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11 mos ago
Current Achmed the Snake
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1 yr ago
It's kind of insane to me that people ever met without dating apps. It is just so inefficient.
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1 yr ago
One, polyamory is notoriously difficult to administer
4 likes
1 yr ago
I'm guessing it immediately failed because everyone's computer broke/work got busy/grand parents died
9 likes
2 yrs ago
In short: no don't use basic acrylics.
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Bio

Early 30's. I know just enough about everything to be dangerous.

Most Recent Posts

The maid proved somewhat shaky, a fact that was unsurprising considering her first introduction to her mistress was to wash the sprayed arterial blood off her mistress. Her hands trembled so violently that she pulled Emmaline’s hair several times until Emmaline was forced to take over, relegating the woman to fetching things and holding the hand mirror. Emmaline herself was no better off but had the benefit of long practice of pretending everything was fine. When she was finally presentable she changed into a gown of green silk with brocade of gold thread. Her jewels, largely gifts from Oderick and other suitors had been brought to the room. Amazingly nothing was missing and Emmaline selected a gold ring with a large emerald as her only adornment.

Once she had been made presentable Kasimir and the Captain of the guard tramped in looking puzzled and troubled. Both men were scanning the area and had hands on swords, as though expecting another assassin to leap from the shadows at any moment. Emmaline gave a brief account of events, admitting only to a struggle with the killer.

“What I don’t understand is, what happened to the man’s hand?” the Captain, a rugged handsome man by the name of Kilbrook, puzzled.

“I zink ee cuts it of vith is own digger nes pa? Ven ee feel on moi?” Eleanor suggested. Both Kasimir and Kilbrook looked momentarily taken aback by such a monumentally stupid suggestion.

“Ma’dam,” Kilbrook began awkwardly, clearly embarrassed by her apparent ignorance “such a blade could never…”

“Perheeps ze bleed was inchanteeed vith vicked mageeks,” Eleanor continued, both men looked dubious but thoughtful. Magic blades were something with which they were familiar with, at least in theory. An improbable explanation was always preferable to the inexplicable.

“Oz more concseerned vith vou ee eez and vi ee tri to keel moi,” Eleanor said. Kilbrook looked blank but Kasimir, with more exposure to Eleanor’s erzat accent, leaned over and whispered a translation. Kilbrook’s eyes cleared though were no less troubled.

“He was dressed as a servant but none of the others knew him. I suspect he stole the livery,” Kilbrook said.

“Vy mee ou as nee-ver seed boo to ze gos?” she demanded. Both men exchanged puzzled looks at this but eventually grasped her meaning.

“We ahh… assume it has something to do with Sir Oderick,” Kilbrook said, as though this were not the most obvious thing in the world.

“Whoever killed him must think you know something, or saw something,” Kilbrook expanded. Eleanor nodded her head.

“Ai cannot imaginé what,” she told him, to the Captain’s obvious disappointment. After a few more desultory questions the interview wound to a close and the Captain departed, leaving Eleanor and Kasimir alone. She wrestled with her conscience. The assassin had said that he needed to kill both of them. Should she warn the man? She hadn’t mentioned it to Kilbrook because she was fast coming to the conclusion that there was no one she could trust. No one except Kasimir it seemed.

“Shall we go and get those bon-bons?” Kasimir asked.

“Oui,” Eleanor replied, brightening considerably.

"What should I egg-spect from a bistard," Emmaline returned spitefully, though in truth she had spent worse nights. More than once she had slept in haylofts or stables and once she had been forced to sleep in a bracken thicket to escape a vengeful mark whom had taken being left at the altar with an unreasonable irritation. Idly, she wondered if she could find the time to brew the itching powder that Kasimir most richly deserved. She narrowed her eyes and resolved to make the time.

The bath and the change of clothes was revivifying, though it did little to cool her irritation with Kasimir. Ranald's two gifts, the desire to flee and the desire to profit warred within her as she brushed her hair.

