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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Expendable
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"In our world," Jack said carefully, studying the bridge with concern, "When the wildlife grows quiet, it's either because it's about to rain, or they're afraid of something."

"Do you have rivals who would think it right to ambush you?" he asks Silbermine softly. "I wonder if we were to move back, if others would appear?"

"Ladies and gentlemen," he said, keeping his voice light as he bowed slightly towards the other members of the crew, "it is now the spot in this evening's program for you to prepare what weapons you have, as I feel the necessity of using them is nigh upon us."

Whoever was out there waiting, Hopefully they weren't too deep into their trap. But then he doubted they expected a walking, burning tree mage to land in it with them.

"Apparently, we are fated to live in interesting times," he shrugs.

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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Quest Abandoner
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Itxaro studied the collapsed bridge. There were stone bridges on Earth of similar design that stood for hundreds, if not thousands, of years; they didn't just collapse for no reason, especially if they were maintained as Silbermine suggested. She took note of the large stones just peaking over the edge of the waterline like crocodiles. It would be dangerous to cross loaded down with equipment as they were, and the receding waters were still moving quickly. Itxaro shifted the weight of her heavy pack on her shoulders and looked to the others uneasily.

"Whatever we do, we should probably do it fast. Get a fire going and post sentries, or get our asses across this river. I don't like the looks of this place anymore." Throughout their journey, Itxaro had been endlessly fascinated with the biome's rich and diverse wildlife, but now the swamp had taken on a sinister, almost malevolent quality that awoke in her a primal fear she kept in check. For now.

At Mallory's urging, Itxaro cautiously drew her revolver and her body relaxed some, the weapon's weight reassuring her. That, and the training she'd received back at the Jotunheim meant Itxaro actually knew how to use it now. Somewhat. She compulsively checked the weapon's cylinder and positioned herself between Shirik and Silbermine. She thought of the demons the Glenn lord had mentioned the other day. A year ago, she would have deemed such a thing impossible, but now, with magic and aliens abound, who knew?

The group seemed indecisive, so the engineer took the initiative. "I remember reading somewhere the best way through an ambush is to power through. So, ladies first?" Itxaro suggested as she slowly walked to the collapsed bridge, studying the route she might take through the broken stones as if it were a puzzle. Itxaro holstered her gun again unclasped her pack's front strap, took a deep breath, and leapt to the first small stone. Itxaro yelped as she nearly lost her footing on the wet rock, but with some clever flailing she managed to regain her balance. She glanced back to the others sheepishly before hopping to the next stone, this time more cautiously.
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by EliteCommander
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Kareet of Arcaeda





However long the silence had been going on, Kareet did not have time to discern its nature before the situation changed. Kareet had stood up and was pacing down the middle of the barge, her eyes darting around across the surrounding forest looking for anything out of the ordinary. However, it was not the forest which changed.

The shift was sudden and drastic. All around the barge, the water seemed to shift into a substance as black as tar, and about as viscous. For the Humans, if they were capable of recognizing such things, they would see the same looks of startled surprise on most of the soldiers, and even Kareet herself. Across all of her education and experience, this was like nothing she had ever seen or heard of before.

There was not much time to stand around in awe. The barge had come almost to a halt as the paddlewheel struggled to push through. More alarming, though, was when a hole formed in the bottom of the boat. This liquid, whatever it was, corroded a hole straight through the wooden hull just under a Tekeri soldier near Kareet. The substance enveloped the foot of the soldier, who fell onto his back as soon as he tried to back away. Despite having practically dissolved a hole in the hull, the substance did not actually cause any visible harm to the Tekeri. Rather, half of his leg was entirely paralyzed.

This was something wholly, completely new and unexpected to Kareet, but it was no time for wonder and curiosity. In emergencies, survival was favored for those who could be decisive. Kareet pushed both hands downwards, open-palmed, extended them outwards, then clenched them into fists. Body and mind focused as hard as she ever had before, she let out a scream as her hands lifted up slowly, as if fighting against some unseen force. The magnetic field she had generated enveloped the whole of the barge, though of course, it could not touch the vessel’s wooden hull. However, every nail, rivet, steel reinforcement, and the paddlewheel mechanism itself was perfectly vulnerable to its influence. Not to mention, as she had not focused her magic to any specific object, every single magnetic object on the barge would be pulled upwards and float in the air around them unless held down by something.

The barge’s hull quickly began to crack and splinter from the uneven application of force that was starting to lift it out of the water. Raising it by influencing a scattered mass of metal objects was far from ideal, and Kareet was already struggling, but they needed to get the barge to the riverbank. “LIFT!” Kareet shouted desperately.
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Hidden 1 yr ago 1 yr ago Post by Blizz
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Left. Ahead, fifteen paces.

Shirik stalked up the river, following the directions in their mind. Velhass climbed higher into the tree far on the other side. Hood down low, Shirik’s flames were all but nonexistent from the beast’s perspective. Especially since it did not know it was being hunted.

She is drinking, eyes to the sun. It was setting over the mountain, Shirik was behind the beast. It stood on six narrow legs, had coare fur that flared in hues of red and green, to ward off some animals. Two eyes like kaleidoscopes darted into a clearing and down to its feet while it lapped up water from the river.

Velhass recalled Shirik referring to the strange animal as a rakthir. They were solitary things, prone to running from conflict. Shirik also said that the more important thing about them was that they had more meat than most creatures in the area. More to be harvested with less killing. They taught him that this was how they respected the world and what it provided for them, and Velhass scouted this specific beast out with that in mind.

It will leave soon. You should-

Quiet.

It was strange, hearing Shirik’s voice in his mind. Even the fact that Velhass could hear it spoke volumes of how capable he was becoming, but Shirik’s voice felt like hot coals against his mind. It crackled, and it left smoke to linger with his thoughts.

