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."
May 29, 2025 10:47 am
Breuddwyd's accustomed glower intensified when his guidance was
ignored by the others. Grumbling inwardly, he wondered if the minor indignity of being overlooked was a side effect of greater Sidhelien marginalisation in lands once theirs. By a clumsily grasping, primitive society that could reasonably be considered beneath them, no less. It stung and he was surprised, displeased to find himself so fragile and resentful at the prospect of examining the bitter spark of emotion in greater detail.

What was that line Mother favoured? Ignore peril, invite collapse.

Deciding it hardly mattered if the others were on their guard so long as he kept watch, he settled down on the ledge, dangling his slim legs and hooking his arms through the weathered and colorless wooden railing. With his ageless, careworn features, he might almost be mistaken for an unusually tall and well-dressed urchin all made up of particularly desolate angles.

Breuddwyd rested his fine-boned chin on the splintery barrier, still observing the docks more than the sea. A small and petty part of him was growing keen to spot some unseen element muck up their plans now. It would likely best serve his needs if the mission could be accomplished to perfection in the long run but he remained uncertain just how well these events would serve the Erebannien and its elves. Bearing witness as the others fumbled and flailed could prove amusing, if only temporarily. It might be interesting to see how Aeric met with unexpected challenges, he supposed. The scion of House Lecland was owed a debt of courtesy and forbearance in accordance with the old ways but that was a far cry from fawning admiration and Breuddwyd wasn't ready to be impressed. Honestly, he entertained more hope for Tovrunn's instincts on that front, having heard some inspiring—if muddled—accounts of her northern tribes and their values. The female was typically the more sensible of any species, he reasoned, unconsciously touching the polished bee-in-amber pendant that hung from a cord around his neck.

Stoic Arglwyddes gave a quick but vigorous shake to disrupt the rainwater collecting on her fur and held her post nearby, knowing her humanoid charge well enough to recognize a bruised ego but not rating the wound grievous enough to warrant sympathy in the moment.
May 29, 2025 10:48 am
At ease in his home Aeric took in the scene. Despite the brackish muck of the dockside there was a countryside charm to Abbadiel's waking routine. A simple comfort to folk going about their business in the mist and mud, with dirt beneath their fingernails and a warm fire to anticipate. The energy of the exciseman was commendable - after all, most goods out of Khinasi would bypass Abbadiel for the free city of Ilien - the city whose walls were just visible an hour or more away beyond the Spider River. Usually the excisemen would wait by the hearth in their offices on such a morning until they saw goods on the dock.

Perhaps this civil servant was new to the job, or just particularly dilligent?
May 29, 2025 10:51 am
Tovrunn's eyes narrowed slowly before a blink drove away whatever dark clouds that had begun forming in her mind. "Hmmm," she hummed thoughtfully, head cocked to the side and watching her fiancé's reaction like a curious fox. Both his initially brusque one, and the one that he displayed once his attention widened.

Only once the beggar had departed did she answer his question. "When the ice melts and the harsh cold winds of the mountains are met by the rays of the summer sun once more, I suspect we will both find passage home in the warm embrace of your southern winds," she replied loftily. "After all, our union may be consummated here in your lands, but it is more typical among our people for the husband to venture forth and claim his bride from her family and kin. And you and your kin have been so generous to me, it would surely please the gods to allow me and my kin the opportunity to visit upon you a similar kindness."

Tovrunn held Lancaelad's eyes for a moment longer before shrugging. "Though perhaps not this season. Perhaps the southern winds will carry with them invitations to our wedding here, and you will be given the opportunity to meet your father-in-law in your own halls. Perhaps those winds will carry us northward to form a union according to my own customs. Who can say with any certainty? The winds being as fickle as they are."

Without another word Tovrunn shifted and turned towards Aeric, her voice and face adopting a slightly warmer tone. Slightly. "I am afraid I am without knowledge of this 'Endier' land you speak. Is it very far from here?"
May 29, 2025 10:52 am
Lancaelad's cheeks mottled at Tovrunn's mention of consummated - flushing hot red and mortified white in rapid succession. In all likelihood, the icily beautiful woman had never seen a man look so simultaneously shocked, nervous, appalled and intrigued by the notion of bedding her all at once. The Anuireans were not as earthy or straight-tongued a people as the Rjurik; perhaps his courtly manners were simply scandalised by the open reference to the sort of jousting men and women got up to when armour and horses were not involved. Or perhaps there was more to his frantic attempts to avoid her gaze...

"It sounds a most... bracing... journey. I would be most honoured to see the halls of your kinsmen," the knight replied weakly. "Yes, the winds can be most fickle. Fickle indeed. I wish they would speed this boat to its berth that we might be about our journey!" He stared at the approaching sails of the Golden Prowl intensely, as if willing the blood of Masela, the ancient sea goddess to hurry it along.
May 29, 2025 10:53 am
As the knight turned to hide his red cheeks the Prowl was indeed making its final approach to the pier. The last of the sail raised and as the ship glided over the glassy water swarthy sailors, their bare arms gooseflesh in the chill of Anuire, tossed fat ropes around the hefty cleats. Through main force the ship was drawn alongside the nearer dock where the exciseman waited.

At ibn Garral's urging the men hurried to fetch the plank, and to bring Husam up from his cabin. Adalric hoisted the long sealskin bag that held his few travelling goods and hung back, awaiting Corson's lead as he watched the near-empty dock replace days of open water over the rails.

The remaining fishermen, now forced to wait out the Prowl's wake and presumably its departure given the haste of it's tethers, had seated themselves on their boats to watch the ship debark while the beggar had disappeared from view beneath the rear part of the pier.

A dirty gull, emboldened by the scent of shellfish, sidled up to Breuddwyd and gave an insistent 'Awk' before pretending to be focused elsewhere once it had drawn the sidhe's attention. A cluster of its fellows waited a yard or so away to see how their scout's luck fared.
May 29, 2025 10:54 am
"Endier, a hubbub of commerce, and a beuatiful countryside, I am told by every travelling merchant." Having tried to change the subject to save Lancaelad, Aeric now regretted mentioning Endier, which was their final destination. Noticing the rather out of place exciseman, he immediately grabbed the opportunity to change the subject, and began walking towards him and his assistant casually.

"Morning, good sir! You are to be commended to set up your desk here at this ungodly hour. I have frequented his harbour at this hour regularly, and this is the first time I have witnessed an exciseman setting up his desk without any sign of disembarking trade goods. Please, tell me your name, so I can relay it to my friends in the upper echelons. I am sure you will go far indeed with your diligence!" he remarks, trying to both sound authoritative and throw the exciseman off balance. He also quickly scans the exciseman, his assistant and the table for anything that might be out of turn.
May 29, 2025 10:55 am
"At last," Lancaelad muttered fervently as the lean hull of the zebec slid towards the berth. The eyes on its prow seemed to watch him with a warning.

Glancing around the harbour, the young knight decided the exciseman probably knew best where the ship's drawbridge – the gangplank, didn't nautical types call it? – would lower and disgorge their foreign guests, so he threw back his cloak, the better to show off his gleaming maille and weapon, and strode towards the pier to his left. There did not seem to be a ladder or stairs between the dock closer to the waterline and the upper one, so he hauled himself up with muscular ease despite the clanking coat he wore.

Belated gallantry made him pause once again, and he turned and knelt on the edge of the dock and held out his hand. "My lady?" he offered to Tovrunn.
May 29, 2025 10:55 am
If Aeric's polite attempt at distraction earned a warmer tone, then Lancaelad's flustered blustering earned a smile. Even a giggle. Content for now to let him off the hook, having earned an awkwardness that she understood, Tovrunn followed her husband-to-be towards the dock, and pretended not to notice that she was nearly a second thought as she took his hand.

