RP Session 1: "A Hart's Errand"

May 29, 2025 9:06 am
It was raining. A soft grey haze descending lazily from the lead sky, so timidly that the biting sea breeze threatened to drive the rain back to the heavens. Out at the horizon sea and sky merged inseparably in a sweep of dirty white that curled overhead. Half rain, half mist, the wet of the place made the cold all the deeper.

The docks of Abbadiel were half bare. Here at the river mouth, in the shadow of stout piers that jutted out to sea, men whose skin and clothes were dark with mud - so dark that sleeve and arm or collar and chest were blended into one - dragged ancient fishing boats, their timbers bleached monochrome with age, down the slippery shore to the brackish water.

A lone gull, startlingly white against the weathered and gnarled timbers and puffed fat against the cold, perched on the pier above. The rest
would come when the men dragged in their catch, eager to claim their unearned share.

https://i.imgur.com/5oHkAJs.jpeg

Favour.

A favour could be done, favour could be won, earned, hoarded, granted, carried. Favour might be a service, a debt, a state. To the godly it was divine, to the commoner neighbourly, to the lover a sign, to the gambler a force of nature. But the brokers of power throughout Anuire knew the truth: Favour was a currency. There was not enough coin in the world to buy what favour could - favour was the one true pathway to notoriety, to influence, to power.

It was favour that brought together a quartet of the more astute political aspirants of Roesone's modest court, favour that brought them to that pavilion a week or more past, favour that put them on a river boat down the Spider River to the fog-hazed port, and favour that saw them on the seaward docks in the grey hours of morning. A favour to be done, and favour to be won.

The task was a simple one, if important. The Sensechal, Gaered Biersen had been as candid as might be expected - perhaps more. A foreign power, one whose own favour the Baroness Marlae Roesone was eager to court but who would go unnamed, was bringing a man named Adalric Salien by boat from distant Khinasi aboard a merchant zebec called the Golden Prowl. Debarking in Abbadiel, the first and last minor port before the Free City of Ilien and more prominent lands beyond, they were to meet with this foreigner and guide him by whatever path they deemed most discrete, to the tradehouse called the Lorn Wastrel outside the town of Halfday in the mercantile County Endier. There they would turn Salien over to parties who would identify themselves with sign and countersign, and thereafter return swiftly (but not conspicuously) to Proudglaive to report their success.

Biersen had made each of them repeat the code over and over. They were to remark that they had heard that 'the price of barley out of Ghoere is going to be high this season' and their contact would reply 'then Sarimie smiles, I favour Tuor barley for my beer in any case.'

"These precise words and no others" Biersen had said more than once. It was true, Tuornen was a competitor to Ghoere for their grains and any heartland merchant might chance to say similar.

If the task seemed likely to take longer than five days they were to send word back to Proudglaive. Beyond that they were at their liberty to go as they pleased. Their party would be too esteemed to be stopped by officials and self-important guardsmen, not esteemed enough that anyone would remember them passing.

Around the eastern point a sleek foreign ship, its faded black sail (emblazoned with a crude claw that might once have been yellow) as sharply angular as its hull, slid into view. The first of the day, it must have sailed through the night to arrive so early in the pre-dawn. Khinasi ships were no uncommon sight in the ports of the Southern Coast of course. The merchant prince el-Hadid and his Port of Call Exchange had sponsored trade routes to Binsada and Ariya and beyond for more than a decade. No one would remark on such a vessel as it glided over the becalmed Straits of Aerele, skimming past the darkly forested coast toward the port.
May 29, 2025 9:15 am
The Sidhe calling himself Breuddwyd perched like some uncommonly svelte gargoyle on a raised section of the wharf, watching the harbor and the sea beyond, resisting the urge to cast a wistful glance further east. On the misty coast at Abbadiel, he was very nearly home and yet had never felt so far away. If he were that gull, he was sure he could envelop himself beneath the welcoming boughs of the Erebannien with agreeable haste; a fretful rustling of feathers and a brief, harried flight and he could leave this ludicrous diplomatic farce behind him. But he doubted even the surliest of cackling sea-worn gulls could stand up to Mother's enervating mask of disappointment any better than he could.

And even if Breuddwyd could fly back home, that would leave poor, faithful Arglwyddes to accomplish his task alone.