Shirik gently raised their spear above their head, using their opposite hand to aim the tip directly at the heart of the rakthir. They wanted the beast to die as quickly as possible, lest it suffer in its last moments. Silence stretched out of the dim, dusky forest as the rakthir raised its head to the setting sun. Just as it turned to walk off into the trees, a thousand ancestors threw a spear into its heart, their wisdom and experience all working through one ever-burning descendent.

The rakthir fell silently to the ground. Shirik whispered words unheard by their son, who came clambering over stones in the water.

”How… Did you kill it so quickly? It didn’t even twitch.”

”It was not done by me, Velhass. It was done through me. We Iriad remember the deeds of our ancestors. All but the earliest of mine were hunters. The oldest ways of the hunt live through me, as they do in the Myriad.”

Velhass’ awe was written on his face. ”One day, I want to hunt like you.”

If Shirik could smile, they would have. ”One day, boy. One day.”




A bird with feathers darker than a Tekeri’s streaked across the sky, over trees and hills, through the countryside of the Ascendancy. Its eyes lazily scanned from side to side, from the pink hue of the sun to the rising greater moon. In this form, Tural was best equipped to patrol the widest area of his team. Every squad of Inquisitors had an expert for all forms of magic, even Stone, albeit not of the Sovereign variety. But every life mage Inquisitors was therefore naturally the best at recon, able to take forms that rogue thought mages wouldn’t expect.

This was the last known location of the child they chased. He ran like a fool from them, unaware he would’ve been spared if he simply surrendered. Salaketh had Tural patrolling this area constantly as of late. It had been almost a year now, and they were still looking for him. No other inquisitor in the Ascendancy, Sovereignty or Mythadia had even caught a glimpse of the boy, so he couldn’t have been moving much.

He needed to stop and rest from flying so long, so he perched himself in a tree and reverted back to his natural state. Still staring out at the forest, the idea that he could be here, of all places seemed all but-

There.

Down in the biggest forest in the area, something pricked against Tural’s senses. Thought magic was being used somewhere. It was too wide to pinpoint where, but he had a trail now. Somewhere, down below, there was a thought mage. And so, Tural turned his mind inwards, ringing a metaphorical bell.

I’ve found something…

Intrigue. Approval. Concern. Ideas were conveyed back to him like heat from a fire. Tural became a bird once again, circled back into a valley, shifting back into his Tekeri form upon landing, putting his mask on before anything else, and then his armor. There behind him was a Glen, two S’tor, and Driisu, all dressed in their Inquisitor armor. Not a word was said, but a conversation was held.








”Bridges do not collapse on their lonesome. It may be different on Earth, but our bridges stand for centuries. This… This was sabotage,” Shirik had likely crossed this exact bridge hundreds of times over the millennia. There were things older than them that were just as unbreakable, and someone broke this.

”Listen to the world. This place we are in, it is home to predators that would swallow a Glen whole. A warband is only rations for the cold to them. We are not alone. Silbermine, your scouts would be wise to spread thin,” they warned, just before Ixtaro started jumping across the ruined remains of the bridge. They laughed their usual horrific, demented laugh.

”She is right to press on. There is foul play here.”

But they began weaving a circle of flame into the air, first. Wisps of glowing heat became strange symbols in the air, forming something not unlike what Shirik used to communicate with the humans on the day of their arrival. It oriented itself perpendicular to the ground, and slowly spun in place. ”I am going with her. If you are ambushed, remain near this. I will use it to incinerate your assailants from afar,” Shirik instructed, before trudging forth and leaping off of the cliff.

And they floated up, rather than fell. Thick waves of distorted air shimmered underneath Shirik’s feet, allowing them to loosely remain at a steady elevation and push forward at a pace somewhat quicker than Ixtaro’s. They caught up with her a few seconds after taking off.

”I have seen the faces of gods, and left them weeping in their graves, and I fear your bravery!” They joked, clearly amused by Ixtaro, as the two scouted ahead.
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Cath
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Zey waved away Kareet’s confusion and made signals that to Humans would be quite clear the comment was made in jest. The Captain then listened closely to Nellara, leaning against the gunwale and enjoying the breeze/sun combination. She chuckled to herself when it became clear that the Castigator wouldn’t answer exactly how many more brigades existed. It was always going to be a long shot.

Zey spent her time stuck on this barge pacing, talking with her crew, learning about what to expect in Arcaeda from the locals, and radioing the Jotunheim. Signal rapidly deteriorated once they left Ertisdea, with the boat putting a large mountain range between them and the ship. She never heard the distress call from the other group.

She kept active as well, jumping on the spot and practising kickboxing techniques she’d learned years earlier. This attracted the interest of some of the natives. Zey eventually realised that may not be a good thing and stopped.

Zey was chatting to the Glen, J’eon, when things went quiet.

“I hope you don’t mind me asking, what are those scars on your back?”

She was listening to J’eon’s reply, taking it all in, when glancing around she got weird vibes. Things were quiet, and the soldier Tekeri were looking at each other all funny. Without really meaning to, Zey looked at the river around the boat. There was no other traffic to speak of, where previously they’d been surrounded by a bustle of activity.

Accessing comms, Zey murmured a warning to all the Humans aboard.

“Guys, something has the natives spooked.”

She watched Kareet stalk down the centre of the barge, her eagle eyes scanning the forest on either side.

“Be ready for anything.”

The sound of flowing water changed suddenly to one of…mud? They stopped moving as fast, and the natives sprung into action. It was only after a couple of seconds that Zey realised the river had changed drastically in consistency and colour.

“What the fuck?”

In the time it took her to wrestle the AR out from the webbing of her pack, the bottom of the boat had sprung an alarming leak. Black tar-like liquid shlopped all over one of the soldiers and was rapidly expanding.

Kareet started screaming.

“Abandon ship!” Zey shouted, slinging her backpack and shooting her gun in the air. It had an integral suppressor, but was still surprisingly loud and brought back memories of the hangar bay in Norway.

“Where are the life rafts on this thing?” She shouted, to no one in particular.
Hidden 1 yr ago 1 yr ago Post by Cath
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Silbermine listened closely to everyone who spoke up, remaining calm despite the growing tension in the air.

