floor and small hands wrung the bottom of a dirty, shapeless tunic. She fidgeted in place, growing more and more pale. Quentin doubted she was older than thirteen. Still a child, and forced into years of service, probably for something as trivial as stealing food.
âThis really needs to stop,â Quentin said slowly, in a low voice he hoped was nonthreatening. She immediately flinched. âIâm not going to hurt you. Ever. I have nothing against you and no reason to hurt you. You donât need to be afraid of me.â He thought about smiling, but thought better of it.
Giselleâs eyes crept up to his, making contact before going back down to the floor. She swallowed and nodded. âYes, sir,â she said in a voice as tiny as she was. âOf course, sir.â She didnât sound convinced.
Quentin sighed and motioned for her to come closer. âWhat were you coming to my office for in the first place?â
She held up another scroll, this one too tiny to be anything other than a quick note. She closed the distance to his desk and dropped it there, hopping backward. But she hadnât run out of his office yet. She stood there, wringing her hands, waiting to be dismissed. Quentin picked up the note.
Quintius, get to my office as soon as you get this. We need to discuss plans for The Blooming. - ATB
Quentin frowned. Heâd really hoped to go the night without having to deal with Amicus. There was no getting around it. He stood, and Giselle took a step back. Sighing, he reached into his pocket and pulled out a one qala piece. Quentin took her trembling hand in his and pushed the shard of glass into her hand and closed it. âI mean it, Giselle. Get yourself a nice dinner tonight.â She looked up at him, confused. Quentin just smiled and left her alone in his office.
âEnter,â Amicus called upon hearing Quentinâs sharp rap. Quentin entered, closing the door behind him quickly.
The Colosseumâs owner was sprawled out on his chair, his injured leg raised on a cushioned footstool and bandaged up. Next to him an ornate cane rested against his desk. He had a bowl of jellied grubs and a bottle in front of him. Seeing who it was, Amicus grimaced and pushed his snacks away. He motioned for Quentin to sit, folding his hands together.
âYou wanted to see me?â said Quentin.
Amicus cleared his throat. âThe Blooming. Itâs two weeks away, and weâve had something sprung on us. Emperor Caragalla himself is coming and will be watching from my box. That means weâre going to be under the heaviest scrutiny of our lives, Quintius. Do you know what that means?â
Quentin shook his head. With Amicus, it was better to say as little as possible and let him wear himself out.
âThat means,â Amicus said, basso voice drawing out the last word, âthat in two weeks weâre going to have one of the most important shows weâve ever put on and we absolutely cannot risk you fucking it up over sentimentality.â
âI understand,â said Quentin, sighing. âI have no intention to --â
âThere will be no courtesies, no last requests, no anything other than satiating our dear Emperorâs thirst for blood. And I mean that for any of the executions you perform that night. I donât care how harmless it seems.â
Quentin grit his teeth, fighting to not snap at the bastard. Then Amicusâ words sunk in and Quentin looked up. âAny of the executions?â
Amicus smiled then, a nasty sneer of a smile. âYes. Since Caragalla will be there, weâre upping the stakes and adding more events. There will be a short play about the holiday, our gladiators will go up against each other in a recreation of the Emperorâs greatest military victory, and then you will go up against as many condemned souls as we can get by then. Weâre hoping to get four. One for each decade of his reign. It will be the four of them against you.â
âAre you joking?â Quentin scoffed. âEven on my best day Iâve never fought more than two at a time.â
âAre you saying youâre not capable of it?â Amicus challenged. âShould we get someone else to do it? Iâve had this idea of letting Cervenka try filling your shoes, some time. I think he could put on a better show.â
That gave Quentin pause. This confirmed his fears about being replaced, and with Cervenka? The man was a dirty fighter who, at best, was divisive. If he ever got the chance to put the mask on, heâd probably draw things out and flat out torment the condemned in the ring. He more or less did that already with the foes he kept alive.
âSo,â Amicus concluded, looking smug. âWeâll have no need of your services until the Blooming. Whatever writs of execution get passed our way will be saved for the show and used then. I suggest you take this time to rest, stay in shape, settle any last affairs, pray to the gods, whatever you need to do before you perform. You will not ruin this for me, Quintius. Either you put on a good performance, or die trying. Either suits me.â
Quentin stormed out of his office, mood darkening by the second. It was one thing to have a job that put him at risk every time he performed. That was old news, and something Quentin grew comfortable with early on in his career. It was knowing that the manager was actively trying to set him up to fail. Amicus was basically trying to murder him and told him that right to his face. How long could Quentin hold out when the person after him made the rules?
