Jon Potter
First Post
[Realms #333] A Change if Plan
Feln growled in disgust and took a long step forward, his face twisted into an angry sneer. "Is there not a warning shot to be had or a blunted arrow to drive home your point?!" he bellowed, shaking his fist at the soldiers.
The captain turned back to face the group and regarded Feln coldly. Everyone - except maybe Feln, himself - saw the way the captain's hand drifted to the handle of his sword. "Do not question my actions, ogreling! My orders-"
"Your orders?" the half-ogre cut him off with a snort. "What good is it to block just this road? Could a vagabond or man of the wild not make his way past through the wilds?" The captain narrowed his eyes and drew his sword then, brandishing it at the half-ogre. Both Morier and Karak could tell from that motion that the guard captain knew his way around such a weapon and neither had any doubt that, if he'd wanted to, he could have given Feln a nasty wound as he drew the blade.
"Enough, half-caste! I've seen enough of your kind in my day to be intimidated by you!" the captain growled. "I gave you a chance because I'd heard rumors of an ogreling who traveled the duchy with an albino elf. And you've a merciful sister in your ranks as well. But don't think that I won't have my men take you down same as any plague-carrier if you try anything with me. Anything at all." The man emphasized his point by stabbing his sword in Feln's direction. Glancing up, the half-ogre saw that the archers at the barricade were looking his way with arrows nocked. He was fairly confident that he could take the sword away from the little soldier in front of him and new full well that he could take an arrow or three without serious injury, but Lela and the others...
He stepped back and bowed his head politely. "I understand the weight you carry, captain," Feln said calmly. "I too have had to carry out difficult orders, hard as that may be to believe. I was not always of this body. So recently in fact, I forget it at times." The captain's face softened a bit and he lowered his sword to a purely defensive position.
"You're better spoken than most ogrelings I've met," replied the man. "And you're right. This duty is an ugly burden to bear. But bear it I must for the sake of the duchy. For all of Pellham, maybe."
Shamalin knew the man was telling the truth - at least the truth as he knew it. She had quickly cast Detect Thoughts as soon as the soldiers' attention was diverted by the sick man and woman. She almost lost concentration on the spell when the archers had killed them both and then the donkey as well. But she'd endured much horror of late and watching the murders affected her somewhat less than it would have a moonsdance ago, And the more she concentrated, the more thoughts she could pick up from the man... and from Feln as well; the half-ogre was within the area of effect from her spell and there was no way to exclude him from its power.
When Feln spoke about carrying out 'difficult orders' Shamalin saw men murdered silently in their sleep or in the bath and she cringed. Still it was the fact that she had access to the half-ogre's thoughts that allowed her to discern where he was going as he spoke and warn Morier of his intention to reveal Lela's sickness.
"Lela, I think the choice is yours.," Feln was saying. "We all risk sickness if we go in, but I will gladly take that risk if you feel there is a chance you could be-"
"WOAH!" Morier shouted, raising his hands and stepping forward. He had a nervous and smile on his lips that looked positively strained. "Getting a little ahead of ourselves aren't we, Feln? Shouldn't we discuss this a bit? Privately?"
"What?" Feln scowled as Morier motioned him away from the captain.
"Did you not just see these guys shoot a sick couple on sight?" Morier hissed and Feln shrugged in reply.
"I understand, but the little sprite needs assistance," he told the albino. "And if these guys want to try and take us, they do so at their own peril."
Morier slapped his forehead in frustration.
"What news from the temple in Rhadcliffe?" Shamalin asked the captain, distracting him from the exchange between Morier and Feln.
"The temple of Flor, mi'lady?" the man asked as he sheathed his sword. When Shamalin nodded, he became quickly interested in the toes of his boots. "That's a good question... a very good question. And the truth is, I don't know. The Duke sent at least three riders to Rhadcliffe to contact the temple when people first started getting sick. But none of them's returned that I know of." Shamalin's expression grew troubled.
"How long since this outbreak began?" she asked and the captain answered quickly.