“There are those who salivate at the chance to challenge a nobleglen. Not least the Lords of other Keraks along the northern border. These backwaters were not the place I envisaged for a duel, however.” Silbermine replied to Mallory.

Contrary to Shirik’s advice, the Glen soldiers had instinctively bunched closer together around their leader. They were natural herd creatures, and not even centuries of concerted effort to break this by the S’tor had succeeded. This evolutionary pressure had the unintended side effect of breeding Glen who were brave and belligerent on their own, which had a negative impact on the empire over time.

Silbermine brayed throatily as Itxaro stepped toward the destroyed bridge, pounding a gauntleted fist against his breastplate. His knights did the same, and it seemed to lift their spirit slightly.

“We press forward! Take your circle of smite with you, Shirik!” Silbermine called, as the rest of the group followed behind onto the bridge. Eva, in her hulking mech suit, brought up the rear.

The river in its current engorged form spanned about fifty metres. Going was slow, with many of the remaining uneven surfaces being regularly submerged underwater. The masonry was so damaged the travellers had to go one at a time.

Itxaro was close to the other side of the river and Eva was just about to start when Shirik’s demented laugh from earlier echoed around them. A deep, corrupted version of Shirik’s voice called out from everywhere at once.

\\”I haave seen the faaces of gods…”//

Two stooping trees on the far shore crackled. The boughs twisted and bent so all of the white flowers on them were facing the group.

“Shirik, is that you?” Silbermine bellowed over the noise of the rushing rapids.

\\”weep in your graaves…”//

For half a moment, it seemed that even the water became silent.

Then a sound halfway between a clock ticking much too fast and the wet tearing of sinews started. A black object larger than the Glen with four strong legs and innumerable tentacles sprung from the river. It leapt up towards Shirik, all its appendages aiming to grab the Iriad.

Two tendrils as thick as Itxaro’s arms sprung from the river around her and went to wrap around her legs.

A third creature, disguised as a large natural stone, shifted near Mallory’s feet. His vantage point sprouted tendrils and large jaws. Silbermine was in front of Mallory; he craned his neck to look around and brayed in anger.

“DEMONS ON THE BRIDGE!”
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by 13org
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To have a well patrolled and used stretch of the river silent like that, Nellara had expected an organized military force from another kingdom, which somehow, got to know about the humans. Due to that, her eyes were not on the water, but on the river's margins, watching every single movement, expecting something to appear behind every bush and tree. Despite all her alertness, nothing could have prepared Nellara for what was about to happen. The first alert that there was something strange going on was feeling the barge quickly getting slower and slower, until for some reason, it seemed to struggle hard just to move a single inch. The culprit showed itself to be a strange, viscous, black substance that appeared in the water, completely surrounding the barge.

"The water! There is something in the wat-" Nellara began, before she was interrupted by the very same black substance, which had already corroded a hole through the floor of the barge, quickly enveloping one of the soldier's foot, making them immediately fall down. Nellara was expecting the soldier to be heavily wounded, giving how easily the substance corroded through the barge, but fortunately, his leg was only paralyzed.

Just as she saw what happened to the soldier, she heard Zeynep shouting to abandon ship, which only made Nellara even more alarmed.

"Whatever you do, DO NOT TOUCH THE BLACK SUBSTANCE!" Nellara shouted, not only to the humans but to everyone present.

"I know not if it's capable of corroding us just like it is corroding the ship, but it is more than capable of paralyzing whatever member it touches. Going to the water right now will only get you either drowned or captured... Maybe worse." Nellara said with a grim tone, warning Zeynep and the humans.

"Someone, help him stand up! The rest of you, get away from the edges of the barge and mind your step!" Nellara shouted as she pointed to the soldier that had it's leg paralyzed before turning to Kareet.

At first, she was intending to ask Kareet if she knew what the black substance was and if there was a way to stop it, but upon noticing that she was trying to lift the barge from the water, Nellara rushed to help her, putting her hands on Kareet's shoulders. Due to the urgency of the situation, Nellara had no time to use her magic herself and talk to Kareet to coordinate their efforts. Instead, she would do the next best thing... To focus her own magic through Kareet and leave controlling it to her. Controlling it might take a toll on Kareet's mind, but it would be the best course of action at that moment.

"Sorry about this, but I'll focus my magic through you, Kareet. Control it as you wish." Nellara said, as she began merging her magic with Kareet, letting her take control of it. Kareet would feel the surge of power going through her almost like an electric shock the very moment Nellara finished saying that sentence.

"Any capable mages, assist Seeker Kareet immediately! The rest of the soldiers, do not let the black substance touch you or any of the humans!" She ordered before she turned to Kareet once more.

"Kareet, please tell me you know what this... thing is? Do we have to worry ourselves about someone controlling it?" Nellara asked, with a clear worried tone in her voice.
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Hidden 1 yr ago 1 yr ago Post by EliteCommander
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Kareet of Arcaeda





Nellara’s assistance lightened the load for Kareet, and once a Force mage among her soldiers joined in as well, it was enough to start moving even a heavy barge towards the shore. Force magic was far more well-suited for this task, as the force could be applied evenly across the hull. Already, Kareet’s efforts had splintered the hull in multiple places.

The barge was floating just above the blackened water towards the nearest riverbank. With the near complete stillness all around them, the movement just ahead from just beyond the treeline stood out all the more easily. Several people, about seven or eight from what Kareet could see at a glance, though there could be more obscured by the foliage. It was a mix of Tekeri, Glen, and S'tor, with no standard uniform or markings that could identify them. They did not look equipped for war; in fact, they looked more like hunters than anything else. Except, they immediately took aim with their bows firmly on the barge. They were far enough away that Kareet could not hit them with any sort of lightning bolt she could charge quickly enough; not that she could afford to do anything except prevent their vessel from falling back into the river, regardless. Their attackers had already ranged their shots, so when they loosed their first volley, most of the arrows came straight for the barge.
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Blizz
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I have not narrowed the region down properly, as of yet. But powerful magic was used.

