Chapter 51: Neighbors
The villa may have been identical in layout, but it already felt different to Razia. Quentinâs home was peaceful and quiet, and that quiet had a weight to it. For all of its size, it was a stark, minimalist place, as closed off and distant as Quentin could be. Even with all of the girls making noise, it was clear they were invaders, disrupting the silence. Quentin may have owned the second house, but it didnât belong to him. Even only half outfitted, it was far too lively to be his.
Though that was at least in part due to the half a dozen laborers moving furniture and potted plants into the girlsâ new home. Razia opened the door to the final bedroom and motioned for the movers to bring in a bed and a dresser. âThis is the last of it?â She asked them.
The closest laborer, a burly tanned man named Hector stopped, and so did his partner holding the other side of the bed frame. On top was a plush mattress without any linens, and their arms were clearly twitching after a couple hours of working nonstop. Sweat practically poured off his brows. âNo, we still have some tables and chairs to bring in. Weâre gonna need a break before those.â
Razia nodded. âOf course. Weâll get some water and fruit out for you.â She got out of their way as they lugged the furniture in, most of the menâs eyes lingering on her as they passed. Just like theyâd been doing all day. Razia had been on her best behavior and hadnât teased or instigated anything. There was too much to do to lose time playing with them.
They set the bed down in the same place in the middle of the room as they had with all the other rooms. Each of them had a bed, a full dresser, a small wash basin and some towels. Other than that, the girls would be free to decorate their rooms as they saw fit, turning it into their perfect place to work. They still couldnât believe their luck and Razia remained giddy about it as well.
She left them behind and walked through the rest of the villa, towards the garden. All around the atrium were large, leafy ferns and rows of hardy but colorful flowers. Vines wrapped around the four columns around the skylight in a spiral, stopping halfway up. Razia and the girls had come up with ideas of how they wanted the place to look, and Quentin shrugged and made it happen. Razia kept a runny tally of the costs, growing increasingly worried that the next expense would be too much.
Three days of shopping around and setting up their business and not once had Quentin blinked at any of it. Not at the basic necessities, and not for the plethora of rugs and tapestries and even a few sculptures they wanted to make the place more than just a house people went to when they wanted their dick sucked. Together, the girls worked to make the house beautiful. They were very nearly ready.
Razia slipped out to the garden and out the gate. She waved to a group of neighbors who had gathered together and watched as the Fleetfoot couriers brought their purchased wares inside. None of them waved back. This didnât bother her in the slightest. All it did was make her smile wider as she went in through the other garden and into Quentinâs much more sparse home.
âHey Sam,â Razia said, coming upon the redhead in the kitchen. âYou mind serving up water and grapes for the guys? Theyâve been at it for a while.â
âYeah, sure!â Samantha grabbed Quentinâs only platters and some clay cups and got to work while Razia dipped back out.
While all major decisions hinged on Quentinâs word, it was Razia herself who was in charge of organizing everything and everyone. A task she was more than happy to perform, if she was being honest. Between picking out the furniture and delegating tasks to the other girls, it was everything Razia dreamed of. Everything Piro had promised her and then backed out on. Well, the joke was on him. She got a little burgeoning empire of her own, and sheâd bound his hands together. His loss was very much her gain.
âThere you are,â Razia said, peeking her head into Quentinâs room. He was in the little toilet room in the corner, wearing only his undergarments. Soap covered part of his face and he held a knife up to his cheek. His eyes met hers in the mirror and he stiffened, but only for a second. âWeâre getting pretty close to done for the day, and you really gotta see how itâs coming together.â
Quentin grunted in response. âAlright. Iâll be out in a bit.â He looked at himself in the mirror and made a face. âCanât believe I let it get as bad as I did. Iâm not someone who can pull off a beard.â
Rather than take the hint to leave him alone, Razia came up behind him. âI donât know about that. No one looks good with a patchy beard, but I can see you in ten years looking dapper and distinguished with a month or two to grow it out.â She smiled at his reflection. If he wanted her to push his boundaries, it was easy enough to know what would do the trick. Being anywhere near naked around her always made him squirm. âYou going to cut your hair too? Itâs starting to get a bit shaggy.â
He grunted in the affirmative, then shaved away a small line on his cheek. âLong hairâs bad for a fight. Gives them something to grab onto. Iâm overdue but itâs a pain in the ass to do on my own.â
Razia raised an eyebrow. âSo donât do it on your own. Samantha cuts her siblingsâ hair all the time. Hell, I could do it.â
âI donât think I want my hair quite as short as yours.â
She laughed, wrapping her arm around his waist. âYou shouldâve seen me before I came to Orchrisus. I had hair down to my ass in neat, tiny braids.â
Quentin paused. Pulling the knife away from his face he turned to her and said, âI canât see it. This is just soâ¦well, you.â
âIt is now. When I escaped my fatherâs men, I needed a way to not match the description they had of me. Easiest way of doing itâ¦â Razia mimed slicing her hair off. âIt worked, and Iâve kept it like this since. Much nicer in the desert, honestly.â
Quentinâs expression turned thoughtful. âAre you always on the run?â
Yes. No. It was complicated. âNot anymore,â she said with a shrug. âIâm not going anywhere in the foreseeable future. Here, let me.â She took the knife from him and ushered him down to sit on the toilet. Quentin obeyed hesitantly. Razia held up the knife to his cheek and tilted his head back. Sitting, he was now roughly the same height as her.
