Fortunately for her, Eun-ji was quick on the uptake. As crazed as Dorothea was behaving, Carmillia found it hard to believe she'd attempt to shoot through Eun-ji to get to her. Even if such a thing were to occur, the she believed the trained Tan Keoulian would manage to keep her unharmed. She snuck a peek at Dorothea from above Eun-ji's head. Even after being warned by one of the Feskan mages, Dorothea kept her gun pointed at her. It was then that Manfred stepped in and skillfully knocked her out. That's one issue resolved.
As Eun-ji was midway through the conversation with the female Feskan mage, they were interrupted by a scream. It was one of the Traveler agents that the rest of them had dealt with earlier; the female hiding behind the table. A wave of nausea and malaise assaulted her senses as the other agent who had been huddled in the corner, had also seemingly recovered and was charging right at them. I'm taking back my thanks. When The Crimson Hand dealt with such situations, she didn't need to worry about her enemies not being properly incapcitated once the battle was over.
The Feskan mage directed her magics toward the agent hiding behind the table, exploding it. Arcane. Carmillia connected the dots. The two Feskan mages were probably the engine mages.
Eun-ji immediately kicked into gear and was dealing with the agent that had charged at them, leaving Carmillia recover from the internal chemical attack. For some reason, it seemed the attack had only been directed at her, given the Feskan mage and Eun-ji had sprung immediately into battle. Accursed bitch.
She stumbled briefly and braced herself. A nausea blast was a common attack under the internal chemical school. It was essentially the equivalent of an arcane mage using a fireball. Consequently, it was also easily resolved. Employing her own magic, she targeted various centers in her own brain to offset the effects of the nausea and malaise as well as stimulating the production of her own adrenaline. She was back to prime condition within seconds.
She assessed the situation.
Eun-ji was outperforming her adversary which was no surprise to Carmillia, the agents had already lost to them earlier and quickly at that. The two ship mages were dealing with the last agent. Between the two fights, she chose to aid the latter. She knew Eun-ji far better than them and believed her capable in dealing with her own fight. The two ship mages were the main variables. No more gambles.
Straining herself, she made full potential of her meager RAS, launching a revenge internal chemical attack back at the female agent. Carmillia wasn't capable of a nausea blast large enough to be useful and she knew that. That said, as long as one was creative enough, there were a plethora of ways to take use of the internal chemical school.
Vertigo.
Such a spell wouldn't incapacitate the agent on its own but it was a curse to battle under its effects, no matter how mild.
A loud thud could be heard from the trapdoor leading into the cargo hold. Had Leon been cornered by an opponent in there? Or had he simply found himself locked in? But no other signs of a struggle could be heard following that.
5 seconds pass.
The hatch of the door swings open, and then again, and then again to no accompanying sound. Similarly, Leon Solaire himself popped up in a gracious ta-da from the opening. Then another one did, and another after that, converging on the performer's held pose. And yet, in a strange deviation of character, any noise you would expect from him was drowned out by the surrounding chaos.
The Leons exited the hatch with a jump landing on their feet and began to waltz through the room holding the Lyre in clear view as they pretended to pluck the strings. Each Leon followed the other so closely that the three blurred into one another. Their capes seemed weightless and chaotic as they weren’t beholden to the changes in the wind from various thrown objects and blows. But their movements were incredibly similar, in fact, they were identical aside from being offset milliseconds in time.
To those paying close attention, they would see a marble apparate out of nowhere ahead of him then split into three floating inline upward at a snail's pace, defying any sense of gravity. The marbles start floating upward and back in the direction of the Leons. Eventually, each perfectly landed between their respective Leon’s fingers, as if they hadn’t even tried to catch a marble at all. The Leons were even not looking at the marbles. Instead, they gazed directionlessly out to the chaotic battle with the same plastic smile.
The Leons carried on further in their waltz until an arbitrary point in which they opened their mouths and bit down on the empty air. Soon after, they take an exaggerated inhale before bellowing fire in the direction of Forceful. And yet, it was poorly aimed and off centre from the Traveller’s agent and it didn’t carry any heat as fire would. So aside from the initial shock at seeing the fire, it wouldn’t do anything.
Reaching the entrance to the room, the Leons took a short bow before continuing down the corridor. They continued to move at a constant speed unbothered by the danger around them. Until they passed by Dorothea. The first Leon stopped with the others not too far behind. An expression of concern could be seen on his face and he stopped for a while as if unsure what to do. He began reaching out his hand toward her. But then he shook his head, retreating his hand immediately to continue the dance. The other two Leons did the same as they all continued the waltz out of the corridor.
Just what had happened? One could assume it was all illusory. But an experienced arcane mage would see that none of it (except the flame) was the result of magically conjured light.
This is not an update. It is only a solo post.🙨 ☊☋☊ ❀ ☋☊☋ 🕱 ☊☋☊ ❀ ☋☊☋ 🕱 ☊☋☊ ❀ ☋☊☋ 🕱 ☊☋☊ ❀ ☋☊☋ 🙨 ☊☋☊ ❀ ☋☊☋ 🕱 ☊☋☊ ❀ ☋☊☋ 🕱 ☊☋☊ ❀ ☋☊☋ 🕱 ☊☋☊ ❀ ☋☊☋ 🙨
The tiles were the same: worn, patterned sandstone, they passed beneath Jocasta's wheels the same as they had six years ago, same as they had passed beneath her feet, same as they would another six or even sixty years from now, when she was long gone. She nearly smacked into Yalen, so absorbed was she, and she pulled quickly back on her wheels. For his part, the monk jumped like a scared animal.
Normally, Jocasta would have had to stifle a snicker at that, but he looked so genuinely spooked for a moment that she didn't find it amusing. She managed a quick apology as last night's actions came flooding back to her. She'd killed Gutierrez. A shiver ran down her spine. She'd killed ninety-two people so far, but none had ever been so personal. It had been six years since she'd looked a man in the eyes as he'd died. Murder was very much an abstract thing for Jocasta. Could Yalen know something? She'd fixed her eyes ahead to avoid any further near-collisions, but they slid uneasily in his direction. Would she have to kill him? She did not want to. He was a religious fool, but a good person. Her world started to seem a little bit colder.
The others were in various states of walking, most of them rather quiet. It was Kaspar's and Ysilla's default state. Zarina was nowhere to be seen. Yalen remained oddly silent, though, like a frightened animal, and for a moment, it made her want to hurt him. What are you all vulnerable and timid looking for? Who pissed in your porridge, you little bitch? She knitted her brows together, took a breath, and decided that the thought had been unnecessarily mean. Still, a deep kind of anxiety settled in the pit of her stomach, right down close to where her feeling ended, to where she wouldn't be able to feel anything in a couple of years' time. Jocasta didn't want to think about that. Death was inevitable. Her clock was ticking, and it ticked so much faster than the others'. Gods, she hated this place. She hated the oil lanterns that hung on their chains from the ceiling, the pale greyish-yellow of the colonnades and tiles, the way the heat rolled in from the desert in waves that distorted the air. She could breathe in the dust: that same smell she had known as a child. She did not want to be here. 'Here' was a place that should not have existed and, even if she destroyed it all, she knew that she could not heal the damage that it had done to her and a thousand other people.
Ayla looked lonely and needy, though perhaps it was just the Tethered girl projecting her own weaknesses onto the Torragonese. She was small and sweet, though, and Jocasta made an effort to come up beside her and take her hand. Wordlessly, she flashed a little smile and knitted her fingers into her teammate's.
Their morning meeting was a mundane enough affair at first, but it shed some light on where the aberration might be. It's far. She'd reached out for it and hadn't sensed it. She was sure that the Warden had already had his people reach for it too, but he wasn't about to risk his cash cows out in the desert. Somehow, his call for help had reached the Paradigm, and quickly. The bigger questions, quite frankly, were just what an aberration of that size was doing way out in the desert and how on Sipenta the Warden planned to dispose of it. More likely that he was hoping some animals would take it in and their group would dispose of the animals. Let them suffer for human failures. She gritted her teeth and, it seemed, was gritting them forevermore after that. With each lie and dismissive remark from the Warden, her anger grew, tempered only by the fact that they genuinely did not seem to suspect that Gutierrez was dead, much less that she'd done it. She had only Yalen to worry about, potentially, and if he did know, the fact that he hadn't said anything yet meant that he likely wouldn't until confronting her. She would tell him the truth, then. She would see how righteous his religion truly was. If he accepted the necessity of what she'd done, then there would be no problem. If he didn't, then she might be able to live with herself should she have to do what she did not want to.
Jocasta did not enjoy breakfast. The very smell of the churros reminded her of her breakfasts with the previous Warden: that sugary sweetness to cover up the rot. On the wall, the stupid clock ticked away and she hated it. The others probed after useless things, but Jocasta was already on thin ice. She was six years older, there were few staff left from back then, and she had changed her hair colour and skin tone. One might mistake her now for for a fair Kerreman, Eskandish, or southern Perrenchwoman as opposed to the swarthy Dorvalish that she was. Still, she did not want to draw any more attention to herself than the great deal already drawn by the mere fact that she was Tethered.
Then, as matters were wrapping up, Ayla asked Marceline for a tour. The girl's eyes darted awkwardly in Jocasta's direction and the older Tethered gave a tiny nod. They'd been planning to meet. If Father truly had an ally here, then perhaps they could move forward. Alas, it was not to be... for now. A tour...chatting and smiling with the others. That was something that Jocasta did not want and could not do, but to be on her own in this place...
When everyone was finished, she excused herself and the seed of an idea started to take root in her mind. Yet, fertile soil was not in the offing. They went their separate ways and Jocasta found herself alone beneath the colonnade. She rolled up to the balustrade, posting her elbows on the warm stone surface like a reptile trying to absorb its radiated heat. She couldn't look at Activity Day with its careful scheduling and fleeting happiness. It just repeated, again and again and again! Wasted lives! Those poor young human beings: stems without roots, just like her, yanked from their soil and fed endless placebos until they just quietly died here in those little rooms for the zeros, purposeless and forgotten. Her vision blurred and she just... couldn't. Jocasta - or whatever her true name had once been - could have all of the RAS that she wanted. She could rise up like a righteous angel of death and burn this place to the ground, but what would it do in the grand scheme of things? What would it make her but a murderer? What would it make the Tethered but homeless, crippled orphans with no idea how to use their magic or function in the real world? It wouldn't change that they would all die before they truly got to live. It was something that she could not fight, or at least not with any hope of winning.
She buried her head in her arms and cried bitter tears. She wanted to live: Gods, she wanted to live, to feel the sun's glow on her skin, to laugh, to love, to run through an open field with the wind in her hair and the cool grass beneath her toes, to be young like everyone else - young with a future, like Ayla, like Zarina and Ysilla and Kaspar. Why couldn't she? In her coming years, there was no tenderly cradling a baby and rocking him to sleep, feeling the kiss of a husband, holding hands by the ocean, growing old in the arms of a loved one, watching her children become people she could be proud of. Instead, she was a heartless murderer who'd given herself to someone else's grand cause so that she didn't have to feel. Feeling hurt. Ipte, it hurt, just like this. Jocasta would be gone in ten years, her body wasting away before then like her soul already was. The only legacy that she would leave would be the impacts of her actions, for even her name would stay unknown.
She straightened, then, and sniffed, tears staining her cheeks. She sniffed again, feeling disgusting, and took a couple of long, unsteady breaths. You're fine, she told herself. That was indulgent, she told herself, but she wasn't and it wasn't. She pulled upon the Gift, tears evaporating from her cheeks, and placed her hands back on the wheels of this damned device her body needed just to move itself around without using magic. Her skin returned to its porcelain perfection, her posture and bearing dignified. Jocasta took a moment to fix her hair. If she could not get anything productive done, then she could resolve these stupid emotional matters here and now and have them out of her way. What she couldn't do, however, was be alone.
Pushing off smoothly, she rolled down the colonnade, a gentle breeze whistling past her ears. It was muscle memory: she could navigate this place blindly if she needed to. All of those blissful childhood games of tag amid the plants and pillars, until running became harder, and then even walking and she had to become an observer. Those nights spent wandering the grounds, having slipped out after curfew. The secret training sessions in the outer compound and the way she'd linger before and after. She was decaying, but this place was unchanging.
Jocasta had just made it down the short ramp into the courtyard, when she spotted one of the magpies who laundered the bed sheets. Avoiding a small barrier and some bushes, she made haste across the packed dirt. "Hola. ¿Hay alguien llamado Amanda aquí?"*1 she asked in her best Torragonese. The caretaker looked at her uncertainly for a moment. "Amanda," the Tethered clarified. "Ella sería un cero si todavía estuviera aquí."*2
The woman's eyes narrowed. "¿Tú... no eres un residente aquí?"*3
Jocasta's heart skipped a beat. "No. Sólo estoy de visita"*4
"Ah, sí, sí. Amanda..." There was an extended pause as the caretaker considered. "Ella es un poco mayor", she replied. "No sé si está viva con certeza, pero estaba en... la habitación 304 en el área de Zeroes la última vez que la vi".*5
Room 304. That was one of the ones with a courtyard view. She started to back away. "Muchas gracias!" she replied, turning and wheeling off. Why was Jocasta doing this, again? Why was she so bent on ruining everything just for some emotional satisfaction. Yet... it was hardly something she could pass up. Amanda was eleven years her senior. When she'd first arrived, it had been into the older girl's strong, comforting arms. When she'd left, it had been sudden, just as the first serious numbness had started to spread through her mentor's hands and she'd been struggling with the impending end of her active role.
Jocasta hurried up the ramp and from one covered colonnade to the next, grabbing corner pillars and swinging herself around them to keep up her speed as she turned. A part of her dreaded what she would see. If Amanda still lived, she would be near the end, and the end was not pretty. Still, it had lingered with her how she had just left without saying goodbye. It hadn't been intentional. It hadn't been planned, but the feeling of having betrayed an elder sister was not something that she felt good about. Plus, she needed some wisdom. Amanda had always been wise, or perhaps Jocasta had just been a child. She did not know but chose to believe the former.
Arriving at the Torre de la Soledad, hairs began to prickle down the back or her neck and arms. A tall, squarish citadel made of reddish-yellow sandstone, it seemed more fortress than residence, here in its own corner of the refuge. Meekly, Jocasta rolled up to the gate. It was unlocked during the day, though none but caretakers ever really went in or out. After the first year or so, where people came to visit and talk with them, keeping them apprised of the refuge's daily happenings, the Zeros were inevitably forgotten.
Reaching up, Jocasta pushed the lock and the gate slid open with a groan and a clank. She pushed her way through the land of deep shadows and shade, towards the extra wide lift that yawned like a great fish's mouth. The smell of dirt and pollen gradually gave way to something mustier and... less alive as she rolled inside. Usually, from her experience, the lifts were staffed, but this one was not. The twenty-year-old was not in the mood to work the pulley herself, so she used the Gift instead. The lift shuddered as it rose, thick ropes spooling and unspooling, light from tiny windows illuminating the dimness and the sparkling dust in the air until she reached the third floor. Jocasta reached out and pulled down the lever that anchored the lift to that floor, lest it plummet and take its passengers to their deaths. Easing out into narrow, poorly lit stone hallway, she glanced at the walls for any directional signs. A single caretaker passed by, his bearing indicating that he was not to be bothered, and so she let him pass.
Determinedly, Jocasta set hands to wheels, and made it a few yards in one direction before realizing that she was going the wrong way and turning around. The floors here were older than in the rest of the Refuge: less even and far more worn. She either hadn't noticed on the couple of occasions she'd been here as a child or it just hadn't seemed relevant. Now, however, as she craned her neck to peer up at the passing door numbers, her mind burned with questions. Maybe it had been a fortress at some point in the distant past. It certainly seemed to be older than anywhere else.
Then, she was there. So much had she been occupied with thought that she'd almost missed it. Jocasta paused and squared herself up in front of the old wooden door. It was the final one before the corner. She was going to simply push it open and roll in, come whatever she would find, but she hesitated. Amanda. It had been six years. She glanced both ways down the hallway and then gathered her magic. With some concentration and an advanced Chemical spell, her hair and skin darkened to the colours that they had been during her childhood. With a deep breath, Jocasta reached out to knock, but then then the door opened of its own accord.
Inside, in a high-backed chair that reclined about thirty degrees, with small wheels and large padded armrests, was a woman. She had Amanda's face, but was otherwise a ghost. Gone were the strong arms and great thick shoulders that had held Jocasta up as a girl so that she could reach oranges for the both of them from Pulpo Viejo.*6 Her fingers were curled in, bony and twisted, her biceps and triceps withered as much as her legs had always been. Her chest and trunk, all their vitality gone, were propped up between a pair of padded side-rests, slouched slightly and awkwardly to one side. Yet, this ghost still had Amanda's sparkling eyes and, when she opened her mouth, Amanda's smile and voice. "Consuela..." She blinked in disbelief. "Have I just finally lost it or is that actually you?"
Jocasta managed a smile, closing the door behind herself. "You were never sane, Amanda. This is just the latest episode."
The woman who had been older sister, mother, mentor, and friend to her snorted. "Still with that devil's tongue of yours, hmm?" she replied.
"That's another thing you imagined, loca," the younger woman said flippantly. She pushed herself a few feet closer, stopping and trying to meet Amanda's eyes. It seemed some effort for her to crane her neck forward while her seat leaned back.
"Oh, I don't suppose this is all my imagination too?" the Zero offered, eyes roving pointedly about the room. Besides her chair, there was a bed, a window, and a particularly ancient desk in the old Torraure style. A lantern, currently dark, sat on the last of these, along with some books. There were a handful of drawings and paintings, old and yellowed, stuck to the walls with putty. With a start, Jocasta recognized one as her work from ten years ago. Amanda sighed, eyes fixed on the younger woman in wary, hopeful disbelief. "Don't break my heart," she practically whispered. "Truly, it's you, but how?" She paused awkwardly for a moment, as if wanting to pair it with a gesture that she could no longer make. "They said you ran. They said you were dead!"
Six years had passed. Amanda had been so much to her back then, but Jocasta was not one to divulge secrets now. "Reports of my demise were... greatly exaggerated," she said with a smirk.
"You sneaky little bitch," teased Amanda, "I wanna know how you did it. Maybe I can join you out there, huh?" She winked and, to the younger woman's surprise, her chair moved a bit, so that she could glance between Jocasta and the window. She smirked softly. "What? Did you forget I had the Gift?" She rolled her eyes. "Gods know I literally would've gone mad without it, these past few years..."
They exchanged weak smiles and then a silence built around them: one built on having so much to say that one does not know what should be chosen, one built upon lives not lived, one built upon regret and a desire not to let it take the reins of conversation. "I'm... sorry, Amanda, for just leaving," said the grown woman she had known as a girl named Consuela. I just -
"Oh shut up, would you?" Amanda's eyes flicked her way, and then back out the window that she must've spent all day staring out. "We all knew what was going on. We all knew how unhappy you were, but we didn't say anything, like cowards, like we had anything to lose." Her head came round to regard Jocasta. "We thought you'd finally fought back and he had beaten you and killed you. Nobody talked about you after that. It was... too painful." Her eyes welled up and the younger woman set hands to wheels and glided up immediately beside her, casting about for something to wipe them with.
Amanda blinked the tears away "Don't worry, Chela, I'm good at making them go away." Her voice cracked.
"I won't judge you for crying them, you know." Jocasta glanced down at her lap and then her eyes found some cotton swabs on a small tray by the bed. She began to reach for them. "Not those, tonta," Amanda scolded. "I have so few and I don't get more 'til next week."
Jocasta pulled her hand back and straightened. "What are they even for?" she inquired, and the older woman's eyes went off somewhere else. "For my ears, for sleep," she replied after a moment. "For peace sometimes during the day."
The visitor snorted. "Always such a light sleeper," she teased, backing up a bit and half-turning to take in the room. "So, I see you still have-"
"It's for the screams." Amanda turned to face her, cumbersome and inelegant. Jocasta could feel the energy swirl. "Some nights, the others scream. Some days they do: they scream from the boredom, the loneliness, because they're going crazy." Her gaze became intense, suddenly, burning into the younger woman. "They beg for death, Chela. That's the reality, but nobody here will give it to them because it's a sin to kill, they say. If you go on your own, they'll ease you off into Mommy Eshiran's arms, all tender love and care. Until then... you have to li - exist like this. Just a couple more years, they say." She shook her head bitterly, "And you'll be free and happy in one of the five heavens, your suffering in life rewarded in the afterlife."
Jocasta's guts tied themselves into knots at the speech. "Mandi..." she squeaked. "I'm... sorry."
"Don't be, sister." The woman's eyes followed her. "You are... my hero now. I'm... honestly jealous. I wish I'd done it, you know, on one of those stupid missions: taken the risk and just run. Lived however long I was going to but enjoyed it!"
Jocasta paused, knitting her hands in her lap and glancing down at them. "I could still-"
"Don't be stupid, snapped Amanda lovingly. "I'm finished and I've accepted it. Maybe another year and a bit. I made my bed and I sleep in it. I have my regrets, but they're mine."
The younger woman took a couple of breaths and nodded. This conversation had long since slipped out of the realm of pleasantries, as she'd known it would. "The thing is -" She gulped. "I'm not enjoying it." She looked up. "I'm mean and miserable and afraid all the time. I wanna change the world and do great things, but I'm one person! Half a person!" She put hands to wheels and began pacing, as had been her habit since childhood. "And I was fine with it too, until recently." She paused and looked significantly in Amanda's direction. "I was working with people who I thought shared my goals. Maybe they do, whatever those are. They got me into Ersand'Enise."
"Chela, that's -"
"Amazing, right?" She nodded as she spoke and began pacing again. "And it is!" She pivoted suddenly. "I'm there around people my age again: bright people, beautiful people, smart and powerful people who are going to own the world someday." She resumed her pacing. "But I'm there like this interloper, this imposter: the one who clearly doesn't belong." She could feel the stupid tears coming again. "When I'm not busy being a snarky lil' cunt, they even like me, just like I'm one of them, a friend: another young person who has a future."
"But you don't, little Chela." Amanda shook her head sadly, an enigmatic expression resting on her lips. "You will always be a snarky little bitch. It's terminal."
Jocasta let out a snort of laughter between the tears, and shamelessly sucked up a dribbler that had been threatening to break loose and drip onto her lap. "Death by snarkiness," she sniffed. "And bitchiness." It occurred to her how badly she could use a hug, and how very long it had been since she'd really had one.
"You know," said Amanda, tilting her head to the side, "That reminds me of Esparza." She pursed her lips for a moment. "There was some big excitement last night. When the Magpies came to check on me, they said he'd died of a heart attack." She paused meaningfully. "And then Gutierrez this morning, dead as well."
A wicked cold pulse shot through Jocasta, and adrenaline replaced prolactin. "Gutierrez didn't die," she countered quickly. "Much as I wish he had. He just ran: the coward."
Amanda regarded her evenly, though. "You've grown very much, Chela, but your acting is as bad as ever."
"You really are losing it, Mandi," she said dismissively, but her heart was hammering.
"Am I now?" The older woman was implacable. She narrowed her eyes. "Then why is your heart beating so fast? She blinked. "Why is your brain pumping out adrenaline?" She rolled forward a bit. "Why did I feel strange and very powerful magics from his room last night?"
Jocasta's body told her to back up. Her mind told her to strike now and kill. After a moment of internal struggle, she disobeyed both. She was silent and waited.
"And then Vargas, that bastard, six years ago, leaving and never coming back the day after you were reported dead." Amanda regarded her evenly.
She knows, Jocasta realized. She really, truly knows. Her 'big sister' had finished and now she needed to say something: to respond. She reached out with the Gift and deadened the sound from leaving this room. Amanda smiled coldly and knowingly. "So what of it?" Jocasta found herself saying. "What if I did kill three bad men? One who raped me, one who raped others, and one who tried to stop me from escaping." She sat tall and proud, jaw fixed. "I am not ashamed of what I did, nor should I be. Death is a part of life and I have delivered it to those who harm others."
Amanda sighed. With a small kinetic tug, she turned half away. "You're not wrong," she sighed, glancing out the window. "But you didn't do it for others, little sister." Her eyes evaluated Jocasta. "You did it for you, because you thought it would make you feel better. Did it?" she asked.
"Too early to tell," the younger woman replied evenly. "And, whatever you think my motives were, I saved more people from them."
"Mmm." Amanda nodded. "Until they are replaced with others exactly the same."
"Then what should I do?" burst Jocasta. "I'm one person, with one life, and I have maybe six more years of being useful!" She put hands to wheels again and pushed frustratedly past Amanda to the window. "I can give my everything to the group I am part of and hope that they can help people like us, but they have others they're trying to help too, you know." She half-turned and then gazed out the window. "Or I can just accept defeat and live this joke of a life and try to be happy until I can't be anymore."
"You are not a god, Conseula."
"I should be."
Amanda let out a snort. "You cannot have everything that you want, and that isn't just you. It's like that for everyone. Sure, people like ourselves: we have it worse in many ways - you'll get no argument from me on that - but everyone struggles with the paths not taken, with the things they want that are beyond them." She rolled forward until their chairs were touching, and then her hand rose, cradled by kinetic magic. Her fingers opened in that same grasp and ran themselves along the side of Jocasta's face and through her hair. "Make your choice, precious sister, and be happy with it. Know that it's yours and that you're doing something with your life, even if it isn't everything. And... if you find you don't like it? Do something else."