"Right after the Fall Festival," he said. "I remember it well because at first folk thought it might just be some bad mushrooms or some such got served up at the harvest feast. But when things didn't get any better after a week-"
"Sorry, sir, but we were in disagreement about whether or not we wanted to get involved... that plague looks right nasty," Feln interrupted, returning from his conference with Morier. The half-ogre smiled disconcertingly and went on, "Could we offer you some assistance and possibly bring word to a nearby healer? If not nearby, than the closest one? It woud be our honor to assist Duke Diliham in his quest to keep the Realm safe for all of us!"
"Good cover. I really believe that one." Huzair muttered sarcastically to Morier.
"Aye!" Karak grumbled. "Who elected the half-ogre to speak for us?"
"He's sure no Ledare," Morier sighed.
"Nearest healer'd be the herbalist, Mistress Feathertouch," the captain told Feln, pointing west. "About half a day in that direction. But this is well beyond her abilities, I'd reckon. She specializes in midwifery and the like." He fixed a suspicious eye on Feln and asked, "Why would you lot want to go risking your necks to help me and my men?"
Feln didn't have a ready answer to that, but luckily Shamalin did.
"My lord, it is evident that your men are steadfast in their conviction to you and to Duke Diliham. So, too, are we committed to our purpose," she said smoothly, a trifle surprised at how readily the lie came to her lips. "What my companion means is that we carry word from Holy Mother Mellona in Floxen, intended for High Matriarch Kosteny in Rhadcliffe. We are seeking anyone at the temple who may receive our news."
"Bad time to be delivering messages, mi'lady," the captain said grimly. "As I've already said, three of the Duke's own have gone missing. There's reports of undead and other abominations to the south, not just disease. What's so important that you'll risk all that?"
Shamalin raised an eyebrow and replied archly, "Certainly your duke respects the honor of the religious institutions within his borders. Or do your orders include the interrogation of messengers as well as the termination of breakers?" The captain nodded his acceptance and took a step back.
"Flor doesn't have quite the sway here as she does in Rhadcliffe, but I've no reason to question you further, mi'lady. The clergy's business is its own," He hooked his thumbs into his sword belt and nodded toward the barricade. "You can pass if that's your wish. I've warned you as well as I know how and I won't stop you from leaving. But If you leave by that road, there's no returning to Diliham Duchy no matter what tidings you bring back from Rhadcliffe."
"Thank you, captain," she said with a polite nod. Beckoning him closer you added conspiratorially, "In all honesty, good sir, the contents of our message are as dark as the taint which creeps over your lands. We bring news of... events... in Floxen."
"I didn't realize that you had such an interest in our manor project, Shamalin," Feln said as they marched westward away from the road leading toward Rhadcliffe and instead more directly toward the pull in Morier's head. As they'd left the roadblock, Shamalin had mentioned the manor project to the captain, but loud enough that his men probably heard as well. "It is commendable that your men serve their lord so faithfully in such difficult times," she'd said by way of farewell. "If ever they find their contracts to the duke fulfilled, there is a man by the name of Wyverneye in Floxen who is looking for such skill to oppose the evils of this land."
"As I've said before, Feln," the cleric told him now as they walked. "You're trying to turn a place of the darkest evil into a bastion of light. Those efforts shouldn't go unnoticed or unappreciated." Feln grinned down at her and said nothing more.
Later, as the road passed down through a narrow gully with steep, rocky walls, talk turned back to the debate over whether they should have pressed on to the temple of Flor. "I still say my dwarven constitution'd be enough to go in and fetch a cleric to heal up Lela proper," Karak reiterated but the sprite shook her head.
"We need to move on," she said. "There is no sense in all of us dying before we get to Rhadcliffe."
"I know I will probably die soon anyways from this disease, so I might as well not be afraid to go in there," Huzair quipped, trailing cigar smoke as he went. "People who adventure with you don't live very long, do they, Morier?"
The albino shot him an evil look and Karak had opened his mouth to say something when the first arrows started hissing down at them from above. The ambush but a quick end to further debate.