We’ll need to get closer. Rest, Duuli and I will scout. Carnperra forms.

Salaketh was stern, as far as Inquisitors went. He was the one who they all looked to for stability, and direction in the field. The old Glen stood, while Duuli hid their encampment with a mound of rocks and mud. To the outside, it simply looked like a hill after her handiwork. Once the two had their armor off, Tural laid his hand on each of them. They became a pair of predatory birds with dark green and brown feathers, ideal for blending in with the forest. With their wing structures, it was one of the fastest avians on the planet, hunting at any time it was awake. Perfect for emergencies.

Duuli took off first, and Salaketh followed her. Tural relayed directions while they flew.

He thinks it’s the child that ran from us a year ago. What are the chances? Duuli asked.

Significant. No other enclave in the Ascendancy, Mythadia or the Sovereignty has reported a rogue with his description. Reports are nonexistent, he hasn’t moved anywhere, if at all.

I find it hard to believe that a child has eluded every Inquisitor in the known world. Either we’re negligent, or he’s too competent. We may be walking into something dreadful, Salaketh.

Then you’ll keep your wits about you.

They couldn’t shift back like Tural, so all they could do was scout for anything suspicious. The forest was dead silent. Every nocturnal predator gave them a wide berth at the sight of airborne hunters. The woods in this dense valley of an area blurred past them like a day-old hangover. Salaketh wanted this child. He was a professional in all the ways an Inquisitor should’ve been, and more. He slept less than his squad all did combined. He always carried most of the burden when they needed to resist magic. He was the anchor, he was their rock.

And right now, he was some bastard child’s reckoning. Duuli caught an updraft up above a clearing and used the moonlight to scan by a river. The rogue couldn’t have gotten far. She saw a light tucked into the hills, and glided down further. She landed on a roof of thatch, clay and timber. Behind her was a dissonantly lush garden, and before her was a young S’tor, carrying a slain rakthir over his shoulders.

Walking beside him was a being with the silhouette of an Iriad. But they were wreathed in fire. Salaketh felt Duuli’s confusion, and flew overhead, landing in a tree. The confusion was reciprocated.

That can’t be real. Back in Bestik, there was an Iriad Inquisitor who told stories of one of their kind who was perpetually burning, citing it as an old legend to keep children from acting out. And Duuli had heard the myth of travelers running into one before.

But this was real.

Rogue located. One thrall with him. Heat mage.





Floating forth, propelled by the flames served two purposes for Shirik. The first was to keep up with the group and avoid being slowed down. From here, hanging over the water, Shirik could’ve easily bartered bandits or vagabonds out of sword range. The second purpose, was to take in the area while the rest crossed the bridge. They had to focus on the path ahead, and mind its crumbling state. Shirik essentially had lookout duty for the brief second.

A third purpose made itself present, however. Everything around them grew more and more ominous by the second. Trees shook, and the water grew still. This was becoming a running theme- Interlopers signaled by a deafening lack of signs. Everything was too quiet, until the moment demons sprung forth. They ambushed the group, Silbermine caught on quickly. This was good. What wasn’t good was the tentacled horror that burst from underneath Shirik. They expected this tactic from life mages in the form of predatory marine life. But this…

Floating above the bridge gave Shirik just enough breathing room to make one swift, albeit ham fisted move in retaliation. They thrust their staff down, as if they were shoving a person backwards, and the mirage of heat beneath them because a raging fireball, sputtering out as quickly as it formed. It was, ultimately, an explosion and not a proper spell. And Shirik was propelled upwards, and back to where they started. The blast flung them in the direction of Mallory and Silbermine, dozens of feet higher than they anticipated.

While it got them out of the clutches of that abomination, it put Shirik in a precarious situation. The propulsion of Shirik’s magic hinges on how much heat they expelled. And because they were not expelling enough heat to maintain their current height, Shirik sunk like a rock. Silbermine, Mallory and the knights would feel a downward draft of sudden heat as they touched down, stumbling and falling to one knee with a crunch near the Glen lord.

A more keen-eyed individual would note that bits of black, gritty material seemed to fall of of Shirik’s body as they stood up, leaning slightly on their staff.

”The battlefield unifies even the most distant banners. We fight together!” Despite their differences, Shirik was a soldier at heart, just like the Glen of Silbermine’s house. Even in their seemingly weary state, Shirik steeled themself. Flames erupted from their crackling shell, as the made a swiping motion with a glowing finger. The blazing ring turned, and raced into the sky. With a flick of their wrist, it curved down, and flew like a meteor on a collision course with the creature that they just escaped from.

The one Ixtaro was closest to, it seemed.

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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Starlance
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Vigdis had been asleep for a few hours by then, only woken up by the commotion when the strange black substance appeared. She staggered to her feet, still half awake, immediately dropping to a crouch to take cover behind the boat’s walls. Cover from what? She didn’t know. She briefly considered helping the paralyzed soldier get away from the hole in the boat, but that idea got shot down faster than the Jotunheim. No way she’d move a Tekeri, much less one wearing armor.

The captain’s command spurred her into action, though probably not in a way the captain expected. ”NO! STAY ON BOARD!” There she goes, stepping over Zey’s authority in front of people again. Fuck it, ask for forgiveness, permission takes too long. ”Touch the goo while in water and you’re dead!” she pointed the paralyzed soldier out to the captain. Her first assumption was some squid-like river monster actually using its ink to fight rather than escape - or maybe it was paralyzing them to escape - but then she had to ask herself why exactly K-A wildlife would even have something like ‘a squid’ releasing ink? Could’ve been Merfolk for all she could guess. Still, it was something in the water, which meant their weapons were pretty much useless unless the culprit was just below the surface.

