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The Realms of Enlightenment: The Grey Companions

[Realms #396] Training for Battle

"I had never seen somethin' like that," Karak mused as he swung his waraxe half-heartedly through the air around himself. He harrumphed. "'Course it take more than a mere word to rattle a dwarf, but it seemed to have the rest of ye in its grip." Ayremac's eyes grew wide with disbelief at the dwarf's words.

"Karak!!" he hissed, placing one finger over his mouth. When he had the warrior's attention, Ayremac pointed out to the woods and said, "Listen..."

The dwarf cocked his head, his lips set in a firm line. After a hushed moment, he gave the holy warrior a dismissive wave of his hand.

"Ayremac, I would nae stray too far. I know you be likin' yer new wings an' all, but if that elf has slipped inta the wood, then I say let him," Karak said, turning away from the woods. As he did so, he stepped on the corpse of a large black bird. "I'm just wonderin' if'n I can 'ave a Word like that for me axe. Hmmm... I'll have to speak to Balazaar about that."

Undaunted, Ayremac took another cautious step into the trees. Karak ignored him and continued to address the rest of the group. He looked appraisingly at Morier's armor and said, "Speakin' o' Balazaar, I've been thinkin'. I think it be time to head back to Floxen."

"So you're just going to let the elf get away?" Huzair asked, incredulous.

"He's slunk away with his wee fairy tail 'tween his legs!" Karak grumbled. "Good riddance, says I!"

"Short-sighted fool..." Huzair hissed and turned invisible.

"Hold on!" Morier said loudly, stepping out from behind the cleric. "I think it's a good idea to search for this mage while we've got him weakened. But let's not go rushing off without a plan. Let's cover each other from all directions that we're able to cover, and centralize back at this thing that Ixin found." The eldritch warrior looked down at the strange bit of flesh and curled his lip in disgust. "Let's head off in pairs in maybe a 500 pace radius. If you find nothing after that, come back to the group here at the center. Agreed?"

Shamalin, Karak and Ayremac nodded. Huzair reappeared and shrugged.

"Come on, Huzair," Morier said to the wizard. "Let's you and I see if we can't go shake this thing out of the bushes." Huzair hesitated.

"Uh, shouldn't I go with Ixin?" he suggested. "I'm the only one who can speak to her, after all." Morier sighed.

"Fine," he said and turned to the dwarf. "Karak? Any objections to pairing off with me?"

"Nope," Karak replied, hefting his waraxe and marching off toward the trees. "But I'm still thinkin' this be a fool's errand. We have a might big load of items here that we could sell and transfer inta belongings we need..." His booming voice started to fade as he hacked his way into the brambles.

"Be careful, Karak!" Huzair called. "Remember how I found Morier last time he was off running around in the woods!" He indicated his lower body, paying particular attention to his pelvis, and winked when Morier turned to give him a dirty look.

Well, if Huzair's going with Ixin, I guess that puts us together, Shamalin," Ayremac observed with a smile. She nodded.

"So it seems," the priestess replied with little interest. She was consumed with thoughts of the Word of Chaos and did not see the holy warrior's face fall as she clanked off into the trees.

"Well, don't move too quietly now," he joked, half-heartedly. "I'll need you to provide some cover noise for me."



They found nothing on their brief reconnaissance of the area although both Shamalin and Ayremac were filled with the foreboding sensation of being watched by someone (or something) hidden. It was decided that they would break camp and press on at once rather than linger more than was necessary in the area of vague threat.



"I need the practice," Shamalin said simply as she appeared in the firelight that night dressed in her armor with her hand on Waveblade's pommel. Morier looked up to find her gaze directed squarely at him. He regarded her levelly but said nothing. She waited. Karak and Ayremac were gone, searching for small game to supplement the nuts and berries that Morier had gathered during their day's travel. Shamalin had waited for the dwarf to leave before approaching Morier. While Karak had been helping to instruct her, he did not have an elemental sword. Their training stopped short of Shamalin drawing Waveblade and she felt that she was missing a valuable opportunity.

Huzair barely gave the exchange a glance before returning to the scroll he was studying. Ixin guessed at the meaning of their words and watched silently. Shamalin shifted, waiting for a response ...

"You'll hurt yourself," the albino muttered dismissively, "or worse yet: I'll hurt you. I don't need that on my conscience." Morier looked back to the parchment splayed before him and resumed scribing. It was a measured reaction, but he thought it had seemed genuine enough.

