Stavvy’s Bar and Grill was eerily quiet, the usual hum of conversation and clinking glasses absent. The dim lighting cast long shadows across the empty tables, leaving only three figures in the otherwise deserted space: Stavvy himself and his two curious patrons.
The first was Leroi, the proprietor of the alchemy shop down the street. He was, as always, an enigma wrapped in an unreadable expression. A slightly portly man with an unsettlingly smooth face, Leroi carried himself with an air of practiced neutrality—no wrinkles, no frown lines, not even a hint of gray in his neatly trimd hair. It was unnatural. Stavvy, a shrewd observer by necessity, had long suspected so kind of facial modification. After all, no one reached Leroi’s supposed age without at least a few marks of ti. Yet there he sat, sipping his drink with the sa placid, almost doll-like expression he always wore.
Then there was John—the man with the red eyes—and his ever-present white canine companion, Lunar.
Stavvy had been warned about John. Whispers in the underground spoke of his terrifying power, urging caution in his presence. But when John first stepped into the bar, Stavvy hadn’t sensed the overwhelming danger others had described. John himself was calm, almost unassuming, speaking in a asured tone and never raising his voice. If anything, he seed… ordinary and pleasant.
But Stavvy was no fool. As a mouse mutant, his instincts were sharp, finely tuned by years of survival in a world that didn’t care about his kind. And while John didn’t set off his internal alarms, Lunar did.
The mont Stavvy’s eyes landed on that pristine white dog, his fur bristled. A cold shiver raced down his spine, his muscles tensing as if preparing to flee. There was sothing wrong with that creature—sothing that defied nature. It wasn’t just the way Lunar moved with uncanny precision or the way its eyes seed to gleam with an intelligence far beyond that of a normal animal. No, it was sothing deeper, sothing other.
Yet, despite the primal fear Lunar invoked, the dog never acted on it. John would sit quietly, sipping his drink, while Lunar remained at his side, still as a statue. No growls, no sudden movents—just that unnerving presence, like a blade resting against one’s throat without cutting.
So, Stavvy adapted. He kept his gaze away from Lunar, focusing instead on John, treating him with the sa polite hospitality he extended to all his custors. And so far, that had been enough. Whatever darkness lurked beneath John’s calm exterior, whatever monstrous truth hid behind Lunar’s watchful eyes—it left Stavvy alone.
John: "Thanks for dinner, Leroi," his voice quieter than usual as he pushed a piece of at around his plate.
Leroi leaned back in his chair, studying John with those unnervingly smooth features.
Leroi: "No problem, my friend," he replied, his tone as flat as ever. "You seed a little off when I spoke to you earlier. Thought maybe you could use a change of scenery."
John exhaled, rubbing his temple.
John: "Is it that obvious?" He hesitated before continuing, "Yeah. Found out a friend of mine got himself hurt pretty bad yesterday. It’s been... weighing on ."
Leroi’s expression didn’t shift, but his voice softened just slightly.
Leroi: "Is it serious?"
John: "No—well, kinda?" he let out a dry laugh. "He’ll be fine. But he wouldn’t be in this ss if he’d just listened to ." His fingers tightened around his fork. "I warned him. Told him exactly what would happen if he kept pushing his luck, to work at the things he could control. And now..." He trailed off, shaking his head. "Logically, I know it’s not my fault. But I still feel like I should’ve done more."
Stavvy, flipping a slab of at on the grill behind the counter, snorted.
Stavvy: "You can’t be responsible for other people’s stupidity," he said, his whiskers twitching as he worked. "Best you can do is lay out the facts and hope they make the right call. But at the end of the day, their choices are their own." He slid the sizzling at onto two plates, passing one to Leroi and the other to John. "Especially when you were only trying to help."
John stared at the plate for a long mont before nodding.
John: "I know. Rationally, I get it. But guilt doesn’t always listen to reason."
Stavvy chuckled, wiping his paws on his apron.
Stavvy: "Feels like our emotions got a mind of their own sotis, huh? Like so stubborn little gremlin living in your head, refusing to see sense." He shook his head. "Just don’t let it eat at you. You did your part. The rest was on him."
John took a slow bite, chewing thoughtfully.
John: "...Yeah. You’re right."
Lunar, who had been lying motionless at John’s feet, let out a quiet huff—almost as if in agreent.