Jocasta threw her arms around Amanda then, squeezing as had as she dared for fear of breaking the fragile woman. Bony arms wrapped themselves around her in return and she let herself relax into them: safe and loved. "See, this is why I came all the way from that fancy academy," she joked. "Those mages can have all the degrees and power and RAS levels they want, but none know what to say quite like you." For a moment, a pit of coldness opened in Jocasta's stomach. And soon, you'll be gone and there will be nobody, she thought, but she pushed it away. "You will find my price quite reasonable," replied Amanda. "Bruja!" wailed Jocasta. "An hourly rate of only two neskals," laughed the older woman, "With the first half hour being half-"
"You'd better pray harder, vieja. With fees like that, you're going to hell."
Amanda giggled, and they pulled back from each other, her hands slipping limply away. "That's the plan. I'd miss you too much if I went to a heaven."
Jocasta laughed. She took a moment to straighten herself out in her wheeled-chair, and swept some hair from her face. Gently, she reached over and did the same for the older Tethered. "Thank you, sister." She took a second to clear her throat. "Thank you for being you and being here for me. You really are the best."
"I know," Amanda chirped, and Jocasta blushed. "Now, I can see the way you're keeping your hands light on your wheels. I know that means you're about to go."
"Yeah," the younger woman admitted. She glanced over her shoulder at the door. "I have to go kill a Sand Wyrm." She smirked nervously.
"Echerran Mio!" Amanda exclaimed. "A fucking Sand Wyrm?"
"Well, not actually," Jocasta admitted. "Not yet." She shrugged. "But I think it'll come down to that. They haven't given us any way to absorb this big aberration, so they must be waiting for an animal to do it, and that's the only one big enough."
Amanda's face looked distressed for a moment, but she furrowed her brow and bit her lower lip in that expression Jocasta knew to mean that she was thinking. That was good, for she was one of the very smartest people that the girl had ever met. Sure enough: "I will think on it, she promised. "Be careful out there and come back to see me tonight, when you're back at the Refuge."
Jocasta was already pushing herself forward, and she paused before the door, half-turning. "Always, Mandi. Don't worry. I will see you tonight, and I may bring... friends." With a quick smile, she opened the door and peered out into the hallway. The coast was clear. She gathered her energies as she wheeled out and her skin itched and burned for a moment as she reverted it back to its usual pale colour. Her hair went blonde too. Momentarily, Jocasta twisted around and peeked back in through the crack, grinning impishly. "You never saw Consuela, okay?" she prodded, "it's Jocasta."
"I really am going crazy," replied her big sister.
Then, the door was closed and Jocasta sat in the middle of a hallway. She estimated she had been about an hour in all and had perhaps half that left: just enough time to rush to her room and grab a few things, relieve herself, and take an orange from Pulpo Viejo before meeting with the others. She found her direction and rolled briskly down the hallway. The desert beckoned and, with it, the hope that they could set things right.
1) "Hello. Is there someone named Amanda here?"
2) "She would be a zero if she was still here."
3) "Are you... not a resident here?"
4) "No. I'm just visiting"
5) "Ah, yes yes. Amanda. She's a bit older. I don't know if she's alive for sure, but she was in...room 304 in the Zeroes area the last time I saw her."
Yalen sliced off a quarter of the baguette and cut it into two pieces. A typical Perrenchian tartine would be something light and sweet, but growing up on the plains of Miatto had given the country boy a more savory preference. He topped his bread with a slice of cured meat and ripened cheese to create a simple open faced sandwich. Yalen took a bite and inhaled through his nose, allowing the flavor to spread across his entire tongue.
Nothing beats the taste of home. He thought to himself, before clearing his palette with a sip of water. Home… home? Yalen put his food down and looked around the room in confusion. He was back in his dorm at Ersand’Enise. The room was just as ordinary as it was when he first moved in. The same bed. The same study desk. The same curtains.
Were they the same curtains? Yalen remembered them being chestnut colored. He scooted out of his chair and walked towards the window to inspect further. The seed of an idea took root in his mind as he pinched his fingers around the creamy white linen. He shouldn’t have been able to cross the room so quickly in his condition. Yalen wiggled his toes, something he hadn’t been able to do for a couple years now. This was all wrong.
The flustered teen threw the curtains open. The rough paved streets of Ersand’Enise looked the same as they ever did… except that the buildings had no windows and the academy town was completely devoid of people. The trees seesawed between green and red as if they couldn’t decide what season it was.
“Please tell me I’m-”
“Dreaming? Indeed.”
The unexpected voice gave Yalen a disturbing sense of deja vu, bringing him back to his first meeting with the paradigm. He turned around without hesitation. The uninvited guest sat on the edge of his bed. Their features were completely obscured by a hooded cloak, though the individual had a vaguely feminine silhouette. She? rose up and sidled towards the young monk with a confident stride, stopping when the two of them were only a couple feet apart. Every instinct in his body demanded he run away. This person had the shape of a human, but their presence felt alien. Unnatural. Powerful beyond measure. It took all the willpower Yalen had not to make a sudden move.
“So you understand what you’re dealing with. That’s good. I like smart people like you.” The woman chuckled.
Yalen’s eyes fearfully darted around the room. “Wait, are you- are you real?”
“Very real child, so I suggest that you stay calm. You don’t pose a threat to me here, but if you test me I’ll make sure that you don’t wake up for a long time.” The stranger’s tone of voice remained steady, but the underlying threat they made was clear.
Yalen nodded. He llicked his lips nervously before speaking once more. “Who are you?”
The hooded woman smiled. “You disappoint me Mr. Noyel. Or was it Mr. Castel? Hm. Out of all the do-gooders Hugo sent here, I expected you to recognize your enemy the quickest.”
Noyel? Yalen’s brows furrowed in confusion. The lady raised her hand upwards. The air in the room began to change, and above the interloper’s palm it appeared as if space-time itself was being deformed. Though he had never seen one in person, Yalen could sense the foreign, unholy energy of an aberration.
“The Traveler!” His hands unconsciously went for the holy symbol wrapped around his neck. He gripped the half-sun medallion like a protective charm.
“The one and only.” The aberration disappeared in her closed fist. The Traveler’s soft smile turned to a smirk as she gazed upon his Dordian icon. “Look at yourself. Do you believe me to be a demon? It’s sad to see an intelligent mind like yours be clouded by deception.”
Finding the courage to speak against this unfathomably powerful being was almost too difficult for Yalen. His voice began to falter, yet despite his terror there was still a spark of defiance within. “You may not be a demon, but you certainly consort with them villain. Why do you come to me?”
“Hmm. I suppose it’s because I find you interesting. Yalen, the pacifistic choir boy from Miatto. Despite not being able to hurt a fly, you’ve killed quite a few beasts on your way here.” The Traveler's lips curved into a smirk.
Tears of frustration began to well up in Yalen’s eyes. “Those creatures were maddened by the very forces you seek to control! The aberrations sow chaos wherever they are found! You’re going to destroy the world!”
The Traveler wasn’t smiling now. She sighed and turned her back on him. When she came back around, Yalen was no longer speaking to the woman from before. Rather, he saw the face of someone he’d known since birth. It was an orphan from the monastery, his big sister Colette.
“I am not trying to destroy the world, Yalen. I am trying to save it. The aberrations, as you call them, are not evil. You do not realize the good that can be done with their power.”
The tears that came unbidden now spilled down Yalen’s cheeks. “Y-you… what sorcery is this? Stop. Please. My sister wouldn’t utter such lies. She…” His breathing was becoming heavy with emotion now. Everything looked blurry.
Colette rolled her eyes and raised her hands in exasperation. The second Yalen blinked his eyes, his sister was gone, replaced by a hairless man with an eagle-like nose.
“As I expected, you are far too emotional. I suppose it was the same when you slew those Halassa. I’m sure you were about to vomit.” The man came closer to Yalen, prompting him to instinctively back away until he was pressed against the window sill. “Listen to me. The church has been lying to you.The madness can be cured. If I am allowed to accomplish my goals, what you witnessed tonight will never happen again.”
Yalen felt ice crawl through his veins. He never thought he could hate someone, but right now he was looking at the Traveler like a pile of walking garbage. “You would blaspheme against the church? Do you not have enough enemies as it is?”
The bald man waved his hand dismissively. “I have a number of enemies. More than I can count. You don’t need to be one of them. I have already made allies out of your classmates. They have seen the proof of my work. Unlike you, their minds are no longer clouded by the lies of their fellow men. What about you? Do you worship the gods, or the priesthood? Do you truly think a mere mortal can speak for the will of the Pentad?”
The fledgling priest was wavering, but he remained unbroken. The Traveler was inhumanly charismatic, but nobody would forsake their entire world view based on the hearsay of the century’s greatest criminal. Yalen’s throat was almost too sore to speak.
“What- what proof?” At that, the Traveler’s face morphed into a rapacious grin.
“Emotional, but open-minded. Yes, I knew I could believe in you.” He was so close now that Yalen could feel his hot breath. “You might be useful to me… but not yet. Not as you are.”
The entire room became dark without warning. Fearing the worst, Yalen closed his eyes. He felt his body become weightless. The moment passed in an instant. The two of them now stood inside an unknown residence, though it had a similar interior to the room Yalen had fallen asleep in. Were they back in the real world now? At the dining table, Ayla and Zarina were having a meal together. They did not seem to notice the presence of two intruders standing right in front of them.
“I know how far you would go to protect them. You’ve been that way long before you swore yourself to the Creator. I admire that about you.” The Traveler moved so that he was standing behind the two girls, still blissfully unaware as they chatted and ate. Yalen’s attention shifted for a mere second, and now it was Jocasta running her fingers through Zarina’s ash black hair. The monk bit his lower lip but continued to watch expectantly.
“But it’s not enough. Unlike this one, you lack the ultimate resolve. Sometimes… offering your own life isn’t good enough.” Jocasta traced her fingers along Ayla’s face. The latter continued talking to her friend like nothing was wrong. Those fingers slowly began to close into a fist. At first, neither of Yalen’s companions reacted, but as the seconds ticked by they grew increasingly uncomfortable. Utensils fell to the ground as both girls exhibited visible signs of distress. They grabbed at their throats; the universal sign of someone choking.
She’s going to kill them! Yalen began searching for drawing sources, planning to form a counterspell in retaliation. It was for naught. The shadows in the room, compelled by some sinister will, writhed around his hands and feet. He struggled violently, but could not find the strength to break free. All Yalen could do was bear witness to the horrible scene in front of him.
“Were you going to try and knock me out? This is what I’m talking about boy. You’reweak.”Jocasta, no, the Traveler, didn’t seem at all interested in her victims. They were now clawing at their skin in abject terror as she continued her speech.
“How many people do you think I’ve killed? Does my karma not demand that I pay for my crimes? Why do you swear an oath of nonviolence while letting the other orders do as they please?”
“That’s…”
“The will of the Pentad? Are you going to wait for a Rezaindian to break in here and dispose of me? Talk me down while I draw the life out of these two? Do you think the gods care for your empty pacifism?”
“No more! I want no part of this!”
“That choice is behind us now. You have a new choice to make.”
Yalen felt his right arm behind pulled forward by tendrils of darkness. He never perceived the moment the pistol appeared in his hand, but it was pointed directly at the Traveler’s chest.
“It’s simple. You will decide who dies. If you pull the trigger, you can end me and save their lives.”
“You don’t want to do this…”
“This is not about what I want. The time for talk is over. I’ll give you ten more seconds and then I end their lives.”
Yalen’s mind was overwhelmed by a tidal wave of emotions. In his addled state it was impossible to parse through the individual thoughts that swirled in his head. The need to save his friends. His holy vows. The belief that even someone like the Traveler deserved to live.
“9… 8… 7…”
It was too much for Yalen’s mind to bear.
“6… 5… 4…”
He fell into a catatonic state, unable to act or think.
“3… 2… 1…”
Yalen shut his eyes the moment they died, but nothing could drown out the sound of their bones crunching as their necks broke. When the shadows finally let him go the cleric pathetically fell to the floor, no longer possessing the wits to stand upright.
He could hear the Traveler walking towards him now, and when he imagined the devil striking him down next, Yalen nearly welcomed it. The idea of drawing never crossed his mind. His will to fight was extinguished by his failure. The tears had long since stopped. There was nothing inside now.
He felt the gun being pried out of his hand.
“If you had just pulled the trigger, you wouldn’t be feeling the regret that you do now.” A hand gently clasped Yalen’s shoulder. The sudden touch prompted him to reflexively open his eyes.
Jocasta was gone now, and so were Zarina and Ayla. The Traveler was in the form of an old Torragonese woman now. They were back in his dorm room, as if the gruesome incident never occurred. Yalen was still dreaming. Everything felt so real that the young monk had forgotten. The relief he felt from this revelation clashed with the guilt of his inaction. He pulled at his hair in frustration and screamed.
In time Yalen finally fell silent, and when he did the Traveler was ready to speak once more.
“I just wanted you to understand.”
“Under… understand?” Yalen’s voice was hoarse from exhaustion.
“Yes. One day, you will meet someone whom words cannot reach. Someone who believes so strongly in their righteousness that no argument will persuade them. When that day comes, you will have to ask yourself.” The old woman stooped down so that she was eye level with Yalen. She squeezed his chin and held his head up so that he couldn’t look away.
“Is it really your duty to preserve all life? If you could save a hundred lives by sacrificing one person, is that not the true path to justice? The Pentad represents unity. Ipte. Shune. Oraff. Eshiran. Dami. Why follow one creed when you can embody them all?”
“I…” Yalen attempted to respond, but his eyelids were growing heavy. He felt the prickly sensation of chemical magic altering his state of mind, but lacked the power to resist. He couldn’t hold on, and gave in to the peaceful oblivion of sleep. As he did so, Yalen could hear a voice echoing dimly in his head.
I still have hope for you Yalen, but you are not yet ready. Accomplish your mission. Continue to grow. When you have begun to see the world for what it truly is, I will come find you again.
@YummyYummy@Ti@Force and Fury Yalen proceeded through his morning rituals sluggishly. It would take time for his mind to settle after experiencing such a realistic nightmare. His memory of the ordeal was fragmented, but the sight of Jocasta murdering their friends rooted in his thoughts like a tumor.
Though he normally left his bed before the final hour of Ipte, it was now approximately 2:30 HS according to the time telling device on the wall. Last night’s bath still sat in its basin, the water now completely cooled. The sun would be well over the horizon by now. There was plenty of thermal energy within Yalen’s drawing range to heat the water to a more tolerable temperature. He stripped off his nightwear and slowly lowered himself into the washbasin. The sudden chill made goosebumps crawl up his skin.
After cleansing himself, Yalen retrieved his Dordian uniform from a nearby basket. The caretakers had been gracious enough to have it washed during the night. There was another gift as well. At his request, the staff had provided him with a set of leg braces that were approximately his size. The simple devices were little more than two metal rods connected by a crude hinge, with several leather straps that wrapped around the calf and shin. The braces fit over his legwear, and his outer robe covered everything so that Yalen’s appearance was essentially the same.
The tethered priest had mostly gotten by with walking sticks and makeshift foot bindings up until now. He was rather stiff when he walked around the room. Still, it was a considerable improvement to Yalen’s mobility. Perhaps now he wouldn’t be such a burden the next time the team found itself on the run from a sand wyrm.
Dear Oraff, today I ask you to renew my heart with strength and purpose. Forgive me the errors of yesterday bless me to follow in your footsteps today. Allow all who bear witness to feel your presence in me. Hold my hand precious Creator, for your servant cannot make it alone. Yalen secluded himself in bedside prayer for a few minutes, but was forced to finish his silent conversation prematurely. If he took too long he would be late to breakfast and someone would be troubled to come and fetch him.
Yalen took a deep breath before opening the door to his room. He would try his best to act normal. Last night was just a dream. Last night was just a dream. Last night was just a dream. He threw the door open and crossed the threshold in one swift movement and then shut the door closed.
The worst possible person happened to be the first one Yalen met today. He wasn’t paying attention to where he was going and nearly got run over by Jocasta’s wheelchair.
“Oh, uh, sorry.” The tethered girl quickly apologized, but he was not so swift in his reply. He tried his best to suppress it, but the dream forced itself into his mind all the same. Logically he knew that Jocasta would never do something so evil, but a more primitive part of Yalen’s brain instinctively viewed her as a threat. The look of fear on his face lasted only a moment, but it would have been obvious to her if she was paying attention.
“I-i-it’s okay.” Far too obvious. He had to get it together. The cleric tried to play it cool as he and Jocasta made their way to the morning meeting. All the while he could feel her stealing glances at him. The others joined them soon enough in various states of alertness. The students reached the dining room right on time. The warden was present as usual, as well as Marceline and another woman. Once the pleasantries were dealt with the briefing began immediately.
Yalen was uncomfortably silent the entire time. It was already difficult to keep a straight face with Jocasta around, and now he had to sit near Zarina and Ayla as well. It was as if he was looking at a pair of ghosts. In his unsettled state he was barely able to absorb the conversation at the table. The warden sounded like he was speaking from across the room.
Breakfast must have been served at some point, because without warning Yalen had a plate of churros held in front of his face. Now brought back to earth, he looked up to see Ayla smiling warmly at him.
“Thank you.” He whispered, plucking his share and placing it on his empty plate. Everyone continued to ply the warden and his entourage with questions while Yalen stared at the churro like it held the answers of the universe.
“Mein Gott!” Marceline exclaimed, “You were in a Refuge?” She blinked. “I had thought to ask but didn’t want to be insensitive. How did you ever get out?” She turned to regard the rather quiet Yalen. “You too?”
Yalen raised his head to look at Marceline but failed to find his voice right away. His mouth dumbly hung open for a second as he mustered a reply.
“I… uh… no…” He shook his head. None of it was real! Get a hold of yourself! They’re looking at you!
A tall cup of coffee floated across the table and landed in front of Yalen. Zarina’s stern glare threatened to drill a hole in his head.
“Drink it. All of it.” She commanded.
“T-thank you…” Yalen murmured. With a shaky hand, he brought the cup to his mouth and drank deeply. Zarina literally wouldn’t stop staring at him until he finished it. He forgot to blow on it and burned his mouth. The scalding liquid soothed his body and filled him with a rush of energy. It was sickeningly sweet. How many sugar cubes were in there?
A hot drink was all it took for Yalen to realize how hungry he was. He was able to take a few bites of his meal before the group departed on a tour of the facility. Before everybody could make it out in the hall, which simmered, open to the elements, under a colonnade, Jocasta spoke up. She glanced awkwardly in Yalen’s direction and then at the others, with a small, reassuring smile.
A pang of guilt throbbed in Yalen’s chest. His unwelcoming behavior must have offended her somehow. That wasn’t fair. This was not the girl from his dreams. Someone this sweet and innocent could not be a murderer. He would force that idea through his head as many times as it took.
“You... you all go on w-without me,” she told them, a couple of pushes from the entrance. The sequins and faux-gold embroidery on her green and white dress caught a few rays of the desert sun and sparkled and her blonde hair, done up in an elaborate fashion, shone in a halo about her head. “I have… s-something else I need to do quickly.”
With that, Jocasta was gone. That was a bit of a disappointment. Yalen would have to apologize to her later. The rest of the gang continued strolling through the compound at a brisk pace. The girls were deep in some conversation that had nothing to do with him, so Yalen silently walked alongside them while taking in the scenery. Once in a while one of the residents would wave at him in passing or give him a knowing nod. It was probably easy to tell that he was tethered just by looking at his footsteps.
The party stopped at a ramp and some stairs. The priest chose the stairs, desiring to explore his full range of movement with the braces on. It was a comedic affair. Yalen descended the stairs like a waddling duck, to the amusement of the rest of the group. Marci couldn’t help but look at him.
“You’re still on four,” she observed almost reverently. “Lucky.”
“Keep at it, hotshot, and you’ll be faster than me.” Zarina winked before continuing onwards.
They reached the bottom and continued on, heading towards the pool area. It was teeming with half-dressed children and teens. The sounds of play and laughter helped Yalen perk up somewhat. He had half a mind to jump into the water himself. He knew how to swim, though in his current condition he might only be able to tread water.
A small curly ball of energy came streaking out of the pool, headed straight for their group or, rather, one member of it in particular. “Mistuh Yawen!” Rita made it a few more steps before tripping over her own feet, only managing to avoid a faceplant by sticking her hands out and absorbing the impact. She lay there on her stomach for a moment, as if deciding whether or not to cry. They apparently didn’t have swimsuits, so the kid was in her underwear and showing a fair bit of plumber’s crack. “Oww,” she pouted.
“Rita!” Yalen broke away from the tour group, nearly tripping on his own feet in the process. In the same moment he tore off the outer garment of his uniform and wrapped it around the child’s body to preserve her modesty. “Are you okay? Where does it hurt?”
Apparently comforted, she returned to a more neutral expression, quirking an eyebrow. “Owaph,” she muttered. “Whewe doesn’t it huwt?” She rolled onto her back and sat up, examining her palms and rubbing at her knees. Thankfully she didn’t look seriously injured.
Yalen gently took Rita’s hands and pulled her up. Rita was running circles around him the moment she was back on her feet. Unfortunately, his coat was a bit too large for her. It fell off her shoulders and into the sand. He sighed and flapped it in the air as best he could. So much for having clean clothes.
“Come on mistuh Yawen! Play with me! Play with me!” Yalen’s fate was decided. It was physically impossible for him to say no to such an adorable kid. There was a good hour or so before everyone had to meet up at the gate. He looked towards Marci and the others and waved at them.
“You all go on ahead! I’ll catch up later!”
Summary: Yalen didn't sleep well and spends breakfast acting like he sees dead people. He has some new leg braces to replace his cane for the time being, but he still walks kind of funny. He has separated from the group to keep a kid named Rita company at the swimming pool.
Lorentine Queen, Main Deck, Outside of Cargo Hold | Nighttime Leon@Jumbus | Carmillia@Animus | Eun-Ji@Medili | Dorothea@jasbraq
After entering what Zarra has dubbed the "Greyborn dimension" there's a large flash of light, Zarra is entirely taken off-guard and he feels ears and eyes suddenly shut-down for a moment. Developing one of worst migraines he's ever experienced in his life in an instant. Just when he thought he would cry out in anguish, it was gone, and his senses became clear again. Obviously, this has never happened before. Maybe he was slightly too slow, and one of the chemical mages messed with his neurotrasmitters. The idea of that is scary to him, he'll have to be careful this time around.
Despite the strange attack no longer effecting him, what he watches does little to fix his feeling of being overwhelmed. Eun-Ji and Carmilla being engaged by the enemy. Dorothea is holding an actual gun to the one person who can't even defend herself. The arcane mages, the last people he wanted to see, are now in the fray, and Leon is entirely gone. As this is going down, he sees a piece of exploded table shoot at him, despite being intangible, he instinctively dives away. He stops himself midlanding, facepalming himself for forgetting something so simple. As Zarra considers what to do in this situation, under the effects of analysis paralysis, Manfred shows up to the rescue and subdues Dory.
He observes Eun-Ji and one of the villains fighting mano-a-mano, with each giving each other very little to work with in terms of openings, Zarra admits he's impressed with their foot work, almost forgetting that they're fighting for their lives. Does the guy even know he's there? Does he have the element of surprise here? He guesses there's only one way to find out.
The young noble materializes behind Forceful, not realizing the irony of what he's about to do. Summoning what kinetic force into his leg he can within as little time as possible, Zarra dishonorably attempts to kick the male Kinetic mage between the legs from behind with the ball of his foot.
The fight continued on. With the Arcane Mages in an uneasy alliance with them, things were slowly but surely turning in favor of the students; at least in so far as defeating the Traveler's agents were concerned. As for the Lyre, that will be a complication of its own to handle. Obviously enough, it will be very unlikely for these temporary allies of theirs to appreciate it if the students were to try to take the Lyre for themselves. As for the moment though, the battle took priority for all sides involved.
Slightly away from the center of the fight itself, within the corridor, a tense situation were defused by the decisive action of Manfred Hohenfelter von Meckelin-Thandau. It was not a decision he made lightly, but as painful as it was, something he believed will be for the best in the end. With one smooth and precise strike of his hand, he knocked his own lover out. It was done so skillfully that Dory only had a split second to feel a sharp pain on her neck before passing out cold, going limp with the gun she aimed at Carmillia falling from her hand. Fortunately it did not went off as it fell and clattered on the wooden floors of the corridor, and now with her unconscious figure being held by Manfred, one of the crisis faced by the team had been solved.
Of course, there will likely be a lot to solve later on a personal level between the individuals involved in causing Dory to be so distressed that she took such an extreme action, but it will be most wise to keep that for later indeed.
Surprised, Jens Becker von Magdeburg stopped in his tracks as he watched Manfred knock Dory out cold. He observed them both for a moment, not entirely sure yet that this wasn't a ploy to fool him. This doubt was erased as Manfred looked him straight in the eyes, telling him that his intervention is not required. Whether it be because of his own instinct or the way Manfred conducted himself or both, Jens Becker surmised that this was no trick, and that the gun-holding girl had truly been knocked out cold by the man before him. "Very well..." he said simply as he raised both hands briefly and nodded at Manfred before backing off.
