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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Scribe of Thoth
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Oh, good, Aaron left. Max was in the clear for the rest of the night, pending Eris having a breakdown. The leech was keeping his composure well enough by now, at least as far as Max could tell from a quick glance over, but he was talking to Ryner, and there was no telling how he'd crack behind closed doors. So annoying. Max had to actually talk to him too, because trusting Eris' judgement alone on the matter seemed like a recipe for disaster. Best case scenario, Varis secretly thinks Eris is a mere eight out of ten and Eris was overreacting. Worst case, Cinnamon has some master plan to fuck Eris - and worse, Max by extension - over.

Once Ryner vacated the scene, Max calmly returned to Eris' side, announcing his arrival rather bluntly by disassembling the gauntlet still wrapped around the vampire's forearm and levitating it back to himself. He shifted his arm a bit to test the new weight once it clicked back into place. One of the bolts was off. Max flashed a quick scowl as he pressed it correctly into place with his thumb. He was slipping - maybe he was more tired than he thought.

"What's the plan? I think your hot date just took off," Max thumbed toward the departing car offhandedly as he spoke, "so I take it you're headed to the dorm with me. You gonna change into your nice red panties to chase after him and ignore the elephant in the room or are we gonna talk when we get there?" He leveled a solid gaze at Eris to get his point across; he didn't particularly want his - concern was too sentimental of a word, but it was what he had to work with at this point - to be blown off as apathetic commentary.


@Hero
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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Hero
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Aha.

At the very least the blonde could give the princess something resembling a small smile as she finished. No opportunity for a followup, but probably for the better considering this was best discussed privately. Whether this made things better or worse was beyond him, but at the very least he would have some time to carefully think about how he would approach the princess. There would be plenty of time tonight to properly think that over, he was going to get both the message delivered and that favor from Ryner. He had to get something out of this.

"You're too kind. Thank you, Your Highness," He did at least say that much before she left, his hand running through his hair. He immediately grimaced, looking at his hands. Good grief was he filthy. First things first, he needed a decent scrubbing, his poor hair was disgusting and he was pretty sure he smelled like dirt.

Right, then, time to scoop the kid up and get going. As the thought crossed his mind, though, the vambrace suddenly moved on its own. Looks like Max had found him first, but was a prod or a word of warning so hard? Eris matched Max's scowl with his own, clearly annoyed, though his expression fell as he mentioned Varis. Ugh, did he have to remind him?

Eris openly rolled his eyes, muttering, "Mhm, lucky you since you'll be modeling them before I put them on. Now come," He wasn't about to wait for some snarky retort, taking Max by the elbow and essentially taking them both to the cars. They weren't going to be talking about anything until they were back at the dorm for one, but Eris wasn't going to say anything until then.

The car ride was mercifully quick and silent, and once Eris stepped out, he made a beeline for their dorm. Once the two were in and the door was closed, Maxie came out of Eris' room to greet them. The blonde let out a short whistle, the pup immediately turning around and settling herself into a bed in the living room.

"Crash course on secrecy: don't go talking about shit when there's dozens of people around," Eris stated, yanking at his shirt and pulling it over his head. "Also don't go talking when there are royal guards--don't go forgetting that aside from the Revel showing you that most of them are useless good-for-nothings, there's also the fact that they report everything."

Ugh, he thought he would feel better with his shirt off, but he still felt grimy. For now he would put that aside. "I'm still reeling over half the things that were said in that 'test', it was all kinds of weird and I actually don't even know where to start on explaining anything."

He held his head in his hands for a moment in frustration, teetering on whether he should even bother telling the kid or not. It had been his idea, but he hadn't completely earned Eris' trust. Before he would begin, however, his phone went off. Who the fuck was calling him right now?! He took it out of his pocket with every intent to mute it, only stopping when he saw Ismene's name. "Hold that thought," He told Max. "What?"

"Hello to you as well," Ismene replied. "I thought I'd call to inform you on my progress and to ask permission."

Eris didn't really have the time or patience for the conversation, running his hand over his face. "I'm busy right now."

"This is important. I've found out one of my colleagues will be going to a convention at a Marivaldi mage academy where a historian specializing in mage history will be doing a lecture," She ignored him and continued to speak. "Do I have your permission to attend?"

"For what--" Eris stopped himself, suddenly remembering as he pinched the bridge of his nose. "Fine, whatever, take notes, record it, ask questions, do what you need to do. Is that it?"

"I suppose. Are you under duress?" She asked.

"You can say that," Stressed was more like it, but he didn't think informing her was the right step. "I'll call you back later." He didn't wait for a response before hanging up, deciding to tackle that issue later. Truly, the universe was testing what little patience he had left. Still, at least the call--as frustrating as it was--grounded him slightly.

He turned back to the kid, deciding to focus on the issue at hand. "I feel like Sunny saying we'd come out of the illusion unscratched was just setup for this--" He showed Max the symbol on his wrist, his expression darkening. "I don't think I ran into a shadow or clone. Or it was the work of a mage or...something." He rubbed the mark, scowling at it. How would he even explain this?


Getting to the point with @Scribe of Thoth.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Scribe of Thoth
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Max rolled his eyes as Eris started talking. Did that moron really think Max of all people was keen to start having a shifty conversation - especially one that could potentially end up with feelings involved - in the middle of a crowd of Noila sycophants? Didn't help that Eris started stripping either. The leech really must've been losing it.

"I didn't say talk there, dumbass," He mumbled as Eris continued. He couldn't tell if the vampire was getting to the point or just finally having his breakdown.

The phone going off elicited a displeased grumbled from the mage, evidently as displeased as Eris was that he was being interrupted. Especially after he actually answered. Was this his excuse to duck the conversation? Max had seen him ignore calls even in a good mood, let alone now. He was pretty terse, but the content sounded like he was instructing an underling. Huh, maybe his text actually paid off.

When Eris showed Max his wrist, the mage actively moved closer to inspect it. That wasn't right. Aaron came out completely unharmed, and there was no way in hell even a shitty clone of him could be locked in a room with that jackass and not so much as lay a hand on him. Not to mention the Retriever's story was way too complex for a simple on the spot lie. It didn't seem like some kind of key either. Nothing in the test had mentioned any kind of magic bruises, and if it was needed for one of the other tests that they'd simply skipped, it likely would've disappeared when they left the forest.

"What do you mean it wasn't a clone? I thought you ran into Varis in there? Stop talking in riddles and just tell me what happened." As much as he disliked untruncated explanations, the play-by-play would be very useful here. Or at least more context than 'it was weird'. Though, he was right, it did sound weird. Why would the test suddenly change parameters? Did the vampires have a different challenge than the mages? Why lead them on otherwise, then? What the hell was Ryner's game?


@Hero
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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Obscene Symphony
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Despite the tension in the car from Varis’ festering, the ride back to the dorm was mercifully silent, and afforded Aaron a rare moment of relative peace. Now that he was no longer preoccupied with forest obstacles, challenges, or an iron vice on his arm, an aching tension behind his eyes was apparent. Even considering his existing headache, it was clear that the spell had taken a toll, though he was honestly just glad he’d been able to keep it up. He hadn’t anticipated any issues with it, sure, but it was still a marathon of a stamina test (not even counting everything else they’d had to deal with) and he could only imagine how much angrier Varis would be if he’d buckled and dropped the spell halfway through.

He held back a sigh. Not as if succeeding with the spell was going to bolster him at all tonight. With how angry Varis had been at the mere concept of the practical, let alone its execution, Aaron had fully expected to bear the brunt of the Count’s frustrations tonight no matter how well he performed. Now, though, there was an errant sigh and an unfortunate human weakness to having the daylights squeezed out of him working against him as well, not to mention whichever other misdeeds Varis would conjure up to satisfy his vexation. Aaron wasn’t stupid; he had no doubt that there was some merit beneath his many, many scoldings, but anyone with eyes could tell that Varis also used him like a stress ball just as often.

But there was no use dwelling on it. Aaron had been done with tonight since the moment he woke up, and while the puzzles in the forest had started out as a nice distraction—it was actually pleasant to work together with his master for once, and get the chance to do his job as an aide rather than an ornament—they had quickly become the night’s foremost headache, leaving the mage feeling a type of violated he was all too familiar with.

