"Too craven are we?" Faruq rebuked Cyrendil as the altmer stood to leave. Whether the challenge made purchase or fell uselessly he could not tell.
Violence erupted within the Gaptooth Grin begging the attention of all inside. Faruq caught only a glimpse of the hairy mill worker with the off-putting stare upon their return, his eyes instead drawn to the half-drunk knuckle draggers following close behind. A single blow triggered all the rest. One by one a mad fury jumped from one table to another as flagons fell aside for weapons. Palm sized stones, metal knuckles, and daggers appeared. Threatening undoubted, but Faruq reserved his attention for those drawing proper weapons. Quite the opposite of the breton standing across the tavern. Droplets of mead still stuck in his dark beard, the breton offered Faruq a brown toothed smile and unsheathed a well used claymore. The bearded bastard took the blade with both hands and split a table in his way in two. Mouth agape, Faruq retrieved the buckler hung upon his bag and the sword at his hip. Another swing of the claymore sent a line of air the redguard swore he could feel as two patrons caught in separate fights fell to the blade. His hand froze over the bone grip of his sword. Talos save me.
The old iron narrowly missed Faruq and bit into the hardwood of the tavern floor. He side stepped the strike, stumbling into a chair in the process. Steel plate tied about his bag clanged uselessly, adding all the weight of armour without any of the protection. Faruq dropped into a squat as the claymore swung unsated. The breton bastard looked down toward the redguard with a maniacal and decaying smile. Below his opponent from which gaps between armour is easily apparent, he felt a swordsman's opportunity -- and a swordsman never left opportunity untapped. Faruq raised the bottom edge of the buckler upward with the power of both arms propelling the heavy steel. Blood sprayed from the big bastard's nose, the claymore forgotten in the air, and the redguard happy to press the advantage. While the breton reeled, Faruq took a on the stance of a brawler. His naked right fist shot into the breton's gut twice before the buckler hooked from the left into their chest. When the big bastard stumbled backward without raising the equally large sword honour cooled the warrior's heart within him. The breton grit his glistening, dark teeth with bloody spittle glistening in his beard.
Faruq desperately jerked the buckler higher as the pommel of the claymore struck. The shock of the blow sent needles up his arm and a deep, warning pang. Before the feeling subsided the breton shoved with no weight withheld. Faruq glided backward over top a table, rolling under another both longer and covered in tankards and pitchers. In short the order the claymore shortened the bench by near a quarter. Yellow streams of ale fell like little waterfalls onto the tavern floor. The clouds filling the redguard's head refused to clear quickly, but the sign to move came all too clearly. Faruq kicked at the breton's feet before crawling from out the furthest end of the table. Splinters of wood flew upward as the big bastard tipped, breaking the table down clumsily with his body. Glancing backward, Faruq stared at his opponent now lying amidst broken wood and spilled ale. He stood as much in pride as in baffled awe.
"Be thankful you tussled with a knight, lest you leave with more than a few bruises," Faruq boasted with feign confidence. He winced, the throbbing pain in his arm like a reminder of humility.
Another glance around the Gaptooth Grin revealed little have changed. The beastly orc raised bloodstained blades, the wild ones disappeared smiling within a sea of fists of elbows, and a number of others blinded by drink fought one another. Faruq heard a sober voice above the crowd crying out about spilled wine -- Really? -- and a few smoother voices of articles of clothes and payment. He took in the shameful sight filled with drunkards and whores and brawlers and inhaled deeply. A likable place indeed, but not one included on his path.
Faruq stepped outside to find fiery haired imperial, the mage, the alchemist, and the sneak-thief who appeared richer for ware. He saw the hairy mill worker lying still in scarlet snow. His eyes immediately went to imperial woman, then glanced back to the bloody corpse. What young affections had been embers fanned by her presence to now again catch flame, now darkened. Faruq openly looked upon the imperial woman with his judgment worn plainly. "A most dire price saved for the worst and war. I pray this was among them," Faruq said, accusation sewn within the words without intention. He truly hoped the death done justly, or done without choice. Lest I forget this lot a band of criminals free from codes or morals. Murderers and sneak-thieves, perhaps all of them.
"Not quite nothing, sneak-thief," Faruq replied. "There is at least one dead here. I expect we will have bounties soon enough, perhaps an escort from here to a quaint little inn with rusty bars and shackles if we linger. There is that."
