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    1. Michellin 11 yrs ago

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6 yrs ago
Current W e w Discord what is up
7 yrs ago
I have a few rps I have left hanging, so sorry about that, life is crazy right now. Not sure when I would be active again.
1 like
7 yrs ago
Yknow you procrastinate so bad when it's 4 am, you're still awake because it took you hours before washing the dishes from dinner and you just watched an episode of Dragula
2 likes
7 yrs ago
Having serious rp withdrawal whew I should get a life
1 like
7 yrs ago
To any rp partners looking, am currently put of town, hence slow/short posts

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In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay
“Fucking hells,” Kire breathed as they ran up. Gavin, the half-elf, and the women had fled ahead of them, and she was still feeling the buzz of energy from the stimulant and blood magic, but even she wondered if they’d all make it out. You will, you’ll make it, come on! She sensed the other two lagging behind her and she stepped back, offered her other hand to Ysaryn, her mind filled with nothing but expletives and the desire to see them all out together. Behind them the ground rumbled as the rune chamber started swallowing itself up, but ahead of them, the mines had opened up, sunlight filtering through gaps in the roof. So close! A part of the stone ceiling fell, narrowly missing Gavin, but it had given them a makeshift ramp up to the uppermost level of the mines, towards the exit. Some of the women, running on adrenaline alone, had stumbled, and Gavin shouted for the half-elf to pull them up to the rock slant.

Another loud crack followed closely behind them; fissures opened up in the stairs they had just left behind and in the walls, widening and climbing up just above them. “Look out!” Kire braced herself against the rock wall that threatened to fall on them, using the stimulant-driven energy for the Ring to convert into dragon-strength. With a pained cry she held it back. “Go! Get them out!” She gritted her teeth as she braced herself, willing against hope for the wall to list away from her, her heart thudding fast.
In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay

Free. That was the first word Gavin thought of when he finally rose up. But he had no time to relish the freedom. “Stay down!” he barked at the women who, he knew, would also just realize it, themselves. They may be free, but the dolls and Akuma had stored up enough energy to go on for just a little longer Ikegai’s body convulsed, residual blood magic still animating the body even as the severed head rolled to the floor, muscles twitching uselessly. Gavin ran, instead, towards Kire’s body, taking out his pouch of needles. Just as he had done to Ruli earlier, Gavin administered a stimulant. As fast as he could, he unfastened her cuirass, then dragged her up to Ikegai’s crystal bed. Ikegai may have gotten powerful here, but it had cost him dearly. He had needed Itallo’s body, would have taken it over before his own frail one failed him. And now, together with the drug he had injected into her, Gavin was going to use the blood magic that had helped keep him alive to bring Kire back.
Kire.
She opened her eyes and found herself adrift in the middle of strong winds. They were pulling at her from every which way, and yet she remained where she was. One wind yanked at her, and when she turned, she saw the visions she had seen after Ruli had given her his memories. She and Ruli—together?, with her face unscarred. Another wind tugged at her, and she saw her fight with the dragon, a god-like being she couldn’t have possibly killed. In another she saw herself in full armor, standing on top of a hill, surveying a battlefield, and in another she saw herself wearing strange clothes, standing in the middle of a city made of concrete, with towers that shimmered in the sun as if made of glass. On and on, the winds showed her strange sights, but in all of them she saw herself, in all of them a little different from the way she was now. Not like the twisted dolls, but as if she had been born into a different time, a different life.
When she made a full turn, she found herself, in armor, sitting cross-legged, her face serene. Her sword lay across her lap, glowing. Not yet your time, Paladin, the other her said, and somehow Kire knew who this was. Her Will Incarnate, the Sword of her resolve. Brace yourself, her Sword said, tapping her chest.

She felt like her chest had been hit with a sledgehammer. Once, twice. Like someone was beating down her chest. And each time, she felt as if fire was running through her veins. Kire gasped for air, coughed, felt like she was lying down on something warm, almost hot. Gavin was hovering over her, his hands on her chest, and her hand darted up at his neck, even as she caught her breath. Despite the hand clutching tightly at him, Gavin grinned. His eyes looked wild—definitely not empty, or hollow. Around them the women gasped. Some where looking at Ikegai’s body, revulsion in their eyes. Kire sat up, still coughing, and saw the body, too. It’s over, isn’t it? Still unable to speak, Kire looked to Gavin, loosening her hold on him.
“The dolls will follow. But they’re still fighting with their last magical reserves. We have to hurry, I don’t know if I’ve put anything else in the walls as a countermeasure.” Gavin looked her over. “Can you stand?”
Kire climbed off the crystal bed, almost collapsing on her knees, her heart beating fast, her mind and body overwhelmed with having just been brought back. Fuck, come on, Kay! Kire grunted, bracing against the bed to stand. She felt weird—but she was standing, and that was important right now. Kire bent carefully to get her sword, feeling much better upon contact with it. She remembered the vision, the steadfastness of her Will. Outside, she heard the shrill shrieks of the dolls, finally sensing the death of their master. The Ring had no power to give her now, she only had herself. Which suited her just fine. “Stay behind me. When you see an opening, bring the women up to safety.” Gavin nodded

In the other chambers, Akuma reeled, and so did the dolls. The nearest ones to her collapsed, Akuma’s eyes lighting up, taking whatever power was left for herself. She saw Ysaryn and Rab fighting despite their tiredness and injuries. While there were still many dolls, Kire knew it was only a matter of time. Gavin’s warning echoed in her ears; she wasn’t going to take chances. “Ikegai’s dead. Women and elves in passage behind me. Get them and get out!” The rest of the dolls harassing the two elves fell to Kire’s blade. The surge from blood magic and the stimulant she had gotten from her revival enlivened her now that she was moving, the blood circulating.