Carefully she scraped a line of hair from his face, dipping the blade into a basin of hot water before returning to his cheek. Wordlessly she worked, cutting small, smooth lines into his wiry white beard. It only took a couple of minutes to get rid of the rest of it, and she did it in an enjoyable, companionable silence. When she was finished she grabbed a towel and wiped the excess soap from his face. âMuch better,â she said, running her thumb over the smooth skin.
Quentin sat very still. Razia noticed it was what he did when he was unsure of what to do, or uncomfortable. He became a statue, as if not moving meant he was safe. Silly man, he was never safe around her. Little moments like this were Raziaâs favorite way of teasing him. Seduction was one of her favorite games, and it was as intoxicating as any drug. But it was different with him. Razia didnât give him suggestions of sex to lead him by the nose. She teased him with glimpses of intimacy, tiny tastes of touch. Each time he froze was another time he was presented with a choice he didnât know how to make.
âI should get dressed,â he said, standing and breaking contact. This was another round she won, and another round where they both lost. Razia just smiled and waited until he turned around to check himself in the mirror.
âWhen you do, come on over and take a look.â Raziaâs smile turned wicked and before she left, she brought her hand crashing down on Quentinâs ass, making him jump. She laughed and left him there. So far, it was an excellent day.
The look on Samanthaâs face threatened to ruin it. âUm,â she said, looking over her shoulder towards the garden. âI think somethingâs going on outside. They donât look happy.â
Razia blinked. âWho doesnât?â
âEveryone?â
Razia walked past Samantha, putting a hand on her shoulder and squeezing as she went. She walked out to the courtyard, which was now a lot more full than sheâd ever seen it. The assembly of their neighbors had grown, and some of the guards were now milling about as well. Before she saw them she heard them arguing.
âI donât give a damn what the bylaws say,â A pompous sounding man in his fifties or sixties all but shouted into the security chiefâs face. âWe were here first, and we have rights godsdammit!â
Ah, here it was. In truth, she and Quentin had been expecting some kind of blowback from the neighbors. At the very least there would be angry mutterings and maybe someone confronting them about their new business. It made sense that it happened on the day men moved in and out of the commons lugging an absurd amount of furniture while beautiful women milled around their new home. Jenna hid behind the gates of the garden, peeking her head out cautiously. She knew trouble when she saw it.
And trouble saw Razia. A short, shrewish looking woman smacked her husband on the chest and pointed at Razia. A dozen other heads turned her way, staring daggers at her. Nearby guards shifted uncomfortably, looking between Razia and the others. They didnât want to get involved, but it was clear they expected to have to. If things got ugly, maybe theyâd be on her side. She wasnât counting on it.
âHi there,â Razia said brightly. âIs there a problem here?â
The pompous man pushed past the exasperated chief and jabbed a finger in her direction. âYouâre damned right thereâs a problem. You!â
Raziaâs mouth dropped in a surprised O and she clutched her chest. âI donât know what you could mean!â she said, cackling on the inside. âHave I done something to offend?â She could be a good actress when she chose to be. This wasnât one of those times.
It wasnât her best quality. Most of the time she could keep her eyes on the prize and play nice until she got what she wanted. Diplomacy was a fine art, but she wasnât quite an artist. Not when every so often diplomacy was forgotten in favor of stirring the pot and making things worse. For as much as she liked control and skillfully getting what she needed, sometimes she just chose chaos. It was the same impulse that had her robbing crime lords and confronting an executioner with knowledge of his secret identity. Even knowing it would one day likely get her killed, sometimes she couldnât resist.
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âEver since you started coming around here, things have been worse!â he said, coming closer but not too close. As if she was going to bite him if he didnât keep at armâs length. Or maybe strangle her. âFirst you lead bandits to our doorstep, then you come and go in and out at all hours of the night! And now this.â
âWait,â Razia held up a finger. âYouâre upset because Iâm a night person? This seems a bit much, to be honest.â
All of them started talking at once, yelling over each other to be heard.