Despite knowing what was waiting for him, finally arriving back at the dorm was a relief. At least he was out of the cold. Aaron followed silently as Varis tore into the dorm, offering a silent bow in response to his orders before Varis took off to his room. Aaron swore he heard the faint sound of tearing when the door closed, but paid it no mind, instead stopping off in the study to leave Varis’ belongings neatly on his desk before making for his own room. Dirty clothes went to the hamper and he was quick into the shower, turning the water as hot as he could stand and allowing himself a moment to savour the warmth—after all they’d been through tonight, he was confident Varis would take a few extra minutes as well, giving him a little time to himself. The water helped soothe his aching shoulders, though the welts where Varis had been holding him remained tender. They’d be even more tender tomorrow, he was sure, unless Varis allowed him to see a life mage and rid himself of such unsightly bruises. A look in the mirror when he got out revealed the damage in full: while he was still a little flushed from the heat, there were clearly red and raised spots all over his shoulders, and of course, some very recognizable handprints on his arms. Some were even just beginning to darken. Something else Varis could criticize, no doubt.

He didn’t tarry long, though, and finished his routine promptly; he’d had enough post-shower lectures that he was pretty quick at the process by now. As Varis ordered, he didn’t bother dressing (nudity barely phased him at this point, a convenient development even if he wasn’t sure how to feel about it), instead making sure his bathroom was tidy before taking his place on the floor at the foot of his bed, ready to get this all over with.
Hidden 5 yrs ago 5 yrs ago Post by Hero
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"I'm not talking in riddles, I'm still trying to understand what happened," Eris couldn't help but snap in frustration. Obviously he wasn't making any sense, he didn't even completely get it. He had half a mind to tell the kid to fuck off, but he felt like he needed to tell someone or he was going to go insane. He needed some sort of proof that he wasn't crazy, but he still hesitated. What if he did tell Max and got dismissed? Then what?

Eris rubbed his temples as he squeezed his eyes shut, hoping the pointless motion would help steady him. Ugh, being stressed was the worst, was this how peasants lived? No wonder they were so miserable. Right, he needed to properly ground himself. All this was doing was making him appear weak-minded, and like hell was he going to dig himself deeper right now. He needed to gain the kid's trust and get him on his side, and as much as his actions were about to contradict that, he needed to reel Max in sooner than later.

Opening his eyes, Eris opened his mouth once before closing it, wondering where to start. The beginning was as good a place as any, he supposed. "I thought I was dealing with Varis, too since he spoke and acted just like him. But at one point he seemed to have forgotten his own name. Strange, but I didn't think much of it until he somehow used magic against a mage. She must have been puppeting him, or at least had been one of the few that was in charge of the test since he spoke poorly of her 'disrespecting' him and specifically referred to her as human. And then he began interrogating me as he tried to 'remember' who he was," The blonde spoke carefully, crossing his arms. "He spoke of things outside of our lifetime intimately--he was shocked when I mentioned the current Lord Marivaldi was Salazar and not Ralmevik. He stated he was a villager of sorts, but he lost me around there. At that point I actually thought the test had changed, or shifted into getting him to remember himself properly."

He paused for a moment, shaking his head as he remembered the next part. He wasn't about to go and admit certain parts of that conversation, that was for sure. For now, he would stick to what mattered. He was well aware nothing he said made any sort of sense, so he doubted the kid would notice, but until he spoke to Her Highness, he would keep the contents of it to himself. For now. "I reminded him of the night we met, and it seemed to have done the trick, but he seemed horrified," He continued. "It was like he was someone completely different, the way he spoke, the way he carried himself, his mannerisms...and realizing he was 'Varis' shook him to the core. At that point, however, he--" He nearly added in the exchange they had, but changed it at the last moment. --bit my wrist and then dropped the coin in my hand."

Ruffling his hands through his hair, he did feel another prick of frustration. Saying it out loud didn't seem to help him as he secretly hoped it would. "I checked myself when I came out, and that's when I saw the mark. It's the same place he bit me, he used magic to do this," Eris sounded a little hopeless as he spoke. "I didn't even know vampires could use magic, but unless it was a blood-drinking mage masquerading as a vampire, I know what I saw."

Slumping his shoulders, the blonde turned away from Max. "...if you don't believe me, fine, but that's what happened," He lowered his voice.


Getting to the point with @Scribe of Thoth.
Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by ReusableSword
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ReusableSword The (not so) Mighty.

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Victor Astorio


Victor had nothing else to do but listen and follow his mage. Salem was still quick to jump to conclusions, but it was understandable given the circumstances of this test. Saying this place was strange would be an understatement. It seemed he was at least right about the maze the path they were on felt stable under their feet and with every step he still couldn’t sense others.

“Be calm and breath, nothing is as it seems.” He responded in his usual calm and monotone fashion. “I do not smell anyone other than you and the Princess would not let other students vandalize or change her test.” He paused for a moment to think, “We search for what is missing. Something subtle but I can only guess wouldn’t belong. Could even be something to do with the figurine we were given on the last task.”

“Remember the symbolism, I would expect if we chose the boar we would be in for a fight. Majesty could possibly be a puzzle. Yet somehow, I do believe we are in for a challenge.” A slight breeze carrying a cold wind caught his attention for just a moment. The count could only hope that the dawn was still far away but couldn’t quite know for sure. “Place the lantern and let’s see what we are up against."

@Trainerblue192
Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Achronum
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Time: 2:31 - Lord Pieron's Training Cottage


When Salem placed the lantern, light bloomed inside it and the pit was illuminated. Victor’s sight returned as soon as it did, just in time to see it grow brighter and brighter and brighter until it shone with the intensity of the sun. Grass rose from beneath the pillar like a wave and rolled across the ground beneath their feet and past where the walls of the pit once stood. The forest shrunk away from them until the trees barely broke the horizon, the pillar and the lantern disappeared, and Lord Peiron Astorio’s training cottage burst forth from where it once stood.

Although Lord Astorio did command a lavish mansion far closer to civilization, Pieron favored his training cottage when his other responsibilities weren’t pressing. A simple one bedroom building with several secret panels hidden in the floors himself and any vampire he invited out to it, every Astorio was familiar with the home. Lord Pieron would randomly summon several of his family members and force them through brutal survival tactics to make sure the Astorio family was succumbing to the weakness persistent in the others during peacetime. Any Astorio’s first summons was a rite of passage and failing to perform well often led to a stake in the chest just before sunrise.

Lord Pieron Astorio towered over his noble counterparts, easily approaching seven foot five. He seemed perpetually exhausted and impatient unless there was a blade in his hand and something, or more preferably someone, to swing at. He came alive when he was one a battlefield in ways other vampires only could when they fed and only for brief moments. His brutality was legendary and was driven by a hunger for violence beyond even the thirst for blood.

He stood there now at the entrance to the cottage, in a simple brown tunic and breeches and his signature greatsword watching Victor and Salem impassively as he ran a hand over his intricately braided beard that matched the ones in his hair. He looked over to the otherside of the training field, where two other figures stood. Neither had faces but rather drama masks took their place. The smiling masked figure was standing confidently, an obsidian longsword in their hand. The frowning masked figure had a collar around their neck, their clothes little more than rags, and clearly missed a meal frequently. An old, worn wooden wand, or what passed as a wand, was in it’s hand.

A longsword, a glaive, and an axe jutted out of the ground around Victor and Salem. Each one was made of obsidian just like their opponent’s. Lord Pieron watched expectantly.

The only light source was from inside the cottage.


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Interacting with:@ReusableSword

Salem rolled his eyes at Victor’s comment. He was as calm as anyone could be in a forest with a murderer as their partner, magics surrounding them, and time ticking them closer to potential failure. He let out a long controlled breath before speaking. "I've already searched for anything out of the ordinary, it’s how I found the prints and came to my conclusion. But so long as we're on the same page about this lantern starting the test…" Salem placed the lantern in its spot, watching the magic begin to take form and reveal the test that stood before him.