"Kissymere!" she barked, "Ai need a ladees maid to 'élp wiv mon 'air!" There came an inarticulate growl from the parlor which Kasimir was converting to a bedroom/guardroom by dragging a bed in from some adjoining chambers.

"Eet would be inconseestent wiv yur fathair's 'onair if ai wasn't presentabluh," she added for good measure. There came a much put upon sigh and the sound of tramping feet. The problem was that her brush with the Count had made her a figure of far greater interest at court which meant she could extract much more gold from her noble marks. On the other hand, all the gold in the world didn't do you any good if some insane cultist decided to cut your throat. Why had the wanted Oderick dead? He was a Knight and a great warrior yes, but you couldn't swing a dead cat without hitting some swaggering idiot who fit that description, the proof of which was currently defiling her parlor. It had to be the note but who had the note been from, and what did it reveal?

Emmaline cocked her head to make sure that Kasimir had gone, then waved her hand and muttered a few arcane syllables. The mirrored glass in front of her clouded, then resolved to the grisly scene of the murder. She swallowed back bile and forced herself to examine the scene. This was from her memory rather than a true depiction of the scene, but the human eye caught more than its conscious mind realized. There was the note. The paper was fine, well milled, not the cheap pulp on which novels were printed. She peered at it and made a gesture with her hand. The note rotated an floated upwards. Most of the writing was blurred save for one word. Selsmark.

"That is more than enough," a voice said from behind her. The mirror collapsed to reveal a pimply young man in palace livery. He lunged for her but she twisted aside, avoiding the thrust of a long straight poniard. He rushed her anyway pinning her against the mirror as she gripped at his arm, trying to keep the knife from her throat. She tried to scream but he grabbed her mouth with his hand, muffling her shriek.

"Sorry, but we got to kill you and the Count's bastard, Magister's orders," the youth grated as he inexorably pushed the tip of the poniard towards her throat. She could smell his fear, fear and perfume, an odd spiced scent that made her slightly nauseous. Emmaline bit into his hand, tasting blood. He cursed and yanked his hand way then swung a round house punch at her head. Rather than screaming Emmaline yelled another arcane word and ducked. The youth let out a startled cry as his hand vanished into the mirror. Emmaline snapped another word and ended the spell. The youth screamed like a gelded hog and fell backward, his left arm now ending mid wrist, the hand trapped inside the mirror. For a moment it was as neat as an anatomy cross section, the blood began to spurt from the neatly severed artery. He started at the amputated stump in horror for a moment, then screamed in rage and drove the dagger at her desperately. Emmaline fell from the chair, landing on her well padded rump and kicked the stool into her attacker. He half leaped half fell atop her and she managed to avoid being stabbed only by virtue of turning the blow with a high heeled shoe that she had been about to put on.

"My hand!" the assassin howled, still spurting blood all over the chamber. He stabbed downward viciously, but Emmaline managed to roll away, kneeing him hard in the groin and doubling the man over. Desperately she sprang to her feet and ran for the door. The assassin followed, half stumbling half leaping but he loss of blood was overtopping his adrenaline. He fell to his knees, trembling and pale, and glared at her with an implacable hate.

"You will not..." he collapsed onto the floor with a clatter, the dagger rolling free of his fingers. Kasimir burst through the door, sword in hand, a frightened looking maid in the doorway behind him.

"What in Holy Ulric's name... Guards! Assassin's in the palace!" he roared, fairly shaking the timbers. The hue and cry was taken up by others and for the second time in a day the halls were filled with thundering feet and clanking mail. Emmaline sat on the floor, stunned for a moment and then began to cry.

"Are you hurt?" Kasimir demanded.

"Non Non but mon mak up eez ruined," she wailed.

