Ashen smoke and putrid rot mixed to form a nauseating miasma in Scathael’s nose. Blackened wood and shattered corpses greeted his eyes wherever he rested his gaze. Behind the crackle of smouldering thatch and groans of collapsing houses, Scathael heard the screeches of carrion and growls of scavengers. That there was ever a village here – with people who lived and dreamed and just existed, and people whom he knew – just felt so surreal. As if this burnt, devastated ruin had been just that this entire time, and Scathael had dreamt up his entire time here.
But that wasn’t the case. He knew that.
That smoking hut to his right, with its once-flowering garden of pungent herbs and vibrant flowers now little more than mounds of mud, had once been the apothecary. The kindly old woman who had lived there had helped Scathael patch up his wounds the day he first entered the village. On his left, the pile of rubble that stretched out onto the main street had once been a house. Scathael knew the family who lived there – the mother had fed him on the two occasions he had to help the father with repairs. And there, near the head of the main street, laid what once was a simple farmstead. The old man who worked the fields there never did warm up to Scathael, but always paid generously with his produce.
Scathael didn’t know them well, but they had treated him fairly. They surely didn’t deserve such an end, to lay broken amidst the remnants of their own homes.
Just what had he done?
You wanted to stay.
The answer came to him quickly enough. Though the voice was hers, he knew the words weren’t. That did little to stop the sting, however used to it as he was. But she – or it, or they, or whatever it was – was right; all of this came about simply because he even entertained the idea of stopping. Nevermind that he never would have seriously considered the option. Just the mere thought of it was enough for fate to decide that he needed another reminder to always be on the move. It happened with his family. It happened with her, it happened with many other places, and now it happened again.
This was your fault.
Scathael squeezed his eyes shut. Focus. He had to focus. What was done, was done. All of the guilt, all of the sorrow in the world wouldn’t change a thing. The village was gone. On whose head was the blame laid was irrelevant. Scathael had to look ahead, at where his path would bring him next. He had to be prepared for whatever would come his way, and that meant that he needed supplies.
And so, he made his way back to the blacksmith’s home. Compared to the rest of the village, it was largely intact. The walls were still standing, even if the roof had caved in. Most of the tools and materials Scathael wanted – such as ingots, files, sandpaper, and whetstones – were gone, but still he searched. He tried his best to ignore the familiar corpses that laid in misshapen heaps not too far away. It had only been just two days ago when they had been conversing about everything and nothing amidst a peaceful night. And now, they were dead and Scathael was left alive. The dark elf tried not to think about that as well, as difficult as it was. How could it be easy, when their bloodied faces were right there for him to see?
“Scathael?”
That hoarse, whisper-quiet voice came so suddenly, and so softly, that Scathael didn’t believe it to be real at first. Only when it repeated itself – straining to call for him once more – did he understand that he wasn’t hearing things. He immediately stopped whatever he was doing and dug his way towards the voice, prying burnt planks from where they were jammed, and tossing loose debris aside. “Yes, it’s me,” he replied. “Try not to move. It’s dangerous.”
Hidden behind a stack of crates and empty roughspun sacks was the foxgirl, Vallana. She was huddled on the ground, with knees brought up to her chest. Tears, both fresh and old, stained her face. Her ears were flat against her head, and she couldn’t stop shivering. Whether it was out of cold, hunger, or fear, Scathael couldn’t tell. Black soot and dirt covered her skin and clothes. “S-Scathael? Are…Are you real?” Her voice quavered and faltered as she looked at him with wide, disbelieving eyes.
“Yes,” Scathael answered, but heard himself as if he were a mere observer.
Vallan’s lips quivered, and she sniffed. “Th-They came–” she began, but had to stop as she choked. Large tears dripped onto the ground, and she wiped her eyes with filthy hands as she wailed. Through her sobs, she cried for her father, her mother, for everything that she never again would have. Her little body heaved with grief and sorrow.
For what felt like an eternity, Scathael could only watch. His worry and concern were plain on his face, but he didn’t know what to do. This wasn’t a problem he could fix; there was nothing he could make that would make things better for Vallana. And so, he froze. His mind, however, dragged him back to the day when he found his own family, cold and dead in their own home. He recalled the dark gloom that had consumed his entire being; the grey nothingness which had coloured his world, and the dreadful uncertainty that had left him paralysed for so long. But he was lucky. He had already been an accomplished engineer and tinkerer when that happened. Good enough to let him survive on his own until he was well-enough to move on.
Vallana, however, had nothing. What would she do from now on? What could she do?
Scathael gulped. He didn’t have the answers to those questions. But he knew that he couldn’t leave her. It would be unconscionable, even for him. “Vallana,” he called to her as gently as he could and knelt. “I can’t reach you.” He reached for her with both arms outstretched. “You have to come to me. We can’t stay here, whoever did this could still be around.” The foxgirl flinched at the mention of the ones who had sacked the village. “Vallana, you have to come. You know you won’t last long alone. I don’t want that, so please, come to me and we can get away from here. We can think about what to do afterwards, but we can’t do anything until we’re safe.”
Vallana sniffed, but nodded. She crawled her way to Scathael, and it was clear from her slow and lethargic movements that she was nearing the end of her strength. Thankfully, she got close enough for Scathael to pull her from the rubble. “It’s okay,” he whispered as he carried her in his arms. She was light. Too light for a girl of her age. “It’s okay,” he repeated. Those words didn’t even register in his head. All that mattered to him was that they seemed to calm Vallana somewhat. “It’s okay.”
And somewhere in his head, he heard a response. Liar.
Only this time, the voice was his own.
Time: Morning Location: Campsite outside Roshmi Interactions: Mari @princess Mentions: Thraash @funnyguy; FIVE @shiningsector Equipment:
His travelling clothes - Dark, earthy shirt and coat, with trousers tucked into boots A hooded, oilskin cloak His bow, unstrung A musket Two pistols Two hatchets His travelling pack
Morning came as a dreadful surprise for Scathael. The past two days – or was it just one – had been but a blur to him. Between taking care of Vallana and making adjustments to the Warforged’s repairs, he barely had any time to sleep for long, nevermind go about his daily work.
The latter was an easy, if boring and mind-numbing, task. Reattaching the Warforged’s arm to his shoulder had been a fairly straightforward job, as such jobs usually were. The problem had been mechanical – the Dragonborn had thankfully avoided damaging any magical circuitry – and so all Scathael had to do was to grind the damaged, jagged parts smooth, and rejoin the limb to its socket with the aid of patch plates. That was where most jobs would end, but because the repair involved a joint, Scathael had to keep watch over the Warforged to make sure that the plates weren’t getting in the way of their arm’s usual range of motion.
It was a lengthy process – one that required a lot of welding and de-welding – but it was the proper way of doing things, and most importantly, gave him a reason to stick around the motley group.
As much as Scathael preferred to be alone – and as experienced as he was a wayfarer – he wasn’t foolish enough to believe that he could take care of Vallana on his own. The traumatised foxgirl had barely left his side since leaving the village. Whether it was eating, sleeping, or travelling, she refused to even be a step away from Scathael. The Dark Elf had to admit, however, that he wasn’t quite sure whether that was due to what Vallana suffered, or simply because of their travelling companions. A Warforged and a Dragonborn were intimidating presences even to seasoned adventurers, let alone a mere child. And Mari, friendly and loud as she was, was still a stranger.
Either way, it meant that Scathael spent most of whatever time he had left after inspecting the Warforged on Vallana. He didn’t regret it – it was his choice to take her, after all – but he did find himself wishing that a day had at least a dozen more hours.
And now, as the sun rose on a new day and breakfast sizzled over an open fire, Scathael sat on the naked earth with legs crossed and shoulders hunched. In his hands, he whittled curves into a small block of solid oak. Vallana was sound asleep beside him, swaddled up in his travelling cloak. This was probably the first proper rest the girl managed to catch since leaving the village, and so he took care to be quiet. Every now and then, he glanced at her, making sure that she was still asleep and undisturbed.
Mari’s sudden statement caught his attention. “Are you going to tell us why?” He asked pointedly in a quiet voice, then tilted his head towards Vallana. “Keep it down if you do. She’s finally sleeping soundly and I’m not going to be happy if she gets woken prematurely.”
Time: Evening Time: Evening Location: Village on the outskirts of Roshmi Interactions:Mari @princess; Thraash @funnyguy Mentions: Equipment:
His travelling clothes - Dark, earthy shirt and coat, with trousers tucked into boots A hooded, oilskin cloak His bow, unstrung A musket Two pistols Two hatchets His travelling pack
Scathael arched a brow at the Dragonborn’s words. He wasn’t offended – this wouldn’t be the first, or last, time someone mistook him for a mere village smith – but rather, he was amused. “You walked all this way, only to question my skills when you’re here?” The look in his eyes was one of utter disinterest, his voice a flat monotone, and every part of his body telling the two that he honestly couldn’t care less whether or not they actually hired him. Granted, the prospect of working on a warforged was tempting, but he didn’t trust these two. Not enough to follow them to who-knows-where after dark, at least.
It was for that reason that he started to dismiss them. But then, the Light Elf spoke up. Her words carried a sort of energy that was somehow simultaneously eminently annoying, but also strangely nostalgic. As if it reminded him of someone.
Scathael quickly nipped that thought in the bud. She was dead. There were many people who were similar to her, but none who were her. He had made the mistake of going down that road once. Never again. Still, he couldn’t help but soften his tone as he addressed Mari, something which didn’t escape his own notice, and something which annoyed him to no end. “You already know who I am, so I won’t bother introducing myself,” he said and looked at her and the Dragonborn in turn. “I saw the two of you in Roshmi. You fought a warforged there, did you not?”
He paused for a moment, then turned to pack up his tools. “I’m guessing that the warforged you want fixed is the same one you tried so hard to destroy. Not unless you have another one tucked away somewhere. I don’t think that’s the case, though.” Turning back to the pair, he continued, “Surely you can see why things feel suspicious to me. Why are you going through so much trouble to fix an enemy? I’m not saying I won’t do it, but I want to know more before agreeing to anything. And I want a guarantee that I won’t find a knife in my back once I leave with you.” He paused again and shrugged. “Some have tried that before.”
Time: Evening Location: Village on the outskirts of Roshmi Interactions: Mari @princess Mentions: Thraash @FunnyGuy Equipment:
His travelling clothes - Dark, earthy shirt and coat, with trousers tucked into boots A hooded, oilskin cloak His bow, unstrung A musket Two pistols Two hatchets His travelling pack
“Looks like we’ve visitors.”
The huntsman’s words were said nonchalantly, but the slight furrow in his brow and brief downward curl of his lips betrayed his unease. Scathael followed the man’s gaze, leaning as far back in his seat as he could and looking down the village’s main street. Despite being a visitor himself, he regarded both strangers with as much suspicion on his face as the blacksmith beside him. A village this small and this far off the beaten track might expect the odd wayfarer during the day, but at night? And two at the same time, at that? Either they were lost – their steps carried enough confidence to make that seem unlikely – or they were looking for something. Or someone.
And there was also something about the pair that struck Scathael as familiar. He didn’t like that.