âYou know thatâs not what weâre talking about!â
âItâs about decency for crying out loud!â
â...and I donât want these she-wolves around my kids!â
A hand on her shoulder let her know Quentin had arrived. She looked up at him. He was wearing his shades but not his cloak. He crossed his arms over his chest and stared out at them. âWhat seems to be the problem, Fred?â
The chief guard turned away from the crowd of angry upper middle class people sighing. âTheyâre here to protest your purchase of that house and the current occupants.â
âAnd they donât like how late we stay up,â Razia helpfully supplied.
Pompous manâs face turned red. âItâs not about that, itâs about you people driving the rest of this area down. This is a good neighborhood, with decent people. Mostly,â he added, sneering at Quentin. Quentinâs expression didnât change, but Razia knew it still bothered him.
Razia wrapped her arm around Quentinâs waist and grinned. âAre you saying that you donât want a group of whores living around you guys?â
âThatâs exactly what weâre saying,â he said. A chorus of agreements sounded from the people behind him. âThis is a good, clean place and we donât need the likes of you sleazing it up and bringing us down.â
âThatâs ridiculous,â Razia scoffed. âEveryone loves whores. Or at least I know some of you do.â She waved at a blonde woman in an expensive dress.âLike Olanna over there. Hi Olanna!â
They all turned around to face Olanna. Olanna shrank, sending a withering glare at Razia who just beamed at the attention. Olannaâs wife didnât look too happy. Quentinâs hand on her shoulder squeezed, and she squeezed his hip back.
Must you? He seemed to say.
I must! Her squeeze replied.
âWe donât want you here,â The shrewish woman insisted.
Razia shrugged. âI donât see how thatâs our problem. Any of you couldâve bought that house and did whatever you wanted with it. You didnât, we did, and here we are. Do you think that we should get a say over what happens in your homes, or is it just one sided?â
âQuintius,â Pompous seethed. âAre you going to let her do all of the talking for you? Weâre here to talk to you.â
Quentin smiled then, and it was the cold, false smile he presented when he was irritated or upset. It wouldnât fool anyone, and between that and his hidden eyes he gave off an impression of a relaxed but wary predator. âI donât know about that, Leonis,â he said. âSeems to me sheâs doing a good job. Iâm not hearing anything worth replying to.â
They didnât react well to that. The yelling got louder and louder and a couple of them surged forward, pointing and yelling at them. That got the attention of the guards, who came in between them and formed a human wall to keep everyone apart. Razia wasnât worried, and it just made the situation juicier. The way she saw it, there was nothing they could do about it other than complain at them. They were just making things worse on themselves.
âEnough already!â The chief guard bellowed. Everyone fell silent. He turned an angry eye to Razia, who had to fight the urge to wink at him. He was possibly one of the only people she needed on their side. âI think people might be less sore about this if you heard their concerns and addressed them,â he said in a voice like a parent talking to unruly children. âIs that acceptable?â
Quentin grunted as Razia said, âYes, I think so. What concerns are that, Fred?â
Fred pointed to a burly man with a drooping mustache. He cleared his throat and said, âWe donât want strange people coming all hours of the night, wandering around. If weâre to expect your customers coming in and out, thatâs going to make the guardâs job of keeping troublemakers out harder.â Voices raised around them, agreeing.
Quentin took this one. âWeâre not going to allow any customers out into the commons. The garden gates will remain locked and anyone who tries to get out will be thrown out. We have no intention of letting them interfere with any of your lives.â
âBesides,â Razia added, throwing oil on the fire, âThe guards have been used to people coming and going for a while. Between Quentin and your kids? People sneak in and out every night.â
âWait,â a woman said. âWhat do you mean our kids?â
Razia shrugged, saying, âI donât know whose kids belong to whom, but Iâve seen plenty of teenagers slip out late at night when Iâm sitting at the fountain. At least two or three a night sometimes.â Or maybe only once or twice, but they didnât need to know that.
That got a couple of them looking at each other frantically, each wondering if it was one of their kids sneaking out without them knowing. Others werenât to be deterred. A dark skinned Ramali woman wearing a lot of jewelry chimed in. âIf thatâs the case, then your business is doubly dangerous. If one of our kids were to venture in --â
âWe would throw them out,â Razia interrupted.
Beside her, Quentin nodded. âThe only children who might be there will be family of my employees, or maybe working the kitchen. No one under the age of sixteen is to be allowed entrance.â
âBut we will be here for when your children grow up and you want to give them a good first time,â said Razia. âIn fact, every resident and guard here has a standing 25% discount for our services!â
Beside her, Quentin sighed. Razia shook with silent laughter, leaning into him and hugging him. It was, of course, the wrong thing to say and everyone started speaking up again. The guards at least looked happy. Judging from their faces, it was enough to sway some of them over to her side. Bonus, if they enjoyed themselves it would give them more incentive to keep an eye out for them, maybe.