"Look," Shamalin began, far more pointedly than in her initial tone, "if you have reservations or doubts, I respect your thoughts on the matter. But please don't dismiss me."

Morier let the now palpable tension linger for a moment while he slowly rolled up the parchment and placed his quill in its case. "If my remarks sounded dismissive, I apologize. It was not my intent," he told her. "I do however have very real concerns about you holding a weapon of the stature of Waveblade."

"Yep," Huzair added from his reclined position by the fire, "I was afraid she'd kick your ass too. But you really needn't worry about it, old chum, I certainly won't tell the others, and besides everyone around here knows that she can heal you up real nice once she's done filleting you."

Morier took the opportunity to demonstrate true dismissiveness as he rolled his eyes and ignored Huzair's comments.

Shamalin spoke first, "You began to train me in swordplay once before, but you stopped at the first signs of anger and frustration. Now you refuse to assist me in learning to use one of the most powerful weapons we have? Why?"

"Because anger has no place in battle. Anger and hatred bind the mind and prevent energies from flowing as they must in order to be effective." Morier closed his eyes as he recited that bit of Eldritch code. "The only emotions I saw in you during your training were the ones that will one day get you killed, and I don't want to be responsible for that."

Shamalin looked almost as if she had anticipated such a respose. She shook her head.

"Can't you understand? My mind works differently than yours Morier. I'm not a warrior. Anger is one of the few emotions left me. Have you forgotten how you found me?" He said nothing, but the images flashed in his mind. Shamalin continued in a whisper. "I live with it every day. I fall asleep at night with it coursing through my blood, and wake each morning with the taste of it in my mouth. I need anger in order to do what we must to win these battles. It's what you do... to kill without anger or hatred that seems almost... obscene to me. It is as foreign to me to think that you can kill without hating your foe."

Somehow Morier was struck heavily by Shamalin's last statement. His existence had been so solitary for so long, that he had never really considered a reason to see another point of view about this. The Eldritch code was so ingrained it flowed through his veins, and he assumed it did to others as well, just to a lesser extent. He paused a long moment while the words bounced through his head, unaware for a moment that the Florian had begun talking again.

"..so often about doing whatever we need to do to be rid of the evil. Well, this is something..."

"You're right," Morier interrupted. "You are absolutely right."



Waveblade was both larger than she remembered and lighter than she expected; it now looked more like a shortsword despite the fact that it felt nearly as light as a dinner knife. Her muscles seemed to adjust to its extension in a way they had not with her previous weapon. It was a dichotomy almost too bizarre for her to even consider - Waveblade, one of four elemental swords, forged by the powers of good in one hand. And Blackheart's heavy shield, tainted by evil and the blood of her own loved ones in the other hand. Shamalin pushed the absurdity out of her mind and focused as Morier advanced. That is, until the weapon spoke.

Waveblade thundered in an alarmingly loud voice as she wielded it, like a wave crashing against a rock. It was all she could to do keep it in hand, having nearly jumped out of her skin at it's proclamation. "IT'S ABOUT TIME YOU UNSHEATHED ME!"

For a moment she stood transfixed, staring at her sword. Morier attacked quickly and deliberately, forcing her to redirect her attention in order to protect herself. She managed to deflect his first thrust, and he nodded his approval. Waveblade, however, was not as discreet.

"YES! YES! NOW SWING BACK. NO, NOT THAT WAY! GO FOR THE ELBOW!" Again Shamalin hesitated, perplexed. And again Morier gave her no latitude. He executed a smooth spin followed by a flurry of attacks, two of which caught sparks against Shamalin's heavy armor. She grunted and struggled to maintain her balance. "GO FOR HIS ELBOW!" Waveblade bellowed. "IMMOBILIZE THE ARM AND YOU NEUTRALIZE THE SWORD!"

Suddenly a second booming voice joined the chorus. "DO YOU DARE TO THREATEN ME, YOU DRIBBLING WAVE OF WEAKNESS?!" the echoing voice of Stoneblade taunted its counterpart. Morier's face was a mask of concentration, betrayed only by the twitch of his mouth. Shamalin gaped openly.

