Later that evening, the Western outer city walls...
When would the rain take a day off?
Wrapped up in a burlap sheet that acted as a makeshift ponch, guardsman Derrick Fontaine stood, soaking and shivering under his padded leather armour as another coastal breeze made his damp clothing seem that much colder. He didn't know how on Nirn he was going to make it to Loredas without catching a cold, and the only thing that was keeping him warm was the pot of tea that Eric had brought up on shift to help keep the guards more comfortable and alert. There wasn't much to look at; the moon and stars were hidden behind thick, heavy clouds and visibility was pretty much nonexistent unless there was a torch to guide the way.
Should've been born a Redguard, I'd rather get sunburn than deal with another fucking night of rain. Fontaine thought bitterly, bringing the pewter mug to his lips, trusting it was cooled down enough.
Vendel pushed back the hood of his cloak and scratched at the long brown hair he'd tied up in a ponytail. He sighed his frustration out to the cold air and grasped up a pewter cup, pouring himself his own cup of tea. He blew into the cup in an effort to bring it down from scalding to just-right and rested his ass on a low section of the battlements, rubbing at the old knife wound from before he was on Castle Duty. There was no talking until Vendel sighed again, "Fuckin' boring work today." He took a sip from his cup, which managed to burn his tongue and make him grimace, "Guess that's good, though. Who made the damned tea this time?"
"Eric. He has a friend on the docks who sets aside a portion of the tea shipments for him. I want to say he's doing it out of the generosity of his heart, but I'm pretty sure he just wants the rest of us to like him." Fontaine shrugged, debating whether to cast off his poncho or not. He continued to stare out over the sea to give the impression that he at least was trying to do his job on the off chance the sergeant saw him doing anything but looking vigilant again. There was a man who was eager for promotion, the cunt.
"So, you still seeing that girl, or what?" he asked.
"When I can. Sergeant Cresspin has me pulling wall-duty when I'm not manning the armory. Fucker is up in arms over those two uniforms gone missing a while ago." Vendel chuckled and shook his head, "What about you? Wife still making you sleep on the floor?"
"I would literally kill to get a posting inside right now... and yeah, either it's because she thinks I'm a bit too friendly with the dairy farmer's daughter or she thinks the bed is the place of our big lumbering oaf of a dog..." Fontaine replied, voice trailing off as something caught his eye. Stepping closer to the battlements, he squinted through the inky void that was the night, trying to make what had caught his eye. Suddenly, his eyes burst open wide, suddenly alert. "Oh, Zenithar's cock... there's ships..." staring harder, and scanning the horizon, he almost forgot to breathe. "Oh fuck, there's a fucking fleet!" he stated, startled and visibly worried.
Vendel choked on his tea, jolting to his feet and coughing, trying to get his words out. Finally, his cough settled just as he too made out the biggest gathering of ships he'd seen since the High King made a visit. "Oh, you fucking..." His voice trailed off as his gape-mouthed face dropped, eyes scanning the fleet. He pushed Fontaine by the shoulder, "Find that fucking ponce Captain of ours and Sergeant Cesspit so they can rally the men! I'll find Captain Gerrald, go!"
"Uh... yeah. Shit...
shit. Ring the fucking bell, will you?" Fontaine managed, dropping his cup and hurrying to get off the wall to find the commanders, his feet not moving near fast as he wanted. The City of Camlorn was about to come under siege. Was it the Dominion? It had to be, didn't it?
~ ~ ~
Inside the Camlorn City walls...