Not that he had any reason to doubt the Cu Sidhe's abilities. She was a beast of singular intelligence. Even now, as if she could read his mind, Arglwyddes lifted her vibrant, keenly sympathetic canine gaze from the small girl determinedly hawking clams and cockles from a trundle cart nearby to consider her bipedal compatriot. Lean and lanky, the whitegold elf-hound's comportment conveyed all the august serenity of a forest grove. Each of them presented a very different sort of elegance—a mismatched couple to be sure—but somehow they made it work. Seated beside Breuddwyd on the weathered oak planks, she was tall enough that her head reached waist level and he absently fondled her pointed, velvety ears.

"We shall have done with this paltry affair soon enough," he told the dog through clenched teeth, his lips barely moving. The reassurance was more to soothe his own restless soul than hers.

He had selected the higher position to grant him a wider field of view. His elven eyes were a touch sharper than most in their dubious entourage and he was quicker on his feet—even if he couldn't dance or duel quite like his sisters—but he was privately lamenting his exposure to the damp chill of the wind. Tugging the dark hood of his good loden wool cloak down tighter about his ears for warmth, he once more considered the others set upon this errand.

The notion that the assignment was beneath him was never far from his thoughts but, in spite of his irascible conceit, he had needed to remind himself a handful of times over the last few days that these people were not truly his peers. This was their greedy slice of the world, yes, and his duty to House Serensgrech demanded he play along on their terms but that did not mean Breuddwyd needed to immerse himself completely. The lovely but gloomy Sidhe who had shared so little since Proudglaive and only loosened up minutely during their journey—coolly confirming that he did indeed bear some natural talent for magic, adequately meeting their short-sighted expectations about his people—decided he would have to try harder to keep his distance.

"At last," he declared with palpable relief as the nimble craft came into view, favoring Arglwyddes with a wan smile. "Our canny prey approaches."

Stories of exotic Khinasi intrigued him and he suspected he'd rather enjoy a lengthy visit amidst the desolation of an arid wasteland. Almost as an afterthought, he had taken the time to purchase a second warm cloak, much like his own, along with matching mittens. If the dignitary was primarily accustomed to the desert, Breuddwyd reasoned they might be unprepared for the cold, wet environs of this region. He hoped they wouldn't object to the staid olive green hue he had selected.

From where he stood apart, the Sidhe looked over the rest of his party, curious to see how the Anuireans wished to proceed. There was always so very much ado over every turn of events in these lands; even muckspattered Abbadiel seemed a crowded, chaotic landslide of activity compared to his home at placid Ysgelynwen, though it was easier to stomach than Proudglaive in many ways. Would Aeric and the others want to close ranks immediately around their valued voyager or keep a safe distance until the landing was complete?
May 29, 2025 9:19 am
Mud squelched underfoot as Ser Lancaelad Noelon paced up and down the wharf. He fancied himself the watchful sentinel marking out a patrol route; it would have perhaps unkind to compare him to a petulant child waiting for suppertime.

Well-polished mail clinked as he marched (this rain would do it no favours; Mhairie would have hours of work tonight with the oil cloth and steel brush) and one hand hooked through his belt, resting near the haft of the crow's bill he carried, and unusual weapon for a knight. Fairhaired, fair of feature and strong of frame he imagined himself cutting an impressive figure, unaware of the near-pout of frustration and boredom that shaped his face.

"Khinasi dignitaries. Watch-words. Clandestine meetings in Endieran pubs. This is business for sneak-thieves and intelligencers, not knights," Lancaelad muttered to his squire. Paidrig Bellamie, a youth tending to plumpness with a well-groomed tabard and haystack hair stood dutifully nearby next to Lancaelad's courser, a highstepping grey stallion he called Victorious, holding the reins and his master's shield.

This mission perplexed the young knight. Whatever message this man carried could surely be delivered by less obtrusive means, and by more trustworthy messengers. Aeric Lecland was a decent enough sort and had the advantage of being the fourth son of a petty lordling – no one of importance. That anonymity would serve this Adalric Salien better as escort that a renowned personage such as Lancaelad! As for the others... the elf was not to be trusted. Lancaelad glanced to where the black-eyed sidhelien was perched next to his hound and shivered. As fascinating, and strangely familiar, as Breuddwyd was, the elvenfolk were no friends of Roesone or man in general. Who knew what Biersen had been thinking, sending such an unreliable and obtrusive figure with them! The Lord Seneschal was a good man for ensuring the baroness' pantry was stocked and dealing with the ledgers, but for tactical matters clearly the Lord Castellean, Traese Noelon, Lancaelad's own father should have been consulted.