Regardless, Vigdis would hardly have been able to shoot even if she wanted to, as some force grabbed a hole of her weapon and several items on her person and in her backpack and started pulling her up, a barrage of Russian swearing touching a variety of topics streaming from her mouth s she held onto her weapon with one hand and the boat with the other, managing to shove a foot under a nearby cleat to keep herself grounded, at least for as long as the cleat stayed attached to the deck. Good thing the implants in her foot were titanium and not steel.

Whatever Kareet, Nellara and the other Tekeri soldier were doing - and she had no idea what it was - was working, the barge being worse for wear but nearing the shore at last. Once they were on solid ground, they could deal with- were those bows?

The volley of arrows answered that question pretty definitely. Curled up behind the boat’s walls, her backpack in front of her as additional poor man’s armor, Vigdis waited for exactly three volleys, counting the time between them while loading a flechette magazine. This called for whatever spread she could get. Right after the third volley, she popped her head and shoulders above cover and fired three times before ducking back down. Funnily enough, the coilguns weren’t much louder than the bows, little more than metallic clicking as the projectile was pulled into the barrel and the coils slightly moved in their mountings. Say what you want about them, but a chemical propellant gun would’ve had a much better psychological effect on the natives. Not wanting to take an arrow to the knee or anywhere else, she didn’t wait to see if she hit anything and ducked back down. ”Nellara? Your neighbors are a bunch of bastards.”
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Hidden 1 yr ago Post by Expendable
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Mallory's gun was already out, he pointed his weapon at the stone beast when Shirik's blast flung them free of the creature. But while he tried his best, his right ankle cracked on landing, filling his head with throbbing pain that made him burst out in sweat as he barely contained his cries of pain.

Damn that doctor for running off like she did! They had to do this as a group! The lone ones running out front were invariably the first targets.

"It's broke," he managed. "Go on ahead, don't let me slow you down!"

Maybe if their attackers saw him as injured, he could draw them away from the rest? Hopefully none of them could deflect his bullets.
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Thanks to Kareet's effort, with Nellara's help and the other mages that were among the group, the barge was safely put in the margin of the river, out of the strange black liquid. The very moment they thought they were safe though, a multitude of people were noticed by them. Even though they were partially hidden by the foliage, Nellara could still clearly see that they were a rather strange group. Without any noticeable marking, uniform or identification, the group's integrante were of many different races. They also didn't seem to be equipped for actual combat, resembling more hunters than even bandits, who often were equipped to some extent, even if only with plundered and stolen equipment.

Before Nellara or any of them could say anything, the group immediately sent a volley of arrows towards their direction. Without any warning or any negotiation, they definitely didn't seem to be bandits of any kind.

"Form a protective perimeter around the humans, right now!" Nellara ordered, as the iron sand she kept in a pouch quickly began floating around, flowing in the air as it gathered together, hardening to deflect shots before going back to it's previous form, again and again.

"Force mages, defensive formation! We need a barrier." Nellara continued before she gave a step forward towards the group, both aiming to make them focus their fire on her as she focused the iron sand to defend herself and to speak to the group.

"This is Castigator Nellara! Cease fire, stand down and identify yourselves immediately! You have exactly one chance to follow my commands and surrender." Nellara shouted with the loud, authoritative voice of someone who was used to commanding and coordinating large groups of soldiers echoing through the riverbanks.

"Failure to comply will be dealt with lethal force." Nellara finished, her voice quickly taking a darker tone as she threatened the group of hunters.

Despite the first volley of arrows getting most of them by surprise, a single glance quickly revealed that the humans were definitely quick to react and had mostly already took cover.

"Not neighbors. They didn't try to negotiate or steal us, nor they even tried to talk to us. Definitely not bandits and most likely not just normal 'hunters', as they would not have any reason to attack us if they were so." Nellara said, replying to Vigdis.

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Kareet of Arcaeda





Kareet had only a limited view of what was going on around her. The assistance of Nellara’s Force mages made it possible to bring the barge to shore, but it still took every bit of effort she could muster to do her part. The soldiers arranged into some sort of formation as quickly as possible. The first volley of arrows came down before they could fully position themselves, but there were two that managed to get themselves in front of Kareet, using their shields, armor, and own bodies to guard her. Likely the same was true for the Force mages keeping them up.

All around her, Kareet heard the impact of arrows. Some against metal, some into the wooden hull, some into flesh. Kareet saw one of them pierce straight through the body of one of the Tekeri soldiers. It was an arrow shot from one of the heavy bows used by the likes of the S’tor which could absolutely pierce even quality chainmail, and in this case, she could see it impale through one of his lungs out the other side. Though, the reactions of the soldiers was professional and practiced. The front line pushed forward to guard those behind them, holding shields high to protect the head. Those in the middle quickly grabbed the injured soldier and pulled them back, then the Life mage got quickly to work. Life mages commonly stayed in the back of most formations and would use their fellow soldiers’ bodies as shields, if need be. Above all, they were trained to protect their own lives, for they were responsible for keeping the rest alive. ‘Treatment’, in this case, did not involve near so much care as the Humans were accustomed to from their field medics. Speed of recovery was the most important factor here, so the Life mage simply grabbed the arrow and yanked it straight out of the body with little concern for how much damage the arrowhead did as she ripped it out. Sheer adrenaline likely halted the pain, and fortunately for him, it would not catch up with him later. A few moments of focus from the Life mage, and the wound closed up before their eyes.

In most circumstances, the barrage would have continued beyond the first few volleys, but there was something to surprise even their ambushers. They were far away and had already ranged their shots beforehand, so they were not expecting effective return fire. However, the Humans and their weapons seemed to be able to aim and shoot at even that long range perfectly well. Instead of arrows or fireballs, it was seemingly invisible projectiles landing all around them. Kareet could hear little beyond the deafening crack of Zey’s weapon, again and again and again. It could shoot so quickly with a sound that echoed throughout the entire valley. Among the assailants on the shore, one of the shots from one of the Humans tore straight through a Glen’s chest, and she dropped to the ground in an instant. There was no arrow, no sign of what struck her, but they could hear the sounds of these shots flying all around them. Startled and frightened, two of them grabbed their wounded ally while they all retreated back behind the treeline.