The blacksmith shrugged and returned his attention to more important things, such as the half-empty mug sitting on the table in front of him. “Eh, they don’t look like they’ll be trouble,” he said and brought it up to his lips. Just before he tipped it back, however, he lowered it and glanced at Vallana. The foxgirl sat on the bare ground, deep in concentration as she glued pre-cut feathers to prepared arrowshafts. Headless ones, of course; Scathael knew better than to let a child anywhere near sharpened arrowheads. “It’s a little late for me to mention, Sadras,” the blacksmith said, addressing the huntsman. “But are you absolutely certain that it’s alright for us to drink in front of Vallana?”
The huntsman shrugged. “I’m not fussed, if that’s what’s worrying you.”
“It’s not you that concerns me. It’s your wife. I swore in front of your little girl the other day and I swear she would’ve torn my head off if Scathael wasn’t there.” The blacksmith glanced sideways as the dark elf with a grin. The gesture wasn’t returned, but Scathael did nod as if to confirm the story.
Sadras chuckled. “Ah, she’s far too refined for the likes of us.” He smiled softly, and his voice turned warm as he went on to say, “Gods alone know why she agreed to come back to this shithole with me.”
“Love makes idiots of us all, as they say.” The blacksmith raised his mug and drank heavily from it. “Can’t say that they’re wrong.” He nudged Scathael with the mug. “What about you, Scathael? I don’t recall you mentioning anything about a lady in your life.”
Scathael gently, but firmly pushed the mug away. “There’s none to mention,” he said curtly. It was, at best, a half-truth and at worst, a quarter-lie. He didn’t care either way; he had no intention of sharing that part of his story or his life with the present company. Or anyone, for that matter. Clearing his throat, he carried on in a level voice, “If there was, I don’t think I’d be here right now.”
“Makes sense,” Sadras said with a nod. “I suppose you’re still young for an elf. Remember us when you’re finally old enough to think about putting down roots, eh?”
Whispers of painful memories drifted through Scathael’s mind, and he pursed his lips. Sadras was right on one thing – by Elvish standards, Scathael had only just begun his foray into adulthood – and wrong on the other – Scathael had considered a less-itinerant life many times over the decades. As much as he enjoyed the freedom a life on the road afforded, he wasn’t blind to the security and simplicity that would come with settling down. In many ways, he preferred the latter. It was just pure misfortune and a string of strange and terrible coincidences that kept him moving. That, and he also had a promise to keep. The sort which would be quite tricky to fulfil without travelling.
Fortunately, Scathael didn’t have to spend too long dwelling on the matter, or even give Sadras a reply, for that matter.
"SCATHAEL! HEY SCATHAEL!!! GET YOUR ASS OUT HERE, BOY!"
A thunderous shout echoed down the street, made all the louder by the prior quietness. The blacksmith let out a string of expletives, his colourful words and angry voice joining a chorus of similar voices and words thrown from open windows and doorways. “Gods above, Scathael. Did you piss off a banshee?” He said in a low grumble. “Haven’t heard a woman scream that loudly since Old Idrid dug up a dead deer in her back garden.”
“I think she was louder,” Sadras said wryly. He knelt on the ground, gently patting Vallana’s back. The poor girl was huddled on the ground, with hands over her ears. “But it looks like you’re wanted, Scathael.”
Scathael looked back at the strangers. Now that they were closer, and in better light, he could tell that they were a Light Elf and a Dragonborn. A strange pairing, if he ever saw one. Stranger still, however, was how familiar they seemed. Scathael was sure that he had seen them before; he just couldn’t quite put his finger on where and when. Perhaps they were past customers? They seemed to be adventurers, and Scathael had certainly done plenty of work for plenty of such travellers and wayfarers. It didn’t seem likely; he didn’t think that he would easily forget such a distinctive pair.
Well, it didn’t matter. If they were looking for him, it could only be for one reason. Work was work. Scathael wasn’t in the habit of turning down work over personal misgivings. He would be a lot poorer and a lot less well-travelled if that were the case.
“I'll call them over. Do you mind?” Scathael asked the blacksmith. Normally, he would have no problems with going over. But considering the manner in which the Light Elf had called for him, and the hour at which she had done it, he felt like making things just that little more difficult for her.
“Go ahead,” he replied with a shrug and stood up. “Come on, Sadras. Let’s get Vallana inside.”
The foxgirl looked up at Scathael as her father helped her to her feet. “Are they friends?” She asked.
Scathael shook his head. “No. I don’t know them,” he said bluntly. “Now go inside.” He got off his seat and walked over to the open gate, brushing off the dirt and dust from his earlier work as he did so. There was no need to rush. More like than not, whatever work they had for him would have to wait until morning. Not that he had any issues with working in the dark, but because he was already done for the day. Working on his personal arms was always his very last activity before sleep. It was an age-old routine, and he wasn’t going to break it without a very good reason.
"Be quiet, lady. It's too late for all that noise," Scathael called back from the gate with arms folded. "I'm who you're looking for. Come over if you've got work for me. We can discuss. If you're looking for me for any other reason, turn around and leave. I won't be interested and you will be disappointed."
Time: Evening Location: Village on the outskirts of Roshmi Interactions: Mentions: Equipment:
His travelling clothes - Dark, earthy shirt and coat, with trousers tucked into boots A hooded, oilskin cloak His bow, unstrung A musket Two pistols Two hatchets His travelling pack
“I knew you’d be back, kid.”
The village blacksmith’s voice was harsh, but his words were affable and teasing. Scathael’s ears twitched as an involuntary show of his annoyance at the interruption. He didn’t respond, pretending to hear nothing, and instead focused his attention on the partially-disassembled musket neatly laid out on the workbench in front of him.
It was an interesting weapon. Certainly more interesting than whatever inane chatter the leonine smith had just attempted to coax him into, at any rate. A wheellock firearm, the musket was an interesting oddity at a time when almost every gunsmith in Avalia seemed to favour the more modern snaplock mechanism. And for good reason; a snaplock was simpler and cheaper to manufacture, easier to maintain, and much faster to load. Everything any gunsmith or gunner looked for in a weapon. At least, that was what the dwarf who had sold Scathael the musket had said. The dark elf hadn’t any reason to doubt the merchant’s words, not when he had been so eager to get rid of the thing that he accepted the robber’s price Scathael had offered with relief instead of complaint.
“Aye, our wee village just has a charm few can resist.” A different voice – this one belonged to the village’s chief huntsman, Scathael recognised – spoke. His words came out smoother, and carried a smile within its melodic and lilting tone. “But truly, it’s good to see you again, Scathael. You did good things for us last time you were around. Don’t suppose we could convince you to stay? I know my wee Vallana here would love it if you decided to stick around longer. You should’ve seen how mopey she was while you were gone.”
Perched on a high stool beside Scathael, the vulpine girl sputtered. “F-Father, s-stop it,” she protested in a whine, almost dropping the brass plate she was polishing. Scathael placed a hand on her back, preventing her from completely losing her balance, though it was more out of concern for the plate than it was for the girl's safety.
Aside from that minor action – which wasn’t enough to get him to look away from his task – Scathael didn’t pay the huntsman’s question any heed. There were still plenty of tiny and easy-to-lose components dotting the tabletop, and the flickering lamplight made them cast dancing shadows that confused even Scathael’s keen eyes. Missing even one of them would render the musket useless. He had to be careful in putting the thing back together. Senseless talk was a distraction he wouldn’t, and couldn’t, allow.
“Interesting firelock you’ve got there, by the way.” The blacksmith was, if nothing else, persistent. “I haven’t seen a wheellock in ages. I think that’s what you’ve got, at least. You’ve done plenty of strange work to it, I can tell. Can’t say I understand what for, however.”
That brought the ghost of a smile to Scathael’s lips as he popped the firing mechanism back into its carved slot in the stock. Few could discern his intentions for the musket from just a glance, and that was always a source of pride for him. It was a vanity, he knew, and certainly one borne from his pride for his work, but it was one of the few which he allowed himself.
He secured the mechanism firmly into place with a handful of screws, then held out his hand. Vallana gave him the brass plate, and he similarly fastened it to the butt of the musket. After giving everything a forceful tug to make sure all was right, he raised the weapon and aimed it towards the night sky. A push and swing of the trigger guard forward tightened a spring within. He returned the trigger guard to its original position, and squeezed the trigger. The quiet whirr of a steel wheel spinning at speed inside the mechanism was all Scathael needed to know that all was well.
Satisfied, he lowered the weapon and finally turned to face the two men sitting with him in the front yard of the blacksmith’s home and shop.
“May I?” The blacksmith asked and held out a hand. Scathael shrugged and passed him the musket. The blacksmith turned the weapon over, looked down its sights, and felt its heft. “Impressive, I’ve to say. I can’t recall the last time I handled a wheellock that wasn’t on its last legs. This feels very well-crafted.”
Vallana beamed. “I helped!”
She had really only handled parts which Scathael had given her. None of them were essential to the basic functioning of the musket. However, the dark elf kept that information to himself. He couldn’t bring himself to, especially not after hearing the joy in her tone and seeing the wide smile stretching across her face. He might be a dour grouch of a dark elf, but even he wasn’t immune to the innocence of a child.
“Yes,” he said simply. “You did.”
“But I have to ask,” the blacksmith continued. “Why not just get a snaplock? It’d save you all this trouble to keep this antique in working order.”
“A snaplock’s easily doused by rain. A wheellock doesn’t have that problem,” Scathael replied. “I simplified the mechanism. Reduced the number of parts by more than half, re-built the entire mechanism as a single block that’s easier to remove, and–” he pulled his chair forward and pointed to a segmented portion at the rear of the barrel. “–made it a breechloader. Makes it easier and faster to load. You also tension the spring by operating the trigger guard, which makes it even faster to fire. I’d say this thing fires at least five times faster than a regular muzzle-loading musket. It still needs work, however. It’s less powerful than a regular musket of the same length.”
“Less powerful, he says,” the huntsman repeated with a chuckle. “Unless you’re planning to hunt a dragon or shoot through a solid block of steel, I don’t think the difference would matter.”
“Who knows?” Scathael regarded the man with a deadpan expression. “I might run into a steel dragon one of these days and wish I had something that could hurt it.” Vallana gasped, and so he clicked his tongue and quickly added, “It’s a joke. Only dragons I’ve ever heard of are made of scale and blood. Bad manners and worse houseguests, though, I’ve heard that too.”
The blacksmith snickered and shook his head. “Don’t worry, Vallana. He’s only being half-serious.” Holding out the musket in front of him, he gave it an approving nod. “In all honesty, you did fine work with this one, Scathael. You’ve taken a wheellock and turned it into something a snaplock could only dream of. I’ve only got one other question, however. Why do you carry a bow on your person if you’ve already got such a fine piece of weaponry?”
“The bow’s for hunting,” Scathael replied simply. “I want my prey dead, not its meat obliterated.”
At that, the huntsman guffawed. “See? This dark elf understands! If you want a good cut of meat, it’s bolts and arrows you’ll have to use.” He gave the blacksmith a hard, but friendly slap on the back and turned to Scathael. “Truly, Scathael, you should stay. We could do with another smith in this wee village of ours, and I don’t think anyone would complain. We live simply here. You’d have a nice, peaceful life, I imagine. After spending the time I assume you do on the road, that should sound quite pleasant, aye?”
Scathael exhaled slowly through his nose. The huntsman was right; it did sound great to his ears. Deep in his heart, however, he knew that it would only ever be a dream. The chance for him to settle down passed a long time ago, along with the one person he likely would have ever settled down with.