She met Akuma’s gaze, just as she had raised her sword at Ruli, surrounded by fallen dolls. Kire grinned, glad to see her faith in his stubbornness wasn’t misplaced, and lunged. “Get your ass out, now!” she yelled at Ruli as she met Akuma’s blade. “You feel that?” she murmured; gods her body felt sore. “Your master’s dead.” Akuma only shrieked back. Kire could see the recognition of impending death in the doll’s eyes, but she didn’t let up, dodged and advanced. Her adversary was getting slower, and blood continued to ooze out of the bite mark. Akuma stopped, backed into a corner by both Kire and Ruli.
“Your Highness,” she said, one final, eerie smile cast their way. “You know I’m a part of you.” Kire said nothing to this; she knew that already. She lived with the weight of it every day. Kire saw Akuma raise her sword up, and Kire prepared for one final attack. Instead, she raised it to her neck, murmuring under her breath. Oh, dammit.. “Out! Go, go go!”
Akuma’s whole body lit up in runes, and the runes in the chamber outside did the same. The doll cut her own neck with her sword, and a loud crack sounded throughout the caverns.
In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay
Akuma writhed, shrieking as she felt the bite on her neck. The last time she had felt pain was during her birth, when Ikegai, having collected enough blood from the many encounters Kire had with his imperfect dolls, had stitched her together with the flesh of a beautiful Amrian lass. In her blood was the blood of Amrians, Shadow-Elves, and Kartaians, charged with taboo magic. “Ruli,” she cried out, pouring in all the pitiful emotions she could mimic, “Ruli, please, you’re hurting me.” With one desperate burst, she radiated glamour, even as she used unnatural strength to hold onto him and throw him full-force against the wall. It was weaker than her earlier blows, owing to the simultaneous use of glamour and the stolen blood leaking out of her neck, but it was enough to get him off her. Akuma picked up her sword and raised it, just as dolls poured into the room to hold him down.
“That brat gave you something, didn’t he?” She smiled, though it didn’t match the tone of her voice. “When it wears off, you’ll feel twice as worse. And it will wear off, soon. Can you keep that up?”

He got her out! Kire could sense it; the glamour was still strong, but Gavin had stopped shrieking. “Ikegai. Now!” The lad trembled, but he nodded weakly, climbing to his feet, and running towards the other chamber, the one with the shallow pit and stored blood. He could feel the echoes of Akuma’s shrieking in his mind, but the mad hope had come bursting back. He muttered words, his hands moving in strange loops and circles as he faced the shallow pool, muttering hurriedly but with an intense focus, undoing the wards that he himself had laid down. The floor of the pool disappeared, and a bright, warm glow lit up the way down. Ikegai. I know where you are. Kire was about to follow when she saw behind her, in the chamber across them, the swarm of dolls headed for Ruli.
“Hurry!” Gavin pleaded.
“Ysaryn, go help him,” Kire said, leaping down the passage.

The whole chamber was filled with gleaming crystal veins—and women. Most were human, a couple were elves, and looking like they hadn’t seen the sun or had proper food in days. All beautiful. They’re alive! They were barely clothed, and some looked to still be recovering from fresh stitches on their abdomen. Their eyes looked to her, pleading. And they all held knives to their necks.
“My Beloved,” called a feeble voice.
On the far end, on a bed carved from crystal, was a man Kire hardly recognized, if not for the stink of blood magic that emanated so strongly from him. He looked like a living mummy, skin clinging tightly to his bones. His body smelled strongly of rot. Still, he managed to push himself upright, to look straight at her, his black eyes peering out of a skull-like face. What was keeping him alive? Blood magic, and resolve?
“Ikegai.”
“One more step, or call your friends, and I will order them to kill themselves,” he said. She heard the women whimper, a few openly weeping, even as they still held the knives against themselves. “Akire, you have used up the portals for today, haven’t you? If you force one more at this state, your heart will give out and burst from the strain. Not even the Ring could bring you back.” He extended his hand. “Stop this.” Gavin, beside Kire, had similarly raised the knife to his own neck. “Give me the Ring.”

Kire had played out this moment so many times in her mind, and in her dreams and nightmares. It had occurred to her many times that it would come to this. The both knew it. They had clashed enough times for them to have arrived here. Kire glanced down at her hand. In all the previous encounters, there was one thing she hadn’t yet done, even if she’d said it to herself many times, even though she had come close many times. She could still feel the knife on her abdomen. Kire took a deep breath, and disappeared in a bright burst of blue light. Ikegai’s eyes widened—only for a second. It would be the last thing he saw, as Kire’s blade emerged first from the other end of the portal right in front of him. Kire crashed to the ground, at the same time as his body. All the women dropped the knives and collapsed, shaking.

Gavin, too, collapsed onto his knees, Kire’s hunting knife still in his hand. Kire didn’t get up. From outside the chamber, a great, terrible cry. Akuma's.
In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay
Kire just needed a breather, just a few moments and she’d be able to meet Akuma’s unnatural strength. If only the room would stop spinning, if only the illusions stopped torturing her mind. Her ribs ached, and the head injury she had only partially healed earlier began to throb with it, but she had to ignore these. She had to devote all the energy into killing this doll. But when she looked up, something else had taken on the task. Ruli! He turned into a demon almost, snarling and clawing like some animal let loose. Kire almost laughed, both in relief and in wonder at his sudden resolve, so different from the conflicted hatred he’d had for just the mere sight of her face. “Holy shit,” she breathed, just as Ysaryn pulled her to her feet.

Her question, though. As amazing as it was to finally see him fight, Kire had to remind herself that the danger wasn’t over. The dolls around them begun to shift, as if waking up from slumber. And Gavin…he was gaping at the sight, unaware that the dolls were moving towards him. “For now.” She pointed at Gavin. “We need the Gemini alive. He knows where the master is.”
“Enough!” Akuma cried out, an inexplicable expression on her face, as if it wanted to contort in anger but didn’t quite know how to do that. The rune circles lit up as her own eyes flashed red, as did the eyes of the dolls around them, while the illusions faded from Kire’s mind. Akuma met Ruli’s lunge with a fist, raised her sword at him just as the dolls rushed forward towards them.
This time, head clear, Kire met the dolls and cut some of them down before they could reach Ruli. The dolls clawed at her, too, but she knocked them back, slashing her way to Gavin. The rune circle still shone, however, and with each doll she cut down, with each tainted blood that spilled on it, Akuma’s eyes flashed. Fuck, this can’t be good. “Gemini!” she yelled, even as she pulled dolls off him. Once he was free, she grabbed him by his collar. “Where is Ikegai? He’s close he’s here somewhere, but he’s got protective wards up. Where?” Kire’s other hand beheaded another doll, slashed at another, ignoring the pull of fatigue, stronger now that she was taking as much energy the Ring could give her.