Evanescence continued with her assault, shifting her focus on Hilde. She had pegged Carmillia as the least of the threat due to how helpless she looked, and thus believed that her Internal Chemical attack on the Perrench women will be enough to take her out of the fight. That was soon proven to be a mistake. Just as she was about to launch a more powerful Internal Chemical carnage on Hilde, she felt a sudden bout of vertigo affecting her. "What the-?" she muttered as she shook her head. Unsurprisingly, she quickly identified it for what it was; an Internal Chemical magic affecting herself. Just as quickly, she worked on purging the effects from her system while her eyes searched for the perpetrator, finding her gaze landing back on Carmillia. She frowned in anger, hissing.
"Oh you little bit-" was all that Evanescence managed to spout out of her mouth before a powerful explosion of heat struck her squarely on the torso. The brief time of distraction caused by Carmillia was more than enough for Hilde to build up and fire off an explosion of sufficient intensity against Evanescence, throwing her back violently as she slammed to the wall at the other end of the room. The Traveler agent slumped to the floors face first, the scent of burnt fabric and flesh emanating from her. Hilde watched on for a brief moment. When Evanescence didn't rise back up, she let out a satisfied huff and looked over at Carmillia, nodding her head in approval. "Much appreciated, young lady. I think that solved that annoying little problem, hmm?"
The last bout of action within the room came from the pair of Kineticists continuing to engage in intense contest of both martial prowess and Kinetic Magic expertise. For the latter, Forceful proved able to match his opponent, each performing a rapid series of drawing and casting of Kinetic enhancements one after another to keep the empowered physical fights going. For the former however, the Traveler agent realized rather quickly that he was out of his depth. He was trained in Kastäng pretty well. He liked to think of himself as a pretty good practitioner of the martial arts, even. Still, it wasn't enough. Not compared to the degree of training that his Tan Keoulian opponent had received. And thus, he continued finding himself being slowly but surely overpowered despite his significantly more imposing stature.
The last hammer that ended up deciding the bout, however, came not from Eun-Ji but from her allies whom both had a penchant for chaos.
A sudden thud from the trapdoor, followed by 5 seconds of silence. Of this, neither Eun-Ji nor Forceful particularly paid much attention to. They noticed the noise of course, but knew that taking their focus off of their respective opponent was not a wise thing to do. It was what happened afterwards that finally caused them to disengage, separated several meters apart from one another as they looked at the trapdoor to the cargo hold opening once. Then twice. Then thrice. Silently. And to make things even more bizarre, the great performer Leon Solaire came out of the Cargo Hold the same numbers of time. Again, silently.
It looked to be a blessing for Forceful who were about to be completely overwhelmed before all of it happened. Both Eun-Ji and Forceful kept their focus on each other while also watching the bizarre occurrence happening in front of their eyes. Eun-Ji quirked an eyebrow up slightly. It was obvious to her that this must be some sort of illusion performed by her comrade. And yet, it was also definitely not a typical form of illusion.
At first, it was mostly only Eun-Ji and Forceful that were witnesses to the strange show. That changed when the three Leons started waltzing through the room, each holding an instance of the Lyre in their grasps that they seemed to pretend to pluck. "HEY!" Forceful shouted loudly. "The Lyre! He's got the Lyre!"
At this, everyone's attention were caught, including the Arcane Mages. Hilde's eyes widened in surprise. She recognized who Leon was due to his fame, but she couldn't quite understand why there were three Leon Solaires and why they were all holding the Lyres. Forceful hesitated to give chase as the Leons continued to stride through the room, each one making exactly the same set of movements as one another, separated only by about half a second each. He was wary that the moment he moved, Eun-Ji will immediately react to take him down. Yet he knew he needed to make a decision; with Evanescence seemingly downed by Hilde with Carmillia's help, it was all up to him to secure the Lyre for the Traveler.
It was not easy for him however, as the magical show made him doubt his own sight, if not his sanity. What the heck is the deal with the marble? What in hells is happening here?? puzzled the Kineticist in his mind. Am I the only one seeing all these? Did someone messed with my mind? As Forceful was contemplating all of it, the Leons then 'attacked' him with a poorly aimed blast of fire. By reflex, he jumped back, not immediately realizing that no heat can be felt from the flame.
Eun-Ji immediately took advantage of Forceful's reaction towards Leon's fake fire; she can immediately identify them as nothing more than Arcane illusion. Thus she sprinted right through the fire, enhanced by Kinetic magic and ready to finish the fight with a fatal stab from her dagger. In that moment, Forceful realized his mistake, eyes widened as he looked upon the death rapidly approaching him.
A split second later, he found out that death felt quite different from what he was expecting. He most definitely didn't expect it to be so painful to his pair of cojones. In reality, what he felt was not death for him but for several billions of his precious life seeds that just got killed by extreme blunt trauma induced by Kinetic-enhanced kick, courtesy of the Greyborn that had reappeared behind him. While it was doubtlessly unlucky for his microscopic brothers, it can be argued that this ended up being lucky for Forceful himself, as Zarra's sudden reappearance surprised even Eun-Ji for just a split second.
"AEEEEEEEEEGHH!" her opponent shouted in agonizing pain as his hands flew to his own nether regions. It was cut short when Eun-Ji delivered a Kinetic-empowered jab to his neck. The surprise from Zarra's reappearance and the sudden shift in Forceful's posture, brief as it was, had caused her to reflexively struck Forceful with her empty left hand instead of the dagger in her right hand. Forceful slumped down, still holding his pulverized man-sacks, knocked out cold but alive. Lucky for him. Eun-Ji blinked once, looking down at her knocked out opponent and then at Zarra. She nodded politely at the Greyborn after another second of silence as a sign that she appreciated the assistance regardless of whether it was actually necessary or not. The result was still that the opponent was out of the fight, and that was good for them all.
"After him!" a shout from Hilde suddenly sounded through the air. She didn't understand what the Leons were doing, but when she saw that he continued to dance away with the Lyre in his hands, she simply couldn't take the risk of allowing it. It was part of her job to protect the cargo hold and the items within it, and she'd be damned to let someone take off with part of the cargo, even if that person was Leon Solaire(s) himself. Hilde didn't wait for the others to move, immediately taking off to chase after the Leons. Jens Becker did the same after hearing his comrade shouted, racing after the Leons as they ran through the corridor.
Thus once more, as if practically his natural calling to be the center of attention, all eyes were on to the famed performer and his magical show. Except there were three of him this time, each holding a Lyre and all doing exactly the same moves separated by about half a second each as they reached the other end of the corridor...
1. Manfred: Knocked Dory out with a well-placed chop to her carotid artery, averting potential disaster. Currently holding the unconscious Dory, he saw the three Leons briefly reaching out as if wanting to help with Dory before they then continued to dance away pass him and Dory.
2. Dory: Knocked out cold by Manfred, probably for the best. Still, she would be able to easily figure out that it was Manfred that had knock her out. Regardless, her safety now lies in the hands of her allies.
3. Carmillia: Negated the effects of Evanescence's Internal Chemical attack on herself, and then counter attacked with her own Internal Chemical Magic to cause vertigo on Evanescence. Saw the three Leons danced pass with their Lyres.
4. Leon: Used one of his signature moves, Fantasia Act 1, to cause a rather complex sort of magical confusion to allies and enemies alike. Three instances of himself strode and danced across the area, last seen continuing through the other end of the corridor, about to enter the narrow passage that runs through the middle of the ship. After Evanescence was seemingly defeated and Forceful knocked out, everyone's attentions are now on to him as the three Leons are openly carrying their Lyres away.
5. Zarra: Phased back in to corporeality and gave Forceful a good Kinetic-enhanced kick between his legs, forcefully threatening the integrity of the agent's virile potency. Ironically, this saved the agent's life at the sacrifice of billions of his fallen unseen brothers.
6. Eun-Ji: Very briefly surprised by Zarra's sudden reappearance and kick to Forceful's nether regions, but quickly adapted and took advantage of it to take Forceful out of the fight.
7. The 4 Arcane Mages: - Hilde Arnsberg von Regensbach: Took advantage of Carmillia's assistance to attack Evanescence, throwing her back and knocking her out with an explosion. Shouted for everyone to chase after the Leons. - Jens Becker von Magdeburg: In response to Hilde's shout, he started to chase after the Leons, thinking of him as one of the Traveler's agents due to the three instances of him holding the Lyres and dancing away. - Arne Voller von Meckelinburg-Kahler and Heinrich Wengeman von Glusdorf-Brandenstrass: Status unknown.
8. The Traveler agents: - Evanescent the Internal Chemist: Counter attacked by Carmillia with Internal Chemical magic. Quickly purged the effects, but the brief moment was enough for Hilde to blast her with an explosion that threw her back and took her down to the ground. Seemingly, taken out of the action. - Forceful the Kinetic Mage: Got kicked in the precious family jewels by Zarra, allowing Eun-Ji to easily knock him out as he doubled over in pain. - Zealous the Blood Mage: Dead. And positively decomposing. - Seer the Magnetic Mage & Firebrand the Arcane Illusionist: Status unknown.
9. Rioters and Revelers: Currently engaging in a brutal chaotic brawl in and on much of the Main Deck and parts of the 1st Cabin Deck. The spread of the chaos is gaining momentum.
*For more details on the Traveler Agents and the Four Arcane Mages, please check the Discord server under the Mission-HQ channel.
Ysilla had laid in the quiet of her room. She had felt tired before but now having the chance to rest, she could not. Sleep required an invitation, but it never could arrive when she wanted it too. For awhile, the Virangish teen lay with her eyes closed only taking moments to peer through slits at the sound of stirring. She swore she heard someone stirring outside and she glanced to the door. Khamsei and Hoopoe sharing the foot of the bed, facing the door acting as sentries. It... was more a ritual than anything else to place them in such a manner. They wouldn't provide any security despite 'watching' the door.
Whoever was outside, Ysilla decided not to investigate opting to return to closing her eyes. Sleep was finally knocking but the dreams were quick to follow.
"Hark in the Halls of my Kin who are Lost...
A feminine voice sang softly, no more than a mere whisper. She carried a tune but her voice croaked with strain and the melody sounded sad. There was a longing in melody, a want for something. Ysilla couldn't see her, the picture was dark as if she had her eyes closed. As if she were somewhere else.
"Sabbah would sing to the ghosts...
The language was Virganish and as Ysilla heard more, the woman sounded familiar. Whoever the singer was, it was like she had known her for a very long time. There was a strange longing, like she felt she was being pulled towards the singer's voice.
"The Ones she had loved, the Ones she had left...
Suddenly there was a sting in her chest, like a needle had pierced her flesh. Ysilla clenched her teeth and thrashed, at least she thought she did but no matter how much her mind played her movement, her body did not stir. Was she strapped down? Encased magically? She needed to open her eyes.
"The Ones who had loved her the most...
A sharper pain in her chest flared. This was no longer a pinprick but now she was being sliced open. She wanted to open her mouth and scream but it didn't shift, not even her vocal chords could wail in agony. Could she do anything?
Now gone for so very long, I couldn't remember your face...
Concentrate. Concentrate. Ysilla heard those words stir in her mind. She had to find out where she was. Find out what she needed to do to break free. It took everything, fighting the anguish of the various pricks and cuts to her chest tearing her apart, but she managed to move. Her eyelids lifted, light rushing in and she could see.
How you could change my life the most...
The woman, singing still as hovered over her chest. Ysilla couldn't see herself, aside from the pale skin of her nose but she could see the woman, focused intently on whatever she was doing to her chest for a moment before she froze. The other woman shifted, the length of her hat coming to block the light and shade Ysilla's gaze. Her hat. Before she could study anything else a soft set of fingers touched her eyelids, gently closing them. Ysilla couldn't see the woman anymore as her song continued for one more line.
You would sing our sorrows away..."
Ysilla awoke with a gasp. She clutched at the fabric covering her chest as she jolted up. Her breathing intense as she glanced around the room. It was just her, back in the Refuge. Nobody was here. Save for Khamsei and Hoopoe who were watching her wake with a fright. Their lifeless eyes seemed to peer focus on her and as she recovered from her reoccurring dream. She always had nightmares but this was the first that actually brought fright. The gaze of those unflinching eyes of her puppets weren't bringing comfort like they did in her room. Her own gaze shifted to her hat that sat in the corner of the room. Why had she seen that in her dream? The girl from last night? She wondered...
Movement outside. People were waking and moving on. She had to as well.
She dressed and stashed Khamsei and Hoopoe in their spots. She had new clothes but her hat and cloak were kept, maintaining that iconic look. Stepping out into the sunlit pavilion, the puppeteer would skulk silently following some of her companions to breakfast.
She didn't eat. Not much, anyway. She had each of the items offered but only a single bite-sized portion of each as if she were sampling them. The cooking was adequate for what it was. This wasn't a place of taste as a segregated colony in a danger strewn desert. They wouldn't be able to bring in spices and more exotic ingredients like the cities of Torragon but the Torragonese cuisine was always Ysilla's favorite outside of some of Virangish specialties.
Discussions at breakfast were dull proceedings. They talked business and any topics away from that were deflected by this table's conversational dictator. Bored, Ysilla sat still and slowly panned from each of her dining companions, watching what they ate and how they ate. Maybe if they reacted a certain way to whatever was being talked about. While the intention was innocent enough, her still and seemingly unblinking certainly came off with a different energy.
We don’t need to fill the minds of children with nightmares
Ysilla perked up. Her nightmare, as cumbersome as it was during sleep, at least offered an insight into what people were like. What did they fear enough to consider it a nightmare? She panned back to warden, patiently waiting to interject with her own question.
"Warden, indulge me. Perchance do you have any nightmares?" She asked plainly like it was an everyday question. If he denied or refused, he was lying. Ysilla wouldn't follow that up, knowing that regardless of his reaction, she would know more about what the warden was like.
With breakfast ended. Ysilla wondered off on her own. She walked quietly through the grounds, watching the children and the guards go about their usual days. She got a lot of stares back but few approached her, noting that the children might have been instructed to avoid them. A lie by the warden that they could see the children tomorrow. Ysilla wasn't going to cause an issue on that matter yet. She was distracted with something else.
In her mind, there was an inkling of something she wanted to see but couldn't place it. The presence of this nagging desire was bothering her. Last night when she arrived at the Refuge, it was there, but this morning? It was like the thought vanished. Someone had something she wanted to see? But who and what? Her mind began to hurt and slipping a hand from under her cloak to her temple. She rubbed in a circular movement, eyes closed trying let that nagging feeling fall away.
When there was some relief, Ysilla used her exposed hand and lifted up her hat to let Hoopoe out. The wooden bird cawed and took off in a low hover circling Ysilla as she paced over to a wall where she could lean against. She'd sit there and watch as Hoopoe would turn and fly off. The bird airing itself out as it surveyed the Refuge now with the light of day to get the full layout. Ysilla could see through Hoopoe's eyes through a bit of complexity with chemical magic. It stirred her own mind to dream of what Hoopoe was actually seeing. The process was difficult to maintain but very, very useful.
The static entity of the Refuge, the buildings and the like, were swiftly taken into account before Ysilla started to focus on the movement. People. It took work to focus on them after building the image of the landscape but she'd be able to watch people from Hoopoe's point of view. There were the children and guards, even her companions moving about. She watched for awhile before witnessing her sister break away towards the stables. She recognized what that meant.
Opening her eyes, she snapped her attention back herself, slightly dizzy from the effort. Hoopoe would descend as Ysilla started heading for the stables. The wooden bird would arrive first, flying through the window and perching herself on the windowsill, announcing the arrival with a loud squawk. It would be seconds after that Ysilla would step inside the stable.
She stood at the doorway for a moment but didn't give her sister a chance to break the silence first. "You always flee towards animals when anger is at the forefront." She said plainly in their native tongue. "Tragically predictable. You ought to consider that."
Already tucked in under her blankets, Penelope was not quite ready for sleep. Part of this was simply the natural boundless energy of a six-year-old girl, but another was excitement. The child’s mind was racing through the world in the story and its endless adventures, so different from an everyday life that she was already beginning to conceptualize as mundane and confining. In particular, she was imagining herself as one specific character: a real person, if the book and Madame Touraine were to be believed.
She was kneeling now, with that preternaturally good balance she had developed on one leg, and her covers were currently sloughing away. “Mademoiselle Nelle,” the nanny declared, and she clapped the book shut. “It is bedtime and you well know what that means.”
The little princess sunk onto her haunch, letting herself slouch to the side after a moment. She gazed up at her keeper and the woman gazed down at her: kindly but stern. “Sorry,” the child apologized. “I’m just eggsited for the next part.”
“That’s wonderful to hear. Books are an important part of your education, but you know what you need to do first.” Penelope was already in her nightgown, of course. She settled back under her covers properly and lay her little head on her pillows. “I’m ready, Madame Touraine.”
The nanny reached out and lovingly poked the tip of her nose. “You most certainly are,” she chirped, “And I wonder what’s in the next part that’s so good, hmm?”
The child grinned. “Lady Talit!” she exclaimed, half–sitting up again. Truly, Nelle could read the book for herself. She was almost seven years old, after all, and quite literate. She just liked to hear other people tell the story because they used cool voices and then they got to hear about how awesome Lady Talit was too.
“The yasoi lady?” Madame Touraine inquired.
Penelope nodded vigorously. “She was my great great great great great great great great -” she paused to take a breath. “-great great great great great great great great grandfather’s wife, so that kind of makes her my great great great great great great great great -” Madame Touraine held up a hand for the girl to stop. “Grandmother,” she finished prematurely. It wasn’t enough greats and that bothered her. One needed to be historically accurate, after all.
“Your many greats grandmother was the noble Queen Eleanor, dear.”
The princess sighed. “I know, technically.” She sounded accepting as opposed to enthused.
“A great hero who gave her life to defend the kingdom.”
“But Lady Talit did all that too and lived!” Penelope insisted. She burst out from her covers. “And - and she was like… running around with her chains and her blade crutches and her magic going whoosh, smash, pew!” The child hopped about in her nightgown, adding actions to her words. She stood there, face earnest and arms spread. “Pssshhh.” She made twinkle fingers, mimicking the fallout from an explosion. “She was a dervish,” she added matter-of-factly.
“Penelope de Perrence,” the nanny said sternly. The girl threw herself under her covers following two great bounds, and tucked herself in. “I’m sorry, Madame Touraine. I’m just eggsited… Queen Eleanor was pretty neat too,” she added after a moment.
“What is it with you and this Lady Talit?” asked the nanny with a frustrated sort of fondness.
The child blinked, starting to sit up again and thinking better of it. Madame Touraine had been very patient with her, but she sensed that another interruption would be a bridge too far. “She was like me,” Nelle said quietly instead.
“That’s a much better bedtime voice,” the nanny approved. “But she was yasoi, dear, and lived eight hundred years ago, and was very different from all of us, I fear.”
It wasn’t that. Sometimes, Nelle wondered if Madame Touraine was actually all that smart. Mother had said that she was “plenty smart enough for your needs”, but mother also wouldn’t allow her to leave the castle grounds with her brothers and sisters. “Yeah, but she was like me in one way,” the child mewed. She half sat up and freed an arm, aware of but ignoring the nanny’s warning look. Instead, with her funny hand, she patted the empty space under the covers where everybody else had a leg.
Madame Touraine blinked. “Oh my dear little Nelle,” she said softly, reaching out and stroking the side of the child’s face. “How thick I fear I am.”
The girl snorted. “Yeah, that was pretty dumb, Madame Touraine.”
The nanny pursed her lips.
“Sorry.” She laid back down. “I just wanna be like her,” Nelle whispered, trying to be extra quiet to make up for her bad behaviour.
“Of course, precious,” the woman responded, gently reopening the book. “She did many amazing things and, someday, you will too.”
She came to on a beach, gazing up at the star-filled sky. For a moment, there was only peace, and Penny was happy. A crab skittered along somewhere close to her head and the waves heaved in and out at her foot. Then, she felt the aches and pains and it all came flooding back to her: being knocked out in a sneak attack, the throbbing pain in her head, the temporary blindness, darkness, and abduction. She'd cast off the chemical magic and fought her way out. She winced and moaned as she tried to take a deep breath. This is what broken ribs feel like, the Perrenchwoman thought. She lay there for a moment, giggling stupidly, but it hurt. She'd never broken a bone in her life. She'd barely even gotten a scrape. Climbed a rocky shore? Fought someone to the death? Her heart pounded at the thought of it. It was crazy: bloody and violent and terrifying, but she'd done it: thrown her strength against a half-dozen hardened cutthroats and overcome them all. Tears streamed down her cheeks, dying in the sand. She found herself strangely compelled to pray.
In Nomini Ipté, Chune, Orpahe, Echeran, et Dami. Amen. She made the sign of the Pentad, flinching as a badly sprained triceps was forced to flex. Thank you, most divine Pentad, for giving me the strength, wisdom, and good fortune to prevail against those who sought to do me harm and who have harmed so many others. I further give my thanks for the station you have chosen for me: the blood that flows through my veins is that of legendary kings and queens, and some of their strength is mine; the hardness of my mother and father are fires that have tempered me into the weapon of your justice. I shall ever be your faithful servant and endeavour to live as a beacon of your light. She made the sign once more, just as she had most every night since she'd been a little girl, just as Benedict the Blessed had before the Battle of the Plains of Abnegation, as Arcel the Victorious had in his hour of need against the Eskandish hordes of eight hundred years ago. In Nomini Ipté, Chune, Orpahe, Echeran, et Dami. Amen.
Penny managed a deeper breath and, with great pain, forced herself to sit up. The glove over her weird hand was tattered and one of her fingers was broken. Her ankle was twisted and her right triceps howled in agony when she tried to move it. There were scuffs, scrapes, and lacerations everywhere she looked. The youth closed her eyes and drew from her surroundings, finding ample energy. This, she applied first to her ankle and her finger, but she was dazed and the effort was clumsy. She let the rest slip and her ribs and triceps remained a source of pain. Again, she reached out, this time gripping the small medallion of Dami's Hammer that she'd worn for this mission. Scrapes healed over, soft and pinkish. Lacerations closed themselves, and the tear in her muscles eased somewhat. It was then that Penny heard the distant voices of what she could only assume were more members of the crew that had tried to kidnap her. Pushing off, she rose to her foot and cast about for her crutch. Dammit! she cursed inwardly. All of the Gift in the world but she was far too dependent upon a stupid stick for basic mobility.
Straining into the distance, Penny spotted something bobbing in the water. Gingerly, she hopped a few steps forward and recognized it for what it was. Taking another painful breath, she stretched out with Kinetic Magic and called it forth from the waves. It arced through the air and snapped straight into her hand. The waves were such a source of power that she continued to draw from them, concentrating as she converted their energy into binding. This, she used to reinforce the bones of her ribcage and the pain began to fade. She took a deep cautious breath. Good enough. There remained yet a painful bruise on her legless hip and a pinch in her right arm, but she was well enough to function and that's what was important.
Peering off into the darkness, Penny couldn't make much sense of anything. It was an unusually black night: only one moon was up, and she still felt a bit woozy. She stumbled around for a bit, searching for some clue, and found herself wandering further up the beach. Then, she saw them: footprints. They were the distinctive mark of a foot and a crutch on sand and they could only be hers. They stretched off into the distance and she now knew a way out. She started to walk.
Yet, something else grabbed her attention, and the Perrenchwoman twisted suddenly at the sound of paddles meeting water. Voices rose over the crash of the waves and a small pinnace made its way through the shallows. Adrenaline burning through her arteries, Penny ducked into a small rocky alcove and pressed herself up inside of it motionlessly. She could not make out any of the words for certain, but there were more people back where she had escaped from. The small stone building she had destroyed in the process was clearly not all that there was. As she stood in silence, her mind could not help but wander. By the time that the likely pirates had passed her by, the youth had decided to head back and at least try to get the lay of the land. She could not be useless. She needed to return to the others with something to show for her misadventure.
So it was that Penny found herself hurrying along a black sand beach. The tip of her crutch dug in and her boot squelched with water. Quietly, she clambered over the rocks, grimacing as her still-tender arm was forced to flex and strain more than once.
The smoking ruins were a site of investigation as she approached them and, like second nature, the girl gathered energy from their residual heat. This, she put into a powerful illusion, bending the meagre light filtering in from the moons and a couple of lanterns. Sound covered by the waves, Penny slipped past without drawing any notice. Her heart thudded in her chest with a nervous anticipation and she continued onward, in the direction that the investigating seamen seemed to have come from.
She found a narrow stone path over the volcanic rocks. Palm trees swayed in a gentle breeze and mist from a small waterfall dusted her skin. Carefully, the interloper placed foot before crutch, feeling herself a charlatan and a fraud as she continued to bend light around herself. You have one leg, you dumb girl. Certainly, it was slow going and, more than once, she stumbled or had to use magic. More than once, she had to scramble off-path and crouch in the shadows as people passed by. Something had seized the once-spoiled royal, however, and she was determined to press on.
She rounded a small promontory and then it lay before her: the mouth of a vast grotto, so tall that a sizable ship might go in and out. Penny let out a soundless whistle. Pay dirt. She grinned and pressed on, senses on high alert, heart racing. "I jus' said keep yer eyes open, man!" came a female voice. Two pirates were approaching. "Eyes open for what?" shouted her partner, frustrated. "A woman?" he snorted. "'spose I should keep me eyes open fer you?"
"I told ye' already, Seamus: A bloody one-legged woman! Can't be easy to miss!"
And yet here she is, thought Penny impishly, slipping right past you. She kept to the shadows and went still as they drew near. It was far less work to bend the light that way. Nothin' to see here, Wingus and Dingus, she willed, and soon she was watching their receding backs. "She's oughta be long gone by now," the male pirate grumbled. "Else dead as dirt."