Following him where he went, she remained by his side, within arms reach. And every once in a while, she happened to steal a glance at him.
May 29, 2025 10:56 am
Easing himself lower to slither deftly beneath the wooden barrier, Breuddwyd dropped down from the upper tier and trailed behind the others. He would leave the humans space to entertain their quaintly cumbersome customs but linger close enough to involve himself if needed. When the traveler finally set foot on land, the elven noble realized he should endeavor to make a better impression than simply standoffish. Even in the unworthy role of a low-level envoy, a Sidhe would comport himself with dignity.

"As we've been charged with security for your long-lost luminary, we'd best be establishing control from the start," he counselled glumly, the hint of music beneath his smooth tone failing to make him sound particularly invested. "Keep things strictly professional. Tidier that way, it is."

It wouldn't do to have another impulsive child introduced to this land only to see him wander off into danger unattended.
May 29, 2025 10:57 am
The exciseman, a man greying about the temples with a neat beard that vanished into the voluminous recesses of a furred gown, turned at Aeric's greeting and bobbed a swift bow, either recognising the young noble's face or merely his speech and garb as worthy of deference.

"Boso m'lud, Hubart Boso. But I must confess to no mere diligence. Warning of smugglers came from the Port of Call Exchange just this past evening - a competitor no doubt. When I heard word of a Khinasi vessel coming into harbour I thought it best to brave the morning."
May 29, 2025 10:58 am
The sailors aboard the Prowl dragged over the hefty gangplank and laid it with a thud against the zebec's rail a yard or two ahead of Corson's post. On the dock he could see a cluster of well-dressed Anuireans, at least one in armour, in conversation. Amongst them a sidhe with a panting cusidhe gave him a moment's pause, but then Roesone had its own tiny population of the fair folk. They seemed a likely welcome, but one could never be too careful.

Beyond he could make out a half dozen fishermen, so filthy that they might as well be mystic constructs of animated mud, surveying the ship
with crossed arms.

From the deck below The Ibis finally emerged, his long limbs and narrow shoulders burdened with luggage in dark canvas and tooled leather, spectacles askew on his large nose.
May 29, 2025 10:58 am
"Salien," Corson signals for his charge to come over. "Time to go."

The squire scans the group that he suspects is their escort, looking for signs that they may not be who they appear to be.
May 29, 2025 10:59 am
Lancaelad listened with half an ear as Aeric questioned the harbour toll collector. It seemed like a waste of time for a man to concern himself with such petty bureaucratic goings on; but, on consideration, perhaps it spoke well of the young Lecland that he was so involved in the minutiae of the realm. On such men's backs was the Barony built.

The knight strode forward as the gangplank was mounted, ready to come down.Cupping his hand to his mouth, he bellowed out: "'Lo the ship! In the name of Marlae Roesone, baroness and protector of this proud and free realm, I bid you welcome to dry land! I seek Adalric Salien. Is he amongst your company?"
May 29, 2025 11:01 am
The gangplank swung out and found purchase on the dock, and with a swift jerk of his head ibn Garral simply said "Nasri with you" before turning and making his way toward the aftcastle. It was a curt farewell after so many days at sea, but it was no surprise given his recent haste.

Striding down with his charge at his shoulder, the Roesonians got their first look at the young crofter at the centre of this clandestine errand and his bronzed protector, as well as a lanky Khinasi in a cloth-of-gold robes adorned with celestial symbols cresting the gangplank.

Before either newcomer could reply however another voice rang out across the docks with businesslike calm. "Alright. Stay where you are. You know what we want. Send him over and there'll be no need to shed blood." Across the muddy expanse the fishermen who'd been loitering in the muck had mounted the docks, and each now held a bow or crossbow, arrows notched and bolts loaded. The one who had spoken, indiscernible from his fellows under the coating of dirt, gave a nod to the little boat on which he stood once he was certain he had their attention.
May 29, 2025 11:03 am
Breuddwyd was the closest to these harborside hijackers and he turned to face them as they barked their demands. The expression beneath his hood was one of typical Sidhe irritation but devoid of fear. How had he missed the signs of treachery afoot? Perhaps his senses had been overloaded with human banality ...

"Historically, Sidhelien never respond well to ill-thought threats of violence," the whip-thin incanter called back, his tone resonant and insistent in its disapproval. Not many of the backwards bumpkins in human lands were intimately accustomed with elves and their mystic defenses and the tales they spoke to each other could aid in cowing peasantry and lesser lords alike. He wondered if the same might be true for these hard-eyed marksmen. "This is poorly done. Send one of your number forth to parley or none of us shall have what we want."

In truth, he cared little for their plans or politics; he genuinely wished to be shut of any entanglements in Roesone sooner rather than later and doubted the squabbles he encountered here would persist in his troubled dreams after he had moved on. He suppressed a smirk at the notion of conflict, hoping they liked fire.

Glancing back at Tovrunn for just an instant, be established the thoughtbridge between them that he had employed as an exercise to sharpen his focus since first discovering his magical affinity. Despite its subtle elegance, it was a simple trick but one that should allow them to communicate their plans in silence.

**You understand me. Yes?**
he prodded mentally, uncertain how his presence might seem squeezed inside the woman's head. He hadn't used this ability in connection with primitive human minds in the past but assumed the female would weather any unpleasant repercussions. It seemed reasonable to guess that she was the most likely to comprehend the elven language. **Hear them out. Or divide and conquer. Either is better. Than this.** For him it felt like tensing a muscle that only existed as an habitual self-delusion, on an intuitive plane. Words formed like the slow and sonorous heartbeat of a great beast lurking in tenebrous forest depths.
May 29, 2025 11:06 am
I look of incredulous annoyance spread across Lancaelad's face as some churl dared to bellow across the muddy harbour at him. He turned slowly to let the loudmouth feel the lash of his tongue - then his eyes widened as he sawed gleam bolt- and arrowheads in the hands of the filthy men.

"What treachery is this?" he snarled indignantly. Brigandage? No, these men had a purpose, and that purpose could only be connected to the ship that had just weighed anchor and its passenger. That man is more than a Surienese farmer, it seems.

A chill ran through his blood, seeming to slow time to the marching drumbeat of his heart, and there was a giddy sensation as he imagined the battlefield from above, like a chessboard. They were in a mixed position. The pier gave them height and there was cover scattered around, but the ambushers were drawn up in a firing line with no clear path to them. Lancaelad eyed the distance; a good bowman could loose once or twice before he, Lancaelad, could reach them, even discounting the shots already taut on the string. And those could not be discounted, not with Salien, if that was him, wearing humble clothes instead of steel - not to mention Tovrunn in mere leathers and furs and the elf in robes, though he had no doubt that wyrdling could take care of himself.

"Lady Tovrunn, stay behind me. Aeric, shelter at that crate. Breuddwyd, have your hound charge at my signal," Lancaelad growled in an undertone, instinctively taking command - though it remained to be seen if his companions would cede to his callow authority. His hands itched to reach for his shield and the haft of his weapon, but he did not want to alarm the ambushers into loosing just yet. Glancing at the excisemen, he said: "You, keep your heads down. The baroness' carrack, the Adventure, is docked in Abbadiel, true? Rouse a contingent of sailors and bring them to assist."

Raising his voice, he yelled across the water: "You, ruffians. Lower your weapons! You dare breach the baroness' peace!? You face not only the royal constabulary of Roesone but a knight sworn to defend her people! The first man to drop his bow will receive a pardon and purse, 'pon my honour. The rest will not live long enough to face the noose." His eyes were hard as chips of jade as he spoke, his tone a grim certainty.
May 29, 2025 11:06 am
As he was figuratively run right over, Breuddwyd shot Lancaelad a particularly dark look—even taking the elf's gloomy features into account —and, through gritted teeth, simply retorted, "No."
May 29, 2025 11:07 am
Instinctively, Corson does a quick survey of the field, clocking each enemy and each potential enemy or ally.