Stavvy pretended not to notice.
Leroi: "Honestly, I'm surprised you actually ca out with today," he remarked, swirling his drink idly. "I've asked you to join at Stavvy's for dinner plenty of tis before, and you always turned down." His smooth, expressionless face tilted slightly, as if studying John for a reaction.
Stavvy leaned against the counter, arms crossed, his whiskers twitching in amusent.
Stavvy: "What, do you not like or sothing?" he teased, though there was a flicker of genuine curiosity beneath the jest.
John let out a quiet breath, his red eyes glinting in the dim light as he glanced between them.
John: "Of course not. You see for breakfast sotis," he said, his voice low but firm. "I just... hate crowds. And dinner rush is when this place is at its busiest."
His gaze drifted across the empty bar—the silent booths, the untouched tables, the lack of life where there should have been chatter and clinking glasses.
John: "But Leroi told business has been rough for you lately. He wanted to co support you. And now that I'm here..." He gestured vaguely at the vacant space. "Well. I can see he wasn't exaggerating."
Stavvy's ears flicked back slightly, but he shrugged, forcing a grin.
Stavvy: "Eh, it's just a little slow because of what's going on in the red light district. I’m sure it will resolve itself soon."
John: "What's going on with the Redlight District?" he asked, his voice casual but his crimson eyes sharp with interest. The question hung in the air between them, heavier than it seed.
Stavvy froze for half a second, his whiskers twitching imperceptibly. He knew exactly what was happening in the Redlight District—everyone on Eld Street did. The Nighthounds Syndicate, the most powerful criminal empire in Golgotta, had called a gathering of their high-ranking mbers. A eting of that scale was rare, and when the Nighthounds moved, the entire underworld held its breath.
They had locked down the district entirely—shuttering brothels, emptying casinos, stationing their enforcers at every corner. The Nighttower, their obsidian-skinned fortress at the district’s heart, was under tighter security than a royal vault. No witnesses, no leaks, no loose ends.
Stavvy knew better than to speak openly about it with John. So he slipped on the mask of ignorance, serving up the "official" story like a well-rehearsed script.
Stavvy: "Ah, that," he said, waving a paw dismissively. "All the brothels and casinos decided to close up at the sa ti for so... massive renovations." He kept his tone light, as if it were the most natural thing in the world.
John’s eyebrow arched.
John: "They all closed down for renovations? At the sa ti?" His voice carried skepticism, the kind that suggested he didn't entirely believe the ‘official’ story.
Stavvy deftly spun the glass between his paws before setting it down with practiced ease.
Stavvy: "Yeah, apparently they're using the sa contractor for all the renovations. So big city outfit promising bulk discounts if everyone shuts down at once," he said, his whiskers twitching slightly. "Doesn't make much sense to either, but hey, I just pour drinks and make food. What do I know about casino maintenance?" He wiped down the counter with unnecessary vigor before adding, "Though it's killing my business. Half my regulars are Redlight District workers stopping in before or after shifts."
John nodded slowly, his crimson eyes studying Stavvy with quiet intensity.
John: "I see," he said after a beat. "Well, if that's the case..." A rare, genuine smile touched his lips. "I'll start coming for dinner more often. Help tide you over until they finish." He glanced at Leroi, whose perpetually smooth face betrayed no reaction. "You should join us too. My treat."
The unexpected kindness ward Stavvy's chest, and he found himself smiling back despite himself.
Stavvy: "That's mighty decent of you, John. But don't worry about ," he said, waving a paw. "Truth is, I could shutter this place till next year and be just fine. The bar's more passion than profession - my other spouse is the real breadwinner in our family." His ears perked up at the thought. "Honestly? I'm treating this whole thing like an unplanned vacation. Sleeping in, closing early, finally getting proper ti with my wives."
John blinked.
John: "Wives? Plural? I thought you had a husband."
Stavvy's grin widened as he raised his left paw, the three wedding bands on his finger catching the light.
Stavvy: "Husband and two wives," he said proudly. "We've been a quad for over a decade now."
The reaction was imdiate. John's eyes widened slightly, his usual composure slipping for just a mont. The concept of polyamory wasn't foreign to him - back in his original world, he'd heard about such arrangents. But standing face-to-face with soone actually living that life? That was different. His mind raced with practical questions - how did household decisions work? What about children? Jealousy? His silence stretched just a beat too long.