"WHAT DID YOU CALL ME?!" demanded Waveblade in return as Shamalin sliced upwards with the sword in an attempt to catch Morier's arm. "I'LL NOT BE CHIDED BY SOME TWO-BIT PIECE OF RUBBLE! ATTACK, WOMAN! ATTACK!"

"Stop talking!" Shamalin insisted as she barely managed to sidestep Morier's advancing thrust. "You're distracting me!"



The swords relented and the combatants continued. Once the verbal dueling had abated, Shamalin found she was able to settle into a rhythm of attack, defend, and counterattack. Morier coached her quietly from time to time. And in a small corner of her mind that wasn't completely occupied with trying to anticipate his every move, she began notice things.

The first was that when she arced Waveblade through the air, the sword emitted a strange and faraway surge of sound. It was a sensation utterly unique and foreign to Shamalin.

The second was even more intriguing. Totally unaware of when it first began, Shamalin found that in her mind she could touch the existence of that sound with her own pitch and produce surprising results. Where she had been tiring quickly, she suddenly felt a renewed sense of energy wash over her. Buoyed by this discovery, she applied herself anew to the task of combining her essence with that of her sword.



Morier sensed the change as well. Though Shamalin's maneuvers were still rough and unrefined, her responses still strained, she was sustaining her efforts much longer than he thought her capable of. When he finally drew things to a close with a nimble step out of the dueling circle, he noted that Shamalin was looking much as she had at the onset of their practice. She beamed - face flushed from excitement more than anything else. Morier nodded acknowledgement and then watched thoughtfully as she made her way back to the fire.

He had been right all along: she truly did have the heart of a fighter. It was not that he took any particular pride in the feeling that he'd been right. No... not at all. What he felt could better be described as a sense of relief in knowing that the events of her past had not completely destroyed her spirit.

To Morier, what Shamalin had endured back at the manor house could only be imagined, and even then only by the most disturbed of minds. But perhaps his was one of them. He thought back to his earliest memories of his real parents, and how they had treated him. Therein lay the parallel between the two of them... survival.

The fact that she survived was what had made him believe that she was a fighter at heart. It would have been easier for her to die in that room than to live, chained to the floor amidst the gruesome remains of those she had once been held captive alongside. But she fought to live, and that was the very reason he had been glad that the group had decided to bring her along when they left Floxen.



As she made her way out of the dim light of the torches that encircled their arena, he made a decision to do something even he felt was out of character. He quickened his step and fell in stride alongside her, never once lifting his eyes from the ground.

"You did well there," he said. "Very well."

"Thank you. It still feels a bit clumsy, but it's all very new to me," the priestess replied, looking over at him awkwardly. He did not look back at her and his profile was inscrutable.

"We're not so different, you and I," he began, and the words stopped her in her tracks. "Maybe there's more to each of our stories than the other knows, but I've thought you had this in you from the moment I saw you shackled to the floor in that manor house... still alive... somehow. I know a small something about the will to live against those odds, and how it opens the door to making a fighter who he is. It's what made me who I am, and it's why I picked up the sword. It's the only time I feel comfortable in my own skin, when I'm in battle. You seemed to be settling into a comfortable place inside yourself back there - something almost inexplicable, isn't it?"

He didn't wait for an answer, but instead continued on. "It's a part of your soul finding itself again."

"I'm not sure if that's what it is or not," the priestess said slowly, "but you know something? That's the most you've ever told me, or anyone in this group, about yourself since I've known you." Shamalin replied, still surprised at the revelation.

He paused, knowing that again she was absolutely right. "Nah... Huzair knows. He's just too self-absorbed to mention it."



"Off the top of me head," Karak was saying later as he gnawed on the leg of a spit-roasted squirrel. I be thinkin' we need a ring or amulet o' translation for Ixin. Morier still could go for a mite bit more armor and a barrel of healing elixir." He winked at Morier, grinning broadly and Huzair clucked his tongue.

"Yeah, Morier. Nice job in that last battle" the mage sneered mockingly. "Good job using up the healing." Karak shook his head disapprovingly and went on.

"Me and Shamalin probably need our plate tended to. More than what I've done in the field, that is. I imagine Huzair may need more spell components and the like." He sighed and slapped his hand on his knee. "I guess what I am sayin' is: it's time for a restock."

"I could use some supplies for my new hobby," Huzair agreed, looking up from a sketch he was working on. "I plan to make everyone tattoos." There were numerous skeptical looks around the campfire, but Karak stroked his beard thoughtfully.