"Stay behind me, Salien," the squire says quietly. "If they open fire, stay behind me."
May 29, 2025 11:08 am
Accosted on the docks? Tovrunn's breath caught in her throat. This was not exactly the simple favor that she had anticipated. Then again, it hardly mattered what she had anticipated, for now this was the scenario she was in. And the one where she might prove herself to be made of more than just lace.

The mental intrusion of Breuddwyd's unspoken words caught her by surprise, but not for long. **I can understand you. Yes, we will stall for time. And in the meantime, plan.**

Stepping gently behind her husband to be as he commanded, Tovrunn noted that there was more room and better cover to be found...and that it was closer to the boat that the brigands had indicated. And where boats were, so too generally was water.

"My beloved," she whispered without any hint of the irony that had once twisted the word into a bitter knife, "if it comes to it, I can better protect our charge were he in the boat. We should stall for time." Mentally conjuring the image of a watercraft surrounded by water and ice suspended in air, she pushed the image to Breuddwyd, revealing her intentions to the elf via their thought-connection.

She just needed to get closer...
May 29, 2025 11:10 am
A slow dawning of horror began creeping up on Aeric's mind the moment he heard that the Docks Office were warned about the ship beforehand. Someone knew about the cargo. But who? Were they set up? As Aeric was deep in thought about the possible ramifications of such a leak, he had already resigned himself to the fact that the extraction from the harbour would not go as planned. Accordingly, while Aeric was not prepared for the ambush, nevertheless, he was unsurprised.

He listened to the altercation between Breuddwyd, Lancaelad and the assailants while in his mind he calculated back and forth the possible outcomes. They seem to want the cargo alive, otherwise they'd just have peppered him with arrows upon his landing. It means the situation may not be as dire as anticipated.

Judging his precarious situation out in the open, Aeric first tries to move slowly into cover. Given that Breuddwyd and Lancaelad already responded with conflicting remarks, he refrains from muddling the situation, he decides to await the brigands' response first.
May 29, 2025 11:12 am
At the mention of a purse a couple of weapons wavered, but the one who had spoken first shot a look at his fellows. "If he has a purse then kill him and take it you fools" he growled. The momentary pause was enough for Tovrunn and Aeric to both slip behind the same crate, where they found themselves near shoulder to shoulder against the archers.

Though the layer of drying harbour mud made the six 'fishermen' indistinguishable, the speaker at least seemed to be their leader. "Let me make your situation very clear" he called back across the pier. "You're very right. You have time on your side. The fog will only waylay the guard or marines so long. But that should tell you something - I'm not here to talk. I have numbers and in this moment I have your lives. That man there starts moving now, or we start killing. You want to talk? We start killing. You make a move I don't like? We start killing. You send one of these people for help? I think you have the measure of it."

As if to punctuate his point, four particularly brutish figures with their own crossbows emerged from the misty streets of Abbadiel, with their own weapons trained on the wharf. They were dressed like commoners, but their size and their scars spoke of bandits or mercenaries. Less inconspicuous than the fishermen certainly, but likely more dangerous.

At the sight of these newcomers the wizard turned to make his way back onto the Prowl, but he was met at the top of the gangplank by a grim-faced ibn Garral and a pair of his sailors and the two exchanged a few angry words in their native tongue even as the Khinasi crew scrambled to loose the ship's hurried tethers.
May 29, 2025 12:54 pm
Breuddwyd wasn't certain what Tovrunn had in mind—their connection allowed the transmission of silent speech but anything else from one failed to coalesce for the other—but there was an awkward pause in her thought-transmission that seemed to linger and he wondered if she held the same notion as he. The spell he would use to make escape by boat quite difficult was as much in line with her shamanic traditions as his own naturalistic leanings so he dared to guess she could perform it just as well. Tovrunn seemed wise enough for a human. Putting their heads together after this was over and comparing notes, so to speak, to better combine their capabilities in future might bear ample fruit.

**Can only perceive words,** he informed the pale woman, almost apologetically. It was enough of a mental workout simply keeping the bond open and permitting her to send so clearly; the long reach of the Goedlan yng Cyfnos exacted its toll. From longer discussions with family in the past, Breuddwyd knew it as a delicious sort of ache, recognising that he was growing ever stronger.

**Have a spell in mind,** he went on. **To swamp their boat. Without harm to a hostage. But need to be closer.** He considered the extra squad of assailants flanking their party and allowed himself a fleeting instant in which to fantasise about the kind of magic he would one day master that could easily cleanse the thoroughfare of grimacing, small-minded despoilers. **Worth it to surrender? Then pick our battle.**

He considered the others around him, those having just arrived, and belatedly assessed the traces of arcana about the spindly foreigner. It wasn't just that hint of timorous, self-important, scholarly distraction in his bearing for Breuddwyd. Magic-users gave off slight phantom tells to his enhanced senses and this human left a faint but acrid flavor at the back of his tongue and a dry, musty odor that teased his nostrils like a greedily guarded library of old, rarely-tended books and myriad forgotten alchemical components. Knowledge bereft of beauty.

"Which one of these humans do you wish to claim?" Breuddwyd queried of the distant leader, hoping his voice sounded appropriately cowed by the threat of violence and largely disinterested in suffering for these others. Maybe this was just a simple misunderstanding. "Most of us have only just arrived here, we have. But we may not be at odds after all."

**Curb your buffoon. If you can.** He let Tovrunn ponder this, not relishing the chore himself. **Or let him loose. Flying bolts won't be picky.**
May 29, 2025 3:29 pm
Almost equally apologetic, Tovrunn communicated through their mental link, **Sorry, this is new to me. I have the magical means to freeze the boat they wish our charge to board and to create a wall of ice between him and our new friends. If he were to go to the boat.**

Glancing over her shoulder at the arrival of the newcomers, Tovrunn felt repressed a shiver as the situation grew more dire by the second.

**Clever plan. I think I know of the spell you speak,** she continued, refocusing on her silent conversation with the normally silent elf. **Though distance is...an issue.** Glancing at Lancaelad, she grimaced. **Curbing him is like directing a charging bull; best done subtly and with no enraging influences. Which is not where we find ourselves.**

Still, she did call out quietly to the knight, careful so that she could not be heard from the brigands on the opposite pier. "Let us comply for now. I can protect our charge if he is in that boat, but not on the dock." To Aeric, who was so near that she could reach out and touch him, she said, "What magicks can you contribute?"
May 29, 2025 3:31 pm
Corson, unsure of who is ally and who is foe, nods to Adalric. Holding his hands out, away from his weapons, he begins to make his way around toward the brigands, readying to run with his charge once they get around to the opposite side of the warehouse to the South... He does not spare a glance to the folk that he thinks may be his retinue, hoping that if they have a plan it will give them a chance to run.

As long as Salien is in the open, fighting is too dangerous...
May 29, 2025 3:33 pm
So it was not to be chess, then. No battle of wits and position with the man across the water; he had brought in a flanking column of allies, and these ones looked more like rooks than pawns.

Lancaelad felt a chill run down his spine, and his maille clinked slightly as he trembled subtly. These were not good odds. Nine or ten against four or six, and those more numerous having the advantage of range, position and facing? What a worthless way to die, gutted by kidnappers and tossed into the Straits of Aerele like unwanted fish from the morning catch. Ser Lancaelad Noelon deserved a more glorious death than that.

He deserved not to die.

When Tovrunn offered an alternative, he grasped at it a little too eagerly. "Yes! Yes... a sound stratagem, my lady," he agreed, relieved. The young knight craned his head around at both sets of ruffians and the men down the pier by the gangplank. There was one more gambit, a slight one; he did not know Adalric Salien by sight, and perhaps neither did the assailants. After all, they had not indicated which man to bring over... the leader had said 'you know who'.

Lancaelad raised his hand at the moustachioed man also in armour who was slowly approaching. "Yes, Goodman Salien come forward! Leave your manservant and come forward."