And as for the third member of his company...

Lancaelad swallowed suddenly, his eyes drifting from the sea to the beautiful canopy of the Erebannien woods that glimmered like a haze of gold in the silver mists to the east, past the fish-reeking and mud-choked port town's pallisade. He had done his best to avoid Tovrunn on their day's journey down the river, and at court before then. She put him in mind of an axe; a lovely, gilded axe with a rosewood haft, but one poised to fall on his neck. His fingers twitched, not towards his weapon but to the quill tucked in a case in his saddlebags. An honourable man, caught between love and duty... aye, there was a poem in that.

Lancaelad shook himself a the lateen-rigged black sail of the Golden Prowl came into view past the distant Storm Tower's headlands. He frowned at the colour, wondering if the ship dressed itself in black to feign to Mierses pirates that it was of the same ilk. "At last," the knight sighed, not realising he was echoing the elf.

He turned to fix his gaze on Paidrig. "Take the boy and find a stables." The boy was Lancaelad's groom and ostler, Geremie Trotter; the knight could seldom be bothered to remember his name. "This Salien fellow will no doubt need a mount. Tell the stablemaster that the Lord Castellean will cover the price of whatever worn out nag Abbadiel has to offer," Lancaelad said with an airy wave of his hand.

He turned back, gazing out into the grey harbour at the mouth of the Spider river as the forgien ship cut its way into port. Menial task or not, it was his.
May 29, 2025 10:19 am
Aeric had to put significant effort into calming himself as he waited for the ship's arrival. The last time he felt such nervousness was when visiting the courts of higher ranked nobles with the family when he was younger. Since then, he had been absent from that society for a considerable time. Still, he had put that time into good use, focusing on improving his own arcane abilities, which, he had eventually and grudgingly had to accept, while formidable, would never match full blooded wizardry or Sidhe sorcery. Hedging his bets, he had put some time and effort into learning the intricacies trade and commerce from Alderman Almeer, and the previous ships he had observed coming in and out of the Port of Abbadiel had been food for thought as he had pondered over the details of their cargo and the calculation of their insurance fees.

He had not envisioned his forays into the arcane and commerce would put him back into the prying eyes and the notice of the nobility. He still had not fully determined if this was a good or ill omen, but the task itself had seemed simple at first. The more he thought about it, the more he delved into the flaws of appointing random and relatively minor sons and daughters of the Realm as escorts to a seemingly politically sensitive delegation. Not that he had any problem with his companions, the Sidhe, while usually displaying an arrogant or at best, an uninterest look on his face, was rather polite with him. The Squire, which he was the most familiar with, might seem to have been struggling to find his way, but come to think of it, so was he. His dealings with the Druid had been formal at best until now, and he intended for it to stay since he had first hand witnessed the complicated relationship between her and Lancaelad.

He adjusted his robe and cloak that covered his studded leather armour for the fifth time as his blue eyes finally noticed the ship's approach. Once again, the doubts crept back in and he could not help but mutter quietly: "Hopefully we are not being set up as scapegoats, or escorting a decoy. I don't know which one is worse."
May 29, 2025 10:22 am
The day was wet, gloomy and brisk. The hazy, noncommittal rain blended the sky and sea and horizon together in a shifting grey blur, the clouds above a dull blanket that swept from distant hills over the town of Abbadiel and out into the bay, indifferent in the plight and toil of those it lazily discharged its ire upon save perhaps for the small mercy of not doing so with any haste. It was an uncomfortable time for most to be outdoors, yet not so dreary as to drive men to shelter.

But to Tovrunn, this felt like home.

She wore a fur lined cloak as a shroud, though she hardly needed it. Since coming into her power only the harshest, most bitter of the northern colds could find any teeth upon her skin. Her hood was down and she let the gentle mists bathe her as they once did far from here. It was, for all its discomfort, a rare moment of peace, inward and out, a chance to truly connect with this land in a way she had not had in weeks. It was...refreshing.

