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Hidden 26 days ago 26 days ago Post by CitrusArms
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Stratya Durmand

Time:
25th, Evening
Location: Pinebrook Camping
Attire: Very Light Armor Set
Zweihander Greatsword + Simple Leather Sheath
Swordbreaker
Family Dirk + Crest
Interactions: Ariella @Tpartywithzombi, Callum @Helo, Riona [@JJDoe]
Mentions: Kira @Potter

The thing that got her most was the scar. You don’t come back from that one. No one that lost their head ever recovered, it was a sure death. She supposed there were other ways to get a scar like that, but all the way around? Everything told her that the man there should be dead. Who’s body even was that? Had she even found his body in the first place? She had to believe the hound, but had someone else tried very deliberately to deceive any investigative pursuits, and make her think it had been his body? That seemed like a lot of effort, though.

Ariella was, indeed, interested in swordsmanship lessons. That was well. Self-defense was a good thing for a young lady to know. She would have broached the subject further, but the young lady had her attention caught by the youngest prince and excused herself. She watched her go to join the royal and Riona, before deciding she would follow as she slipped her foraging dagger back into her bag and slung her greatsword over her shoulder, a relaxed position not intended for drawing. She saw the expressions they were wearing. Yes, she wasn’t the only one.

As though they were thinking the same, Callum found her and motioned her to join them. She approached with a smile, with only a hint of weariness. If that was Darryn’s head, if his head had, for some reason, been selected for a new body and necromancy, what did that mean? Why go to the trouble? Could they see or hear them through his senses? Was he loyal, and would report back? With a possible known agent so close, she had to be careful.

And that woman. That woman that didn’t fit. Clearly not an average commoner, her clothes were too.. fine. Was she a foreign noble? Perhaps, but something about her seemed too.. roguish? She couldn’t risk saying anything such, but when she thought about the Alidasht nobles she’d met, that woman still didn’t quite sit right. Ah well. Maybe she’d figure it out later.

“Prince Callum,” Stratya smiled as she approached the group of three. She drew back the tartan cloth over her breadbasket, “a baked good tae steady yerr though’s? Rriona? Seems work ‘as followed us from t’ morgue, ey.” That’s where his head should have been. She spoke in a soft voice, “did y’ no’ice ‘is scarr?”

It wasn’t necessarily a question she needed answered. More boistrously, ”on an evenin’ like this, you shoul’ ‘ave a lit’le drrink, I think. Brrough’ two bot’les o’ me brrother’s mead, I did. There’s all t’is rroasted mea’ and camp nibblin’s tae go wit’ it, too! ‘ere’s some cookin’ even’, too, aye? I ‘avn’t cooked f’r owt ‘sides me in a while. Bakin’, aye, but ‘at’s diff’rrent.”

”Oh, Lady Arriella,” Stratya dug into her bag and produced the dagger, which she offered, “farr t’ firrs’ parr’ o’ y’ trrainin’, carry t’is and get accustomed tae i’s weigh’, and i’ bein’ a’ yerr side. We’ll got forraging la’er, tae ‘elp ye ge’ used tae usin’ i’. I’ll grrab my lieutena’ forr y’ tae prractice with boffles tomahrruh. Y’ may drraw tae inspect the blade only, and rr’memberr tha’ if you touch t’ steel, y’ll ‘ave tae clean it, or i' 'ill rrust in time.”
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Hidden 23 days ago Post by Apex Sunburn
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Apex Sunburn Justified text enjoyer

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Time: Late Evening / Night
Location: Sorian Waterfront >> Sada Kurau
Interactions:
Mentions: Dahlia Fletcher @princess
Attire:



For the second time in less than half-a-day, Sjan-dehk left the Privateers’ Office. He moved with haste, his boots thumping loudly against well-trodden planks as he marched across the veranda and jogged down its steps to reach the cobblestones of the waterfront.

There wasn’t much of a crowd – Sjan-dehk supposed that it was late enough that most people had already found their haunts for the rest of the evening. Even so, there was still a steady trickle of longshoremen still grimey from labour; of well-to-do citizens who gave them wide berths; and of commoners strolling leisurely along the waterfront. Some moved with purpose, their heads bowed, shoulders hunched, and coats pulled tight against the chilly seaward breeze. Others instead stopped every so often to bask in the warm, yellow glows of street lamps, and gaze out over the dark waters of the harbour.

Sjan-dehk didn’t know what they were looking at. He heard no waves, and he doubted that the lamps were bright enough to show passers-by anything more than an endless, black expanse. But perhaps there was an attractive mystique to that, to stand before an ink-black void.

He shook his head and quickened his pace, pulling his hat a little lower over his eyes and holding the ratty book and bundle of fabrics in his arm close to his chest. This wasn’t any time to ponder; Sada Kurau was waiting for him to return before she could finally sail out for her mission. She would have gone out earlier, before the sun had fully set, had Sjan-dehk not needed to pay the Privateers’ Office another visit. It hadn’t been a long one, thankfully, but still he felt embarrassed for having needed to make it in the first place.

“Good evenin’, Cap’n,” a vaguely familiar voice called out to him. Sjan-dehk looked up and to his left, and saw a vaguely familiar man walk towards him. His head of fiery hair was in a mess, as was his green coat, unbuttoned down the middle to display a brown waistcoat and off-white shirt. Both his hands held onto the handles of a heavy crate.

“Good evening,” Sjan-dehk replied and furrowed his brow. “Captain…”

“Cynric,” the man completed for him with a mischievous grin as he approached. He hefted the crate with a grunt and rested it against his thigh. “Dae’n tell me yer’ve forgotten aw’ready?”

Sjan-dehk nodded sheepishly. “Apologies. Your names, they are still strange to me. Hard to say. Harder to remember.” He glanced at the crate. “These are…Supplies? No. Provisions?”

“Aye,” Cynric replied. “Figured I’d get ta’ lads an’ lassies some good drink tae keep ‘em ‘appy fae a whiles longer. Nae sailor like stayin’ in ‘arbour fae tae long, ‘tis sae.” He then tilted his chin towards the book and bundle that Sjan-dehk was carrying. “An’ I see yer’ve taken tae privateerin’?”

“Yes,” Sjan-dehk replied, shades of his surprise showing through. “How do you know?”

Cynric grinned. “I wan’ tae say that I recognise ‘at signal book that yer carryin’, but nae, ‘tis nae that. I jus’ saw you leavin’ tae privateer’s office earlier,” he said. “Hope yer dae’n mind me askin’, but did yer jus’ sign up, or are yer headin’ out on a job?”

“Sada Kurau will sail, yes,” Sjan-dehk said. “I joined in the afternoon, but I forgot to ask about your signals and your flags.” A sheepish tone tinted his words. As far as mistakes went, that was one that a captain as experienced as Sjan-dehk shouldn’t have made – signalling was how a ship talked, and it was as vital to a ship as her sails or hull or crew – and that he had made it brought him some modicum of shame. He took it as a lesson learned, however. At least now he knew one thing he had to look out for when sailing waters beyond the Commonwealth’s borders.

“Ah, dae’n s’pose yer mind ‘avin’ an extra ship tae ‘elp?” Cynric asked. “I was jus’ thinkin’ o’ signin’ mysel’ and my crew up as privateers tae, aye. Figured ‘at if I lend yer a ‘and, it migh’ dae us some favours in tiltin’ ta’ odds in our favour, ‘tis sae.”

He grinned again. “An’ maybe it migh’ convince yer tae put in a good word, tae.”

Neither of those seemed necessary to Sjan-dehk. Based on what he had seen, Kerr would be overjoyed to have another ship that wasn’t a gunboat, and a captain who knew what he was about, at his disposal. But Sjan-dehk was in a rush, and he had dawdled for long enough. And besides, if he was going to go hunting for an unknown ship – or ships – in the dark, he wasn’t about to turn away extra sets of eyes to help keep an eye out for things.

And so, he nodded. “Okay. That is good. How soon can you sail?”

Cynric hefted the crate off his thigh. “As soon as I get this bastard o’ a crate stowed awa’,” he replied. “I’ll ‘ave eyes on yer ship, aye? We’ll make sail when yer start makin’ way.”

“Yes, that will work,” Sjan-dehk said. “We should go now. Otherwise, will be too late.”

“Aye.” Cynwaer grunted as he took a few steps forward, trying to reacquire his balance. “I look forward tae sailin’ wi’ yer, Cap’n.”

Sjan-dehk nodded to him, said a few parting words, and continued on his way. It didn’t take long for him to return to Sada Kurau – the ship was docked only a short distance away from the Privateers’ Office – but it still felt as if he had been away for far too long. He went up the gangway. Just as he took his first step onto Sada Kurau’s deck, he caught the tail end of a conversation that was going by the bulwark, directly beside the gangway’s landing.

“...don’t know, Inshahri, I-I can’t sense anything.” It was Yasawen. “L-Look, the Captain’s back. Maybe you should ask him b-before you go any further.”

That got Sjan-dehk’s attention in an instant, and – the mission momentarily forgotten – he snapped around to face Yasawen. “Is there something you plan to do to Sada Kurau that I should – no, I must know about, Yasa?”

The boy wilted beneath his gaze, and he looked off to the side. “N-No, Captain,” he said in a small voice. It didn’t seem as if sending him off to explore Sada Kurau on his own had done him any favours. If anything, he seemed even more timid than when Sjan-dehk had first seen him.

“I-Inshahri’s the one who was doing…Things,” he continued, pointing to the girl standing beside him.

The girl pressed her fingers to her lips and giggled. “Aw, come on, Yasa,” she said, her voice melodic, and every syllable sounding as if they were part of a song. “Don’t tell me you didn’t have fun chasing down this mystery with me.”

Yasawen flushed. “I–”

“You can’t lie to me,” the girl sang. “I know you too well.”

Sjan-dehk sighed and held up his hand. “Alright, that’s enough,” he said and turned to the girl. It took him a moment to remember her name, as well as the reason why she was even aboard Sada Kurau in the first place. “Inshahri, yes?” He asked.

“That’s me,” the girl chirped.