It did not sound very convincing, even to him.
May 29, 2025 3:33 pm
Corson looked at Lancaelad and cocked his head. "I will not leave my man's side until he is delivered safely. Step out of the way or help, there is no other choice."
May 29, 2025 3:34 pm
The mud-caked fisherman shook his head as Corson began his advance. "I warned you. Bring them down! Fast!" At his command the peace of the misty harbour was broken by the hum of a volley of bolts, followed by another even as the Roesonians scrambled to draw their weapons. With a wave of his hand Breuddwyd encased himself in a glimmering shield of magic an instant before one of the bolts marred his flesh, while Lancaelad's oiled and shining armour was proof against all but a single projectile that grazed him through the mail beneath the arm. Corson caught out in the open suffered the brunt of the assault, bolts biting into his thigh and neck despite his mail's protection. Blood pouring from his neck wound, the man fell into a dazed and bloody heap before he could reach the cold earth of his homeland.

Their target fallen, three of the fishermen pressed a hurried advance around the pier even as their fellows rained more death across the spongy muck.

Seeing their doom descending from above on steel wings, the exciseman's assistant caught the fur-robed man and dragged him off the wharf and with a splash into the water just off the prow of the Prowl, while at the gangplank the Ibis raised a great cry as he was pressed forcibly down the gang plank, and the sailors hauled the plank aboard. The last of their number throwing the heavy ropes free and leaping from the cleat to cling to the zebec's rails.

In the distance many of the other bystanders fled in panic, or else took cover where they could find it.
May 29, 2025 3:35 pm
The man who must be Adalric Salien set off in his protector's wake, but with an inarticulate cry he flung himself against a pile of crates when the man fell in a bloody heap mere yards ahead. Wide eyed he looked up at Tovrunn and Aeric where they shared the shelter of a single large crate, and met their eyes with uncomprehending horror.
May 29, 2025 4:32 pm
"Gweithredol," Breuddwyd hissed, waving one hand almost dismissively to deny a well-aimed bolt its svelte elven target. So very calm, as if he was shot at every day, as if his heart wasn't hammering out a beat like frantic leporine footsteps fleeing every which way within his slender chest. Falling back to the crates alongside Tovrunn, he shook his head and grumbled, "Has it just been my experience or do all human males truly tend to lead with their pointy bits?"

Not waiting for a response, the dark eyes peeking out from beneath his hood fastened on the nearest of the unwashed chargers, dedicated to making him pay first for his band's wretched opportunistic treachery.

"Methiant arwrol," the sorcerer and would-be sovereign growled, brandishing his crystalline focus to set a crude but effective hex of the darkest woods upon the man before following up with the plain elegance of a dart comprised purely of flaming cinders, thrown sidearm like a pinecone whipped at nettlesome peers (the type who never see fit to show any respect for a skinny, doleful child with a solemn outlook). "Adain dân."

His salvo loosed—and with Arglwyddes pelting silently away, apparently determined to follow Lancaelad into combat despite Breuddwyd's own misgivings—he dared a glance back to address the foreign arcanist cowering by the ship. The magic he smelled on the man suggested he might not be completely useless in a skirmish.

"Will you not contribute? I doubt they're of a mind for leaving witnesses behind, no matter how lush your dress."
May 29, 2025 4:33 pm
Ser Lancaelad grunted as the strange knight misunderstood the ploy and affirmed his determination to defend the man who must be his charge. It had been an unworthy ruse of war on his part; and in any case, the ambushers seemed to have decided the quickest way through was at the point of a bolt.

The swarm of shots were on him before he could limber his shield. Like hornets, buzzing and jagged, most of them glanced off his maille but left him buffetted and bruised. The sting from his flank registered dimly, distantly, and he glanced down to see blood – his own blood – trickling through the links in the armour and staining his surcoat crimson. The pain of the graze was secondary to the chill of fear that ran through his body at the realisation that they were outnumbered, their backs to the sea, against an enemy with every tactical advantage.

A wall of ruffians reloading their crossbows lay between him and escape. The best he could do was try and shape the battlefield to his benefit – and his eyes fell on the stack of wooden crates and shipping chests at the base of the pier. Lowering his head and shielding his face with his armoured sleeve, Lancaelad charged recklessly through the next wave of missiles, the planks creaking and shaking under his boots, and threw the brawn of his shoulder into the crates.

Wrapping his arms around one of the boxes at the base of the pile he wrenched with a ox-like snort of effort, and the stack of crates came tumbling down across the ground towards the ruffians. Salt herring, Erebanien almonds and bolts of wool scattered as crates broke and lids spilled their goods, splinters flying all about. Huffing with effort, Lancaelad straightened and unhooked his war-hatchet from his belt, glowering at the men across the debris. "Come, then. Who's first to meet the Cold Rider?"
May 29, 2025 4:35 pm
Unable to comprehend the suddenly deteriorating turn of events, Aeric for a moment stood looking at the dying man-at-arms that seemed to be protecting Adalric. What could have been the cause of such dedication and folly? As much as he wished to help the man, the arrival of new brigands to flank them would certainly be his doom unless he was able to create a distraction.

"Crouch behind this crate stay in cover, don’t let these brigands see a single hair on your head" he ordered Adalric as he began the incantation for a spell he hoped would buy them precious time. He conjured an image of Adalric in his mind and projected it into reality, which started running from behind the crate to away from the ambushing thugs. It was a long shot, but he decided to shout "Where are you running, you idiot!", hoping some of the thugs would pursue the image, allowing them to have a chance of dealing with the rest. He followed after the image, both to make it beliavable, and to find better cover from the hailing arrows.
May 29, 2025 4:36 pm
With a glance at his fallen protector, and another at Aeric the sun-baked easterner was swift to leap into the shadow of the cargo at Tovrunn's shoulder. Even as the roar of shattering timber rattled from the stone warehouses as loudly as Lancaelad's challenge an illusory Adalric emerged and with a grace and speed that would be uncanny had their attackers had time to consider it overlong, he leapt from the pier and rolled into a sprint.

Two of the larger, meaner looking men broke into a dead run after the magician's ruse while their fellows watched their backs, harmlessly peppering a couple of shots toward the armoured knight advancing on them.

Meanwhile the lethal projectile of flame conjured from Breuddwyd's hand struck the nearest of the false fishermen true in the chest, burning off the caking of mud and leaving a horrid red burn showing through a scorched hole in the man's tunic. It staggered him, but he did not fall.

The acerbic sidhe's entreaty to the spellcaster who had debarked with Adalric was met only with an unintelligible diatribe in panicked Khinasi as the man returned to shaking a lean fist at the Prowl's captain.
May 29, 2025 4:37 pm
The violence that erupted on the pier was astounding, both in its breadth and in its suddenness, and watching the stranger who seemed to be their charges bodyguard peppered with bolts and arrows stunned Tovrunn into stillness. It wasn't until the sidhe's odd noiseless speaking pushed it's way into the corners of her mind and she could attach meaning to words did she move. A few short breaths later, she was back, though the shaking in her hands and the pounding of her heart seemed paralyzing.

First things first. Save the knight.

Having the wherewithal to see Aeric's ruse for what it was, Tovrunn spoke the words and drew the gestures of healing over the still twitching and groaning knight, infusing his body with rejuvenating energy and bringing him back to consciousness. "Do not speak!" She hissed as he awoke. "Your charge is safe, the enemy chases illusions, do not correct them! Can you fight?"

The sounds of battle and the noxious fumes of burning flesh and hair drew Tovrunn's attention, and she snapped fire to life in her hand, pitching it at the nearest enemy, one of the fishermen whose flesh was already burnt, before dipping back behind cover.
May 29, 2025 4:38 pm
Corson's eyes flutter open, taking a moment to digest Tovrunn's words, the supine warrior listens around him, staring up at the sky. One enemy, cries out in pain, in the direction of my feet... that one.