The incessant rattle of goods and materials drew her out of her reverie, long enough for her mind to drift towards the cause of the disturbance. Lancaelad was frustrated. It was written over his face. Though he had not deigned to speak to her overmuch on their journey to Abbadiel, she had grown adept at understanding, or at least interpreting, the subtle and not-so-subtle movements and expressions and tones that he hid behind. Yet for all her studying of him, she could not yet for the life of her understand the boy. But it did not take understanding his thoughts and motives for his actions to be made clear. He was avoiding her.

That thought more than any was the very one that disturbed the peace that she sought out here, standing in the rain. Could he not see that this tension, whatever its cause, was only laying the foundation of their shared home upon quicksand?

Tovrunn scoffed, the moment ruined. There was no peace to be had here. Not now, at any rate. Her eyes drifted toward the magician. The two had spoken briefly, mostly over the medicinal purposes of some of her clippings and poultices. He was a pleasant sort, and she knew that he had Lancaelad's ear, or at least his acquaintance. She idly wondered if perhaps he might be of some use in teasing out this splinter that vexed her fiancé so. Or if not, had the good graces to attempt to uncover it.

Thinking of one of their companions on this mission they had been entrusted to inevitably brought forth the other in Tovrunn's mind. The sidhe was an unknown factor in all of this. She had encountered his kin before in her homeland, shared drink and words and songs with them first in her grove and then in their clearings, yet the gloomy elf was so different than what she had grown accustomed to. She wondered if he knew that she spoke his language, or if it would matter; she had been in the room of her elders counselling the jarls to know one who's mind had decided on a course when she saw one. Perhaps in time, and with prodding, that would change, but it would be a slow process not unlike the nurturing of a sapling into a tree.


Movement on the horizon drew Tovrunn out of her thoughts. A ship was arriving, the black sail of the Golden Prowl for which they waited. And upon it, the man they were to escort through the barony. Adalric Salien.

Stepping forward until she was side by side with the now mercifully stationary Lancaelad, she spoke the first words she had said to him in nearly three days. "You seem troubled, by beloved," she cooed, her voice as crisp and clear as a ringing bell on the first snowfall of winter. "Whatever is the matter? Are you unaccustomed to waiting?"
May 29, 2025 10:24 am
Adalric had been leaning on the rail of the Prowl since well before dawn, watching the Erebannien slip by in the moonlight with a sort of tense wonder. Corson had to allow that coastal Anuire and Khinasi were remarkably unalike despite their similar latitude; Khinasi was lush, steamy, with vivid jungles draping their tapering fingers down dark cliffsides for azure seas. Anuire was altogether more austere by contrast, its silty beaches littered with bleached driftwood and its forests standing straight and brooding like an army awaiting the order to charge.

The pair had had a chance to speak a little on the voyage, though the crofter seemed too distracted by the long journey ahead to share much, and Corson couldn't say why some distant western lord might have interest in the man - he seemed so ordinary and completely distant from the politics of Suiriene, let alone the pit of vipers that was Anuirian diplomacy. Had the man seen something and not realised? Nothing in his recent history suggested it. He seemed merely to be the several-times great grandson of a settler in the post-Imperial days who had lucked into some fine land. If he had anything to hide the man was exceptional at apparent banality.

Still, he was a likeable enough travelling companion, and his nervousness only made him profoundly interested in what Corson could relate of their destination.

As Abbadiel loomed into view out of the fog and Corson kept his vigil by the gang plank, ready to debark the moment the vessel moored, it was clear that that nervous energy that had suffused his charge throughout the voyage was at its height. Winding through the Khinasi sailors to the orderless knight's side he asked in a lowered voice "is that it?"
May 29, 2025 10:25 am
Responding to his charge, Corson nods. "We are here. I do not relish this trip, for the sea has been most unkind to my constitution. I look forward to being on solid land once again."

The squire, for he does not yet consider himself a knight, points out to the docks. "Hopefully, our entourage will be there so we are not flapping aimless in the winds..."
May 29, 2025 10:26 am
Back on the docks Arglwyddes gave a wide-jawed canine yawn as Paidrig and Geremie scurried off toward the barely waking market of the port town in search of a spare mount at a good price. Geremie had a keen eye for horseflesh if no other discernible purpose in the world, but doubtless both were about to be swindled out of a coin or two from Lancaelad purse if whatever merchant they found knew their business. The pair would at least learn something from the scolding that would warrant.