Heavy bells tolled along the walls of the city, raising alarm. Guards and soldiers alike were rallied and roused from their beds, the officers finding their doors pounded on by messengers to lead and organize the men. Within twenty minutes, a good sixty percent of the city's defenders were in uniform, weapons in hand, and the commanders set to work ordering them. To the walls, archers flooded the battlements, although there weren't nearly as many as Captain Gerrald would have liked. The commander of the Camlorn Legion garrison, Gerrald was a grizzled man in his 40s, a close-shaved head that blended seamlessly with his stubble of a beard and a lithe build, a man accustomed to mobility and ordering men from behind the front lines, where he could watch the battle unfold and react accordingly. When guardsman Vendel found him, he'd been pouring through reports from the 3rd and 7th Legions in Cyrodiil, detailing casualty reports and the ever evolving frontlines. The damn elves were pressing hard, and they shook off counter-attacks like a dog shakes off water. He didn't know how, but it was worrisome.
And it looked like it might be a Dominon fleet attacking the city. The gods were testing Gerrald's resolve this day, he was sure of it.
"How many sails?" he asked the Nord.
"Too damn many. More than the fleet the High King took with him from Daggerfall on his visit last year." The Nord was still panting from his long run from the walls to the Legion Barracks. "The Castle Guard is preparing for a siege. There isn't enough of the Town Guard to rouse the folk and man the Kingsway gates. Guard-Captain Guillaume wishes for your men to bolster the town guard's numbers."
"I see." Gerrald said, considering his options. "Very well, we'll concentrate the bulk of our forces on the Western walls where the threat is imminent. I'll instruct the Guard-Captain to have his men keep order in the streets as well as to bolster the sentries on the East, North, and South walls. Louiselle!" he barked. His runner stood at attention. "Make way to the trebuchet batteries, tell them to make ready to fire. What's your name, guardsman?" he asked.
"Guardsman Vendel, sir." Vendel's heels clacked together as he gave his best salute. "I must return to the Guard-Captain and give him the orders. Stendarr have mercy, sir." Vendel wiped his forehead with the back of his hand and broke into a jog back to the castle.
First Brynn and now this. Francis better thank me for all I do.~ ~ ~
"In ten to fifteen minutes, the ships will be in range, depending on prevailing winds." The battery observer said to the runner. Fontaine stood nearby, listening to the conversation, feeling reassured that the heavy weaponry would soon be brought to bare against the ships. Foolishly, perhaps naively, he hoped that they'd be able to prevent a landing. He shuddered to think of how many vile elves were aboard those ships, waiting to slaughter Camlorn for no other reason than being a part of the Empire. Had Daggerfall fallen, as well? There were so many questions, and the absence of so many guards to deal with the Centaur problem around King's Guard was definitely a sore point of contention; the city was down about 40 men and women who were direly needed here, and now.
Well, at least he had the next ten minutes or so to contemplate the coming storm.
"What the fuck?!" a shout came down the line by one of the guardsmen. Soon, his cause for alarm was addressed when a succession of loud clanks were heard against the stone, and it only took Fontaine but a moment to recognize what they were; grappling hooks.
A pair of guards tried to look over the battlements to see below, but were swiftly rewarded with an arrow each into an eye socket. The men slumped over onto the hooks, dead weight securing their hold even further. More men tried to hack at the rope, an impossible feat, given the grapples had a foot of chain behind the hooked and weighted head, and peaking over the battlements was proving to be suicidal as impossibly expert archers were killing any who dared try to ascertain exactly what they were up against. Fontaine recalled the tales of how infamously and inhumanely deadly bosmer were with their bows, and how the lithe, small elves were known to make impossible shot through the thick forest of their homeland to take down their prey... which more often than not included trespassers. A sudden barrage of ice spikes flew past, missing heads or shattering on the battlements, giving further credance that some talented mages were amongst the ranks of the raiders.
Soon, the first hands were cresting the walls, and swords met. The battle of Camlorn had begun in earnest.
As Fontaine blocked a blow of a double-headed axe with his shield, he was startled to find that it wasn't an elf or even khajiit that was striking at him, it was a Nord of all people, laughing with maniacal glee as he struck at his foe with savage, heavy blows. Viewing further down the line at the raiders, there were other men and even argonians in the ranks... what was going on?