The squire takes a deep breath, Do what must be done.

Corson rolls over and scrambles toward his savior, and past, slinging his shield off his back as he takes to his feet!
May 29, 2025 4:39 pm
Seemingly reading her master's thoughts, Arglwyddes lunged forward across the timbers of the pier, catching hold of the ruined tunic of the nearest fisherman (the one whose wound still smoked with vaporous flesh) dragging at his clothing and snapping at his limbs. Slinging crossbow across his shoulder the injured man backed away in cautious retreat even as his paired fellows advanced, each loosing a shot at the seemingly resurrected Corson. "Why won't you stay down?" one of them spat in frustration to punctuate the hiss of his bolt as it found its mark in the warrior's scarred flesh.

Behind them two of their fellows split between the high and low road making targets of Breuddwyd and Aeric, while the man who'd spoken for the group took advantage of his unobstructed view of the suddenly menacing sidhe before clambering from the little keelboat. Close though their shots came, the salty timbers of dock and crate proved valiant defenders.

The Prowl meanwhile, its rear sail partially unfurled and inverted, began to laboriously pull away from the dock. As a rule ships were not built to move backards, but with the sailors aboard frantically thrusting hefty poles at the dock and the zebec's natural agility they were achieving a surprisingly swift departure.

With what there could be no doubt was a profane curse in his native tongue, the Ibis began a chant in the familiar syllables of ancient sidhe. A ripple of magic raised the hairs on Breuddwyd's neck, while Aeric glanced up at the familiar intonations just in time to see the ostentatiously attired man blink instantly out of sight. Meanwhile at his feet the exciseman and his assistant swam determinedly to the piling behind which Aeric was sheltering, and clung there.
May 30, 2025 11:54 am
Breuddwyd noted the sudden vanishing act of the foreign practitioner and watched without expression as Arglwyddes leaped dependably into the fray. She never produced much noise at all but that didn't make her any less fearsome when she was laying back her ears and showing a mouthful of big and pointed teeth to those who crossed her. He almost felt empathy for the man he had burned.

"Adain dân," Breuddwyd uttered once more and the Sidhelien words "fire wing" were an apt description. Tossing another incendiary blast across the distance separating them with an air of disdain, he considered his options.

"Hanghoeth," he muttered with a shake of his head, glancing towards Lancaelad and the other warrior from the ship, a bodyguard perhaps. The second man made for a very able puncushion, it seemed. There certainly were a lot more humans arrayed against them. This would be a taxing affair, likely to get far worse before it got better. The young sorcerer focused his sharp mind and his pinched visage grew incrementally more sour for a moment as his meta-elven will readjusted to help bear the load of his magical demands, like wooden puzzle-block pieces fitting more firmly together.

With that settled, he turned his attention to the few among their enemies who actually might have a clear shot at his position. Breuddwyd didn't hesitate to drop to his belly on the planks, watching the verbose human on the distant pier for a reaction. Being prone wouldn't undermine his affinity for spellcraft but it might make him a less appealing target for the marksmen.

**If you've any fresh ideas. I'm all ears.** he wryly sent to Tovrunn. **Or so I've heard.**
May 30, 2025 11:55 am
Corson, swatting the incoming quarrel aside, moved toward the pair of crossbowmen! Hoping to break the line to open an escape route, he surged forward, drawing his blade slashing at the nearest brigand!
May 30, 2025 11:57 am
Snarling through gritted teeth,as they fought a battle on two fronts, Lancaelad heard the eerie sizzle of fairfolk magic and the cry of the strange knight plunging into the fray. The man was admirably relentless, if nothing else; he had as much fletching stuck to his shield and armour as a badly-plucked chicken.

Deciding that the other approach, the pier not blocked off by debris, was in greatest need of being held, Lancaelad looked at one of the brutes charging after the figure of Salien. "Salien! Storm strike you, come back!" he yelled in frustration, not quite grasping that there were two of the sun-browned men on the field now. For a parting shot he hefted his arm back and hurled his axe in an overhand whirl of steel that struck over the barricade and grazed the brute's shoulderblade, leaving a crimson rent in his tunic.

Snorting in satisfaction, Lancaelad turned and strode towards the walkway between the building and the sea, unlimbering his crow's bill. "Hold the line! Each foot of Roesonean soil is paid for with a hogshead of foeman's blood!"
May 30, 2025 11:59 am
Aeric, satisfied that his trick seemed to be working, managed a thin smile. He had thought that the momentary diversion might have enabled them to make a break, but his hopes faded as he witnessed the calm yet determines fighting spirit of Salien’s escort - and Lancaelad’s boiling blood. With a sigh, he realised those two would not withdraw, he might as well aid them. "These brigands signed their death warrant the moment they decided to challenge the best Roesone can offer! Dispatch them swiftly, Knights!" he shouted, hoping to instil some confidence into the frontline fighters, and then focused on the image, moving it further away from the thugs. Perhaps, witnessing their quarry slipping through their grasp, the thugs would panic and be more prone to tactical errors and rash decisions.
May 30, 2025 12:01 pm
The illusory Adalric put on a turn of speed that Aeric deemed believable even though it exceeded most men's pace afoot, and outpaced his two burly pursuers by just a few yards as he made a dead sprint into the shadowy tangle of pilings beneath the far wharf. Aeric held the spell for a moment, letting the phantom vanish from sight. All going well he could dispel the thing once they went in after it and keep them searching, but if not he might have use for his ruse yet.

Seeing their fellows on the illusion's heels and with Lancaelad drawing first blood, the remaining heavies took up the ruinous barricade the knight had quit. Loosing a pair of bolts from their heavier crossbows at the knight as he disappeared around the corner of the looming nearest warehouse, they attempted to pin down the Roesonian contingent in preparation for escape while their companions secured their quarry. Though knightly armour and the salt-ravaged timbers proved too much for them Lancaelad didn't fancy returning to the open.
May 30, 2025 12:05 pm
"Fresh idea? How about running??" Tovrunn shot back verbally, not yet used to merely thinking a response. There were too man of their enemies, and her allies, brash and foolhardy as they were, seemed terribly interested in abandoning what cover they had in favor of clashing swords.

Men.

Having had quite enough of the chaos that surrounded them, Tovrunn lifted the crystal she kept hanging from a thong about her neck, shifting it in midair until the captured starlight flickered to life. Letting go of it as it suspended itself before her, the displaced druids hands formed arcane symbols on either side as the light grew and then somehow rippled outward like a stone tossed into a still pond. As the light passed over her, something strange occurred; to those paying attention in the midst of pitched battle, it would seem as though Tovrunn's skin had been replaced with the night sky. And then suddenly as light pierced forth in the dull gray drizzle of the docks, she became far harder to ignore. Her eyes became moonlight, her joints shone like stars, her hair floated as though suspended in water, painted by the soft milky white light of the galaxy.

Seemingly heedless of this sudden transformation, Tovrunn coolly reevaluated the battlefield, deciding her next course of actions. Lifting her arm, with one brightly lit finger she traced the constellation of The Hunter on her forearm, ending the bow-like tracing with a bright streak towards the palm of her hand, as though the hunter had loosed an arrow at a target. As she did so the light solidified, as though it were plucked out of the sky by some fae hand, and formed a miniature version of the projectile. A dozen copies sprang to life and wrapped themselves around her forearm, waiting patiently to be used.

Nodding in satisfaction, Tovrunn turned her attention to the thugs who had loosed crossbow bolts at her beloved. "Sir Lancaelad! Sir knight! We must retreat!" she shouted, even as she focused the two thugs blocking their retreat in her mind. They must be removed if they were to survive. "Wēta fylgð ljós!" she shouted, tracing symbols again. Light again burst forth from her hands, searing and painful to behold, and shot forth towards one of the two enemies, leaving streaks in the after vision of those who witnessed it. Turning and drawing her arm as though she were pulling at the string of a bow, one of the arrows sprung away from her arm and lengthened, becoming an arrow of light which she loosed at the brigand that the mysterious knight now fought with before ducking down again behind the crate.