There was a large ship in the cavern, lit by a number of lanterns. It hovered, phantasmal in the murky near distance, and appeared to be mostly out of the water. Crew members crawled over its surface like crabs, probably scrubbing the hull of worms and barnacles, Penny decided. Its hull seemed unusually dark, and she counted at least thirty-five cannon. This has to be it, she realized, the Maria Nera. There were too many people there, even with many of them outside the grotto picking through the ruins or searching for her.
However, she noticed a second item of interest as she came up to the channel that had allowed the ship to slip inside. Some ways from the Nera was a sizable sub-cave, its entrance well-lit by torches. A handful of guards were talking outside.
Muffling her footsteps and slowing to a snail's pace, the Perrenchwoman slipped smoothly inside. Sure enough, there was a massive treasure trove, much of it in Revidian coinage. She took a moment to tune into the guards' conversation. "Cap's bringing the goods home," promised one. "Nothin' to worry about!" There came a second voice. "Just hope they understand why. It looks bad from the outside. Everyone thinks he's a hero, you know: busy kissin' his arse." This kind of eavesdropping would only ever provide her with an incomplete picture. Penny needed more than that, so she decided to go deeper. The cave branched, and curtains covered one of the branches. Well, if that's not something worth investigating, she thought, then I don't know what is! On a desk in the small, well-appointed room, she found a captain's log. The flag of Segona hung upon the wall opposite wall above an unusually opulent bed: a more battered version of the sort of thing she might've slept on at home. Penny took a moment to open the journal. The handwriting was very neat - feminine, she imagined - and there were plenty of details, particularly something about a 'fight for freedom' and a 'dastardly uncle'. The intruder decided that she could read it all later. She palmed the small journal, stuffed it into her belt, and turned to keep exploring deeper.
There was the expected treasure: gold, spices, medicines, and valuable stones. About to leave, the Perrenchwoman paused. There was a midsized lockbox, shoved off in a corner, conspicuous only in its pointed inconspicuousness. Creeping up to it, she drew from the lock mechanism using binding magic and it shattered. She took a moment to apply some of the repurposed matter in healing her arm and her stump. She rolled and flexed the latter and propped the former on her crutch handle. Inside the lockbox, however, lay only disappointment: an old lamp and nothing more. It was the simple kind too, with only a candle and some old-style glass: a Chune Lamp, people called it, for that's how the Seeker of Knowledge's holy symbol was always portrayed. Penny thought about bringing it along. Wouldn't it be something if that was the actual Lantern of Chune? She shook her head to clear it, rolled her eyes, and decided that it was probably time to get out of here.
Before she could make it more than a couple of steps, however, the sound of approaching footsteps threw her into a near-panic. Penny darted into a darkened alcove and held her breath. "Coulda sworn I heard somethin'," one of the pirates insisted. The other's eyes swept the room. "Aye, I think she doubled back, sneaky lil' wench." They were talking about her! They were onto her! A cold, prickly shot of adrenaline shuddered through her veins. If these two spotted her, even if they shared their suspicions with other members of the crew, it could be very bad. They would come swarming for her by the dozens and she could not hope to fight them all off. I'm sorry, she thought, but you have to die.
Rising up behind them, the Blood Mage pulled with all of her might. The two men disintegrated, heads first, and she watched them die. Immediately, she hunched over, hands on her knee, and swallowed back the bile rising in the back of her throat. Those were someone's children, she thought, maybe someone's fathers. Holy shit! She stood uneasily and gulped a couple of times. Magic power coursed through her veins and she used it conjure some light, doing a final sweep of the caves, that lantern still nagging at the back of her mind. It began to dawn on the one-legged woman, then, that she was playing a very dangerous game. It was time to get out of here. Making haste, she darted out of the cave, glancing about as she went. With the coast looking clear, Penny took a couple of steps, but then she was falling. The world spun and she hit the ground with a painful smack. Her lip split and her vision blurred. The journal tumbled away to the edge of the water, its pages getting wet, and she lay there, stunned, her crutch clattering on the rocks.
She blinked and started to regain her bearings. Idiot! She'd missed a step: simple as that. Hissing in pain, she clambered to her foot, retrieving her crutch. There were pirates coming now: a pair of them wading through the shallows, but there might be more at any moment. The youth's mind burned with adrenaline and she called the journal to her hand. Ahead was the channel, and beyond it a sandbar and eventual freedom. "You there!" shouted one of the approaching enemies, "who are yah?"
"Ay! Stop!" warned the other. Drawing from the current, Penny unleashed an Arcane Lance that skewered the first through the head. Her body dropped with a splash into the shallows. The second, she was only able to wound, and he opened his mouth to scream a warning at the top of his lungs. His friend's killer, however, drew from the current for a second time and dampened the sound all around him. His cries did not leave his immediate vicinity and her stomach coiled up inside. She felt like a monster as she reached out with a telekinetic fist and snapped his neck.
Then, as she began wading though the deepening water, preparing to push off and swim, things took a turn for the worse. A pair of sharks, drawn by the blood, entered the shallows. Instantly, Penny knew that she could not outswim them, and she did not feel confident trying to fight them in the water. Instead, she drew energy from their very motion though it, backpedaling as quickly as she could, and used that to alter their primitive brains. Induced to fear, the beasts fled out the grotto's entrance, startling a second pair of pirates who'd been sauntering closer. Their potential victim breathed a sigh of relief. Nobody else was coming for her. She sat on the rough, gravelly ground at the sub-cave's entrance for a moment, steadied her nerves and...
It was like the damned thing was calling for her: that lantern. Penny stood, retrieved her crutch and hustled back inside. Prying open the lockbox, she fished it out. I hope you're worth it, she mused, turning on her heel and making haste out. Diving once again into the water, she found that it was not easy going. She stumbled on a protruding rock almost immediately, and both book and lantern were splashed. Glancing over her shoulder, the interloper could see the pirates who'd been scared off by the shark earlier, making their way over. Their eyes wandered in her direction and one leaned in towards the other. She kicked off, trying to gain some momentum, but it was a struggle to hold both book and lantern clear of the water while swimming. She needed a new plan. They'd seemed to notice her now. They were pretending not to, but one's hand was resting on the hilt of her sword.
Penny drew, then, with everything that she could, from the stone of the grotto itself. Rock began to crackle and a couple of large chunks plummeted from the ceiling to land with a splash. Shouts echoed through the dimness and people scrambled about. Up above, cracks began to form and the youth's stomach went cold. Too much! Driven by desperation and adrenaline, she turned the repurposed energy into Kinetic and rocketed out the channel, past great crumbling pillars of stone. A small section of the grotto outright collapsed, but she was past it, riding the wave. She found herself bobbing up and down beside her crutch in the cold dark waters of the ocean. Another moon had risen and it was brighter now. The lantern and journal hovering above her head in a kinetic grasp, she continued to tread water for a moment. You're no fish, stupid, she chided herself, making for shore.
Then, however, an opportunity too good to pass up presented itself. A small bomb ketch sat there at a small within the hidden cove, completely unguarded as people rushed to deal with the collapse. Tossing the lantern, the journal, and her crutch inside first, the one-legged woman climbed aboard. At the sight of six cannon, a mortar, and crates worth of explosives, her eyes lit up. Momentarily, her thoughts turned to her teammate, Desmond. Who says you get to be the only captain? cutting the mooring ropes, she cast about for a captain's hat and any sort of noteworthy gear. Instead, she only succeeded in catching her foot on a coil of rope and tripping painfully. "Damidammit!" she hissed, rolling into a seated position. Gritting her teeth, she examined her hands and rubbed at her knee.
She had bigger things to worry about, though. Penny had read books about sailing: plenty of books. She'd always found it fascinating, adventurous, and romantic, but she'd never actually done it. She hurried about the tiny ship, using her magic to unfurl this or tighten that. Slowly but surely, the ketch started to lurch forward. Her heart leapt and she took a moment to look up at the stars for some navigational aid. With more luck than skill, she was able to make it through the gap between two rocky islets. The great wide sea stretched out in front of her. Yet... to the side lay another opportunity.
Moored at another small dock was a rather large... She paused, trying to remember the rigs of various seacraft. It wasn't a Brig... A snow! she thought. There were precisely two sailors aboard from what she could see, and the rushed over to shout at her. "Avast!" shouted one. "Aaayy! Where you going with that!?" demanded the second. They were standing right beside each other. With a puckish smile, Penny smacked their heads together. Both went limp.
She had pushed this far and done this much and it stood to reason that she should not press lady luck much further. Yet, she thought back to those childhood tales of kings, queens, knights, mages, and great adventurers. She thought of the hundred risky plays of Lady Talit. Her first one had cost her a leg. The other ninety-nine had brought her wealth and renown. Penny grabbed the coil of rope, wound up, and tossed it as far as she could. When it began to slacken, she lifted it up the rest of the way with telekinesis. It landed on the larger ship's deck and she followed moments later.
The thieving interloper found that she had much to do. First, she tied the ketch fast to the snow's stern. Next, she used what spare rope remained to bind the pair of guards to the mainmast. She glanced about the vessel. It wasn't large, like the big merchantmen and warships of her father's fleet, but it mounted fourteen guns that she'd counted and felt like a true ship: one that was about to be hers. With a bit of Arcane magic, Penny burnt the mooring lines apart and cast off. Sails unfurled themselves. Ropes tightened. Planks creaked and groaned. A gigantic grin split the lower half of the youth's face. All of those years of being nothing and doing nothing. They were well and truly behind her. Perhaps this was just beginner's luck, or perhaps she was merely fortune's favourite daughter, but she did not believe that either was the case.
The snow was well underway now, the ketch tethered astern of it. Penny reached out with the Gift, drawing from the endless power of the waves, and created some wind. Sails filled and the little flotilla picked up speed. With some difficulty and a good deal more luck, she left the cove and struck out along the coast towards the town and her allies. Along the way, she found a stool to lean against and, on it, a great plumed tricorn hat. This, she settled jauntily on top of her head. She couldn't wait to see the look on Desmond's face. Maybe she'd let him have the ketch if he asked nicely. Time to meet the others. A captain needs a crew, after all.
Amelia could sense the noose tightening. She had neither the time nor the energy for it. These people were a threat in their own right. Ingrid, whose life she'd saved, was eyeing her the way a dog eyed a steak on the table. Desmond's hand upon her was... far more threatening than comforting. He was trying to hide some kind of signal behind his back. She'd almost missed it, but she'd grown up around hidden meanings and whispered messages. She shrugged him off and backed away. Her eyes darted warily about. "You're all about to turn on me, aren't you?" she said defiantly, backing away. "But you're... not Prospero's people," she thought aloud, eyes wide and brow furrowed. She glanced about at the corpses and then back at the threatening group. "...They were." She stood there for a moment, haunted. "...How?" she practically mouthed. Amelia paced tightly then, a few steps each way before remembering that she was not among friends. "Tell me, honestly," she demanded, whirling to look at Desmond. "Were you truly sent to rescue me, and by whom?"
"We are from Ersand'Enise. We were sent here by Paradigm Hunghorasz to do three things-" Desmond stepped forward with a cold expression, losing all trace of emotion, much more like a mask as he spoke in a calm and commanding tone, seeming to hide a growing sense of anger, "-rescue Princes Amelea of Segona, retrieve the possible artifact the Maria Nera has, and kill the Captain."
As he stepped forward he looked down on her, only his eyes breaking his mask-like expression, as they seemed to relay every emotion he felt. He continued, "We lost one of our people, another one is confirmed dead, and I have not trusted you since the moment I met you. So you tell me how I would react?"
"Goddammit, now's not the time! she shouted, rubbing at her temples and half turning. "I mean: yes. Yes, I lied. I thought you were lying. I know my uncle - Prospero, that throne-stealing slimy eel - has friends at the school. At first, I thought you were just some useful idiot who might be an ally, but once you said you were from there and it was too late to just run, and I thought you were working for him, for sure. I was going to lose you in the city - fake my own death. I had... people who were going to distract you." She pulled her hands back from her face nervously, opening and clasping them, as if she didn't quite know what to do. "Oh Gods, oh Dami, oh Eshiran!" She pivoted to take them all in. "I have been less than forthright. I apologize. Truly, I'm sorry, but there is still a chance to salvage the situation," she continued desperately. She took a deep quick breath and exhaled. "My uncle, Prospero Malatesta, was to be my regent after my father and brother died. I was ten. You know the rest. He took over. He rules Segona like it's an extension of his realm: another source of people and plunder for his war machine."
Her face was flushed. Anybody who reached out to sense her energy could plainly feel the heightened pulse within her. "Maybe you have heard that I'm called 'The Ghost' by some. It is because I lived the past fourteen years under house arrest, except for when I was to be trotted out for the odd function. Godsdammit!" she cursed. "I escaped a few months ago. I came here because it was beyond the reach of the law, beyond the reach of his many, many friends... or so I thought." She shook her head, as Onarr was healed behind them and cleanup efforts continued. "My goal was to recruit loyal Segonese - we're good sailors - and to start building a resistance. It was to free myself, win back my throne, and free my people." She shook her head tightly, wrapping arms around her small figure.
"But the bastard knew, or he found out." She sighed shakily. "When he couldn't find me, thanks to my friends here, he decided to use my name." Her fists clenched open and closed. "The Maria Nera is not my ship," she hissed. "But that she were: what I could do with her!" She breathed a bit more calmly. "She is a fabrication of the Doge: a false flag creweed by his own people meant to make me an outlaw and a danger so that he can justify eliminating me without being named kinslayer." She laughed bitterly. "Ever question why the Nera sinks all the ships that she catches? Why nobody but the most loyal Revidians have ever seen her? Why every. single. target. is Revidian?" Her face scrunched up and she half-turned towards the waterfront, off in the direction of The Main. "Ask the Dorvalish, if you don't believe me." she begged, "Ask them about the registry of the ships that went missing: all Prospero's ships and his friends' ships. Ask them about the prices of goods that soared from the thefts, about who stocked up on those right before the ships were 'plundered' and 'sunk'."
Dazed, she sat on a curb. "Gods, we've been played. All of us: you, me, my allies." She exhaled, shaking her head in disbelief. "Hugo Hunghorasz and the Doge are friend, or else they pretend to be, at arm's length, for the sake of mutual interest." She chewed on her lower lip nervously. "You were sent to retrieve me so that I would poke my head out of hiding. He had his people ready to pounce. News travels very quickly here." She gestured at the carnage around them, silhouetted against the backdrop of a slowly lightening sky. "Then we have this fight and the evil rotten crew of the 'Nera' - myself and you - lay waste to the town and prove that I need to be stopped. We were supposed to have lost to those Black Rezaindians Prospero sent, I imagine: those men and women of faith, sent to bring me to justice." She looked up at the others. "We're patsies, she said simply. "He outplayed us, and now I'm sure the Nera will be coming, loaded with whatever Black Rezaindians, pirates, and mercenary mages his money can muster."
Amelia of Segona rose and dusted herself off. "I am going to fight them, one way or another, with or without you. She backed away once more, fishing a whistle from the folds of her dress and blowing it in a distinct high-pitched pattern. The sound reverberated through the air, enhanced by liberal use of sonic magic. "But I will die," the princess concluded, "by my own hand if need be - for I will not let anymore shed blood for me unless they offer it freely. I will die before I let you take me."
They shuffled into the plaza by the waterfront, then: first a handful, then ten, then dozens. Some had already been there, among the growing crowd, among the rescuers and accusers. They began to gather around their rightful queen. "But there is another way," she offered. "I know I've no right to ask you, but I can promise rich reward should we win the day." She smirked. "The Nera's winnings are substantial indeed, and whatever does not go to fund our war effort would be yours to do whatever you wished with."
It was Ismette who spoke first. "Say we do trust you," she said. "And get involved in your war." She glanced between Amelia and her fellow students. "How is this not a suicide mission? Why not run? Cut your losses, get safe, and live to fight another day? I mean..." She glanced around and tilted her head to one side, not entirely unsympathetic. "You don't even have a ship."
"That's... not strictly true," said a particularly greasy-looking pirate, stepping through the crowd. It was Xavier Falzon, the Dorvalish pirate from The Main. He crossed his arms, eyes flicking over to Ingrid and Onarr. "Sorry for rippin' yeh off before. Thought you was against the Princess here." He cleared his throat as a few more of his crew came up behind him. "I'd have preferred not to, but the Nera's market manipluation's gotta stop. Plus, I gave Lady Amelia my word and Xavier Falzon is a man who... usually keeps that." He removed his hat and bowed his head slightly. St. Elmo's Fyre is at your service, my lady."
Before anybody could say anything, however, the sound of cannonfire reverberated across the water. A pair of ships - it looked like a large snow towing a smaller ketch - that had been nearing the port for some time drew closer, smoke rising from one of the former's guns. On board, at the wheel, was a solitary - and solitary-legged - figure. She jumped up and down and, amplified by sonic manipulation, her voice carried across the water. "Desmond!" it called. "Deeeeessssmooooonnnnnd!" The echo took a moment to fade. "I brought you a ship, captain!" One could sense the grin in Penny's voice, even if it could not be seen. She pointed to the six-gun ketch, packed full of high explosives. "It's the lil' one!
She wasn't so occupied with healing Onarr that she wasn't able to also take in the conversation that was happening mere feet from her. It confirmed more or less what she had suspected, though the details differed. Basics remained the same however: Princess discontent with her lot flees to the pirate island in order to escape from under the thumb of her uncle's tyrannical rule. The biggest surprise was mostly just the fact that she had no connection to the Maria Nera itself.
Not that it mattered. Thrones passed hands all the time. She decries her uncle's cruel war-mongering yet she herself speaks largely of war. Each ruler uses the same language, speaking with passion and appealing to the crowd's pathos. In the end regardless of whether she reclaims the throne or her uncle marches on the world will continue on, unflinching as history churns forth.
Trypano looked on at her and her plea for them to aid them with an expression that was plain and simply unimpressed. While her normal expression was flat and unemotive this feeling definitely bled through her calm mask, an expression that looked as though she hadn't slept for days but she wasn't any less well rested. Plain and simply put their team bumbled into a flat out ambush which could have easily been avoided had they not outed themselves immediately, all to rescue someone who was only in danger thanks to them.
_ She cared not for the causes of royalty nor the promise of wealth. Two of theirs were dead, one more obviously so than the other. At least, that's what she thought. As soon as cannon fire rang out in the distance it alerted her to the presence of several ships out amidst the waters. Yelling through kinetic magic was Penny, previously MIA.
Oh good. Looks like while everyone else has been failing to maintain cover or make any decisive tracks towards finding the artifact Penny was off on her own doing a significant lot more it seems.
Trypano placed her left index and middle finger against her carotid artery she scanned herself for magical tampering. She believed her growing irritation had a fairly self-evident origin but it never hurt to confirm by eliminating the possibility of outside interference. She quickly checked her patterns on a material, chemical and even bio-electrical scale, ensuring that they were all operating as expected, no anomalous patterns occurring within.
"Now that her attempted abductors are slain one of our three tasks is complete. Only the retrieval of the artifact and the slaying of the captain remain. The latter is optional."
With that said she began walking away, looking out onto the scene of the battle and inexplicably moving towards the water's edge.
"Do not tarry lest we incur more casualties."
_ And just like that she began to descend into the ocean, one measured step at a time, not even bothering to look at those she was speaking to before her head disappeared beneath the waves. Now underwater it was time to get to work. She started drawing the water in front of her while creating water behind her in a manner not dissimilar to her movement through the ground. She was able to move fairly quickly through the water, much faster even than she was through solid earth. As she neared Penny's ship she drew a circular hole through the side, right where she was about to enter.
In a smooth motion the water forced her through the hole she had created, sliding across the floorboards as water splashed in after her. Now inside she simply turned and sealed the hole she had created, a flat mesh of wood fibers sealing off her entrance aboard the ship.
With a light splatting of her wet feet she ascended from the belly of the ship, moist step after step, until she was upon the deck. It was not an unfamiliar place to her, the deck of a boat. She walked with firm confidence, as though she owned the very vessel she stood upon. She cast her stone cold gaze upon their previously missing teammate, head held high and eyes fixed upon her with an analytical stare.
As Penny witnessed the strange girl's approach, her heart started crawling up her throat for a moment. You made a hole in my ship! she screamed inwardly, stalking towards the stairs where Tyrpano emerged. But then the hole was sealed and she knew, as a Binder herself, that it had been a fairly easy thing to do. What irked her was the tone, the entitled body language - the lording of her height - and the near-glare. It reminded Penny of the way that her mother had always addressed her and spawned an instant and intense reactionary dislike.
"Oh, hello to you too," the Perrenchwoman shot back. "You want a summary?" She tilted her head to one side, the tricorn hat nearly sliding loose. She had to keep this professional. Besides, people had been looking down on her for entire life. This one wasn't any different. She sighed. "It's a dynastic struggle. Just... played out through piracy. Amelia owns the Nera and she's using it to hit back at the Doge." She shrugged. "I avoided the Doge's Breeches because-"that's just nasty. Who'd wanna go into a Doge's breeches? She sensed that her teammate was a being bereft of humour, however, and skipped the joke. "A pair of Perrenchwomen walking into a Revidian stronghold and asking questions about attacks on Revidian ships when the two countries are on the brink of war is just daft." Penny waved dismissively. "Tried to convince Wvysen and only got silence. She's a big girl and can make her own poor decisions. I saw tracks along the shore, went to check them out, and got kidnapped." she continued. "Long story short, I broke out and did some snooping along the way. Killed a few pirates before they could kill me and stole a couple ships in my escape. Not sure how I'm not dead. Just kept going and here I am." She hobbled to the side and plucked the journal off of a stool. "Got her journal: just sitting out there to be had. It's an awful read." She arched an eyebrow. "But a very convenient piece of evidence." Penny plunked it back down and motioned with her chin beneath the stool. "There was that lantern too. I thought it could be Chune-Sept's, since I know that we were briefed on an artifact. It's probably just an old lantern or a decoy at best, but it didn't hurt to grab, just in case." She tilted her head again. "That's my side. What's yours? Long version. They're taking their sweet time ashore anyway."
Ingrid listened to the princess's speech. Ingrid had heard so many boastful speeches of war recently that it just feels unoriginal. Spinning this to really be about the rightful ruler and painting your side as righteous was a classic. They were classic for a reason, they worked. Ingrid felt herself being moved by it slightly. Amelia's speech was reminiscent of some of the books Ingrid read as a child. Ooh! I wonder if she has read the True King of the South? Or maybe the Oriflamme Epic. Such good reads. As these warm feelings washed over Ingrid, she continued to clear the debris.
Ingrid's mind was on where Penny might be. With the sky lightening with the approaching day, Ingrid should be able to make out landmarks to look for her. Whatever the case they need to at least confirm if she is alive or not. Ingrid shuttered at the thought of what pirates might do to a captured girl. Well whatever, I need to finish clearing the debris before I can go look. There are probably more people trapped in the rubble. Ingrid took a look around, she would be here for a long time if she kept holding back. Now that she knows that the princess wasn't going to try to kill them at the moment, Ingrid could finally use her telekinesis fully.
It was mere moments after Ingrid started, A loud crack rippled in the air. It sounded like canons, Ingrid turned her head to prepare for battle but instead was met with the amplified voice of Penny! Ingrid felt a great deal of relief seeing she was alive. The 2 ships were surprising, to say the least. Where could she have gotten them Ingrid pondered for but a moment before returning to debris clearing now more at ease with one less dead teammate. I'm sure Penny is going to have a hell of a story to tell us. Ingrid went back to cleaning up the rubble.
As Ingrid got deeper into the rubble of the storehouse, the injuries got more severe. The most she could do was cauterize some of the injuries. They would need medical attention from an actual doctor. Then Ingrid finally uncovered someone who had already died. Ingrid paused. She had been removing debris when she came across what looked to be one of the beams that she blew up in the previous fight. As Ingrid the shards of wood she came across the mangled corpse of a young boy, maybe 13 if Ingrid were to guess. Ingrid seemed to shut down. That momentary relief of not having to fight the princess and Penny being alive no longer mattered. The sight of the body sent her into a haze. She kept cleaning the rubble when now she overcame an injured woman trying to get into what seemed like a crushed dresser even as the rubble covered her. She screamed over something about her child. Ingrid's blood ran cold. She didn't want to see what she had done but she had to. The sight was revolting. Her stomach turned and twisted and she felt horrid.
In another show of power, Ingrid began to draw in more energy than normal. She didn't want to be here she needed space. The rubble moved quickly overhead and was stacked in the growing pile. The Injured were moved to a separate area out of the way. Ingrid broke away to take a moment in the alley to try to calm herself. It wasn't long until she was spewing the alcohol she had drunk earlier trying to make a deal with Captain Xavier Falzon. Some tears were shed over what she had done. Ingrid wasn't trying to process her thoughts, more like expel them for the moment while the mission was still going. Ingrid will be there for a few minutes.
Kaspar shut the door behind him, listening to the sounds of his companions fading into the distance, hopefully off to their own rooms for the night. Feelings had been tugging at him since Jocasta had first talked about the nature of the refuge, but they’d been shoved down and away—as emotions always were, for one who was dangerous without that control.