The features of her face fading from memory. Yet still beautiful enough to warm his heart. “So.” Her voice, so clear in his head. “What do you think? This place would make a nice home, I think.” A smile on his face, and one on hers. The rest of the world falling away. Joy. Expectation. Anticipation. All filling his body. And then a flash. In the cave once more. Fear clawing at his heart. Regret sapping his strength. A body, broken beneath rocks. A scrawled apology, red ink darkened to brown. Pain. Tears. Anguish.
Scathael shook his head and blinked that vision away. Then, he cleared his throat. “Thanks, but I’m going to have to decline.” He turned back around to pack up his tools. “It’s not for me.”
The darkening sky spread over Sorian harbour, and with it came a scattering of ships seeking safer waters for the night within the city’s breakwaters. In the diminishing light, even weather-beaten and tarnished sails appeared to be wavering slivers of luminescent white. They fluttered furiously against the nightly seaward winds, but still flagged more than they billowed. Pushing their hulls towards the docks at a torpid pace was all they could do.
From the waterfront, Sjan-dehk watched with crossed arms and in amusement. Beneath the lopsided grin, the occasional snicker – particularly when a ship found itself in irons – and the less-occasional thoughts of how his Sada Kurau would be the superior vessel in similar conditions, he felt some sympathy for the crew aboard those ships. Really, he did; to spend a day of toil at sea, only to be delayed by something the fickle winds so close to home was frustrating, to say the very least.
Granted, that wasn’t something Sjan-dehk had ever personally experienced – the sea was both his closest companion and second home – but he had observed his crew enough to understand it, somewhat.
“That’s not good,” he murmured and drew in a sharp breath through his teeth. A sizeable ship – a freighter, judging by its size and heft – had lurched into a lumbering turn, only to have her sails immediately deflated and pressed flat against her masts by the headwind. She lost what scant speed she had in an instant, and drifted slowly and aimlessly to a complete stop. There was little her crew could do aside from trimming her sails every which way in vain hopes of catching some form of wind. Such a position was unenviable; even Sada Kurau would be hard-pressed to get out of such a situation – she could sail much closer to the wind than most, but she could not sail directly into it. No ship could.
Or rather, no sailing ship could. A steamer wouldn’t have cared which way the winds blew.
Sjan-dehk grunted and leaned forwards, resting his forearms on the salt-pitted guardrail stretching across the length of the waterfront. It felt surreal – wrong, almost – how quickly those machines of iron and steam took to the seas. When the War began just over half-a-decade ago, they were mere theories dreamt up by shipwrights and engineers. Two years into the fighting, and the first wooden frigates to be fitted with steam engines were put into service. The following year, those very same ships were coated in thin plates of iron and sent to the front. And by War’s end, there were ships leaving the slipways that looked completely alien to Sjan-dehk.
He recalled seeing one such vessel, the Sadhakan Ai-kai. It had been during the final days of the War, and Sada Kurau had happened to pass her whilst underway to the Viserjantan capital, Mersawas. Her hull had gleamed in the sunlight, and she had sailed into the wind with naked masts and funnels belching clouds of dark smoke and white vapour. It had been a strange sight, and to this day Sjan-dehk was still uncertain as to what he thought of it. On the one hand, being able to sail without paying heed to the wind was a dream of every captain. And yet on the other, that very same dream made real sapped the magic from sailing. As if it turned something that called for talent and imagination into something colder, and more clinical.
Well, he supposed it didn’t quite matter what he thought. If it ever came to a day when he would be forced to leave his Sada Kurau to take command of one of those newer ships, then he could either simply accept the decision without fuss, or fight tooth-and-nail to remain aboard the ship that had taken him to countless victories. And he already knew which option he would choose.
A familiar voice from behind quickly dispelled whatever daydreams he had of a probable future, and pulled him back to his senses. “Captain, I hope you don't mind a siren's company for the night's festivities.”
“You know, sirens–” Sjan-dehk began with a chuckle as he turned around. And as soon as he laid eyes on Kalliope, whatever words he had left to say vanished from his tongue. Without thinking – or even knowing, for that matter – he swept his gaze over her form before resting it on her face. Her verdant eyes gleamed with mischief, but also shone with the waning twilight.
"Shall we dance in the realm of arrogance and pompous asses?"
Sjan-dehk cleared his throat, coughing into a fist, and nodded in response to her question. “When you put it that way, it almost sounds like it’d be fun,” he said with a quiet laugh.
Once again, he couldn’t help but take in the sight of her. The gown she wore was the exact one which she had bought days ago, so it wasn’t as if he was looking at anything new. And yet, he was captivated all the same. Blue fabric, soft and fine, flowed from her like the rolling waves of the gentle sea, and pooled at her feet in ruffles reminiscent of swirling eddies. And just like the sea, it was broken up by golden accents that reminded him of the vibrant hues painted by a setting sun. Intricately woven to look like scales, they made her look like a merrowfolk from ancient legends.
And it was around that time when Sjan-dehk realised that if she hadn’t noticed him ogling her before, she certainly must have, now. “Sorry,” he said sheepishly, and carefully considered his words. A not-so-small part of him just wanted to call her ‘beautiful’ and be done with it, but knowing what he now knew about her relationship with Cassius, he knew he had to establish and maintain a respectful distance. He may as well get started – and get used to it – sooner rather than later.
“You look…Wonderful.” That was the most neutral word he could think of while still retaining some form of honesty. “It’s a beautiful dress, and it suits you well.” He should have stopped there. That would have been the wise thing to do, but he couldn’t stop himself from continuing with, “I mean, the rest of you is…Well, it’s easy on the eyes as well.” He paused, and tapped his finger on a scabbard. “You dressed up well, is what I’m trying to say. Almost makes me feel a little underdressed.”
Sjan-dehk spoke the last sentence as a half-joke. Compared to Kalliope, he looked remarkably plain. That wasn’t the seamstress’ fault, however, but rather his own. The poor woman had tried to convince him to at least try some of the more fanciful and eye-catching clothes she had to offer. Consummate soldier that he was, Sjan-dehk naturally refused. He eventually settled on something that was as close to his usual attire as possible, albeit with some flair in the form of elaborate patterns embroidered with golden thread. Even that was something the seamstress had to talk him into accepting. She had pointed out – and rightfully so, in hindsight – that without them, he may as well wear his own uniform. And that was hardly fitting for what seemed to be an elegant and grand event.
“Anyway,” he said, taking a step back from her and tilting his head to one side. Whether that was the right way to go was unknown to him. “Shall we go? I don’t know where this count makes his home, so I’m afraid you have to lead. Not unless you don’t mind us ending up some place where we shouldn’t.”
Time: Late Morning Interactions: Mentions: Attire:
(Placeholder until I get a better reference image) Roughspun, blue trousers A shoulder belt and waist belt carrying his equipment Two swords and two pistols, one on either side A woven, conical hat wide enough to shade his entire face
Sjan-dehk didn’t linger at the beach. After Kalliope told him where they were to meet – and after he agreed to her suggestion – he bade her a short, but still polite, farewell before taking his leave. This morning had been eventful enough on its own, and he wasn’t too keen on making it more so. Between meeting a bevy of new faces – as well as learning the names which came with them – and the small debacle courtesy of the Alidashti princess, he felt he had seen and heard enough for one day, let alone just a part of it. There was already plenty for him to think over as things were.
And yet, as the crunching of sand beneath his boots gave way to the tapping of leather against stone, his thoughts were of neither new acquaintances nor of capricious royalty.
Rather, they were of Kalliope and Cassius, the man who had accompanied her to the beach. Specifically, he pondered over the nature of their relationship for the umpteenth time. He wasn’t sure what vexed him greater: that he didn’t know, or that he was devoting so much thought to a trivial matter. What did it matter to him? Both were little more than strangers to him. Kalliope less so, granted, but he still only knew her for all of two days, at best. And Cassius? The man may as well be a giant question mark. Sjan-dehk couldn’t think of a reason for him to be so concerned with how the two were linked. They could be friends, or even lovers, for all he cared.
Well, that wasn’t entirely true. Though he couldn’t say for why, that last thought – of Kalliope and Cassius being lovers – made his chest feel ever-so-slightly tighter, and brought a twitch of a furrow to his brow. He willed both away with a shake of his head and a growl that wasn’t quite as muted as he had intended. This was all just a result of having too much time on his hands, he was sure of it. Spending a bit of time aboard Sada Kurau and busying himself with the tasks of the day would fix that in short order. Mending sails and polishing yardarms for hours on end would numb anyone’s mind to whatever it was that plagued them.
However, the sight that greeted him as he stepped onto the dock put a quick end to those plans.
Standing near the end of the boardwalk, and right by the foot of the gangplank leading up to his ship, were two familiar faces. Or to be accurate, it was one familiar face – Iyen – and one somewhat-familiar head of flaxen hair. With how raised their voices were and how wildly they gestured to each other, Sjan-dehk didn’t know if he was witnessing a particularly animated conversation or the start of a fight, and so he proceeded cautiously, as if he were sneaking up on a skittish animal.
Iyen’s eyes found him as he drew closer, and the barely-hidden exasperation on her face melted away to a look of relief. “Sjan-dehk!” She called out over the shoulder of the other person, who revealed herself to be Aislin – the fishergirl he had met just days before – as she spun around. “Praise the Mountain and the Shadowed Green that you’re here. It’s about time, too.” Iyen rested her hands on his hips. “Any longer and I would’ve had to go out looking for you.”
“Well, are you going to tell me what’s so important, then?” Sjan-dehk asked.
Iyen shrugged. “Not a clue.” She cocked her head towards the shorter Caesonian girl. “I found her running up to every one of our people near the beach, asking about you and your ship. Couldn’t understand much more than that, so I brought her here. I was hoping that you’d know what she’s going on about.” Her eyes shined with mischief, and a smirk tugged on her lips as she leaned in closer to him. “My, Wasun Sjan-dehk of Jafi, you haven’t done anything to her that you shouldn’t have, have you?”
Sjan-dehk ignored her and addressed Aislin directly. “Iyen says you looked for me. Why?”
Worry was written plainly upon the fishergirl’s visage. She had clearly left her work in a hurry – her simple, over-patched dress and bodice were streaked with stains of red-and-brown, and there was a strong scent of the ocean – laced with that of fish guts – that clung to her hastily-tied hair and clothes. “Sorry Cap’n, but I need your help.” Fretful eyes flitted between Sjan-dehk’s face and Iyen’s from beneath knitted brows, and she wrung her hands over her chest as she spoke. “A few boats went out fishin’ early in the mornin’. They should all be back by now, aye they should, an’ most of ‘em are, but we’re still missin’ one wi’ crew an’ all, an’ I ‘eard frae the rest that they went farther out, but ‘tis pirate waters o’er yonder, ‘tis so.” She paused to take in a heaving breath. “Pa said tae tell the city guard, but if anythin’s really ‘appened tae ‘em, it’ll be too late by the time those bastards do anythin’, an’ I cannae think o’ anyone else who can ‘elp, so I came tae you, Cap’n–”
Sjan-dehk stopped her torrent of words with a gentle pat on her shoulder. He offered her a small smile and said, “It is…It will be okay. We will go find them. If there are pirates, we can fight. Will be okay.” He glanced at Iyen and nodded. “Missing ship,” he translated for her. “Sounds like there might be pirate trouble too, or not. I’ll take Sada Kurau out and see what I find. It’ll do the crew some good, either way. Nothing like a surprise journey every now and then to keep them sharp and on their toes.”