A sleepy exciseman, his role apparent from the attendant who followed with desk, ledger, quill and ink as much as his well tailored and fur trimmed attire, emerged from the small excise office and picked his way into position where the Prowl would moor. Aeric recognised the man, though he couldn't recall a name, so this at least was unlikely to be some cunning assassin.

One of the trio of fishing boats being prepared for morning began its lazy journey over the muddy shore to the water, announcing its departure with an obscene sucking noise. The men calling 'heave, heave' as they put their legs and backs to the thick rope bound to the vessel's prow.
May 29, 2025 10:29 am
Ser Lancaelad scowled at Aeric's reply. "By the Storm Lord, I trust not! If the man Salien has enemies, let them come to us in the open with naked blades, not skulk and conspire in the shadows. I would fain protect a man, even a farmer from some island at the tail end of Cerilia than provide false escort for some dupe. If the Lord Seneschal seeks to do us with such subtle treachery, I shall thrash him on the field of honour until his chains of office rattle around his ankles." It was a sign of trust that he spoke so openly of assaulting or duelling with a high courtier of the land so openly with the seer.

The knight jumped a fraction of an inch, his spurs clinking like Lord Biersen's putative gold chains as he heard Tovrunn's voice close behind him. The look of guilt and alarm across his features was schooled into formality as quickly as he could manage, and Lancaelad bowed to the woman – slightly at first, then deeper, with an arm swept back. He knew a priest was due a certain measure of respect on behalf of the gods, but what of a foreign priest of the Father of Forests? And what of one's betrothed? He used the moment he had bought with his show of etiquette to frantically formulate a reply, but as much as Lancaelad fancied himself a wordsmith he was no good at spotting obvious conversational traps until he rode straight into them.

"Lady Authunar's daughter," he gasped, composing himself as he straightened. His Anuirean tongue had difficulty capturing the nuances of the Rjurik. "Troubled? I... no, no, not troubled. Merely impatient to be off on our quest, such as it is. It does not become one to wait for one's rightful dues, don't you agree?"

Snap went the trap.

Casting about for a distracting topic of conversation, Lancaelad spotted the most obvious one; the one that took up the entire southern horizon. "I hear tell the Rjurik at great seafarers, that your longships put the dread of Nesirie in Brecht merchants and fishermen on the Tael Firth alike. Did you, ah, grow up near the sea?" He smiled, fidgetted, and glanced at Aeric out of the corner of his eye as if asking for help.
May 29, 2025 10:31 am
Content that the agile ship easing in closer to the docks wasn't likely to burst into flames or be taken by the waves before their contact could disembark, Breuddwyd moved forward to do business with the purveyor of savoury bivalves. It seemed an odd time for her to ply her wares with few takers along the wharf—perhaps she was counting on those who'd failed to break their fast at home that morning. For just an instant, he imagined an overbearing parental figure who traded in shellfish to pay the bills. There would be no arguing over demanding sales quotas for one so young, particularly when the merchandise would only briefly prove edible.

"Diolch," he said by way of simple thanks to the girl, dropping two copper pennies into her small palm in exchange for the cockles. He showed her the ghost of a smile, adding in his lilting, whisky drawl, "And my compliments to your chef." The briny aroma was pleasing enough; like many Sidhelien, Breuddwyd preferred to keep a vegetarian diet but the occasional exception for the tasty flesh of basic creatures such as this did little harm.

He paused to glance back at Arglwyddes, who was observing the transaction intently, before moving from the upper level to join the rest of the welcoming party. The dog required no additional instruction, her tail flopping thoughtfully on the old wood only once before she rose and silently followed on his heels. Where Cu Sidhe were concerned, it was often said that if you needed to give orders every time you stopped or started, you weren't really worthy of the animal's loyalty at all. You should endeavour to bark even less frequently than they did, which was to say practically never.

The few labourers on the docks certainly didn't seem inclined to bar the tall and exotic creature's path.