Dark of skin and mischievous of face, Inshahri was another arcanist Sudah had sent over – a woodshaper and counter-arcane specialist. Sjan-dehk remembered that part about her clearly; both her specialisations were very much welcome aboard a ship-of-war, and he distinctly recalled being not as annoyed by her late arrival – a few hours after Yasawen – as he should have been because of that very fact. That she seemed to have some history with the geomancer, and was his utter opposite in terms of personality, had appeared to be an added bonus. Sjan-dehk had hoped that her presence would make it easier for Yasawen to ease into becoming part of Sada Kurau’s crew.

Now, however, that seemed to be wishful thinking.

Yasawen stood ill-at-ease beside her, his eyes looking at the sails; at the pier; at the sea; at everything but Sjan-dehk. His slouched shoulders made Inshahri look even taller than him, beyond the few scant inches that separated them. Coupled with his disheveled clothes – likely a result of squeezing through the narrow hatches and lower decks of Sada Kurau – he looked quite miserable.

Sjan-dehk let out a quiet sigh. He would have to do something about the boy at some point. Otherwise, he wasn’t going to last long as part of Sada Kurau.

Shaking his head slightly, Sjan-dehk spoke to Inshahri. “So, want to tell me what you’re doing?”

The girl hummed, her shoulders faintly swaying back-and-forth. “So you know I’m a counter-arcanist, right, Captain? That means I can sense magic and stuff like that.” She tapped a finger against her lip, turning to look towards the stern, then towards the prow. The cat-like smile on her face never faded. “I just thought I sensed something earlier. Still do, actually! It’s magic, that’s for sure, and it’s not Yasa’s.”

She looked at the boy with a playful look. “His magic has a nicer song. This one is just weird.”

Yasawen’s face flushed. “S-Stop it, I know y-you’re just teasing…” He muttered, eyes looking at the space between his feet.

“Enough of that,” Sjan-dehk interjected. He wasn’t quite sure why, but there was something familiar about how the two of them interacted with one another. Whether it was a good thing or not, he still didn’t know. “Inshahri, focus for now. When did you start detecting that magic?”

“Not too long ago. Maybe just a little while before you returned?” She hummed thoughtfully, then shrugged before wiping her hands over her shirt. It hung loosely about her shoulders, and was messily tucked into a calf-length skirt. A bright, yellow sash tied around her waist completed her simple outfit, one that reminded Sjan-dehk quite a lot of what Iyen preferred to wear. And now that Sjan-dehk took a proper look at her, she even wore her hair in a pair of tails that wasn’t too dissimilar from how Iyen wore hers.

“I tried looking, and Yasa helped, too!” She continued. “But we didn’t find anything, so I wanted us to go to the holds and the…And the…” Her smile faded slightly and she scratched her head. “What’s the place with all the gunpowder called?”

“The magazine,” Sjan-dehk said. He turned to Yasawen. “You did the right thing, stopping her. Nobody but Young Master Sohn-dahn and his boys, and Master Mursi and his gun crews should be there.”

Yasawen smiled hesitantly. “T-Thank you, Captain.”

“Boo,” Inshahri whined with a pout. “What about me? I found the magic first, Captain.”

Sjan-dehk flashed her a grin. “I’ll praise you once we find that magic, Inshahri,” he said and lifted the book and bundle. “Let me get these to Chief Sai-nahn and get us underway. Then, I’ll join the two of you to look for that source of magic. Just do exactly as I say and nothing else. I don’t want anyone accidentally killing themselves before we even leave harbour. It’s bad luck.”
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Hidden 21 days ago 21 days ago Post by Potter
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Potter

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Time: Evening
Location: Camping Event

Interactions: @Rodiak Matthias @CitrusArms Straya ☁
Mentions: ☁ @Conscripts John ☁ @Tpartywithzombi Ariella
Aesthetic:
☁ Hair
☁ Necklace
☁ Bandanna, Outfit (ignore the shoes))

☁ Boots



Kira politely bowed to Sir Matthias and dipped her head respectfully. ”I hear a good discussion over there on swordsmanship; my curiosity is piqued so I must join! I would enjoy your company if you come!”

Kira strode over to the group and politely waited for a turn to join. Ariella wanted to learn from the knight how to use a sword. The rest of what was said was not of interest to Kira. On the other hand, she heard Prince Callum and Riona whispering and then gesture for Ariella to converse with them. Ariella left to join Riona and Callum which left Stratya alone. She looked over at John who had left Roman, who was also idled and busy. She joined the the knight with a half-smile and shyness.

”Hi, good evening! My name’s Kira! I heard some discussion on swordsmanship? I would be interested in learning more. Y’know, us females have to stick together.” Kira laughed and glanced at Stratya. ”What's your name? Are you looking forward to the rest of the evening? I think the cooking competition sounds fun! All The food looks good, I hope I won’t be alone in diving into that.”

Throughout the exchange, Kira’s demeanor was friendly, innocent and sweeter than a strawberry dipped in chocolate. She waited for their answers patiently.
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Hidden 17 days ago Post by CitrusArms
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CitrusArms Space Spatula

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Gale McLeary, James Clearwell, and Cynwaer Fiachin

Flashback


Time: 10:40 am, 25th Sola

It always seemed like dead bodies were heavier, somehow. As though the soul occupying anybody's body were lighter than air, and removing it made a body sink toward the earth even harder. With just two of them, it was a bit of a chore, but they managed. The rope tied around the man's ankles was quite helpful in pulling him up.

Gale was just pondering the rope in question when James appeared, dressed down from his military uniform into something middle-class. The gruff, older man looked up from his resting when he heard steps on the cobble, after having struggled the body up with the man he hadn't sent away, “James.”

“Gale.” James had been trying to resist the stretch of the alleys, but it was quickly overcoming his ability to do so. “This is the body, then.” It wasn't really a question. He pulled a handkerchief from a pocket and covered his nose and mouth with it.

“Aye, ‘is is t’ bloke. There's two things abou’ ‘im. There's t’ rrope abou’ ‘is ankles, aye, but also..” Gale carefully tilted the head aside, “there's two, clean.. puncturre woun’s, on t’ neck.”

“Do you think that's what killed him?”

“Aahhck, I cannae be surre. I'm nae doctorr. If he wasn’t dead before, he’d ‘ave bled out righ’ quick.”

“Well, let's get him to the hospital, then. The morgue should have a look.”

“Ehhh… ‘old on.” Gale seemed to dislike the idea, “‘ooever did this an’ dumped the feller in t’ sewer ‘ad reason.”

“Reason enough to conceal a killing in the slums.” Which meant some kind of powerful secret? Those with powerful secrets had a tendency for pet rats. The dressed-down lieutenant examined the sewer grate and the body from where he stood. After a brief pause, he pondered, “they used a rope? They didn’t just lift him, or grab his limbs..” He took a deep breath and approached the body, crouching by the neck to examine the wounds Gale had described.

“Too posh?” Was that a remark of the disposer, of James, or both? “How far d’y’ suppose..” Gale looked around, wondering how much other activity had covered the tracks of this.

“I’ll look into it.” James nodded, and motioned his head at MacGregor. Mac carried a large, cheap cloth to wrap the body in, and maybe contain the smell for a little bit. The middle-class young man began looking for the signs of a body dragged. An overturned, loose cobble, scattered, loose rubbish trailing off from a larger pile, toward the dump site, a smeared ooze leading toward the same. An unoccupied space about the size of a body, among some refuse. Was that rust-colored stain blood?

The high-pitched squawks of a bird-of-prey – and an agitated one at that – interrupted the men.

Not long after, Cynwaer rounded the corner, the source of the squawks perched on his shoulder with mottled wings half-unfurled, and a shorter woman a step behind him. Neither person said or did anything for a moment, their eyes open in shock as they first looked at the foul and stinking corpse, then at the three men surrounding it.

Cynwaer was the first to recover, and he raised a brow. “Well, feck me,” he said, his level voice making it sound as if he had just stepped in rubbish, rather than run across the possible scene of a terrible crime. This feckin’ day jus’ keeps get’in’ bet’er and bet’er.” He brought a hand up to scratch the chin of the bird. It chirped and nuzzled against his finger. “‘Tis nae righ’, Neirynn?”

The woman, however, was markedly less calm about the whole situation. Her loose, auburn hair flew across her face as she snapped a hand to the pistol holstered at her side. Before she could pull it out, however, Cynwaer stopped her with a quip. “Come now, there’s nae need fae aw’ that song an’ dance.” He nodded to the trio. “Cannae imagine ‘ow they’re gae’n tae try an’ kill us wi’ ‘ow they’re standin’, aye.”

“That’s well and good, Captain,” the woman’s voice came out as a growl. Though she complied with Cynwaer and kept her weapon where it was, her dark, piercing eyes flitted between each of the men. Suspicion filled her gaze. “But I know a murdered stiff when I see one, and these three right here sure look like the ones that did our grey mate here in.”

Cynwaer shook his head and sighed. He had to admit that for a second surprise of his day, this was a pretty big one. The first had been running into Matilda – the woman, and also the surgeon of his ship – as she had been trying to corral Neirynn into returning to Remembrance. It seemed as if the harrier had gotten tired of waiting for her owner to return, and had decided to simply go off and find him herself, instead.

So, yes, stumbling across a likely – and possibly recent – murder was quite a step up from that.

“My surgeon o’er there,” Cynwaer addressed the men, pointing to Matilda. “She’s o’ the opinion that three o’ you are who fecked that poor fecker up. An’ I dae’n see any reason tae disagree wi’ ‘er, aye, sae dae any o’ yer three ‘ave an excuse, or should we cut ta’ nonsense an’ jus’ get tae ta’ part where yer run an’ we ‘ave tae catch an’ dae yer aw’ in?”

The birds had come already? Wait.. that wasn’t a crow or raven, or even a vulture, and they hadn't been there for that long. All four men looked at the bird and followed it with their eyes. James was unable to track the beast back to the man and woman that had approached the group of three. The man - the Captain - and the bird were close, which was impressive, but sadly not important immediately. That anyone had come across them and decided to pay attention was a surprise, unless these folk were party to whoever did this.

Gale was the first to respond, offering a chortle that might have been heartier if the air and circumstances were more pleasant, “beg parrd’n, but do I ‘earr someone else tha’ carres?” Genuinely surprised, he stood from rolling the body with the second man, while the third had stepped to block for Gale, seeing the gun.