The lightest sting in his palms returned, and the boy glanced down at them for the first time since they’d entered the refuge. The skin was scraped, though not severely so—it was still more than he’d hurt himself in years, and he cursed his lack of control. Something about this place made him feel vulnerable and weak—emotional, in a way he couldn’t allow himself to be.
He started toward the bath and then stopped, heaving out a breath. His muscles itched and he felt like he couldn’t stand still, like he was shaking. He grabbed at his dark brown hair, red eyes squeezing shut, and tried to breath deeply into his chest. He had a mission to do, for fuck’s sake—he couldn’t be this weak. Besides, this reaction would spark curiosity and questions. Maybe not all of his companions would notice, but some were far too sharp—and might be all too willing to use something they learned. No one else could know that he wasn’t Kaspar Elstrøm von Wentoft.
At that, something in his mind grabbed back violently and he jerked away like he’d been hit.
You are Kaspar. You’ve always been Kaspar. There is no one else.
He sucked in another stuttered breath, eyes snapping open, and realized he’d fallen back against the tub, crouching on the floor with his face between his knees like a toddler. He couldn’t find it in him to care much for decorum, letting himself slide down until he sat against the floor.
He needed to sketch. Sketching was what calmed him, what could tame these emotions and put them back into the locked box where they belonged. He’d not brought supplies, but the boy reached for anything nearby that could be remade into charcoal—drawing away at the nearby materials and, perhaps, at flesh. As the utensil materialized in his hands, Kaspar had the epiphany that trying to make anything else in such a state could leave him very injured and very lacking in deniability.
He glanced up, looking for a desk or some manner of paper.
His eyes found the wall first. It was flat enough, and plain enough. Charcoal was not so picky as ink.
The boy stood, stalking swiftly to the wall with a stick of charcoal clutched in his fingers. He put it to stone, hand sketching a rough line. He wasn’t even sure what he was creating until the first large, arcing line of a shell became apparent.
The halassa took shape one line at a time on the rough wall, the boy pacing back and forth fervently. At some point he grew too hot, bunching the ends of his sleeves up the elbow, but before long the fabric around the joints became too much for him to bear, and he hastily pulled off the vest and tunic alike, ignoring the prints of charcoal against the fabrics. The pale skin of his bared back glistened with sweat as he worked at the sketch, mind honing into the fine point he craved.
The face came last. He stared at the empty space in the center of this rapidly sketched piece, and his mind kept blinking to the designs—was it meant to have eyes dribbling down its cheeks, or to be choking on its own blood? Perhaps the neck was to be turned at an awkward angle, or no face at all but a gory hole where one had been, once.
He never thought of the peaceful face of the one Yalen had killed with internal chemistry.
Finally, it was a dark and smudged handprint that formed the face as he dragged his palm and spread fingers against the stone, ignoring the pain against the scraped flesh. There was enough charcoal left on the skin to coat it as he dropped the darkened nub that had served him. The boy stepped back, breathing more easily than he had since the door had closed.
For minutes he stood stock-still, taking in the messy sketch with little thought to the manner of cleaning it. Finally, wiping sweat from his brow, he noticed the black stains on his hands. He let out one humorless bark of laughter before stumbling back towards the bath, fumbling to kick the sand-filled boots off his feet.
The water was cold now, and he shivered as he lowered himself into it. The soap was not hard to locate—he noted that the bar seemed to be fresh, but was missing an uneven chunk. He tried to push down the shame of that moment and rubbed it against the skin of his hands, watching the charcoal slowly turn the water dark. Despite the chill of the bath, he found his energy draining and tiredness overtaking him down to the very bone.
He saw his parents in the dream that found him. Not the Marquis and his wife, but Ehren and Lark Weber. They looked just as they had when he was eight, young and lively and filled with joy in parenthood. He and his father were playing some simple game, sitting cross-legged on the floor and trying to tap each other on the hands, laughing the whole while.
It was Lark’s screams that pitched above his own childlike giggles, snapping the boy’s attention behind him towards the sound. She stared at him, horror in her eyes. Scared, and confused, he turned back to his father for help and—
Red.
His hands and wrists, and the floor all around him, painted in the dark crimson of fresh-spilled blood. It was icy cold and crawled up his arms as Alaric screamed, trying to scramble back from it to no avail. It climbed up and up, over his elbow and up the flesh of his arm, across the shoulder, prickling and cold against his skin all the way. Across his throat and up under his chin, passing his lips and flooding into his wide-opened mouth and reaching for the nostrils—
Kaspar woke, coughing icy water back into the tub and nearly dry-heaving. He shivered, breathing clean air and shaking his wet hair from his eyes. The boy couldn’t tell the hour, but knew he should’ve been asleep long ago—in a bed, perhaps.
He pushed himself out of the tub, arms weak but mostly clean, and shuffled toward the bed. Practically falling into it, no care for the water droplets still clinging to him, the boy wrapped himself in every available blanket, willing away the cold of the water and his mind.
He fell back into sleep, and did not dream again.
LOCATION: Breakfast Table INTERACTIONS: AA [@], BB [@]
Kaspar would seem stoic to any who looked at him over breakfast, but it was not unusual for the boy. If there was something darker to the silence, shadowing over him, it would be difficult to notice. He was tired, but that much had to be expected after the night he and his companions had experienced.
He had more than his fill of coffee, hoping the liquid would breathe something like life back into him, and picked at most of what was brought out for the meal. He glanced at his classmates, keeping an eye on their conversations, but lacked the motivation to chip in anything—even though one of them was Ayla, the cheerful girl who seemed to be the only one he stayed around.
His plate was nearly empty when the warden began talking, but Kaspar watched the man passively and continued to chew at his Pan Con Tomate, offering up neither questions nor suggestions. Something in him disliked this man, but the student couldn’t tell if it was for specific actions and the way he spoke to Marceline, or for the knowledge Jocasta had given them about the refuge—there was certainly no love in him for a man who allowed such things to happen.
But the Warden’s visit was blessedly short-lived, and Kaspar found himself pulled along behind his classmates on a tour of the facilities. While he did not have much personal interest in the tour, it would provide distraction enough for his mind and allow him to assess the state of the refuge and those living within it.
He noted, as Zarina drew attention to the priest, that Yalen seemed even more lacking in sleep than Kaspar. With a stab of pity, he wondered what nightmares could’ve visited him in the night—and decided, a moment later, that he’d rather not know. Kaspar’s own demons were enough to deal with. But he kept an eye on the fellow student, when he could—he might be impartial to emotions, but the red-eyed boy was not heartless.
Yet as the tour went on, the group dwindled with surprising urgency—Jocasta wheeling off to some task of her own and Yalen disappearing to aid a child. Ysilla seemed to be missing entirely, and Kaspar hadn’t quite noticed her departure following breakfast. He hung behind his classmates and Marceline, listening quietly to the conversation as it turned toward the tree they were nearing.
(Also found in YummyYummy’s “Morning before the Mission”)
Kaspar’s eyes drifted to the tree, scanning the branches and admiring its shape. He was unfamiliar with its kind, as he didn’t study the plants of Torragon, but it pulled him in like so many other plants had in his time.
Keeping the voices of the group half in mind, he stepped away, head tilted as he noted the particular shapes of the leaves, the contrast between the bark and the bright orange fruits that dangled temptingly from the branches. He reached up, fingers skimming the flesh of one, and wondered passively if it would keep until he had a notebook in hand.
Willing to chance it, he grasped the orange fully and tugged, detaching it from the branch and watching the leaves bounce in response. He palmed the fruit, turning it over and admiring the bold coloring. He traced the shape of it, the minute dimpling of the skin and the way the light reflected from the waxy peel. Then, realizing the foolishness of this moment, he found himself wondering what, precisely, his plan for storing the fruit was.
Feeling a bit sheepish at the way he’d been distracted by the tree, Kaspar glanced around to see if anyone—most of all his fellow students—had noticed his captivation. His red eyes trailed down, sweeping around, and froze near the trunk. His brow furrowed, unbidden, as he stared at the couple carving into the bark, and a coldness crept up the skin of his back. The girl was unfamiliar, but there was something unsettlingly recognizable about the boy, like Kaspar should know him—like he always had.
It took him another moment of openly staring to realize just how strongly the stranger’s face resembled his own—the most noticeable difference being in the colors of their eyes, but the other details seemed to fit like a blurry memory. They were close enough, though perhaps not exact.
For a moment, he felt as though he were looking at some distant timeline in which he’d simply been disposed of, placed far away where no one would ask any questions. It burned hot in his gut, flooding his mind with everything he’d spent the past night pushing away, too surprised for the logic to understand he was not tethered, and could not be this boy. It almost seemed like he could smell the blood again, coating his stinging palms…
And the pain forced his awareness back, red eyes sliding down to the fruit still gripped in his hand. The skin was mottled and leaking, pooling on his scraped flesh and dripping to the ground as his Gift peeled at it. The juice was sticky against his skin, not warm or red but still enough in the shock of the moment. Startled, he dropped the fruit to the ground and watched it thud gently, rolling away from his feet and leaving the stone wet beneath it.
Breathing raggedly, he backed away, trying to find his classmates and their guide. The boy didn’t matter, nor did any possible path but this one. Kaspar could simply push him away, every boy he’d ever been, and forget this moment in the garden. If it truly wouldn’t leave his mind, as part of him perhaps so dearly hoped, the carving would still be fresh—and it’s not as if the boy could leave.
As his feet shuffled back across the courtyard toward Ayla, Zarina, and Marceline, Kaspar finally caught onto the body language. He realized, moments before he stumbled back into it, that he was approaching what seemed to be a heated argument. He stopped, uncertain, and stared wide-eyed as Marceline turned and began to storm away. As he processed the last of her words, trying to make sense of where things may have gone wrong, it was Ayla’s angry voice that resounded next.
Kaspar felt like a child witnessing his parents argue, standing mere steps away as they shouted and thoroughly unsure as to whether he should still be here, listening. It was Zarina’s response when he truly began to make sense of the words, bodily flinching as she mentioned the tree—though it was unlikely either of them would notice, caught up in their disagreement.
As she turned and left, Kaspar was at a loss to see the tour ended so quickly—and in such poor spirits. For the moment, it seemed Ayla was the only other student left. The red-eyed boy stood unmoving, half-raised hand still coated in juice and stinging. He blinked slowly at her, unsure whether he should announce his presence, or perhaps offer some support or comfort… Or simply turn and leave, and pretend he’d not witnessed the heated exchange.
They saddled up at the gatehouse and it was telling that the animals the small convoy mounted were camels and not horses. Lingering in some minds as they gazed out across the desolate terrain may have been the Warden's response to Ysilla's strange question from a few hours earlier. "Everyday," he had said, narrowing his flinty eyes, "I have nightmares of this place being consumed: swallowed by the shifting sands of los Páramos Sin Fin."*1 He had shaken his head and his voice had lowered. "You do not know it like I do, girl. I pray you never will." He had moved on quickly.
It was near to midday as they set off, canopies above their heads, a couple of supply animals loaded down mostly with water. A distant breeze undulated across the shallow dunes, ghostly waves of sand writhing in its embrace. When it reached the group of ten - for Marceline, two guards, and a quiet, leathery-skinned ranger named Escarra were with them - it did not provide any relief. Hot air blasted them and they were forced to shield their eyes and clasp their lips shut until Jocasta drew from the desert and forced its winds to swirl around rather than through them.
As they ventured further into the desert, the midday sun beat down on them and Escarra stopped to check his map more than once, consulting with the guards or Marceline. The latter smiled and nodding, pointing this way or that, clearly happy to be out of the Refuge or perhaps to be in his company. The ranger, for his part, said few things once he had finished teaching some who had never ridden a camel before how to do it. He perched upon his camel like a lizard on a rock: barely moving at all but seeming to see everything. Occasionally, he would call out with a word or a hand gesture to marshal them to stay close. Given his taciturn nature, understated competence, and what they had already seen of this place, there was little argument.
The swirling sands gave way to something rockier, as outcroppings rose into the burning sun. Sips from flasks were stolen at increasing opportunity and animals were spotted here and there in the distance, particularly halassa. Marceline explained with great enthusiasm that windier days like this one were idea for them, as many smaller animals preferred to shelter or spent time shoring up their burrows and nests. It was easy hunting should they seek meet and there were more roots exposed should they have favoured that.
It wasn't long before the group's first encounter, and it was a harrowing one. As a set of low cliffs and hoodoos rose up around them, a pack of five halassa started to come uncomfortably close. These were driven off twice by Escarra and once by one of the guards. Then, one made a grab for one of the baggage camels and the crack of a rifle echoed through the dry air. Spooked, the giant tortoises backed off, only to begin doubling back some thirty seconds later. There were five of them and it would not be a pleasant fight. "Be ready," Marceline warned the others, and a few of them started to gather their magic. Escarra held a hand out in a placating gesture, however, and they saw him pull out his rifle. To his lips, he brought the whistle hanging from a colourful string around his neck.
The halassa came closer and he blew a strange, deep note on it. Frozen for a second, the lead beast took a bullet perhaps an inch above one of its eyes. It grunted and snorted, flinching belatedy, and the entire pack scampered off into the desert. "Missed your shot, old man," teased one of the guards: a young guy with a large nose and a resting smirk.
Escarra shook his head and spat. "I didn't." They continued into the heart of los Páramos Sin Fin and the winds picked up further. The grizzled ranger pointed in the direction of some shallow cliffs and the convoy turned to follow his lead. "Hey Manuel!" called Marceline, "Are we gonna stop up there?"
Escarra nodded.
Taking that as a cue, the guard who'd teased him spurred his mount on and took the lead. "Exploraré por delante."*2 The senior ranger clucked his tongue and those closest to him could see his face tighten, but he said nothing.
Moments later, the lead guard and his camel went still. From around a small rise came a great angry snort. They had mere seconds to react before a Rhinodon came charging out. The foolish young guard who'd drawn its ire at least managed to save himself, but the angry herbivore continued its charge, forcing people to dodge or dive away. Even Zarina's attempts to calm it did nothing, and it skidded to a stop, turned, and began lining itself up for another charge.
It didn't follow through, however. Sniffing the air, it flicked its ears and its tail back and forth, before trotting briskly away. "The hoodoos!" shouted Escarra, "now!" and he coaxed his camel into a gallop. In the distance, what had seemed a large hazy ridge revealed itself as the leading edge of a sizable sandstorm. It gained on them with frightening speed, but they had enough of a lead that they reached the hoodoos, slipped in through a small gap, and were able to hunker down and ride out what ended up being a rather brief storm.
Interestingly, the winds had revealed ruins among the cliffs, built right into them and it was in the shade of these that they took an early afternoon meal - not deep inside, though, Escarra had warned, for there were a great many animals that liked to live in places such as that, and it was their domain now.
Some people talked as they ate, and Marceline joined them belatedy, unable to walk without assistance and the Gift in the deep sand. The two guards played a card game, and Jocasta disappeared into a darkened room for a few minutes before returning and joining her peers. Escarra, meanwhile, sat off to the side, separate from the others but not entirely inaccessible to them. He spent most of his time cleaning his rifle and checking his equipment. His eyes scanned the area twice every minute and he ate mostly without chewing.
"We ride two and a half more hours," the ranger said as they remounted their camels. "If we don't find it, it's not in this direction." The sun was now no longer directly overhead. It was towards the latter half of Oraff's hours and the sand, where it was not cloaked in shadow, positively boiled. Wrapped in desert whites, they could feel the heat rising from below. Those whose feet yet lived found it leeching up through their shoes.
They had been on the move again for scarcely more than five minutes when Jocasta and Marceline exchanged a look. The former rode towards the back of the group in a modified saddle, useless legs strapped to her animal, and the latter paced her. The two women looked to Yalen, who could yet ride normally, but all three tethered seemed to have a moment of agreement. "I can feel it," announced the youngest of the trio, moving up closer to the head of the pack. She pointed further down the canyon. "Not sure exactly how far." She glanced back towards Jocasta and the older girl took a moment to catch up. "About...uh... eight miles away," she decided, and Escarra scowled, brow furrowed in momentary thought. "Then we go," he announced. "On the return, no dinner." Suiting words to action, he coaxed some more speed out of his camel, and the group pressed forward.
The ruins faded from view and their world became the blue sky above, the greyish-gold sand below, and the steady rhythmic rocking of their mounts. To either side stretched increasingly imposing canyon walls and, occasionally, they would sight some animal scampering about. Most unnerving by far were the froabasses that roosted along the top. They had thus far managed to avoid any unpleasant encounters with the beasts, but the twenty to thirty foot dragons were known to be voracious predators. "Into Ejiran's throat we go," murmured the older of the guards as a pair of them circled on the thermals overhead. He made the Sign of the Pentad.
Yet it was not the froabasses that troubled them. Two more hours and one quick water break passed in uneasy anticipation and they drew ever nearer to the aberration that was their goal. Once again, the Tethered were first to feel something and Jocasta leaned in towards their guide. "There is a wyrm," she told Escarra quietly, eyes sliding over to the others.
He nodded, unpanicked. "How far?"
"About a mile," she warned. "It was inert before. It has awoken."
"The storm," he replied, "has stirred up the animals. It hunts."
Marceline appeared beside them. "Uhhh, there's a sand wyrm," she warned. Jocasta twisted and nodded. "We know. It isn't headed toward us yet. Go tell the others."
Escarra's eyes peered out through folds of white cloth, searching for something. He twisted in his saddle. then, after a moment, he raised his arm and pointed to an area some two to three hundred yards ahead where the cliffs tumbled down into the sand and there was ample rocky ground. The group began making their way and the progress was good. Everyone had gotten to be at last competent in riding by this point, and none questioned the instructions that had kept them alive to this juncture.
Then the sand moved.
Everybody froze for a moment, and the ranger held up a fist, demanding complete stillness. Necks craned hesitantly, waiting to see if it would come their way, but fate's dice refused to take their part today and, with a great tremor the sands of la Garganta del Ejiran*3 quivered. One of the camels in the baggage train panicked and began to gallop off in a different direction. "Go!" shouted Escarra, "Go now!"
A wave of sand built behind them and they set their camels on a gallop, the beasts' instincts doing most of the work. The wave gained but Zarina was not with them. Reaching out with words and, perhaps, the Gift, she brought the stray camel back down from its panic and hurried to catch up with the others. One by one, they reached the safety of the rocks, some with perhaps only a couple tens of yards to spare. The Sand Wyrm barely slowed at the lost opportunity, plowing forward in the shallow sand, and carving a great furrow behind it. It was lost upon nobody that the aberration was less than a mile distant and the enormous sand dragon was headed straight for it.
"Don Escarra!" shouted the younger guard, "We have to stop it!"
"If it takes in the aberración," added the other, "Who knows what-"
"Shut up!" the ranger snapped, and it was jarring to hear him speak that way, so calm and steady had he been up to now. He gave the signal for complete quiet. His eyes were looking up.
Already, six or seven froabasses were in the sky, and more were joining them every moment, clacking and circling overhead. As the group watched, a pod of hibernating Sand Cows, their burrow revealed by the wyrm's path, began to stir. One of the froabases came streaking in like a comet and plowed into the sand not ten yards from the sheltering convoy. A great cloud was kicked up in the struggle and there were flashes of the dragon thrashing its prey about.
Then, came the chittering screech of a dozen more of the beasts and they hit the sand like meteors, roaring, snapping, and feeding in a blood-crazed frenzy.
It was too much for the camels. In the immediate presence of a nearby predator, they panicked and bolted, an instinct to hug the cliff walls (where the froabasses could not swoop down on them) and run taking over. Only Escarra and Zarina managed to control theirs. Everyone else was exposed, and the results were grisly. First it was the older guard, ripped from his mount, struggling and screaming, and then the younger. He cried out for his mother and was torn in two as a second froabas came. The camels fared better, but not by much. One from the baggage train and one of the guards' met bloody ends, and it was chaos: all chaos. People attacked with what they could of the Gift. A couple were thrown by their mounts. Kaspar's was snatched out from under him and the Helbahnishman avoided death by perhaps inches, slamming it with a barrier and hurling himself into the sand.
All around, the dragons flapped and swarmed. There must've been more than two dozen. Magic speared more than one from the sky, or hammered them on the ground, but the beasts were durable, quick, and had some mana of their own, making many of the tactics that the students had employed the previous evening against the mad halassa unusable.
Zarina hit on something else, though. As Escarra was controlling his camel, galloping about in a spiral pattern meant to distract the froabasses and shooting at them, one took notice and hurtled directly at him. Then, it pulled back. The closest half-dozen of the beasts did the same, tearing meat away from dead sand cows, camels, humans, and their own kin, satisfied with their meals. For a moment, it looked like the Virangishwoman had saved them.
Then, the rest of the flock sensed weakness. Plunging down from every direction they came: nearly twenty of the beasts. Escarra kept firing, praying loudly in an unknown language as he went, but even his pinpoint accuracy did little. It seemed time for the students to make peace with their gods.
The froabases went still: frozen unnaturally in place. Sound deadened and one could not even hear his own breath. The very sky itself seemed to grow darker for a moment. Then, they saw it: Jocasta. The tethered girl rose into the air, hair writhing around her like golden snakes. Energy flooded into her small body like water spiraling down a drain. Escarra collapsed into the sand, wretching. Marceline staggered and fell. The pressure was immense! So much energy! It built in people's heads. It hammered their stomachs and organs: ungodly, unnatural!
Their schoolmate trembled, drawing still more. Beads of sweat stained her skin and clothes. Her eyes grew bloodshot. Then, the energy changed. It was... more like what they had felt in the Paradigm's tower: a strange, forbidden magic. They blinked, or perhaps they did not, and the froabases were gone: gone as if they had never even been there.
A cool breeze swept the sands and whistled along the cliffs. Jocasta dropped to the ground, limp, with a light a thud. The sun burned in the sky with all of its usual vigour.
Marceline struggled to her knees, hurrying over with the assistance of the Gift. Jocasta lay partially face down, crumpled in something like the fetal position, but she was breathing. Croucching in the lengthening shadows, the others turned her over. "I tried to get the wyrm," she rasped, "but I couldn't. The froabasses are... nine miles from here, with their food. They won't be bothering us anymore." She blinked a couple of times, clearly woozy, and tried to sit up, but she needed help to do it. With a quick, brusque thanks, she brushed the hands away. "We need to stop the wyrm. It's headed for the aberration. If it gets there..." She paused. A dark look had crossed Marceline's face. Kneeling in the sand, she knit and unknit her fingers and shook her head tightly. "I cannot sense the aberration anymore," she squeaked, looking to Yalen for confirmation. "I fear we are too late."
1) The Endless Wastes
2) I'll scout ahead.
3) Eshiran's Throat
The group has absolutely been through the ringer. They have faced down multiple dangerous beasts, a sandstorm, and the extreme deprivation of a desert voyage of some five hours. On that note, the hours of Oraff have come to an end and the hours of Eshiran are beginning. There are four hours remaining until dark.
The situation currently stands as follows:
1) The two guards are now dead. There are eight people remaining and six camels, but one of them is the supply camel that survived. Water is not an immediate problem, but the group cannot afford to waste. A camel can support up to two riders but it will be slower unless boosted with the Gift.
2) The sand wyrm has consumed the aberration and it will go mad from this. It does not currently seem interested in the group, though it is only a matter of time before it finds its way to the Refuge. The group is excused from classes for up to a week in order to deal with the situation.
3) The warden is waiting back at the refuge for their debriefing. Amanda is ready for a visit this evening. She's had all day to think and has some ideas.
Action Opportunities:
1) Feel free to have your character describe any individual action they took during any of the fights or escapes. You have quite a bit of leeway here.
2) There was ample opportunity for social interaction with each other or the NPCs during the ride and lunch. Play this out, if you'd like.
3) Reactions to the wyrm, the ruins, the froabasses, or the reveal of Jocasta's true power are all very welcome.
4) Feel free to play out the journey back, right up to sighting the Refuge. Aside from any interactions you might have planned or want to collaborate on, it will be hurried, uneventful, and anxious. You will arrive just as dusk is fading to night and more of those accursed froabases are circling.
Carmillia watched as the the force of the explosion launch the female agent several meters away. The loud thud that came from her smashing into the wall was extremely satisfying. If not for the current situation and the watching eyes, Carmillia would have loved to physically continue the beatdown on her unconscious body and more. Count yourself lucky that's all you had to deal with.
"Much appreciated, young lady. I think that solved that annoying little problem, hmm?"
"Yes, you have," responded Carmillia with an approving nod.
With their adversary down, Carmillia and the arcane mage watched as Eun-ji took on the remaining agent. Though she kept it from showing, Carmillia was reeling inwardly from the aftereffects of overdrawing. At the moment, she wasn't capable of launching any internal chemical magic strong enough to impact the fight. Likewise, the arcane mage refrained from interfering as Eun-ji and the agent were locked in close combat. If she intervened, Eun-ji could get in the crossfire. That said, it didn't seem like any help was necessary as they watched Eun-ji slowly but surely overwhelming her opponent.
With her awareness peaking from both the adrenaline and her own mental focus, Carmillia did not miss the thud coming from the trapdoor. She noticed Leon, or Leons, the moment they appeared from below. The Lyre!
She couldn't help but smile at the sight of the Leons waltzing about with the Lyre, seemingly oblivious to the gravity of the situation at hand. It was entirely a Leon thing to do. He truly was a wild card. With the exception of herself, Leon was the next ideal member of their team to have possession of the Lyre. Her foresight with Dorothea had been a miss but it looked like it had been accurate with the performer.
