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    1. Glaw 11 yrs ago

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Here is an OOC for our collective amusement. Pizza and ice cream in room 2. Kittens in room 5. Video games and ping-pong in room 8. Pillows, room 13. Please do not open door 11. Thank you.
I kind of took some liberties and made up some things, let me know if anything doesn't work with what you imagined. :3 I figure this sort of thing might be a bit rocky before we get into the swing of it.
Dorothea's tail thumped against Sam's back, and she stretched her neck to look up at the colorful feathers flitting in the trees. "It's the fairy roads," she explained. "The fairy realm is like your world -- it exists outside the five kingdoms. The fairy roads are the link between our world and theirs. The roads are full of life energy -- some wizards call them leylines -- and so everything grows differently, the closer you get to the fairy road."

Alphonse looked back with a grin. "Not to mention the fairies that sneak through the veil."

"We should be careful," Dorothea went on with a nod. "Verinia is a beautiful place, but these woods have a mind of their own."

Coralie smacked a low-hanging tree branch with her palm, and it jumped and moved away as if stung, its leaves shuddering. A flock of long-feathered birds warbled above. They passed by a tall stone with a symbol of a sun etched into its surface -- then, half-concealed by foliage, a moss-covered statue of a long-forgotten god. It had the head of an eagle, the outstretched arms of a woman and the wings of a bat, bristled with green lichen and heavy with dew-glistening vines. A crow cackled somewhere in the distance.

"Well that is not right," Alphonse whispered, as he tended to do when faced with the unknown. He pushed his hat farther down his forehead, the feather trembling. "We should be near the brook now, but I know I've never seen that statue before."

Florian huffed, shifting the weight of his pack. "The woods 're just playing tricks again. We're all right as long as we stay on the path."

August, who had been walking slower ever since they had passed the sun-stone, finally stopped in his tracks. While the dwarves trouped onward through the brush and bramble, the Marshal stood breathlessly still. "Sam," he said in a low, grave voice, laced with a hideous sort of anger. His eyes were fixed on that mossy statue, and he refused to take another step. "If you value your life you will untie me and give me my sword."

"You're mad!" Dorothea hissed, and her claws nipped through Sam's shirt for an instant. "I won't have any more of your tricks, Marshal. Keep moving."
Woot! No worries whatsoever, take all the time you need. If your muse isn't liking the subject/setting, though, we could still totally do something different. :)
Genkai, sent you a PM. :) Bump!
Chaos is over, rp is slow and sweet. Let's go fishing. Bump!
"Doc Jolly," Florian answered, after swallowing a mouthful of hash. "He's a family friend, used to be a stable hand for the old king of Verinia. Now he owns a horse farm down across the fairy road. You'll like him, I think."

Though he was starving, August ate slowly, and he kept an eye on Coralie who seemed to be immensely offended that the food she had slaved to prepare was going to feed a liar and a murderer. She kept squeezing the handle of a knife as if she were imagining what it might feel like to plunge it into his heart. He wasn't even sure what he'd done to personally offend her.

Once breakfast was cleaned up, the dwarves each shouldered a pack, the biggest sack was given to August (Coralie insisted on bringing her favorite frying pan) and the troupe set off single file along a thin path between the boulders and trees, led by Alphonse and his feathered hat.

"Mind the Jockal," Alphonse whispered loudly.

The forest buzzed, clinked and whirred, full of life now that the queen was nowhere nearby. As they delved further into Verinia, the trees and the vines were greener, the flowers brighter, and the animals just a little more curious. Dorothea yelped when a yellow fuzzy monkey-squirrel pulled her tail -- after that she rode on Sam's shoulder, keeping watch ahead.
"Whoa, hey!" Dorian threw himself forward and slid on his knees over the shining white floor, but he was too late to prevent Zahi from hitting the floor. His eyes wide in alarm, he crawled over the regal desert prince and pressed a hand to the side of his throat, his own heart slamming in his chest. "Zahi," he breathed. He had known the wound was bad, but Zahi had been walking, coherent and thoughtful -- nothing that would have indicated he was so near death. Damn these heroic men!