âYou look like hell.â Demetrius say by way of greeting. He motioned for Quentin to join him as he jogged around the perimeter of the practice yard with half the other gladiators.
âJust saw Amicus,â he replied, falling into a light jog beside the much shorter man. âHe wants me fighting four people at once for the Blooming. Including a Savant.â
âPick up the pace you useless scabs!â Demetrius barked at a fighter lagging behind the rest of the pack. To Quentin he said, âso heâs definitely trying to kill you. You need to quit while you can.â
âOr you can give me some extra training and make sure I survive. If you can spare the time.â
Demetrius looked up at him sharply. âOf course I can spare the time. But this is getting ridiculous. You donât have to prove yourself to anyone. Maybe nowâs a good time to retire. If you did, youâd be setting Amicus up for failure. Heâd look like a fool.â
Now there was a reason to retire Quentin could get behind. Almost. âYeah, but after what happened with the Supreme Arbiter, theyâre offering me 10% of the take.â
Demetrius stopped jogging. Quentin slowed to a stop as well. The other runners went around them, leaving the two behind. âSeriously? Okay, thatâs a lot but itâs not like you give a shit about the money.â
âYou donât know that,â Quentin said in a deadpan drone. âI could be looking to spend it all on prostitutes, booze, and nice clothes.â
That got him a harsh laugh, and then they were jogging again. âSpeaking of prostitutes, you ever settle things with the one you said found you?â
Immediately, Quentin stopped again. At the look on his face, Demetrius understood. âAlright maggots,â he bellowed. âSword and board training. Run through the basic forms until you puke. Câmon,â he said, motioning for Quentin to follow him.
Once inside Demetriusâ office off the locker room, the aging trainer grabbed a bottle of whiskey and one glass. âAlright. What the hell happened?â
Quentin told him, in exhaustive detail. From setting out to look for her from Demetriusâ home all the way to meeting Mr. Cicero. The more Quentin spoke, the more absurd it all sounded. Demetrius coped by taking a drink each time he seemed surprised. By the time he was done, there was little wonder Demetriusâ response was just, âyouâre fucking with me.â
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âNo fuckery. Honest.â
Demetrius rubbed his eyes, looking older than Quentin had ever seen him. He braced himself for anger, or another stray hand upside the head. The trainer did neither of those things. All he did was look Quentin up and down and ask, in his tired, gravelly voice, âQuentin. How do you see this ending? Realistically.â
It was a good question, and one Quentin had no answer for. âI donât know,â he said with a crooked smile. âI have no idea whatâs going to happen. Itâs stressful and a bit exhausting.â
For that he got a sigh. Demetrius worked his mouth open and closed silently as he wrestled with the words. âDo you have any idea how unsafe youâre being? You might actually be more reckless in your personal life than in the ring.â
Quentin shrugged. âIf it makes you feel any better, I think this makes me more likely to take my fights seriously. You know, so I can go out and test fate out on the streets instead.â
âDammit Quentin, Iâm serious!â Demetrius gesticulated wildly, growling in frustration. âAre you really willing to trust your life to a whore you flat out said is a serial liar?â
âWhen have I ever shied away from gambling with my life?â Quentin scoffed, sitting up straight. âI just want to see what happens. It beats coming here, killing a couple of people and then going home and drinking myself into a stupor. This is something different, Demetrius.â Quentin frowned. âIâve never had...Whatever this is, before.â
Frustration and irritation warred on Demetriusâ face. In the end he just sighed and grumbled, âWe couldâve gotten you a whore years ago if thatâs what you wanted. One who wonât get you dead.â
Quentin ignored him. âIâm not planning on dying until my curiosity is satisfied. I promise. Now, you can give me shit for it or you could help me.â
Demetrius made a face. âObviously Iâm going to help you. Get your ass here well before sundown and Iâll grab Jonas and have him be a training dummy for you. Maybe take the time to teach him some moves and get him some practice too.â
Quentin smiled. âYouâre really trying to groom him for stardom, arenât you?â
âHeâs a good kid. He just needs to have the stupid knocked out of him, and maybe some time seeing what he shouldnât be like will be good for him.â
With promises of additional training secured, that left only one thing left to do before Quentin could turn back and meet up with Razia out on the Boulevard. Truth be told, he didnât have to do it but the idea of going to the Colosseum and checking on his duties without also checking on the prisoners was unthinkable. Quentin stopped by the locker room to grab his mask and wore it, sans the black armor.
