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The Game of Kings

MadMaxim said:
Partash catches Doral's silver coin, gets a large mug of water and carries it up to Morika's room. He watches as she collapses on the bed and then he shrugs: "I pray for you to be better in the morning, my child. May the Host grant you the strength to overcome the intoxication you have put yourself through... Rest well, Morika." Then he closes the door to her room and walks downstairs with a small prayer in Quor to il-Yannah on his lips.
Morika opens one eye at Partash's entrance, and her eyes reflect the light like an animal's do. Her muscles tense until she can get a clear view of the mug in his hand. She takes it and sniffs it a few times, then drinks it down. "mmthanksmm..." she mumbles, then curls up on the bed again.
 

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Sail and Scepter (later evening) - Dining Room - Vhir, Glasia

Listening to the conversation a moment, the kobold does not seem to hear what he wanted. It finishes its meal in silence, lost in thought. When finished, it stands, gathering the loose leaf sheets of the Chronicle with him, stating to the girl, "I will retire to the suite for now. My work is complete until word from our many ears return."
 

Glasia smiles softly at the kobold. "Thank you for your company. I'm glad you are here with us during this endeavor." She stands and follows him to the stairs. "I'll retire as well. Hopefully morning brings us the information you seek."
 

Sail and Scepter (later evening) - Dining Room - Vhir, Glasia
The kobold says nothing, only nods, then retires to the room, going the back way if possible. Once there, it reads the paper in silence, waiting for a message that may or may not come. But it is patient, patient as Dragons.
 

Sail and Scepter, Port Verge (evening) – Vhir, Glasia

Port Verge's most luxurious accommodations awaited Vhir and Glasia as they made their way to the third floor of the Sail and Scepter. Opening the ornately carved door, they found a large common room to be the center of the suite. On the wall opposite the door, about twenty feet away, tall double doors of glass lead to a balcony. They had a prime a view of the harbor, and beyond it, the foggy channel between Port Verge and the neighboring island of Trebaz Sinara. On the right and south-facing side of the central room, two bedrooms lay beyond a pair of dark wooden doors; a smaller sleeping chamber was located on the opposite wall, but the room next to it is larger than any of the bedrooms, and looking through the slightly ajar double doors, it appeared to be for conducting meetings and other business.

Thick woven carpets covered the floors, and a few tasteful paintings of scenic vistas adorned the common room's walls. Ornate brass lanterns along the walls had been lit to keep out the oncoming night--the eastern horizon has already grown dark. There was a small fireplace in each of the side rooms, and a large on in the common room. The stone façade and hearth were warm from the low fires the maid had left burning, making the rooms more cheery and comfortable. Facing the large fireplace in the common room was two high-backed chairs upholstered in blue, and a chaise and two squatter chairs were arranged around a low table in the center. Near the balcony doors, overlooking the harbor, was a small round breakfast table and four chairs.

The girl and the kobold made themselves at home, unpacking their things into the armoires and onto the desks and tables in their rooms of choice. In the largest bedroom was a lavish canopy bed, clothed in the same blue as the chairs in the common room. The adjoining room held two smaller and simpler beds, and the third chamber beside the meeting room had one small bed.

As they had just about settled in for the night, after properly moving into the suite, a brisk and officious knock sounded on the front door. The bellman’s smooth muffled voice announced, “Visitor for Master Vhir, a dwarf by the name of Bourstart. Since you were expecting a message, I took the liberty of bringing him up with me.”



OOC: Question for Bront: is Carver headed back for the Sail and Scepter, or is he joining Doral and Partash on their endeavors?
 

Sail and Scepter, Port Verge (evening) – Vhir, Glasia (and Dragen?)

The kobold spent the time after dinner working on the various puzzles in his old news leaf, thinking obscure thoughts. It had noticed the bowman had retired to one of the rooms, but said nothing of it. The construct had not yet returned, but it would have followed orders---that was their nature, after all.

When the knock came, the kobold ensured that the bedroom doors were closed and then answered. Seeing the dwarf there, it nodded and made a gesture to the meeting room to the side. It appeared not to recognize the new dwarf. "Master Bourstart, good evening to you. I do not believe I had the pleasure of your company earlier. I assume your colleagues from the Thresher informed you of our conversation. What news?"

OOC: I'm assuming that Bourstart was not with the original dwarven contingent.
 


Shark Tank Tavern, Port Verge (evening) – Doral, Carver, Partash

"Well, let's get going, shall we?" Partash asks while walking towards the exit.
 