"You should tatoo yer face, wizard," Karak suggested. "That is what the Battleragers do!"

"Yeah Karak, that is just what I want to do: look like a dwarf," Huzair said sarcastically, shaking his head in disbelief.

"Aren't ye supposed to be on watch?!" Karak grumbled. "Ye said ye had to take first watch so's ye could get a full night's sleep an' now that ye have it, yer spendin' yer time drawin' pictures and chattin' it up with us. Get to work, ye lazy anvil-droppin' goblin-spawn!"

"Stop getting your beard in a twist, dwarf," Huzair said with a grin as he closed his eyes and clasped his hands behind his head. "It is being taken care of." Karak's teeth ground audibly as he got to his feet.

Morier grabbed the dwarf's arm and shook his head when Karak turned to look at him. "He's baiting you," the albino said. "He's got his familiar watching while he sits here and gets beneath your skin. Let it go."

Karak considered this and finally settled for spitting on the ground near the wizard and settling back onto his rock. "I will nae lie to ya either," he went on, losing almost no steam in his arguement, "but seein' you all wield those mighty weapons is givin' me a hankerin' to visit Balazaar to get me axe upgraded a bit. So I say we take a breather after what we've all been through. I'll tell ya something else too. I been wonderin' how the manor house be. I mean, we should check in on our little experiment to fight chaos. What say you all?"

They were taking a vote, then, but Huzair was distracted by the voice of Sparky crying out in his mind, "Boss, we got trouble, I think. There's a lot of guys heading toward you with bows. I think they're elves, but there's also something-"

Sparky's thoughts cut off in mind stream and Huzair felt his link with the hummingbird go instantly dead.
 

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Jon Potter said:
Huzair reappeared and shrugged.

I don't know why but I read this and just start laughing. I've had to exit the SH twice now trying to read the whole thing. I think it's because this is something my group would waste a full round action to do. :lol:
 

[Realms #396a] The Eyes Have It

OOC- A little shorter post for Hairy Minotaur.

Enjoy.

---------------------------------

"Sparky has been killed," Huzair declared, jumping to his feet. His body went from a state of apparent torpor to full alert in an instant.

"What?" Ayremac hissed. Windblade was ready and in his hand before he'd even fully stood. He began scanning the perimeter of the campsite for some sign of the latest threat.

"Get ready for battle! Archers are approaching with something Sparky could not tell me," the wizard said, shrugging into his haversack as he moved. "Get cover and, for Kael's sake, do your buffing now before it is too late!" He favored Morier with a pointed look as he said that last.

Shamalin wasted no time and began casting a Magic Circle Against Evil centered on herself. Morier and Karak readied weapons while Ixin, who still understood little that went on without Huzair's help to translate, got uncertainly to her feet and unsheathed her Matched Pair Scimitars.

"Remember, archers probably will avoid Karak, Ayremac and Shamalin because of their armor. Morier and Ixin will most likely be the targets until I become visible; then they will focus on me. Nothing wrong with playing dead, guys, if you are going down," the wizard continued to bark orders, his body shaking with rage and excitement as he searched for the optimum position from which to rain death on their enemies. "Those trees would provide good cover. Watch your backs. Elves are in their element here."

"But why would elves be attacking us?" Shamalin wondered aloud and Morier flinched visibly, convinced that his presence was the likely cause of this assault.

"That's a good question, Shamalin," Ayremac said. "Huzair, get into a good position, but don't attack until they do... please... I have some skill at negotiating, maybe Shamalin and I can work together. Just give us a chance."

"You are an idiot," Huzair snapped, pointing an accusatory finger at the holy warrior. "I am hiding. First sign, they are fried."

"At least let me see if I can Detect any Evil out there," Ayremac demanded, his teeth clenched, jaw twitching with barely contained anger as he fixed a wrathful eye on the wizard.

"Killing Sparky was an evil act and someone will be paying for it," Huzair paused and for a moment the rage on his face twisted into a rictus of grief. "He was a humming bird, damn it, not a fire-breathing dragon. Hardly a threat worth killing." His expression of pain hardened into a snarl and his eyes smoldered red just before he disappeared. "They are going to pay."