When he got down to the cells there were two men posted at the doors. At the sound of his footsteps they put hands on their belts, but relaxed when they saw it was the executioner. âBe careful,â the woman on the left said, surprising him. âHeâll drive you nuts. Weâre on rotating shifts in and out of the room so we donât kill him.â
The executioner nodded sympathetically, unsure of what she meant. When she opened the door and he stepped through, he understood. Kassim Nadir lay on the cot in his cell, humming while a copy of him paced up and down the length of the room, letting out an unending stream of profanity. The two guards in here were at the table and appeared miserable. Upon seeing the executioner, Kassim stood up.
âWelcome back, moonkissed filth,â he said, wrapping his hands around the bars. âQuentin, wasnât it? Thatâs what the traitor called you.â
âThe Butcherâs moonkissed?â A man on the opposite end of the cell called. âHuh. Iâll be damned. Again.â He let out an unhinged giggle.
The executioner ignored the savant and headed for the cage of the latest occupant. Graham Calhoun was a jovial, grandfatherly looking man, with tiny spectacles and a long beard. The executioner let his breath come out as a hiss. âThe child rapist.â
The old man smiled. âThatâs me.â
There were few times he wished he could execute a prisoner quick and quietly, and not let the world know they even existed. Amicus had this one saved for the Blooming. He wouldnât be a threat. âWhy?â he asked, the only question he could think of. The only question that mattered.
Graham Calhoun shrugged, letting out a giggle. âThey scream better. They cry more. They think someoneâs going to save them, right up to the end.â
âLet me kill this one,â Kassim said, sitting up. His face was a stone mask as he and his copy stared at Graham. The old man either didnât notice, or didnât care.
âTempting,â the executioner muttered. âBut no. Heâll get a fair death, same as everyone else.â Normally he tried to show compassion and maybe even kindness towards the end. There was none of that here and now, only revulsion and resignation. He turned back towards the Ramali captive. âHow is your nose?â
âWhat do you care, monster?â His copy spat a glob of nothing on the ground at the executionerâs feet before winking out of existence. âYour kind delights in pain.â
âOther executioners maybe,â he replied. âI donât.â
Kassimâs eyes narrowed. They were still puffy and tender looking. âIâm talking about your curse. Youâre an abomination that shouldâve been given back to the Darkstar as soon as you let out your first stolen scream.â
It was easier to deal with this now, while wearing the mask of the office. There was a layer of separation that kept his anger at a low simmer. It wasnât the term, although he hated it. It was knowing that no matter how silly those beliefs were, Kassim was a zealot and meant every one of them. Being hated and feared was a given, but few prisoners hated him with this intensity. âYouâll get your chance to do just that soon enough.â
âHow did a disgusting creature like you become the emperorâs attack dog? Quentin.â Kassim leered. He seemed to delight in knowing the executionerâs name, even if that was all he knew.
âQuentin,â Graham tittered from his cell. âQuentin, Quentin, Quentin the executioner.â
âUm,â one of the guards at the table cleared their throat. âIs he going too far? You want us to shut him up?â The other patted the club on her belt.
âNo,â said the executioner. âThat wonât be necessary. If you were to beat him every time he was annoying, how much would there be left for me on the Blooming?â
One guard snorted. âNot much.â
âIs that what matters to you, Quentin? How much of me is left for you to kill?â The air in front of Quentin shimmered and Kassim faced him. His copy, funny enough, didnât have any of the scrapes or bruises on his face. âDoes the attack dog like meat that struggles?â
The executioner sighed. This was pointless. He turned to the guards. âHas Amicus given any special instructions about the prisoner?â
The guards shared a look. âHeâs on half rations,â the woman said.
A twinge of annoyance. âThat would be for the wound on his leg. That ends today. I want him on rations and a half. Heâll be in good health when we fight, is that understood?â
âWhat do we do if Amicus looks into it? Asks us?â
The executioner shrugged. âLie.â
âIs that why you came down here, Quentin? You want to feed me and nurse me back to health so you can enjoy my death?â Kassim sneered.
Yes, but also no. âTrying to make sure youâre being taken care of and arenât treated like animals,â the executioner said through grit teeth.