They stood in a clearing, Salem taking in the scenery to see what he could use to his advantage when met with their assailants. A cabin stood in the distance, unrecognizable to him save for the man before it under the light. Lord Pieron Astorio. His reputation preceded him, and his stature alone was an imitating wall of suppressed aggression and savagery. He saw the mage and what he could only assume was a vampire before them, faces hidden behind theatre masks. Salem may of been naive to a few things, but he wasn't stupid enough to take on thr Astorio, opting instead to focus on the mage.

He stood there as he watched his prey, battered and malnourished, hardly a fight of that was any indicator. However a mage was still a powerful asset and one that needed to be eliminated quickly. He wasted no time, kicking up the glaive into his hand and silently running headlong towards the mage. The spear was tucked under his left arm, held in place as his right began to glow and the grass surrounding the mages feet grew and twisted around their feet and ankles making it harder to dodge.

Salem grabbed the glaive with his right hand, digging the pommel into the ground and lifting himself into the air as he launched towards the mage, going in for a swift kick to the mask in an attempt to break it. He'd have to thank Victor later for all the lessons and exercises working on his core, making it easier for him to engage in battle for this trial.

Both the vampire and the mage watched Salem’s antics. The frowning faced opponent brought its wand up, the tip lighting a faint green and purple, and whipped it around in a tight circle above its head before bringing it down vertically as Salem launched himself. However, the frowning face made no move to handle the impatient mage as the smiling face caught the brunt of the attack with the flat of his sword and twisted around the frowning face, letting Salem’s own momentum continue carrying him past the pair. The mage made a quick motion and the grass root system burst out of the ground and wove itself tightly around Salem’s glaive.

Salem let out a deep breath as he landed past the pair. They were working in perfect unison it seemed, the mage having hardly flinched as he knew his vampire would defend him as he cast. He watched the pair intently, knowing full well that he and Victor were not at that level yet. He left arm began to glow as Salem slowly lowered it, palm down, releasing his glaive from the ensnarement. A plant mage, he'd have to study carefully in order to use his own magic against them.
Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Bert Macklin
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Goodness gracious what a terrible scene. Between the beast cornering him between coffin and itself and his own panic slowly rising, Ben was certain he was going to end up maimed. Fortunately for him that was not the case this time, albeit he did not miss the ghastly image of Lilie's face penetrated by the claws. It was disturbing to say the least, but as quickly as it came, it left. The area around him faded into darkness but the scene would be painted in his memory for some time. A hollow feeling gripped him for a moment, robbing him of any comfort he could have given himself. What a dreadful image.

He regained his composure shortly afterwards; there was little point in lingering. Of course, wishing he could see his mage right now would be great, but he had to rely on his other senses. Fortunately for him he could here the shuffling of her dainty feet and the scent of lavender was faint but still present. Hearing her voice did relief him greatly but his tune quickly changed once she revealed how many challenges she intended on completing. The optimist in him said she was merely stating how many were left but at this point he could safely say the skip in her step as she tugged him along said that she had every intent to clear as many as she could.

"I must ask your forgiveness, I fear I did very little to solve that challenge. I mistakenly assumed it would be a fight to the death as a great beast appeared before me. We were surrounded by the sea, and you slept peacefully. However, I ended up doing nothing, and by sheer luck the tide swept in some monstrosity from the sea," He said. "I will say, I will be filing a small complaint. The riddle specifically stated it was a test of might, not of wit. They should clarify their wording."

Ben looked up purely by force of habit, forgetting for a moment that he would not see the stars above him. "I'll make up for my failure in the next challenge," He promised.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Scribe of Thoth
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Max listened politely as Eris recounted the situation, taking Eris' stripping as an excuse to do the same - if way less racy. He dropped his disassembled vambraces on the floor unceremoniously and threw the hoodie he'd been wearing down on top of them shortly after. In retrospect, it probably looked like he wasn't listening at all, and the leech looked a bit distraught at that. Part of him believed Eris was blatantly misinterpreting everything he saw, but even so the situation sounded outside the norm of what he and Aaron had apparently seen during that test.

"Alright, let's dissect this." Max raised a finger as he spoke to accentuate his point. "Are you sure it was magic-magic? Your clone did some magical shit too - the area we were standing in was basically an extension of his consciousness. According to Aaron, mine probably was too, he just didn't bother using the environment." Probably some baggage in there about an internal versus external locus of control and lack of environmental help, but this was Eris' psychoanalysis and not his.

"Anyway, Clone-Eris had full control over it, I think. Like, we were on a stage; you were ordering extras around left and right, and they could look like whoever you wanted them to. That mage you saw him supposedly using magic on could've just been part of his 'stage'." That would explain the abilities, anyway; the tirade about history still didn't make sense. That didn't sound like a way of getting Eris to crack. Or... maybe it was, considering the vampire was currently having a meltdown in the middle of his dorm. The others seemed to focus on personal attacks though, but Eris didn't mention any of those.

"The weird part is, it sounds like Varis only wanted to talk about him, where the other clones seemed intent on avoiding that so they could talk about us. Which defeats the purpose of the test if he was just going to wax poetic about a paragraph he read in a history book and then hand over the coin. Or the weird bruise, for that matter. You think it was a clue for another optional test we just didn't bother with?"

Still, why leave it there after the test? Were they overthinking this and it would just heal on its own? Ryner was laughing at them somewhere, he could tell.


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Now that Max had pointed it out, Eris realized he hadn't even considered asking about how the other tests went. He really was slipping, that should have been one of the first things he should have asked. The thought had successfully grounded him out at the very least, snapping him out of his funk. Right, whining wasn't going to get him results, he needed to pull his head out of his ass and think properly.
That said, seeing that their experiences were so different did comfort him a little--he wasn't crazy, something was up. If the clones regardless of being could do magic, then some of his panic had been misplaced.

But Eris wasn't willing to dismiss it just yet, even if he was just going off a gut feeling. Not yet, anyway. The idea of him directing did get a chuckle out of him, and Eris turned around to face Max with his arms crossed. He was distracted by the kid's lack of armor for about two seconds, eyes flashing red as he eyed his neck, but he shoved that aside for now.

"At first he did say something about me--saying something about a pretty face, I can't remember--but that lasted all of two seconds. From the way he spoke about it, he wasn't doing it out of choice, he was being forced to, and specifically mentioned a human insisting that he 'insult, degrade, and demean you before threatening to scar your face permanently', that much I remember for sure," Eris said, a lot calmer as he spoke. "Once he got rid of the hooded mage, that was when everything got really weird."

What clone-Varis had said was certainly a clue, but it wasn't related to the test. Eris was willing to bet his life on that much. "It was magic. Or something like it, either way, it's..." How would he even describe it? And to Max's defense, Eris wasn't exactly an expert on magic. Looking down at his arms, he lifted his wrist to look at the mark. "This is the only reason I think there's more to it. I just don't know what. I've never seen this symbol before."

His finger traced the the moon's curve, his nail pressing into his skin. "That's why I'll be visiting the Count. I doubt I'll get anything out of him now, but I'll see if I can get some sort of hint or clue. It's a start, at least," Eris dropped his arms, giving Max a look. A lot was being said right now, and he needed to cover all his bases. He made a decision right then and there: the kid was going to have to start pulling his weight around here.

"It goes without saying, but none of this can leave the dorm," Eris stated. "Once I get the information I need, you're the one that's going to be looking into it."


Getting to the bottom of this with @Scribe of Thoth.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Hero
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Lilie held back her giggle, her free hand over her mouth as she continued to pull the count along. "Actually, I was watching the whole thing. I couldn't get to you, but it was like I was floating on the water. Kinda reminded me a little of whenever I meditate in the sea with Esi," She admitted. "I was a little worried at first, but honestly, I think I would've done everything that you did."

Well, she probably would've had a lot less dignity, but she meant what she said. It was nice to see him do something nice instead of scolding her--maybe he didn't think so badly of her after all. And he didn't even know she was watching, so it's not like he was faking it, either. She smiled to herself, tucking a stray hair behind her ear. If she had to be stuck with any vampire, she was happy that it was with him. At the very least she could say that the princess was succeeding in bringing them closer together.