Approaching his affiliated cluster of humans, Breuddwyd almost intuitively noted which planks creaked and cracked beneath him—a Sidhe paid attention to where he put his feet, at least while free from the effects of good Erebannien honeywine—and examined their faces with faint interest as he sampled his vinegared treat. The tartly sour whiff that emanated from the food matched his usual countenance to perfection. It seemed the callow, lumbering young lordling Lancaelad was hard at work winning hearts and minds. This might be difficult to watch.

Breuddwyd dearly hoped his appetite would persevere.
May 29, 2025 10:32 am
As the first of the fishing boats made its way slowly out to sea the first signs of a waking Abbadiel showed themselves. From a warehouse towards the river a trio of shipwright's apprentices emerged, their coats wrapped about them against the morning chill. They were joined only a few moments later by a bare-armed quartermaster with a ledger in hand who marched up the farther pier with businesslike austerity. On the raised seaward wall not far from Breuddwyd an old man out on a morning stroll, replete with sturdy stick, took a seat on a crate and called out to the young hawker.

As Lancaelad floundered to master the flow of conversation a ragged beggar emerged from an alcove in the sea wall where a raw-boned hound still slept and, noting the knight's garb and departing servants, shuffled over with his cup in hand, eyes tactfully averted. "Spare a coin m'lud? To break me fast" he asked plaintively.
May 29, 2025 10:35 am
Returning the extravagant bow with a simple curtsey, Tovrunn's eyes never strayed from her would-be husband's. Not even when he blundered into her trap.

"When such a delay is caused by human hands, indeed, it can be quite burdensome," Tovrunn agreed quietly, knowingly, staring the knight down, the barest wisp of a turn at the corner of her mouth. "Yet no such hands can guide the winds and waves, least wise none who have any interest in doing so on this dock. And so wait we must with grace and poise."

She let silence linger before answering Lancaelad's hastily asked question, not yet ready to let him off her hook. "There are druids who watch over the fjords and cliffs at the edge of our waters," she said finally. "But my first viewing of the seas was the days before my departure. My grove and circle lie inland, where the frost maintains its hold for many months of the year." Tovrunn's sidelong eyes met Lancaelads again, the curl in her mouth more distinct. "I've thought that we have discussed my home before," she said, a lilting smile in her tone.

Their conversation, such as it was, was then interrupted by the beggar, and Tovrunn fell silent, watching her fiance with fascination, waiting to see his reaction.

How will the Knight who wishes to be thought of as Noble respond, I wonder, knowing that I watch...?
May 29, 2025 10:37 am
Breuddwyd slurped up the last of his cockles with an effete precision that
seemed to underscore both his otherworldly immortal lineage and his
starchy mannerisms. He turned subtly to watch with dour reservation as
the old man behind him beckoned to the girl and her barrow. Bending a knee so that be might more discreetly address the group from his higher vantage, he fixed his eyes on the black-sailed freighter slicing ever nearer across the surface of the water before scrutinising the meagre populace arrayed along the man-made shore. Perhaps doubting the fickle motives and selfish impulses of unfamiliar humans just came easily to him.

"Only just a bit longer now," he observed, unsure as to how far out the others could see with clarity, even in these conditions. "We presume we are the only ones awaiting this exchange. How certain are we?"

Breuddwyd peered down at Lancaelad's petitioner for a moment as if sorely puzzled as to how such a bedraggled creature might have been conjured into being before continuing to scan the wharf. He watched faces, watched for furtive movements or disproportionate interest. His mother had taught him that every scheme had many moving parts beneath the surface—even out of sight, they should never be out of mind. Biersen had maintained an admirable play at clandestine methodology but so rarely was a secret absolute. Out of his element in human lands, Breuddwyd couldn't say with confidence what belonged and what stood out in a harbor full of fishing skiffs but he believed he had the capacity to pick up on nefarious involvement all the same.

"Your seneschal advocated caution," he softly reminded them and perhaps it was that husky, sardonic tone paired with his severe expression that made it sound like a mild rebuke. "Let's keep one eye turned outwards until we've everything where we want it, just so."