Fontaine bashed the Nord with his shield when the man raised his axe to hew at him once more, causing him to stumble back, trying to keep his balance. The Breton guardsman didn't give him a chance to retain his composure before driving his sword into the man's abdomin, taking him out of the fight as he begun to bleed out.
Suddenly, a half dozen screams came behind him, along with a torrent of unbearable flame that was so intense it overwhelmed the ward spells that tried to resist it, as if it were more kindling to the inferno that it feasted upon with untamed savagery. When the flames stopped, the caster became visible, a woman in her early 30s with short, chin-length dirty-red hair that was cropped to her chin, intense and cruel green eyes, and a striking trio of scars upon her cheek from some kind of claw marks time ago. Her arms were bare, and the leathers covering her torso were low on her chest; under other circumstances, she'd have a wild attractiveness to her.
The woman's hands were cast in flame, and she looked up from a smoldering, charred corpse and her eyes met with his, and despite the heat, he felt all warmth leave his body when the woman's lips parted into a menacing grin.
~ ~ ~
Inside Castle Camlorn, two hours later...
The city burned.
Untold hundreds were cut down in the late night attack that overwhelmed the defenders with its swiftness and ferocity. Within the first twenty minutes, the walls had fallen, and the trebuchets had been taken before they had a chance to fling their first stone. Reports were incomplete or even contradictary of what was happening, as scouts more often didn't make it back, and the city streets had turned into a hard fought tooth and nail skirmish between Legionnaires and city guards that had grown far too soft from years without real conflict and the invaders that hit with military precision along with raiders' ruthlessness. About the only thing that everyone managed to agree on was that the invaders were not the Aldmeri Dominion; they were something else entirely. However, one word was uttered through more than one clenched throat; pirates.
There was a sense of disbelief and outright denial by many who refused to believe that a group of disorganized outlaws that preyed on shipping lanes could ever assault a city, let alone in an organized fashion. Others said that among their ranks must have been quite a few trained former military members who brought training and skill at arms to the fold, along with officers' training.
Whatever the case may be, Callen Raimes was terrified but defiant; he wanted to defend his city, but the guards wouldn't allow him out of their sights. Him and Leonard Marco, the son of Lord Maximilian Marco, were ushered along by the elite of the house guard, who brought them through hidden passageways to a safe chamber to protect the family from invaders. Callen clutched his lover's hand reassuringly; Leonard was keeping his composure, but he required reassurance that it wasn't Callen's brother seeking vengeance against his family for keeping Callen's company without word.
"Don't be ridiculous," Callen had said. "My brother's rich, and he can be a heartless bastard, but he's not going to raise a fleet and start a war. Shornhelm's hundreds of kilometers from the coast, this isn't him."
It seemed to reassure Leonard, who was still understandably concerned far his father, who was separated from them at his order in case he was discovered. Lord Marco was a brave and kind man who loved his only son and grieved for his long departed wife; it must have killed him to have ordered himself away from his son to keep him safe.
The sounds of fighting weren't far now; they were inside the castle walls now, and growing ever closer. At least Callen was permitted to hold a sword; he'd be able to fight if they were discovered, at least. It was a small measure of power and comfort.
Leonard gulped and hoped that Callen didn't notice how slick his hands were. They hadn't even seen one of the pirates yet and he was already close to pissing. The ceremonial sword at his hip was the only weapon he had to him, but he kept a sweat-slicked hand resting on the crossguard. He tried to make himself seem fearless, and tried a slight frown but decided it was too much effort to keep through the fear. Callen's hand was the only thing that kept him grounded and he spared a glance at the man, standing half a head taller than he. "Either way, they won't make it past the Knights of the Table." He let go a sheepish chuckle that caught in his dry throat and he coughed into his fist, replacing it on his sword.
"Of course not, Lordling Marco." Sir Artur bowed his head quickly to Leonard. Leonard hoped very much that Artur was right. The Knight was not in the business of lying, after all, given his vows to the crown of Camlorn.