First order of business was lower tension. There was no way of knowing if these two were here for the body in the first place or not. Then again, if they were here to take care of a body anyway, what was a few more? The way this man and woman were approaching the situation read strangely. About as strange as the trio of men currently bundling up the body. “Werren’t us, I c’n tell ye tha’.” Gale put his hand on the shoulder in front of him, stepping by calmly, “but yer nae enforcers, ‘at’s plain. Last place I'd expect tae see those lads.”

He looked over the situation carefully. James had kept quiet, perhaps he was continuing to investigate the origins of the body. Perhaps he was waiting for an opportune moment to reveal himself. “Step off, lads.” Gale motioned the other two back, stepping over by the dead man’s head and turning his attention to Matilda, “you think we done ‘im in? Nae. Come an’ see, Miss Surgeon, since I’ll guess my worrd would nae convince ye.” He knelt and watched the pair patiently as the two men with him moved away, giving the body space that the surgeon could approach without anyone standing over her. He was just in need of a doctor of some calling, a surgeon was great.

Matilda glanced at Cynwaer, who merely responded with a shrug. He did, however, drop a hand to his sword, and Neirynn kept a watchful gaze over the men with her beady eyes. “Cannae say I’ve e’er ‘eard o’ killers invitin’ a surgeon to check their victim, aye,” he remarked nonchalantly. It was perhaps a little too nonchalant if he wanted to play a nondescript pedestrian, but with a bird like Neirynn on his shoulder, and with Matilda – who had very clearly referred to him as ‘Captain’ despite having been told not to – following him, that role was likely not one he would play well in the first place.

He tilted his chin towards the corpse. “Off yer go then, Matty. ‘Ave a look at yer grey mate.”

Matilda nodded, and shot piercing glares at each of the three men as she pushed through them to the body. She knelt, eyes narrowed, and hand cupping her chin. With a light touch, she turned the dead man’s head to one side, just enough for her to see the two small holes in his neck. Her face darkened, and she chewed on her lip. “Two lancings to the jugular. He must have bled out in seconds,” she said, voice impassive and clinical.

Very carefully, she touched the holes. The man’s neck was, as expected, cold from being dead, and slimy from having been in the sewers. But Matilda didn’t seem to care about that. “Smooth edges, so the implement must have been sharp. Pointed.” She balled a hand into a fist, as if she were wielding a dagger, and mimicked a stabbing action into the corpse’s neck.

“The strikes had to be precise for the entry wounds to be this clean,” she commented. “But then why do it twice? Once would have been enough to bleed grey mate white.” She looked over the rest of the body. “No signs of a struggle, either, so I don’t think his killer had to worry about him fighting back. So anger? But the body is intact. Rage would manifest in mutilation, usually.”

“Could be jus’ one blow?” Cynwaer piped up.

“Like some strange two-pronged fork?” Matilda asked. From anyone else’s mouth, such words would have almost certainly sounded mocking, but Cynwaer knew better. She was actually considering it as a possibility. “Maybe. If not a fork, then perhaps some other implement with two points that are in close proximity to each other.”

She regarded the body with a scrutinising gaze for a moment longer, then stood up. “Ah well, it’s not my job, anyway,” she said, her voice suddenly regaining colour and emotion. She looked at the three men, her cheeks slightly flushed and gaze averted. “Sorry about that. I was too quick to pass judgment.”

Cynwaer cut in at that moment. “Aye, she’s righ’ about that, but…” He trailed off and glanced at the rope around the corpse’s legs, and the sheet held by Mac. “Maybe yer did’nae kill this poor bastard, but I’m still nae sure what yer dae’n tae ‘im.” He paused and smirked. “Yer nae cleanin’ ‘im up fae some other fella, are yer?”

“Nae trrouble, Miss.. Matty?” That went well. MacGreagor and Jonson stood aside, standing by and watching for any more uninvited guests. The tension seemed to have gone from the pair, and Gale found his muscles relaxing just a bit. Trying to deal with a gun in these circumstances wouldn’t have gone well, especially when he’s got just a dagger, bow, and arrows. “Tha’s a fairr question. We hauled the poorr scunner ou’ t’ sewer, there. Someone bothered tae ‘ide t’ body, beyond just put’in’ t’ feller in t’ slums. Oye, lads. Wrrap ‘im up. Cannae be left tae rot.”

“Miss Swann, to you,” Matilda snapped, her earlier bashfulness gone. “I’m Matilda Swann. Surgeon of the Rem–”

“Recompense,” Cynwaer quickly cut in, and gave Matilda a look of warning. Matilda caught it and nodded, her cheeks flushing once more at her near-mistake. Cynwaer turned back to Gale. “‘At’s what we call our current ship. Jus’ got ‘er nae tae long ago, aye. Pirates fecked our last one, an’ ‘tis pure luck we got awa’ wi’ ta’ skins on our backs.” He may have said too much, but he had to play it safe. Sprinkling a bit of truth over falsehoods never failed to make the latter seem that much more palatable. “Oh, an’ I’m ‘er Cap’n. Yer can call me Cynric Fletcher.”

He then turned to look down one of the alley paths, he could hear the familiar footfalls of the lieutenant approaching, “James.”

“Gale. You’ve,” James, dressed in his own civilian clothes and armed with a dagger and buckler, stepped into view from around a corner and eyed the woman and man that had appeared since he left, “made friends. Lovely bird.”

Neirynn chirped, as if thanking James for the compliment.

Cynwaer grinned and scratched her neck. “Aye, she is.”

The older man nodded, looking casually at the pair of strangers before turning back to James, “aye, aye, friends. Cap’n Cynrric ‘n Miss Swan. Did ye find anything?”

James looked at Gale questioningly, who merely motioned for him to continue. James eyed the Captain and his Surgeon again, before taking a slow breath and speaking, “the body seems to have been dragged from the next alcove, but I can’t say for certain. There seems to have been something large removed recently from a pile of refuse, about the size of our body, here. The rope would suggest it was used to do the dragging, which would further suggest whoever did so could not or would not lift the body’s legs or arms to drag it.”

“Jus’ wha’ I needed, thank ye,” Gale nodded graciously as he turned to the Captain and Surgeon fully, “as you ‘earrd, we’re,” he paused briefly, “bein’ nosy, an’ cleanin’ up. Speakin’ o’ nosey, does yerr fine featherred frriend there oft’n brring ye tae find bodies? Seems an odd business, it does, Cap’n.” The man grinned, not meaning to seem hostile. However, it was his turn to ask questions.

“If yer’ve e’er seen a sea ‘arrier, yer’ll know that they’ve a nose fae meat,” Cynwaer explained. That wasn’t a lie. Neirynn, little huntress that she was, could always be counted upon to find prime fishing spots, and if they were on land, wild game. It was just a shame that not everything she found was always edible for her non-harrier crewmates. “An’ ‘tis nae like we were followin’ ‘er. We jus’ got a little turned around findin’ our way back tae the ‘arbour, aye.”

Gale seemed to have negotiations with this unknown party in hand. James slowly turned from the three and looked back down the way he came. He took a moment, staring, and slowly followed the path he’d found from the alcove beyond, down the alley and to the grate, where he’d been then dumped, his expression concentrated with deep thought. He approached the grate, staring down as though the answers might just climb out for him to pick up.

Cynwaer glanced at James. He didn’t quite believe that these four men were here solely for the purpose of cleaning up the body. For one, altruism had its limits, and for two, James wasn’t exactly trying all that hard for his disguise. His clothes may have been that of a civilian’s, but the dagger and buckler? Those weren’t exactly the sort of things a civilian might use. A basic sword, an axe, or even a truncheon made sense, but daggers and bucklers called for a bit more skill than what your average citizen would possess.

He shook his head. It didn’t matter. Whatever was going on here, he wanted no part in it. At least, not until Renegade and Songbird arrived at Sorian. Whilst he was still waiting for them, Cynwaer intended to make good on his word to lay low. Or as low as he would allow himself.

“Aw’righ’, well,” he began, motioning for Matilda that it was time they left. “Good luck an’ ‘ave fun wi’ what yer dae’n, aye? We’ll be makin’ tracks first.”

Gale nodded and grunted, before turning to the body again, “poor bloke bled ou’, ey? Wha’ a way tae go..”

Bled out? “Just a minute, please, Cynric,” James did a final sweep for blood stains from where he stood. He’d brought out his handkerchief, a plain white thing, to cover his nose and mouth, again. “I was unable to bring our benefactor with me today. Gale has expressed hesitance in taking the body to the morgue, and now, I think I agree. He bled out? There was no such large bloodstain or puddle. Was he killed elsewhere? Did someone clean up and not take care of the body? If someone were willing to use the sewer system, they could get to a great many places in the city. If they were the right person, no one would question them.” He looked again at the grate and then meaningfully inland, toward the city walls. “None of this makes sense. If Gale is right, someone of great influence could have had a hand in this. Someone who could have eyes in the hospital, in the morgue.” Finally, his eyes settled on Cynric, “Agrona would have had another way. Unfortunately, that is not a card I keep in my deck.”

Matilda shrugged. “It’s not my job to find out,” she said. “And it doesn’t look like it’s yours, either.”

It was Gale’s turn to look questioningly at James. Even if he wasn’t sure about relying on this guy they’d just met, James was right. They didn’t have a reliable way of disposing of this body besides taking it to the morgue. He turned to Cynric, as well, “hate ta ask a new frriend f’r such a strrange favorr. Can’t imagine anyone else’d even bother tae stop.”

Cynwaer stared at Gale, then at James, and blinked once. Were they seriously, seriously, asking him to do what he thought they were? “Aye, maybe we’re new pals, but I’m nae lookin’ tae get involved wi’ whatever ta’ feck’s gae’n on ‘ere, I’m nae.” He shook his head, still not quite believing what he had just heard. These men were as audacious as they were suspicious, asking him – practically a stranger – to help them hide a corpse. If Cynwaer had wanted to stay out of this out of respect for his promise to Renegade and Songbird earlier, he now wanted to do the same for himself.

Gale gave a pitch to his head and torso as he started laughing, and he shook his head. James gave relenting nods. Of course not.