Gavin gasped, looking into the woman’s face. She was so very alike Akuma and yet, this close, he could see she was a totally different entity altogether. It wasn’t just the hair, or the scar, but the eyes—the fire behind them, that no doll could replicate. “Not far. Deeper down. Secret passage. I can—I can lead you to it break the prot—” He gasped, face crumpling in horror, as the voice of Akuma in his head screamed, his hands scratching at his own face. Kire smelled the stink of control on him. Fuck! A wave of blood magic surged from the chamber, more powerful than just glamour, searching for subject to control. It was strongest in its epicenter, Akuma, and radiated outward. They were deep underground, but the control extended just far enough to affect humans immediately aboveground.
In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay
“Ruli,” Akuma said simply, smiling down at the shackled man. “It’s been a while. Come to see me get wed?” She reached down, her fingers hovering just above the scars. “You came. I had wondered if you still held me in your thoughts. Tell me, how is Envy?” She smiled wider as she said the Kartaian’s name, then glanced at her hand, as if only just then noticing the bloodstains on the palm. “My boy,” she called over her shoulder, “do come in here. You should be properly introduced, if you are going to be a lord of Cordon.”
Gavin stepped inside, almost as pale as the bloodless dolls outside. She smiled and touched his shoulder. “Gavin of House Gemini, Gavin of Amria, meet Rulitus of Ziad.” Her nails dug into his shoulder. “Say hello, Gavin.”
“H-hello.”
“Remind me again, Gavin, what you had been before we found you.”
“Nothing. I was nothing.” He glared down at the table, unable to look Ruli in the eyes, reduced to a chastised boy before this monster. His wild hope turned to despair, and he felt like he could throw up any minute. How much of this had been a trap? How much of what he had thought was defiance was foreseen? Or did she merely sniff it out of him all this time, and waited?
“It’s not too late, you know,” Akuma crooned to Ruli. “You can be like Gavin. You can still be mine. You can rise above these worthless lot. You have so much potential. We, all of us, are material, and molded by the right hands, we can build an empire here.” She paused, looking sideways, as if sensing something, before turning back to Ruli, touching his arm. “Really, we were surprised you’d be helping her. Or that she would be asking for help. She likes carrying the world on her own shoulders, then moaning about the weight. So much self-sacrifice, so much conflict, in that pretty head. I should know,” she said, tapping her temple, as if all this was somehow amusing.

Gavin’s thoughts began to cloud over, the part of him that had surrendered to Akuma’s hold on his mind taking over now, numbing him. Akuma had fallen silent. “She is coming,” she murmured, and the thought gave her the widest smile. The Beloved. The Paladin. The other dolls entered then, blank and soulless. “Gavin, be a good boy and give him a dose. I’m sure you’ve seen him do it. I want to show him something.” Gavin’s eyes wept freely, standing rooted to the spot. But Akuma looked over her shoulder at him, her red eyes on his green ones, and he went completely numb, going through the motions of drugging him. The dolls, meanwhile, upon Akuma’s instructions removed all the shackles save for one on his right hand, then pushed him upright so that he could see the rune chamber.

“Now, we are all about to meet the Empress of Amria.”

--
“Fucking—bastards!” Kire cursed as she ran up at Ysaryn’s urging, rushing up as fast as she could. The smell reminded her of the burning at the warehouse, only worse. On top of the staircase she saw a figure like one of the Kartaian dolls and was about to leap at him, until she recognized him. He was pointing, mouthing something, though words didn’t come out. Kire’s eyes widened. Before she could do anything, though, Ysaryn lunged, trapping him against the wall. “Wait!” Kire put a hand gently on her shoulder. “He’s the half-Kartaian. He was pointing that way.” She turned to him. “Is that where he is?” Behind them, she could hear the infernal dolls, and she knew they needed to move faster. They’d just have to trust him.

Through the winding tunnels, not daring to stop and feel her exhaustion. Ysaryn was still with her, despite her injuries. Kire couldn’t fail now. They were so close. They ran till she couldn’t keep track of the bends and forks in the corridors, till they reached one mineshaft that was clearly different from the others. It was quieter here, colder. The carved stairs more polished than the ones they had left behind. The signatures were getting more distinct; they were on the right track. That eerie chill, too, was getting stronger. This time, Kire took the lead, running ahead of the elves. If there were any dolls lying in wait, they weren’t on the way.

Orchids. Plums. Death. Kire found herself staring down a staircase and into a circular hall with rune circles. Kire inhaled sharply. There were dolls lining the walls, but they weren’t moving. “Your Highness Akire,” one said, stepping out into view. Akuma.
“Ysaryn.” Kire’s voice was low. “He’s down there. Chamber to the right. With the Gemini. If you can get to him—the moment you get Ruli. You take him, and you go. Understand?”
“Your Highness,” Akuma repeated. “Oh. I am not observing the protocols.” She smiled and dipped into a curtsy. “My honor to have finally met you formally.”
Kire didn’t answer, had nothing to say to this doll, no answer for the taunts Ikegai had already given her before, only this time spoken with her own voice, through her lips. Kire leaped off the stairs, disappeared in a blue flash, and reappeared where Akuma had been, striking with her sword.

Except, she found herself in the middle of a town. Holy gods. She knew this village.

Around her, her own soldiers pillaged the town, burning it, putting its people to the sword. They were within the borders of Gemini territory. The skies were red, remnants of the Black Storm that had devastated this side of Amria mere days ago. And Kire, newly Empress, newly orphaned, and burning with a cold anger that made her eyes gleam red, had marched her army through it.
“This isn’t real,” she said aloud, reliving one of her greatest horrors. The sword wavered in her hand as she watched the slaughter that happened under her command. She may have become impervious to Ikegai’s control, but this… “This isn’t real!” she cried out, running towards the nearest soldier. As she got nearer, the soldier faced her, and it had her face.

Kire was sent flying back with a blow from Akuma, slamming against the cavern wall. Her head spun, her gaze unfocused, her mind seeing both the real chamber and the illusion. She was reeling, too, from using the portal, and had only just ducked in time before Akuma’s powerful second strike. Kire rolled away, running for her sword. “You know you’re not my opposite, Your Highness. I am your child, after all. I came from your soul. Ikegai knows you so well. And you’ve fought his dolls so often, seen you move so often, that he has quite a good picture of it. Enough to give to me.” Akuma grinned then. “Are you angry at me for invading and slaughtering a city? Perhaps look in a mirror, Sire.”

She aimed another blow at Kire’s middle; still confused by the illusions, Kire was a hair too slow to evade and crumpled upon contact, coughing up blood. The cuirass’s enchantment held, but Kire felt the full force of it, anyway. The blood. She draws strength from it. She’s toying with me. Akuma must have sensed that Kire needed a bit longer before calling upon the dragon-strength again. Move, Kay! Move, or she’ll kill you!

Gavin watched, horrified though rooted to the spot, surrounded by dolls. He saw the visions given life, and now remembered, with a sickening feeling, that he had helped carve those runes onto the floor. He glanced sideways at Rulitus. He had obeyed, he had given Ruli a dose—but his conscious mind held on just enough to give the wrong dose. A stimulant.
In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay
She’s not fighting them. Kire pulled them away from her, tossing them as far as she could manage down the path they had just come from until there were none left between her and Ysaryn. Putting herself between the controlled bodies and her comrade, Kire raised her sword. “They’re essentially dead,” she said firmly, but not unkindly, “if they’re like that,, they’re far gone.” She stepped forward, cutting them down, doing her best to do it quickly, though with them crowding around her like that, there wasn’t much space to do it cleanly. As with the other bodies she had slashed earlier, these went down more easily than the Kartaian body. Slaves. Weakened severely before death. Even if they couldn’t feel pain, there wasn’t much to work with anymore.