Kassim burst out laughing. It was forced and overly loud. âI know what this is. Youâre trying to make yourself feel better. Youâre trying to pretend youâre not a soulless killer.â
Quentinâs throat tightened. He didnât have to be there, he reminded himself. He could leave at any time and just...Wait out the two weeks and come back and put an end to this. But he couldnât. âYou donât have a lot of room to judge me, Kassim. Youâre a killer too. How many men did you kill trying to get to your target?â
If Quentin thought it would do anything, he was wrong. Kassim just looked amused, and even Graham let out another nervous giggle watching the argument. âWeâre not the same,â Kassim said, offended. âI kill for a reason. I choose my targets based on need and the belief that their death would make the world a better place. You kill whoever they tell you to, and I serve something greater than myself. Tell me, Quentin, do you believe in anything?â
Listening to the prisoners was foolish. They had every reason to try to hurt Quentin and this one seemed to know how. He shouldâve just shrugged it off, but the question sunk its teeth into him and wouldnât let go. âI believe in justice,â said Quentin. âCompassion. That no matter how much of a bastard you mightâve been out there, Iâll treat you the same. Thatâs what I try.â
The real Kassim spat on the ground and the copy followed before flickering out. âTo make yourself feel better,â he repeated. âI once watched you spill one manâs guts and remove anotherâs liver. Held it up while people cheered. Iâm sure he felt comforted in the end.â
Quentin remembered that. Ibrahim...something. Something that started with an M. He was an alcoholic and a snitch, so the bounty was to make an example out of him. That had been just last year. He had no one to send money or last words to and heâd rejected every attempted kindness. Quentin had felt sick for taking that money, but he still took it. âHe felt nothing. I killed him quickly and pulled his liver out after.â
âSo compassionate,â Kassim sneered. âYou really are just handling meat. I think maybe you arenât Quentin afterall. Butcher suits you better.â
The entire world burst into flame. Quentinâs face burned and tingled, and his breathing caught in his chest as his heart worked overtime.He became painfully aware of the three other people in the room, listening in on their conversation. The guards would talk. Just whispers at first, but theyâd spread. This would be just one more way of confirming that he was a monster and Quentin wasnât sure he disagreed. He remained silent.
âIâve killed my share of imperialist scum,â Kassim said, dropping to just a whisper. His copy lazily flickered into existence on top of him, overlapping him until it looked like he had two heads. The second head continued, whispering, âYou wanna know what you are?â Quentin couldnât help but lean in closer. âYouâre a bloodthirsty monster who wishes he was human. And this is what I think of your compassion.â
The copy disappeared. Quentin had just enough time to see Kassimâs hand on his exposed cock before he was hit with a stream of piss. He jumped back. Kassim continued pissing on the floor. The puddle oozed in Quentinâs direction, making him step back until the table stopped him. His leg and part of his tunic was dark and damp.
The prisoners howled with laughter. The guards looked away from him, and that said more than laughter could. Quentin wanted to laugh, wanted to rage, wanted to cry. He settled for freezing, fighting to steady his breathing. Since he did nothing, the guards took it on themselves to act.
âAlright, thatâs it,â the man said, drawing his club and the keys. The woman followed, getting in close. They opened the door and set upon Kassim, clubbing him over the head while he howled. With each hit a copy of him materialized and disappeared in a flash. Quentin watched it happen and said nothing. His fists were balled up at his sides so tight they shook.
This wasnât what it was supposed to be like. This was the only place he felt happy, at home. Where was that place? Gone. Whether it was Amicusâ death threat or Kassim getting under his skin, Quentin was engulfed in this horrible feeling of loss. He didnât have to be here, but he was because he cared. He wasnât a monster. Unless Kassim was right, and it was just to make himself feel better.
Quentin left Kassim to his beating. He couldâve stopped it and he knew he shouldâve. But with Kassimâs piss still dripping down his leg, Quentin wasnât feeling especially charitable that night. All he said was a quick, âRemember, rations and a half,â to the guards before he took the ramp back up to the Colosseum proper.
Back in the locker room he threw the mask at his chest, slumping onto the bench in front of it. He buried his face in his hands and breathed in and out. He felt like shit. Defeated. Quentin had won a round and now Kassim had evened the score. He thought he was above being baited by the prisoners, but this was too raw to ignore. This was going to linger with him, long into the night.
Then he remembered Razia. At the start of the evening sheâd told Quentin where she and Samantha would be working that night. He escorted her out of the neighborhood and before they parted ways, sheâd said, âCome on by after youâre done. Sam and I want to show our appreciation.â
It wasnât something he seriously considered, but now...It was better than storming off home and being angry all night until he drank himself to sleep. The night was still young, he had a friend now, and maybe things could get better.
After he washed off the piss.