She reran over her schemes in her head, making plans on how to sway Leon onto her side and how to get him to agree to keeping the Lyre for themselves. Even when Zarra made his reappearance and the subsequent howls of pain from the agent, she paid them little notice. Her attention was on the Lyre. She watched as the Leons exited the cargo hold and continued down the corridor.
Even before the arcane mage had yelled "After him!", Carmillia was already on the move. She sidestepped and strode passed the gawking male arcane mage, Manfred and the now unconscious Dorothea. As she approached the Leons, she hesitated briefly. She had no idea if the magic he was employing was some sort of trap based spell that triggered upon contact.
Desmond listened to the princess as she spoke, and he was honestly dumbfounded. At this point, Desmond had about enough of this whole situation. He is found in the middle of a political struggle, a king trying to secure his thrown through any means, a princess trying to free herself and her people from his grasp. This little shadow game between a nation, the school, and the church, honestly Desmond about had enough. He was not paid enough…'Wait, I'm not even being paid!! I was promised not a damn thing for all of this. No money, no promise of education, hell why would I care what that old man could show me? What can he do for me?
Desmond began to rub the back of his head as he looked down, he seemed like he was beyond irritated, he has had the most annoying night humanly possible. He had to deal with a very annoying situation from the very beginning, a political game that he had no clue about because he had zero clue about any of the political push and pull that was occurring. He is in a pirate's paradise with every corner seeming to have someone either willing to gut you or a pirate. And for some reason, Desmond is always being set up with missions that have no guaranteed reward, and right now he has to either choose between letting the princess go off and cut his own losses or decide to fight to try and ensure her survival. Yet the most annoying thing of this all is that Desmond decided to accept another mission without any guarantee of a reward. As he looked around and listened to the Princess talk he began to watch as many different people seem to almost appear from the crowd that was appearing answering the call she made to them.
As the princess continued she asked for their assistance, with the promise of rewards if they are victorious. There would be quite a bit of reward, some to go to their war and whatever is left is to be given to them. Desmond looked away as he clicked his tongue and almost seemed upset, someone finally promised him something, but now it is to face off against what would be mostly mages, pirates, and mercenaries. He ground his teeth as now they were being compensated, yet they were going to be tasked on a suicide mission. They had no ship, and whatever they could scrounge up would probably be second-rate at best. Yet it seemed like another one of Desmond's excuses were dashed, as a pirate appeared who says they were loyal to Amelea and offered his ship and crew to her war.
Desmond thought for a moment as when he was about to talk about their missing teammate, almost like clockwork he heard cannon fire. He whipped around and looked out to see two ships, one pulling the other as he heard the voice of a very familiar person, "Penny". Desmond felt almost relieved, almost. Desmond stood there and waved nonchalantly to her as it seemed Trypano was done with the conversation as she left in a hurry. Desmond sighed as he realized this might be a fight they need to take. Desmond took a breath in as he was about to say something, that was until he felt a draw of energy that made him almost sick. His head turned to Ingrid as he saw the flying rubble and then her run into an alley, as that was when he knew she found something she shouldn't have. She found the death she caused. He wished if she left it alone, yet she was more than determined to do it, she had a decent heart to her, so having such things happen can easily break someone. Injuring their very being as they now had to deal with the idea of innocent death. Desmond looked to the others as he says, "We'll need to talk with the rest of our crew, so please give me a moment". As once he said that he made his way to Ingrid, he needed to make sure she was okay, having someone going crazy now would be too much for them to handle now.
As he made his way to the alley he saw Ingrid puking up what seemed to mostly be liquids. She must have had been mostly alcohol because of how late they were called to the Forked Tower for the Bastard Magician's game to take these missions. Desmond looked to her and saw she was mostly naked, with only small bits of cloth covering the most important bits, she must have not thought of it through the intensity of the combat and the things following after. Desmond moved over to where she is and took off his coat and tossed it over her as she was hunched over. He leaned against the wall as he took his hat off as well and tossed it onto her head while he took out his water skin and took a swig from it before holding it out to her and saying, "I know it hurts. But if we don't do what we have to now, then we will never be able to atone". Desmond did not look to her with sympathy, he looked as if he had a neutral face, one that seemed to almost never be held on his face, it had no smirk, no grin, but it was also no mask it just seemed like he was getting tired himself and took it off.
Part: Prior to Meeting Point |Collab: Kaspar @Wolfieh
Ayla sighs as she makes her way out of the aqueduct. Giving herself a shake-down, a good ol’ wiggle as she closes her eyes and thinks to herself. “Box breathing, Ayla”. She imagines the shape of a box, and starts to draw it with her mind. As she does one side, she breathes in for 4 seconds then as she draws the other, she exhales for 4 seconds, with the 3rd side repeating as with the first side, then exhaling as the box completes, repeating itself. As she composes herself, she looks up to notice Kaspar still standing there, the poor boy being quieter than normal this morning as he doesn’t have his graphene to hand. “Imagined you would have been drawing the naranja tree.”, smiling warmly towards him, “It represents the beating heart of this refuge”.
Kaspar startles, eyes flickering to Ayla before glancing over his shoulder at the tree in question. The reminder stings like the juice on the abrasion, and he shakes his head to clear it. “I… You’re probably right. It’s… beautiful,” he stammered quietly, glancing down to the floor. He was still shaken, but noticed that Ayla seemed to be, too, and tried to push his own distress aside for his friend. “ Are you alright, Ayla?” he asked, voice soft as crimson eyes returned to her face, tracing it for signs of the upset that had been there a moment ago.
Ayla simply smiles warmly towards him, moving up along the back of Kaspar and wrapping her arms around him, leaning into his shoulder as if it was a pillow. “Things were only temporarily heated, they will recover. You do seem less like yourself than normal, talk to me.” She peers up towards Kaspar with those sapphire blue eyes of hers, “... or, if you would not like to talk, we can find a nice place to sit for a while.” She ponders upon the different possibilities, though her thoughts dwell on somewhere quieter. “Top of the refuge might give us a good view”.
He jumped at the contact, stiffening for a moment before hesitantly curling his arms around the smaller girl. As his palms pressed into her back, the nightmare from the night before surged up his throat and he bit back a gasp, pulling his hands away. “I…” He swallowed hard, mind grasping for some sort of reasoning. I can’t? I… won’t? The two words jumbled in his head, until finally the boy sighed, eyes drifting closed as he settled for, “I think a good view might be nice. For both of us”
Ayla tugs upon Kaspar’s hand as she tries to lead him towards the battlements, needing to ask a few questions of the friendly staff to help guide them into the right direction and end up reaching their goal as they look out towards the sands, the same position the tethered children were eagerly looking at them from when they first arrived at the Refuge. Other than the passes of the sentry guard, they were up here alone. “Never thought to be seeing Torragon, origem - home, again so soon”, her eyes looking out along the stretches of desert. She was raised in Varrashasta, a vastly different sight as she gazed upon the seas of water, but for unknown reasons, gazing upon the seas of sand gave her some comfort. “Do they have deserts where you are from? First time seeing one myself”.
Kaspar’s crimson eyes scanned the expanse of sand as he settled on the stone, breathing easier so far away from others. “Helbahn is all forests and rivers. I’ve never seen so much sand in one place, or felt so much heat without fire,” he mused quietly, turning to glance at the girl beside him. Kerremand had not had deserts either, so he was fortunate to not need to lie about his homeland. “I think I prefer the cold, in truth. Though Ersand’Enise is not so bad, either.”
She simply nods as she looks out to the expanse, “Often stay in the shade, red doesn’t suit my complexion. Unable to wear it well unlike others around here”. She gives a cheeky smile towards Kaspar, putting emphasis on who she was addressing with that statement. “Did you choose to join the Academy? Many appear to have counted their blessings when they were admitted”.
He blushed lightly at Ayla’s compliment on his wardrobe, meeting her cheeky grin with a small one of his own. “It goes well with my eyes, or so I’ve heard,” he muttered, hand rubbing at the back of his neck. He waited a moment, thinking about her question before offering any response. “I am honored to have been accepted to Ersand’Enise. It was, in part, a desire of mine—I would need to study the Gift somewhere, and this is the best academy available. But my parents sought this, too, for me. Not so many places teach Binding, and my… aptitudes make me poorly suited for most other schools of magic. For my learning, and my control, the options were limited.” Kaspar turned to his friend, tilting his head. “And what of you? Did you choose this?”
Ayla tilts her head as she gives Kaspar a sarcastic grin, “Apparently the academy was too dangerous for my brother to attend, where did my parents get that idea from?”. After the pause as she awaits Kaspar’s reaction, the current situation hangs over them very prominently as she gives a laugh. “My brother Jorge was chosen to attend. He has been groomed as the heir of House Arslan since birth. Every waking moment is spent on his, our, success. In comparison, the disposable child, no one has expected greatness, is pampered like the family's pet cat and allowed to follow any desires”, she stretches out towards the sun in a way Kaspar may associate with a feline familiar, “Not going to stop now, my path will be my own”. She moves her hand over Kaspar’s, squeezing upon it, “Now make your path your own as well. Be who you want to be, not what others tell you to be. That is the only choice we have in this life”.
He listened quietly to her explanation, smiling in amusement at the way her stretching evoked imagery of the comparison she had just made. As an only child, Kaspar knew that no duties could be pushed off on another. What he lacked now in the skill to inherit the Elstrøm name and estate, he would need to work all that harder to make up for when his schooling was finished. Then her hand covered his own, squeezing it as if to emphasise her point, and he felt something choking up in his chest. If only it were so easy. I don’t know who I would choose to be, if someone gave me the chance, he thought, something sad and bitter coiling over his heart. He shut his eyes, inhaling sharply through his nose to push down the feelings, focusing on his job and the warmth of Ayla’s hand against his.
She simply continues to squeeze upon that hand, allowing him to share what he wants to, “Then that is where you start. Without any barriers, imagine what an ideal day in your life would look like. Once you have that image in your mind, come and see me again. Then we will take a look together at how we can make that possible.” She gives him a wink as she pats upon the hand, gesturing to the gathering people below them. “We should look at joining them soon”.
Part: Rest at the Ruins |Collab: Yalen @pantothenic
Ayla finds herself seated next to Yalen. It has been a while and they still haven’t spoken much together unlike the others in their class. She summarises that must be part of his personality, keeping his nose within his books and scriptures, but now far away from these distractions uses the opportunity to speak. “Where did you disappear to with Rita?”, she smiles warmly as she looks over towards him.
Yalen smiled fondly at the mention of his new friend. ”Nowhere in particular. I got dragged into a little playdate at the pool. Did I miss something important?“
She pauses for a moment, as there were a few revelations after his departure, but continues with the small talk. “Playdate? Guess you’re what they call a little sister type.”, she grins widely, unable to resist teasing the boy as she moves to grab upon his hand, “You needed a good distraction, you have been very preoccupied lately. First with the Halassa, and then with Breakfast…”.
”You and your friends really remind me of my big sister. You love to tease people.“ Yalen made a face at her. ”Ha ha, not that I mind. Forgive my odd behavior today. I just had a bad dream. I’m fine now.“ Though his face betrayed nothing, his grip around Ayla’s hand was a bit tighter.
“Good, we need to be al máximo today.”, she looks down towards the hand, feeling it squeeze tighter upon her own in return. “Tell me more about your big sister, what is she like?”.
Yalen looked up at the dark ceiling, suddenly lost in thought. ”Colette? Colette is… so many things. Smart. Confident. Strong as an ox too. When I was brought to the orphanage she was the oldest one there. I could spend all day talking about her, but right now I can tell you that she has recently become a Sister of the Unconquered Sun.“
Ayla does consider things for a moment as she starts to slowly approach what she was wanting to discuss. “How were you treated at the orphanage, in comparison to the Refuge? We have seen what life is like in there”, and heard the tales too… she thought, alluding to the difficult discussions Jocasta has expressed prior to their arrival. “You would have an unique perspective as both an Orphan and as a Tethered”.
”Well, it’s hard to say how it compares to life in the Refuge. I haven’t seen anything to confirm Jocasta’s utter hatred of the place. The children I played with seemed happy enough. Although, I am very concerned about the lack of freedom here. It seems like none of these kids realize there’s an entire world outside these walls.“ Yalen paused for a few moments. ”The monastery I was raised in was more than a place of worship. It was my home. I’ve been there since I was an infant. I suppose my parents suspected I would have the disease and left me there, and they couldn’t have chosen a better place to do so. The monks raised us like their own children. We wanted for little. Some of my brothers and sisters were more willing to embrace the Creator than others, but the order is not a cult. We were free to believe whatever we chose to.“
Ayla smiles a moment as she imagines what life at the monastery might be like, though recounting her knowledge from back home, “In Varrahasta, the orphans used to play a lot by the docks. Many merchants would pay a shiny Corona for a pair of helping hands, if they were lucky, a coin from Revidia. It kept them from causing too much mischief, often growing up to be traders or dockworkers themselves. The girls often took care of the domestic duties and running of the place, dreaming of being married off to a rich merchant and seeing the world.”, she slowly starts to approach closer to what she wanted to discuss, “We might be able to help those at the Refuge, if they were willing”.
Yalen looked a bit more focused on the conversation now. ”Willing? Are we talking about something other than dealing with the aberration?“
She nods towards him, “There is a reason we were chosen. Jocasta, myself, and you… the Aberration isn’t our mission… it is more the pretext.”. Her fingers interlock with his own, “We can make a real difference in their lives, but I am getting ahead of myself. Think of our conversation as I repeat what Marci said in your absence.”, she looks towards him, watching to see if he is starting to follow her train of thoughts.
”Go on, I’m listening.“
“Marci told us that the Refuge is lacking something important, something those orphanages have. A future, a life, a purpose.”, starts to carefully craft the scene with her words, “They have pool parties, food, drink, even…”, she feels her cheeks blush red at the last one, but presses on, “... but nothing to get them up for in the morning. The Refuge is not an Orphanage, it is Hospicio - Hospice. A place for the infirm and dying.” She found it so easy to jump ahead, struggling to hold back her ideas, now reeling herself back to Marci’s statements, “There is something else about the Refuge, the real reason we were invited and not Duke Frannemàs, and most likely unknown to Torragon, they are training the Tethered here as living weapons. Weapons which can end a life from 10 miles away without a trace. Assassins.” Upon the last word, she looks gravely towards Yalen.
The young priest jumped to his feet when he heard the word ‘assassin’.
”Assa…!“ Yalen’s mouth clamped shut as he looked around the immediate area. Their travel companions weren’t especially close by, but might pick up on the conversation if the two of them spoke too loudly.
”Assassins?“ Yalen’s tone took on a whisper now. He sat back down and regained his composure. ”I wouldn’t even believe such a thing if it weren’t coming from you. So this is what Marceline told you? What of Jocasta?“
Ayla tugs hard upon Yalen’s hand, causing him to sit back down beside her, leaning in close towards him as she puts a finger upon his lips with a distinct Shh. She looked around towards the others as he attracted attention, speaking louder, “ Ñoño ! Sit down”. As the sands settle, she returns to talking to him quieter, this time subtly using the gift to cover their conversation, “That is what Marci told us… as for Jo, don’t know … it is marked by the Clovers on the Naranja tree. Those are the ones recruited.”. She pauses to allow the information to be digested before continuing, “She agrees to do it because there is nothing else, no purpose”.
”She? Marceline? If she’s involved then she put herself in a lot of danger by revealing her secrets. Is she the one asking you for help or…“ Yalen began to trail off.
Ayla shakes her head, “Not directly, maybe indirectly, maybe confessional. She wasn’t able to finish…”, she tilts her head towards the direction of Zarina, who now seems to be deep in conversation with Marci, “Though it appears they have made up”. She moves her eyes forward, “Been thinking to myself, what can a daughter of a Duke of Torragon do?”, she gives a sly smile before turning to face Yalen, “Petition King Sancho on their behalf. He would be interested to find out what happens here, and imagine if those skills could be put to other purposes…”. She beams brightly as she goes into her sales pitch, “Let's turn the Hospice into an Orphanage, the Adopted Children of Torragon. Instead of being treated as fragile burdens, make them treasured resources. Allow them opportunities to lead fulfilling lives. Like an orphanage big sister, the older ones can run the Refuge, no need for Wardens.” She gazes intently towards Yalen as she chews on her bottom-lip. The boy is the first to hear about this plan, and as a Tethered himself, she wonders about his thoughts upon the matter. “It won’t be perfect, but it will be better. Move them closer to other people like a big city, allow them to experience real life they are being deprived of”.
True to his nature, Yalen was a patient listener. As Ayla laid out her plans for him he quietly nodded his head and looked at her intently without interruption. He began to speak again once Ayla stopped to take a breath.
”Your idea is ambitious to say the least, but I do like it. I’m worried you might be overlooking something though. If we tethered make for such potent weapons as you say, don’t you think the refuges were designed the way they are on purpose? We may not be looking at a neglected bureaucracy, but something far more sinister. If you rock the boat too much you may face consequences from powerful people.“
Ayla had considered this, returning to an earlier point. “Assuming you are correct. Wouldn’t they want this knowledge hidden from others? The secret weapons of Torragon on display to the world by inviting us here.”, she shakes her head, “Duke Frannemàsis not too far from here, his men could resolve this issue upon request without the presence of forasteiros.” She sighed as she paused for a moment, carefully considering his words. “King Sancho is pragmatic. If we petition him, we won’t be the ones held responsible. Cannot say much for senhor pervertido”.
“Hmmm… well, I suppose you know better than I do when it comes to the political side of things. You never told me you were a duke’s daughter. You’ve given me a lot to consider, but I do need to know, what is it you’re asking of me?” Yalen retracted his hand and placed both of him in his lap.
Ayla watches as the hand is removed away from her, “Does that... bother you, Yalen?”, her blue eyes seem to shine with surprise as she notices a formality creep into his voice. “Wanted your opinion as a friend. Your own insights to this situation.” Her eyes watch upon the hands placed upon his lap, as if looking for movement.
Yalen seemed to pick up on Ayla’s uneasiness, because he gave her another reassuring smile. “Bother me? No no no. I’m just feeling a bit overwhelmed. You all have such powerful magic and are important people to boot. Me, I’m just a country boy from a Miattan border town. It makes me wonder why Hugo needed my services at all.” He tapped his chin pensively. ”As for what I think, well, I share your point of view. I just don’t want you to get in over your head. No matter what happens, I’ll support you.“
Yalen looked around yet again to gauge the perception of those around them. Everyone was ignoring them thanks to Ayla’s sound dampening. His eyes were especially drawn to Marceline and Jocasta.
”If Marceline is training to be one of these so-called assassins, then did Jocasta…“ When he realized what he was saying, Yalen’s face turned a bit pale. His eyes went back to Ayla as he waited for her to say something.
Ayla simply smiles brightly towards Yalen, moving her hand back upon his as it rests upon his lap, she leans in to whisper, even with the sound proofing. “Do you like Jo, Yalen? You have been bringing her name up a lot.”, a somewhat mischievous sparkle in her eyes as she grins like a Cheshire cat. “She is pretty. You have been looking towards her quite a bit this morning too”.
Yalen was completely caught off guard and leaned back slightly. His face was caught up between surprise and embarrassment. ”H-hey! Where is this coming from? I thought you and Zarina were quite different, but I guess I was wrong!“ The red faced monk turned his head away and exhaled. ”I… w-well, I’m certainly interested in her, but I think your suspicions are a bit misplaced. She just… I had some dreams last night and they weren't the good kind. I saw her in them, and because of that I had a hard time being around her this morning. Like I said, I’m over it.“
Ayla softens her smile as she removes her hand away from him, “If you change your mind, there could be a good word put in on your behalf.” She finishes her playful tease as she returns more seriously to the discussion. “Let’s hope they were merely bad dreams, there are desafios - challenges ahead.”
Part: Journey back to Refuge |Collab: Zarina @YummyYummy
Ayla leans over Jocasta, kneeling beside her as she is giving the poor girl a hug as she pulls her close as she is slowly unwrapped from that fetal position. It seems that Jo became serious for her friends, offering everything she had to save the party from the froabasses. She gently guides her into the upwards position as she starts to speak, “I tried to get the wyrm," she rasped, “but I couldn't. The Froabasses are... nine miles from here, with their food. They won't be bothering us anymore.” Ayla continues to simply hold upon Jo, feeling the body trembling within her arms, the skin clammy. “We need to get her back to the Refuge, Marci, can she ride with you?”, she appears around at the carnage left over from the attack, it seems they would need to be doubling up anyway. “Zaz! We need your help. Need to get Jo onto the camel”, she looks around as she shouts out, trying to locate the tall Virangish girl to support her.
Zarina had just dodged death by horrible disembowelment from the now vanished flock of carnivorous beasts, and it took her a little bit to fully process everything. When he name was called, she shook her head and sheathed both her blades. The camels were still behind her, as she had stepped forward to guard them, especially the supply wagon, as well as the more defenceless ones of the group, ”Hmmm? Yeah, sure.” she was drenched in sweat, hair greased up with dust accumulated on it and the elastic that kept it tied ripped and gone. She was a mess, but her mind stayed sharp. Zarina gestures for Ayla to take a step back so she could use her size to quickly hoist the living super-weapon onto the mount and ensure she was properly fastened via the riding equipment made for Tethered while also tying the supply camel to Escarra’s for added safety. A couple of verifications later and she’d give the animal a couple of taps on the rear, ”Stay behind her, Marci. Make sure she doesn’t wobble too much.” she then sighs and peers over at Ayla, ”Let’s go.”
“‘m fine,” Jocasta insisted, slurring her words slightly. “Just overdrew. Need…” She swayed dangerously, only for Marci to grab her. “Rest,” the older Tethered finished. “I’m sorry.”
In turn, the little lion was pushed up the same way Jocasta was onto Zarina’s camel. The Virangish pseudo-creature whisperer kept on land for now, mostly so she could keep better tabs on both the convoy and the supply camel tied to the mounted camel, ”You’re not hurt, Ayla? You’ve got …” she points at her own left brow, indicating that there was a bloodstain over Ayla’s eye.
Ayla wipes her brow with her sleeve as she looks around, they have some reprieve from the attack, though the situation has certainly escalated. She was hoping to try to round up some of the Tethered to help with the Sandwyrm, but now there would be no choice, as their home will be assaulted by the creature. “We were too late to stop them, we need to head back and warn the others and prepare to defend the Refuge…”. She looks out towards the sands, she had hoped to replicate their earlier success with the Thumper, stopping the aberration in its tracks. She looks down to see Zaz continuing to look at her with concern, “We should be okay. Made sure to rest on the journey here”.
Holding onto the straps by the camel’s cheek, Zarina was essentially guiding the last member of the chain they formed. The sand had gotten colder, and she could always hop on if it got too hot or tiresome, ”Good.” she simply answered, eyes darting between the front and somewhat behind her. The camels had since calmed down and were going at a constant but slow pace, ”I’m going to need you sharp. There isn’t just the Wyrm to think of.” she lowered her voice, words semi-articulated and the camel’s breathing made it somewhat difficult to hear her. Good thing Ayla was a sound mage.
Her attention was on Jocasta after another round of shifting eyes. What she had just displayed and what had been revealed not all that long ago– it all made Zarina very anxious. An anxiety that was surprisingly efficient at keeping her awake and aware, ”What do you think of her? Full honesty.” she nudges her chin in the direction of the Tethered pair, ”She’s by no means just some fragile little flower. I don’t even think my mother could match what we just saw.”
Ayla pondered the question for a moment before answering. “Jo is my friend. We are probably her only friends. She needs us more than it looks like, she is very lonely.” She reflects on when they first faced the Halassa, how she noticed the performance she displayed before them. “She has been holding back because she is scared, scared because of those who used her in the past. Imagine being so powerful that everyone around either fears you, or wants to use you.” She tilts her head towards Zaz, a sly smirk as she teases her playfully. “We guess that you have to get used to being called Zamira now?”
Zarina did not succumb to humour. Her cold and cautious gaze remained, ”I don’t know if she is scared.” her eyes narrow a little more, ”Keep quiet about it, but she did confess to being from that very refuge-” halfway through this confession she looks up toward Ayla with her gait slowing just a little more as to make the camels lag behind just a little, not enough to get any attention though, ”Like Marci. Like Amanda. She was like them.” lips pursed, she looked at her friend expectantly, to see if she was piecing together what Zarina was presenting.
Ayla nods, understanding, “She was another of the Clovers. They trained her well.” simply looks a little saddened, “Been discussing how to resolve the situation at the Refuge. This programme is not sanctioned by Torragon, why do you think the school was asked to get involved? Imagine the potential if it was, these children will be treated like national treasures. They can have a real purpose, a real existence, than being hidden in the dark remote regions like this.” She simply watches Jocasta and Marceline from their position, “Going to petition the King on their behalf. A chance for experiencing real life.”
As Ayla went on with her plan, Zarina returned her attention to what was forward. She was paying attention, but the cub’s words of hope did little to actually uplift Zarina’s mood, ”How do you keep an attitude like that when we just saw two people and a few camels get eaten alive in front of us?” partially a reflection, partially an awkward attempt at humour, Zarina ended up sighing, ”It’s all nice and good, to have such ambitions and a big heart, Ayla. But let’s ground ourselves for just a moment. Està posible?” she pauses to adjust a strap on the camel’s saddle before continuing, ”I want you to remember what we discovered the other night. And then factor in this morning and the little lies our Tethered friend has been telling us. Good reasons or bad, doesn’t matter when you think about it.”