Quicky, Kire went to Ysaryn, looking her over. “You’re hurt,” she said, touching the bloody arm. She looked around, tore a scrap of cloth from one of the fallen to bind the elf’s injury. Her eyes went to Ysaryn’s neck, where the dolls had tried to strangle her, and she gestured at it. “Can you go on? There could be more—like this. Down there. The moment you think you can’t fight on, you retreat. I’m not losing you here.” She looked down the entrance. Rulitus and the Gemini were on the move, on the far side of the mines. It was getting harder to keep track, with all the other magical signatures overwhelming her senses. What I’d give to have that mind-reading power of his right now. Ikegai, Akuma, the Gemini, they were all somewhere here, so close, but not close enough for Kire’s liking. “Come on.”

The entrance led them down the mineshaft that would have looked abandoned save for the presence of torchlight and of the dolls they had just killed. It’s too quiet. Kire had an odd feeling, of cold creeping down her spine. She remembered what it had been like to hunt for Ikegai back in Amria, and this brought back those terrible waking nightmares. She had some idea of what was waiting for her, but he had six months to lie in wait and prepare. Kire looked about; the walls look like they had been extracted of their precious ores already, and so deeper they must go. Ahead of them, the corridor opened up to a deep, vertical mineshaft. A reddish glow emanated from it that Kire was almost certain wasn’t from fire. She gripped her sword. “More coming,” Kire murmured. “From the pit.” They’ve been waiting for me.

What crawled out of the pit was a horror that felt both gut-wrenching and familiar: her face, twisted into different forms. Elven features, molded, wrongly, into a warped version of her likeness. Others, though not a copy of her, looked like attempts to replicate a Kartaian’s form. All of them, wrong in every way, and coming at them. Kire lunged, cutting them down before they could climb fully out of the pit. Where’s the way down? She got as close as she dared to the edge of the pit, kicking away dolls, beheading others, almost getting pulled down by a Kartaian-sized monstrosity. “Grab a torch!” she yelled, stepping back to take one for herself. The dolls, seeing her retreat, advanced, and were met with Kire’s blade and the flames from the torch. Some of the corpses caught fire faster, spread it to the others. The sounds they made were inhuman.

There! As they cut a swath through the advancing dolls, she could see, just to the side, beginning from the lip of the pit, a staircase carved into the rock.

--

Gavin slicked back his hair, trying to steady his shaky hands. He needed to be presentable, needed to keep the mask of obedience on his face. Not a sign of weakness. He walked as briskly as he dared, even as other henchmen and servants were busy securing the manor. Many knew that even they shouldn’t risk the mines. From a servant he heard news that the captives had gotten away, and the wild hope threatened to burst out of him. He must look angry. He must look like he had no investment in this chaos. He practically ran up the stairs, taking two at a time, until he reached the third floor. The topmost level of the manor, where the lord’s chambers were, and where he and his bride would reside, was similarly off-limits to all but a few. Somebody, surely, must have informed them by now. Gavin took a few deep breaths, pressed a thumb to the self-inflicted cut on his hand, and stepped inside Lord Itallo’s chambers.

There was an otherworldly glow inside, the chamber covered by runes. The lord himself sat unnaturally stiff on the edge of the bed, eyes glazed. “Ana…” he murmured, mouth twitching, the gem in his hand gleaming. Very soon, there wouldn’t be much of the lord left. There would only be Ikegai in his mind, a living avatar of his master. Should the wedding proceed, it would be Ikegai, through Itallo’s body, standing beside the beautiful, deadly beauty. Should. A blasphemous thought. Where is she?

“Looking for something, Gavin?”

Gavin turned, expecting the regal Akuma in all the wedding finery, a crown of orchids adorning her lustrous, blacker-than-black hair Instead he gasped. She was wearing armor, a sword by her side. Akuma smiled, reached out to touch Gavin’s chin. “What is it, my boy?”
Gavin stammered, wishing he could be anywhere but here. “T-there are intruders. In the slavers’ hold and in the mines.”
Akuma nodded, her red eyes gleaming. “I know. I can feel her. She is getting close.”
“I caught one of the intruders. I can prepare your chamber, for the final blood ritual before the ceremony. We can use him. His blood will be potent, maybe even more potent than the elves.”
Akuma didn’t speak at first. Instead, she searched his face, and Gavin forced all the will he could muster to hold her gaze. She leaned forward, kissed Gavin on the cheek, her cold lips making him shiver even harder. “I know. You have been so good,” she whispered into his ear. “Such a good boy, you are.”
Gavin gasped. He wanted to die, right there.
Akuma straightened up, took his hand—the bloody one—squeezed it tight. “Come. Let’s go out and meet our friends.”

--

Just as Gavin had reached the manor, the eunuchs carried the ‘unconscious’ Ruli down a set of carved stairs. Unlike the rest of the mine, these corridors had been smoothed out, and proper lamps lit the way. The sounds of fighting have yet to reach this place. As they descended, Rulitus would have noticed the veins of red crystal, and a red glow that didn’t come from any of the lamps. Like there was a giant furnace somewhere, without the heat. In fact, it wasn’t hot inside the mines at all, despite the depth. They finally set him down inside a large chamber. The lamps here looked as if they were made of quartz, and the same red glow emanated from them. The floor and the walls were smooth, save for the grooves of interlocking rune circles carved onto the floor and walls.

Some of the passages around the large rune chamber led to staircases. One of the two larger openings led to an area similar to the arena in the slavers’ underground hiding place, filled with tables with manacles attached to them, shelves with vials, mysterious crates. A room for a blood mage. The other opening opposite it had a shallow, empty pool in the middle. Great ceramic jars with symbols etched into them stood all around, filled with elf blood. The eunuchs dragged Rulitus to the blood mage chamber, about to shackle him to one of the tables.

Not long later, outside, the soft sounds of people heading their way. Dolls, the closest likenesses to Akuma but with empty, glassy-eyed expressions, lined the rune chamber. And following behind, the armored footsteps of Akuma.
In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay
Paint the earth. Kire found herself smirking, if only briefly, and she nodded in reply. When Ysarynn wiped her face, Kire realized her own face must be covered in blood too—hers, and the slavers they had slaughtered. Once they had blocked off the way behind them, using the gates the slavers had built for it, the crates they had unload, and a cage Kire had managed to tear from the wagon, they were off. The elves, Bolym at the head, took over the wagons and horses. Kire took one of the free horses. “Ride with me, Chieftess.” They both needed to conserve their strength for what lay ahead.