“Gae try askin’ some other fecker down at ta’ docks fae ‘elp. Nae short’age o’ sailors lookin’ tae earn easy coin, aye,” Cynwaer continued. He was no stranger to the darker side of Sorian, and he dabbled with it as easily as he drew breath, but even he had his limits. This whole situation stank worse than the corpse, and his gut told him to put as much distance between it and himself.

The laughing subsided and the laugher looked at the corpse again, “aah, fuck. Yeah, she's got us doin’ some rrigh’ weirrd shit, she does. S’pose I’ll ‘ead down tae t’ dock, ‘en. Got any coin, James?”

“Yes, some silver from Agrona.” James reached into a pocket and pulled out a small satchel, handing it off. He didn’t like not having more of a plan.

As Gale took the satchel and went off, he stopped and spun in place, to turn and look at the sea captain, “any chance yer one o’ them sailors lookin’ f’r coin?”

Cynwaer’s first instinct was to reject the offer. Matilda, however, spoke before he could say anything. “The coin could be useful, Captain,” she said, her voice a quiet mutter just loud enough for him to hear. “We do need to replenish our medical supplies soon.”

She did have a point. The coin he had taken as his cut from the attack on the taxman hadn’t been much. It might cover for a few days of harbour fees and sailing, but nothing beyond that. And until he found another way to earn coin that didn’t involve blowing up the King’s men, he had to seize as many opportunities as he could to pad out his coffers.

And so, he harrumphed and turned back to Gale. “Bring ol’ gray mate to Recompense at night. There’s tae many folk about on ta’ wat’erfront righ’ now, an’ unless yer can make ‘im invisible, I’d nae e’en try. ‘Ow yer wan’ tae bring ‘im o’er, that’s up tae yer, but yer make it tae obvious, I’ll say I nae know yer, aye.” Then, he looked at the coin pouch in Gale’s hand. “An’ keep ta’ coin. I dae’n make a ‘abit o’ takin’ payment ‘fore ta’ jobs ‘nywhere done.”

When the surgeon had spoken first, it had sparked a bit of hope in his old bones. Indeed, the Captain seemed to be swayed. Gale stowed the coins away in his clothes and chuckled, relieved, “whew, nae ken ‘ow I was gonna pull ‘at off.”

A delivery to a ship. James nodded, a smile softly lifting the edges of his mouth underneath his handkerchief, “yes, I think we can manage that. How do you feel about durian?”




That night, a horse-drawn cart radiating the overpowering stench of durian approached The Recompense. It carried three crates in a row, the last of which carried the subject of the evening’s visit. James disembarked from beside the driver and approached. He carried a coin filled with 20 silver and 3 gold buried among the lesser coin, compliments of “Agrona”. He would wait until the right moment to hand that over.

Adaleida didn’t like any of this. Not one bit. But then again, she knew what she was getting into when she agreed to sail with Cynwaer.

As Remembrance’s – or Recompense’s, as she had to remind herself – quartermaster, keeping track of all that went into her holds was her primary business. And so, for Cynwaer to tell her to receive a shipment of durians – something which she knew he didn’t like having aboard, no less – out-of-nowhere came as not just an unpleasant surprise, but a suspicious one.

She frowned as she sat on the ship’s gunwale, looking down at the approaching cart. A cooling landward breeze made a mess of her pale, blonde hair. She brushed a few strands away from her face, but kept her gaze locked on the cart.

No, she didn’t like this at all.

But, Cynwaer was the Captain, and he had yet to make a decision that was too wrong. The two ships that had been shot out from under them aside, of course.

Adaleida harrumphed and hopped off her perch once the cart was at Remembrance’s gangway. “You’ll no take a step closer,” she called out, voice firm and imperious. She took her time getting ready – smoothing out her blouse and patting dust from her trousers, and tugging her gloves snugly over her hands – before striding down the gangway to meet James. “I’m Adaleida. Quartermaster of Recompense,” she introduced herself curtly, hands folded over her chest and head tilted back slightly. “The Captain’s away on business, but he gave me leave to handle our exchange.”

She glanced over the man’s shoulder, at the three crates in the cart. There was nothing outwardly strange about them, but still she knew for a fact that not everything was as it seemed. Her lips pressed into a thin line. If it was something that Cynwaer wouldn’t tell even her, then it had to be either something incredibly stupid, incredibly risky, or just something he hadn’t entirely wanted to do. She made a note to check with Matilda later. The surgeon had been with him; she had to know a thing or two about what was going on.

James stopped and lifted his dominant hand as she first addressed him, taking a couple small, respectful steps back as the woman came down to greet him. He nodded at her introduction, “I’m James, I usually work with the Adventurer's Guild. Seems there was a bit of a mixup, it's not all durian. It didn’t seem like your captain would mind, however. Two crates of mixed fruit and one crate of durian.” He’d picked up on a bit of distaste from the Captain at the mention of the particular fruit, but only thought of a change in his plan as he went to source the fruit. It was an easy change to explain away.

Plenty of good fruit for a ship full of sailors, though James was not about to make any assumptions of the story the Captain had spun, if any. The last container was full of, not just durian, but a fair bit of cracked durian, which is where the potent smell was coming from. Crack it open and the smell would only get worse, best not to. Which was good, because that was the one he didn’t want anyone opening until they were ready. MacGregor and Jonson were present and ready to carry cargo themselves, while Gale had taken the role of driver.

At any rate, the young man produced a very convincing faked shipment manifest for the Quartermaster’s perusal. He’d hand over the payment once Mac and Jon had taken the last crate.

Adaleida looked at the manifest, then waved it away. “I’ll no need that,” she said brusquely. “If the Captain agreed to take your shite on, then I’ll not argue with his ghost.” She would argue with his person when he returned, later. Everything about this arrangement felt sloppy and rushed in planning. Whoever had heard of a ship being paid to accept goods? It wasn’t as if they were transporting this anywhere, either. Anyone with half a functioning brain would find this whole thing suspicious.

Well, it wasn’t as if anyone aboard Remembrance would go running to the guards. Not without weapons in hand and malice in heart, at least.

“I’ll be taking your coin,” Adaleida said, extending her hand and jerking her head towards the ship. “And I’ll have my own boys bring your stuff aboard. You and yours can go once you’ve paid.”

The paper was folded and tucked away as James motioned for Mac and Jon to drop the crates in the dock. They were already handling the first two, so it was just a matter of bringing down the third. “Very well.” The quicker they could leave the last crate and be gone, the better. He deposited the satchel into the woman’s hand and watched his two hands set the last crate down.

“That's that. Have a good evening.” He nodded to the woman and boarded the wagon with the other two. Gale started driving them away promptly. That could have gone better, but he had some ideas of how this could go better for next time. Having an existing contact was a good start. They'd have to expand their operations into the docks, as it seemed like it would pay off to be in good graces down here.

Adaleida watched the wagon depart, hands on her hips and a frown on her face. There was something, an air about James, that she didn’t quite like. She couldn’t quite put her finger on it, but the man hadn’t acted as common or base as he had appeared to be. Perhaps he was just a well-read individual, maybe he used to be someone of higher-society, or maybe she was just being overly-cautious. Regardless of the reason, the niggling feeling in her heart refused to leave.

She shook her head. Well, if it did turn out that there was something wrong with this whole deal, Cynwaer could deal with it. He was Captain, after all. She looked at the crates, clicked her tongue, and turned back to ascend the gangway back onto the ship. “Oi, I need strong hands to bring cargo aboard! I’ll no have any layabouts aboard our ship!”

Meanwhile, the cart pulled away from the docks and into the streets. “This all coul‘ave gone bet’er.” Gale spoke softly as the other two disguised men-at-arms rode in the back. At least the horse was happier, with the cart now much emptier.

James nodded, responding without hesitation, “oh, absolutely. It, also, could have gone much, much worse. Things went about as well as we needed them to. I’m just glad durians smell strong enough.”

“Ha! F’rr once.” Gale was ready to grab some mead. What an awful, long-ass day.
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Hidden 17 days ago Post by CitrusArms
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CitrusArms Space Spatula

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Stratya Durmand

Time:
25th,
Location: Pinebrook Camping Event
Attire: Very Light Armor Set
Zweihander Greatsword + Simple Leather Sheath
Swordbreaker
Family Dirk + Crest
Interactions: Kira @Potter
Mentions: Matthias @Rodiak

Stratya had just been about to join Prince Callum’s gaggle when another voice addressed her. Ah! It was that woman. She seemed to be towing a noble along with her, though she might be mistaken. He seemed a little familiar, but the captain couldn’t put her finger on it.

What was more pressing was the woman that had approached her. She seemed very friendly, but something in the back of Stratya’s head made her weary. Brushing her off to go speak with the prince seemed like a move that would attract attention. Not necessarily a lot, but it only had to be the wrong person getting nosy once. She would be cautious by being casual.

”’ello, Miss Kirra,” she chimed, putting her most welcoming foot forward, “I’m Strratya, a pleasurre meetin’ ya. I do enjoy a bi’ o’ cookin’, especially camp cookin’. Though, I think my idea o’ campin’ is a wee bi’ diff’rren’ than t’ Crrown’s. Nae rreason tae go ‘untin’, for starr’ers. Ooh, I was lookin’ forrward tae frresh rroast, too.”

This woman was too mysterious. Alidasht, right? Almost certainly. The visiting party of foreign nobles only increased the chances, but it just didn’t sit right in her mind. There was s o m e t h i n g about her. Just thinking about it wouldn’t get her anywhere, and now wasn’t the time, either. ”Arre y’ frrom Alidasht? Such lov’ly skin tones, and fashion tae compl’men’, from ‘crross t’ sea.”
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Hidden 12 days ago Post by JJ Doe
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JJ Doe

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Violet & Fritz Part 2

TRIGGER WARNING: Blood
Location: Polite Inn
Time: Late afternoon to early evening, before the detective meeting
Mention(s): @FunnyGuy @princess @ReusableSword




Violet entered the secluded room, carefully laying her cloak on the edge of the bed. She had insisted on the farthest room, away from the bustling main hall, to ensure she wouldn't be disturbed. Fortunately for her, Fritz anticipated her request and had reserved the room at the far corner, though there was nothing he could do about the neighboring guests. The air here felt heavier, quieter, as though the very walls were holding their breath. Her gaze drifted to her trembling hand, the fine tremors betraying the storm within. With her other hand, she gripped her wrist, squeezing tightly in a futile attempt to still the shaking.