Zoya would have very much liked to brush her hair, but her brush, her clothing and all the possessions she had traveled with were back in her lodgings in Tear. Doubtless the Highlords would seize them. Ultimately that was a cheap price to pay. She was the first Aes Sedai to set foot in the Great Holding of Tear in hundreds of years and the first on to recover anything from it in history. The other Browns were going to be so jealous.

"We of the Tower are invariably honest," Zoya replied.

"As for my name it is Zoya Sakura and I am a sister of the Brown Ajah," she replied haughtily. "As for my purpose..." She unwrapped the colorful cloth which served as her disguise to reveal the original garments beneath. She began to pull the small objects she had looted from the stone free from the various pockets and pouches, setting them on the desk, forming a pile of strange objects. Finally she retrieved the puzzle box she had come to Tear for. It was a cube with rounded edges, its face covered with cunningly set stones that rotated around each other to form stylized maps.

"I learned that this object may allow me to find an artifact which has been lost since the Age of Legends. If I do not recover it, then the Dark One's armies may march across the world when the time comes for the Last Battle." The words hung heavy in the air for a moment.

"What object?" Davian asked warily.

"The Horn of Valere," Zoya told him simply.
Jocasta wiped the blood from the baton on some nearby foliage, then her face screwed up with consternation.

"What?" Markus demanded, bringing his weapon up in case it was needed.

"I just realized I missed a perfectly good 'is that a baton in your pocket' line," she lamented.

"I'm regretting this already.."

__________________________

It took two hours to reach the starport they had overflown during the crash. They briefly took cover as a pair of orbital landers flew overhead, angling towards the crash site. Jocasta doubted they would do more than verify the crash. Two dead scapegoats were as effective as two live ones for Gallanis's purposes. Maybe better because they couldn't contradict his story. So long as they didn't make themselves obvious, they might hope to escape detection for some time.

The starport was a private one, attached to a series of agricultural properties which stretched around it like spokes on a great wheel. Every few hours a light transport would touch down and carts of wheat and barely would be loaded on for transshipment to jump capable craft in orbit.

"Well, it isn't going to be a Nevian Luxury Line," Jocasta observed as she watched the loading from the top of a small hill a half kilometer from the port.
Pedestrians scattered in all directions as Zoya and Davian charged across the quay, iron shod hooves striking sparks from the flagstones. The crowd at the waterfront dissolved into screams of confusion made all the worse as baskets of live poultry were upended in a storm of feathers, squawking, and showers of dung from the panicked birds. The two sailors at the gangplank stood slack mouthed as the two fugitives came on at a gallop. Davian’s steed, the stronger of the two pushed forward and pounded up the gangway, screaming as he made the deck and sawed at the reins to halt the beast before it took him over the far side. The sailors made a half hearted grab for the gang plank as the ship continued to pull away, succeeding in dislodging one end from the pier side. The plank promptly upended and plunged into the widening gap between the ship and the quay. Zoya’s horse screamed and tried to turn, but she grimly yanked the reigns this way and that to keep it on course. The horse leaped into the air, vaulting the gap with the grace of a born steeple chaser and landing on the deck with a hollow boom. A hanging rope caught Zoya across the shoulders and pitched her from the saddle onto the deck. She landed on her back with an impact that drove the wind from her lungs and started spots across her vision. Her horse reared and came close to trampling her but one of the sailors, possessed of quicker wits than the others, snatched the beasts bridle. Screams and curses rang out deafeningly as sailors, spectators, and the soldiers trying to force their way to the ship bawled themselves hoarse trying to be heard.

“Those soldiers will be aboard in a moment!” Davian shouted into her ear, still barely audible over the din. Zoya gasped for air and sat up, tasting blood, she reached down and grasped at a stabbing pain in her bosom, her hand emerging with a sculpted statueete she had taken from the Holding. It was in the shape of an anthropoid snail atop which a naked woman rode, the sword she held aloft red where it had driven into Zoya’s flesh. She stuffed the thing to her pocket and struggled to her feet.