They had met no real opposition as they rode down the hidden trail. Either the rest of them had been trapped behind them, or had fled to safety, or were with the ones that had gone to capture Ruli. With the Gemini. Kire focused on the trail ahead and spotting danger on the way; the sooner she and Ysaryn reach their destination, the sooner they could help Ruli. They met a few stragglers ahead, but on horseback they were easy to dispose of. Soon, Kire could see the roads diverging: one of the paths looked brighter, the overcropping receding to let in the morning light more. The way out. Kire worried there may be more of Itallo’s slavers guarding that path, but she would have to trust Bolym and their kin that they could hold their own. She waited just a few more moments to see if enemies would be charging at them. When none came, she gave him a nod and directed her steed to the other road.

“They’ll be alright, won’t they?” Kire murmured as they made their way straight ahead. This trail veered left and began to slope downward once more. Soon, the light of morning disappeared, replaced once more by torchlight. She could smell not just Gemini magic, but the specific signature of Ikegai’s bloody art. The horse seemed to sense it too. In any case, the further they went, the less likely they would be able to take it in. Kire had it stop, climbed off the saddle, drew her sword again. Mines? Ah. She had expected to find some passage that would lead to the underside of a manor or palace, but instead it looked like they were heading for the entrance to a mine shaft. The closer she got to the opening, the stronger the signatures were, she was afraid she’d lose track of where Gavin was taking Rulitus. On top of that, there was a new sensation: the smell of an orchard, filled with orchids and plums, with an underlying odor of rot. She remembered the crates full of stored elf blood they had left behind.

Somebody was coming their way. The first sentries. As Kire prepared for the attack, though, she could see the silhouette crouch to fit through the entrance before extending itself. “Oh fuck me,” Kire hissed. It was a Kartaian. She instinctively stepped back, arm held out to Ysaryn. The Kartaian’s head swayed this way and that, as if looking for something, before finally looking their way, lips curled into a snarl, smelling of decay.
Decay?
Kire’s eyes searched its body for signs, finally finding the carved runes on its chest, the pinprick of light from a blood gem. She barely registered it when the Kartaian lunged with his sword. “It’s a doll. Puppet. Not alive, still deadly!” More silhouettes flickered in the torchlight behind the Kartaian. More dolls. “Cut out the gem,” she said simply, before meeting the Kartaian-doll’s blade. This one was much less decayed than the other doll she had fought, and seemed quicker, too. With a grunt, Kire parried its blows, went in for an opening and slashed its leg off. She was about to go in for another when she felt multiple hands grabbing her. Elf-dolls. Ysaryn’s kin. Empty now, save for the commands from the gem to protect the mine’s entrance.

“Bastards!” Kire yelled as she pulled more dragon-strength from the Ring, throwing the whole lot against the Kartaian. She hacked through them, but they had no weapons, went limp faster than the Kartaian doll when she damaged them. Fodder. He made fodder out of their corpses. They really were just dolls to the blood mage, playthings to test out his magic. She hacked off the head of the Kartaian doll last, cut out the gem on its chest while the other dolls writhed uselessly. She turned quickly to Ysaryn to see if she needed help, slashing the dolls nearest to her. Gods. The bastard!

--

Gavin gulped when he blinked twice. His voice was shaking earlier when he made his proposition, and now there was no turning back. “You understand, don’t you?” he said, turning to Rab. “If he succeeds, the masters will be dead. Nobody to hunt us down when we escape. Help me bring him to the mines, to my chambers there, and you’re free to go after that.” There was a portion of the mines reserved for when he needed to make more difficult magic. Even when Akuma would relay the instructions, he needed concentration. Which was a difficult balancing act for someone who was under somebody’s thrall. Or maybe, getting him to focus on more complex rituals helped keep that defiant voice in check, just as when he would be tasked to conduct the experiments on the elves. Akuma would be in one of the chambers, away from where he would construct the dolls. Preparing the elf blood for Akuma’s sustenance required a different kind of fine-tuning. Different dolls, different purposes, and she was the most complex doll of all. When Gavin would fall under the trance of working on strengthening Akuma, half the time he wouldn’t be entirely aware of what his hands were doing, what some of the runes were for. He would almost become a doll, himself, and he would struggle to remember what he had done at all afterward.

Right now, Akuma and Itallo should still be in the manor. Itallo, the poor fool. Totally ensnared. That was why the control worked so well for certain people: Akuma would use the glamour to dangle something they wanted in front of them, and that would be the magic’s way into the brain. Like a pest looking for the first signs of rot on fruit. And even when Gavin knew this rationale, it was one thing to think logically on it, quite another to fight it. Itallo, pathetic lord that he was, didn’t stand a chance against the glamour that made him believe his lost lover had returned. And this lost lover whispered dreams of empire into his small, greedy mind, played into his weaknesses as a lord who rose up from the ranks.

The manor wasn’t that far from the mines. Precarious, but also convenient. By now maybe some of his men would be arriving with word of what had happened, and he would be expected. They would be looking for him, ask him questions, and dread washed over him. He had to show up before arousing suspicion. They needed to be quick. “He needs to look like we’ve bound him properly. Not too tight, though.”

Eunuchs, those mutilated for their crimes, and human slaves that Itallo couldn’t sell manned the mines, or at least the parts of it that Itallo managed. But as Akuma took over Itallo, more and more parts began to be off-limits to ordinary workers, save for the few that had been assigned to Gavin. “I have to show my face to the lo—to Itallo. Follow this path, you’ll meet the eunuchs who would know where to leave him. Make sure you hand him over to them and that he’s safe. You have your freedom after that. If you don’t, they’ll all have our hide, and they’ll turn us into dolls. Like the ones in the mines, yes.” Gavin said all this as he administered the dose that would revive Ruli later.
In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay
They were gaining ground. Kire used one dead slaver as a shield and struck down more. Not far from her, she could see Ysaryn and Bolym unleash their bloodlust on their adversaries. The freed elves, the blades of their captors in their shaky hands, matched their resolve, if not their strength. She could hear the distressed roars of horses hitched to the slave wagons on top of the cries and yells of agony. Just as she was about to join the elves, she saw another henchman climbing the top of a wagon, about to take aim with a dart. “Ysaryn!” Kire yelled, pointing to him, just as she felt Ruli’s aura flicker and fade. No. Kire was seized with a great fear that he had been struck down, until she realized it had merely flickered. It was still there, but faint. The moment’s distraction allowed one footman to slash at her head. Kire ducked only just in time, the man’s blade grazing the side of her head. With an angry cry, Kire answered it with a slash at her opponent, the force enough to leave a deep gash across the man’s middle, almost slicing him in half the way she had the Kartaian in Ziad.