Feln growled in disgust and took a long step forward, his face twisted into an angry sneer. "Is there not a warning shot to be had or a blunted arrow to drive home your point?!" he bellowed, shaking his fist at the soldiers.
The captain turned back to face the group and regarded Feln coldly. Everyone - except maybe Feln, himself - saw the way the captain's hand drifted to the handle of his sword. "Do not question my actions, ogreling! My orders-"
"Your orders?" the half-ogre cut him off with a snort. "What good is it to block just this road? Could a vagabond or man of the wild not make his way past through the wilds?" The captain narrowed his eyes and drew his sword then, brandishing it at the half-ogre. Both Morier and Karak could tell from that motion that the guard captain knew his way around such a weapon and neither had any doubt that, if he'd wanted to, he could have given Feln a nasty wound as he drew the blade.
"Enough, half-caste! I've seen enough of your kind in my day to be intimidated by you!" the captain growled. "I gave you a chance because I'd heard rumors of an ogreling who traveled the duchy with an albino elf. And you've a merciful sister in your ranks as well. But don't think that I won't have my men take you down same as any plague-carrier if you try anything with me. Anything at all." The man emphasized his point by stabbing his sword in Feln's direction. Glancing up, the half-ogre saw that the archers at the barricade were looking his way with arrows nocked. He was fairly confident that he could take the sword away from the little soldier in front of him and new full well that he could take an arrow or three without serious injury, but Lela and the others...
He stepped back and bowed his head politely. "I understand the weight you carry, captain," Feln said calmly. "I too have had to carry out difficult orders, hard as that may be to believe. I was not always of this body. So recently in fact, I forget it at times." The captain's face softened a bit and he lowered his sword to a purely defensive position.
"You're better spoken than most ogrelings I've met," replied the man. "And you're right. This duty is an ugly burden to bear. But bear it I must for the sake of the duchy. For all of Pellham, maybe."
Shamalin knew the man was telling the truth - at least the truth as he knew it. She had quickly cast Detect Thoughts as soon as the soldiers' attention was diverted by the sick man and woman. She almost lost concentration on the spell when the archers had killed them both and then the donkey as well. But she'd endured much horror of late and watching the murders affected her somewhat less than it would have a moonsdance ago, And the more she concentrated, the more thoughts she could pick up from the man... and from Feln as well; the half-ogre was within the area of effect from her spell and there was no way to exclude him from its power.
When Feln spoke about carrying out 'difficult orders' Shamalin saw men murdered silently in their sleep or in the bath and she cringed. Still it was the fact that she had access to the half-ogre's thoughts that allowed her to discern where he was going as he spoke and warn Morier of his intention to reveal Lela's sickness.
"Lela, I think the choice is yours.," Feln was saying. "We all risk sickness if we go in, but I will gladly take that risk if you feel there is a chance you could be-"
"WOAH!" Morier shouted, raising his hands and stepping forward. He had a nervous and smile on his lips that looked positively strained. "Getting a little ahead of ourselves aren't we, Feln? Shouldn't we discuss this a bit? Privately?"
"What?" Feln scowled as Morier motioned him away from the captain.
"Did you not just see these guys shoot a sick couple on sight?" Morier hissed and Feln shrugged in reply.
"I understand, but the little sprite needs assistance," he told the albino. "And if these guys want to try and take us, they do so at their own peril."
Morier slapped his forehead in frustration.
"What news from the temple in Rhadcliffe?" Shamalin asked the captain, distracting him from the exchange between Morier and Feln.
"The temple of Flor, mi'lady?" the man asked as he sheathed his sword. When Shamalin nodded, he became quickly interested in the toes of his boots. "That's a good question... a very good question. And the truth is, I don't know. The Duke sent at least three riders to Rhadcliffe to contact the temple when people first started getting sick. But none of them's returned that I know of." Shamalin's expression grew troubled.
"How long since this outbreak began?" she asked and the captain answered quickly.
