"Well . . ." she thought for a moment, "It's pretty good money. Real easy money, too. Everyone everywhere needs hard labor done, and are more than willing to pay a good price for good work. Especially if they're desperate."
That was Kei's gentle way of telling Hrothgar "you'll get over it." Hroth was taking it well on an emotional level, but he seemed as unused to the physical labor as he suggested he was. It was good money, though. If he was going to be traveling like this for awhile, he'd definitely get used to it over time. Incidentally, Kei seemed perfectly fine. She'd broken a sweat, sure; that's just what that brand of work does to a person. She wasn't busted, though. She wasn't sore now, and she wasn't going to be sore in the morning, either.
But on to other topics . . .
"I doubt it," Kei shrugged, "Aiden seems pretty harmless. Like the type to only get in trouble for having a book out for too long--but with the way the library is in this place, I doubt they'd notice if a few books turned up missing."
This was said with a bit of contempt. Sure, running a library wasn't the best paying job in the world, but it was an honest and decent living and should have been treated with respect.
All these thoughts were cut short when they arrived at the inn, though. She didn't need to say anything, just stop walking and stare. At first, she couldn't believe it. When she finally came to terms with the fact that this was no joke--that it couldn't possibly be a joke--she began to wonder what the hell happened, and just how the hell anything could possibly turn up that way. She also recognized the taste of her own words.
Posted outside of the inn was a wanted poster, preferably dead, with the likeness of Aiden Rayne sketched upon it. The reward was perhaps needlessly steep, too . . .