Her head throbbed, but when she straightened up she saw many of the slavers lying dead around her. Ahead of them, the elves had gained possession of the wagons and horses. Kire took deep breaths as she pressed a hand to her head, jogging over to the nearest wagon, her Ring glowing a faint blue as she focused its energy to heal it, only enough for it not to inconvenience her too much in battle. She would be lightheaded for a few minutes, and it wouldn’t be completely healed, but she’d rather not be bleeding and distracted with pain in case there was a bigger fight later. She peered at the vehicles around them. Some were fitted with cages the one she looked into now was loaded with crates. When she pulled the lid off one of them, she saw, nestled within the hay that lined the box, glass bottles filled with dark red liquid. She didn’t need to remove the stopper to figure out what these were, and given the older slaver’s remark earlier, she also knew what purpose they had for Akuma.

“Are you two alright?” she asked Ysaryn and Bolym, surveying the freed elves to see how they were. “We can take the wagons and horses, though we’ll need to unload this one first.” She turned, already working on discarding the crates. “The Gemini has him,” she told the other two. “This way would lead to where the slavers have taken the others, but that would mean more trouble. We’ll probably also see the way out along the way. I can help see you to it, and then I’ll go follow Ruli.” She glanced around as they spoke, on guard for any more reinforcements. “They are your people. Do you want to lead them to safety now, or will you follow me to Itallo’s manor?” Better make sure they can’t follow us this way, she thought, looking at the entrance. “Let’s block this path off first.”

--

Gods. This man was like an ox. For a moment, Gavin thought that would be the end of him when the blonde man disappeared and reappeared, even after taking a potent needle to the neck. What kind of demon is this man? And yet, why did Gavin’s heart beat so fast in his chest in excitement? Rab had loosed another dose upon the enemy, and Gavin watched the maniac sink, finally, succumbing to the drug. She’ll kill everyone, he said. “I know,” Gavin muttered. Which is why I need you. Akuma was stockpiling as much blood as she could before the wedding. It was a test, to see if Ikegai, through her, could cast a glamour upon a whole city. It was one thing to charm individuals, or even groups. The next step would be this. Of course Gavin had contemplated fighting back, but the urge hadn’t presented itself as strongly as it did now, when everything seemed to come together: the coming of the hunter, Rab, and now this man. That flicker of himself that still fought against the mental hold on him latched onto this one fortuitous moment, because otherwise, Gavin knew his fate was sealed, that he wouldn’t get the resolve again, and he would keep staining his hands with the blood of innocents.

“The chattel are gone! They’ve sealed off the way to the wagons!” shouted a man, breathless as he joined them. “Elves, and some—some monster—er, woman—”
Gavin narrowed his eyes. “What do you mean?”
The man paled, realizing what he was about to say. “S-she looked like the Lady Akuma.”
Gavin’s eyes widened. His suspicions were right. “Go back up to the warehouse entrance. Send word to the lord—”
“Already sent runners back up there, Gavin.”
Blast it. “Good. Some of you, go join them. The others, work on unblocking the exit.” The men all looked wary in their presence already, though this messenger was similarly haunted by what he might have witnessed. They obeyed his word, all too glad to put distance between themselves and their adversary, never mind that he was still out cold. Monster was right, if this was indeed a twisted version of an already twisted woman. “Come on, Rab.”
“Do you need us to watch this one?” one of the last men to exit the cavern asked, gesturing at the unconscious man.
“No, Rab could handle it.”
The man looked uncertainly at the half-elf, not just because he mistrusted the creature, but after seeing this stranger fight he knew how formidable he would be when awake. Gavin stepped closer, whispering. “We’re going to drain his blood, take some of his organs and anoint the caverns with it to strengthen the wards. It’s a delicate procedure, and things might go wrong when my concentration breaks.” He looked up seriously at the man, who might have lost the rest of the color on his face then and there.
“Fine. If he kills you, don’t blame me.” Despite his bravado, the man ran out the room in a hurry.

The Gemini had his own ways around the tunnels. He led Rab the way he went in earlier, through the hidden entrance only a few knew about. Once he, Rab, and the unconscious blonde were alone down this path, he broke into a faster pace. “Hurry,” he hissed at the half-elf. It was eerily quiet, his heart pounding in his ears and against his chest so painfully he thought he would burst with every breath. What are you doing, Gavin?a sweet voice in his head, the one that told him to obey without question, to obey in exchange for the possibility of finally seeing where his real world was, making him halt abruptly, as if someone had yanked him bodily back.

Gavin crouched, head in his hands, his whole body shaking. He couldn’t remove the pendant now, even if he had his full resolve, because he knew they would know. She would know. Your mother wouldn’t want you to put yourself in danger, wouldn’t she? crooned Akuma’s voice. Gavin, you are a Gemini. Are you really going to help a hunter sent by the Wyverns? The sworn enemy of your blood?
“I…I….” He sounded like a boy, then, a bleating orphan. Gavin, still clutching his head with one hand, drew the dragon-knife with the other, and with a shaky hand drew it across his palm. He stifled a cry of pain, but he pressed his wounded hand into a fist, focusing on the pain, his breath hissing with each shaky inhale. “C-c’mon, Rab,” he muttered, and he picked up the pace again. In this silence, it felt like forever, but Gavin dared not stop, afraid of losing precious time, and afraid that he might lose his nerve and turn back. Finally, he came to a bend in the path which would take him to where he had left his horse earlier. “Set him down, Rab, I want to rouse him.”

He wasn’t sure how strong the two doses would be, or how long they would affect the man. But Gavin bent over him, slapping his face several times. Still out cold. Gavin unfolded the pouch once more, selecting a different needle this time. Carefully, he pricked the blond only very briefly. The drug would wear off a little, enough for him to vaguely comprehend what was happening around him but would still be potent enough to keep the stranger from moving. He lifted the eyelids, inspecting, before slapping his cheeks again.

“I will drug you again. Keep you behaved. And I will present you to Akuma as a gift before the wedding begins. Before that though, I will give you an antidote. It’ll make you awake enough to be able to act. And—end her. I can’t do it; she would be protected, and her—her glamour would be too strong when I’m that close. But you can, and you could even get away after you do it. Do that, and I will lead you and the hunter friend of yours to our master. If the hunter is still alive by then. Blink twice if you understand what I just told you.”
In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay
More coming. With the three of them, it was easy to deal with the men who had remained within this chamber, but Kire knew reinforcements were on the way. Just as she had anticipated, more men with blades came. Kire met them head-on. The first man to cross blades with her only stared in surprise as Kire, with the force of her dragon-strength, knocked his sword out of his hands before giving him an almighty blow, sending him crumpling to the ground. The others didn’t fare any better. One of them managed to get a slash in while Kire was preoccupied with two others, an attack she barely dodged. She felt the man’s weapon graze her cuirass, and in anger at having missed him, she turned and hacked off his limb right before finishing him off.