"I could tell you were really worried about me. It was sweet to protect me like you did," She told him as she looked back at him, though she remembered that he probably couldn't see her. Focusing instead on the path ahead, she guided him carefully over a root. "And don't worry, there's not a challenge we can't get through together. We're basically unstoppable now." She grinned.


Leading @Bert Macklin.
Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by WeepingLiberty
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WeepingLiberty ~Friendly Garden Statue~ / ~Blink And You're Dead~

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Amaris Marivaldi

Interacting with: Madalyn @Achronum


Amaris accepted the candle into her hands, running her fingers across the object’s surface deliberately. She had hoped that perhaps an additional clue might be found with the token, however, the glitter that Maddie spoke of would likely interfere with her assessment. Still, she ran her fingers lightly across the surface just in case anything stood out to her.

Well, I suppose it would have to be either this or the bell that introduced us to the serpent. Do you think the matching color is a coincidence?” The Countess asked before shaking her head. Again with the distractions, the origins of a color weren’t going to be much assistance if their challenge was luck of the draw. She could daydream about the color schemes another time.

Never mind. It’s rude to keep a host waiting. Let’s see what this game has to offer, shall we?” Amaris calmly smiled, hoping to ease some of the building tension. She had the feeling that the challenge had been a lot more taxing for the mage than it had been for herself. After all, she wasn’t the one responsible for dragging around a useless leech. Perhaps she should have urged to move onward instead of selecting yet another obstacle to burden her partner with.

So, what’s the poison? House selection or players’ choice?” It seemed odd to her that an exam filled with tests of courage and wit would throw in such a wild card. There were many possibilities where gambling was concerned, and some were far easier to influence than others. Whether fortune favored their hand over House obstruction, however, only time would tell.
Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Achronum
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Time: 2:36 - The Forest







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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Scribe of Thoth
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Scribe of Thoth It's Pronounced "Thot"

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Max gave Eris a lidded stare and shifted his hand to rub at his neck as the vampire started eyeing him like a piece of meat. Was this why he was moody? He was hungry? The mage listened to the rest of the explanation with dwindling interest. Eris really wasn't giving him much to go on, most of it was speculation, and his plan sounded more like a bad excuse than a solid lead.

The ole' fuck them for information trick just didn't sound viable here. Cinnamon didn't seem like the type to spill his whole plan just because he got his dick wet. At least Eris seemed to have his head on straight now, so Max wasn't too concerned with him saying too much and ending up on some noble's hit list. Then again, all those overdramatic movies he's acted in could've taken a toll on his perception of reality, and he might expect some big dramatic reveal that he knew Varis' secret to be met with a love confession or something equally asinine.

And he was in charge of this issue now, great. What was he supposed to do? Look up magic moon tattoos online? Five hundred quirky goth girl blogs later and he still wouldn't have anything to go on.

"Oh you know me Eric, I'm such a gossip. With all my friends. Who I love talking to. Regularly," The mage groaned flatly with a roll of his eyes, "If Cinnamon really isn't who he says he is and this is some weird Sinnenodel plot, it's probably not in your best interest to let him know you know. Don't think you should let him see that mark."

He didn't think showing up at all was a good idea, honestly, but he'd probably have better luck arguing with the wall. Assuming that symbol actually meant something and Varis recognized it, he'd be asking way more questions than Eris had answers too, or worse.


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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Hero
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Hero Sincerest of Knights

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Did Eris look like an amateur? Now he was actually offended at the kid's words, openly rolling his eyes. Couldn't see the forest for the trees, could he? As if this was the first time he was going to get information out of someone--did he look like an idiot to him? Actually, he wasn't going to dwell on that one, he already knew Max's opinion of him was low enough as it was.

"Must you always assume I'm incompetent?" He voiced his annoyance, shaking his head in disbelief. "Believe it or not, I'm a man of many talents--information gathering is one of them. I don't leave everything to my mages, unlike some cocky vampires." He scoffed, crossing his arms as he gave Max an annoyed look. Of course, now that he said that, he could feel his unease bubbling under his chest. His mojo was all sorts of off tonight, he wasn't going to recover, but he wasn't really in the mood to care right now. And if he was honest, he'd rather not give the kid the assignment, but he was stretched thin as it was.

That said, however, he decided to make an attempt at clearing the air between them. It was a strange whim since he didn't really lose any sleep over what his own mage thought of him, but something he said seemed to rub him the wrong way. "And if I state the obvious, it's because there's no trust between us. For all I know, you can turn tail and rat me out at any moment," He continued. "Your spite paints you as the first culprit if anything were to happen to me and I'm half expecting you to try to stake me the second I let my guard down."

Fortunately everything that was revealed so far could be dismissed as Eris talking nonsense and having taken the test too seriously, but still. Now was as good a chance to say everything that needed to be said, he supposed.


Getting to the bottom of this with @Scribe of Thoth.
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Varis took his time in the bathroom. The feeling of dirt and grime washing off him was a close second to feeding at the moment though perhaps that could be arranged as well. Treating himself after such an awful experience could only be expected after all. He was sorely tempted to run a bath but Eris would be coming over later and he needed to handle the boy before then. He didn’t want to think about this evening until tomorrow night and Eris would be the perfect distraction, even if he did just listen to his empty rambling about whatever nonsense his dreadful sister was up to. At least it wouldn't remind him of this sad excuse of an exam.

And honestly if Ryner was going to put a Sinnenodel through an exam, Varis would have expected something more scholarly. Using vampires as test components was bad form in his opinion. The whole thing was an insult to every institution of education in the realm. Varis doubted even an Astorio would have put together something so distasteful. Assuming they could put two brain cells together long enough to plan an exam of course. Brutes.

Varis turned off the shower, drying off, and got dressed. Simple clothes this time, just a dress shirt, slacks, and a new pair of gloves. Varis made a mental note to have the boy order him more as he pulled them over his hands and pulled the cover off the mirror to fold it away neatly. He made his way out of his room and into the boy’s, snapping and ordering him to stand immediately. Varis spent several silent moments looking him over, tongue clicking in disapproval with every injury he noticed. He was thorough, moving and inspecting Aaron like he was little more than a mannequin on display, and his hand lingered on the scar before he pulled away with a sigh of disappointment.

“For someone who boasted about their training with a premier member of Princess Nox’s retinue, you lack stamina and fortitude clearly.” Varis gestured at the markings. “Get dressed in something appropriate for seeing a life mage. Meet me in the study. We have some points to review after your abysmal performance tonight.” Varis turned sharply and stalked into the study. He collected the belongings the boy left there and took a seat, pulling out paper and writing instructions on exactly how much care the boy was to receive.

Aaron was still as Varis inspected him, eyes down as the Count prowled, poked, and prodded to his satisfaction. He even resisted glancing over when Varis touched his scar, even as his apprehension from the clearing came roaring back. There he was with the ear again. He sincerely hoped he was just overthinking things, but Varis’ odd behaviour in the clearing and the renewed attention to his scar made him fear that his clone—if that was indeed who Varis had faced inside the skull—had said something he shouldn’t have.

But despite his worry, he couldn’t help but inwardly scoff at Varis’ comment. Lacking fortitude? Stamina there may have been an argument for, but there wasn’t much to be done about the resilience of one’s flesh. If not for exhaustion and his lingering sour mood, he might have smirked as a memory of something Salem told him over the break popped into his head: maybe Varis thought mages could build an immunity to bruising like they could to poison, enduring small injuries to grow immune to big ones.

The humour didn’t quite catch, though, and he simply nodded as Varis left and went to work, relieved that he’d be allowed to receive at least some care for his injuries. Bruises really weren’t so bad, but with his mild dependency on life magic, it felt like they took forever to heal, and that was one inconvenience he really didn’t need to deal with at the moment. His choice of clothes was a bit more casual than Varis’, a thick long-sleeved shirt and black jeans, easy enough to take on and off when the life mage examined him. Once dressed, he took a moment in his mirror to run a hand through his hair, neat enough to look presentable but slightly mussed to Varis’ taste, before crossing the hall to the study.