The barrage of arrows might have halted until the barge made it to shore, but that did not mark the end of the ambush. A horn sounded out, and from the trees came charging two massive creatures on all-fours, as fast as their bodies could carry them. To nearly everyone present, they were entirely unrecognizable, but to Kareet and J’eon, they were frighteningly familiar.
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Zey quickly realised the folly of her last order when she looked around and realised this black tar had risen to the surface of the entire river around them. There was no escape in the water.

“Belay that, spread out but stay in the boat! Round the edges!” She shouted, feeling a strange tug on various bits of her gear as some of the locals began raising the boat out of the water with magic. Zey pulled her comms unit closer but had to hold on tight to stop it floating away.

“Jotunheim, this is Zey. We’ve run into difficulty, I…uh… I'm not sure how to explain it. We’re nearly at the shore now.”

She signed off and scanned the tree line when a line of natives appeared. Squinting, Zey’s features hardened when she saw what they were doing.

“Archers on the riverbank, take cover!” She yelled, crouching behind the gunwale to fumble with her gun. It was moving all on its own, probably because of its metal content, so she wrapped the strap around her arm a couple of times to stabilise it. Then Zey poked over the top and fired on full auto.

Her magazine was bigger than usual, holding 45 bullets, but it was still empty in just a few seconds. The muzzle flash made it difficult to see if she’d hit anything, but the barrage coming from the Humans seemed to have the right effect. The strangers fell back into the tree line, and for a moment there were no targets.

Zey looked around - the boat was in chaos. The natives were much larger and made very juicy targets for the arrows; she could see some of them had been gravely wounded. “Everyone alright?” She asked her crew over comms.

“How could they know we were here?”

Zey tried to contact the Jotunheim, but couldn’t make a connection.

“Jotunheim come in - we’re under attack by unknown assailants. Requesting indirect fire, do you copy?”

A horn sounded. Zey swore, put the communicator back and looked at her weapon. The magazine had another full magazine taped to its side, so she swapped them clumsily over.

A loud, rhythmic thumping came towards them, and two huge creatures emerged. Yelling out, Zey didn’t even hesitate into shooting her second magazine at the one on the left.

“What are these things?!” She shouted, not even sure anyone could hear her over the racket.
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Nellara's expression as she looked to their assailants was almost frightening as she noticed they had no reaction to her words. Their lack of reaction, their immediate assault and how they were enough to confirm Nellara they weren't just common hunters or bandits. Depspite her initial intention of dealing with that matter with just intimidation, the amount of arrows being fired at them and the fact that there were already wounded soldiers between her men was a signal that intimidation and defensive formations would only take them so far.

While Nellara already knew that, due to her previous dealing with the humans, it was still a relief to know they weren't just harmless politicians and envoys to be escorted and defended. Vigdis quickly quickly grasped the situation and waited for the right time before returning fire. The humans' strange weapons, despite not being particularly loud or intimidating at first sight, were undoubtedly effective, with their projectiles flying faster than the eye could see.

"Vigdis, Captain Zeynep, thank you for your support. Feel free to fire at our assailants without reservation." Nellara said, glancing at the humans for a brief moment before she looked at her soldiers again.

"Soldiers, prepare fo-" Nelara began, just before she was interrupted by a worrying sound. From amidst the trees, the sound of a horn echoed, just before two frighteningly large creatures appeared, charging directly at them. Nellara didn't need to know exactly what were those creatures to know they were dangerous.

"Force mages, focus solely on defense against the arrows! Soldiers, shields raised, tight formation, prepare for impact!" Nellara said, hurriedly as the beasts charged towards them.

"Kareet, J'eon, do we have any information about these creatures? Vulnerabilities, weak spots... Anything?!" Nellara asked, grabbing a few of the iron beads with her hand, shooting them at the creatures using her electricity and magnetism magic to propel them at great speeds. One after another, Nellara tried to hit the head, the side of the head or any place she thought had any chance at deterring their charge.

Additionally, with the force mages focusing in defending them against arrows, Nellara was free to use her iron sand in a different manner. At the same time she shot the iron spheres, she made the iron sand form a long line in the ground, starting on her feet and continuing all the way after the shield formation made by the soldiers, forming a line just in front of them. The moment the creatures stepped or crossed the line, she would produce a strong electricity current, touching the iron sand line on her feet. Due to the creature' size, Nellara knew it was highly improbable it would be able to incapacitate them, but as long as it dazed them enough to confound or lessen the impact of their charge, it would be enough.
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The creatures were quick and chaotic in their movements. The tendrils on their bodies appeared to shift in different directions simultaneously, seeking targets. The one below Shirik grasped the ancient Iriad’s foot with one of these tendrils before it was engulfed in fire. A whirlwind of black flakes exploded in every direction. The force of the magic blast smashed it back into the water. A large bowl of steam blew outwards and for a brief second the riverbed below was visible. Then the water rushed back in.

Silbermine and his Glen were much heavier than Mallory, so they merely turned and shielded themselves from the massive blast. Upon opening his eyes, the Lord saw the tendril beast unfurling itself from the nook it’d been hiding in on the bridge. It began advancing towards Mallory.

Letting forth a belligerent snarl, Silbermine drew his sabre from a flank scabbard. By Human standards it bordered on obnoxiously large at over 1.5 metres with a slight curve towards the end.

“We fight together! Lets see your mettle, mage!”

Clopping unsteadily forward on the partially submerged bridge, Silbermine slashed at the creature’s tendrils from the opposite side to Mallory but the same side as Shirik.

Two sizeable tendril-tips came off and slapped onto the watery stone beneath. They immediately began disintegrating into the bridge in a flutter of black grit. At the same rate, the creature’s tendrils started to grow back.

The horrific thing screeched and turned quickly away from Mallory to face Silbermine and Shirik. Losing its quadrupedal shape, it formed something like a black fleshy tornado of fast-moving knives. Without delay it moved quickly towards the space between Shirik and Silbermine where it could slash them both.