The door glides open, and Vhir immediately recognizes the scarred, dark-haired dwarf. His fatigue is clear as he shuffles into the fine common room, the door closing quietly behind him. Getting straight to the point, he speaks as soon as the three are alone. "Good evening to you as well, sir. I came straightaway from a long meeting with the Prince, and the news won't be to your liking," Bourstrart admits with a grimace as he takes a seat at the round table near the opposite wall. "Kinndareck told the Prince about your concerns, and... he didn't expect the news from him, I can tell you. He wanted to know how we knew about it," the continues, scratching his beard. "He could have kept it to himself, but there's more delicate buisness here than just your Baron. Kinndareck told Kolberkon about you and your entourage. He said a kobold told him he came from the Blacksurf Principalities to negotiate. Aye, and that interested the Prince."

"Well, he said that he'd been dealing with trouble from the Blacksurf Principality a'fore the Last War was over. Said that you--your bosses, I mean--aren't 'civilized like me or you.' He told Kinndareck not to worry himself with it, said he'd deal with it himself." The dwarf, previously looking down in thought, turns his eyes up to meet Vhir's. "That was all we said about that... no, no. The Prince told us--laughed a bit--said that 'even the Gaardasci boys aren't fool enough to attack me with their father here.'" Bourstrart shrugs, looking uncomfortable. "That's your news," he finishes lamely, standing up.

"I'm just the messenger, but I don't think I'll see you again. It looks as if the Prince wants to deal with you, face to face," the dwarf predicts. He makes for the door with a nod to the wizard and warlock duo. "Goodnight, sir, m'lady."
 
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Middle Docks District, Port Verge (evening) – Doral, Partash, Carver

The trio climbs the gentle slope inland a few blocks, in the general direction of both the Sail & Scepter and the Prince’s manor and barracks complex, before turning left and heading down a narrow yet still decorative street. They continued one for a little while, watching the middle-class commercial district slowly dilapidate and give way to a poorer working class neighborhood.

Still lined with businesses and shop-windows, the street narrowed and darkened still, and began to meander back and forth in a winding route as it channeled south into the poor half of the city. They passed the occasional drunk staggering out of a pub, one young couple wandering aimlessly, and an old man sleeping half-upright on a stone stoop.

Coming to an intersection with another main roadway, the companions were stopped by a man sitting cross-legged on the street corner. He was thin and filthy, and his arms were somewhat crooked.

“Spare ‘ny copp’r? Th’ poor litt’le un needs it bad…” Fearing their disinterest, he held up one arm to reveal a tiny scrap of fur nestled there, which proved to be a ragged kitten. “She’s too litt’le to kill rats… Th’ rats jus’ about killed her, that’s when I found ‘er…”

Across the way, two women stood at the side of a brick building, watching to see what the strangers would do. Presently, they stepped forth and crossed the cobbled street. In the lamplight their clothes, which were at once both elaborate and poor, as well as the very way they moved, made clear that they were what Carver had described as ‘women who hung out on the corners.’

“Good evening, gentlemen. And warforged.” She was smiling girlish way, though not un-flirtatiously. “We were afraid to come over and say hello, not many newcomers here that aren’t sailors…”

“You look more like Prince’s men than anything… But not nearly so rough-cut.” Her friend smiled also, and swung forward a little bit in Doral’s direction, gauging his reaction before righting herself and smiling politely to the warforged.

The first spoke up again, turning to Partash. “Normally we love a newcomer, y’see, but Mirren… He told Jisia”—a slight nod of her head towards the second girl—“tonight that there’s Blacksurf in the city.”

In what was seemingly the first genuine expression either of them had shown, both of their smiles weakened into brief frowns of concern and mingled fear. They recovered, though, and the first girl continued, stepping closer to Partash as if seeking reassurance: “But a Blacksurf wouldn’t even stop to look at a beggar’s cat, would he?”

Hearing acknowledgment of his presence, the man sitting on the curb perked up and turned his neck to face the girls, completely apathetic to their sharing the nightly money-making business with him, but his face nevertheless still full of curiosity. “What else di’ th’ Capt’in Mirren say?”

Jisia looked away from Doral, and replied in a more ordinary, much less honey-sweet voice: “Don’t go spreadin’ rumors, beggar. The spies are being taken care of tonight, I’ll tell.”

The beggar smiled, appeased. “Good, good… spies are worse than rats, y’know.” He said it almost as if trying to inform his cat, which he returned his attention to since it had woken.
 
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