Violence erupted within the Gaptooth Grin begging the attention of all inside. Faruq caught only a glimpse of the hairy mill worker with the off-putting stare upon their return, his eyes instead drawn to the half-drunk knuckle draggers following close behind. A single blow triggered all the rest. One by one a mad fury jumped from one table to another as flagons fell aside for weapons. Palm sized stones, metal knuckles, and daggers appeared. Threatening undoubted, but Faruq reserved his attention for those drawing proper weapons. Quite the opposite of the breton standing across the tavern. Droplets of mead still stuck in his dark beard, the breton offered Faruq a brown toothed smile and unsheathed a well used claymore. The bearded bastard took the blade with both hands and split a table in his way in two. Mouth agape, Faruq retrieved the buckler hung upon his bag and the sword at his hip. Another swing of the claymore sent a line of air the redguard swore he could feel as two patrons caught in separate fights fell to the blade. His hand froze over the bone grip of his sword. Talos save me.
The old iron narrowly missed Faruq and bit into the hardwood of the tavern floor. He side stepped the strike, stumbling into a chair in the process. Steel plate tied about his bag clanged uselessly, adding all the weight of armour without any of the protection. Faruq dropped into a squat as the claymore swung unsated. The breton bastard looked down toward the redguard with a maniacal and decaying smile. Below his opponent from which gaps between armour is easily apparent, he felt a swordsman's opportunity -- and a swordsman never left opportunity untapped. Faruq raised the bottom edge of the buckler upward with the power of both arms propelling the heavy steel. Blood sprayed from the big bastard's nose, the claymore forgotten in the air, and the redguard happy to press the advantage. While the breton reeled, Faruq took a on the stance of a brawler. His naked right fist shot into the breton's gut twice before the buckler hooked from the left into their chest. When the big bastard stumbled backward without raising the equally large sword honour cooled the warrior's heart within him. The breton grit his glistening, dark teeth with bloody spittle glistening in his beard.
Faruq desperately jerked the buckler higher as the pommel of the claymore struck. The shock of the blow sent needles up his arm and a deep, warning pang. Before the feeling subsided the breton shoved with no weight withheld. Faruq glided backward over top a table, rolling under another both longer and covered in tankards and pitchers. In short the order the claymore shortened the bench by near a quarter. Yellow streams of ale fell like little waterfalls onto the tavern floor. The clouds filling the redguard's head refused to clear quickly, but the sign to move came all too clearly. Faruq kicked at the breton's feet before crawling from out the furthest end of the table. Splinters of wood flew upward as the big bastard tipped, breaking the table down clumsily with his body. Glancing backward, Faruq stared at his opponent now lying amidst broken wood and spilled ale. He stood as much in pride as in baffled awe.
"Be thankful you tussled with a knight, lest you leave with more than a few bruises," Faruq boasted with feign confidence. He winced, the throbbing pain in his arm like a reminder of humility.
Another glance around the Gaptooth Grin revealed little have changed. The beastly orc raised bloodstained blades, the wild ones disappeared smiling within a sea of fists of elbows, and a number of others blinded by drink fought one another. Faruq heard a sober voice above the crowd crying out about spilled wine -- Really? -- and a few smoother voices of articles of clothes and payment. He took in the shameful sight filled with drunkards and whores and brawlers and inhaled deeply. A likable place indeed, but not one included on his path.
Faruq stepped outside to find fiery haired imperial, the mage, the alchemist, and the sneak-thief who appeared richer for ware. He saw the hairy mill worker lying still in scarlet snow. His eyes immediately went to imperial woman, then glanced back to the bloody corpse. What young affections had been embers fanned by her presence to now again catch flame, now darkened. Faruq openly looked upon the imperial woman with his judgment worn plainly. "A most dire price saved for the worst and war. I pray this was among them," Faruq said, accusation sewn within the words without intention. He truly hoped the death done justly, or done without choice. Lest I forget this lot a band of criminals free from codes or morals. Murderers and sneak-thieves, perhaps all of them.
"Not quite nothing, sneak-thief," Faruq replied. "There is at least one dead here. I expect we will have bounties soon enough, perhaps an escort from here to a quaint little inn with rusty bars and shackles if we linger. There is that."