Her entire body thrummed with excitement, an almost euphoric sensation that battled with the remnants of her humanity, the fragments that still felt sorrow, guilt, and regret. But the darker part of her laughed, relishing in the uncontrollable hunger. It should have been simple, she told herself, a few vials of blood and the thirst would be quenched. Yet, her body craved more than sustenance. Each time she indulged, it was never enough, leading her down a blood-stained path.

Each life taken only deepened her descent into madness, and each attempt to restrain herself was futile. She had tried to fight the urges, to find strength in the remains of her fractured soul, but the hunger always won, pulling her deeper into the abyss with every victim. Maybe this will be different…

Still gripping onto her wrist tightly, Violet turned to face Fritz. It was time.

The scene before Ryn was, he had to admit, a bit odd. The tastefully curated room now sported more towels than the average bathhouse. They covered every surface of the bed and were strategically placed across the floor. He had even stacked a precautionary tower of towels off in the corner, though he hoped Her Ladyship would not prove quite that... enthusiastic in her consumption.

The lady in question blinked, surfacing from whatever deep pool of thought she had been paddling in. Ryn offered a welcoming smile and swept an arm towards the table, where the trunk sat like a macabre picnic basket, its blood-filled vials glinting in the light. With a flourish, he pulled out a chair for her.

Once she was settled, Ryn took his place opposite her. He withdrew a leather-bound notebook and a freshly-sharpened pencil from his waistcoat. Poised to record this most unusual of taste tests, he said, “Help yourself to any of the bottles. I’ll record your impressions of each so we can determine which ones agree with you and how effectively they slake your particular thirst.”

Violet’s breath hitched as her fingers hovered over the vials, the sound of her own heartbeat pulsing in her ears like a distant drum. Her gaze flitted briefly to Fritz, absorbed in his notebook, blissfully unaware of the storm brewing just beneath her skin. The vial felt impossibly heavy in her hand as she lifted it, the number "3" glaring back at her—a harbinger of the chaos it held within.

The cork came free with a soft pop, and in that instant, the air thickened with the pungent scent of iron and decay. The deep, coppery tang wrapped around her senses, drawing her in like a siren’s song, irresistible and damning. Violet’s face slackened, her expression hollowing as the scent burrowed deep into her mind, unearthing shadows she had long tried to bury. The demons stirred, stretching in the dark recesses of her mind, eager for release.

Her hand trembled violently as she tried to steady herself, to push the ravenous hunger back down, for Fritz’s sake. But her restraint was slipping, unraveling like a thread caught on something sharp. The vial met her lips, the thick, crimson liquid coating them in a sheen of lustrous red. Her eyes fluttered shut as the first drop hit her tongue.

It was like fire. Molten and alive, it coursed through her, igniting every nerve. The taste was intoxicating—rich, dark, and full of life. Her body seemed to relax as the blood spread through her like a venomous tide, her once-shaking hand now steady, but her mind was a storm of wild, frenzied thoughts. The dark corners of her mind no longer whispered; they screamed, clawing at the surface. A sharp gasp escaped her lips, and the hunger swallowed her whole.

Her eyes snapped open, dark and feral, pupils shrunken to pinpricks, as if they were retreating into the abyss that now consumed her. A low growl rumbled from her chest, primal and raw, as her left hand clamped down on the table, the wood groaning beneath her tightening grip. The hunger had fully taken hold, and she was no longer herself.

With trembling urgency, she snatched another vial, her breath ragged and shallow. The cork came free with a soft, mocking pop, and the room seemed to thicken, the air now suffocating with the stench of blood—rich, metallic, and overpowering. Her head snapped back violently, and this time, she didn’t sip. She devoured. The thick, warm liquid slid down her throat in seconds, and her body shuddered, drunk on the power flooding through her veins. Blood dripped from the corner of her mouth, snaking down her chin like a dark river, pooling at the curve of her neck.

She rose to her feet, swaying slightly, her vision swimming with the crimson hue of madness. She no longer recognized where she was—no longer cared. The world around her melted away, swallowed by the spiraling darkness wrapping its cold, spindled fingers tighter around her mind.

Her vision was a blur of red. Blood. It was all she could see. All she could feel. Her heartbeat pounded in her ears, growing louder, faster, as if urging her to seek more, to claim more. The darkness was no longer a shadow—it was her. It lived in her veins, clawing at the edges of her sanity.

Graphite scratched across the paper, documenting Lady Violet’s every reaction to each sample with scientific precision. To his mild surprise—and, he had to admit, relief—her tastes proved far less restricted than anticipated. He’d expected revulsion, perhaps even violent rejection to some of the blood. Instead, she drank everything with equal fervor, her throat working as she swallowed.

However, as diverse as Lady Violet’s taste proved to be, Ryn did not ignore the predatory gleam in her eyes when they flickered to meet his gaze. The hunger in those red eyes spoke of a thirst far from sated—the primal urge for something warm, something alive.

Violet's hands moved with frantic precision, fingers trembling as she uncorked the vials one after another. Pop... pop... pop. The sharp sound echoed in the hollow space as she threw her head back, swallowing the blood in desperate gulps. The liquid was thick and cold, coating her tongue and throat with a coppery tang, leaving a metallic trail of satisfaction as it slid down.

Her breath hitched, and then something snapped. The frenzy in her movements stilled. The blood, now smeared across her hands, glistened in the low light, staining her pale skin a deep, violent red. Slowly, almost deliberately, she brought her bloodied fingers to her lips, her tongue curling over each one, savoring the taste. It was slow, deliberate, and hungry.

Her crimson eyes flickered to Fritz, cold and devoid of any warmth. Darkness had taken her again, that familiar, gnawing hunger dragging her back into its depths.

It won’t be long now, he thought, setting aside his notes. His fingers moved to his cuffs, unhurriedly rolling up his sleeves to expose pale forearms. Then, maintaining eye contact with Lady Violet, he loosened his collar and undid the top buttons of his shirt.

He had considered offering other major arteries, of course—the femoral, perhaps—but decorum won out in the end. This act was intimate enough as is, he would rather spare them both unnecessary embarrassment.

Her mind was completely gone. The Violet they knew had vanished, leaving only a hollow shell twisted by ravenous hunger. Her once vibrant face was now a mask of something monstrous, her eyes lifeless and glazed with a predatory gleam. The dim light cast long shadows across the bloodied mess on the table, the metallic stench of copper saturating the air, sickening and thick. The room was suffocating under the weight of something wrong.

It all happened so fast. One moment, Violet stood still, eerie and silent, by the table. The next, Fritz was pinned beneath her, a bed of towels beneath his body. Her fingers were wrapped around his throat, digging deep into his skin, drawing blood. She pressed down with unnatural strength, her body holding him captive. Her gaze fixated on the pulsing vein in his neck. His heartbeat thundered in her ears, each rapid thump an irresistible invitation. She inhaled sharply, her breath ragged, and a guttural growl rose from deep within her chest.

She no longer saw Fritz—he had become nothing more than prey. The person under her grasp no longer existed in her mind, replaced only by the pulsing rhythm of his life.

Her jaw slackened, lips curling back to reveal the glint of her fangs, sharp and eager for flesh. She sucked in a deep breath, the coppery scent of blood intoxicating her senses. Slowly, she drew back, her movements unnervingly deliberate, her mouth widening in anticipation.

Then, like a viper striking, she lunged. Her teeth sank deep into his neck, piercing the skin with a sickening squelch. Warm blood spilled into her mouth, hot and rich, flooding her senses with an overwhelming wave of ecstasy. Her fangs burrowed deeper, tearing into his flesh as she fed, each frantic pulse of his heart sending fresh streams of blood surging into her.

The room seemed to close in around them, the shadows thickening, suffocating, as her body pressed harder against his. Every sound—the gurgle of blood, the raspy gasps for breath—became a symphony of death. It just kept coming, more and more of his blood pooling in her mouth like a facet.

More!

Ryn had steeled himself for the attack, but it still shocked his body. No amount of mental preparation could stop the rapid drumming of his heart or quiet the sharp, jagged breath that escaped his lungs when her claws and fangs bit into his throat.

There was, however, no fear.

He lay there, motionless beneath her, offering neither resistance nor plea. The initial shock of it all—the rush that had set his heart racing—began to ebb, slowing to a steady, almost serene rhythm. Pain hovered at the edges of his awareness, a distant hum he could acknowledge but not fully grasp.

As warm blood seeped from him, Ryn felt the growing cold creeping into his limbs. He tried to keep track, mentally counting how much blood he was losing per second, but it was a task easier said than done.

When the light-headedness set in and Lady Violet showed no signs of slowing, Ryn finally whispered her name, his voice barely more than a rasp. “Violet.”

Her grip tightened against his head as she pulled his neck more, opening his veins.

She did not hear him. Or did not care. Either way, she did not stop.

His voice cracked as he tried again. “Violet… If you don’t stop soon, you’ll have to clean all this up on your own...”

Still, she did not pause. Her hunger held her in its grip, consuming her as much as she consumed him.

With a fading strength, Ryn’s hands found their way to her. Not to push her away but to rest them on her. He trusted her. Even now, when everything was slipping away, he believed in Lady Violet. He gently stroked her head, and kept whispering her name, over and over. There was no doubt in his mind that she would master this.

Just before darkness took him, Lady Violet’s face hovered above him. Her expression was too hazy to make out, but he smiled at her anyway.

“Everything... will be… okay.”

And then, silence. Stillness.

Her mouth tore away from his neck with a ragged gasp, her lungs burning as if surfacing from deep water. Scarlet streaks of blood stained her lips and chin, the metallic taste lingering on her tongue. Her chest heaved as the suffocating darkness that had gripped her mind slowly began to recede, like claws releasing their hold. She barely registered the weight of Count Fritz’s limp body cradled in her arms, his unconscious form a lifeless heap against her.

Her crimson eyes darted wildly, trying to piece together the shattered fragments of her thoughts. The taste of warm, thick blood clung to her senses, and she glanced down in horror at her arms. Her breath caught in her throat. The reality of what she had done crashed down on her like a wave.