"Have you ever been in a fight, Callen?" Leonard asked, looking to Callen.
"Nothing serious," Callen admitted, rolling his jaw. "Just practice boughts with my retainers, I haven't even gotten into a fist fight. Nobility has an unfair way of keeping you from getting your hands too dirty when you're a youth, I'm afraid."
"And yet how rogueish and rough you seem to the likes of me." Perhaps Leonard's first sincere smile since this whole thing started crossed his lips. He laughed, "I hadn't set foot on the streets of my own city until I was twelve, for Mara's sake. In fact, when-"
The loudest crash against the door seemed to have killed all sound to Leonard. The sound of plate-mail shifting as the Knights of the Table drew their swords with the raspy whisper of their sheaths was all that punctuated the silence. A few beats more and Leonard flinched at another crash, boughing in the door and knocking dust from them. Another and Leonard let go a quiet whimper, squeezing Callen's hand ever tighter. Leonard drew his sword, however useless the jewel-encrusted thing may be for anything other than a fashion statement. He wouldn't die without his sword drawn, it would be one brave and proud thing Leonard would've done with his short life.
Another crash and he could hear the beam barring the door shut start to crack behind the force. Another crash and he could see it start to come apart. Another crash and it was splintered in two, a gaping hole left in the middle where the two bent and broken doors would've met.All was quiet, and Leonard was met with the same fear a child has in the lonely darkness. Slow as slow, a head with hair cut skin-close to the sides with the top flopped over one elven ear and a devilish grin of point-filed teeth behind bloody lips came through, eyes wide as valleys and pupils closed to pin-pricks appeared. A voice like winter escaped his jaws, "Here's Bloodbreath!"
With one more mighty knock, the already beaten doors fell from their hinges and out poured shirtless, painted bodies of Bosmer with similar crazed and hellish likenesses, giving whoops and ghostly high warcries. Bloodbreath stood there like a rock planted before the wave, his men splitting up to avoid him with equal parts caution and fear, arms opened wide as of beckoning forth daedra. Leonard stood as the clash of steel rang out all around him, eyes closed, not a thought spared to his sword. It felt like an eternity, but he knew it had to have been a short fight. As he opened his eyes slowly, he saw the carnage. All around them, Artur and his Knights of the Table lay dead with a few of the Bosmer raiders. Bloodbreath stood with his mer at his back, snarling and hissing like animals.
Through the portal that once was a barred wooden door strolled in another figure, unhurried, a khajiit of the Cathay breed. Garbed in a black thigh-length, high-necked coat that had metal plates sewn in the material, knee-high black leather boots, intricately carved metal pauldrons that went down the length of his arm, where on his right hand, a golden ring with a shimmering blue saphire sat upon his ring finger. His fur was gradients of grey with black stripes, his eyes an icy blue. Upon his head, his mane was styled into a mohawk and his ears carried a pair of golden hooped earrings. As he walked into the room, his hands rested lazily on his weapons, a pair of ebony war axes, were upon his red waist belt in leather hoops, and a peculiar was mounted to the small of his back. To say he struck an impressive figure was an understatement. Behind came some of his men, of various races including Orcs, khajiit, and even Imperials, but the most shocking was the Senche-Raht tiger, a massive beast that was in fact a khajiit that walked on all fours and filled the door frame, stepped through, dragging Lord Marco by his finery into the room with its powerful jaws. Dropping the lord by his son, the Senche-Raht turned and left the room, bitterly complaining about the taste stuck in his mouth.
The leader clasped his hands together enthusiastically. "My, what a touching reunion of father and son. And here I am willing to wager neither of you expected to see one another again, yet here we are." walking around the table and stepping over one of the bodies on the floor, he eyed the bare table distastefully. "And here I was hoping we would have been crashing supper. Understandably, rowing for several hours ahead of the fleet can be mighty tiring business, but I was just so enthusiastic to meet you, Lord Marco." he said, staring directly at Callen.