After she had dealt with the last immediate threat, Kire took the keys to the cages from him and unlocked the nearest ones. She found the body of the other slaver who had another set and tossed that to Ysaryn. Need to buy time. Kire headed for the empty cages and pushed them up against one entrance from where the reinforcements had come earlier.There has to be another entrance here. The warehouse must have been for exits and disposals. She heard a gurgle and a cough; the older man, the one she had spoken to, was struggling despite his broken body to move. Kire bent over him, pressed a hand against his mangled chest. “Where’s the other entrance?” She pressed harder, making the man cry weakly in pain. “Quickly.” The man lifted a trembling, feeble hand back out at the arena, towards another passage that led out of it, from where some of the men they had killed today came. “Will that take us to the mines? Or Itallo’s manor?” The man merely barked out a bloody laugh. Kire’s lip curled in distaste as she stood up, glancing at her two companions. “He’s all yours,” she said, turning away to count how many captives they were dealing with.

“Ysaryn, how many can you take to safety, how many times without exhausting yourself?” she asked while, as quickly as she could, she went among the women who were bound and tore their bindings loose. There were about a dozen that were outside the cages, the ones on the floor. Another dozen from the cages; they, at least, seemed like they could stand on their feet. As much as Kire wanted to help, she needed to reserve her dragon-strength, saving the portals for when things go dire for them. “Take the ones too drugged to move. The rest we’ll take with us down that way. Can you tell them to hold onto weapons?” she asked, gesturing to the men they had slaughtered.

While Ysaryn Shadow-walked as much of the captives as she could, Kire guarded the entrance, partly barricaded with cages. Like an annoying itch, she could still feel the Gemini here, somewhere, and along that, Ruli’s signature. Don’t die, you stubborn fool, or Envy won’t forgive me. More came their way, but hindered by the cages, Kire and Bolym would be able to pick them off. With captives, however, she knew the going would be slow, though she also hoped they all had the same fire as Ysaryn, now that they were being led to escape. The moment Ysaryn returned, Kire took a deep breath. Here we go.

Kire pushed over one of the cages, her Ring glinting, and it landed on some footmen that had been trying to shove their way in. She leapt at the next men, taking them down as fast as she could go, knowing they needed to protect more people now. Not fully trusting the dead man’s instructions, Kire ran ahead to scout. The path sloped upward; up ahead she could see the faint light of day, smell the sea—and hear slavers with wagons and horses. Faint traces of Gemini spellwork, too. She could see just enough of what lay beyond the entrance to have an idea what the surroundings might look like. There looked to be a path facing the sea and shielded by rock formations that would have made the way invisible to casual observers from the surface.

“Anyone there?” called one voice. Likely a ruse; Kire suspected these were slavers remained behind to wait by the entrance to slaughter those who came through.
She stepped backward, gestured behind her for the procession to stop. “I’ll draw them away. When you hear fighting, that’s your sign,” she whispered, before disappearing in a blue flash.
She reappeared in front of the entrance surrounded by men. As she had thought, they were waiting in the entrance. Kire didn’t linger long. She disappeared again, but when she appeared, the men would have had a dead body or two of their comrades thrown their way. Kire took advantage of their surprise to mow them down. Three portals down. She would have to wait to use the next one.

--

Gavin didn’t need to be a sorcerer of any sort to know where the trouble was. The whole cavern had erupted in fighting, which told him there was more than one. And the hunter is with them. He felt this in his marrow. Trusting Rab, Gavin followed him, and entered the scene to witness something extraordinary. Gavin didn’t know who this blonde man was, but he clearly was very skilled, with magic of his own. The brutes, for whom Gavin didn’t have any particular sympathy for, crumpled at a touch. It’s almost like them. Like her. But not like her; this one could disappear in a blink. Didn’t Ikegai say the hunter could do that? Was this the man behind the strange “visit” to the warehouse? Powerful magic. A powerful ally. But, more importantly, Gavin noticed he hadn’t killed these men yet. “We need him,” Gavin whispered, handing Rab a leather pouch. Needles. “Do that, and you’ll be free. He will help us be free.” He hoped the word was enough to motivate Rab.

There were more men coming. Gavin urged them forward. Good; as good as this man is, he was alone, and Gavin hoped the fight would distract him enough to get knocked out.
In Wanderers 4 yrs ago Forum: 1x1 Roleplay
Kire was silent as they prepared to enter the warehouse. Ruli was taking the lead for now, and she let him instruct their companions, especially Bolym, who would perhaps be more likely to take instruction from somebody who wasn’t her. She didn’t need to understand his words to interpret the acidic glares he threw her way. She was glad Ruli told their companions not to fight their way to the death; she was going to say as much to all of them, anyway, though in her case, it was mostly applicable to just everybody else. When Ruli offered his hand, Kire took it, nodding at his reminder and anticipating the push of memory into her mind.

Happiness flooded into her once again, a continuation of the childhood scene she had witness last night, even smelling the aromas of a bakery, tasting the dish Ruli was eating. She would have enjoyed the experience—she hadn’t tasted anything like that before—if not for their present circumstances. Afterwards, just like last night, her confused mind lingered on a different, unintentional jumble of images: she and Ruli, laughing together around a table, with Dara sitting with them, her sweets in front of Kire. The mind is a strange thing, Kire thought, turning to Ruli, blinking the traces of false memory away.

She glared at the silver ring, knowing what it would transform her into, as she slipped it on. She knew it worked, because she could see the look on Ruli’s face. Kire almost smirked back in defiance. His handiwork was too good. She didn’t need to be told not to show any kind of real mirth, or any outburst of emotion, while wearing Akuma’s face. That otherworldly calm still had to be stolen and twisted from somewhere, too; Kire had known to put on a false face before, as Empress. She hated to admit it, but when the situation requires her royal façade, it would be like putting on a glove.

The smell inside the warehouse, though absent of the reek of burning bodies, was no less pleasant. Kire followed Ruli down the hidden stairwell, noting with disgust how a city that already had a system in place for slavers would be perfect for Ikegai’s intentions. When, finally, they had left the long stairwell, she braced herself for what she would find. Empty cages, the smells of inhumane captivity. Save your anger for later. Kire kept going, looking out for danger ahead even as she kept track of Ruli’s signature. Ahead of them, Ruli seemed to have spotted another way right before running into some trouble. Kire stopped, kept her hand on the sword, in case Ruli couldn’t handle this, ready to step in. But the confrontation lasted only a moment, with Kire feeling the flare of his Touch, which he must have used to end the fight before it had even begun. After he had stopped, Ruli had gone on to the other passage. So far so good.