The humans might treat their assignment as a trivial diplomatic errand or
a brisk jaunt down to the coast but quite suddenly Breuddwyd ... had a
bad feeling about this.
May 29, 2025 10:38 am
Witnessing Lancaelad's pleading look, Aeric decides to try nudging the direction of the conversation in a direction more fitting of a group that is supposed to be on discreet escort duty, where marital squabbles are hardly an appropriate topic. "Have you by chance heard of or visited Endier before? I had not heard much of that small county before, but during my time with the Alderman, he mentioned the county becoming a bustling center of trade, rivalling or perhaps surpassing Roesone, after some non-noble that knew how the money flows assumed control. I'm sure even we would find it interesting, not to mention Torvunn..." Aeric's words die in his mouth as he observes the beggar, and he assumes a wary trance as the beggar approaches Lancealad.
May 29, 2025 10:39 am
The Prowl's captain - a scarred Aftanien called ibn Garral - cleared his throat from behind Corson. When the warrior turned ibn Garral was as stern as ever. "Only you and the wizard debark" he reported in his heavily accented Anuirean. "No goods. You make haste, yes? And we be in Ilien before noon." He seemed eager to be rid of them - in fact ibn Garral had gone from terse to tense about their presence in the final days of the voyage, some time during their crossing of the Gulf of Coeranys. Corson had to suppose that they had been somehow delayed, because no news could have reached the ship on the open sea.

The 'wizard' was another passenger. A Khinasi scholar called Husam the Ibis, who lived up to his namesake with a drooping, drawn face and pointed black beard. He'd spoken little, in fact he'd seldom emerged from his cabin since the Prowl picked him up in Ghamour, but the ostentatious golden mantle he wore, embroidered with a device merging the sun and moon, was enough to mark his profession.
May 29, 2025 10:40 am
Corson nods casting a look to Salien. "We will gather our things now, to reduce our disembarking time to its minimum."
May 29, 2025 10:42 am
"Ah-hh-hh, yes, of course," Lancaelad said, a little too brightly and brittly in reply to Tovrunn. She had a knack for tangling him up in his own tongue – he had thought the Rjurik were supposed to be a straightforward people, not snake-tongued and two-faced like the Khinasi or Brecht! No, the fault was his own for not remembering what they had discussed. He had been to eager to extricate himself from the prior conversations, no doubt. "Forgive me, my lady. Perhaps I was merely distracted by the obvious passion and wistfulness with which you speak of that brave and rugged home to the north. Do you think you will wish to return there, soon?" A touch – just a touch – too much hope in his voice.

"Eh?" he glanced down as the hunched beggar shuffled up, silently rattling the air in his cup. Lancaelad frowned slightly at the impertinence, his nose wrinkling. "Paedrig, give the unfortunate man..." he looked around, realising his squire had already been sent on an errand. He swept his foot pointedly in the mud of the dockside, indicating that a swifter kick to the rump might be to follow. "Begone, wretch. There's no alms for you here." Then he noticed Aeric and Tovrunn's gazes on him, not to mention the dark sly eyes of the elf, and he coloured, realising he was hardly being the model of chivalry. Lancaelad fumbled in his belt purse and picked out a coin without looking at it, hastily tossing it into the beggar's cup. "There you go, grandfather," he said with surly, belated kindness. "Nesirie smile on you. Somewhere a ways away from here, preferably."

Shaking his head and dismissing the beggar, Lancaelad looked back at Aeric and nodded. "I have my doubts that merchants and guilders make rulers of any quality, but any realm that stands in defiance of the baron of Diemed's ambitions is a friend to Roesone... in spirit, at least."
May 29, 2025 10:44 am
The Prowl turned with a sharp grace and a hiss of spray - none of the silent lethargy of the big Anuirean merchantmen they'd been passing along the coast - and began its final approach to the pier on which the exciseman had now set up a small folding table, groaning under the weight of a ledger.

Another of the fishing boats put to sea, in a sudden hurry before their little keelboat was buffeted by the wake of the approaching Khinasi vessel.
May 29, 2025 10:44 am
While the girl with the cockles picked her way around to the old man the beggar bobbed his grizzled head to Lancaela, eyes wider than the coin in his hand but straining to restrain his surprise lest the denomination had been a mistake. "Thankee m'lud" he muttered, slipping the shining metal into the folds of his filthy cowl and turning to pick his way toward the pierside tavern favoured by sailors.
May 29, 2025 10:45 am
After gathering his things, Corson checks on his charge and the two head to the deck to await the approach. "Are you ready? We are almost there."
load next

You do not have permission to post in this thread.