The young man blinked. "I'm not-"
The khajiit put up his hand, "Shh shh
shhh, trust me, boy, I know better than you what your station is. Your world as turned upside down, and the pirate republic of Wayrest's leadership was eager to meet the Lord of Camlorn, who so graciously has taken the burden of hosting us this eve." Gesturing back to the leader of the bosmer, he announced, "And I see you've met my good friend, Bloodbreath. Say hello."
Leonard was caught between charging at the Khajiit and pissing. He swallowed, his lips moving, but all trace of sound absent. After a long while of silence, Leonard spoke the only thing that came to mind, "W-why?"
"I was hungry." Bloodbreath licked his lips, the eyes of a wolf staring at lambs were set in his skull-like face.
"My father had no quarrel with Wayrest." Leonard swallowed, trying his hardest to ignore the beast of a man eyeing him hungrily, "Before or after your ilk claimed it." He swallowed, looked to his father lying lifeless on the ground like a broken doll and hefted his blade, "Either way... I'm ready to die. Are
you!?"
Before his lunge cound even reach out at its farthest, Bloodbreath stepped forward and swung a forearm into Leonard's throat, bringing him off his feet and to the floor without breath. Bloodbreath brought his gaze from Leonard to Callen, "We keeping both of these?" He asked the Khajiit.
The khajiit clucked his tongue twice, giving an approximation of an admonishing
tsk tsk that one would be expecting from a disobendient child. "Keeping? My word, Bloodbreath, you speak of our guests as if they're property. No, my friend, they'll be coming with us. A ravaged castle is no place for a pair of lords, is it not?" he said.
"Who are you?!" Lord Marco suddenly demanded as Callen suppressed the urge to charge the terrifying Bosmer. The khajiit turned to face him as if noticing him for the first time and smiled graciously. "Ah, forgive my poor manners... I am Lord Greywake, one of the Five Pirate Lords of Wayrest. Considering how much we rather despise the feudal system and groveling to an Emperor the rest of High Rock is well known for, it's hard to shake how catchy the titles are." Turning to Bloodbreath, Greywake put a hand on the Bosmer's shoulder and leaned close. "Pick one, I'll take the other. They're valuable alive, so try not to eat him, yes? Your men can have the pick of the corpses, my necromancers want what's left."
Stepping away from his compatriot, Greywake stepped towards Lord Marco, who was positively snarling at the khajiit, who appeared almost amicable. Leonard had never seen his father so livid or furious. He tensed when the khajiit suddenly drew the dagger from his back with a large and peculiar pommelstone, a smokey white colour that almost looked like the colours were shifting. Holding it reverse grip, he held it up for the Lord to see. "Tell me, have you ever been curious as to what could have been, had circumstances been different?" he asked.
Lord Marco's rage suddenly faded and his face grew heavy, after a few moments tears welled up in his eyes as his hand reached out gingerly to the stone. "Alaine... my wife..." he said softly, grieving. Whatever he had seen had made him utterly forget what was going on in the room.
"FATHER!" Leonard yelled, terrified of the bewitchment that came over his father. Lord Marco looked over to his son, and a sudden flash of movement from Greywake's arm seemed like a flash of lightning; a crimson gash had spread across Lord Marco's neck, and the dagger dripped with blood.
An incomprehensible scream of grief and rage filled the room as Leonard watched the life slip from his father's eyes, who feebly reached to his son as bloody spurts pooled out from his neck. Greywake calmly wiped the blade off on the man's finery and stood, slipping his dagger back into its sheathe. Grinning at the boy, Greywake patted him on the shoulder as he passed. "Going by line of succession alone, I suppose you're now the Lord of Camlorn. Congratulations. Bloodbreath, you seem to be getting along swimmingly with Lord Marco, so I suppose I will be taking his friend with me. I will have plenty of time to get to know him on the way back to my ship. It will be a grand, marvelous time, will it not? I'll be sure to give Skyfire my regards; she did stellar work on the walls."