“And any excuse to step away from shore, eh, Captain?” Iyen teased with a grin. “Just as well that I’ve got nothing planned for the rest of the day. I’d hate to miss out on the fun. It’ll be just like old times.”
“Don’t you have duties?” Sjan-dehk asked. “Like looking after our Lady Adiyan?”
“She told me to take the day.” By the sourness in her voice and the brief twisting of her lips, it was clear to Sjan-dehk that Iyen was too pleased about that. Then, she shrugged. “But I guess it’s better that I take it today, when she’s safe aboard the Sudah, than when she’s able to come ashore.” She let out a breath that was halfway between frustrated and resigned. With a shake of her head, she brought a cheeky smile back to her face and playful mirth to her voice. “Anyway, there’s nothing for me to do other than to go wandering around a city I don’t know, and you know that means I’ll pay you a visit sooner or later. Might as well make things easier for us both and let me join you now, eh?”
Sjan-dehk took a moment to consider her offer. It didn’t take long for him to nod his assent – Iyen wasn’t a stranger to his ship, and her skills would be more than welcome if it came to a fight. “Alright. An extra pair of eyes is always helpful.” Then, he shifted his attention to Aislin. “You know where….You know where it is the boat can…Might? Yes, might be?”
She nodded. “Aye, I’ve got a pretty decent idea. She canne ‘ave gone far frae our usual waters, otherwise the others would’nae ‘ave let ‘er sail away, nae they would’ve.”
“Okay. You come with us. Take us there.”
“You got it, Cap’n.” Aislin smiled, but Sjan-dehk looked away. He would have preferred to leave the young fishergirl behind. Bringing her – someone unused to battle – to a potential skirmish was a risk to everyone involved, most of all the Aislin herself. But when the alternative was to wander aimlessly across unfamiliar waters for Mother-knows-how-long, what choice did he really have?
Sjan-dehk led the two of them up the gangplank and onto Sada Kurau. Her crew milled about on her main deck. Most were in the midst of returning to their duties – descending steps into her bowels, clambering up shrouds ratlines to her tops, or scuttling across the deck to their stations – and some were either sitting or laying by her gunwales, catching some hard-earned rest while they could. It almost made Sjan-dehk feel a little guilty about what he was going to do.
Almost. Sada Kurau was a warship. The crew knew what they were getting into when they joined her.
The first of Sjan-dehk’s barked orders shocked those closest to the gangplank awake. Those who heard it clearly immediately sprang into action, and with his subsequent commands, he pushed more and more of his crew to action. Before long, Azwan’s voice – along with those of the other officers – joined his in urging every sailor to their station. There was little time to waste; if there were pirates about, Sjan-dehk wanted to catch them as soon as possible. Every delay, every slight moment wasted, was simply another chance for them to slip away. Nevermind that there was only the possibility of pirates; Sjan-dehk acted as if it was all but confirmed that they were involved.
And it was that attitude of his which he spread to his crew. Like a well-maintained machine, they prepared Sada Kurau for a speedy departure. The gangplank was pulled up, and her mooring lines cut and allowed to drop into the harbour. Teams of sailors called out their cadence in unison as they hoisted her long yards into position. Crimson sails, once free from their lashings, fell in waves from them, bellowing and stiffening almost immediately as they caught the wind. With a deft hand on the wheel, Sjan-dehk guided her away from the pier.
And soon enough, her svelte hull was slicing through the water like a shark’s fin.
Time: Late morning to Early Afternoon Interactions: Mentions: Attire:
(Placeholder until I get a better reference image) Roughspun, blue trousers Lamellar Chest plate with tassets A shoulder belt and waist belt carrying his equipment Six pistols and two swords A woven, conical hat wide enough to shade his entire face
Finding the missing ship wasn’t as difficult a task as Sjan-dehk had assumed. He couldn’t take much credit for it, however – that honour belonged to Aislin. Were it not for her knowledge of local waters and her able guidance, he doubted they would have found their mark as swiftly and smoothly as they had. The sun was only just approaching its zenith when they arrived at the fishing grounds, and it wasn’t long after that when Sjan-dehk caught sight of a ship which he thought looked familiar.
The other vessel – sleeker and armed – that was with her was an unpleasant surprise, however. A tangled mess of ropes tethered the two together, in such volume and disarray that it was visible even from afar.
Sjan-dehk, Iyen, and Aislin observed the two ships from Sada Kurau’s quarterdeck – the fishergirl through the Captain’s spyglass, and the two Viserjantans with only their eyes. Ghostly whispers of a north-westerly whistled and rushed past their ears. Large, triangular sails shading the main deck ruffled, even in winds so light, as they propelled Sada Kurau through gentle waves glimmering in the bright, midday sun. The glare stung Sjan-dehk’s eyes, and made it difficult for him to see much of the unknown ship. All he could make out was that she sported three masts, and from that he deduced that she was likely a larger ship than the two-masted Celestine.
“I can’t see shit,” he grumbled beneath his breath. Using his hand as a shade did painfully little to help with his situation.
“Speak for yourself,” Iyen teased with a grin. “I see two ships.”
Aislin spoke up before Sjan-dehk could snap off a reply. “That’s her, aye it is. The Dawn. ‘Tis young Tom’s boat, ‘tis so, ‘tis so.” She had the spyglass pressed against an eye and half her body leaned out over the gunwale. “She went out fishin’ wi’ us yestermorn, aye she did.” Her lips curled into a slight smile. “Cannae say I’m nae surprised, Cap’n. Did’nae think you’d ‘ave remembered ‘er.”
“I did not,” Sjan-dehk admitted with some awkwardness in his voice. “It was only a guess.”
She waved off his remark. “‘Tis close enough, ‘tis so. I’d take the compliment, Cap’n.” She swept her gaze across to the unknown vessel, then back to the Dawn, and alternated between the two for a moment. Her grin quickly vanished, replaced by a troubled and worried frown. “I cannae see anythin’ movin’ aboard the Dawn, nae I can. An’ that other boat…There’s plenty ‘o things ‘appenin’ on ‘er deck, but she’s nae a boat I recognise, aye she’s nae.” She leaned even further out, as if doing so would get her an even clearer look at the ships far off in the distance. “I’m nae likin’ this, Cap’n. Feels all sorts o’ wrong, aye it does.”
Sjan-dehk quickly took her by the shoulder. “You lean too far,” he said. With a firm tug, he guided her back fully onto Sada Kurau. Aislin let out a surprised yelp, but did nothing apart from shooting him a glare. She returned her eye to the spyglass and her attention to Dawn. Sjan-dehk paid it no heed. “Do not worry. Just say what you see. We will do the rest.”
Aislin drew in a deep breath and nodded. “She’s got ‘er stern tae us, so there’s nae much I can see, but…I think she’s unfurlin’ ‘er sails? Plenty ‘o fellas climbin’ up tae her ratties and masts, ‘tis so. An’ they’re cuttin’ off the lines tyin’ them to the Dawn, aye. Might be they’re tryin’ tae make a–” She cut herself off, and would have leaned out over the gunwale again had Sjan-dehk not reined her in with his hand. “Her crew’s raisin’ the Black Flag,” she said in a hushed voice, and gulped. “Pirates, Cap’n, and ones dangerous enough tae be eager for a scrap wi’ a warship, aye. I’d be careful, Cap’n. Might be they know somethin’ we don’t.”
“Helmsman, two points to starboard,” Sjan-dehk called out over his shoulder. A shouted acknowledgement later, Sada Kurau creaked and moaned as she leaned into a gentle turn. “Well done. Keep her steady and maintain an oblique approach, but be ready for sudden manoeuvres at Captain’s discretion.”
He tapped Aislin on the shoulder to get her attention, then held out his hand. Reluctantly, she returned the spyglass to him, but kept her eyes on both ships. Sjan-dehk peered through the tube of polished brass, his brows knitted in concentration as he searched across the deck of the pirates’ vessel. There was prudence in Aislin’s warning; no pirate – no one, for that matter – would willingly pick a fight that they had no chance of winning. And as far as Sjan-dehk could see, the pirates didn’t have one. They were out-gunned – even looking from an unfavourable angle, it was clear that Sada Kurau carried far more guns in one broadside than their ship did in total – and unless they could untangle themselves from Dawn faster than any crew Sjan-dehk had ever seen, they would be fighting more as a floating battery and less as a ship.
So they had to have a plan. Some strange trickery that would be unleashed at the last moment, and which was up to Sjan-dehk to find before it was too late. But he found no such thing. Nothing about her seemed out-of-place. Her unfurling sails were a filthy shade of white, and her green-tinted hull could likely do with a proper scrubbing, but those weren’t anything out-of-the-ordinary for a ship like her.
Sjan-dehk huffed and lowered the spyglass. Right then, Iyen spoke up. “So,” she began, her grin so clear in her tone that Sjan-dehk didn’t even need to turn around to see it. “Can I assume that we’ll be going into a fight soon, and I can finally earn my keep?”
“Maybe,” Sjan-dehk said grimly. He tilted his chin towards the pirates’ ship. “She’s got pirates aboard, Miss Ai-shi-lehn tells me, and they’re picking a fight with us.”
“That’s awfully stupid of them.”
“Yes,” Sjan-dehk agreed. It was also convenient – it saved him the trouble of having to chase them – and if there was one thing he knew for a fact, it was that behind every convenience was likely an ambush or trap he had failed to spot. “Or might be that they’re very smart, and that they’re deliberately making themselves look stupid. Oldest trick in the books, y’know?” He glanced at Iyen, then looked back at the ship. “Could be that I’m overthinking this, I’ll admit, but nothing about this feels right to me.”
Iyen chuckled and clapped a hand on his shoulder. “Be calm, Captain. If you’re able to tell me all that, then I’d say that whatever they’ve got planned isn’t going to play out in their favour.” She gave him a pat on the back and rested her arms on the gunwale. “You Jafins are the better sailors, I’ll admit, but we Sudhrayarns have better noses for battle, and mine tells me that Sada Kurau will come out of this on top, as she always does, and you’ll look like a bloody fool for worrying so much, as you always do.”
“This worrying keeps us alive, and Sada Kurau afloat.” Despite the dryness of his words, Sjan-dehk’s face still broke into a smile, however slight it was. He brought the spyglass up to his eye.
And just as he directed his gaze at the pirates’ ship once more, two puffs of white smoke shot out from her stern. Not a moment later, low rumbles – akin to that of distant thunder – reached his ears. He knew it for what it was in an instant.
Alarmed yells rippled down Sada Kurau’s deck as everyone dropped whatever they were doing – in some cases, literally so – and threw themselves onto the planking. Sjan-dehk did the same, grabbing Aislin and roughly pulling her down with him. The elfin fishergirl cried out in surprise, and then again in pain when her body struck the quarterdeck with a distressing thud. She squirmed on the floorboards, a hand pressing on her hip and a litany of Caesonian expletives flowing like a river from her mouth. Sjan-dehk made a note to apologise later, but for now, his mind was too preoccupied by other things.