“Take me to the side,” she gasped, too low to possibly be audible, but Davian grasped her intention and dragged her to the side. One of the sailors, confusion on his face, reached out to grab her, but a sharp punch with a beaked fist from Davian dropped the man retching to the deck. Zoya reached the side as the soldiers reached they quay, separated by no more than ten feet. Embracing Saidar she wove wrist thick flows of water and the river surged upwards between the hull and the quay so violently that a spray of dank river water rained down on the deck. The out thrust of the water shoved the ship away from the quay, opening the gap by more than forty feet in a matter of a few seconds. One of the soldiers raised something and Zoya heard Davian curse. He grabbed a wooden belaying pin and swung it. There was a crack and the pin spun from his hand, the quarrel of a crossbow bolt splitting the timber almost in two. It would have pierced her heart if he hadn’t acted her Saidar enhanced perceptions informed her. Several other crossbows raised by she dropped below the bulwark a moment before the series of musical thunks impacted the hull. A few seconds later and the strong current of the Erinn had pulled them out into the channel and the sails, ignored in the confusion by their tenders, billowed and filled. The ship began to pick up speed and with Zoya’s encouragement, the current quickened. Before the crossbowmen could reload the ship was well down river, a white bow wake foaming around her forepost.

“Who in the name of the black depths are you, and what in the name of the Light are you doing on my ship!?” a white bearded man with piercing blue eyes demanded. It took no great leap of logic to deduce he was the captain.

“You may call me Zea,” Zoya said, her voice strong despite her exhaustion and the adrenaline burning through her. “The name of my clan and my salt name are unimportant.” The Captain’s eyes bugged as if he were about to suffer a fit of apoplexy. Then his eyes took in her Sea Folk garb and he settled slightly.

“And why shouldn’t I turn this ship around and take you back right this moment?”

“Because you have incurred the wrath of the Highlords of Tear, but you have not yet incurred the anger of the Athan’miere,” she explained, her tone sharp but controlled.

“Which do you imagine is a greater peril to a sailor?” she underscored. The Captain blanched slightly. Not being able to make port in Tear for a time was an inconvenience, the hostility of the sharp prowed Sea Folk rakers which might fall upon him in anywhere from Shara to the Sea of Storms would certainly prove lethal.

“I will of course bestow a suitable Gift of Passage, assuming this scow doesn’t take us to the Father of Storms,” she added with a twist of her lip. The Captain vacillated a moment, looked back at the furious confusion on the now distant waterfront and sighed. Then he turned to his men.

“What’a’ya starin’ at,” he bawled at his crew, “wanna’be holdin’yer tackle when the mustachios get organized?!”
“I notice,” Jocasta observed, “that you are a lot less talkative when you are in chains.” Markus turned to eye her, his pose making him look particularly hang dog. There were two guards outside, face plates polarized to anonymity. They stood well beyond arms reach and their shotguns were loaded and unslung.

“Being chained up usually has that effect on people,” Markus growled.

“Not if you do it right,” Jocasta countered, earning a grunt of laughter from her partner. One of the goons shook slightly as though chuckling before stilling at a stern glance from his partner.

“Any non bondage related plans for getting us out of here?” he muttered under his breath.

“Not until they move us,” she responded.


By the time the authorities arrived to collect them, a six man team in riot gear, both mercenaries were pretty miserable. These men were bare headed and clearly surprised to find one of the ‘extremely dangerous’ prisoners they had been task to transport was a woman who looked like she should be making holos rather than running around the tag end of a nowhere sector. Nevertheless, they took no chances. First Markus was herded across the hall to use the bathroom, a collar slipped around his neck and attached to two guide poles held by the guards. He was then given a liter of water and a handful of hard protein ration. The process was repeated with Jocasta. One man took position in front and one at the rear with two on either side of their prisoners as they began to transport from the holding facility to the shuttle.