Gesturing to his men, Greywake stepped out of the room, humming a pleasant sounding and melodical tune as Callen Raimes struggled in the grasp of much bigger and stronger men who wasted no time binding his hands and slapping a sack over his head.
Leonard sat upright on the floor, propped up on his hands, feeling as helpless as he did the day mother passed. It was happening all over again, and still he lacked the courage to move, to spring to action, to save his father- much less his mother. He swallowed and the blurriness of tears crept around the corners of his vision.
"Either way," Bloodbreath's voice came unnervingly close from behind his ear in a mockingly high tone, "I'm ready to die..." He appeared from around him, Leonard had not been so uncaring as to his fate than now, "Are you?"
He saw Bloodbreath's bare foot rise up and shoot towards him, and all was black.
~ ~ ~
Lying on one's back and trying to unshackle oneself with both hands behind their back is as hard as it sounds. Brynn was having a jolly good time of it. A group of Bosmer screaming at the top of their lungs had stepped out of one of the passageways and knocked his escort over the head. He'd only managed to escape with the key by giving one a nasty kick to the face and the rest of them the slip. What made his night even harder was the fact he could concentrate with their incessant fucking banging on the door while he worked. Finally, the key found purchase and he heard the click of the tumblers and the falling away of the shackles, "Hah!"
He brought his hands to where he could see them, "Hah!"
Now, all that remained was getting out of this alive. A shame he had none of his weapons. It was do or die. The banging on the door was starting to grate on him. He took a deep breath and let it out. He turned the door's ring and the pounding stopped. He opened it, fist reared back and screaming at the top of his lungs- to be greeted with the petrified faces of several handmaids. "My apologies, ladies."
One of them screamed and they all ran as a terrified herd away from him. He wasn't much to look at, but he rolled his eyes and rubbed his face with a palm, to open his eyes and be greeted with a shirtless, painted Bosmer with a cleaver in one hand and a savage grin on his lips. They stood staring at one another for a few beats before Brynn ducked a blade's swing and ran in the direction of the handmaids, hearing the pounding footsteps of the Bosmer behind him all the while. He ran, taking erratic turns down hallways that lead to Gods knew where. He finally ducked into a doorway and waited for his attacker. He finally heard hard breaths and loud footsteps. When they seemed close enough, he stepped out and clotheslined his pursuer, only to see it was Francis. "You pig-fucker..." The Breton said, heaving in breaths.
"What are you-"
"Deserting, you half-head." Vendel grumbled, "Now's the perfect time."
"Lead me to the exit." Brynn said. He'd spent enough time here.
"I'll lead you off a damned cliff." Francis got up, rubbing his neck. The trio made their way through the halls of the lower castle and finally made it out into the courtyard. Vendel yanked both Brynn and Francis behind a cart of hay as a menacing looking Khajiit at the head of a procession of matching menacing outlaws followed him at the other side of the courtyard. Two of the bigger men held a squealing and screaming man wriggling uselessly in their arms. Brynn squinted, "No..." Sure enough, Brynn's hopes of having this be his last days beholden to Lord Fuckstick and his merry band of misfits were dashed on the rocks- Callen Raimes was being dragged away by some of the meanest raiders he'd ever seen.
And speaking of his merry band, Cedric showed up with Finch in tow just as the menacing group disappeared with what seemed like all his happiness. A few moments later, Kiralla and Gaela came out of the woodwork and the only consolation was that those in the sewer would be having almost as bad of a mood knowing they'd waded through shit-water for nothing. Brynn sighed, and the only thing that came to mind passed his lips, "Fuck."
Tearing his helm from his head and throwing it to the ground, Cedric chimed up,
"Can't we fookin' go anywhere without the town burning to the ground?" he growled, his "borrowed" sword in hand.
"We need to get our shite back, find the others, and get out of town. I don't think we'll be rescuing little lordshite today, c'mon, let's get going."