Was this the pirates’ secret? Guns that out-ranged Sada Kurau’s? On their own, they already robbed Sada Kurau of one of her chief advantages. Combined with whatever else the pirates had hidden away on their ship? They could very well turn the tide of battle to their favour. Sjan-dehk clenched his jaw. Not knowing anything about his enemy was a grave mistake on his part, and now he could do little more than count the agonisingly long seconds and brace for impact.
Except, the impact never came.
Sjan-dehk slowly returned to his feet, but motioned for Iyen and Aislin to remain in cover. He hadn’t heard the familiar scream of cannonballs flying overhead, so they couldn’t have overshot. Neither did he hear the splashes that would have come with a near miss. Each passing second felt like a decade, but eventually enough time passed that it was impossible for any cannonball to still be in the air. “Looks like they missed us,” he called out. “On your feet, everyone, and make ready!”
Shouts and yells echoed all throughout his ship as the crew scrambled to their stations, but Sjan-dehk was still deep in thought. If the pirates’ shots didn’t overshoot Sada Kurau, didn’t hit her, and didn’t hit the water close enough to be heard, then they must have fallen exceptionally short. They wouldn’t even have value as ranging shots – shots fired to ascertain the distance of a target – and that only puzzled Sjan-dehk even more. Such an act reminded him of past adversaries who fired useless volleys out of defiance after having been thoroughly defeated. But why would these pirates, who sought battle, carry out what was essentially an act of desperation?
And then he saw it. As his eyes swept over the side of his own ship – by chance, as it were – he got all the answers he had been looking for.
He was wrong, and Iyen was right. The pirates had no trick, and he had been worrying over nothing.
Earlier, in his haste to find the missing fisherfolk, he had called for his crew to squeeze all available speed from Sada Kurau. That meant that she had been sailing with every gun retracted into her hull, giving her a sleek and smooth appearance. And with the sun directly overhead, her large headsail would have hidden her bow chasers in its considerable shadow. From a distance, anyone unfamiliar with her make – such as those native to these waters – could easily mistake her for an unarmed vessel. Given that she approached the pirates bow-on, they wouldn’t even have had a chance to spot the gun ports cut into her hull. To them, it would have looked as if an easy mark had made herself known. One, perhaps, they thought they could easily scare by simply firing their guns.
A wicked smile stretched across Sjan-dehk’s lips. Then, he bent over and laughed. Partially at the pirates whose mistake was about to cost them very dearly, but mostly at himself. There was probably a lesson to be learned here. What it was exactly, he wasn’t quite sure. Figuring it out would have to wait. For now, there was work to be done. He made his way over to the guardrail and looked over the crew below. With a soft chuckle, he shook his head; half of them would be pleased as the easy fight, and the other half would be disappointed for the very same reason.
Well, nobody could please everyone. He smirked and drew in a deep breath.
“Well, they had their turn,” he shouted. “Now it’s ours. Let’s give them a surprise. Run out the guns!”
“Are you going to say anything?”
Sjan-dehk ignored the gruff words of an impatient man and instead, took a bite from an apple. He chewed with deliberate slowness, making sure his companion could hear every crunch over the cacophonous din surrounding them. Casually, as if he were seated at a teahouse rather than on the deck of a ship that had only moments ago been an adversary, he placed the apple on the table in front of him and turned the page of a small, leather-bound book. Its cover was badly torn, and the parchment within damp to the touch. He frowned deeply, and pushed the brim of his hat up and away from his eyes, giving them the best chances they had of parsing messy sentences made worse by hasty scrawls and smudged ink.
Across from him, the man growled and slapped his hand on the table. The rickety, wooden structure shook and rattled. Sjan-dehk’s apple rolled away, but he caught it just before it reached the edge. Still, he didn’t deign to look at the man. “Oi, are you listening? How much longer is this going to take? We’ve got places to be and little time to waste sitting around doing nothing. Are you going to let us go or what?”
“Shut up.” There was no anger in Sjan-dehk’s words, or much of anything, for that matter. He said them as if the man was nought but an afterthought. A slight annoyance, at best. “Look around,” Sjan-dehk said and gestured to the deck. From quarterdeck to hold, and prow to stern, the pirates’ ship was packed with Sada Kurau’s crew as they searched every square-inch of her. Captives were hauled up through hatches at rifle and musket-point, and anything suspicious brought onto the main deck for inspection.
“Does not look like we are done, yes?” Sjan-dehk continued. “So be quiet, be patient.”
“I’ll do no such thing,” the man said with barely-concealed rage. “We haven’t done anything wrong. You’ve got no right to search or hold us. What you’re doing right now is fucking piracy.”
A tired sigh left Sjan-dehk’s lips. The upturned crate he had been using as a makeshift bench creaked with his shifting weight as he drew one of his pistols. With blithe nonchalance, and still without looking up from the book, he rested his wrist on the table with the weapon’s muzzle pointed at the man. “Last warning. Be quiet and do not interrupt me. You do again, I shoot you,” he said in a calm monotone as he thumbed the hammer into position. Only then did he peek over the edge of the book.
As far as captives went, the man wasn’t in too bad a shape. He was still whole, for one, and that was more than what could be said for most who crossed paths with Sada Kurau. Neither did he seem to be doing too badly; apart from a few cuts and scrapes on his face that were unlikely to leave any lasting marks, he was otherwise unharmed. Perhaps that was the reason for his foul mood. Had he been more seriously injured, he could have at least had the pretence of having fought hard to prevent his ship from being captured.
The man swallowed hard and slowly balled his hands into fists. Nails dug into palms, and his sinewy arms visibly tensed. He had likely intended for it to be a threatening display, but all it got out of Sjan-dehk was a derisory smirk and a wag of the pistol’s muzzle. So tightly did the man clench his jaw that veins in his neck bulged, but he soon relented. Even so, he glared daggers at Sjan-dehk from under brows so furrowed that they looked as if they were attempting to bury his eyes.
“Okay, fine. You want me to talk? I have questions.” Sjan-dehk closed the book and put it aside. “First one, you talk a lot about Yola. It is a place, yes? Where is it? I am new here, you see. Would be good for me to know more places.” The man scoffed and averted his gaze. Sjan-dehk chuckled and glanced at the book’s cover. “Captain Saellas Yent, is it? Yes. Captain, you asked me to talk. Now I talk. Do not be rude.” With a jab of the pistol, he grinned and said with dark words but a light tone, “Give me answers. Or I can pull the answers from you. It is your choice.”
Saellas glanced at the pistol, then at Sjan-dehk. With a snarl, he said, “It’s a city. Alidashti city. You’ll find it on the east coast. That’s all I’m saying.”
“I decide how much you say,” Sjan-dehk countered. He made a note of that nugget of information. Though memories of his time at the beach felt like they came from a wholly different life, he recalled meeting a few Alidashti royals and nobles there. Perhaps whatever he uncovered here would prove useful for them. “But that is enough. For now. Next question. You talk a lot about this…‘Harvest of the sea’. Every entry, almost, you write it. What is it? Food? Water? Weapon?”
“It’s slang. Just means fish,” Saellas replied quickly. A touch too quickly.
Sjan-dehk dragged the book to him and flipped through a few pages. “You move a lot of fish. And always from Yola. But I see you never write where you go.” He glanced up at Saellas with a curious gaze. “That is not good captaining, yes? You have…You have other ways to do things here? Or you do not need to know where to go?”
Saellas looked off to the side and folded his arms. “We take contracts. They always write the destinations on them, so I never had a need to note where we’re going in my logs. Some of my employers preferred to keep things that way.” By the time he realised what he had said, it was too late to do anything about it. He could only look at Sjan-dehk with wide eyes, who simply beckoned for him. “Fine,” Saellas grumbled under his breath. “I’ll admit it. I don’t ask too many questions about my jobs, but I’ve been around enough to see smuggling work for what they are. I’m not ashamed of it. They pay well and that’s what everyone needs at the end of the day.”
“Calm,” Sjan-dehk said with a smirk. “I did not say anything. I only want to ask, you said you take contracts and you use them to know where you have to go. But just now, when I searched your cabin, I found no contracts. What do you do with them?”
“Maybe you didn’t search well enough,” Saellas shot back.
Sjan-dehk shrugged and nodded. The man had a point; there was no shame in accepting that. Besides, to catch a fish, one had to know when to give and when to pull. Saellas would be caught in due time. It was a simple question of when. “So today,” Sjan-dehk asked. “You were going where?”
“Does it matter?” Saellas snapped. Sjan-dehk merely glanced at the pistol, then back at him. He scowled, but could do little else. “We were on our way to Sorian. There, are you satisfied?”
“We will see.” Sjan-dehk picked up the apple and turned it in his hand. Then, he looked at the dozen or so sacks stacked into a neat pile further down the deck. All of them had been cut open, allowing various fresh fruits within to come tumbling out. “Very sweet,” he remarked after taking another bite out of the apple and placing it on the table. “You make a lot of money like this? Moving fruits?”
Saellas looked away again, and scratched his neck. “It’s enough.” He cleared his throat. “Or it would be, if this fucking nonsense didn’t happen.” Unable to help himself, Sjan-dehk snickered, and the seething glare Saellas shot him could have set water aflame. Not only was the Viserjantan not intimidated in the least, he even broke into a scornful laugh. Normally, that would have made Saellas even angrier. Furious, even. But the sight of the pistol waving about with Sjan-dehk’s finger around the trigger only made him flinch every time the muzzle drifted over his person.
“Do not be so angry,” Sjan-dehk said between breaths as he composed himself. He holstered the weapon and looked at Saellas with a wide, mocking grin on his face. “No need to feel shame, Captain. You did not give a bad fight.”
That much was true. It hadn’t been a bad fight. From start to finish, it had been a comical farce.
Those first two shots fired by the pirates proved to be their only shots throughout the engagement – to call it a battle would be an insult to all battles. One-sided didn’t even begin to describe it. Sada Kurau’s speed allowed her to bring her guns to bear before the pirates could fully free themselves from Dawn. Unable to move, unable to turn, and unable to even return fire, the pirates’ vessel was little more than target practice for Sada Kurau’s veteran gun crews. Accurate broadsides raked them from stern-to-bow, and only became more precise when Sada Kurau stopped moving entirely, sitting well beyond the range of the pirates’ guns with sails furled. Were it not for Sjan-dehk’s orders to avoid targeting the hull, Saellas and his crew would have surely been sent to the frigid depths below.
In fact, it had been so unfair that Sjan-dehk had been tempted to call for a ceasefire to allow the pirates at least a chance to free themselves and put up an actual fight. They struck their colours, however, before he came to a decision. In total, less than half-an-hour had passed between Sada Kurau’s arrival to the fishing grounds and their surrender.
“Maybe some shame,” Sjan-dehk added with a smirk. “But we do not need to talk about that. There is one more thing I am curious about.” He turned a few pages in the book. “You also move…Livestock?” Saellas bristled noticeably, but Sjan-dehk decided against bringing attention to it. For now. “I see you write about it a few times. Not as often as ‘Harvest of the Sea’, but it is there. Two to three times a week, yes? Always to Yola, never to Caesonia. That is strange.” He looked at the other Captain, then at the ship in general. “You use this ship to move livestock? Usually it needs bigger, no? Needs more space. Unless livestock means another thing for you?”