The Mazda transport craft wasn’t far. It was an ancient workhorse of a cargo shuttle, long used to transport prisoners and indentured labor, or slaves depending, and was well set up to contain prisoners. Markus and Jocasta were ushered aboard and moments later they were void borne and on their way.

“Hey!” Jocasta shouted as the engine thrust died away, “hey!”

“Shut up!” one of the guards called back in an irritated tone.

“Hey! I’m Terran, that means I can’t be tried by Colonial courts, you have to extradite me back to the sector capital!” she called. One of the guards laughed.

“Bull shit, even being from Earth dosen’t make you a Terran, you have to be a fucking fancy pants to get citizenship, or be born with a silver spoon or billion shoved up your ass!”

“Check it! I’ve got an ident, it will clear the local database even in this shithole,” she challenged. The guards looked at each other. This was clearly well beyond their experience and while someone claiming to be Terran was a mainstay of holo entertainment few people had ever met one in the flesh.

“Might be worth something in ransom if its true,” one of the guards cautiously observed.

“Worth getting your throat cut if the boss finds out you mean,” another one snapped.

“Hey who is to know if both of them are killed ‘trying to escape’ but we only recover one body?” the first guard replied.

“Alright honey, give us your ident and we will check it out.” Jocasta ignored the hard look from Markus and rattled off a long string of letters and numbers which the guard dutifully punched into his computer.

“Check is running now,” the guard replied, “Going to be pretty upset if this turns out to be a waste of our time girl.”

“It is legit, you’ll see,” Jocasta replied, her voice sounding far away. Markus gave her another look and reached out a hand to steady her. Minutes dragged by as the message was beamed to the systems beacon and then routed through the QEF. A few minutes later there was a beep and the guards gathered around the console.

“Holy shit she was telling the truth,” the lead guard gasped. There was another beep, then another.

“That isn’t the comms…”

“It’s a proximity alarm!”

There was a mad scramble for the controls but the mournful dirge of the proximity alarm grew louder and more instant.

“I’d hold onto something,” Jocasta advised and wrapped herself around the bars a moment before the whole world lurched sideways in a colossal scream of rending ceramsteel and screaming decompression. Escaping atmosphere blasted in all directions, carrying with it a storm of dust, trash, and detritus. Blue white sparks crackled down the bulkheads as electrical systems shorted and suppressant cylinders dumped their payloads. Jocasta managed to hold on as they were flung violent backwards. Two of the guards crashed into the bars, one went head first his neck snapping audibly and his head twisting off at a wrong angle. The other hit back first and bounced, Jocasta let go of the bars and grabbed him by the webbing belt, dragging him back against the bars. He kicked and struggled against her until Markus hand grabbed the shock rod from the mans belt and jabbed it into his kidney with an arching discharge that sent the man into spastic twitches. There was a second enormous crash and the man flew loose of Jocasta’s grip. She snatched key from his belt as he went and thrust it against the door plate. Internal partitions were snapping down, sealing sections of the ship to stop the atmospheric leakage. One of the unfortunate guards was sprawled across the divider between two sections. Two thousand pounds of piston pressure cut him in half diagonally from hip to shoulder with a sound like breaking into a lobster. Artificial gravity failed and blood, dirt, and bone fragments all lifted off like a suspended rainstorm. Jocasta kicked her way out of the cell to retrieve the guards side army. The others were alive, mostly, but on the other side of a hull partion. One of them was screaming and waving his own weapon in front of the plexisteel view port though his shouts didn’t carry through an inch of steel and the ongoing scream of the crippled ship and wailing alarm claxons.

“What in the name of the Red God was that?” Markus demanded, jamming the shockrod against the partition and pulling the trigger. The guard on the other side flew backwards from the suddenly electrified surface. Non lethal, but certainly painful.

“I crashed the Shark’s shuttle into us,” Jocasta explained, peering through a port out into space. Red heat shimmer was already beginning to limb the aperture.