"We bring down the other one, and then we run," she said to her companions, both the sidhe and their charge. "We can't stay here."
May 30, 2025 12:06 pm
The dangerous-looking men who'd emerged from the fog seemed made of sterner stuff than those who'd disguised themselves as fishermen, but even so the combined assault of Sir Lancaelad and his betrothed was more than he could bear, and the big man crumpled to the frigid cobbles.

Corson meanwhile created a bottleneck of sword and shield on the upper boardwalk, with the man he'd wounded joined by a pair of others. Despite trading their crossbows for short, curved blades with glittering razor edges they could make no mark in the knight's lovingly kept mail.

On the boards below a pair of crossbow armed fishermen continued their advance on Aeric's position, peppering the suddenly menacing Tovrunn with bolts, a single steel projectile managing to graze her despite the elevation and cargo protecting her.

Arglwyddes meanwhile dashed past Aeric where he crouched, and like a pale streak she took hold of the leg of one of the men pursuing the false Adalric, dragging him back with a threatening growl.
May 30, 2025 12:09 pm
A glittering bolt of light shot a few yards past Lancaelad's shoulder, making him flinch and glance back at the source. When he saw it – her – his jaw fell open.

Tovrunn's eyes were silver flame, her skin indigo and black swirls studded with intricate webs of diamond stars. She was like an avatar or Ruornil, like the mysteries of the night sky given form. Beautiful, the thought dimly crossed his mind before the clamour of battle drew him back to the moment.

Her words pierced his consciousness and he looked around swiftly at the other kninght holding his own down the pier, the enemies scattered on all sides. They had shed more blood than they had lost, but this was a forlorn hope of a battle. The brash, but not foolhardy, young man clung to Tovrunn's cry of retreat as a lifeline. It was the sensible course of action, and the fact that she had called for it, not him, would let him hold on to his dignity when there was a call to accounts.

"We must protect our charge!" he roared in agreement. "To me, Salien! To me, Lady Tovrunn! Lord Aeric! I shall clear the path!" Lancaelad turned and fixed his attention on the remaining man by the barricade. Lunging forward, unencumbered by a shield, Lancaelad grasped the haft of his weapon in both hands and swung the hooked metal spike in a crescent arc at the ruffian's chest. The man was able to step inside the blow just enough that he took the bruising force of the haft against his shoulder instead of the bill to the heart, huffing in pain. Lancaelad hissed through clenched teeth and whipped the weapon back to repeat its accusation, but a counter-stroke from the ruffian was able to parry the blow.

But... hold a moment. The young knight suddenly remembered an observation Aeric had made to him, that he sometimes over-committed on his swings, leaving himself Open. Normally he would have dismissed such advice from an unseasoned warrior such as Aeric, but in that instant Lancaelad saw the ruffian had pushed too far into the parry, leaving him arm extended in a way that made it impossible for him to turn the knife he held quickly. Lancaelad took that mistake and stepped into it, catching the flat of the enemy's blade on his maille-armoured flank where it could do no harm, and bringing his weapon down a third time in as many heartbeats in a far more confident blow that drove the spike into the ruffian's collarbone with a gout of crimson. "There you are," he spat in the man's face.
May 30, 2025 12:10 pm
Breuddwyd peeked around the corner of his grimy wooden bastion, noticing quickly that another enemy was closing in, poised between himself and the unknown soldier.

"Newid safleoedd," he murmured, wrestling the unseen, writhing tangle of corrupting enchantment off the smoldering corpse and affixing it to the next lucky recipient before lashing out with punitive flames. Treachery and woe were the gifts that kept on giving, uncooperative as they could be in transit. "Adain dân."

It was a funny angle.

A wicked whimsy caught him then and, in his cold and distinctly Sidheaccented tone—with just a hint of unfathomable fey malice—he told his allies, "Mind you leave one alive for after. My kin would surely savor weeding out the sins that drove them here." In ordinary circumstances, he would be reluctant to play on the parochial superstitions and misinformation regarding elves that seemed to plague human society. But if that same ignorance might be used to sway matters in their favor now, who was he to balk at the opportunity? Content that crates alone would cover his slender form from attack, he rose to a crouch, sensing that this spot could not keep him safe forever.
May 30, 2025 12:11 pm
Aeric smiled as the thugs continued running after the image. It had served its purpose well. Only a powerful group would have the gall to attack Roesone nobility at the docks in broad daylight, and the hired thugs would most likely be terrified of reporting failure. Hoping to utilise the fear of losing sight of their quarry to his advantage, Aeric ceases the image to exist once he is further under the wharf, out of sight of the mercenaries, and turns his attention to the ongoing battle.

The numbers were still against them, despite the bravery of Lancaelad and Adalric's escort. He was impressed by the carnage Breuddwyd and Torvunn created through their arcane aptitude, yet using magic for killing never had interested Aeric. He decided to try evening the numbers further, by taking what he perceived to be their leader out of the picture, via muttering the incantions which would induce a magical slumber. Witnessing the predicament Adalric's escort was in, he shouts "Just hold them back! They no longer outnumber us, and they sure do not outmatch us!"
May 30, 2025 12:11 pm
Corson's mind raced, taking in all of his new allies' chatter. Hold ground... Retreat... Which is it?

The stalwart squire decided that reducing the number of opponents was more important and slapped his blade at the man's head!
May 30, 2025 12:14 pm
Now that they were in close quarters Corson could discern more than muck and sweat in his opponents. The first was lean with a, hollow cheeked fellow with a hunting-knife of a nose. His sword was oiled and honed to a cruel edge - this was no weapon of opportunity. His small eyes glittered with the giddy thrill of the fight before Corson killed him, heavy knightly weapon splitting his skull like a melon and smearing red amongst the brown.

His two fellows looked equally inured to violence. Brigands or mercenaries if he had to guess. A woman with short, knife-cut hair and a scar on her chin that threatened to give her mouth a vertical opening, and a man in his early middle years so nondescript that Corson would have passed him by even in the sun-soaked avenues of Suiriene without note. Their faces fell as their companion collapsed, but the pair held their nerve. Likely they believed that outnumbering the orderless knight would afford them the upper hand.

They were wrong of course.

Lancaelad meanwhile found himself more fairly matched. The man opposite him was undoubtedly a mercenary with his gambeson pitted with cuts and stained. A leather coif and undyed scarf covered his face, but beneath them a heavy-browed eye glowered at the younger Noelon from beneath a livid scar.

From farther down the wharf came the bellow of another of the crossbow-wielding thugs. "Trickery! They've still got the man!"

Even as he scarcely weathered a punishing rain of blows, the man gave a grunt. He'd heard. The eyes rolled to take in his surrounds - his fallen companion pierced by Tovrunn's arrow. Blood spread across his shoulder, and spittle rolled lazily down the scarf but he exchanged his hefty crossbow for a knotted cudgel and made a lunge that winded Lancaelad for a moment. The Roesonean knight was only barely able to duck under the heavy backhand that followed by pure instinct.

As the melees continued Aeric watched with some satisfaction as the most distant of their attackers succumbed to his spell, slumping to the timbers across the muddy shore, and looking to strike his head as he did. The cry of the men he'd drawn off cut short his celebration though, as bolts whistled overhead, the one destined for Tovrunn clattering off the wharf, but the other marked for him grazed Aeric's forearm, drawing a ragged line of blood.
May 30, 2025 12:14 pm
Adalric looked between Tovrunn and Breuddwyd, wide eyed. "What in Cuiraécen's name is going on?" he yelped, seemingly still in shock at the sudden conflict. "What do they want?"
May 30, 2025 12:16 pm
The bolt slipping past her armor and leaving red streaks of pain on her arm caused Tovrunn to gasp and cry out. There was no doubt about it; this was a fight for survival. One they might not win.