With a cry of alarm, she released him, his body falling limp against the blood-soaked sheets as she scrambled off the bed. Her heart pounded in her chest as she took in the scene—the room bathed in red, the thick, glistening trail of blood leading from the table to the bed. Violet’s eyes filled with tears, a choking guilt rising in her throat as she stared at his still, motionless form.

It was all starting to make sense. The horror of it, the hunger she couldn’t control. ”No. no..no no no …NO NO NO”

She ran over to him gripping his shoulders tightly, She began to shake him ” Wake up…come on…” She whispered in desperation. Her head moved down to his chest, resting her head on his chest.

Thump……..Thump…….

Relief flooded through her like a cold wave as she realized—he wasn’t dead. The rhythmic, faint thump of his heart reassured her that she hadn't gone too far. She hadn’t killed him.

With hurried but delicate movements, she ripped the blood-soaked towels from the bed, tossing them carelessly over her shoulder. The sound of wet fabric hitting the floor echoed in the room as she focused on clearing the space for fresh sheets. She worked quickly, her hands trembling as she carefully shifted Fritz’s body, pulling him until he lay comfortably, his head resting gently on a soft pillow. The sight of his chest rising and falling soothed her frayed nerves, but the knot of guilt twisted tighter in her stomach.

Tears blurred her vision as she collapsed to her knees beside the bed, overwhelmed. She pressed her arms onto the mattress, burying her face in their protective fold as quiet sobs racked her body. The tears fell freely, soaking the blanket beneath her, but she didn’t care. She couldn’t stop them.

She had hurt him. The thought gnawed at her. His heart still beat, but what about the pain? The fear he must have felt in those final moments before he lost consciousness—why had she done this? The hunger, the violence... it wasn’t her. It wasn’t supposed to be her.

But it was.

Her red eyes peered over to top of her arms, she looked at his peaceful body sleeping. Her hand slowly reached out to him, wrapping around his fingers as she held his hand.
”I’m so sorry…” she whispered ”I couldn’t stop…”

Darkness swirled around Ryn, a thick, inky void that pressed against his consciousness. How long had he drifted in this lightless sea? Time seemed meaningless here.

Then, a sound—someone weeping. The sobs tugged at him, drawing him upward through the murky depths of unconsciousness. As he neared the surface, the crying grew louder, more distinct.

Ryn struggled toward awareness, reaching out blindly. His fingers twitched, and suddenly something enveloped his hand. The contact anchored him, pulling him the final distance.

His eyelids fluttered open, the world a blurry haze. Ryn blinked, willing his vision to clear. Slowly, shapes coalesced—and there, hovering above, a face came into focus.

Lady Violet.

Her crimson eyes were rimmed with tears, her cheeks wet. She clutched his hand, whispering broken apologies.

Ryn’s throat felt dry, but he managed to croak out words. “I’ll take that... as a compliment.”

With effort, he raised his free hand, brushing his fingers across her damp cheek. A weak smile tugged at his lips. “‘Five out of five stars. So delicious... it’ll move you to tears. Will... visit again’.”

The chuckle that followed was more of a wheeze. He fell silent, studying Lady Violet’s distraught expression. Though he already suspected the answer, he felt compelled to ask, “...Are you alright?”

She stood to her feet, nearly popping up as she leaned over the bed. ” Lord Fritz!” she said with a shock. She quickly wiped her cheeks of the remainder of her tears. Her glassy red eyes peered down at him. She let out a long sigh of relief, sitting down behind him. ” What a strange man…” she said grinning, her fangs visible to him for a moment. ” I nearly kill you and you're asking if I’m alright.” She relaxed her shoulders and smiled softly ” Physically I’m fine.The real question is how are you? I would imagine dizzy and you seem to have your wits about you.”

“Forgive me, I didn’t mean to scare you.” As Ryn attempted to hoist himself upright, his vision swam, and he found himself unceremoniously reacquainted with the feather-stuffed mattress. His fingers grazed the raw punctures at his throat, eliciting a slight grimace. “I confess to feeling rather woozy, and I’ll require some assistance with these wounds, but...” His eyes met Lady Violet’s, bright with triumph and quiet admiration. “I am alive. You did it, Violet.”

” You’re giving me too much credit…” she said softly.

“And you give yourself too little.”

” You will feel woozy for a while, we should get some food into you.” She stood up and walked forward to the table, looking down at it in disgust. She reached towards the basket that sat off to the side, it had linen wrapped over the top to protect the bread. Thankfully there was no blood on it.

Walking back to his side she took off the cotton towel and offered him the basket of rolls ” This will help, make sure to eat it all.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

After Lady Violet's hesitant—and almost fearfully careful—attention to his wounds, Ryn found himself propped against a small mountain of pillows, accompanied by an equally mountainous basket of bread rolls. Despite the heaviness weighing down his every movement, he made quick work of early dinner, washing down each bite with cool water that seemed to restore his strength.

He was halfway through his fourth roll, picking apart its golden-brown crust, when he asked, “Has your appetite been sufficiently sated?”

” Yes” She lied offering him a smile ” I’m sorry you had to see that…” She looked away from him as he ate.

Another blackout.

Ryn watched Lady Violet while he chewed. Her smile was of the variety he knew all too well. “I apologize, of course the thirst is always there. Let me rephrase the question: has this dulled its edge at all? Even slightly?”

Thoughtfulness creased his brow as his gaze drifted to the bread in his hands. “If it hasn’t, we’ll need to make some adjustments and calculate how much it will take to reduce the bloodlust to manageable levels.”

” Let's not worry about that for now.” She said softly.

The furrow in Ryn’s brow smoothed out, replaced by bright, uncomplicated optimism. “On the positive side, you took to the samples remarkably well!” His lips curved upward. “This will make procurement considerably easier.”

“Did any particular sample speak to you more strongly than the others?”

She turned away from him. ” I don't remember much of the tastes i’ll be perfectly honest…It all just blended together” She said softly.

“That’s okay. At least now we know you can consume just about any type of blood with equal enthusiasm.”

Looking back at him with a fake smile her red eyes silently looked him over for any other wounds she may have caused. ”You need to know the information I have for you now. I can’t answer all of the questions you will likely have but I may need some information from you. ” She said in an attempt to change the subject. Taking in a deep breath she tugged up a blanket over his legs to keep him warm from all the blood he just lost. ” Do you have any enemies? Anyone you believe would hurt you?”

His smile dimmed. “Sadly, there are people who would be overjoyed to see me and my entire family dead.” Had luck, or fate, not intervened that day, those who wished them harm would have succeeded. “Why do you ask?”

” Do you know of The Bloody Thorns?”

Not as much as he would like. Ryn shook his head, “No.”

” I have it on good authority that they are after you. Unfortunately, I don’t quite know the reason for it. Your name was on a list, along with some others. There is a planned attack on Drunkards Day at night. You really can’t think of anything that they may want you for? ”

“Oh, I can think of multiple reasons. The most promising three: the unforgivable crime of existing, the cardinal sin of upsetting a parent, and—perhaps most damning of all—my rather inconvenient habit of uncovering secrets people want to keep hidden.” Ryn canted his head, “How did you come across this information?”

” I’d rather not say but I trust the information.” she said firmly ” I can be there… to help keep an eye on you.”

Ryn’s head snapped toward Lady Violet with such abruptness that his freshly dressed wound protested, sending a lance of fire down his neck. He pressed his fingertips to the bandage. “Your warning may well have saved my life and you have my deepest gratitude. However, I cannot, with anything approaching good conscience, allow you to cast yourself into harm’s way on my behalf.”

She raised a brow as she looked down at him and said firmly ” And why not? You put me in a position that nearly killed you yet putting myself in a position to help you is worse?” she sighed ”I have avoided death, literally been ripped from the arms of it.” she said softly ” Life has thrown much worse things at me…If for some strange reason, it decides to end all of my suffering by protecting a friend. I can’t imagine a better thing. I’m practically a walking corpse…I mean…Look at me” she gestured to herself, first to her scars then her fangs which she finally tucked away. ”...but I'm still here. And I will be after we stop whoever these people are from attempting anything. At least allow this monster some kind of redemption.”

Ryn opened his mouth, then closed it again, any words of protest dying on his tongue. Her conviction about being a monster, the shadows that seemed to lurk behind her eyes—she was seeking equilibrium, trying to balance scales that had tipped too far in one direction. A life for a life. A neat mathematical equation, though he doubted the arithmetic of redemption was quite so simple. Red eyes searched him as he lay there quietly.

His hands clasped hers as he met her gaze and offered a slight nod.

His smile, when it came, was gentle but firm. “Okay,” he said softly, the word carrying more weight than its single syllable suggested. Then, because he could not quite help himself, he added, “But as you don’t want to lose a friend, neither do I. I’ll seek what additional aid I can find, and you—” He squeezed her hands gently. “You’ll take no unnecessary risks. After all,”—and here his smile bloomed into something warmer, more playful—“we still have that standing appointment for tea in the gardens, and I have the perfect book in mind for our first book club.”

” There is something else…” she added holding a soft smile from his book club remark.

” The more we encourage these meetings some things may happen. I don’t fully know what or how it will go” She took a breath ” It’s a blood bond of sorts. You will likely develop feelings towards me and I you. The word love was used but it can be in many forms not just romantic. On top of that, there is mention of a protection spell and some other things I still don't quite know much on.” She looked towards him ” If I find out more I’ll share it with you. I plan on doing some reading to see what I can find. Are you sure this is something you want to keep doing?”

Ryn listened intently to Lady Violet, his eyes growing wider by the second. “By the Creators…” he breathed. “A blood bond?”

There was silence.

Violet's eyes widened slightly before looking away bracing for a reaction.

And then…

“How absolutely fascinating!” His eyes went alight with unrestrained curiosity. Lady Violet’s head snapped back to look at him. Her words about the effects of blood ties between a vampire set his mind racing down countless theoretical pathways, each more intriguing than the last. “I wonder what the mechanisms of that are… It almost sounds like a magic ritual.” One hand placed itself beneath his chin while the other folded across his chest. “When you feed, there’s an inevitable cross-contamination—your saliva, my blood… Could it be possible that the magicae within our body fluids is used to form this bond?”