Stavvy: "You find it strange," he observed, not unkindly.
John cleared his throat.
John: "No, it's just..." He rubbed the back of his neck, uncharacteristically flustered. "First ti I've actually t soone in that kind of relationship."
Leroi, who had been watching the exchange with his usual detached amusent, finally spoke up.
Leroi: "More common than you'd think," he said mildly. "Polyamory was said to be a pretty common practice amongst the druidic faith."
Stavvy chuckled.
Stavvy: "Don't go getting theological on us now, Leroi." He turned back to John. "Look, it's not for everyone, but it works for us. We love each other and didn’t want to put one over the other so we all got married together. Each relationship is different, sa as any monogamous couple. Just... more moving parts." He winked. "And more birthdays to rember."
John exhaled slowly, the tension in his shoulders easing as he processed this. His crimson eyes flickered with thought before he murmured.
John: "No, I get that," more to himself than anyone present.
His gaze instinctively dropped to Lunar, who had been observing the entire exchange with that uncanny, unsettling focus. The hound's tail gave a single, deliberate wag - whether signaling approval, amusent, or so more inscrutable canine judgnt, John couldn't quite decipher.
John: "Love is love. If everyone's happy within the arrangent, who's got the right to say otherwise?"
Stavvy's ears perked up at this.
Stavvy: "Now that's an attitude I wish more Light-worshippers would adopt," he said, pouring himself a shot of sothing amber-colored. "It's why I don't exactly advertise my relationship. Last thing I need is so self-righteous zealot lecturing about 'moral purity'." His grip tightened around the glass. "Not that I give a rat's ass what they think. Half those hypocrites would string up just for being a mutant - like I woke up one day and chose these whiskers. They can take their judgnt and shove it. I'll love who I damn well please."
The bar fell into a brief silence, the weight of unspoken histories hanging in the air between them. Even Lunar seed to sense the shift, the hound's eerie gaze shifting between the three n with unsettling intelligence.
John hesitated for a mont, his finger tracing the rim of his glass.
John: "Um... is it rude if I ask so questions about your relationship?" His voice carried an uncharacteristic tentativeness, the kind usually absent from his usual deanor.
Stavvy's whiskers twitched in amusent as he refilled their drinks.
Stavvy: "It's not rude to . Fire away." He leaned against the counter, his tail curling comfortably around the stool leg. "Though fair warning - I might answer with more honesty than you bargained for."
John nodded, organizing his thoughts.
John: "It's just... relationships are already so much work. I found maintaining even one could be..." His gloved hand clenched slightly, "...overwhelming at tis. How do you balance three?"
Stavvy's expression softened into sothing thoughtful. He rotated one of his wedding bands absently as he considered the question.
Stavvy: "Oh, it's absolutely three tis the work," he admitted with a chuckle. "But also three tis the hands to share the load. That old saying's true - many hands make light work." His voice took on a more serious tone. "If you're struggling alone in a relationship? Might be your partner isn't pulling their weight." He tapped the side of his nose knowingly. "A good relationship shouldn't feel like you're constantly drowning."
John stared into his drink, the ice cubes clinking softly as his hand trembled slightly.
John: "When you put it like that... it makes an uncomfortable amount of sense."
The mouse mutant's ears perked up in surprise.
Stavvy: "Honestly? I'm more shocked you've got relationship experience at all. Didn't peg you as the marrying type."
The temperature in the bar seed to drop several degrees.
John: "I... was. Had a wife." His voice cracked like thin ice over dark water. "It didn't... end well." His gloved fingers curled into fists so tight the leather creaked, his untouched al suddenly the most fascinating thing in the world.
Before either could respond, an impossible weight crushed down on Stavvy and Leroi simultaneously - not physical, but primal, the kind of pressure that makes prey animals freeze before the predator strikes. Their glasses cracked under unseen force, liquor seeping across the wood like blood from a wound.
Both n instinctively turned toward Lunar. The white hound's normally placid gaze had transford into sothing ancient and terrible - blue eyes burning with the cold fire of dead stars, pupils slit like a reptile's. That stare carried the weight of extinguished suns and forgotten aeons, a silent warning written in the language of cosmic annihilation.