Ayremac grimaced, exasperated and activated his ability to Detect the presence of Evil. "Karak, try to get Ixin to stand behind you or Shamalin or me, until we can bring the battle to them."

"Aye," Karak nodded and stepped in front of the drakeling, shielding the lower two-thirds of her body with his own. She glanced quizzically down at the top of the dwarf's helm, but held her position, surmising his intent.

Ayremac concentrated on his Detection, his eyes glittering jewel-like as he searched the shadows. For a time all the world seemed to be holding its breath. The campfire crackled and popped, but that sound and Huzair's muttering as he layered himself with spells were the only ones to reach anyone's ears. Then the distinct sound of a branch snapping under someone's foot thundered amidst the silence.

"Who goes there?" Ayremac shouted into the trees. Even with his darkvision, there was nothing to see in the forest. There was no reply, but again he felt the flesh crawl on the back of his neck as something watched him from the shadows. Still he sensed no evil within the range of his power to detect it. "We are a simple party of clerics and bodyguards, trying to bring good health and healing to sick people of this region."

"What you are is a liar," a voice said from the darkness. The words were in the common tongue, but they were strangely accented and underscored with a buzzing sound like a hive of wasps somehow given voice. It was strange... alien... "Strange, is it not, angel, that your first inclination is to lie."

"Would you identify yourselves and your intentions?" Ayremac asked, still casting his eyes around for some sign of the speaker.

"Our intentions are mutually beneficial," the voice said again. This time it seemed to have moved closer. "We are representatives of the Dominion of the Final Forge, enemies of the Dominion of Flesh Reborn, whose ally our monitor tells us you drove off earlier today some distance to the west. But I am hesitant to present myself to you with your mage so ready to, as he put it, fry us at first sight."

Ayremac glanced around for some sign of the wizard, but of course there was none. "Huzair, stand down," he commanded. "We have a chance to talk our way out of conflict here." There was no response from the mage.

"Perhaps it would help to convince him to know that I could destroy him with an eyeblink right now if I chose? No, I don't suppose that it would," the voice buzzed. "But perhaps knowing the fate of his little friend would predispose him to negotiation rather than suicide?"

There came then the muttered sound from the trees of a few words that were too low to understand. A second voice repeated the words some distance farther on and then a third and so on until the words disappeared in the hush. After a heartbeat, Huzair felt the link with Sparky re-establish itself. Fear and panic flooded the connection.

"Boss! You won't believe it! There's a be-" Sparky cried out before the link winked out again.
 



[Realms #397] The Eyes Have It

OOC- Okay, here's the next little bit. But nothing else until Sunday!

--------------------------

"Please show yourself, representative of the Dominion of the Final Forge," Ayremac said, stepping toward the trees. "If you have nothing to hide, you should be willing to do that..."

"Do not misunderstand me, angel," the voice buzzed. "We have much to hide. Especially with your wizard still poised to attack. Perhaps we were wrong to seek you out."

"You have my word that Huzair will not attack you," Ayremac said as he stepped forward into the tree line.

"The word of a 'cleric and bodyguard?" the voice asked. "Your promise rings hollow, holy warrior." Ayremac sighed.

"You call me a liar, which is not a truly accurate assessment," the Officer of Umba explained, spinning the situation in his favor as well as he could. "I simply played down the importance of our quest. But we are trying to heal the Realm."

"We know," the voice responded. "We have been observing you since you exited the Tainted Cave. We have learned much from that observation."

"Fine," Ayremac went on, nodding. "So you know our purpose. What is it that the Dominion of the Final Forge quests for?" There was a pause, and when the strange voice spoke again, it seemed to be coming from Ayremac's left, barely ten feet from where he stood.

"We seek to bring order to the world," the voice explained. "Through order comes justice. Through justice, harmony."

"You have us at a disadvantage." Shamalin's voice rang out clearly as she clanked forward, her hands empty apart from her huge shield. "We know little about the man we drove off - other than his ill intent."

"He is allied with the Dominion of Flesh Reborn," the voice told them. "Our Sovereign will speak more of this once we return to our demesne." Shamalin paused, considering before digging into a pouch at her hip.

"Perhaps you can tell us about this?" she asked, pulling out a small wrapped piece of cloth. Carefully she unrolled and held aloft the strange thing they had found on the ground. "I've never seen such a creature before... one of the many unfortunate enough to have been caught in the wake of Chaos."