"You, apparently," Tovrunn said to Adalric, glaring at the man who had shot at her and preparing an arrow of her own when he stopped in his tracks and fainted as though poisoned by the smell of dream-ointment. "Find your feet and get ready to run. But stay close; there could be more."

Looking about the docks-turned battlefield, Tovrunn did her best to predict the tides and eddies of the battle. But things were moving too fast, the changes happening quickly and unexpectedly. One thing was clear though; these men chased their charge. Perhaps there was enough there to end this quickly.

"We can't stay here," she repeated to the wide-eyed man. "I will draw their attention. Breuddwyd, Adalric, cross the open and get to Lancaelad. Go!" Sparing a glance down at their other lordling below them on the dock, Tovrunn shouted, "What are you doing Aeric?! RUN!!"

With that she stepped away from her cover, crossing the docks towards where Lancaelad fought the corner of the building and launching another glowing missile as she did so, hoping to bring down the ruffian that threatened her betrothed and give the man a moment's respite.

"Sir knight! We must flee! Your charge is what matters not these men's blood!" she shouted at Adalric's guardian, and muttering a spell under her breath.
May 30, 2025 12:17 pm
At a jog Adalric followed on Tovrunn's heels, but before Breuddwyd could follow there was a screeching crunch of timber or timber and the sound of splintering wood. The Prowl, hasty in its departure, had underestimated the arc of its turn, and as it ground hard against the piling of the dock the seaward piling collapsed and the whole thing shook violently threatening to throw the noble sidhe to the ground.

Seeing their target break cover the scarred woman and her forgettable companion began to converge, circling around Corson in their close quarters battle and making ready to intercept Adalric. The scarred woman's blade bit deep even as Corson parried the other man's thrust.

The remaining fisher on the lower boardwalk, with no hope of joining the battle in time, instead advance on Aeric's position, close enough that he could make out the woman's uncannily pale grey eyes beneath her leather cap. She loosed another shot as she circled around, the bolt thudding into the timber's near Aeric's head.

Arglwyddes continued to harry one of the bigger brutes, pulling at his leathers in powerful jaws and slowing his return.
May 30, 2025 12:23 pm
"Yhhh -"

The wind was knocked clean out of Lancaelad's lungs by the blow, and his avoidance of the follow-through was more reeling chance than intentional dodge. It felt as if the chain links of his hauberk had been hammered into his flesh, and it required a visceral effort to suck the briny, fish-stained air of the docks into his chest again. The man fought like a gutter cur, with none of the poise of the melee field, but he was undoubtedly effective.

"You knave! You dare strike one of the blood!?" the young knight wheezed, his face mottled as he gasped and fell back a pace or to to regain his composure. Let the man think he was retreating; Lancaelad would meet his advance head on and show him who was the superior. Forcing a deep breath and gathering his strength, he cried out: "For the Black Hart and the Hawk!" The beasts of Roesone and House Noelon gave him renewed vigour, and he swung his crow's bill at the oncoming brute. His mark saw the blow coming and stopped short, turning a decisive strike into a mere scratch.
May 30, 2025 12:23 pm
Crouched down by the crates, the sudden splintering impact easily knocked Breuddwyd off his feet and sent him sprawling on the planks. For an instant, images of twisted, testudinal fey horrors danced behind his eyes, shelled pixie-things not meant to be viewed in daylight. And he felt a tortoise himself, not so agile as many of his kin and momentarily defenseless once supine. He was too surprised to even utter an elegant Sidhelien curse.

Righting himself quickly, he knew it was past time he followed the northern woman's directive. Rising, he similarly retreated but then scarcely paused before rushing to the other side of the wharf and dropping low once more to offer Aeric assistance in reclaiming the higher ground.

"Time to elevate your thinking, trickster," Breuddwyd called down wryly but not unkindly, reaching out with both hands to provide some leverage. "This welcome party's well and truly played out, it is."
May 30, 2025 12:24 pm
Corson assumed a defensive stance, raising his shield as he withdrew.
May 30, 2025 12:25 pm
Aeric cursed as he realized his little jig was coming to an end. The Brutes had found out the duplicitous nature of the image he had created, and the nearest person to the Brutes was none other than himself, utterly unprepared for close quarters combat in his current circumstance. Thankfully, the loyal companion of the Sidhe seemed to be causing trouble for one of them.

As he pondered what his next move would be, he saw Breuddwyd offering his assistance and immediately grabbed his hand to climb out of the lower wharf. "Many thanks, and agreed, let's get out of here before those brutes head back." he replied, as he unsheathed his rapier and began running.
May 30, 2025 12:25 pm
Seeing their quarry on the move the pair of ruffians drawn off by Aeric's arcane ruse were hustling back to the fight, the farthest forgoing reloading his crossbow to tear his clothing free of Arglwyddes jaws. If towering the man Lancaelad was still contending with was a sign of their prowess then coming toe to toe with this pair would go poorly. Seeing his foes closing in Aeric scrambled up the piling, but as he reached for Breuddwyd's hand a crossbow bolt sung between the pair. Though it thudded into the timbers well short of the sidhe, it was enough that both men had to retract their reach and the magician found himself sliding back to the planks below.

Behind the scarf that at least partially concealed his identity, the eyes of the big man opposing Lancaelad glittered with a desperate light. He was wounded, his breathing ragged, but with the whole of the Roesonians bearing down on him and his back unguarded even in so dire a state he dared not retreat. Darting forward with a speed his build belied, the man sent a grimy thumb straight into the knight's eye, and as Lancaelad reeled the brute brought up the cudgel and caught the young knight right in the jaw, sending him thudding to the cobbles.

Now free of a foe the big man pulled back to the corner of the warehouse.
May 30, 2025 12:26 pm
As soon as Aldaric's bodyguard was clear, Tovrunn let her spell burst forth, slamming a palm to the wood of the dock. Small curling green sprouts sprang to life from the dead, fractured boards and traced beneath the knights feet before exploding forth in a burst of magically induced growth about his assailants legs and arms. Vines and thorns grew froth from the wood beneath their feet, as though the boards of the docks suddenly remembered the strength of the trees that gave them birth and now sought revenge against those who desecrated their corpses.

Turning in satisfaction to continue the retreat, Tovrunn's blood ran cold as she saw her knightly husband-to-be fall at the hands of the brute that he had battled against. "Lancaelad!"

Hurrying to his side, she spoke words of healing and life to him, and then turned to the bandit that felled him with vengeance in her eyes. Snapping to life a small handful of flame, she threw it at the man in retribution.
May 30, 2025 12:27 pm
As Tovrunn took the lead in a fighting retreat, sorcerous growth entrapping the scarred woman and her nondescript companion on their flank even as another spell sent consciousness exploding back into Lancaelad's body and another scorched the wall of the warehouse as her betrothed's foe vanished around it, Aeric could only watch. At his back a pair of towering thugs in armour advanced while ahead the pale-eyed girl with the sallow complexion advanced, lunging forward with her savagely sharp knife and cleaving a bloody line across the nobleman's doublet. He was penned in down here, and if the retreat continued apace he'd be left behind! And then what might this woman and her companions do to him?

Unable to free their limbs from the clinging vines, the pair of fishers readied their crossbows and took aim at Corson, determined to make his retreat a costly one. But even with so close a target the ever reaching vines and the warrior's own evasive footwork was too great an obstacle for their marksmanship.