âAs nice as that is, Ms. Rashid,â Fred said, raising his hands to quiet people down. âI canât be splitting my menâs attention to help keep your business safe.â
âYou wonât need to. Weâll have our own private security for the house. You keep watch on the commons and the streets outside and weâll take care of ourselves.â
That was enough to make Fred just shrug. It seemed like a token complaint anyway, and while the man didnât look happy with them, he didnât look antagonistic either. Mostly, he just seemed tired and done with all of this. Her own enjoyment was starting to wane as it went on, but there was still fun to be had. Razia looked around. âAnyone else with concerns?â
Their neighbors glowered at her. A couple of them turned and walked away from the group, muttering to themselves as they went back inside. Including Olanna and her wife, Razia noted with glee. They had some stuff they needed to work out. Maybe it was wrong of her to out her, given she was the one who pointed out where Quentin lived when Razia asked, last month. But then, she shouldnât have been part of the irritated mob too. She only had herself to blame.
It was Leonis who spoke up again. He looked like he had reached the point where he was ready to strangle her, only to find a calm in the eye of the storm. Looking at them with cold hate in his eyes, he said, âItâs bad enough having to share a neighborhood with a freak like you, Quintius. Did you really have to invite a bunch of whores to come live with you?â
âI think a better question is did he have to buy his girls their own house,â Razia supplied. âAnd the answer is no. He didnât have to.â Quentin looked down at her, puzzled. âBut he did. For us. Because thatâs the kind of guy he is. Heâll look out for a bunch of girls just trying to make a living, and heâll tolerate canker sores like you without trying to make it worse. Me? Iâd just as happily declare war on you and make you as miserable as youâre trying to make us.â
Once more his hand squeezed her shoulder. Tightly this time, and the message was clear: enough. It was too late to stop Leonis from reacting though. âYou see, Fred?â he demanded. âNow sheâs threatening me. Iâve half a mind --â
âIf that!â
Leonisâ sentence trailed off into a garbled scream. He took a step towards her, fist raised in the air. Razia didnât have time to do much more than widen her eyes in surprise before Quentin pulled her back and put himself between them. Leonis stopped, looking up a few inches at Quentin. Quentin pulled his spectacles off and directed his glare at the man. Razia wondered if Leonis had any clue Quentin probably couldnât see him too well, or if all he saw was menace.
âTry it, Leonis. Itâll take half of Fredâs men to get me off of you.â Quentin bared his teeth. The gap in the front had a tiny nub of a tooth starting to grow back. Gods, he really wasnât kidding about that.
Fred had enough. âLeonis, pack it in. If you throw the first punch I wonât interfere. And you Quintius, could you kindly not threaten the other residents?â He put his hand on Leonisâ shoulder. Leonis violently shrugged him off, but seemed to regain his sanity. Holding his hands up in surrender, he backed up.
âSorry,â said Quentin, sounding anything but. âI can be overprotective.â
Fred grunted. Turning around to address their neighbors, he said, âAlright, thatâs enough from all of you. Youâre not going to change their minds and theyâre not going to change yours. You donât like it? Go to the magistrate and complain, maybe someone there will listen. But let me make this abundantly clear: any of you start something and the magistrate will laugh you off. Donât make my job any harder than it has to be.â
While some of them obviously didnât care for the hired help telling them what to do, the majority of them grumbled and dispersed. Some lingered a little to talk to someone close by, but by unspoken agreement they all vacated the commons. Last was Leonis, who glared at Razia one last time as if willing her to die from all of his venom. She just smiled at him.
âWas all of that really necessary?â Quentin asked, putting his spectacles back on. He was frowning. Or maybe that was his neutral expression. With the shades on it was hard to tell. Razia let out a pleased laugh.
âProbably not, but I had fun. Look,â she let out a sigh. âThey were going to be pissed at us no matter what. All I did was make it clear that weâre not going to back down and weâre not going to be bullied or intimidated or do anything different just because they donât improve. Was any of that wrong?â
Okay, now he frowned. âNo,â he said. âI suppose not. But you didnât have to tweak their noses while doing that.â
âNo. I got to tweak their noses.â
âRazia,â he said warningly.
Razia took his hands in hers and tugged on them, pulling him towards their business. âCome on,â she said. âBe mad at me later, but come in and take a look at what weâve built together. Youâre not going to regret it!â
Maybe she was just in a manic mood and wanted to cause trouble, but it came from a place of joy. And that joy was infectious. Within seconds Quentinâs frown turned into an exasperated smile and he followed behind her.