“My Lord!” A soldier bellowed from behind Silbermine and Shirik (towards the goal-end of the bridge). He moved forward to assist, but a fourth creature leapt from the water in the form of one giant corkscrew. With pinpoint accuracy, it pierced the Glen soldier’s armour and knocked him to the floor. The corkscrew drilled through to flesh, spraying blood everywhere as the Glen honked in pain and fear. Tendrils unfurled from the back of the corkscrew to engulf the soldier.

Further forward on the bridge, the first creature that Shirik had dispatched crawled back out of the water and up the side of the bridge. It was wreathed in flames just like the Iriad that had cast the spell on it. It went to attack another of the Glen that was hemmed in on the bridge just next to Itxaro as Shirik’s meteor approached the Human.

“Mallory, can you move? I’m coming over there.” Eva called over comms. Her mech wasn’t particularly well suited to this ruined bridge but there was just enough space for her to try and barge past Glen soldiers towards the middle. However, many of the loyal knights had the same idea and were rushing to assist their leader.
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Kareet of Arcaeda





As soon as they had reached the shore, Kareet extended a hand towards her pack over in the corner of the boat. Since she knew just where she kept her hammer, she could form a magnetic link to it, then pulled it out of its pouch, through the air, and into her hand. Placing two fingers near the base of the haft, she ran them up towards the hammer head at a constant speed, building up electric charge the entire time. By the end, the weapon was wreathed in lightning and still bound to her by the link she had made.

Against any other creature, Nellara’s orders would have been the right call. Few animals would willingly charge in to be skewered by a wall of spears and blades. However, from her experience with the creature before, that was not going to work here. Their weapons were not going to pierce its hide, and it had the sheer power behind it that grouping tightly would only make it easier for it to crush more of them at once.

“No, spread out!” Kareet shouted, looking over to Nellara. “Tough hide, magic resistant. Alternate heat and cold to weaken it.” She spoke quickly and efficiently, as the beasts were mere moments from reaching them.
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J'eon the Blacksmith




J'eon's lips curled and he began to hum, fanning the gift of flame in his hearts to grow. Holding out his hands, tiny pin-pricks of light appeared, swelling into spheres, one of flame, the other of cold

"You will regret this meal, should you survive," he bellowed, throwing the flaming sphere at the nearest, then as it began to writhe with pain, threw the cold sphere and watched as it sucked out the heat from the creature before engulfing it again in flame.



Jack Mallory




Jack fired three shots, aiming center of mass as he was taught.
I hope we're still in range for my implants to transmit this back to the ship, he hopes.
"What the hell are these things?" he demanded.

Hearing Eva's cry, he yells back, "My ankle's broke. Defend the others!"

A tendril beast burst out the water, only to get three shots in its face. Or at least Mallory hoped that was its face.


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Itxaro was too focused on not falling into the raging river underfoot to notice much. Shirik's cheers of encouragement. The ominous silence that followed. It wasn't until she heard their voice again, warped and strangely distorted, did the engineer realize something was terribly, terribly, wrong.

And by then, something had her leg.

She tried pulling away without looking, assuming she'd gotten snagged on a branch knocked loose by the torrential flood, but it tightened around her calf, digging into the heavy cloth. Then Itxaro looked. A black tendril coiled up her leg, its grasp slowly constricting, while another crept towards her other. Some kind of snake? Vine?

She barely had time to yelp before all hell broke loose.

Strange, shifting figures erupted from everywhere, all ropes of black sinew striking with deadly speed and strength. "Shit, shit, shit," Itxaro muttered breathlessly as she was pulled onto her back with incredible strength by the tendril. Time seemed to slow as she watched her comrades struggle against the beasts in whatever way they knew; sword, gun, fire. It all seemed woefully ineffective.

No help coming here, Itxaro thought as she struggled to keep her body out of the water. Already she was submerged to the knee, tentacle climbing up further and further. She drew her heavy revolver and pressed the barrel against the tendril's surprisingly yielding flesh, sideways so as not to blow her own leg off, and pulled the trigger. Jet black powder splattered across the wet stone as the tendril was nearly severed from the large caliber round. Her ears rang from the gun's boom and her hand felt numb from the recoil, but Itxaro seized the moment and pulled her leg free from the weakened thing, scrambling to her feet.

The damaged tentacle withdrew just as the other seized her wrist holding the gun. She might have wondered at the creature's intelligence, apparently able to realize that gun equals weapon, had it not started to try and crush her organic arm while simultaneously drag her into the water. Itxaro howled in equal parts anger and pain, her finger instinctively pulling the revolver's trigger. It fired into the air to no effect.

She pulled against the tentacle, pain shooting up and down her arm, before realizing she had two hands. Well, one hand and a prosthetic, but a very strong prosthetic at that. She grasped the tentacle with her unfeeling mechanical hand, and with a squeeze, crushed the pliant flesh in her metal palm to black dust. She nearly fell back into the water but stumbled and remained upright. Her arm was sore, and purple bruises were already appearing around her wrist, but she was alive and free.

Itxaro watched in silent horror as another malformed beast sprung from the water and onto the collapsed, now engulfed in fire. She thoughtlessly fired her remaining five rounds into the creature's back (was it the back?) and dark powder erupted from the exit wounds on the other side. The bullets seemed to pass clear through the monster. "Shit," She repeated, knowing her gun was now empty and the ammo for it could only be found in her cinched-up backpack.
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Yesterday’s hunt had gone well. And now, Velhass inspected the skin he cut away from the rakthir they caught. He laid it over the fire last night, to dry it out and make it easier to clean for the colder seasons. It was large and would make a good covering.

Looking up into the trees, he saw a pair of birds flying under the midday sun.

”Howlerwings…” Shirik walked out of their quaint abode, looking up at the sky. ”They should be hibernating by now… Odd. Velhass, did you use the ash base I showed you for that?”