The nurses flurried around him, and Dorian scooted and stumbled away to let them do their work. While the nurses touched their patient precisely and recited life signs to one another, Dorian carefully approached the horse, a hand held out in peace.

"Good girl," he said in a low, kind voice, keeping his gaze on the horse's long-lashed brown eyes. "Anat, isn't it? There you are, Anat, it's all right. Good old Zahi will be just fine, you'll see." He laid a gentle hand on Anat's face, while a stretcher was brought in and Zahi was cradled onto it. Within moments the prince was being wheeled away by running sneakers and a blur of blue scrubs. "Ssaa, ssaa," Dorian sighed, stroking Anat's muzzle, his back to the hallway, imitating what he'd seen Zahi do. "He called you a child of the djinn, Anat." He ran his hand along her nose, and he watched her eyes for signs of intelligence. "I wonder if that's true. I could tell you a world of stranger things I've seen."

Motion caught the corner of his eye, and he whistled and clucked at a little boy who had crawled out of bed and was creeping toward the open door in the wall. "Hey, hey, back to bed," he commanded in Japanese. "Ah, you!" He pointed to a slightly older and much more intelligent-looking girl in the next bed. He read the front of a card on her side table. "Sakura. Please take charge of the door. Let no one get close to it. No one," he peered around the room, pointing an accusing finger at each of them, "is to go anywhere near that door. If anyone goes near that door, I won't tell you the ultra-secret password. Now. What should you never do?" The children resounded -- "Never go near the door!" -- and Dorian smiled and nodded, and he clucked at Anat and led her, if she would allow it, into the hallway.

The chaos had gone down the corridor with Zahi, so now there was only the ambient beeping and low murmurs of a quietly efficient hospital. "Dorian!" a head nurse called, wide-eyed and amused. "A horse this time? What've you done now?"

"Could you tell surgery I'll be in the shower room?" he asked sheepishly. He had not failed to notice the trail of sand and flakes of blood that Anat was leaving in her wake. He stroked the horse's muzzle again and whispered to Anat. "How would you feel about getting a bit cleaned up, yeah? Zahi will be scrubbed shiny by now, himself, and your ears are full of sand." He made a sour face as he noticed this latter fact, and he guided her farther, into a wide and expansive tiled room with drains in the floor and all manner of running water.

He washed the dry blood from her flank with a damp cloth and a scrub brush, as thoroughly as she would allow, and he combed her mane and scrubbed her hooves and beat out her saddle blanket, sometimes waving with a friendly smile at the towel-waisted men that gave him passing odd looks.

By the time he was finished, a nurse popped his head in to announce Zahi was out of surgery. With an encouraging smile, Dorian led Anat out of the shower room and back down the hall to see her master.
Dorothea was quiet a moment while she stared thoughtfully up at Sam, considering her with the utmost seriousness. There was something different about Sam now. For the first time, Dorothea felt the difference in their age -- that Sam was very much her elder, with experience lived in a world she could never fathom -- a world of concrete and lights and noise that had made her head ache just running through it. Sam's own life had been threatened directly by the Marshal -- if she was confident in this, then Dorothea had no right to dissuade her. For all she knew, this sort of thing happened all the time in the world across the mirror. Finally, the princess took a slow breath. "All right," she declared, firm in her decision, "I trust you."

Coralie called them to breakfast, happily proud of the piles of eggs and hash that she'd managed to brown to perfection. Everything else was packed -- they should be able to leave soon.

After awhile, Alphonse emerged from the tent, followed by the Marshal, who had his wrists bound in front of him and was wearing the browns and greens of a common sword-for-hire. His hair was damp and the clothes were slightly too big on him, but he still managed to appear dangerous and in control. He thought about how easy it might be to wrap the rope around Alphonse's neck, take his knife and hold him hostage until the others did as he commanded -- but to remain prisoner here would do more to further his ends.

He gave Sam a cold glare, already considering her in charge, ignoring the princess completely. He held out his bound wrists. "I hope you're aware that this is a joke," he growled. He thought it was plainly obvious that only binding him this much was about as useful as letting him free.