"Right after the Fall Festival," he said. "I remember it well because at first folk thought it might just be some bad mushrooms or some such got served up at the harvest feast. But when things didn't get any better after a week-"
"Sorry, sir, but we were in disagreement about whether or not we wanted to get involved... that plague looks right nasty," Feln interrupted, returning from his conference with Morier. The half-ogre smiled disconcertingly and went on, "Could we offer you some assistance and possibly bring word to a nearby healer? If not nearby, than the closest one? It woud be our honor to assist Duke Diliham in his quest to keep the Realm safe for all of us!"
"Good cover. I really believe that one." Huzair muttered sarcastically to Morier.
"Aye!" Karak grumbled. "Who elected the half-ogre to speak for us?"
"He's sure no Ledare," Morier sighed.
"Nearest healer'd be the herbalist, Mistress Feathertouch," the captain told Feln, pointing west. "About half a day in that direction. But this is well beyond her abilities, I'd reckon. She specializes in midwifery and the like." He fixed a suspicious eye on Feln and asked, "Why would you lot want to go risking your necks to help me and my men?"
Feln didn't have a ready answer to that, but luckily Shamalin did.
"My lord, it is evident that your men are steadfast in their conviction to you and to Duke Diliham. So, too, are we committed to our purpose," she said smoothly, a trifle surprised at how readily the lie came to her lips. "What my companion means is that we carry word from Holy Mother Mellona in Floxen, intended for High Matriarch Kosteny in Rhadcliffe. We are seeking anyone at the temple who may receive our news."
"Bad time to be delivering messages, mi'lady," the captain said grimly. "As I've already said, three of the Duke's own have gone missing. There's reports of undead and other abominations to the south, not just disease. What's so important that you'll risk all that?"
Shamalin raised an eyebrow and replied archly, "Certainly your duke respects the honor of the religious institutions within his borders. Or do your orders include the interrogation of messengers as well as the termination of breakers?" The captain nodded his acceptance and took a step back.
"Flor doesn't have quite the sway here as she does in Rhadcliffe, but I've no reason to question you further, mi'lady. The clergy's business is its own," He hooked his thumbs into his sword belt and nodded toward the barricade. "You can pass if that's your wish. I've warned you as well as I know how and I won't stop you from leaving. But If you leave by that road, there's no returning to Diliham Duchy no matter what tidings you bring back from Rhadcliffe."
"Thank you, captain," she said with a polite nod. Beckoning him closer you added conspiratorially, "In all honesty, good sir, the contents of our message are as dark as the taint which creeps over your lands. We bring news of... events... in Floxen."
"I didn't realize that you had such an interest in our manor project, Shamalin," Feln said as they marched westward away from the road leading toward Rhadcliffe and instead more directly toward the pull in Morier's head. As they'd left the roadblock, Shamalin had mentioned the manor project to the captain, but loud enough that his men probably heard as well. "It is commendable that your men serve their lord so faithfully in such difficult times," she'd said by way of farewell. "If ever they find their contracts to the duke fulfilled, there is a man by the name of Wyverneye in Floxen who is looking for such skill to oppose the evils of this land."
"As I've said before, Feln," the cleric told him now as they walked. "You're trying to turn a place of the darkest evil into a bastion of light. Those efforts shouldn't go unnoticed or unappreciated." Feln grinned down at her and said nothing more.
Later, as the road passed down through a narrow gully with steep, rocky walls, talk turned back to the debate over whether they should have pressed on to the temple of Flor. "I still say my dwarven constitution'd be enough to go in and fetch a cleric to heal up Lela proper," Karak reiterated but the sprite shook her head.
"We need to move on," she said. "There is no sense in all of us dying before we get to Rhadcliffe."
"I know I will probably die soon anyways from this disease, so I might as well not be afraid to go in there," Huzair quipped, trailing cigar smoke as he went. "People who adventure with you don't live very long, do they, Morier?"
The albino shot him an evil look and Karak had opened his mouth to say something when the first arrows started hissing down at them from above. The ambush but a quick end to further debate.
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