Velhass nodded, the underside of the rakthir pelt was dry as bone, in no small part thanks to the curious mix of wood ash, paste from some alarmingly poisonous fruit that Shirik just happened to cultivate last season in their garden, and animal fat. ”How do you know so many things like that? Did one of your hunting ancestors teach you?”

”They do not teach me anything, but no. I learned that from a S’tor in the northern mountains, shortly after I won a god’s crown in a game of Damage.”

Velhass stared at Shirik. This was one of their stories that he could neither confirm nor deny. ”…There is some part of that story which is true, and I have no way of knowing which,” He shook his head, and returned to his work, cutting away bits of sinew that shrunk under the smoke with a chuckle.

Shirik laughed, only it sounded like the death throes of a dying animal. ”One day, you’ll learn that I rarely tell an imagined tale, boy.” Shirik leaned on their walking staff, pondering the forest that lay before them both.

”And just how did you meet a god?”

”By leaving this fragile form behind, while my mind delved beyond what is known, to find peace in my new life,” Shirik retorted, matter-of-factly.

Velhass did not have a witty remark for that. He let the answer go for a moment as he thought about what Shirik just said. They never talked about how they wound up burning alive perpetually.

”…How did that happen? The… Well-“

”The flames?” They could tell Velhass was trying to be polite about it. Not that they needed to be cautious at this point. ”I was burned alive, many centuries ago. Have you heard of the Kolodon?”

”Some. Only stories,” he said, curiously.

”They ruled everything in this world, once. They conquered it all, laying claim to whatever was strong enough to survive their passing. I was young like you, when I witnessed their attack on my home.”

Shirik knelt down beside Velhass, and waved a hand through the air. Wisps of flame shaped into a glowing tapestry, depicting S’tor and Iriad in a war. ”I hadn’t realized what happened, until it was too late. I was set ablaze like the forest around us all, and then I saw things that no living being could understand. I saw the birth of the world, and I saw its end. And it was all one continuous moment… Life and death, cast in golden hues. Burning as a flame.”

The images fell away, one after another, until there was only one Iriad rising from the ground, where tall trees once stood in the background.

”It changed me. I was not reborn, but I was no longer the soldier with ancestry of hunters.”

Velhass listened with rapt attention, marveling at the small tale. He felt small, uninteresting in comparison to the immortal being he took to calling a father. From time to time, Shirik told stories of times long past, of great kings far beyond the horizon, noble heroes who wandered this land before his grandparents could form words, and of places no one but Shirk themself had seen. Velhass often wondered just how many of Shirik’s stories were true, and how many were elderly ramblings. But now…

Was he just another page in the book of someone who would outlive the universe?

”Do you ever miss the Myriad? Could you ever go home if you wanted?”

”The world is my home, boy. Every step I’ve taken, every road I’ve walked. I was here long before the borders of today were drawn out on maps, and I will be here long after they’ve faded,” Shirik looked up at the sky, towards the south where they were born so long ago.

”I often wonder if the faces from my old life still live as we do, but I am just a memory to them all now.”

One day, Velhass would be dead and just a memory as well. He knew this, and it wasn’t particularly a revelation to him. But thinking about Shirik’s age made him feel an emotion he couldn’t put to words. It wasn’t sadness, there was nothing to be sad about.

”My family left me behind too. Before the inquisitors found me.”

”I thought they were…” Dead. Velhass didn’t like talking about where he came from. Shirik knew this.

”I think they are. They told me they’d come home one day, after they were done being soldiers. If they didn’t die, they lied to me.”

Shirik stayed quiet for a moment. Velhass couldn’t tell what was going on behind those burning eyes, but it must’ve been something like understanding.

”You’ll see them again, one day.”

”How do you know?”

Shirik stood, leaning on their staff. ”Nothing is permanent, Velhass. You’ll understand, one day.”





They were cornered. The river-dwelling beast was set ablaze, and splattered like day-old salad. But it was still kicking, despite being on fire. The other human, Mallory, was injured and surrounded by the Glen, who were taking hits. Being in the middle of them gave Shirik space to take in the battlefield. They did not need ancestral memory to recall the tactics of yesteryear. These creatures were forneless, they warped and twisted themselves into new forms as if they were made of clay. In this world, it was Life mages who held such power. Shirik wouldn’t put it past a particularly deranged one to create such abominations. Magic opened up possibilities that the denizens of Kanth-Arenek could never dream of otherwise.

The Glen were not impenetrable, and neither were the humans. Shirik elected to kill two birds with one stone. With their staff in hand, they drew a circle of fire in the air, sticking an arm through it one it was completely. The flames went from warm gold, to a bony white color in the blink of an eye, seemingly brighter than they were initially. Palm open, and fingers curled, Shirik pointed the ring at the creature attacking Ixtaro. The end of their staff began forming a glowing ball of heat, with thin, almost invisible strands of light trailing from one spell to the next. The orb of heat grew brighter and brighter, into a miniature sun no larger than a human fist. The more attentive warriors would notice that a much larger orb of mist and fog seemed to be crackling in front of Shirik’s hand, glimmering like winter wind in the moonlight.

”Get back here, Ixtaro!” They bellowed, as the glowing white ring moved forward, past their hand. Shirik spread their fingers, and the shimmering air was sent forth like a spear, the only indication of magic being used to attack. Shirik’s spell was the exact opposite of a fireball, it was a void of heat, colder than what any living being could hope to survive, drained of every scrap of friction imaginable. This blast of ice was intended to flash freeze the monster, and compromise its ability to reform, or successfully get up the bridge to Ixtaro.

And as there was take, so too was there give. All of the heat they sapped from the air directly in front of them was now theirs to use. They closed a hand around the blazing orb, and let it deep through their cracked bark like water into roots. Flame was the lifeblood that gave Shirik the energy to keep going. And after they flew through the air like a Force mage, they needed to boost.

”When I give the signal, shield your eyes, all of you!”

They raised their staff high overhead, and started drawing curious shapes. If this worked, it could turn the tide of battle. But they needed time…

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