“It’s just–” Saellas began, but choked. He coughed into a fist and tried again. “I-It’s just small thi– animals, that we deliver. You said it yourself. It’s not too often, and it’s always on our return trip to Yola so it’s really just a matter of convenience. We don’t earn much from those jobs.”
Sjan-dehk scanned down the page, and nodded. Saellas was telling the truth, it seemed. Every shipment of ‘Harvest of the Sea’ or fruits or spices or whatever brought to Caesonia was always followed by one of livestock to Yola. “I see,” he said. “Sorry. Did not read. My fault.” With a glance, he saw Saellas visibly relax. Shades of confidence and defiance gradually returned to the man’s face. “Okay. I have one last question for you. If you answer well, I let you and your ship go. Will even pay for what you lost. Is good?”
“About damn time,” Saellas said loudly. “What do you want to know?”
Turning back a few pages, Sjan-dehk asked, “Why did you attack Dawn?”
Saellas groaned. “I already told you. We didn’t attack that damn fishing boat!” With a sigh of exasperation, he leaned over the table and hunched his shoulders. “I’m going to say it one more time, so you had better listen closely. We were on our way to Sorian when we came across the Dawn. She looked like she was in trouble, so we decided to get in closer to have a better look. There wasn’t much we could do to help, and it was my opinion that she wasn’t seaworthy, so we took her crew onto our ship for their own safety. You can ask them yourself. Anyway, you showed up not long after, and my boys panicked. They opened fire, and I think you can fill in the gaps on your own from there.”
Just as Sjan-dehk had expected, there it was.
He had to give Saellas credit, however. The man did a good enough job of weaving in just enough truth to make his falsehoods that bit more difficult to unravel. For example, it was true that Dawn had experienced trouble with her rudder soon after leaving the main fishing fleet, and it was also true that the fisherfolk had been brought aboard Saellas’ ship. What he failed to mention, however, was that the fisherfolk had almost fixed the problem when the pirates chanced upon them, and that rather than being invited onto the pirates’ vessel, the fisherfolk had been herded at gunpoint into the cramped hold – which was where Sada Kurau’s boarding party found them. Coupled with Saellas’ lack of explanation for flying the black flag, and his story had more holes in it than a sinking vessel.
Aislin had said as much – in her own colourful manner, of course – before she brought her rescued people back onto Dawn. Sjan-dehk never believed a word of the story, either, but he wanted to go a step further. It wasn’t enough for him to simply disprove Saellas’ claims. Neither was it enough to prove that Saellas and his crew were, indeed, pirates. For Sjan-dehk, nothing but the total exposure of every crime the man had ever committed would do. If not for the justice done, then purely for the fun of it.
“So…You do not attack fishing boats?” Sjan-dehk asked.
Saellas clicked his tongue. “Haven’t you been fucking listening? We don’t do that.”
With that response – likely one Saellas hadn’t even thought much of – the man had sealed his fate. For a moment, Sjan-dehk did nothing and simply savoured the moment. Saellas looked so relaxed, so confident that he had secured his undeserved freedom. A shame then, that in a moment, Sjan-dehk would snatch it all away. “That is strange,” the Viserjantan began and turned a few pages of the book. He turned it around and pushed it towards Saellas. “Read this. Left side.”
“I thought we were done.” Saellas’ eyes narrowed. “You can read it yourself.”
“I cannot read.” A cryptic grin spread across Sjan-dehk’s face.
Saellas scoffed. “Who’re you trying to fool? You were doing fi–”
The click of a pistol’s hammer interrupted him. Sjan-dehk was standing now, with pistol in hand and aimed at Saellas’ head. “I pretended,” he said with a fiendish smirk. “It was good acting, yes? But that is not what is important. What is important is that you understand this. I am not asking, Captain Saellas.” Leaning over the table, Sjan-dehk pushed the pistol towards Saellas, who leaned back as far as he could to avoid it, but found himself unable to prevent the cold steel of the muzzle from touching his forehead. “I am telling you to read. Do it. Or I shoot you.” He pulled back and lowered the pistol to aim at Saellas’ shoulder. “You will not die yet, but I can hurt you in a lot of ways. So do as I say. Or suffer. Your choice.”
Saellas looked back at Sjan-dehk’s grinning face with a vicious snarl. Despite his rage, however, he lacked a counter-argument for a loaded and cocked pistol aimed at him. And so, he had little choice but to comply with Sjan-dehk’s forceful request. “Sola 11, 1739. Alif will be the death of me. That Alidashti bastard wants double of what we agreed to deliver on the 15th. How does he expect us to find that much livestock in just four days?” As he read, Sjan-dehk sauntered around the table to stand behind him. Saellas’ eyes followed him the entire way.
“I did not say to stop,” Sjan-dehk said and tutted. He tapped Saellas on the shoulder with the barrel of the pistol. “Read more. Do not stop until I tell you.”
“I’m going to have words with him when we get to Yola. Damned idiot’s always making ridiculous promises to customers without first using his brain. At least he’s paying triple the usual price, and there’s word–” The colour in Saellas face drained away in an instant, and his voice died in his throat as he realised at last just what exactly Sjan-dehk was making him read. “I–” He cleared his throat. “I think that’s enough, Cap–”
The deathly cold touch of a pistol’s muzzle against his neck stopped him short. All the strength in his limbs vanished, and his blood turned to ice. “You still do not understand?” Sjan-dehk leaned in and whispered, a deadly playfulness to his words. “Then I repeat. I say when it is enough. You only read.”
Dry-mouthed, and with a heart pumping frenetically out of abject terror, Saellas could only reply with a few silent, unsteady nods. He touched the rough pages with numb and trembling fingers. “And there’s word of a f–fishing fleet off the Vermillion coast. If we can h–hit them quickly, we might be able to…” Already weak and whisper-quiet – and without its earlier defiance and bravado – Saellas voice gave out towards the end of the entry. Sjan-dehk sighed, shook his head, and reached over the man’s shoulder to tap the next entry twice. “S-Solas 12, 1739. We managed to catch one f–fishing boat alone. Her crew put up a fight, and not all of them s–survived. We’ll have to get a–another one to make up the numbers for Alif. There are–”
“That is strange, yes?” Sjan-dehk interrupted. “Just now, you tell me you don’t attack fishing boats. But it is not what you write. So, you are liar? And if you need livestock, why attack fishing boats?”
“I–It’s slang–”
“For fish, yes?” Sjan-dehk chuckled. “So many slang for the same thing. It is confusing, no? But that is not what is important now.” Pressing the pistol against the base of Saellas’ skull, he pointed to the final entries on the next page. “Do not waste time. Read the last one.”
Every part of Saellas froze. He couldn’t even nod, and merely gulped. “S-Solas 14, 1739. Damn it all. Two of my crew a–assaulted…” Once again, his mumbled words trailed off and faded into nothing. Sjan-dehk grinded his pistol into his flesh as a means of encouragement. “T–Two of my crew assaulted the livestock despite me telling them t–that we had to deliver them to Yola untouched and un–unspoiled. D-Damn idiots couldn’t keep it in t–their pants for just another day. I g–gave them fifteen lashes each and I–I’ll be leaving them behind next time we dock.”
“This is where I get very, very curious, Captain Saellas.” Sjan-dehk grinned and closed the book. “You see, the facts give a strange story. You take livestock to this…Alif of Yola, yes? And he sells. It is something he orders you to get, and from Caesonia, it looks like. But you do not say you got to town or city. You only say you take from fishing boats. So I am curious, what livestock is it? You say it is fish, but then you say two of your crew assaulted the livestock. I am not stupid, Captain Saellas. I know what happened. It is difficult to do such things with fish, yes? So there is only one option left. You want to tell me?”
Saellas didn’t answer. He trembled like a loose sail caught in a stiff breeze, and that alone was enough for Sjan-dehk to confirm his suspicions. The man knew he was finished, and all that was left was to simply put everything out in the open.
“Your 'livestock', it is people,” Sjan-dehk leaned in and practically whispered into Saellas’ ear. “You are worse than pirate, Captain Saellas. You are slave-taker.”
And just like that, the dam burst. Saellas’ started sobbing uncontrollably. Dripping tears and mucus formed dark spots on the book. “I-It was supposed to be only once!” He cried, not even noticing when Sjan-dehk stood back and removed the pistol from his neck. “B–But they kept asking, and th-they offered so much money just for a f-few trips, and I-I really needed it!”
“I am sure,” Sjan-dehk said with a quiet laugh. He gave the man a couple of pats – in an almost reassuring manner – on the shoulder. This was a sight he had seen many times before. “And I can understand. Life is not easy, yes? We all find ways to survive.” It was clear that Saellas, with his body wracked by sobs and a series of blubbering pleas tumbling from his mouth, wasn’t listening anymore, but Sjan-dehk continued on nonetheless. “But your way, it makes others suffer for you. That is not right, yes? It is bad thing to do. You do something bad, you need to be punished. It is only natural. So there is no need to be sad. Wise people, they say to punish crime, and not people. But now, I do not know if I can. To punish this, I must punish you also.” He took aim with the pistol. “If you talk to Gods or what it is you people pray to, now is good time to say something to them.”
“No! Please! I–I’ll go quietly with you to Sorian! Don’t–” Saellas’ desperate cries fell on deaf ears.
“You, Captain Saellas Yent, are pirate. And slave-taker. Maybe other things. I do not know. But those two, it is certain. And by Viserjantan law, you must die. So as Fourth Lesser Marquis of Jafi, of clan Wasun, of Viserjanta, and as Captain of Sada Kurau, I, Wasun Sjan-dehk, sentence you to death.” Such a statement should have been filled with authoritative grimness, but Sjan-dehk had recited more-or-less similar words so many times that the best he could manage was a half-bored, half-official tone.
“Please!”
He pulled the trigger. The powder in the pan ignited. An ear-splitting crack cut through the air. Gunsmoke, thick and acrid, engulfed Saellas’ head. Unburnt embers singed his hair, and the bullet smashed a jagged hole through the table before embedding itself into the discoloured planking underneath. Pale, grey wisps curled like ghostly snakes from the barrel of Sjan-dehk’s pistol. Saellas collapsed into a heap on the deck, his eyes wide open, a deathly pallor sapping colour from his flesh, and his quavering pants shallow. Blood dripped from a shallow wound just beneath his hairline.
Sjan-dehk squatted beside the man, a mischievous smirk on his face. “Only a joke,” he said. “You are very lucky, Captain Saellas. The fisherfolk, their ship is still here. They are not used to our kind of work. Is good for them, yes? So I do not want to show them. So you will live a little more, for now. Later, maybe, you can show them thanks.” There was no response from Saellas. It didn’t even seem like he was aware of all that was going on around him. Frowning, Sjan-dehk prodded him with the still-hot barrel of his pistol. “Hello?”
A strained yell from further down the deck pulled his attention away. “Sjan-dehk!” It was Iyen.
Looking up, he saw her and Azwan shuffling down the deck, their faces clenched in exertion and a bulging sack between the two of them. So full was it that their hands couldn’t find much purchase. They didn’t set it down as much as it simply slipped from their grasp once they were close enough to Sjan-dehk. “Look at what we found,” Iyen said cheerily, wiping the sweat from her brow with the back of her hand. She drew a dagger sheathed in her boot and sliced open the sack. Rough granules, each of them roughly the size of a thumb, came spilling out. They glittered in shades of blues and greens in the sun, akin to the sea.