“You… how?” Markus demanded. Jocata floated like a drowned thing, her hair out of control in zero-g.

“Not important, what is important is that we going through atmospheric re-entry now. We are going to crash somewhere down there. With a little luck, we might even survive the impact,” she added cheerily.

Zoya followed Davian down a series of winding corridors, cutting through access corridors, empty barracks and storerooms. The Stone was an immense structure, the greatest fortress in the world; it could contain whole armies to garrison it. Fortunately for the fugitives, that very fact meant that much of it was empty during times of relative peace. What servants they did pass spared them curious glances, but didn’t offer comment or obstruction.

They were only a few stories above the ground when the air was split by the sound of a great gong. The sound resonated throughout the stone, startlingly flights of gulls from their nests in great clouds of feathers and tumultuous squawking. The had gotten further than Zoya had any right to hope before the alarm had been raised. A squad of Defenders, half dressed and scrambling, rushed around the corner to confront the pair.

“What are you standing around for!” Zoya shouted, “There are intruders in the building and the Highlords are in residence! Get up there and secure them!” The guards gave them a further confused glance and then the officer in charge nodded.

“Move!” he shouted and lead his men towards the stairs to the higher level.

“You’re lucky that worked,” Davian said, glancing at the departing squad. Zoya sniffed.

“Men usually respond to someone acting like they are in command,” Zoya replied. The clanking of boots alerted them that more soldiers were coming up from below. Davian grabbed the Aes Sedai and hauled her into one of the many turrets which studded the side of the stone and closed the door. The interior was dry and dusty, little more than a gallery with loopholes cut into the stone to allow archers to shoot down at besiegers. Through the loopholes the city of Tear sprawled out, tumbling gracelessly down to the river of the River Erinin.

“There is no way we will make it down without a fight,” Davian said, moving over to the loophole and looking out. Below them could be seen another projecting turret, and below that the slate roof of the stables. The drop between each was easily fifty yards.

“Any chance you know how to climb?” he asked. Zoya gave him a superior smile.

“I am a thief, afterall.”

Getting through the loophole was no easy feat, particularly for Zoya’s hips, but with a good deal of twisting she managed to force herself out. It had been many years since she had made her living as street waif in Tanchico, but she had climbed to the roofs many times. Davian followed her out, navigating the climb with ease. The wind tugged at her clothing and she focused on her hand holds rather than the dizzying drop below. Hand over hand she eased herself down the face of the Stone, pressing herself as flat as she could to minimize the area the wind could get at. Other gongs and bells were sounding in the city bellow as the alarm spread. Zoya reached the roof of the lower turret and slid down the roof to the edge. Davian landed lightly behind her.

“If I’d known I’d be doing this I’d have bought a rope,” he griped.

“If I’d known I’d be doing this, I wouldn’t be doing this,” Zoya retorted and gazed down at the fifty yard drop to the roof of the stables. The lowest section of the walls was the smoothest, there were no practicable hand holds that she could see. They could try to climb back into these loopholes, but that would have them running into the soldiers swarming into the Stone in response to the alarm.

“We will have to jump,” she decided. Davian’s eyes widened in alarm.

“It’s fifty yards!” Davian replied incredulously.

“Try to stay against the wall, the friction will help,” Zoya advised and then stepped off into nothing. Friction or no, she plunged like a catapult stone. Saidar filled her and she again wove flows of air, this time in a great gust that rushed up the front of the Stone sowing her fall markedly. She hit the slate roof of the stables, bending her knees to absorb the shock. Looking up she gestured at Davian. He mouthed an obscenity then jumped. Zoya sent a blast of air up to meet him, stronger than the one she had used for herself. He hit the roof with little more than a tap of boots on slate. Zoya sagged from the effort, not having yet recovered from her earlier exertions.

“What is the plan now?” Davian asked.

“We steal two horses and ride for the waterfront, there is a ship about to get underway, I saw her spreading her foresails. If we can get aboard, I can get us away.”