Varis didn’t look up from what he was writing, only pausing a moment to snap at his feet and continue on. With his mild dependency, seeing a life mage was unavoidable. The boy’s new and upcoming training regime was more important than the lesson a few bruises could teach. Damn Noilas. All of their precious Starags probably had a severe dependency if the boy already developed this much. He supposed it made sense. Can’t have the symbols of good faith and peace looking even a touch out of place although Varis would have preferred more mundane means himself. Makeup was borderline magical when used appropriately and it didn’t come with a nasty case of addiction. Varis finished his instructions to the life mage, signed and sealed it, and handed it to the kneeling mage.

“These are exact instructions about how much magical assistance you are permitted. I have no interest in exacerbating your inability to depend on yourself but after tonight’s poor display, it’s clear you cannot be trusted to maintain your own physical wellbeing. As such, I’ll be drawing up your new training schedule.” Varis turned the chair to face the boy. He considered him for a moment and his next words were more to himself than the boy. “I don’t think I’ve seen you use much other than a sword. Maybe I’ll bring…” Varis trailed off for a moment. If he wanted to make a proper training schedule, he’d need to see all of the boy’s abilities first hand. He jotted down a note on a scrap of parchment he had on the desk.

“I’ll put together a mock schedule tomorrow and the day after you’ll complete the first portion in its entirety. I can adjust afterwards.” Varis decided, facing the boy again. “But for now, I think I’d care to hear your opinion on the events of the evening.”

Aaron took the letter, absently examining the familiar seal as he processed the Count’s words. More time for physical training actually sounded more like a privilege than a punishment; between his duties to Varis and his school responsibilities, the time he could spend at the arena was getting shorter by the night, and he’d noticed an antsy buildup of tension without that regular release. Training with something other than a sword, however, was a different matter. Sure, he did a lot of hand-to-hand and grappling training, and he’d tried out myriad weapons as a child before deciding to focus on the longsword, but he couldn’t claim proficiency in anything else. If Varis expected otherwise, there would surely be another lecture about the inadequacy of the Noila training model in his future.

Being asked his opinion, though, made fumbling around with an axe or a glaive in front of every noble at the Academy sound attractive by comparison. There was never a good way out of it when Varis asked his opinion. It was a plainly obvious trap that he had no choice but to step into, and Aaron had yet to completely master twisting his words so as to be truthful enough not to be accused of lying while remaining innocuous enough that he didn’t draw too much of Varis’ interest.

He liked to think he’d gotten a little better though, and as luck would have it, he had at least one opinion on the exam that he expected Varis to fully agree with, recalling their puzzle with the keys and his experience inside the skull. “I think Her Highness is entirely too fond of introspection, Master.”

“Indeed. Every vampire here has had a century to do so. If it didn’t help them in that time, it won’t do them any good now. However, it seems you could do with a great deal more.” Varis said as he studied the kneeling mage. There was a great deal he was curious about after his time in Ryner’s sadistic challenges. The copy of the boy wilted beneath the same insecurities and frustrations this one barely knew how to hide in the first month of his time here. The boy had gotten better thanks to Varis’ tutelage but nothing wiped away the deep sense of betrayal and uncertainty when your glorious, guaranteed future was ripped away from you by the very vampires you trusted. The thought almost made Varis smile but he kept himself in check. Now wasn’t the time to break character.

“Remind me, boy. What exactly happened with that scar on your ear?” Varis asked pleasantly. “The details escape me but it was a training accident, right?” Varis would give him the opportunity to open up. He had his suspicions the night of the dinner with his Lady that the boy hadn’t given him the full truth and this night confirmed his suspicions. The attack was far too targeted, far too personal, for it to have been a coincidence. Varis hadn’t considered the half truth any further than that evening and even he’d admit it wasn’t really a problem. Just a trump card when the boy got too comfortable.

But that wasn’t the case for the clone. No, no. The clone could have burned out his eyes, could have taken his writing hand, burned the tongue out of his head, could have attacked any of the instruments of abuse Varis preferred but instead, the clone made him match with an injury from a passing training accident. And since it meant nothing to Varis other than one of many other scars, it was important to the boy and Varis wanted to know why.

Eclipsing the comment about introspection, Aaron’s stomach turned at the mention of his scar, his worried suspicions from the clearing suddenly coming true. Should he just come out with it? Technically, he already had; everything he’d told Varis had been factually true, after all. It just… wasn’t all there was to tell. But why was Varis so interested? The full truth might hold some power in his hands, but even Aaron didn’t know how much—Varis couldn’t possibly predict that. And why did he suspect that he’d lied, anyway? What had that clone told him?

No, no, he needed to stop running away with his thoughts. The clone may have said something, but it didn’t necessarily have to be anything new. If the clones worked on their subjects’ insecurities, it might have dug into the events preceding the accident, when he’d felt utterly helpless in the face of his mother’s illness. There was no need to panic.

“Yes, Master. Sir Bordeleaux raised his rapier just as I lunged for an attack, and I failed to dodge it. The blade was blunted, but the force still tore through the cartilage and ripped my ear in half.” He confirmed, running a finger over the bumps of the scar. “It happened while my mother was ill, if you recall. I was scared for her and angry that I wasn’t allowed to see her, and the distraction made me less attentive in training.” There, those cliffnotes were true enough, and avoided the lame excuse he’d made last time. “May I ask why the sudden interest, Master? If it bothers you, I’ll be sure to keep it covered up until it can be fixed.”

“Stop fidgeting. There's no reason to while you’re being addressed.” Varis scolded, considering the boy’s answer carefully. While at first glance his response was acceptable, Varis was likely the only person outside of the Noila family to know it was still a sidestep. A good one too. Varis appreciated the sacrifice of personal comfort for the sake of establishing trust. Clearly, the boy had more than a quarter brain. Varis shook his head and unlocked one of the drawers of his desk, pulling out the records Aaron relinquished to him near the beginning of his service.

“I’m sure you recall handing this to me, yes?” Varis asked rhetorically. He flipped them open, looking into his medical records. “We already know you personally intervened to keep this mistake of yours out of public view but looking through this…” Varis ran a finger down the extensive list of injuries and started reading them off. “Fractured rib—Training Accident. Broken nose—Training Accident. Three broken fingers—Training Accident.” Varis put his foot under the boy’s chin and forced him to meet his unamused stare. “Clearly, your trainer had little care about your physical wellbeing through this ordeal and I doubt he took responsibility for each of these. All of these injuries are probably just a long testament to your ineptitude and that one would have been no different if it was on here since it could clearly be fixed.” Varis slammed the folder down on his desk and snapped forward, grabbing the mage’s chin roughly. Varis’ eyes darkened as he stared the boy straight in the face.

“The one thing I am unable to criticize you about is your infallible sense of responsibility. You accept your mistakes and you try to learn from them even if you end up failing worse. Better than most mages I’ve met, honestly. So either, you are about to clarify my misconception about your singular redeeming quality or you are keeping something from me.” Varis snarled, fangs bared. “Leaving out details is just a lie of omission and I will not tolerate lying.”

Fuck.

Aaron’s mind burst into expletives when Varis grabbed hold of him, mostly aimed at himself. Of course Varis saw right through him! His excuse the first time had been asinine—why would he hide a training injury to protect Lucan if Lucan injured him far worse each time they trained without fear of discipline? It was stupid. He was stupid! He’d been appalled at first that no one back home ever confronted him about the scar, always chalking it up to the fact that it was hidden under his hair. After five years of only ever having to explain it as an “accident”, he didn’t have a solid story put together—truth be told, back then he’d barely bothered, expecting anyone who pressed any further to already know what happened and just bracing for the consequences. But how had he never thought to shore up his story once he changed households? Stupid!

His first instinct was to lie again, but even if he wanted to risk drawing even more of Varis’ ire, it was pointless. The Count could probably feel his quickening pulse under his fingertips; there was no way out now. He could throw himself on his sword and beg forgiveness—Varis admitted he was good at that—but a nagging sense of guilt made him hesitate. But what choice did he have? For the umpteenth time he felt torn in two, weighing his former loyalties against his current ones, heart only quickening as the consequences of telling the truth and the consequences of lying vied for the title of worst-case scenario.