“There’s more, Captain,” Azwan added. “One of Master Hai-shuun’s boys, In-shah, found a false bottom in the hold. We pulled up some planks and found dozens of these. My guess is that there’s probably at least a hundred of these hidden away down below, Captain. I have the men pulling more out as we speak.”
Sjan-dehk nodded slowly. “Is that so?” His gaze drifted over to the catatonic Saellas. “Well, whatever it is, he’s not going to tell us anything anytime soon, though I think I’ve got an idea what they might be.” If there was anything at all that looked like it could be called ‘Harvest of the Sea’, he was more than certain that it would be these strange granules scattering across the deck. Saellas had been lying when he said that the term was slang for ‘fish’, and Sjan-dehk knew it for one simple reason. No one with any modicum of sense would willingly write such a long phrase for something so innocuous.
Iyen giggled. “My, Sjan-dehk. What did you do to him?”
“The usual.” He shrugged and nudged the man with his boot. As expected, there was no response. “Asked him a few questions, had a short chat, and one thing led to another. I found out that he wasn’t just a pirate, he was a bloody slave-taker as well.”
“I’m surprised you didn’t just shoot him.”
“I was tempted,” Sjan-dehk admitted. “Mother alone knows how much I wanted to kill him even during our chat. Man’s got a tongue that could make a nun choose violence. In any case, just as well I didn’t. He can answer whatever questions we have about that blue stuff.” He smirked, and Iyen responded in kind. “Have our new friend here brought to Sada Kurau, and I’ll get Dai-sehk to collect a sample of whatever it is that’s in those sacks. Get him to get certain as to what we’re looking at.”
“That should get that surgeon of yours to start smiling,” Iyen said with a giggle.
Sjan-dehk chuckled and nodded. “It would.” He looked at Saellas with an impish grin. “And we’ve even gotten him a new friend to help him with his work. He’d better be bloody thankful.”
Time: Late morning to Early Afternoon Interactions: Mentions: Kalliope @Tae Attire:
(Thanks, Tae!) A shoulder belt and waist belt carrying his equipment Two pistols and two swords A woven, conical hat wide enough to shade his entire face
As Sada Kurau quietly slipped into Sorian harbour, so too did thoughts of the masquerade drift to the very top of Sjan-dehk’s mind once more.
The setting sun, a blazing disc of orange hovering just above the horizon, splashed calm waters with hues of vibrant pinks and fiery reds, even as the skies above were cooling to shades of soft blues and enigmatic purples. From shore, a breeze swept across the harbour and washed over Sjan-dehk, its chill a welcome contrast to the gentle heat warming his back. Quiet murmurs of conversation, the occasional ruffling of his ship’s sails, and the slow rush of waves graced his ears. They were all that accompanied Sada Kurau as she returned to her berth.
It was a fine evening by any account, and a finer way of ending a day of sailing.
But it wasn’t one Sjan-dehk found himself enjoying very much. Not when the prospect of having to mingle with other nobles – and the observation of niceties that came with it – loomed over his head like a gloomy shadow. Such events rarely sat well with him. They called for someone with finesse, decorum, and at least the airs of nobility. Sjan-dehk possessed none of those. He might have the rank, but he was a sailor and a soldier through-and-through. The events of the day only made that all the more apparent; he had been so comfortable, so in his element, in leading Sada Kurau out to hunt pirates, rescue the fisherfolk, and mete out justice. But now? He felt like a lamb awaiting slaughter.
“My, you’re a cheerful one, aren’t you?” Iyen’s voice freed Sjan-dehk from his thoughts, and he turned just in time to see her join him at the starboard gunwale. The slight slurring of her words, the pale flush tinting her cheeks, and the fact that she was wearing a sleeveless tunic rather than her usual attire told him that she had been part of the victory celebrations going on below decks.
“You’d be the same too, if you’re going where I’m going later,” Sjan-dehk replied drily.
Iyen laughed, hiccuped, and slapped him on the back. “I heard from the others,” she said with a grin. “But I think I would’ve guessed anyway. The way you’re dressed, you’re either going for something fancy or your burial, and I think I would’ve noticed if it’s the burial. You look pretty good, by the way.”
Sjan-dehk tugged on the collar of his shirt. It was strange; the other day, when he had bought these exact clothes with Kalliope, everything had been well. The fit was perfect, the soft-yet-hardy fabric gentle against his skin, and the design elegant yet simple enough for his tastes. Now, however, with the masquerade less of something far away to merely think about, and more of a real thing that was happening soon, Sjan-dehk felt ill at ease. His clothes felt restrictive, as if it were a prison tight around his body.
“Think I’d prefer the burial,” he said wryly. He glanced sideways at Iyen with a little smile. “But thank you.”
“You’re welcome,” Iyen replied as she tied her hair into a messy tail. “I heard that you’re going with quite a lady, as well.”
“Is that what they’re saying?” Sjan-dehk asked and chuckled bitterly. Although where exactly the bitterness came from, he wasn’t quite sure. “It’s nothing like that,” he continued with a wave of his hand. “I’m just her escort and nothing more. She's probably already got someone in her life, anyway.”
“Huh.” Iyen’s lips twisted into a lopsided frown. “Why would she invite you, if that’s the case?”
To that, Sjan-dehk could only respond with a shrug. He had been pondering over that same question, and found no good answers. Perhaps Cassius wasn’t available? Or perhaps he was seeing things that weren’t there, and this was nothing but an invitation of politeness or friendliness. “Right place, right time, if you ask me,” he said with uncertainty clear in his words. “Either way, it doesn’t matter. I gave her my word, and I’ve to keep it. The Count hosting the damn thing invited me again at the beach this morning, too. Can’t back out of something like that even if I want to, now.”
“A Count?” Iyen’s surprise was palpable, as was her concern. “Not sure I like the sound of that, Shanya.”
Sjan-dehk turned to her and patted her shoulder. “I’ll try to be careful.” He smiled, though perhaps it wasn’t as reassuring as he had hoped. “Don’t worry, Yen-yi. If there’s a way to get out of dealing with nobles and their gullshit, I’ll find it. Been doing that for a damn long time, now.” The deck beneath them shuddered as Sada Kurau pulled up alongside the same pier it had left earlier that morning. Shouts went up the masts to furl all sails and to prepare her yards for lowering. “I should probably get–”
“Iyen!” A shout from Aislin came from behind the two of them. They looked back over their shoulders, and saw the fishergirl poking her head through a hatch. By the tone of her voice, she had clearly been drinking whatever it was Iyen had drunk. “The lads want tae start another round! Are you joinin’ in?” Then, she saw Sjan-dehk and waved. “Good evenin’, Captain! An’ thank you again!”
Sjan-dehk waved back with a nod. “Look after her,” he said quietly to Iyen. “And do not let her drink Avek’s brew. In fact, you shouldn’t drink it either. Nobody should. Mursi drank it once and we found him the next morning half-naked and in the shrouds. Removes stains like nothing else, though, so I don’t want to think about what it does to your insides.”
“Aye, comin’!” Iyen shouted back to Aislin. To Sjan-dehk, she said, “Don’t worry, my dear Shanya. Azwan’s making sure nothing bad happens, and I’m keeping an eye on Ai-shi-lehn. I don’t think anyone would do a thing to her, though. She’s getting into everyone’s good graces by teaching us bits of her language.” Then, she smirked. “And in return, I’m teaching her how to fleece coin from some of your boys. And that’s where I’ll leave you, Captain. My game awaits.”
The two of them parted ways – Iyen returning below decks with Aislin, and Sjan-dehk leaving Sada Kurau for the pier. It was a strange feeling for him. All his life, he had never worn anything that wasn’t Jafin or just Viserjantan in general, and now here he was, doing just that in a foreign city. He pulled his hat a little lower over his eyes as he walked towards the waterfront, and brushed his hands against the swords and pistols at his belt. At least there were those pieces of his normalcy still with him.
He stopped at the edge of the passing crowd, and looked for a familiar face. Kalliope had agreed to meet him at his ship, but seeing as how he had only just returned, he wondered if perhaps she might have gone elsewhere upon seeing Sada Kurau’s absence. He hoped not. It would be a poor start to what he was already expecting to be a difficult night.
Time: Early Afternoon Time: Early Afternoon Location: The Nest; Roshmi Interactions: Mentions:@ShiningSector Five; @FunnyGuy Thraash; @princess Mari; @Alivefalling Aerilyn Equipment:
His travelling clothes - Dark, earthy shirt and coat, with trousers tucked into boots A hooded, oilskin cloak His bow, unstrung A musket Two pistols Two hatchets His travelling pack
Scathael’s plan did not work.
Granted, he supposed that it had more to do with the fact that everyone was far too occupied with trying to get out of The Den than anything intrinsically wrong with his idea itself. Not every window had been thrown open to their fullest extent, and not every ceiling fan spun at their best possible speed. But, there was one saving grace: In their rush to vacate the building, nobody had the mind to shut the doors behind them. Dirt and detritus from the street outside drifted past thresholds, caught in the swirls of a weak breeze.
Such a paltry wind did little to dispel the Warforged’s miasma, and its effects were already starting to make themselves known. It wasn't the individuals on the peripheries of the cloud who suddenly collapsed that caught Scathael’s attention – more likely than not, they were simply struck by panic and hysteria – but the Dragonborn engaging the automaton in combat. As far as Scathael knew, the Dragonborn were a resilient and tough people. They could take enough punishment to kill any other species thrice over and still remain on their feet and raring to fight.
And so, to see one slowed and muddled by the gas was concerning, to say the least.
“Paralytic agent,” the dark elf muttered beneath his breath. Be it as gas or liquid, it was a common enough thing used by bounty hunters across the world. Scathael would never claim to be a chemist, but he spent enough time around such people to know a thing or two about such concoctions. Chief of which was that depending on the ingredients used, the gas could either be effective only in a dense cloud, or it could put a person on the ground with just the barest of whiffs.
Scathael wasn’t keen on finding out firsthand. Clicking his tongue, he grabbed his equipment and slipped around the sides of the building towards the kitchen. Between the rushing crowd making their exit, and the cacophony of the fight, it wasn’t difficult for him to pass unnoticed.
The kitchen’s air was thick and soupy, heated by at least a half-dozen idling stoves. Half-cooked food and discarded pots and pans sat on their tops. Scathael ignored them all and focused on searching for the one thing he cared about. It had to be in here somewhere; every kitchen had one, lest the owners of the place be of the sort to not mind one or two kitchen staff suffocating to death every so often. And even so, there had to be something similar, or at least something Scathael could bend to his purpose with some tinkering.
The ventilation fans sat partially embedded in a wall far to the back of the kitchen. Scathael made his way towards them with haste, pulling out his tools even as he moved. By the time he reached the scuffed panel he knew was covering the gearbox, he had his screwdriver out and ready to remove the rusted and pitted screws holding it in place. The hammered piece of copper was dropped onto the floor along with its ruined fasteners. Scathael had no need of them anymore. His true aim was what laid within.
“Alright, let’s see here,” he murmured as he looked at the collection of gears before him. Each was linked with another, and all were heavily scarred with rust. It didn’t seem as if anyone had ever given them even a customary oiling before. Scathael chewed on his lower lip. That could potentially prove hazardous to his plan, but it wasn’t as if there was anything else he could do at this point. He flipped the switch to stop them from turning. One-by-one, he carefully plucked them from their axles and laid them on the floor by his feet, arranged according to their size.