"I was having the most wonderful dream," Jocasta groaned as she sat up. Her hair slowly moved through a progression of colors as the cocktail of venom and anti-venom worked it's way through her system. She awkwardly sat up, steadying herself with an arm on the deck. Her eyes focused as she beheld the mutant, the snake man hissed as she staggered over to the controls before the pod.

"Just businesses, nothing personal!" the mutant cried. Jocasta reached up and took hold of the evacuation lever.

"Nooooo!!!" the snake man shrieked. Jocasta sighed and let go of the handle stepping away.

"Well," she sighed, "I suppose it is hard to be in a bad mood when you are about to become a quarter of a million dabluntz richer."

The snake man sagged back against the interior of the pod in relief. Jocasta took a seat in one of the console seats, paging idly through the shuttles internal systems.

"Speaking of which, we better get airborne before any surviving Mercs or Sharks catch up with us."
Zoya let out an explosive breath as she released her flows fighting the urge to simply collapse from exhaustion. It as one thing to weave or tie a flow, it was another to keep so many alive for so long. She had been ready to end the men's lives to save her own, but it would have taken all of her flagging strength.

"I've already sworn all the Oaths I plan to," Zoya replied, reaching out to touch the lock. The simple flow of Earth was a tremendous effort but the lock fell open with a click. She tried to walk out of the cell with her head held high but she was more than a little unsteady.

"None the less, I thank you for these men's lives," she replied, nudging one of the senseless defenders with her boot. "It would have been a pity to have to kill them." Davian looked her up and down, as though trying to decide whether she was joking. It was hard to joke when the Oath prevented you from telling an untruth.

"I wonder how they figured it out," Zoya mused as she edged towards the door. "I played everything perfectly."

"One of them recognized your name, I guess pigeons fly both ways," Davian replied.

"Bad luck then," Zoya decided. Her arms were growing heavy and she staggered slightly. Davian caught her and steadied her, making her simultaneously try to smile and scowl with an overall effect that looked like she had just eaten something unpleasant.

"Criminals often blame bad luck in my experience," Davian replied.

"I told you I hadn't stolen anything," Zoya insisted stubbornly. At the time she had told him that it had been true of course, and she didn't feel any need to bring him more up to date.

"Now we have to get out of here.. before... more Defenders... show up," she gasped. Davian was already leading her towards the door.
Zoya was feeling so self congratulatory that the first crossbowman stepping through the door caught her by surprise. The bearded Defender raised the weapon but hesitated a critical second as one of the guards, unaware of the situation steeped defensively in front of the door.

“Move you fool!” the Defender shouted “she is a damn witch!” Even as the words were leaving his mouth flows of air wrapped him, freezing him in place. A second crossbowman, then a third crowded into the chamber and were similarly immobilized. The two guards spun to face her eyes wide. The first she wrapped in air, the strain of so many weaves making sweat spring from her skin. She drank deeper of Saidar, pulling down a dangerous amount of power to weave the last man. She couldn’t quite manage to contain him completely; her flows enough to hold him in place but not totally immobilize him. With wide eyes and teeth gritted he forced his leveled pike forward, inch by inch as though driving it through a wooden wall by main strength.

Don’t make me kill you Zoya wanted to scream but the effort of maintaining so many weaves forced her teeth to clench in a riktus of effort. It was clear that her life was in danger, but killing a half dozen Defenders of the Stone would virtually guarantee she never left Tear alive, even if she managed it the High Lords would hound her till the end of her days. Wind stirred in the chamber; spill over from so many flows of air. The pike point came closer. A queasy feeling came over her. How would she do it? Strangle them? To slow. Fire? To much effort to weave another flow. Blades of Air… messy but her only realistic option. Zoya’s vision began to waver from the crushing strain and her bones seemed to burn from the amount of the Power she was wielding. It was now or never.
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