Shaking her head slowly she opened her mouth to respond but he continued.

“Though,” he mused, “perhaps the development of strong feelings is not necessarily supernatural. After all, such an intimate and potentially life-threatening exchange requires trust. It rather naturally lends itself to deeper connections, doesn’t it?”

Ryn offered her a warm, reassuring smile. “From what you’ve shared, I see no cause for concern. I am helping a friend, and if we become better friends because of it,” he spread his hands in a gesture of acceptance, “then why not?”

Ryn cocked his head. “Where did you come across this information?”

” Books…Just knowledge that I had gathered from some reading. I thought it to be fictional but there were so many repeat commonalities it makes me believe it's true.” She avoided mentioning Alexander, ”It is a very intimate thing…Unfortunately not memorable” she joked nervously ” I just black out, It's like something else just takes over and then I just come too. Sometimes after I’m done and other times..much later.”

This was not the type of knowledge that, even with the amount of wealth that nobility had, could be casually obtained from “some reading.” Especially not in Caesonia. Though she insisted the texts were mere fiction, there was a certain conviction in her confession that told Ryn that she trusted the source. Which led to a rather interesting possibility: based on her reluctance to reveal whoever told Lady Violet about The Bloody Thorns, the source of this information was likely the same person.

“I see,” Ryn said, allowing a thoughtful pause to stretch between them. “May I examine these volumes? Fiction they might be, they might help our research on blood-bonding of the vampiric variety.” He shrugged. “And if nothing else, they’d make for an interesting book club discussion, wouldn’t they?”

"The books were part of a private collection I lost access to some time ago, but I’m doing my best to track down replacements. If I manage to find them, I’d be willing to share. Perhaps you’d uncover something in them that eluded me."

She paused looking around slightly nervous ” How familiar with Charlotte Vikena are you?” She asked out of the blue.

The name drew a quizzical tilt of Ryn’s head. “I’ve made her acquaintance only recently,” he replied, his words measured and patient as he waited for Lady Violet to unburden whatever weighted thought had prompted her sudden inquiry.

She paused, glancing over at Fritz. Her hand brushed the edge of the nearly empty bowl of bread, which she set on the nightstand beside him. Then, with a sudden, fluid motion, she leaned over him, her body stretching across his as she shifted into the bed beside him. Her crimson eyes drifted to the ceiling, reflecting the room’s dim light. The sharp scent of copper hung around her, a reminder of her dark nature.

Reflexively, Ryn adjusted himself to accommodate Lady Violet. His hand found her back and fell into that familiar rhythm—tap, tap, tap—the same gentle pattern his parents and grandparents had used to lull him to sleep, the one he had later used when his siblings sought comfort in his bed during restless nights.

”She stopped by my home recently. She’s a neighbor, so her visit wasn’t entirely unexpected, but we haven’t spoken much since Crystal was a child. It felt... odd. Not in the way you might think, but there was something overly friendly about her, almost intrusive. It was as though she were sniffing around, trying to uncover something hidden. I can’t say I trust her motives."

Her head turned on the pillow, and she looked over at him, a faint, reassuring smile playing on her lips.

"It’s probably nothing. Just my imagination running wild. If you do happen to run into her, perhaps you can find out if it is just my imagination or if you get that sense as well.”

Ryn’s brows drew together in puzzlement. “That’s peculiar,” he said, studying her face. “From how she spoke of you, I had rather gotten the impression you two were dear friends. Was I mistaken?”

Letting out a long, weary sigh, Violet's expression softened, a glimmer of sadness darkening her gaze as she tilted her head back to stare blankly at the ceiling. Her lips parted, words trembling on the edge of her breath. “Maybe… back before everything went wrong,” she murmured, her voice a threadbare whisper. “Roman was the only one who cared about what was happening to me. Now even he’s gone, avoiding me like the plague.” Her voice wavered, catching painfully in her throat as emotion began to well up. “He was my only friend, the only one I trusted. And somehow, I’ve already ruined that.” Her shoulders pressed into the bed, a shadow of despair darkening her features. “It’s only a matter of time before I destroy this too.”

She drew a deep, shuddering breath as if trying to steady herself, and let the silence settle. “Look at me…” she finally continued, her tone hollow. “I’ve been sliced open and patched up more times than I can count, my eyes are the color of blood…” she paused, brushing a fingertip across one of her sharp, gleaming fangs, exposed in a grim, humorless smile. “And these…” she muttered bitterly. “I was killed, dragged back just to exist in this life, forever surrounded by death and disappointment.” Her voice grew softer, laced with a resignation that bordered on defeat. “I can’t blame them. I smell like death; it clings to me like a shroud. I bring it wherever I go, leaving only bodies behind. Who would want to be around that?I wouldn’t…” Her voice trailed off.

“So no…my only dear friend is off enjoying the courting events I imagine.”

Drawing Violet into a half-embrace, Ryn kept up the steady rhythm against her back. “Please correct me if I’m wrong,” he whispered, “but you’ve not actually spoken to them of this, have you?” There was a pause where he waited for her to answer before continuing, “Violet, don’t torment yourself over what might not even be true.”

She turned to look at him, her raven black hair pooling around her.

He drew back just enough to meet her gaze. “Talk to them. Share these fears. Listen to what they have to say. I could arrange the meeting, should you require it. And if your fears prove prophetic—” his lips curved into a half-smile “—send for me. Cry until you can’t cry anymore, and then we’ll either cocoon ourselves in blankets and copper dreadfuls, or party until the sun chases us home. Whatever you prefer.”

Finally, she spoke, her voice low and tinged with weariness. “You make it sound so simple." Her fingers brushed a stray lock of hair from her face as she looked away, her gaze distant."But you don’t understand. If I speak to them... if my fears are true..." She trailed off, her hands curling into fists against the bed.

She took in a deep breath looking back at him with a smile “ Focus on getting your strength back. The rest can wait." Her face relaxed as her fingers unlocked from their fists “ Thank you for everything Lord Fritz…" she said softly “...everything." She added the word holding more weight than he likely knew.

She reached over him pulling another roll from the bed and gestured it toward him with a soft smile.
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Time: Night
Location: Sorian Harbour; aboard Remembrance
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What a feckin’ eyesore.

Dark against the deep indigo sky, and imposing amidst a field of buildings dwarfed by its presence, Castle Sorian loomed over its city like an ominous shadow. Flickering orange dots, sparsely scattered across the main keep’s sheer walls, and visible from afar despite their faint glows, marked where windows had been carved out of monolithic stone blocks. Peering over the curtain wall separating the keep and its courtyard from the rest of Sorian, those pinpricks of light were like the eyes of beasts leering out from their den, and down upon the people wandering the streets below.

Cynwaer snorted as he gazed towards the damnable fortress from Remembrance’s quarterdeck. To draw any similarities between the people within that place and beasts would be a gross insult to the latter, as far as he was concerned. A beast’s actions were guided by instinct, and not thought. If they were cruel, if they were savage, or if they were depraved, it was only because it was in their nature to be so. They didn’t, and couldn’t be expected to, know any better.

The people of Castle Sorian, however, had no such excuse.

For they were creatures of thought, and could know better. Cynwaer knew that. After all, weren’t they like him, possessed of a rational mind with which to think, and senses with which to perceive the world? Even if the bastard king himself and his sycophants were bent on being as wicked as possible, surely they had to be someone, or many someones, who could see the miseries the Kingdom visited upon its own people, and were outraged enough by such injustices to do something about them.

But no, they did nothing. Once, Cynwaer had been disappointed by such a fact, but now he simply took it as one of the ugly truths of the world. Those people, like many others – not just in the castle, not just in the capital, but across all of Caesonia – were more than happy to keep themselves deaf and blind to the pains of their fellows, so long as they themselves could live in comfort.

And so, they would continue to toil for a king and court that cared little for anything but themselves, and for a kingdom that was so thoroughly rotten.

A grunt rumbled in Cynwaer’s throat as he swept his eyes from the castle to the rest of Sorian. He leaned forward, resting his elbows on the gunwale. “What a feckin’ eyesore,” he repeated in a dark murmur. Then, he looked to his right.

“‘Tis nae the trut’, Neirynn?” He asked in a louder voice.

Perched on the gunwale right by his side, the harrier stopped in the midst of tearing apart her latest catch, an unfortunate rabbit. She still had a claw on the carcass’ neck, whilst the talons of the other held onto the gunwale, digging shallow notches into the wood. Sinewy threads of pale crimson streaked and hung from her hooked beak, and the mottled plumage around her face and chest was speckled with blood.

Neirynn regarded him with dark, beady eyes for a moment, her head cocked. Then, she chirped.

Cynwaer chuckled, shaking his head as he reached across to brush his fingers over her scalp. Letting out a series of satisfied coos, the harrier pushed herself against his touch. “‘At’s a good lass,” Cywaer said, his tone gentle and lips in a smile. It were such moments, when Neirynn acted like any other pet, that made it difficult for him to remember that she was in fact a vicious huntress in her own right, with plenty of victims to her name, both human and animal.

He ran his hand down her back, flattening a few stubborn feathers that jutted out from her otherwise sleek form. She bent low, head stretched towards him and eyes closed. “Someone’s feelin’ affectionate an’ such ta’day, hm?” He chuckled again, patted her on the head one more time, and drew his hand back. “Best yer be back tae yer dinner, lass. We’ve a lang night ahead o’ us, I reckon.”

Neirynn chirped, dipped her head in a nod, and promptly returned to her meal. Cynwaer watcher her for a moment before himself returning to leaning against Remembrance’s bulwark and looking at Sorian and its castle, his visage cold and hard. Silence descended over the pair.

Well, amidst as much silence as a ship could afford, at least. Behind him, and down a short flight of stairs, the main deck hummed and buzzed with activity as Remembrance’s crew prepared her to sail. A chorus of boots thumped across wooden planks, interrupted every so often by shouts. More calls came from above, amidst ratlines and rigging, and alongside ruffling sails, creaking yardarms, and clanging tackles. Cynwaer had long since gotten used to such noises, however, and paid them little heed. Remembrance was, to his ears, perfectly and pleasantly quiet.