Scathael had repaired enough such mechanisms to pay for food and lodging to know how a large majority of them worked. Connecting the fans directly to The Den’s power plant would cause them to spin much too fast to be of any practical use. It was thus the job of the gearbox to essentially reduce and limit the power given to the fans. With a little creativity and intentional malpractice, however, Scathael could just as easily reverse the process and instead feed the fans as much power as The Den could provide. It was, at best, a wild idea and at worst, a stupid one, but it was all Scathael had. He didn’t even care about the fight at this point; no matter who won, the gas would still linger and stay, and cause problems for everyone involved, himself included.
He hammered the last gear into position just in time to hear someone’s muffled attempts to parley with the Warforged. A brave attempt, but not one Scathael was confident would succeed. “Lady Fate, don’t piss on me now,” he said drily beneath his breath, then pulled the switch.
The gears crunched once, then twice, and then spun with such intensity that they visibly shivered on their axles. The fans spun until they made a loud whine, and a gust almost knocked Scathael back. The strong wind tore through the kitchen, rattling utensils and sending loose parchments flying. The dark elf gathered his things and made a quick exit. It was unlikely that the gears or even fans themselves could keep this up for long before, quite literally, shattering themselves. He wanted to be away when that happened. It didn’t feel like the sort of thing he could repay with just his labour.
Time: Late Morning Interactions: @Tae Kalliope; @princess Calbert Mentions: Attire:
(Placeholder until I get a better reference image) Roughspun, blue trousers A shoulder belt and waist belt carrying his equipment Two swords and two pistols, one on either side A woven, conical hat wide enough to shade his entire face
The appearance of the Count came as a surprise, but a welcome one. If nothing else, it served as a much needed distraction for Sjan-dehk from his troublesome thoughts. Although if he had to be honest, it wasn’t the Count himself that drew his attention as much as it was his herald. Or perhaps that other man was just an attendant? Either way, Sjan-dehk found the manner in which he introduced the Count to be as puzzling as it was intriguing. Any Viserjantan Count who had themselves introduced in such a manner would have been swiftly chastised for being presumptuous and acting beyond their rank. Sjan-dehk had been present for enough such scoldings – unwilling of a participant as he had been – to know that such a mistake would be at best, an embarrassment, and at worst, an insult to someone of a higher rank.
Sjan-dehk stowed this observation away. The old books and journals that had brought him to these shores did mention that Caesonia had a different method of ranking their nobles. Unfortunately, Sjan-dehk hadn’t paid enough attention to them to find out if anyone had actually written down how the ranks worked. A visit to the Sudah and the Royal Tutor later seemed to be in order, and he groaned inwardly as the prospect of a lecture from the wizened, old man.
The Count approached Kalliope after his greetings. Immaculate in his dress and bearings, his words were spoken with the airs of a learned man, or at least someone who absorbed books like a dried sponge. It felt like a refreshing breath after the whole debacle with Layla. The tension emanating from his brief exchange with Kalliope thus came as yet another puzzle. There was nothing in their words, but Sjan-dehk could feel it in her tone, and see it from the shallow smile on the Count’s face. Clearly, there was something here that he was missing.
He caught Kalliope’s gaze just as the Count addressed him. Sjan-dehk’s brows arched, and his lips curled into a grin, as he heard the familiar greeting. “Fair weather to you,” he gave the typical Jafin response, but quickly added, “No need for that. It is too…Important? No, formal. Only used for important things. For this, can just say normal greetings. Also, it is old. Not used by most people. Only by bigger nobles.” It had been a long time since Viserjantans visited this part of the world in any significant numbers, so it made sense for the Count to use an archaic greeting. All the same, however, it greatly tickled and amused Sjan-dehk.
“I am Wasun Sjan-dehk, fourth Lesser Marquis of Jafi.” Sjan-dehk introduced himself quickly with a bow of his head as he took the offered invitation. “No need for anything now, but thank you. We rest on our ships and we buy what we need. But if we need help, then I will…Remember you.” The Count stepped away to speak with the rest, leaving Sjan-dehk to examine the small slip of paper in his hand. With everything that had happened, he had almost forgotten about the masquerade were it not for this little reminder. A sinking feeling plunged into his gut as he wondered if he should still attend.
Kalliope’s warning about the Count was only half-heard by him, and he responded with a simple nod. The Count seemed like a decent person, and Sjan-dehk was willing to give him the benefit of the doubt, but he would still treat him like any other noble of a higher rank: carefully, cautiously, and with only the necessary norms and respects.
“He seems nice enough, but thank you,” he said with a slow nod. Far more important to him at the moment than the possible intrigues a Count might be up to, was the question of the masquerade. Despite himself, Sjan-dehk couldn’t help but wonder if he was the right person to accompany Kalliope. Surely, given their relationship, Cassius would be a better choice? Or maybe Sjan-dehk was reading far too much into things, and this was, as she had said the other day, her doing him a favour. The more he thought about it, the more that seemed likely, and really, it wasn’t him to pull out of an agreement just because of a bit of discomfort. A word given had to be a word kept, as his father liked to say.
And so, Sjan-dehk gave her a smile and held up the invitation. “It’d be rude not to show up after getting an invite from the Count himself, I think.” There was a touch of playfulness lacing his words. “I’m still willing to accompany you, if you’re still willing to have me. I have to ask, though, how are we meeting? At the estate itself or elsewhere?”
@princess Sure. Ignoring the strait for convenience's sake, how long would it take to walk, say, from Kolonivka to Montauppe? What kind of a land scale are we looking at here? I was thinking of placing the prison where it would be cold, alienated, and inaccessible (ie. near Kolonivka); but not if it'll take me three months IC to hit the scene lol
Is there an established, canonical lore I should be reading up on and strictly adhering to on when I'm invited to the Discord, or are we free to worldbuild?
In the same vein as the previous question, when was the last time this setting was embroiled in total war, or any conflict large enough to upheave power structures, borders, etc.? Anything you can tell me about that conflict, such as numbers, factions, results, famous battles, etc.?
Here in the OOC tab, one GM post says this is a pre-industrial society, while another GM post declares this universe has developed steam ships, dirigibles, trains, etc. Which of these is accurate? If we were to look at firearms as a microcosm of the technological epoch, are people using flintlocks? Percussion caps? Matchlocks? Earlier, or even no firearms at all?
(Placeholder until I get a better reference image) Roughspun, blue trousers A shoulder belt and waist belt carrying his equipment Two swords and two pistols, one on either side A woven, conical hat wide enough to shade his entire face
A faint shade of pink crept over Sjan-dehk’s face – just as a flutter tripped through his heart – as Kalliope’s soft lips brushed against his cheek. The kiss had come as a surprise, but it would be an egregious lie if he claimed it to be unwelcome. Without thinking, he reached across to touch the spot where she had kissed him, and upon realising what he was doing, swiftly changed the action to a scratch against an imaginary itch before wiping his hand across the lower half of his face. His eyes turned to the sea, the sky, the trees, and even the crowd. To anywhere and anything but the pretty lady beside him.
“I-It was nothing,” he managed to stammer out and pulled his hat lower over his eyes. “Nothing you should thank me for, I mean. Anyone else would’ve done the same. If not to defend you, then to put an end to the shit spewing from her mouth.” He snuck a sidelong glance at Kalliope. With an awkward shrug, he cleared his throat and added, “And besides, I couldn’t just stand there and let her get away with all the abuse she threw at you. That’s not the Way. Not the Jafin Way, or any Viserjantan Way.”
He cast his eyes over his shoulder at the group as he led Kalliope away, but it wasn’t the venom-tongued princess he looked at. Rather, his eyes lingered around the man who had initially accompanied Kalliope to the beach. Cassius, if Sjan-dehk wasn’t wrong. But that didn’t really matter. What did, was that Sjan-dehk was almost certain that the two of them were in an intimate relationship, if Kalliope’s words were anything to go by. Part of Sjan-dehk didn’t want to believe it – for whatever reason – but the larger part of him was occupied by a more immediate concern. He was currently dragging Kalliope away, and she had just given him a peck on the cheek. It didn’t take much imagination to see how Cassius might interpret things poorly, and that was a barrel of troubles Sjan-dehk could go without opening.
Thankfully, it didn’t seem as if he noticed. The man was far more occupied with Charlotte, and that brought Sjan-dehk even more confusion. Was he so brazen that he would court another lady whilst his partner was within sight? Or was this how things simply worked here? Either way, Sjan-dehk didn’t like the look of him, and this was yet another feeling for which he had no explanation. The man looked normal enough, and he seemed polite enough as well. And yet, just looking at him brought Sjan-dehk great unease.
Sjan-dehk pushed those thoughts away – as best he could, at least – and continued leading Kalliope away and further up the beach. There was definitely something wrong with him, and the sooner he could return to his Sada Kurau, the sooner he could figure out what it was, exactly.
“I guess we’ve just got poor luck, then,” he quipped in response to Kalliope’s answer to his question about the princesses of the region. Casting a sidelong glance at her, he continued, “That it’s the mean cunt that we have to deal with, and not any of her nicer siblings.” He paused for a moment, his mind chiding him for being overly-judgmental of a person whom he had only just met. An unpleasant person, to be sure, but still a stranger, nonetheless. “But I was serious about my pity,” he said a little awkwardly. “The Way teaches us that there are very few people that are inherently bad. As much as I think she’s a little shit, I hope she isn’t one of them, and that she’s just the product of a troubled life.” Even as he uttered those words, he realised just how silly they sounded. A noble’s life could be hard, he knew, but all the same he wondered just how troubled a princess’ life could get.
Well, that was really none of his concern. He could only react to what he heard and saw, and what he saw and heard was a princess being unnecessarily mean and cruel.
He stopped a fair distance away – close enough to keep an eye on the group, but still far enough away to stay out of any altercations that might arise. “Don’t listen to her nonsense,” he said with a sigh and turned to face Kalliope. She did tell him that she was fine, but concern still lingered in his mind. How could he feel otherwise? Layla’s words hadn’t been directed towards him, and yet even he felt their sting. He imagined that they must have left some sort of a mark on their intended target, Kalliope. “All she did was make a lot of assumptions and attack your character. None of it was worth the spit she spent on them, and definitely not worth the effort of even reaction. Though I guess I failed on that one.”
“And maybe I’m making my own assumptions here,” he continued, giving Kalliope’s arm a gentle squeeze and offering her a little smile. “But you’re not what she makes you out to be, if you ask me. If you were that sort of person, you wouldn’t have paid your respects to Izahn. That you did makes you better than most in my books. The little princess can say whatever she likes. It doesn’t change who you are. It doesn’t change that she’s acting like a cunt, and you’re not.” He leaned in a little closer. “Besides, I doubt she contributes to society as much as she thinks she does. Not as much as you, in any case. You work for a living. I find it hard to imagine someone like her doing the same.”
Then, he stood back, and quickly took his hand away from Kalliope’s arm. “Probably should’ve done that a little sooner,” he said apologetically with a bow of his head. Discomforting as it may be, he had to remind himself that Cassius and she had some form of involvement with one another. He had to take a little more care with his words and actions, at least until he became more familiar with local norms. “I, uh, I should let you carry on with your day, I suppose.”