Florian poked the point of his blade at the Marshal's ribs. "Just don't get any funny ideas," he said in deadly seriousness. The Marshal snorted in amusement and sat down by the fire, where Alphonse grudgingly handed him a full canteen. He drank half of it in a few thirsty gulps.

Dorothea stopped glaring daggers at him long enough to clear her throat. She looked to Sam. "We should arrive at the farm before mid-morning, then ride until nightfall. There's a small chance we might meet Liam's men on the road, but I believe we should have more than a few hours' gain at the least."
August returned Sam's frown with a who, me? smile, and the tent flap fell shut between them. Immediately his mood plummeted, and he gave the two armed dwarves a foul glare before he sat down to start work on his wound. By now Liam and his own men would be on their way to Verinia, and the queen will be pissed. He'd have to somehow make it right with Narissa while remaining true to his word to Sam. He believed now, firmly, that she was vital to the queen's destruction.

Dorothea's eyes widened as Sam spoke -- and by the time she had finished, the princess' mouth had dropped open. "Well ... uh." She was shocked. Stammering. Her tail fluffed. She sat up very straight and puffed her chest, forcing regal composure. "I'm glad you've decided to come with us," she said in a stately voice. "You would be invaluable, surely -- moreso than the dwarves, as kind as they are. I'm happy we don't have to part ways here, in such terrible circumstances." She paused, careful with her next words. "The Marshal --" her voice began to waver with hatred, and she cleared her throat. "I do have a problem with his coming with us. I very much would like to never lay eyes on him again." Her throat rumbled in a low growl. "But I don't have a better answer. We can't leave him and we will not kill him. We are not animals." She said this gruffly, in detest of her form. "Can you promise me that he can be kept under control?"
Raquelle smiled sweetly, and she reached over and rubbed the prince's back. "It'll be all right," she said soothingly, as if speaking to a child. "We'll find her. If my dear sister is alive, we'll find her and rescue her. You and me. Everything will be all right."

She continued riding beside him as long and as far as they went, quite pleased with herself for being the shoulder Liam had to cry on. If she had to, she would make him cry. Tears of sorrow for the loss of Dorothea!
Having that gag out was the greatest relief. August coughed raggedly, and he remained calm, quiet and compliant as long as Sam was the one taking charge of him. He gave her no fuss and no trouble, not even a glare; he kept his eyes closed or on the ground, his anger deflated into exhaustion. She was trusting him, he understood that -- he had to respect her enough to trust her in return.

Alphonse watched the Marshal carefully, and only with a knife in one hand did he help to pull away the last of the ropes -- but as long as their prisoner was calm, he wouldn't say anything that might instigate a fight.

August leaned heavily on Sam, and his legs shook for the first few steps, until he could walk more readily. His shirt was caked in dry blood, and the gash from the Jockal's claw was raw and ragged. Sam made a comment on his stench, and he laughed under his breath. "You don't exactly smell like roses either," he breathed with a smirk.

He looked to the dwarf. "I need bandages," he said in a cracked voice, this time addressing Alphonse with a cool glare. The dwarf hesitated for awhile, reluctant to leave Sam without protection, but finally he bustled off to retrieve medical supplies.

Upon Sam's urging, Dorothea stretched, yawned, and opened her amber eyes -- then jumped sky-high when she saw the Marshal standing so close. "Sam! What are you doing? What's going on? Are you all right? Why is he here?"

Alphonse pushed his way in with a medical kit. "Okay, ladies -- sorry, Princess -- if you could please vacate the tent for awhile, the Marshal here would like to wash up and change before we leave --"

"Who's leaving?" Dorothea stuttered. "Him? Sam? What's going on? Why is he not tied up? Marshal, get your hands off her."

By this time, August had found his own footing, and he casually released Sam from his touch and strode into the tent, much to Dorothea's hackled displeasure.

Alphonse somehow managed to shoo the cat and Sam out of the tent, just as Florian arrived with a bucket of water and a bar of soap. The two dwarves remained inside to guard the Marshal with long knives pointed at him, and they closed the tent flaps behind them.

Dorothea sat on the ground and stared up at Sam, expecting a very good explanation for the danger she was sure they were all in.
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