As the precious seconds he had to deliberate ran out, Varis’ hand on his chin and the sight of his fangs only added to his burgeoning panic. Suddenly it was as if he was back in that training room with the Count’s fingers wrapped around his throat, fangs bearing down on him, black eyes burning like some wicked creature and on instinct, Aaron snatched his face from Varis’ grip, stumbling back.

The image disappeared when he broke contact and Aaron shook his head, running a hand over his chin and around his neck, and took a steadying breath, settling himself back where he’d been on his knees. “I’m sorry Master, I didn’t mean…” he trailed off, the impotence of his lame little apology not worth completing.

He dropped his head, defeated. “You’re right,” he admitted. “What I told you was true—that’s precisely what led up to my injury—but it wasn’t everything.”

His next words caught in his throat for a moment, held back instinctively like bile, but Aaron forced himself to continue. He’d lost this little battle. That much was clear from the smug look on Varis’ face.

“My injury was an accident,” he reiterated. “I lunged into Lucan’s sword without thinking and tore my ear in half. But I barely even noticed; the pain was somewhere off in the background, and I just wanted to reset and go again. Lucan tried to stop me—apparently there was a lot of blood—but I wouldn’t listen, and eventually when he wouldn’t attack me, I charged at him instead.”

The images of what happened next flashed through Aaron’s mind again, disjointed, broken pictures that didn’t quite tie together cleanly, but this time he was prepared for them. “I don’t remember a lot of what happened next. It happened so fast—I think he hit me, and I remember going down and then up again, and punching, and the next thing I knew I was on the floor and Lucan had his hand around my neck, about an inch away from tearing my throat out with his teeth. I can’t believe he didn’t kill me.”

A wave of potent shame washed over Aaron, just as it had the night it all happened, and he paused to let it settle before continuing. “The life mage on duty was Lucan’s stepmother. Apparently I’d lost a fair amount of blood, alongside a number of worrying injuries Lucan gave me. In her haste to heal me, she didn’t mend the ear very cleanly, hence the scar.” Despite knowing Varis had already seen it, he moved his hair away to expose the scar, clearly hastily reassembled from the puckers and bumps, and not quite perfectly realigned either. “I begged her to keep everything off the record, and she agreed. She didn’t see what happened, and if anyone found out…”

He didn’t bother finishing that sentence; he was sure Varis knew perfectly well what consequences could be in store for a vampire who almost single-handedly ended the Starag line.

He shook his head, mostly to himself, and lowered his head nearly to his knees. “I am sorry for lying, Master. I don’t expect forgiveness, but know that what happened that night was my fault; none of it would have happened had I not pushed Sir Bordeleaux to the brink like a petulant child. Please don’t let it colour your opinion of him.”

“Don’t beg on behalf of another vampire. It’s pathetic.” Varis wrinkled his nose in disgust. This information was interesting. Nearly ending the Starag line? Best scenario, he would have been stripped of his position and sent away with the rest of his family and worst scenario, he would have had a wonderful view of the next sunrise. Having the information could unlock an interesting avenue for some of his side projects but for now, he had a larger issue to deal with.

“As for my opinion of him, it certainly has been colored. A vampire who allows a mage of all things to disrupt his control is a disgrace to our kind.” Varis sighed, crossing his arms and leaning back in the chair. “I think now we need to deal with a more pressing issue. This is important information for me, your current master, to have and you thought it acceptable to keep it from me. Why?”

Aaron raised his head when reprimanded, but kept his eyes on the floor, his posture defeated. How could he feel any different? In one fell swoop he'd incurred the ire of one vampire and tarnished the reputation of another, all because of the years-old stupid actions of a hot-headed teen. He wasn't sure how many times he'd wished nothing that night had ever happened, but he was certainly adding to that number now.

Varis’ question was expected, but unwelcome nonetheless, especially knowing he'd never find the honest answer acceptable. But there was no point in lying now, and Varis would probably see through any attempt to anyway.

“I wanted to protect Sir Bordeleaux, Master,” he answered simply. “Since it was my fault and nothing similar ever happened before or since, I convinced myself there was no need for any of it to come to light.”

“I don’t think I need to remind you that your loyalties no longer lie with the Noilas or, by extension, him. Your skills, your experiences, your knowledge are all bound to the Sinnenodels now. Keeping secrets, no matter how slight you think they may be, is unacceptable behavior for someone of your pedigree.” Varis shook his head in disappointment. Keeping secrets from your betters was quite the offense and frankly, he’d let himself believe the boy was above that. Clearly some retraining was in order. “As your punishment for that, you’ll have a new set of lines starting tomorrow. I’ll have the parchment ready for you when you wake up. Hopefully, another thousand and a half will drill it through your thick skull and we can put this behind us.”

Varis considered where to move the conversation to next. He hadn’t expected something of this magnitude to come to light but he certainly wouldn’t waste it. It made him wonder what else this boy had floating around inside his skull. Maybe he should have a mental mage examine the boy’s head before he learns to resist it. Varis scowled at the thought and shook it away. Even he found that distasteful, as useful as it was, and he had no intention of turning into her. He didn’t need magic to control his mages. “See, had I known this tidbit of information, perhaps I could have used it to avoid being set on fire in that challenge. Your copy had the audacity to use sunlight to chop off my ear in the exact same place and set my hair on fire. Now, I’m being gracious enough not to hold that against you but I did not have all the tools to defend myself in that situation. Consider that next time you think something doesn’t need to be brought to my attention.” Varis leaned forward again, frowning thoughtfully.

“What I am interested in was the choice of venue. I was in some sort of marble building with a statue of Landar Starag and the names of his wife and children on the walls. Did you have any insight into what that might have been?” Varis asked. Here was a wonderful chance for the boy to redeem himself. Varis had no clue what that was meant to be but clearly the place was significant to the boy so he was offering him a chance to start being truthful.

Aaron stiffened, taken aback. Set on fire!? All this time he'd been worried that the clone had simply said something it shouldn't have, or given Varis a distorted impression of him, but to attack him with sunlight? Despite knowing the clones had advanced magical prowess, somehow the possibility had never crossed his mind. Sure, it was a combat scenario—at least, it had been for him—but in retrospect, the real challenge seemed to be overcoming the insecurities dredged up by the clones, or whatever such inane introspective exercise the Princess intended. Plus… he couldn't really picture Varis fighting, so he supposed the possibility of injury never crossed his mind. No wonder he'd seemed especially testy when they were leaving the clearing; surely being so sorely betrayed by someone supposedly loyal to you would put anyone in a foul mood.

Of course, as with every conversation with Varis, the worst was yet to come. If he’d stiffened at the mention of a sunlight attack, he was outright petrified at the description of the venue, disguising his shock behind a pensive expression. He usually didn’t like to speak—or even think—ill of the royal family, but had Princess Ryner lost her mind? He doubted she personally oversaw the illusion made for each student, but she hadn’t thought to tell whichever mages were in charge of that challenge not to include illusions of extremely secret and illegal tombs on royal grounds?! Far be it from him to chastise the Princess, but Aaron couldn’t help but feel like a letter to her office was in order about that. With luck, it was just an oversight, and not some dangerous game.

And once more, he found himself at a crossroads. It was like he lived at those lately. Back home, Aaron had never considered himself a man of many secrets—in fact, aside from his singular secret about that incident with Lucan, he would have called himself an open book—but his time with Varis so far felt like one deceitful sidestep after another. Was this just how it felt to be a Sinnenodel, weaving one lie after another until you lost track of the truth? Or was he just so used to an environment where none of his knowledge was unique that he’d forgotten how much sensitive information he was privy to?

Truth be told, he was tired of secrets. If it were up to him, he’d tell Varis about the mausoleum and everything else he was keeping from him, if only so he could finally clear the fog from his head and act without worrying about what was being revealed to who. But it wasn’t up to him, was it? His secrets—some of them, at least—related directly to the royal family, so surely they weren’t truly his to reveal. But, as Varis rightly said, his loyalties didn’t lie with them anymore. Moreover, it was Princess Ryner herself who chose to put him in Sinnenodel care; surely she’d considered the consequences, right? Surely she knew that giving him away (especially to the Sinnenodels, of all families) also meant giving away anything inside his head?