She sighs as she looks towards Zarina, a look reminiscent of earlier, “How can we expect her to believe in us, when we don’t believe in her?”. The tone is critical, but softens, going quiet as she considers the earlier spoken words, “Why dwell on what cannot be changed, when we have the power to change the future?”. Looks towards the Caravan as they begin to set off, “How often did you speak to those here before yesterday? Through our shared experiences, we are forging bonds of friendship, and it is these bonds which will get us through our trial ahead of us”.
”Ayla.” Zarina closes her eyes, leaves her mouth agape to take in a few deep breaths, and then continues, ”Use your brain, not your heart. At some point it becomes condescending.” the restraint was something to behold, though she did exert herself quite a bit at this point, ”I’ll explain, since I didn’t make it clear enough.” they were deep in the desert already, and Zarina was still walking by the camel, clearly unperturbed by her decision, ”The one that died before we arrived. You know, what we overheard at the morgue. Sudden heart attack from a ranger. We hadn’t even met the group they had mentioned and one just dropped dead. Do you recall Marci’s detailing of how good Tethered are at doing that? Killing from afar?” she nudges at the camel’s saddle, encouraging it to pick up the pace a little as they were lagging a little too much, ”Then, another ranger disappears in the night. And then I find out Jo’s got history with the place.”
Zarina let the information sink in a little longer, but she continues before giving a chance to comment, ”Now, we see what she can do. If someone this powerful is actually on a warpath, Ayla, what the fuck do we do? Because you can kiss your bleeding heart initiative goodbye if we’ve got a vengeful Jocasta that won’t take no for an answer.”
Ayla rubs upon her temples as she tries to process the information.“So during the Halassa attacking us, she decided ‘Oh, lets kill a random person over there’ ?”, she tilts her head as she looks towards Zarina, “You always had an active imagination, wouldn’t it make more sense for Marci or another Clover to do it. Either way, last night, Jo decided to wheel herself to the rangers room, remove a body, no blood anywhere, went down to the stables body and belongings in toe, packed up the horse with belongings, then made them all disappear, then snuggled up into bed when we were touring the Refuge?”. She simply groans as she rubs her temples more, growing frustrated, looking down exasperated towards Zarina. She pauses for a moment, holding her hands up, “Let’s assume you are right, however improbable… … … how are you going to stop her?”, there is an emphasis on the you in the statement, one which was not expected to be answered. “Perhaps you won’t be as dismissive of appealing to her bleeding heart”.
”Random?” she raises a brow, ”She’s from there. If she did kill the ranger, it wouldn’t be random. That’s the point. Why NOW do they start dying? People supposedly used to harsh conditions.” she shakes her head, ”What sounds more crazy? The meticulous crime you’ve just described, or one person warping dozens of Froabasses in one instant?” she stares at Ayla, deadpan, ”Actually, if one could do that to a bunch of massive creatures, wouldn’t doing it to one man and a horse be easy? You’re acting like I’m just guessing, but this actually pieces conveniently together.” and then a big exhale. She slows herself down to check on the rear camel briefly, checking for any potential wounds and the such before returning to her friend, ”There’s very little I can do if she’s resigned to exacting any sort of action. And I’ve sort of promised to get Marci outta the shithole,” she raises her free hand near her mouth and bites down on her now dirt-covered nail, ”But if things get dangerous with her, you might be the one we need to quell the flames. As frustrating as you may be now, I think you get it right sooooometimes. Mostly. A lot.”
Ayla cannot help but smile as Zarina conceded her position, “We would be best placed if you are wrong, so don’t rush in being right in this matter.” Zarina clicks her tongue, ”I’m talking to your corny butt, aren’t I? As tame as I can possibly be. But you get it now, don’t you? Someone this strong stuck with first years on a convenient mission. You don’t need an imagination to figure this out.” Ayla points out the obvious in return, “Hugo chose us for a reason. We are in Torragon after all.”, grinning as she gestures towards herself. “Our real mission is to make things right, to correct the wrongs in this world. If Jo was on a warpath as you said, she would not need deception, the Refuge would be gone before the Wyrm got to it. We got to believe in our friend, and a friend also knows how to steer you onto the right path.”
”Or something’s holding her back. Thing is, we don’t know. I’d like to think you’re right, Ayla.” she continues to nibble her thumb’s nail, ”I really would. But the truth is, we’ve only known her for a day. I can assure you, trust wouldn’t come that easy where I’m from, and I’m definitely not ready to let my guard down.” Zarina hops over to sit on the camel’s saddle, right behind Ayla. She reaches out for the reins and takes over the steering, ”You see the good in her, even after what we just saw and heard.” she smiles warmly behind the Arslan cub, ”Someone’s gotta consider the worst possible scenario, though. Especially when dealing with … That calibre.” she gives a passing glance to the camel carrying the passed out Jocasta.
“Planning to bring up my plan at a convenient time, and as for your concerns, the King won’t tolerate such a rebellious tendency. If it is done once, it can happen again.”, sighs out, “Don’t think even my voice would be able to help them then.” Zarina speaks over Ayla, ”Speaking of. I was gonna say …” she steers the camel just a bit further to the side, just to be particularly safe and not get any sudden eavesdroppers, ”Both of them, they mentioned a revolution. Like they had planned something of their own.” she whispers right by the sound mage’s ear. Ayla grumbles as she feels Zarina’s arms around her as she takes over the steering, the girl’s body being pressed against the back of her own as they are stuck together between the humps of the camel. “You must be doing this intentionally now, knowing we are stuck together like this”, her voice mumbling to confuse her lips, even though a twist of her fingers is cancelling any sound. She tilts her head as she looks up, the height difference causing it to lean against her shoulder as she tries to examine her face. “Or were you not planning on sharing this information with me.”, sounding disappointed in this revelation.
Zarina tightened her hold on the other passenger and rested her clenched hands over the saddle, ”I was going to mention it, but you were keen on disproving me. Soooo, I focused on that. Because I’m right.” she looks down with a cheeky smile, ”I don’t know the details. They want to meet with this Amanda person. Tell us the whole truth, or something along those lines.” the Virangish girl leans back against the hump behind her, gently enough to not hurt the animal but eventually the creature adapts to her weight being applied to the bump, ”Kind of makes your own plan an issue, if they’re gonna wave the flags of rebellion. If we all survive the Wyrm, anyway.”
Ayla frowns more, “Then that means we just need to make sure we get to this Amanda before or as we do. If we convince her of our plan, she should be able to temper the others, and then we can save them from both señor pervertido and themselves”. She smirks for a moment as she watches Zarina, “operación corazón sangrando - operation bleeding heart, ahoy!”.
Zarina snorts at the terrible naming convention, ”Yeah. It did sound like they valued that person’s input. Let’s just hope you can mix a bit of brains in your speeches.” she then gives a couple of pokes to Ayla as a tease, ”But.” the moment of levity had subsided, now Zarina’s tone is drier, ”Consider yourself too. Those close to you. You are fucking with a source of weapons for many interested parties, including Torragon most likely.” again she quieted down, her chin poking the other’s shoulder to keep the whisper close to Ayla’s ear, ”Depending on how it goes, the world will know Ayla Arslan helped disrupt a Tethered Refuge, staining the Arslan name in the process. Don’t forget, most of the world hates ‘em.”
Ayla shakes her head simply dismissing the concerns easily, “There is no concern, my loyalty has never been questioned, neither has House Arslan despite those rumours.”. She pushes herself backwards against the girl as she makes herself comfortable, wiggling herself in position as she plots for another catnap before preparing for her big speech to influence the shifting sands of the desert. “The King’s eyes and ears would be my own on this matter”, she places her head against Zaz’s shoulder as she gently wraps an arm around her, securing a hold as she closes her eyes. “Thank you for caring”.
Zarina sighs, her expression out of Ayla’s cone of view. She was not particularly reassured by the answer, but refrained from adding anything more. The kitty wanted to sleep, and the Virangish rider had to keep an eye on the caravan as well as the cargo camel walking beside her own. The evening was quiet, the air cooler and Zarina mostly still– cat bound. They still had a little bit to go, and she only had the sights to really keep her distracted at this point. The coming hours were going to be rough, she could feel it.
Next: It is time to meet Amanda...
Friendship building with Kaspar Encouraged Kaspar to become his own person. Friendship building with Ysilla Pending Friendship building with Yalen Discussed life at Yalen's Orphanage and Orphanage life in Varrahasta Ayla shared her plan on how to help with the Tethered. Yalen voiced his agreement and also concerns about consequences. Ayla shared information about the Refuge-trained Clover Assassins. Yalen shared his dream. Ayla helped Jocasta get upon the camel with Marceline. Friendship building with Zarina. Zarina shares concerns about Jocasta and recent events. Ayla shares her plan to help the tethered with Zarina. Zarina shared that the Tethered at the Refuge are planning to revolt. Zarina raises concerns around the consequences of Ayla being involved in the mission.
The stables held a good dozen horses, bred for the desert and slightly bigger than average. Most of them were brown with long, unkept manes, except for a couple which Zarina had just recently brushed. There were also a few goats in a pen near the entrance, likely for a steady supply of milk. There were four, all sticking their heads out of the wooden planks that kept from leaving, curiously looking over at the new human that had entered their home and giving them head scratches beforehand. They weren’t calling for her– they just stared and flocked together, like they enjoyed her presence. The horses were also calm when she approached them, some even stretching their necks and flapping their lips to get her attention and hoping for some food.
Zarina was currently kneeling behind one of the mares. An older beauty, still in shape for duty but one could tell her age by the shape and colour of her teeth. Quite yellow and beginning to ‘split’ in a way. The mare’s hoof was over her knee, hoof pick on one hand and her other holding the strand of hair just over the foot. A routine cleanup, one she really put her back into. It made her happy, and even better: It calmed her down. In turn, the beasts were serene, without a single neigh of protest. But then she heard an all too familiar squawking from the nearby window. The Virangish girl’s features distorted from a composed and relaxed neutral to a mild scowl.
The hoof was allowed to drop and she stood up, giving the brave horse a little tap on the behind and a kiss to the side before she moved to the front of the pen so she could see the inevitable frame of her sister and attack the muck under the front hooves, ”Kol Khara*.” she responds with a restrained but whiny tone. She rolled her eyes and exhaled from her nose in frustration. It didn’t stop her from going about her task. The animals noticed the newcomer, and some of them stomped in light agitation. A couple of goats even ‘baah’d a little loud and the nearest horse grunted. Maybe they sensed something strange? Nothing Zarina would find too odd– maybe they had the same tastes as her.
”So,” she too spoke in her mother tongue, ”You come to the stables, for once, as a sort of unpredictable move to get me, huh?” she gives a glance to her sister from under the pampered horse, a gaze that didn’t hold much annoyance or even anger, though she definitely didn’t try to be even remotely welcoming, ”Pass me the brush, to your left.” she directs her eyes to said brush to make it clearer, and the order wasn’t heavy or loaded with any emotion. A mere routine request.
Ysilla maintained a lifeless expression from her sister’s snap. She had grown accustomed to rude receptions and made a habit to never give them anything. This was different in a way and a mild annoyance began to surface. Why did she even bother with her sister anyway? Why now? What exactly did she want to do here with her?
Unknown. It was a compulsion that just took over and now since she made the bed, she was going to lie in it.
It was Ysilla’s turn to respond but she carefully considered her words and opted to buy herself time. The puppeteer would raise her hand in acknowledgement at the request and would send Hoopoe to fly over and grab the brush with her talons and fly over to dump the brush in Zarina’s hand. The stable held silence, aside from any audible discomfort of the animals or Hoopoe’s flight and cawing, imitating a real bird.
To get her? The wording of her sister’s comment was simmering in her head as she considered the meaning. ”Such a trifling conspiracy to waste your breath on.” A scoff but with Ysilla’s emotionally muted tone, it was hardly noticeable but there was indignation in her tone. She never liked when her sister accused her of something. ”Do you feel threatened? Like I am about to get you.” She aired snidely.
The unnatural clanks from the wooden puppets broke Zarina’s focus on her current manicure endeavour. A glance of subtle revulsion was dedicated to the marionette and she swiftly nabbed the brush from it. She did not like the imitation, not one bit, ”Thanks.” she then passes the brush over some of the fur near the horse’s knee, scraping off some dried dirt that had accumulated there before standing back up. The next task was the mane, and she’d use the underside of the brush to begin straightening the knots and removing the scarce debris.
”Threatened?” she shakes her head, her tone matching the monotony of her sister’s, ”Just wondering what you want. For you to come alllll this way to the stinking stables to talk to me. I must’ve fucked up real bad, or something’s up.” variation in her tone returned, showing some degree of frustration. But she also seemed a tad intrigued, as her gaze deviated more and more from the animal and dedicated more interest to the twin, ”I’ve been doing good, by the way.”
Once more Ysilla stood still, her form tucked under cloak so even her idling finger taps on her thighs would be unnoticed. Her glare never leaves her sister. She was silent but without something to act as an excuse to delay her response, she answered after a few moments. ”Guilty conscience?” Ysilla robatically asked, tilting her head to one side inquisitively. ”Or do we only converse amid peril?”
”Bit dramatic.” Zarina is snappy in her response, ”We got through the worst. I think.”
A question that Ysilla didn’t care to hear answered. She knew her sister stormed to the stables for a reason. A reason she was not forthcoming with and the lack of trust was bothersome. ”The former, I suspect. You did, afterall, retreat here.” She jabbed, ignoring her sister’s wellbeing comment as that was only a poor attempt at distraction, she surmised.
Zarina exhaled from her nostrils, lips tightening and her repeated strokes coming to a stop. There was still some mane to go, so she clearly wasn’t finished, ”If it’s the case, what can you do about it, Ysilla?” her gaze is now hidden behind the beast’s long neck, her expression barely distinguishable, but a very good listener could hear a brief grit of the teeth and slightly heaving of her chest, ”You never were a people person.” she pauses, ”But I guess neither was I.”
Ysilla had no mare in front of her, no task to distract her. When she spoke, she wanted to know all about them. Her sister was no exception and the little, unseen reactions betraying Zarina’s apparent composure.
She knew not to push her luck too much. They were at least talking, though Ysilla’s own composure started to crack. She was hurt hearing her sister immediately discount the opportunity that she provided. A space to vent freely like any true sisterhood in the plays she had seen. How could they be called sisters like this? On edge all the time. Ysilla stood in silence, her mind rapidly shuffling through responses that she could say. She couldn’t think of anything to offer, creating the lengthiest silence in their conversation so far. That was until Ysilla finally offered something that was on her mind.
”The Torragonese have a stage play with a narrative around horses.” Ysilla began, diverting into reciting a play or story she knew, most relating to the situation she finds herself in. She often did this when she couldn’t find anything to say. ”Finding the finest horse, fit for a King. Specifically a replacement for his old war steed.”
Ysilla finally moved and began to shuffle over the nearest horse and she watched it as it began to rustle nervously. ”Gran Dia. You remember this one?” She announced the title of the play just as she reached out for the horse. It jumped and snapped in clear agitation, prompting Ysilla to recall her hand and fold herself back up in her cloak. A quiet resignation that she wouldn’t be able to pet the horse. The horse calmed but was still visibly disturbed.
”He never found a better horse than the one he had.”
Without any proclamation, Ysilla turned and began to head out. Hoopoe dropping for her perch and flying out the window that she had come in.
The long pause had given the time Zarina needed to finish pampering the mare. The mane was clean and made ten years younger, while the rest of the fur was brushed. Ysilla then began to speak, mentioning a play that both of them knew, although she didn’t stop her sister from retelling it. It was one of her favourites. She reached for a sachet she left at the corner of the pen, taking half of an old carrot from it. The now cleaned horse turned her head, likely recognizing the dull smell and the sound of the bag opening, and began flapping her lips in anticipation. Zarina didn’t tease the beast and offered her flat palm to be felt out by the lips. The carrot was quickly gobbled up and munched away, as a reward for being such a good girl.
Ysilla attempted to connect with one of the horses, or at least get a little closer, and was rebuffed. Zarina watched curiously, still silent. But when her sister had finished her story with an ending that warmed the teen’s heart, she stepped out of the pen, ”Hey.” she called out, her voice loud but tone softer than what she had been using during the exchange, ”Come.” she beckons her sister with an inviting gesture and then offers the other half of the carrot, ”Flat hand. Go slowly. Talk to her quietly.” she forced a mild smile, trying to be encouraging, and stuck by her sister’s side. The horse remained docile for now, although it was clearly eyeing Ysilla with caution.
The puppeteer froze in the threshold of the doorway as her sister called to her. She turned witnessing a beckoning gesture and the offer of a carrot. If there was any way Ysilla could express concern, this was it as her eyes darted back to the horse watching just as carefully as the animal did.
Silently accepting the offer, Ysilla proceeded over to her sister, palming the carrot and following the instructions to the letter. She… didn’t know how to talk to animals and her mind settled on the first thing she could see. The carrot. ”Do you enjoy carrots? I enjoy carrots.” She muttered under her breath, stepping lightly on her approach. ”Carrots are often put in a stew. Those carrots taste best.”
This felt humiliating and a rosy color blushed on Ysilla’s cheeks as she stuck out her hand and offered it to the horse.
Zarina could not help but giggle at Ysilla’s choice of words. Not in a condescending or mocking manner. It was cute. When her sister got close enough for the horse to reach out of the pen’s gate and take a sniff, the more animal-versed of the two stepped forward and stood by the horse’s long visage, one hand rested over the neck just under the mane, and the other over the cheek, ”That’s it.” she whispered to her sister while also providing some comfort to the beast.
It still looked reluctant, but eventually it began to flap its lips and reach for the strange human’s palm. A little bit of saliva was left onto Ysilla’s hand, and if she kept her palm still she would get a little, gooey massage. Zarina did not dare to tell her to remove her hand, as it was quite amusing to see. Munching away, the younger mare appeared to be relaxed now that the odd human had reassured her and given her a pleasant treat, ”I believe her name is …” she squints with her head tilted, ”Fiorella. And she seems to like you.” she didn’t have to force a smile this time, ”Maybe you and Fiorella can become friends when we make the trip, hmm?”
She had never been able to do that. Feed a horse by hand. Even as a child, Ysilla had always put animals on edge and it seemed like she’d always approach them, it would be the wrong way causing them to flee or fight. Fiorella seems to have been the first animal in a long time that was willing to put up with her. The resulting feeling was unexpected.
”Fiorella.” Ysilla muttered the mare’s name, unflinching as she was slobbered on, believing that was expected. Even after the horse had taken the carrot from her, Ysilla never moved her hand and let it sit there as if she expected something else to happen. ”Perhaps we could.” Ysilla trailed off, thinking about her actually riding a horse. She never really rode before. Wait. Has she ridden before? She couldn’t remember, her mind stirred harshly as she tried to recall a memory that just wasn’t there anymore.
Ysilla winced at the feeling in her head, and promptly retreated her hand tucking it under her cloak. ”I have something to do. See you.” She stated abruptly and turned, headed out.
Translation: *Shut up/Eat shit
With Ysilla gone, Zarina could return to caring for the beasts she thought would be their trusted steeds for the next venture in the desert. The sunrays from the window Hoopoe had come from had since thinned, indicating the sun had moved a bit since she had last checked. It was nearly time, and hopefully the staff had the steed ready for them in the next minutes or so. A few more things were packed, notably her two blades and a second gourd containing a nice mix of the refuge’s coffee and the goat milk that had been freshly taken from the livestock. A Café au Lait. Finally, a very brief morning prayer– it wasn’t too unusual to get it done quickly, as few were morning people, and they were not in a place of worship. When Zarina walked out to meet the party, it would not be the guards and the head of the expedition that took her attention, but the animals.
”Camels. Huh.”
She remarked, eyeing one of them that she would claim as her’s, ”Then a long journey is to be expected?” she inquired out loud, to see which one of the three unknowns would step up and present potential plans. It would likely be Escarra in this case, a man that definitely looked the part of a veteran desert ranger. All the while, she slid her hand over the snout of the tall breast, immediately letting the relatively young but strong male take a good sniff of her scent and grow used to her touch. Similar to a horse, it seemed to be more intrigued to see if there was food in her palm, flapping its lips a little over it before returning to its docile state, looking around and awaiting its rider’s orders, ”What’s your name, handsome guy, hmmm?” the camel’s neck got a couple of pats before she walked to the side and eventually hopped onto its back between the humps. Clearly she had rode one before, ”Daoud. That’s your name, okay?”
The caravan was to set off, and Zarina’s experience as a horse rider made it easy for her to adapt and steer the camel to her liking, although she abstained from pushing it before a calm pace. It was also a habit of her’s to keep to the back, especially with inexperienced troop members and supply animals, ”That’s right, Yalen. Nice ‘n’ steady.” she called out to the young priest with a grin, ”Hold the reins tight, but don’t pull unless you wanna stop, yeah?” it looks like she had regained some vigour after spending some ‘alone’ time.
Their first hurdle: The Halassa. Well, as much of a hurdle as they were the previous night. Zarina was ready to act, but the squad leader had his way of dealing with it. A method she approved of quite a bit and took note of the means to efficiently scare off these big beasts. But the real jump in adrenaline came with a Rhinodon of all things charging right for them. Why? It was anybody’s guess, but one would suspect it could be from invading some territory if it wasn’t madness. Without any comment on it being the latter, she started to manoeuvre her camel to steer clear of any path the angered beast would take. The fact that some of her peers were not too experienced with riding, however, prompted her to step up in this mini-crisis.
”Hey!” she called out, tapping the sides of Daoud with the soles of her boots to prompt a trop and maybe even a canter if it came to it. The Virangish girl even whistled to get the Rhino’s attention, but it seemed tunnel visioned. It didn’t help that riding a camel at such speeds for the first time stressed Zarina a tad, but she did her best to at least help her teammates not get run over by the bulky creature. Luckily, or maybe the contrary, a storm seemed to hit them minutes after this issue had occurred. A wall of sand was coming onto them, and it was enough to have the horned animal to cease its assault and seek safety. The group did the same in a mountain of sorts, taking refuge until it subsided just moments later. No casualties so far.
When they emerged, an interesting sight came about from the residue of the storm: Ruins! Architecture Zarina didn’t recognize, although she did not think too much of it either. What took priority in her mind was a little break to eat and drink with plenty of shading to be had in these forgotten stone buildings. The animals were parked and given some feed, with Zarina lagging behind to ensure all was good with Daoud.
The storm had revealed ruins of a time long gone. With the announcement of a small break, it seemed everybody had the instinct of hunkering down under the ancient roofs, away from the merciless heat of the desert in mid-day. The animals did not mind, they were born for such climates, but even the Virangish needed time for siestas during such times. Before she could indulge in some of her packed food and a good caffeinated sip, Zarina made sure that Daoud– the camel she had baptised as such was properly bound in the shade and given food, although water was withheld for now (they were used to conserve it after all). A good few pats, a couple of whispers and then a general inspection of the others’ beasts later and she was off for a lunch break.
She was late, much like another person that had been on the Virangish girl’s sleepless head. Marceline was not having a good time with the sand. Funny they had a Refuge in the middle of an ocean of the stuff, right? Hesitant, the taller teen watched for afar, water gourd in hand and taking in a sip. Sighing from her nostrils, she caved and approached the tethered she had not exactly treated nicely just a few hours ago, ”Wanna sip, Marci?” she asked while keeping a few feet of distance and holding back from directly offering help, ”Haven’t seen many drink up. No point saving up if we all get heat strokes.” she presented the gourd with an awkward smile, now a few steps closer. Now she was close enough to help without it seeming too forced.
For a moment, Marceline only glared at Zarina, and it looked like the girl’s insecurities and stubbornness had won out. She drew upon the immense heat in the sand and was able to put enough bounce in her step to manage a near-normal walking pace. Then, she sighed in the slightly petulant way a fourteen-year-old might when confronted with what they know they should be doing, in spite of their pride. “You don’t… need to give me your water as a peace offering.” She snorted. “Save it. You’ll need it.” She shook her head. “And I don’t think you’re a horrible person or anything. You just… don’t get it. You wouldn’t unless you’d grown up here.” She paused at the steps and reached up to brush some hair from her face. “Plus, I bet you had the traditional first night’s sleep.” Marci grinned. “Nobody sleeps well their first night.”
Zarina blinked, surprised at the reaction. No adversity, only a composed teen that acted far more reasonable than many adults she had known. It left the Virangish speechless for a moment, gourd still presented as an offering, ”Well,” she pursed her lips and shifted her eyes side-to-side before whispering, ”I have a pretty damn good café au lait in my bag, and you know what they say about drinking alone.” she snorted at her own mediocre joke, and the Perrench accent was very much exaggerated. She gestured over at one of the decrepit buildings from a bygone era, there they could probably sit and be safe from the merciless rays of the sun, ”No, no. I was a right cunt to you. Very much a horrible slag at that moment.” she gestures in dismissal with a smile. The exchange with her sister and the time at the stables had apparently done good work on her mood, ”T’was uncalled for. Whether I know what you lived or not. So, er-” she shifts her jaw, prompting a couple of pops, ”Yeah. Sorry.” awkward, but embarrassing enough to be genuine.
The apologetic tall teen found herself a flat, stone surface to rest her rear upon, bag by her side and opened to reveal a packed lunch and a container with the supposed milky drink. Marci reached the same area and plopped down beside her, taking and releasing a long breath. She untied the little sack she’d slung over one shoulder and pulled out some biscuits, dried salted meats, and a couple of clementines. “How about we trade?” she offered. She began peeling her fruit. “I take some of your coffee, you have one of these. I’m more thirsty than hungry anyhow.”
