You're a few hours between villages in either direction.
"Yes, yes," Lutchi says. "Oh, where to begin, and who knows how much of it is even true. Apparently, the Hierophant has been in a love triangle for some time with Lord Gahmez and a rich Mezian widow. One night, the Gahmez mansion burns down while the widow is there. Everyone in the city seems to believe that a pair of flying, shapeshifting warlocks are responsible, and that they kidnapped the widow. Then, many days later, word reaches the city that an entire cohort of soldiers has gone missing. The Hierophant sent them to march on the warlocks' castle to rescue his lover."
"I play the Hierophant," the red-haired man interjects.
"Yes, and the Hierophant did this without alerting the military commanders or the lords of the noble houses. Next, people are saying that one of the warlocks transformed into a dragon and slaughtered the cohort when they reached the castle. Then, rumor has it that the Hierophant himself hired the warlocks to kidnap his lover and ruin Lord Gahmez, but they kept her for themselves either because the widow seduced them, or because the Hierophant wouldn't pay up."
"They're going to hang him," the fat woman says matter-of-factly. The red-haired man immediately pantomimes being strung up by the neck, tilting his head to the side and sticking his tongue out as he yanks upward on an imaginary rope. "It's only a shared pretense that props up their strange little charade of a government anyway. Hazard will have a king again before the year is out, and it will be one of the Cronim. Mark my words."
"The Mezian faction will never allow that," the gray-bearded man mutters.
Lutchi shrugs. "Who can sort it all out? All I care about is that the story has sex, death, a corrupt head of state -- all of the most cherished elements of a good narrative. The audiences loved our play."
"And the time to tour it is now, while rumors are spreading and the country folk hunger for fresh news," the gray-bearded man says. "I suppose it falls to me to get the new wagon wheel." He grabs a backpack and a walking stick out of the back of the wagon, then gets down to pry off the broken wheel. "If this lot doesn't rob us, you might want to pay them to guard the wagon until I return. I doubt I'll be back before nightfall."