"It is but part of a whole, priestess," the voice said. "It is one of our monitors' eyes."

Shamalin looked at the thing and it did bear a resemblance to some sort of fly's eye on the end of a tough, leathery stalk. "Let us return it to you now," she offered before moving forward a few paces and gently setting the thing on the ground before stepping away. She held up her hands again adding, "We mean no harm."

"I believe you, cleric," the voice replied. Ayremac thought it close enough for him to reach out and touch, but still he saw nothing. "It is not you who threatens us; the mage has about him the taint of Chaos. We do not trust one such as he."

"I won't attack. Let the bird go as a sign of good faith," Huzair spoke from Shamalin's right. His voice held a suprising tone of composure and lack of venom. "You have nothing to worry about from a hummingbird. When he is safely with us, I will come out of hiding as my gesture of good faith."

"In truth, you are not hiding from me, wizard. My sight extends outward passed veils that you cannot mask with such paltry magics," the voice said. "I had hoped you would not force me to take such a provocative action." And on queue a ray of energy stabbed out of the darkness, striking Huzair and Dispelling the Magic maintaining both his Invisibility and all of his Mirror Images. His False Life remained in effect, however.

"What?!" the wizard cursed, caught flatfooted by the unexpected disruption of his spells. His hands went to his haversack, but a figure dropped down from the trees behind him and another stepped out in front of Ayremac before anyone could react further.

The one near the holy warrior was cloaked head-to-toe in a voluminous, hooded robe that masked his body entirely and buried his face in shadow. Ayremac, whose darkvision worked perfectly well in shadow, could clearly see the face beneath the hood. The visage was human-looking apart from the third eye that stared out of the man's right cheek like some horrible lesion. He was bald beneath the hood and his head was crowned with eyestalks that writhed around, medusa-like. Each of those eyes was multi-facetted like an insect's.

The one that dropped down near Huzair was just as strange, but naked apart from a loin clout and knee-high leather boots. His body was a coiled spring of muscle ready to explode into action, covered with a tough chitinous hide. In addition to the two on the man's bald head, six other eyes studied Huzair from the man's chest and stomach, arms and legs. They were all different sizes and colors, but they all regarded the wizard warily. A pair of ten-foot long tentacles curved up from the man's muscular shoulders, the last several feet of which were each sheathed in some kind of leather sleeve festooned with sharp metal hooks that seemed capable of shredding flesh handily. An unblinking, multi-facetted eye stared from the tip of each tentacle.

"Now that this impediment to conversation has been eliminated, let us proceed," the robed figure said, pressing the sleeves of his robe together before his chest and bowing slightly. His was the voice that had been speaking all along. "I am Premarch Rabanmar and this is Premarch Brah. We bring an offer of hospitality from our Sovereign, Lord Hofralix. Our most majestic Sovereign wishes to discuss with you our mutual enemies."
 

Jon Potter said:
OOC- A little shorter post for Hairy Minotaur.

Enjoy.


"You are an idiot," Huzair snapped, pointing an accusatory finger at the holy warrior. "I am hiding. First sign, they are fried."

:D

Yea for Huzair! He sounds more and more like Menthos, you sure he's not going Warlock? :p
 



[Realms #398] Welcome to New Mellorell

Karak planted his axe haft in the soft earth and laughed - the sound seeming particularly loud in the tense atmosphere of the campsite. He nodded at the tentacled figure standing beside Huzair and said, "Well now, it seems you have our dark wizard at a disadvantage. You are in a loin cloth, yet Huzair feels more naked without all his buffs, I'll warrant ye."

"All I want is my bird," Huzair hissed, his empty hands held out at his sides.

Karak laughed again and pulled out the Goblet of Life. With a word, he brewed up some ale, slurped some down, and proffered the remainder to the man in the loin cloth. "After a jump like that, I figured you'n might be thirsty."

Premarch Brah, the man in the loincloth, reached out one of his tentacles toward the Goblet, studying its contents with the eye at its tip. After a glance he shook his head, his lips set in a tight scowl.

"Premarch Brah follows an ascetic path, Karak," Premarch Rabanmar explained from his position on the edge of camp. "He believes that enlightenment comes through denial of fleshly pursuits, including the consumption of alcohol." Karak snorted and downed the cup's remainder.

"His loss, then," he said, wiping a hand across his wet mouth. "So where might this Sovereign, o' yers be?"