“I grew up around depictions of my grandfather, Master. There are several on the castle grounds, especially in the mages’ quarters. Was there anything else of note nearby?” he asked cooly, scrambling for time. Ugh, why would Her Highness put him in this position?! This wasn’t just about loyalties to the Noilas or the Sinnenodels, this was personal. That mausoleum was precious to his family, as well as highly illegal and top secret, hidden even from most of the castle staff. Only the royal family, his family, and a few select guards even knew it existed, and if word got out that it did… he didn’t even want to think about it.

“No, not that I recall. I was busy avoiding sunlight.” Varis replied dryly. Interesting, interesting. Varis quite enjoyed that reaction but he wouldn’t push this issue yet. No, no. He’d have his talk with Ryner first and then he’d come back to it. Varis smiled, amused at the boy, and continued past the location issue for now. “Which is far more interesting than some dusty representation of your unwavering devotion to your family. I have to admit, experiencing your betrayal and discovering your lie have shaken my faith in your devotion to the Treaty’s primary tenet. If you truly don’t know this place, then it’s likely just a representation of what’s most important to you.” Varis paused to consider that.

“And one could argue that it took your loyalty to Landar’s legacy and manifested it. But then, you disgraced that legacy and attacked a vampire unprovoked in front of him which makes me think it was symbolic of your devotion to your family instead.” Varis continued musing, snapping his fingers as a thought occurred to him. “Which means, you care for your family more than your duty. Especially since you destroyed that Landar statue at the end and I talked you into killing yourself.” Varis waved off the last statement as meaningless.

“But, it’s all just idle speculation of course. I’ll be discussing the magicks employed with Ryner tomorrow and we’ll revisit the subject after she gives in to the various charges I’ve levied against her for facilitating an attack on a noble heir.” Varis said, turning to the desk and writing on the scrap piece. Discuss location development in challenge. Now I won’t forget and we’ll both get to find out why it picked that place of all places once and for all.”

That his clone killed itself was shocking, but it paled in comparison to Varis’ mention of the Treaty. Aaron was accustomed to all sorts of demeaning, belittling, and humiliating comments and tasks from Varis, but doubting his devotion to the Treaty? That may have been the most insulting thing he’d heard come out of Varis’ mouth. Inwardly, he bristled, but he was careful not to let his displeasure escape, especially considering the position he was in. Hopefully it was a combination mistake and jab rather than a genuine observation, and he could at least help to clear it up.

“I can’t say I know how the arenas were generated, Master, but regarding the clones, I think I have a few ideas on what they were generated to do.” He offered. “My exchange with Max’s clone was… well, I’d call it disturbing. When I didn’t respond to its insults and started insulting it back, beyond the ranting about strength and weakness I told you about in the clearing, it talked about killing vampires. It seemed to think killing me would prove that it was powerful enough to kill…” he paused a moment to recall the names, “... his master, Princess Ryner, and anyone else who supported our system, I believe. Not in those words, mind.”

“Judging by that, I came up with two theories,” he continued, counting them off on his fingers. “For one, I thought the clones might be exaggerations of the outward personality of whoever they were reflecting. In Max’s case, it would be easy to take his obvious disdain for vampires and blow it up into something approaching rebellion.” He counted off one. “For the other, I think it’s possible the clones are designed to present the test-taker with whatever would set them off the most. With me and Max, the two could overlap; I can see how an outside party could think Max’s distaste could be exaggerated to murder, and of course, the idea of rejecting our system and murdering Her Highness would certainly shake me.” He shook his head pensively. “But given what you’ve described, Master, I think the latter is more likely. I would hope I wouldn’t need to say this, but I don’t think even an outside observer could think I’d ever hurt you, though a proctor could easily imagine that betrayal from a mage and an attack with sunlight would anger the heir to a noble House.”

He looked back up to Varis. “Did my clone do anything else that might shed light on that, Master?”

“You mostly talked gibberish.” While the boy explained his theories, Varis pulled out a piece of paper and wrote them down so he could see how close he was to the mark. He’d bring it with him tomorrow when he had his meeting with Ryner. “You talked about Yvaine and Ralmevik. You thought I should have something to do with them but frankly, I’d rather set myself on fire than be in a room with a Marivadli and until Salem’s dreams, I’ve never heard of an Yvaine in my life. No matter. I’ll be taking the issue up with the Princess tomorrow. I’m sure she’ll appreciate your analysis of the test and your opinion of the evening’s events.” Varis didn’t comment but frankly, he disagreed with the boy’s thoughts on the matter. How the copy targeted his comments and insults, over things he very well knew neither Ryner nor the mage knew, was far too direct and focused to be developed by some casual observer. That either meant their privacy had been invaded, which means Varis would need to thoroughly check his room before he changed every time, or…

Varis fumbled the pen he was holding for a moment as something hit him. There were only two vampires who knew some of the things the copy said: himself and his Lady. Neither of them would divulge that information, even with the threat of death, because of how badly it would destroy the family’s reputation. Yet despite that, the copy knew. Which made the realization hit him like a semi-truck.

Ryner got in his mind.

“Enough about the test. I’d like to discuss the sullen silence I returned to after the challenge.” Varis changed the subject but he’d clearly lost some of his earlier composure, rattled by even the possibility. “While I understand Eris’ mage is withdrawn and painfully unaware of the social niceties of his new position it does not give you an excuse to ignore him. You’ll likely be in close contact with him regularly so you may as well maintain a working relationship with him and communication is important to that. Do not let it happen again, understood?”

Yvaine? The woman from the nightmares? Aaron grew pensive just as Varis did, wondering why on earth that name would show up in the trial. Maybe the clones were based on the people they copied, but not only outwardly? That would be another invasion of privacy added to the growing pile, but not unexpected. But Ryner had told him to keep that name and all other information about the nightmares under wraps as a matter of national security—how could she be so careless as to let one of her proctors use it as an element of the exam? Theoretically, any other student could have ended up with his copy, and then be wandering around with sensitive information thrust into their head. And why would the clone mention it anyway? It wasn’t as if it was a sore spot for Varis; like he said, he’d never heard the name before.

A movement in the corner of his eye broke his focus; Varis’ gloved hand nearly dropping his pen. That was odd. Small as it was, Varis didn’t make mistakes like that. The subject changed quickly, and while Aaron was happy to let it, it only emphasized that little hiccup. Or was he just being paranoid? No, the change in Varis’ tone was more than just coincidence.

“Understood, Master,” he acknowledged with a short bow, letting the strangeness pass. If Varis wanted to share whatever shook him, he would have, and Aaron was sure any prodding would not be taken well. “We did talk a fair bit before you returned, but I’ll endeavour to make more of an effort.”
Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Bert Macklin
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Bert Macklin

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Lilie bearing witness to his blunder did assuage him but it was still majorly embarrassing. At least now Ben was glad that he had been forthcoming with it; the only thing that would have added any more humiliation was if he had been caught in a lie. I suppose it isn't all terrible, He thought. Even so he did find himself laughing alongside her instead of feeling like he had been the subject of the joke. Her words lifted his spirits and for the first time since they had met he felt completely at ease. He would have much preferred if they had not been anywhere but a forest, but he would take what he could get.

“Of course,” Ben said. “Lead the way.”

The rest of the walk was quiet, but not uncomfortably as Lilie focused more on making sure the vampire didn’t trip over anything. Once they reached the clearing, she stopped Ben before the bush with hands as she decided to take the parchment and unravel it.

“History remembered not quite the same as that to those who lived its page. Choose your teacher and follow close, for some are fraught with dangerous truth. Lilie read the riddle out loud, looking at the various props around them. “There’s a book, a scepter, a mirror, some kind of...mace? And a...giant disk.”

She eyed them warily, pocketing the parchment as she knelt down to examine each one. She had to admit that the mirror drew her in more than the others--it was so pretty! Her fingers gently traced the intricate pattern, though once she tried to lift it, she found it was a lot heavier than it looked. Oh geez, were these things made out of rock or something?!

“They’re each made out of...marble, it looks like? And there’s a pair of marble hands near a bush. I guess we have to pick one and place it between the hands,” She guessed with a small shrug. “Which one should we go for?”