Zarina pursed her lips at the sight of clementines before nodding, ”Oh, yeah, sure thing.” She presented her hand to collect the goods and the exchange was made. “As for sleep, it looks like a few of us didn’t get great sleep, no.” she added, peering over to the direction of the others. If she couldn’t see them, she could probably hear some of them conversing during the break. Zarina shook her head, ”Sleep just doesn’t come easy for yours truly, even on the comfiest of beds.” a small, metallic cup was being filled with the beverage as she spoke, although it had since lost its heat.
The Tethered girl swept some loose hair from her eyes. There was a backdraft coming from inside the cavernous old ruins. She’d been stealing glances inside since the moment they’d sat. She blinked. “Why?” she asked, tilting her head ever so slightly to the side. “Is something the matter?”
The mention of a lack of sleep had Zarina drift for a brief moment. She just stared at the drink she poured and nearly caused it to overflow, ”Ah crap.” she was quick enough to not waste anything, and equalised the volume by adding some to her own cup, ”Why what, again? Sleep? Erm.” she begins to focus on one specific yet irrelevant point of reference: a stray hair of Marceline’s that stuck out near her ear, ”I just- Hmmm. I just haven’t been able to sleep, let alone dream, for like …” she tilts her head and closes an eye, ”Twwwooo years? I mean, I sleep. But they’re more micro-naps. I think. Anyway, it’s basically routine.” she shrugged to downplay the issue, smiling confidently as she took a sip from her own drink. The excessive powdering of her face that served to veil her black circles was becoming far more apparent when one was so close and aware of Zarina’s habits.
For a moment, it looked as if Marci was going to say something, but she paused and took a sip of water. “I never have trouble sleeping,” she shared. “At least… I never used to. They put essence of valerian in our evening tea. Knocks us right out.” She leaned back, posting her hands on the cool stone floor behind herself. Her sea blue dress fluttered in a sudden light gust. “They add honey so we always drink it. Nobody can say no to honey. Thing is…” She glanced at Zarina almost… evaluatively for a moment, “I don’t get the extract anymore - not since I’ve been in training. I guess they need me sharp and I train at night sometimes. You know what the funniest part is?” By the way that she turned to face the older girl, hands knit in her lap, it was clearly a rhetorical question. “I wouldn’t have even noticed. I’d have slept just as well if I hadn’t found out.” She sighed. “Two weeks ago, I did, though. Now that I know, I fear I’m not faring much better than you or Ayla.” She shook her head and bit into some of the jerky.
Zarina indulged in the pieces of clementine that were traded for some of her coffee mix, meticulously nibbling away as she kept her golden gaze on the tethered teen by her. When the drug was mentioned, she narrowed her eyes, rested her left calf over her knee and leaned forward a tad, ”Well, you did call it a prison. Don’t want any of these extremely dangerous ten year olds to wander during lockdown, now.” the sarcasm was as evident as the smirk on her face when she turned her head to face Marceline, ”The training.” her voice lowers, respecting the discretion Marceline sought out the last time they spoke, ”How many of you are in that program-thing?” she takes a sip, gaze focused on the other’s eyes, ”Do you have a choice in the matter?”
Marci’s eyes narrowed - not hostile, but perhaps a bit professionally suspicious. She finished chewing and she swallowed. “Why are you so interested in us?” she asked. “Why do you wanna know?”
Zarina didn’t back down when she met the girl’s cautious gaze, keeping hers focused while her body language remained relatively composed, “For the numbers? Just so I know how many could potentially be helpful if things don’t go so well with the mission.” another contingency, something she had been preparing since her exchange with the warden, “As for your choice-” she averts her gaze, arms crossing under her chest and fingers drumming over her bicep, ”I’m no stranger to being put in a situation where you’ve got no choice, as a kid.” a quiet pop can be heard when she shifts her jaw, ”The little flip out I had back in the Refuge wasn’t really because of what you said- Well, it was, but this whole thing reminded me of something that hit close to home, I suppose.” she sighs and returns her attention to Marci, ”It pisses me off to no end, that the people trusted to care for the young and defenceless, would put them in such … Fucking impossible situations. To use them, instead of nurturing. Ugh,” she pressed her fingers against her temple, ”Sorry- It’s hard to articulate without me heating up.”
“We have a choice,” Marceline said quietly. She gazed out over the ruins, the camels, and the sandy floor of the deepening canyon. “But it’s a pretty easy one.” She shrugged. “I think it's designed to be.” She stretched her legs out in front of her, braces and all, and there was no missing the atrophy in her calves, the bunched up muscle in her knees - at least until she pulled her fluttering dress back down over them. Her body was losing the battle, same as Jocasta’s was and even Yalen’s to a lesser degree. She turned to the Virangish girl earnestly. “We don’t know who we are. My name isn’t really Marceline. It was just something I chose after I woke up with no proper memories of who or what I’d been in the ten years I lived before the Refuge. On the surface, this is a paradise for us poor, doomed souls.” She rolled her eyes and glanced down at her knees. They were pressed together, her feet splayed apart, knock-kneed. “But there’s no purpose. There’s no excitement. There’s no reason to live. We’re just… things that… exist.” She sat up straighter, fingers bunching and unbunching the folds of her dress. “Every week, it just repeats: the same thing again and again. The caretakers get a little older and you get a little older and the other Tethered you looked up to as a kid get more and more crippled each year until they disappear into the red tower and you just know…” She trailed off, her face scrunching up. “That’s gonna be you someday.” Tears started to bleed out of her eyes. “And there’s no point to it all. Nothing to look forward to, only things to fear. You did nothing. You were nothing: just some tragic girl who nobody wanted or remembered who sat there by a pool in some little corner of the world, numbing herself with prayer and drinks and drugs and-” She blushed. “Sex,” she whispered. Quickly, she began to gather herself. “So that’s why I did it. That’s why we do it: it’s a chance to have done something, anything that’s real.” She sniffed, wiping away the few tears she’d cried with the back of her hand.
Zarina’s extremities felt more numb than usual. It was far from being cold despite the adequate shading, and she wasn’t scared or anything. She had begun feeling this when she admitted to her own issues that prompted her outburst, and now that Marceline was painting a proper picture of her situation, the Virangish girl felt a little queasy. And then Marci began to cry. Hairs rose in reaction, Zarina’s heart rate intensifying and her gut cramped ever so slightly. How easy it was to cause a visceral reaction to this girl with a show of emotions. It ate her soul so much more when she was forced in situations where she had to be the cause of these. The cold extremities began to shiver, though she’d hold one hand with the other to hide it. The more Marceline spoke, the colder it felt.
Awkwardly, she found the courage to raise her hand and rest it over the Tethered’s shoulder with the same hesitation she had shown to Yalen, but this time exacted it. She did not want to be too invasive, and Zarina was clearly not too experienced with positively dealing with emotions, but she offered her hand nonetheless, ”I don’t see you as a thing.” her voice was unusually mousey, even a little difficult to hear with a couple of words swallowed by her trembling form, ”You’re this new friend I made, that thinks a tangerine is worth my awesome café au lait.” she lets an awkward giggle escape her.
Marci sat up a bit straighter. “I was only gonna pay half a tangerine at first,” she teased, popping another slice into her mouth, “So be grateful.” Zarina grimaced, waving her hand in dismissal, only to laugh right after, ”Revolting. They don’t even teach you manners!”
“You know,” the younger girl giggled, “the tears and boogers actually add a nice bit of saltiness to it…” She grinned impishly, mock-horrified at the inappropriateness of it.
“But how ‘bout that?” Zarina offered, “I’ll teach you the value of such a delicacy, so we can open a little brewing gig. These places make BANK, I swear. Doesn’t that just sound a quadrillion times better than that not-choice, hmm?” her Virangish accent had briefly mellowed out there.
Marceline’s face became sad again, for just a moment, and she went still, aside from absently taking a bite of her jerky and the final sip of her coffee. “I’d love that, someday,” she said quietly, with a faint smile. “You're a good person and I’m sorry for misjudging you.” Finished her food, she tied up the knot at the top of the bag. “But that’s a false comfort.” She reached for her crutches and, with a bit of kinetic assistance, stood. She pivoted to face Zarina. “There’s no getting out of here for us.” She shook her head. “They’ll never let it happen. You know the truth?” She narrowed her eyes. “They’re scared of us.”
As if the hand of Dami himself was at work, Jocasta emerged from the darkness of what looked to have been a small temple, drifting above the ground like a ghost.
”Oh, yeah, they’re scared. Anyone would be, if what you said is true.” Zarina straightens herself too but remains seated. The moment they had quickly reverted to the darker, depressing tones they started with, but the Virangish girl didn’t let herself sink into that mood. Then, she noticed Jocasta. She was a little surprised, almost jumping in place even, but the timing was too good for her to make it a scene, ”But she got out.” she gave the blonde Tethered a glance and nod, ”Why can’t we make it happen for you too?” she then narrowed her eyes back toward Marceline, leaning forward a little, ”Should you want to leave, of course. We talked about choices, after all.”
“I do,” Marci replied “But…” she hesitated, mouth open to continue speaking, but found herself pre-empted instead by Jocasta, who whooshed over and ‘stood’ beside them. It was a bit jarring to see her at eye level. One could feel the kinetic gravity loop that kept her off of the ground. “Hey, s-sorry,” she cut in. “I don’t mean to i-interrupt. I just overheard the last bit while I was back there.” She glanced at both of the others. “G-gods willing, if all goes well today or… at least not disastrously, I’m going to be meeting with Amanda to-tonight.” She took a breath. “I think we should all sit down and discuss these things and…” She looked down for a moment, meeting Marceline’s eyes and glancing at Zarina as well, “If you want to know how I g-got out, I will tell you everything.”
“I can only speak for myself,” replied Marceline, “But it sounds good, sister. Very good indeed.”
”Amanda …” Zarina focused on that name, eyes squinting downwards toward a small pile of sand, ”She’s one of the clover names.” she recalled upon snapping her fingers, ”An old one too. I assume … You know her too, Marci?” she tilted her head, clearly a little overwhelmed with the information and potential plans to be. She needed a moment to process, ”Sister?” she furrowed her eyebrows, glancing over at Marceline, and then toward Jocasta, then back to Marci. She never thought the Tethered were THAT close.
The pair of them looked at each other. “There’s still a lot you don’t know,” the younger one admitted. “But…” She glanced over at Jocasta, as if looking for permission, and the blonde nodded. “It’s time to fill you in. It’s time to fill everybody in.”
“Both of us know Amanda,” Jocasta admitted. “All th-three of our names are on that tree.” She glanced down and then up, meeting Zarina’s eyes with a bit of a twinkle. “I’m trusting you, Zamira.” She smirked knowingly. “Tonight,” the eldest of the three promised, voice sinking conspiratorially. “Tonight, w-we not only figure out how to sh-shove that stupid aberration back where it belongs, we start plotting our refuge revolution.”.
This was dizzying to the small time, wannabe mobster with a bit too much of a bleeding heart for the job. Zarina could hardly follow. How the two girls were on the same wavelength, how Jocasta was on the tree despite the absence of such a name, how it just jumped to REVOLUTION all of a sudden. Zarina blinked and stayed quiet for a moment, hands over her thighs. Silently, she looked at Marceline, and then at Jo, ”... I have a lot to say, realistically. Vashdal as my witness.” another pause. She clenches the sandy cloth that covered her legs, ”But honestly? Fuck it. If you guys wanna fight for what you want, I’m in.” taken by the excitement, she grinned a toothy smile, ”If only to get this nasty little git out so she can taste REAL quality stuff and repent for her awful comments.” she nudged her chin toward Marceline. If she were fully truthful, she had quite the reservations for such rash decisions, but she did yearn for something more than compliance. She did, however, shoot a knowing glance toward Jocasta. Nothing had slipped by Zarina, despite her sleepless state, and the blonde girl had always managed to keep the Virangish on her guard.
They were back on the hot sands, marching forward to a destination she could not see. The break was soothing, if not jam-packed with conflicting feelings that plagued Zarina’s restless mind. The fact that she still hadn’t gotten some shut-eye was weighing on her, even if her mood was kept in check with other positive stimuli. The more her mind got hazy, the more the unsettling thoughts came to be.
Jocasta …
The ‘On Two’ Tethered of the group. A mysterious one that had so far merely been a light risk of emotional breakdown, but now a whole new angle was provided. Zarina kept at the back and could have a good look at everyone, and she narrowed her eyes onto the blonde first. What was it she had planned? How did she have a rapport with Marci? Why did she not just come clean with her origins? The more she thought about it, the more she started to piece things together. Slowly. Before any conclusions could be made, her weakened mind ended up focusing elsewhere …
Marci …
The young teen she had reconciled with, and in turn was let in on some insight that made Zarina’s head spin. She wanted to help Marceline. Help the one willing to fight for what’s her’s to get what she’s owed. It was almost a sort of honour thing, to the point that it drew from Zarina’s indignation and emotional nature and led her down this rabbithole of revolution. Would she partake in this potentially disastrous ‘revolution’ to help a friend? Or is she just way over her head? She blinked a few times, having nearly fallen asleep on her camel.
Yalen …
Did they all know each other? Was this some sort of coordinated thing and Hugo was the mastermind? Or was he fooled too? After all, two Tethered pupils attending this mission was objectively a boon. He did not look well at all this morning, even worse than Zarina herself. Had he been involved in something as well? Or was it one of those nightmares her sister had brought up? So many questions, and the Virangish insomniac would get little from them in her current state. Although with the way he killed those Halassa, Zarina was not going to bank on some Quentic pacifism to hold this one back.
Kaspar, Ayla …
Two with family names that mattered. One from this very land, one from another where potential ‘Clovers’ like Marci could be sold to. What would disrupting a factory of Mage Snipers potentially do to their reputations? Would they go with it, and maybe risk their families’ wellbeing? There were many patients in that Refuge, many children. But how many depended on these families too? Would a two or three hundred ailing youths be worth the many impacted by the harming of big names? The thought was nauseating, when Zarina realised how complex things could get with stopping something so clearly ‘wrong’ in many ways.
Ysilla …
And finally her own sister. Her own blood. What applied to the two previous applied to her own family. In a sense, her mother was likely not to ever falter over petty geopolitical cabals, but to bring shame to her family’s name, and subsequently harm her very blood was a frightening prospect indeed. It was all mentally taxing, to the point where she just let go, and slumped over the first hump, and entered a micro-sleep. Luckily the camel was content with just following the herd, letting the rider get a bit of rest. No dreams would be had, thankfully.
And then suddenly, she woke up to growing tremors in the sand and stone. They were getting close to the aberration. The Tethered trio could sense it. But it would obviously not be made easy. Another Wyrm came into play, or maybe it was the same one as before? It really did not matter, they just had to leave. Rushing toward safety, the animals were clearly spooked by the ordeal, but Escarra could lead the flock away just in time while Zarina took notice of the one supply camel panicking. Pumped with adrenaline and refusing to lose a precious source of goods, she went into a full-on gallop with Daoud to retrieve the panicked beast, seizing its broken rope and calling out to it. It actually calmed down once tugged and heard the calls of the girl despite the chaos going around it.
Successful in her rescue, she kept the camel bound to her own and quickly joined the party before she ended up Wyrm chow. They were safe … Until one crisis ushered in another. A meat feast had awakened within the canyon, and the predators were now all on high alert. Forabasses, a lot of them, first picking off the easy targets, but then taking interest in the party. Coming in waves, the clouds of pseudo-dragons began to pick off their group, ”Hug the wall!” she called out, employing some of her Kinetic magic to push the supply camel to safety and close to her own.
The Froabasses were limited, for a time, but they would end up winning. First was one of the guards, and the scene unfolding before her eyes had Zarina’s heartbeat at a headache-inducing pace. She was clearly scared, but not helpless. One hand drew a sword, and the other picked up some knives she had brought along for the trip. The guard was already long ago, taken by the carnivorous beasts, but the second was about to be devoured right before them. As he was being ripped apart, she instinctively hurled her blade toward his head. She missed, hitting the throat instead. Her attempt to end his life painlessly before the gruesome end had only partially failed, as he would likely not feel much after losing most of his blood in a few seconds. Still, she whimpered at the sight, but didn’t give up. A few camels were taken too, and while her aim wasn’t the greatest, she did her best to pierce their skulls and end it quickly, until it was her turn to be greeted by the predators.
”Fuck it.” if it was going to be the end, she would go down with a fight. Both blades were drawn and she hopped off Daoud, keeping the terrified beast behind her as she began to swing at the monsters while shouting at them. And when she was in the right state to just go all out, her mind serene and committed, one of the creatures downright attacked another and served as a shield for Zarina and those near her. This bizarre turn of events had her completely stunned, ”What the …” her body felt cooler than normal, and she couldn’t shake off the sensation that the moment she felt that coldness, the beast felt it too and acted accordingly, somehow.
The group attacking them retreated after this strange occurrence. They were not safe, but a moment of respite was generously given to them. Enough time for Zarina to actually approach the draconic being and slowly attempt to rest her hand on its tail. Any thoughts of her actually connecting with the beast immediately vanished as it reacted with a slap to her core with the tail. Not breaking anything, but she would get a bruise. It growled at her, seeming ready to attack, but then just flew off with the flock.
That same flock was going to come back to them. At least two dozen massive flying beasts, and they had to chance. Zarina took this time to peer over at her sister and Ayla. Then at Marceline. She frowned melancholically, but only briefly. Inhaling strongly, she raised both her blades and stared down the coming swarm with defiant eyes. She screamed a powerful warcry, bracing herself for the worst and standing between the attackers and those she cared for most. She would not die today, however.
A massive draw was taking place. One that even the Froabasses were sensing and halted their attack over. All this energy– it converged toward one person: Jocasta. The intense power was enough to have Zarina kneel and stare in awe. She had only seen one person display such power before, and even then this seemed exceptional by that standard too. The thought of inevitable death was superseded by a fear of the unknown. What could possibly come of such a concentration of power? And then she felt a familiar feeling. The same that came from solving that first riddle in the tower, and when the Paradigm opened a tear in space and time. The Froabasses were then all gone. Poof. Like they weren’t there in the first place, along with their meals.
It took a moment for Zarina to fully grasp what was going on, her eyes shifting about to see if anything else had changed. And then Jocasta explained. The threat was gone, taken somewhere else via a magic that few knew. It didn’t hit the Virangish teen right away what all of this could imply. No, she was first and foremost thankful to Vashdal that this did not turn into the nightmare it could easily have been. Her hand reached for her pendant, her thumb tracing the lines upon it. She had so nearly died, and yet here she was. It did not stop a creeping bad feeling to take root at the back of her mind, however.
[Ending is at Ayla's post above!]
-Comfy ride in desert, names her camel Daoud -Reconciles with Marci -Jocasta shows up during her lunch with Marci, the idea of Refuge revolution is mentioned -Zarina agrees to help Marci and considers the revolution idea -Zarina is realising what this may imply, especially to those they're close to -Big chaos with the Froabasses, loads die, she is ready to fight to the end -Zarina attempts to tame one that defends her -She fails -Jocasta saves the day and the display of power makes Zarina particularly anxious -She connects some dots when she speaks to Ayla -Ayla proposes a plan, but it can be an issue if someone as strong as Jocasta is on a warpath -Ayla falls asleep over Zarina's shoulder
Ingrid was taking time to purge herself of what she saw. She was trying to put what she saw behind her for at least the mission. But the reoccurring image of the dead children kept creeping into her mind. Her conscience wouldn't let her move past it that easily. She wanted to just go home, leave this island and this ever happened but it's not like she could. The alcohol nauseated her less than the images and by the time Desmond arrived Ingrid was dry heaving trying to get a handle on herself.
Ingrid didn't even flinch when the jacket, her guard was down and it wasn't until he tossed the hat on her head that she stiffened up to look at the person who draped her. It was Desmond, not a face Ingrid wanted to see, to be honest. Well, she didn't want to see anyone but having the mission lead come to check on her just told her she was taking too much time composing herself. She listened to what he had to say and a pathetic smile crossed her face as she turned her face away before saying "I know, I know." Ingrid held back tears as she continued, "I … I'm okay. Okay enough. I have to be. I'll head out to the ship after I clean myself up a bit." Ingrid wiped away the tears and let out a sigh like she was trying to refocus. She tied the jacket together to try and cover up a bit more and it was semi-successful. Her current outfit reminds her of the enemy's seductress after succeeding to go home with the naval captain. It was… a look and Ingrid might not have minded it if she wasn't in front of actual people. Hopefully either ship Penny captured has some pants for me, mine are barely holding on. I should figure out how to fix this stuff in the future. She took some of the water out of Desmond's waterskin with kinetic magic, Ingrid wasn't too keen on getting puke lips on her classmate's waterskin. Ingrid quickly rinsed her mouth out and started to make her way out of the alley. Ingrid turned back and said ready, handing back Desmond's hat.
Ingrid tried to make her way quickly to the water where she could make her way to the ship. Her embarrassment of walking in front of so many people in such a scandalous outfit was put on hold for the next moment of rest. She swears to Eshiran that she heard some fucker whistle at her. Whatever the case, when she made it to the water she cheated an ice disk big enough for 2 if Desmond wished to hop on. The ice sheet shot towards the ship, using the waves' movements to propel the forward. It would probably be difficult to stand if you were not used to the ice but Ingrid was more than used to the ice. Ingrid's homeland is mostly ice so this was like walking to her.
As Ingrid approached the ship she just simply did a kinetic jump onto the ship. But Ingrid didn't expect the ice sheet she made to be so thin after the travel to the ship. The water must have been warmer than she expected. The Ice broke underneath her and she went up maybe a foot and then fell into the newly created hole in the ice. She decide to just climb up the side where the ladder was. As she was climbing she slipped and hit her head on one of the steps, dazing her. Hitting the water brought her back to attention. She finally decided to just make a large ice structure to put her on top of a small ice block to get on the ship. As the block grew closer and closer to her goal, the ice flipped as a big wave hit it and sent her off it into the water again. Defeated she yells to Penny and Trypano for a rope. I can't even get on a ship. How humiliating…
Desmond watched as Ingrid had began to notice the world and compose herself. She seemed like she was mentally pushing everything to the side until it was all over, 'Good, we'll make it out yet'. As she began to dress herself, she tied up his jacket, and that was when Desmond realized how big Ingrid was, he never fully understood until that moment. He almost chuckled at her outfit, it did not suit her, definitely was not a part of her wardrobe. Yet is seemed once she made her clothing do, she readied herself by clearing he mouth out with water, using magic nonetheless. Desmond did chuckle at that as it did show their difference, Desmond saw Magic as a tool, she saw it as an extension of herself. In this moment of thought it seemed Ingrid had fully composed herself and prepared to move forward. Desmond gave her a nod as she handed back his hat, he flipped it onto his head as he said, "Alright let's go".
As they left the alleyway Desmond realized that it was not only her top taken off, Desmond walked a little closer to her and slightly off to the side where the larger group was. He was being nonchalant about his actions, but he was trying to cover her bottom side from those looking. As they walked by Desmond looked to Ismette and Onarr as he called out to them, "Come on we need to talk on the ship. We need to see what's happening with Penny". As they moved past them and near the Princess he looked to her and said, "We will be talking on the ship, when you see the sail raised on the ketch, red will mean we fight and white will mean we are leaving". Desmond left it brief, they could not waste time, they had mages on the way. He let out a sigh as he heard a whistle come from the group of on lookers, Desmond just tilted his hat as they continued, this was not a great look for the crew yet it was what they had to deal with. Yet once they made it to the water Ingrid created a sheet of ice, as she stepped on she shifted herself to make enough room for him. Desmond took a step on and was about to slip, yet he began to focus his magic onto the bottom of his boots and started to make the ice underneath him much more rough and able to create friction between his boots to allow him to stand just fine. This was a trick that Desmond was taught to work on all terrains, to shift and change not only the ground he is on but also his boots to allow him to walk with ease.
As they neared the ship, Desmond prepared to do a kinetic jump, as he pulled in kinetic energy, he waited a moment as the moment he was about to jump, he first jumped off of the ice and then used his stored energy to throw himself into the air. A kinetic jump in the end never needs you to physically jump, all that needs to be done is using the energy to propel yourself. So Desmond decided to use the energy to push up against his legs while drawing in the energy at the moment of impact to allow him to be launched without hurting himself. As he flew up he used the kinetic energy to make sure he made it up and the moment he was about to land on the ships deck he drew in the energy to soften his landing into nothing. Desmond looked back and didn't see Ingrid, as he looked back into the water and saw her trying to climb the side of the ship as she fell again. He began looking for a rope as then he felt a draw of energy as he saw ice beginning to climb up, yet not connected to the boat. And a wave seemed to past that flipped it over and send her into the water. Desmond let out a sigh as he said, "Alright let's get her up".
As he looked to Ingrid, he used the energy he had to launch Ingrid out of the water, yet he didn't realize how light she was, so she went up much faster than expected, to the point where she was right infront of him in a moment, and he had no time to react to her coming up and over as she lands straight onto him. As he fell with Ingrid landing on top of him, as he fell over, he landed on his back and Ingrid had landed on his lap and lower stomach area. He looked up to Ingrid and said through a slight grunt, "You alright?"