"We will escort you to him," Premarch Rabanmar told him. "The eyehold of New Mellorell is but a short distance to the southeast."

"New Mellorell, eh? I have to say, we all be needin' to spend time in a town," the dwarf nodded. "I know I could use a good bed to go with my good ale. An' me armor and weapons need a tendin' to. A good runesmith could go a long way, too. Do ye have one of those?"

"We have skilled artisans. Of course," Premarch Rabanmar explained. "Lord Hofralix may permit you to make use of their services provided an agreement can be reached."

"Agreement?" Ayremac asked and a trio of eyes snaked around the edge of the Premarch's hood to stare at him.

"Lord Hofralix will speak to you on that matter," Rabanmar told him. "For me to speak further on it would be to overstep the authority of my position in the hierarchy." Huzair groaned.

"Does Hofralix's hospitality include getting my familiar back safely?" the mage asked. "That is the sole reason I was ready to attack you." Premarch Rabanmar's eyes regarded the wizard coldly and he nodded once.

"The bird basks even now in the company of our Sovereign," the Premarch said. "Come with us to New Mellorell and he will be returned to you."

"And if we don't want-" Huzair started to snap and Morier reached out and jerked his arm roughly, cutting him off. The wizard's eyes blazed into the albino's and Morier mouthed the words, "Shut up!" The expression on his face conveyed the rest of his sentiment: "Or I'll kill you myself!"

"I reckon we can go with ye," Karak said, hefting his waraxe.

"I must take a moment to commune with my goddess before we depart," Shamalin interjected quickly and Karak studied her face for a moment before nodding.

"It'll take us a few minutes to break camp," he said. "Ye do what ye need to in that time."



The two Premarchs retreated to the edge of camp while the the Order went about the process of breaking down camp and Shamalin knelt in prayer.

"I feel like I'm being marched to my execution, here," Huzair grumbled to Morier as they stowed bedrolls. Ayremac approached and looked gravely at the wizard.

"Huzair, could I have a word..." he asked, beckoning for the mage to follow him a discreet distance away. Huzair looked at Morier and rolled his eyes, but he stood up and followed. As he went he produced a pair of cigars, offering one to Ayremac. The holy warrior declined.

"I am not one for idle threats, or pompous posturing," Ayremac told him in a conversational tone. "I don't need to be the leader and I don't need to be always right, but I do need respect." Huzair lit his cigar and exhaled a column of smoke toward the night sky.

"Uh huh," he said, the mage said, his own tone was disinterested.

"I understand that you were upset over the apparent loss of Sparky, but you flash to anger and disrespect too quickly for my liking," the Officer of Umba told him and Huzair snorted laughter.

"Damn straight, I am upset. I want my bird back," the wizard replied. "If you have not noticed, I am the type of guy to flash to anger. Just roll with it, angel." He gave Ayremac a companionable punch on the arm, but the holy warrior was unmoved.

"I am going to say this one last time," he said. "Do not disrespect me again like that or it will come to blows between you and I." At that Huzair's jaw dropped open.

"For Lisori's sake, if Morier hit me every time I went off on him, I'd be black and blue... already black, though... ha. My quick reaction is a curse and a gift at the same time," the wizard defended. "I have never seen us so well prepared for battle as we were after my outburst. Thus the gift. Hurt feelings can be the curse. Take the bad with the good."

"I will not be disrespected by you, Huzair. Regardless how much of a gift you consider your flippant tongue to be," Ayremac said simply. "I will not be called an idiot. You will treat me with respect or your mouth will get soap every time it's needed." Huzair sighed and shook his head slowly.

"It would not be the first time my words have gotten me into a fight, but just a warning, fly boy. I am not some bookworm that can be pushed around and I do fight dirty. I learned that on the streets of Farmin, so be ready if you want a piece of me," the wizard told him. "I hope it does not come to that. It would be bad for both of us." Huzair started to walk away and then turned back, pointing at Ayremac with his cigar. "By the way you should be happy; YOU WERE RIGHT! That is as close as you will get to an apology, so I would be happy with that, if I were you. And you were not the one who lost someone you cared about. How would you react if that happened to you? Hmm? I bet the same way. More a alike that you would like eh, big guy?" Now it was Ayremac's turn to laugh dismissively.