Kire went over to inspect Ruli’s handiwork. The man was practically catatonic while sitting down, and not far from him was an elf woman, most likely drugged. “Can you take her to safety as fast as possible?” she asked Ysaryn. “We’ll stay here.” As Ysaryn Shadow-Walked out with the barely-conscious elf, Kire looked at the man Ruli had Touched and wondered how long the effects would last. She wondered, too, if this was one of the two men she had seen before, or if he was taking her “upstairs” to do the same thing as they had. She almost dared the fates to let him wake up so she could end him.

Once Ysaryn had returned, and trusting that Ruli would hold his own until their paths converged again, Kire directed her companions down the current path. On the other side, more empty cages. Where were the men? After a while of going through them, the current room opened up to other crudely dug out caverns. She could see the faint flickering of torchlight in the distance. The stink of Gemini magic was faint, but nevertheless present. Instinctively, Kire touched her nose; in the presence of a strong ward cast by a full-fledged blood mage, the side effect for this for a Wyvern like her would be a nosebleed—followed by whatever booby trap the blood mage had waiting for her. No blood.

She could hear the sounds of men laboring, the echoes coming from the corridor opposite them, perhaps carrying more contraband for transport. Kire made her way towards it, doing her best to look calm, emotionless, in case some other passageway opened up and they encounter more men. Just as she was about to inspect the corridor, Kire stopped, then turned her head sharply to the left. The Gemini, Kire mouthed. He was somewhere in another chamber, and from his current trajectory she knew he was heading for where Ruli was. Fuck! Ruli’s signature remained steady, so for now he was still alright, though most likely he had drawn the muscle to him. And they had barely gotten what they needed.

With a quiet curse, she proceeded down towards the corridor— and found herself looking down what looked like a shallow, circular arena. There were remains of a rune circle, signs of a ritual. Tables—stained, dirty, with bloody rags on them. Ahead of them, the sounds of weeping, weak cries. An older man—the one she had seen with the half-Kartaian—entered the chamber from which those cries had come and barked at them, before turning to give orders to speed up their work. Men holding soaked rags in gloved hands, others with syringes, went ahead to carry out his orders. Kire hissed softly between her teeth, then stepped out from her vantage point, walking calmly towards them, letting go of the sword hilt. She trusted that Ysaryn and Bolym behind her would heed Ruli’s instructions and follow her lead.

At once, Itallo’s men swarmed them, though upon looking at her face, they kept a healthy distance, wary and confused. “M-milady?” The older man almost tripped over himself as he headed towards her. “Milady…Akuma?”
“Am I not allowed to visit before my wedding?” Kire asked, smiling.
“Er—well—milady, we had thought the Lord Itallo had given orders for the, ah, chosen chattel to be moved to the lord’s mansion grounds. We are in the middle of this, milady, while the others are to be disposed.” The man’s eyes darted to her armor, sword, and then to her armed companions. “Are these--?”

“Security,” Kire replied with a wave of a hand. “Elves have more than one use, it seems. These were hard to procure as they are, so I would rather they not be harmed by your men, unless you want them harmed back.”
“Yes, milady.” She could tell he was still uncertain. “I—suppose now you would like to inspect them?”
Kire gave him a look that told him it had been a foolish question. The man nodded quickly and led them inside.

There were a few elf women, some in cages, others outside, but drugged and bound. “Most of the ones Gavin had found suitable, the ones we haven’t disposed, are already on the way to the lord’s mines. These, I am told, are more suitable for you. Are—are they to your liking, milady?”
Kire could imagine what that meant. A doll still needs sustenance after all. “They will suffice. Worth every coin? We shall see.” It didn’t sound like these people knew who Ikegai was, but this Gemini really was the key to finding him. She bent over one of the drugged elves, holding her by the jaw, turning her head one way and then the other as if looking at the woman’s features. “Unlock the cages, I wish to have a better look at your wares.” Kire didn’t really expect them all to obey this; indeed, even the older man she was talking to was hesitant to echo the order. And the men have begun to eye them more closely, going nearer now. But at least could see which of them carried keys, and for those keys that were missing, Kire had more direct ways of opening them, anyway.

A man ran in just then, alarm in his voice. “Someone got in! Found the blasted warehouse entrance,” he said in between curses; a couple of the men ran towards the direction he had indicated. “Search the other corridors and see if he’s got friends. Come—” The man stopped, seeing Kire and her two ‘bodyguards’. The older man Kire was talking to turned to her, shock in his face, suspicion dawning on his face.
Kire grabbed him by his collar, lifted him, and slammed him down onto the ground. The remaining men rushed at them then, but Kire was already lunging at them. The chamber made it hard for them to take advantage of numbers. Kire slashed at her first two opponents, who had gone down easily. Her Ring flashed blue as she beheaded another, then used his knife to throw at the henchman behind him. They may have the numbers, but they were common thugs, and Kire had a lot of rage to spare on fodder today.

--

When Gavin had arrived at the underground caverns earlier, he had asked that the half-elf man be brought to him. Gavin wasn’t particularly tall, and standing in front of this half-breed made him even smaller. “What do they call him again?” he had asked one of Itallo’s men.
“Rab.”
“Leave us.”
He knew some of these men wondered why some green boy like him was throwing orders around, but others would quickly remind them that he directly answered to Itallo, and that his strange magic, whatever it was, was keeping them secret from prying eyes. The fear that surrounded his presence, helped by the fear of Akuma, Itallo, and whatever horrid fate lay in wait for them, would keep them in check. This, at least, Gavin was thankful for. No more Briars to beat him within an inch of his life. Besides—Akuma never needed to lay a finger on him, not since the day they had ensnared him. Gavin gripped the hunting knife hard as he stared up at Rab.

“Were you the one guarding the passage the day that elf woman got away?” Gavin read his expression and gave only a nod of understanding. “Whether or not it was you, it is really suspicious, you know. People around here, I bet they’d jump at the chance to accuse you of something. They’ve also told me that you were stationed at the warehouse yesterday when something unusual had happened. Soon, they will distrust you completely.” Get it all out, before you lose your nerve. He gripped the hunting knife so hard he thought the dragon etching would dig into his skin. His other hand itched to touch the Gemini brooch, and it took all he could to resist this impulse. “When that happens again, when—when something—someone unusual comes again, you come to me. Nobody else.” He paused, searching Rab’s face for any resistance to the idea. “There will be a reward for you, if you do this.”

Now, that time had come. They're here.
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