Time seemed to slow to a crawl. The noise behind him intensified, then slowly withered away until all that remained were vague murmurs of chatter. Cynwaer leaned further forward, resting his weight on his arms as he glared at the city. The warmly-lit streets, sparse crowds, and smoking chimneys made for a peaceful scene. They reflected a city at rest; a city that had nothing to worry about.

And that felt so, very wrong.

“Yer e’er wonder, Neirynn,” Cynwaer started, casting a sidelong glance at the harrier. She looked up at him with a string of meat still swinging from her beak. Without missing a beat, she snapped her head back and swallowed it. Cynwaer chose to ignore that. He continued, “If any o’ those who work fae ta’ court e’er gave a thought about what they were dae’n? An’ I mean, gave it actual, serious thought, aye? Like, if ta’ fecker who ‘elps tae write aw’ these feckin’ piece o’ shite laws e’er realises just ‘ow fecking stupid they are? Or if ta’ cunt who sends ta’ taxmen out tae squeeze another wee village dry knows jus’ ‘ow many ‘ave tae suffer fae ta’ fat bastard o’ a king’s pleasure?”

Or if ta’ fecker who sends out mage’unters know jus’ who’s bein’ ‘unted.

Dark memories, painful ones, pushed their way into Cynwaer’s mind at that thought. With the sort of ease borne from suffering this exact thing many times over, he forced those images back to their corner. Still, he heard the chilling screams of that fateful night echo in his head. He heard the pounding of fists against his door; his daughters frightened cries, his wife’s desperate pleas; the crack of a pistol, the cold hiss of steel against leather. They had all been from a different life, experienced by a different Cynwaer Fiachin, but still they cut him deep all the same.

A worried chirp pulled Cynwaer from his mind. It was swiftly followed by a few taps of Neirynn’s beak upon his elbow. He turned his head, and the harrier raised hers, her dark, beady eyes meeting his mossy green ones. She chirped again, flapping her wings as she hopped towards him.

“Dae’n worry yer head about it,” Cynwaer said with a smile that was a touch more forced than what he had hoped. He rubbed a thumb over the top of her head. “Jus’ thinkin’ ou’ loud, ‘tis aw’. Dae’n worry.”

He glanced at the rabbit’s carcass, then looked back at her with a raised eyebrow. “On ta’ contrary, ‘tis yer food that worries me, aye. It did’nae belang tae someone, did it?” Neirynn averted her gaze, stretching out a wing to hide her face as she scratched it with a claw. Cynwaer groaned. “Dae’n tell me yer went an’ did it again, yer dafty. ‘Tis nae cheap tae pay off yer huntin’ debt, aye ‘tis nae, dae’n yer know?”

“It’s okay, Captain,” a woman said from his other side. That dry, monotonous voice came suddenly enough to make Cynwaer almost flinch. “She no caught it. ‘Tis Mister Bannoch who bought it for her when he went ashore earlier.”

Cynwaer spun around, and came face-to-face with Remembrance’s quartermaster. As always, Adaleida’s countenance was that of wood – empty of emotion and seemingly unchanging. That wasn’t to say that she looked unfriendly or unwelcoming, however. She simply looked neutral, with lips in a perfectly straight line and downturned hazel eyes giving nothing away. A stiff breeze whistled over the two of them, whipping her pale, blonde tresses across her face. She paid them little heed. “Talking politics with Neirynn again?”

“Nae, jus’ speakin’ me mind, is aw’,” Cynwaer replied and shook his head. “An’ ‘ow about yer? What’re yer dae’n bein’ aw’ sneaky?”

“Sorry, Captain,” Adaleida said with a slight bow of her head. She ran her fingers through her messy locks, smoothing them out, as she continued. “I heard you talking and I did no want to interrupt, that’s all.”

“Yer me quartermaster, Ada,” Cynwaer said. “It’s normal fae yer tae interrupt me. Of aw’ the people aboard Remembrance, yer probably ta’ only one I want tae interrupt me, aye.”

“Normal,” Adaleida repeated that word, her voice distant, as if she was ruminating on it. Then, she nodded and flashed Cynwaer an almost-smile – the corners of her lips twitched upwards, but didn’t go far enough or high enough to be perceptible by most. Cynwaer was one of the exceptions. “Got it, Captain.”

“Sae, what d’yer need me fae?”

“Ah, right,” Adaleida said and tilted her head towards the main deck. “Remembrance’s ready to set sail on your command, Captain, and…” She trailed off, her eyes focusing on something far behind Cynwaer, and the ghost of a frown clouding over her face. “Our friend over there’s already pulling from her pier.”

Cynwaer nodded slowly. Then, he pushed himself away from the gunwale and turned to face Adaleida, his lips curled into a knowing smirk. “Well, are yer gae’n tell me what’s botherin’ yer, Ada, or d’yer wan’ me tae keep proddin’ an’ pryin’ until yer annoyed enough tae jus’ tell me tae get me tae feck aff?”

“‘Tis nothing–”

“I’ve known yer fae a whiles now, Ada,” Cynwaer cut in. “I know when yer troubled, so dae’n e’en try ta’ lie tae me. An’ besides, I cannae ‘ave yer workin’ at yer best when there’s somethin’ weighin’ on yer, aye? So come on out wi’ it.”

Adaleida averted her gaze, and chewed on her lip for a moment before speaking. “I’m no questioning your decisions, Captain, and I can understand doing shifty work for coin. Gods above and below know we need a steady stream of that shite. But working with a privateer? Someone who sails for the piece of piss crown and the bastard wearing it? I’m no sure I understand why we’re doing any of that, Captain.”

Cynwaer nodded slowly, then jerked his head to his left. “Come along wi’ me,” he said and walked towards the port bulwark of the quarterdeck. As he passed Neirynn, he ran a hand along her back. She cooed, but didn’t look up from her dinner. “Dae’n leave a mess now, aye? ‘Tis nae easy cleanin’ blood an’ viscera frae wood, I’ll ‘ave yer know. Drop what yer cannae finish intae ta’ sea, an’ fae ta’ love o’ aw’ the Gods up there and down below, dae’n bring it up ta’ masts an’ leave it there.”

“It gives the crew reason to go up high regularly, though,” Adaleida offered. She mimicked Cynwaer, giving the harrier a gentle pat on her back as she walked past. Neirynn basked in the attention, standing up and leaning into her touch, chirping and cooing all the while.

“Aye, I s’pose there’s that,” Cynwaer said and chuckled.

He stopped at the gunwale and looked across the piers at the foreign ship. She had her strange, triangular sails fully unfurled, and hanging from long, slanted yardarms that bowed under their own weight. Lanterns affixed to her gunwales lit up the ship, their yellow glows strong enough to reveal the crimson fabric of her sails, and more importantly, the many gunports lining her svelte, dagger-like hull. “Tell me, Ada, what d’yer think o’ ‘er?” Cynwaer asked.

Adaleida stood beside him with arms crossed over her chest. She shrugged. “Well-armed, built to be quick and nimble, but I can’t see her being well-protected.” She cast a quick glance over to Cynwaer. “She can’t be, no with that many guns, aye. Her sails are interesting, though. They remind me of an Alidashti…What do they call those little cutters they like so much, again? Dhow, I think. But yes, those sails on her look like the ones used on those boats, aye they do.”

“Good eyes.” Cynwaer caught her glance and grinned. “But yer missin’ one big thing, an’ that’s she’s nae Caesonian, nae Varian, and nae e’en any o’ them Alidashti folks. I met ‘er Captain ta’ other night, an’ I can tell yer that ‘e might look Kimoonese, but ‘e’s sure as shite nae one o’ ‘em.”

“So we’ve got someone in our waters who’s a complete stranger,” Adaleida said. She looked at the ship as it quickly pulled away into the night. “And commands a ship that can match a light frigate gun-for-gun.”

Cynwaer nodded. “Aye. Now, frae what I’ve ‘eard, ‘e’s likely nae a fan o’ ta’ bastard king, or ‘e’s nae gae’n tae be one sooner rather than later. But still, ‘e’s a huge feckin’ question mark fae aw’ o’ us, an’ if good ol’ Renegade and Songbird’s gae’n dae what I think they’re gae’n dae, we cannae leave anythin’ tae chance, least o’ aw’ a ship that powerful ‘at’s nae under any flag we know, aye?”

“And if we sail with that ship, we get to see what she can do firsthand,” Adaleida surmised.

“Now yer gettin’ it,” Cynwaer said. “An’ who knows? If we play our cards righ’, an’ everythin’ gae’s well fae us, maybe we can e’en make oursel’s a new friend tae raise some ‘avoc wi’.”

Adaleida raised a brow. “You really think that’s possible, Captain?”

Cynwaer shrugged. Personally, that possibility wasn’t one he thought realistic. It was a pleasant thought to be sure, but as things stood, it was simply just that. But there were too many unknowns, even beyond the ones he had shared with Adaleida. For one, he didn’t even know for how long that ship would be in Sorian, and if it was even going to return after it left for home. Neither did he know for certain if the foreign Captain would agree with his ideals. Granted, he had sounded sympathetic, but Cynwaer knew firsthand that a gulf existed between sympathy and agreement.

But all the same, Cynwaer kept that idea in his back pocket. “Frae what I’ve ‘eard, ‘e’s a good mate tae ta’ smallfolk, an’ if ‘e’s nae got a bad impression o’ ta’ bastard king already, I’ve a feelin’ ‘e’ll learn tae think o’ that wee fecker as a cunt sooner or later.” He shrugged. “But ‘at’s nae our concern fae ta’day. Let’s jus’ get underway an’ catch up wi’ ‘er befae she slips intae ta’ night, aye?”

“Aye, Captain,” Adaleida said. “Should I give the order, or do you want to give it yourself?”

“Save yer voice, Ada,” Cynwaer replied. “I’ll ‘andle this one.”

He strode over to the guardrail overlooking the main deck. Adaleida followed close behind him, and stood beside him as he swept his eyes across the length and breadth of his ship, and those who milled about on her planking. Dozens of heads turned towards him with expectant looks. Cynwaer gave them a grin. “Right lads,” he shouted and raised a hand. “Time tae look lively! Let's bring 'er out!”
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