The ssage was clearer than any words: This topic was forbidden ground.
Stavvy's fur stood on end, every survival instinct screaming. Even Leroi's perpetually calm facade cracked.
As suddenly as it ca, the pressure lifted. Lunar blinked, and the terrible intelligence behind its eyes retreated like the tide, leaving behind only the familiar, if unsettling, canine companion. It nuzzled John's hand gently, the contrast to its previous deanor almost laughable.
John's gloved fingers lingered on Lunar's head for a mont longer than necessary, the white hound's fur seeming to absorb so of the tension from his touch.
Stavvy's whiskers twitched nervously as he caught the shift in atmosphere. The mouse mutant cleared his throat, his voice uncharacteristically gentle.
Stavvy: "Right... I, uh, heard the pain in your voice just now. You really don't have to—"
John: "No," he interrupted, shaking his head with a resolve that seed to surprise even himself. "You've both been open with . It's only fair that I return the courtesy."
Stavvy's ears flattened against his skull as he shot a panicked glance toward Lunar. The hound's ears had pricked forward, though its eerie blue eyes remained half-lidded—for now.
Stavvy: "N-no, really, that's fine," the bartender stamred, his paws gripping the counter a little too tightly. "So things don't need to be said aloud."
Leroi, coming to the rescue, chose that mont to intervene. He swirled his drink thoughtfully before speaking in that smooth, asured tone of his.
Leroi: "John, even the finest al turns to ash when seasoned with painful mories." His gaze flickered aningfully toward the untouched food between them. "This conversation would be better suited for... another ti." There was an unspoken weight to his words—a silent acknowledgnt of Lunar's earlier warning.
For a long mont, John simply stared at them, his expression unreadable. Then, like a storm cloud passing, the tension in his shoulders eased.
John: "Oh. Okay, if you're sure."
Lunar exhaled through its nose—a sound almost like relief—and settled back at John's feet. The feeling of danger lifted as abruptly as it had descended, leaving behind only the quiet hum of the bar's aging refrigeration unit and the faint clink of glassware.
John: "So, what have you been doing with your wives lately during this free ti?" His crimson eyes flickered with genuine curiosity, the earlier tension dissipating like smoke in the wind.
Stavvy, eager to steer the conversation to safer waters, grabbed a cloth and began polishing a perfectly clean mug with excessive vigor.
Stavvy: "Oh, you know," he said, his whiskers twitching with amusent, "the usual couple stuff. We've caught a few films at the Grand ridian Theater - though trying to agree on which picture to see is its own battle." He chuckled, setting down the abused glass. "Been taking evening walks along the river too. The lantern reflections on the water make for a nice romantic atmosphere, even with the occasional giant eel surfacing to ruin the mood."
The mouse mutant's ears perked up as he continued,
Stavvy: "And I've been cooking more at ho, which has been... interesting. My wives keep complaining I use too much at in every dish - they're convinced they'll need new tailors soon if this keeps up." He rolled his eyes affectionately. "anwhile, my husband gripes that I don't include enough protein to et his 'nutritional requirents.'" Stavvy threw up his paws in mock exasperation. "I swear, pleasing everyone at the dinner table is harder than running this bar during festival season!"
John's eyebrow arched slightly.
John: "Your husband must be quite the athlete with those dietary demands. Bodybuilder?"
A proud grin spread across Stavvy's face.
Stavvy: "Boxer," he confird, leaning against the counter. "And not just so back-alley brawler either. Ranked top in the Golgotta Mutant Fight League." His expression softened. "He's actually the main breadwinner in our little unconventional family. Brings in more in a week than I do in an entire year of slinging drinks."
The mouse mutant's gaze drifted toward the window, where the ominous silhouette of Nightower dominated the skyline, its obsidian surface swallowing the evening light. His voice grew quieter.
Stavvy: "Funny thing is... this whole district shutdown was supposed to give more ti with everyone. But his schedule hasn't eased up at all." There was a wistful note in his voice.
Outside, the first neon signs along Eld Street flickered to life, their glow reflecting faintly in the polished bar top. The distant sound of a police siren wailed sowhere beyond the Redlight District's unnaturally quiet borders, a reminder that life - and all its complications - continued moving forward, whether they were ready or not.
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