Ben listened intently to both riddle and brief description of items. He couldn’t say history was his strong suit but the idea of a truth revealed did pique his interest more than it possibly should have. Five items, five histories. None of them seemed tied to any particular historical figure that he could think of off the top of his head. The closest would be the scepter as time immemorial has proven the ruby to be the symbol of the royal family.

After a moment of consideration, Ben asked, “The scepter has my interest. Were there any that caught your eye?”

Lilie looked at the scepter before looking back at Ben. She didn’t see anything too interesting about it, but maybe he saw something she didn’t. “I thought the mirror was pretty,” She admitted. “So, we can go with the scepter or the mirror since those are the two that caught our eye--uh, attention? They’re kinda too heavy for me to lift, so if you think we should go for one over the other, I’ll lead you to it so we can get to the next part of the challenge.”

A mirror could be symbolic of many things. Perhaps the items held some sense of symbolism that he wasn’t catching at the moment, but even so Ben felt he needed to trust his gut. He didn’t want to disappoint Lilie but he felt the scepter was the proper choice to move forward. Of course, he would not completely ignore her comment and made a mental note to remember it for the future. Perhaps it would make a nice gift.

“The scepter then, if you would be so kind,” Ben said.

Looking around for the scepter, Lilie carefully guided Ben to it. Honestly, she didn’t mind his choice, and it was probably easier for him to lift without accidentally smacking her with it anyway. Gently pushing him towards the bush with the marble scepter in hand, she felt like she was helping a little kid with how she had to push and pull his hands to place it properly.

“Okay, here we go,” Lilie verbally confirmed, tapping his fingers to signal him to let go and pulling him back a step. ”Dangerous truth probably means there could be another fight, though, so be ready.”

“Fear not, I believe that these riddles are a challenge of the mind moreso than anything,” Ben said as he made to pat Lilie’s hand in comfort, missing it entirely but making no effort to correct himself.
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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Scribe of Thoth
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Scribe of Thoth It's Pronounced "Thot"

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Max arched a brow as Eris finally put everything out there. They were doing this now, huh? Okay, he'd bite. It at least meant Eris had his head on straight if he was throwing insults around again. Prodding the leech to make sure wouldn't hurt, and he wasn't going to let something like that slide without commentary. Seriously, he thought Max would go run off and tattle on him? To who? Now who thought who was incompetent?

"Riddle me this, jackass, who am I gonna tell? What am I gaining? I don't like you, but I'm not stupid." Actually, fuck this guy. Max just spent half the night - during his test - worrying about Eris' plans and Eris' politicking and Eris' moodiness and Eris, Eris, Eris. Hell, he even bothered to debrief to figure out what the fuck was going on before anyone made any stupid decisions and the issue here was a lack of trust?! Eris didn't even have to trust him, he just had to trust that the mage wasn't a fucking idiot.

"I can't tattle to Ryner, she set up the whole thing and it was probably her idea. I can't tell Cinnamon, he'd probably take me out just for knowing about it, if it was really that important. The only other vampires I even know here are that douchebag that tried to hit on me once and the Astorio brute whose brain would probably short-circuit halfway through the convoluted explanation." Max listed off people as he grew more and more exasperated. "And even if I did, what're they gonna do? Reassign me after I stab you in the back? Oh boy, somebody else gets to tug on my leash, fun!"

Max threw his arms up in the air before deflating and returning to his usual monotone. "Whatever, have fun on your weird date. At the end of the day, you don't have to trust me. But I evidently have to trust you, because you ultimately have your fucking foot on my neck." He turned and sauntered off toward his room, discarded vambraces skidding along the ground behind him like obedient puppies, "I'll be in my room sharpening that stake for you. Excuse me for giving a fuck." The door slammed behind him as every metallic object in the dorm rattled in agitated synchronicity for a brief moment, then fell silent.


@Hero
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Hidden 5 yrs ago Post by Hero
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Hero Sincerest of Knights

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What the hell?

For the first time in what felt like a really long time, Eris was genuinely stunned. Not in the sense of a pleasant surprise or receiving some bad news, of course, but it had been some time since anyone had managed to actually leave the vampire speechless. Of course, even if Eris had wanted to say anything, Max slamming the door had promptly ended the conversation. The blonde stood there for a few seconds, completely dumbfounded as his brain tried to wrap itself around what just happened.

The kid pitching a fit wasn't something Eris had expected, sure, but what really surprised him was that for just the tiniest moment, he felt bad. Alienating Max wasn't exactly something that Eris had planned for--and he remained true that he sooner expected the kid to stab him in the back sooner than later--but he felt like he had done something wrong. That he had said the wrong thing and there was going to be a lot of work done to fix it. Now that was a thought, him having to fix something between himself and a mage. No, no way, this was not his fault. Was it? Did he feel guilt over a mage? No! Why was he even giving this a second guess?! What was wrong with him?!

The frustration in him seemed to hit its limit, the vampire shaking with rage before he lifted his fist, only stopping himself at the last second from breaking down the door. Of course, he only avoided that by slamming his fist against the wall instead, but details. With a huff, Eris spun on his heel and had to consciously stop himself from stomping back to his room. Peeling off his dirty clothes, he focused on taking a quick, cold shower. He needed to get his shit together, going into a conversation with a Sinnenodel at anything less than one hundred percent capacity was as stupid as leaving the curtains open on a sunny day.

Fortunately, the icy water soothed him, hitting a few aches and attacking a stiffness he didn't know he had. Alright, now that he had calmed himself down a little, he needed to strategize. In hindsight, agreeing to see one another wasn't the best course of action, he should have declined and remained quiet, make the count come to him. Then again, Varis coming to him happened so little that it would probably take weeks for that to happen. He needed to spin this around, he needed to divert the attention away from him and pin the blame solely on the vampire. Which was easy, he fucking admitted he didn't care about anyone. How dare he lead him on like that! The thought nearly caused Eris to burn up again, but the coolness of the shower kept him grounded.

Exiting the shower, Eris took a moment to stare at the bruise, letting out a small groan. His perfect skin was marred by such an ugly thing, and it wasn't even stylish enough to pass as a tattoo. Maybe it would go away in a few days' time? He winced a little as he remembered Not-Varis biting into his skin, his fingers tracing the mark once more. Maybe telling Max to find out about it was the wrong move, if Eris himself had no idea, how could a kid with no resources find out anything?

Catching himself, Eris dropped his arms as he let his head hang, slowly bringing it up as he turned towards the bathroom mirror. "You need to get your shit together," He warned his reflection. "Focus on the now. Everything else will follow." He slicked his hair back and away from his face, relieved that at least it felt like its usual silky smoothness. Once he dried himself, he threw on a pair of slacks and opted for a long sleeved shirt. At the very least the mark was additionally hidden by his watch, so as long as he didn't draw any attention to it, it shouldn't be noticeable to anyone.

With a makeshift plan in mind, Eris exited his room, stopping only to double check his reflection in the hallway mirror. A tiny whine caught his attention, and he looked down at Maxie pawing at Max's door. There was that stupid feeling in his chest again telling him that he should probably at least try to say something. Yeah, he'd try to apologize and then he'd end up with Max's foot on his neck. Like he would ever let anyone have a hold on him.

And yet Eris stood there, staring at the door.

After about a minute, Eris tore himself away, fully intending on walking out, but he stopped again. Despite knowing it wouldn't do anything and despite his head yet again arguing that he should just go, he just couldn't for some reason. But he wasn't going to stand outside Max's door waiting for the kid to open up, no, he wasn't going to disrespect himself that much. Instead, he walked over to his study, grabbing a piece of his stationary and a pen. He didn't really think too hard on what to write, if only because he was only willing to write one word. He still felt like it was stupid and pointless, if he kid didn't hate him before, then he certainly did now.

Folding the paper in half, Eris walked back to Max's door, carefully sliding it underneath.



Maxie let out another whine, but Eris only patted her head for a few seconds before standing up. At least now he didn't feel so bad. Now he could focus. Eris left the dorm and began the walk to the Sinnenodel dorm, carefully articulating a plan for the uncomfortable conversation he was going to have.


Leaving @Scribe of Thoth behind and heading to @Achronum's dorm.
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