"We are nothing alike, Huzair," Ayremac told him. "I am going to say this one last time; do not disrespect me again like that or it will come to blows between you and I." Then he turned and walked away.



"The enemy of your enemy is sometimes your friend," Shamalin whispered to Karak and Ayremac as they tramped along through the woods following the two Premarchs. The shadowy forms of elven archers darted through the forest around them as they travelled, making no more noise than smoke. "When I cast my Divination, I asked 'What will be the outcome of being honest and forthcoming with the Sovereign of the Dominion of the Final Forge?' and that's what I got for an answer."

"Cryptic," Karak observed and Ayremac nodded.

"That is the way of thing with such spells," he said. "The gods almost always leave themselves open to interpretation."

"Still, it seems rather positive," Shamalin said and Karak nodded.

"Aye. It seems that this Final Forge holds no love for Aphyx," the dwarf said, spitting thickly after speaking the Rot Queen's name. "That at least be somethin'."

"I'll try to speak with our guides to find out more," Shamalin said and hustled forward toward Premach Rabanmar. For the next hour she attempted to engage them in conversation in order to gather information about their soon-to-be host. But apart from learning that they did not worship Sato, the god of order, but rather an entity known as the Void Mother, they were tight-lipped deferring constantly to their Sovereign. Lord Hofralix would answer all her questions in due course.



After a time, the more attentive amongst the Order noticed the dwindling number of elves who were accompanying them on their journey, and soon, they vanished altogether, leaving the Order alone with the two enigmatic Premarchs. Only Ayremac looked up and spotted the ornate wooden buildings built onto clever platforms amongst the canopy overhead, and so realized that they had in fact entered an elven settlement. He pointed out to those around him, the thin, wide-eyed faces of dark-haired elves staring down from above and soon the Order was walking along without watching where they were going. The elven houses were uniformly breathtaking structures of crystal, glass, and living wood whose outlines merged into the surrounding foliage with graceful ease. Here and there they spotted narrow rope bridges connecting one tree to another and surmised that both must contain a dwelling although they were often invisible to casual observation.

The trees opened up somewhat when they reached a stream of cold water that meandered through a shallow gully. They followed along it to the south for a few hundred yards until they reached a spot where flat stones had been sunk into the river to allow passage. The two Premarchs moved over them as easily as they traversed the well-worn path, but for Shamalin and Karak the crossing was treacherous and required a delay as they carefully picked their way from stone to stone. On the other side of the river they spied some incongruous dwellings of wood and animal hides which were dug into the earth in concentric rings about an elaborate stone fire pit in which a fire blazed. The buildings were familiar to both Shamalin and Ayremac as designs common amongst the southern barbarians.

Beyond the cluster of dwellings rose a bluff with narrow steps carved into its face. The steps slanted upwards at a steep angle before vanishing at the top of the rise. They could see the tops of monolithic standing stones at the bluff's summit, but the Premarchs led them to a perfectly round opening in the side of the hill.

There was firelight within the cave, but Karak didn't need any light to see that the place wasn't natural. It cut straight into the hill, its sides perfectly even and perfectly smooth apart from a narrow bit of flattened earth at the bottom that served as a walkway. After a distance of sixty feet or so, the passage opened abruptly into a huge, spherical chamber every bit as smooth as the passageway. It was empty and featureless apart from the Everburning Flames that lit the place and another treacherously steep flight of stairs that cut down from the passageway to a similar opening set into the floor.

"What is this?" Ayremac hissed, looking all around.

"This is my audience chamber," answered a voice from the well in the floor of the chamber. It was deep and underscored with the same insectile buzzing that had underscored Premarch Rabanmar's. And then the speaker rose up from the well and they forgot all else. It floated upward from the round shaft, seeming to hang in the air before them. Its spherical body was covered with chitinous plates with a central, unblinking eye above a large maw filled with daggerlike teeth. Smaller eyes, attached to wriggling stalks, sprouted from the top of the orblike body, each glittering like multi-facetted gems in the light from the Everburning Flames.

The gaze from its central eye fell upon the group and everyone felt their magical gear suppressed by a powerful anti-magic field. "I am Lord Hofralix, Sovereign of the eyehold of New Mellorell, and representative of the Dominion of the Final Forge. I would start our negotiations by asking what you know of the Dominion of Flesh Reborn."
 

Into the Woods

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