Meanwhile not far out to sea the Prowl continued to grind its flanks against the pier, tearing the weathered timber apart with a terrible groan and making the piling that was already peppered with bolts all the harder to climb.
May 30, 2025 12:29 pm
Adalric seemed at least to know when to follow instructions. Sprinting through the gap he pressed his back against the wall of the warehouse and looked between Tovrunn and the gradually recovering Lancaelad. Unarmed he'd be little better than worthless should the fight corner them here. The temptation to turn over their charge and fight another day was strong, but with even their fishing vessels the ambushers could be in Diemed by sunset. And with such determined opposition, failure in their assignment was beginning to look like more than mere reprimand might compensate.
May 30, 2025 12:30 pm
Corson seemed impressed by the sudden intrusion of nature on the docks, and with a smile withdraws to join the others, backing away at first, making sure everyone had made it past him, then turning to pursue.
May 30, 2025 12:33 pm
In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man was king. Roesone must not be the land of the blind, then, for Ser Lancaelad did not feel very regal.

The snap of the cudgel came from seemingly nowhere as the young knight winced back, his eye contorted around the grime from the thumb that had been rammed into it. That was perhaps a small mercy – very small – for it spared him any sense of foreboding. There was merely an impact that pushed Aebrynis sideways; the feeling of his teeth smashing together; the brine and mud slicked cobbles knocking the breath from him again.

Lancaelad wheeled in darkness for what felt like hours, days, but in reality were mere heartbeats as Tovrunn rushed to his side. In the ringing black of his concussion he felt rather than heard the words she spoke, but they wrenched him back into the light. The taste of blood filled his mouth. The links of his maille cut into his skin where the padding had become disarrayed by his fall. The commotions of battle rolled in like the tide, and the plants of the piers and walkways seemed to writhe as the Golden Prowl ground against them and something uncanny made them claw at the assailants of their own volition.

He looked up as the daze cleared from his eyes, and saw the figure above him shining brighter than the morning sun. Her silver-gold tresses gleamed like the moon on a clear night, and her eyes were as clear and luminous as starlight. "Like an angel," he murmured in wonder, his teeth scarlet and tongue thick.

Gathering what little wits he possessed, Lancaelad rolled onto his knees and pushed himself upright, biting down on a groan of pain. His crow's bill had not scattered far from his hand and his picked it up, shrugging his shoulders to shift his shield from his back to his arm, quickly tightening the straps. "Shield and helm," he grunted. "A knight's stout left hand and crown. Never forget again." Heaving to his feet, he grabbed Adalric Salien by the shoulder and shoved him towards Tovrunn. "Brenna's speed, you fool!"

Tottering forward, towards the man who had laid him low, Lancaelad took a breath. "For the Black Hart and the Hawk!" he repeated shakily, squinting, raising his shield and letting the point of his weapon scrape across the cobbles in a warning rasp.
May 30, 2025 12:34 pm
Aeric began panicking as he felt the situation grasping from his control. His inability to scale the pole on his first try had put him in a precarious situation. This might be the first time he was truly fighting for his life.

Out of useful tricks, only one hope remained, that he was not the primary target of the assailants. Although they seemed the type that don't leave witnesses behind, they would most likely prefer it to failing to capture their target in this high stake scheme. Or so he hoped. He disengaged his opponent, ran toward the base of the stone wall where the wooden part of the pier ended, and jumped, trying to grab the top of the wall and quickly pull himself upwards, hoping the crates above would provide him cover from incoming arrows.
May 30, 2025 12:35 pm
Breuddwyd's petulant, habitual scowl deepened as Aeric scrabbled to reach him and then failed, remaining planted on the planks of the lower wharf as if climbing was against his religion. Then he winced, feeling helpless himself as the human enemy that bore his curse cut the would be administrator with their sword. It would not do to let Aeric fall to so basic an adversary—not when he was so close to salvation. A debt was far better repaid to a living man than to his corpse.

"Rude to dance with someone else when we've not yet finished our jig," Breuddwyd hissed down to the unnamed assailant and, rising to his feet, he was relieved to see the wounded Aeric duck nimbly away to find his own route. "Adain dân!"

Spitting out those harsh Sidhelien syllables once more and aiming a finger stiffened like a killing bodkin point, he threw more magic fire out to solve this problem with finality. Keeping his shoulders squared and his death-dealing hand half-raised towards their opposition, the elf moved to meet the climbing magician once he reached the top.

"You've got red on you," he remarked placidly, seemingly unconcerned.
May 30, 2025 12:36 pm
At the bloom of Breuddwyd's sorcerous flames about her shoulders the pale eyed woman shot him a glare like the heart of a glacier, but it was distraction enough for Aeric to scramble away and up the seaward wall while his sidhe companion made good his own retreat to join Tovrunn and the two armoured and battered knights on the salty cobbles.

Ahead of their paired shields the bloodied heavy limped out of sight around the corner of the warehouse, but his two companions down by the water seemed not so tired of the fight. The first jogged up to the position Aeric had just surrendered, letting off a humming shot at the disappearing back of the nobleman. Still fighting with a frustrated growl to loose Arglwyddes from his weapon, the other was only able to make a rather more harried advance.

Aeric heard Breuddwyd make some remark as he mounted the wall, turned to regard the sidhe, and the bolt caught him squarely between the shoulders, sending him crumpling forward into the cargo debris before him with an ugly, boneless thud.
May 30, 2025 12:37 pm
Grimacing at the smouldering mark on the wall that had been meant for their foe, she looked down on Lancaelad just in time to hear him say...something. It was hard to tell what exactly he said given the sounds of battle around them and the blood thickening on his tongue, but Tovrunn got the sense that she should probably feel flattered. Mostly though, she was just confused.

Worrying over him as the knight-to-be found his feet, Tovrunn nodded. "Keeping those close seems a clever precaution from here on out," she agreed kindly, forgiving him this instance on account of the sudden and unexpected danger. Turning in time to see Aeric take a crossbow bolt to the back, she huffed exasperatedly, "And it seems a lesson that dear Aeric is in dire need of."

Hurrying to his side despite the debris that littered the cobblestones of the pier, Tovrunn pulled out what strips of purified cloth and herb-soaked bandages she had thought to keep close, thanking her greatgrandmother's memory for reminding her to keep such life-saving remedies close. She was not the healer that her ancestor was, but she had enough talent to save the young man's life. Provided they make good on their retreat.

"Help me carry him," she bade the sidhe as she tried to pull the unconscious lordling to safety.
May 30, 2025 12:40 pm
With an air of grim determination Tovrunn and Breuddwyd hefted Aeric's slumped form onto their shoulders and began dragging him through the detritus of fallen cargo toward the steel wall their knightly protectors afforded around their charge. The battle was far from lost, but with the Rjurik noble's healing spent and near all of their number nursing some harm things were about to become desperate.

Out of the corner of her eye Tovrunn could see one of the disguised fishermen - the woman with the scarred face - hack herself the magical vines with murder in her eyes. But even as battle looked once again ready to join a welcome sound resounded across the docks.

"Stop in the name of the Black Hart!" bellowed a woman's voice, husky with age and authority. And with it came the thunder of dozens of footfalls. One by one the Baronial Marines began to emerge from the mist, bills and swords at the ready, and before them scurried Lancalad's young squire Paidrig, a cruel looking bearded axe in his hand.

The fishermen were no disorganised rabble - their escape had always evidently been the sea, their light armour said as much. With a swift discipline they each took off at a run, diving from the docks and into the water in the face of such overwhelmingly superior numbers.

By the time the first of the marines set foot off cobble and onto timber only one of their number remained: The painfully nondescript fisherman stood amongst the writhing vines that Tovrunn had summoned forth, his knife and crossbow already cast as far from him as possible. The rest could be seen just out to sea beyond the Prowl, which had finished its destructive arc, clambering onto the pair of skiffs that had launched before the attack.

The situation at least somewhat in hand, captain of the marines - an Anuirean who looked to be in her late middle years with iron in her hair and eyes, surveyed the battered company with a perfunctory bow. "My lords" she deferred, recognising the livery of the knights and the ashen face of Lancaelad. "Does he yet live? Shall I summon Lord Lecland?"
May 30, 2025 12:42 pm
The arrival of the Marines could not have come at a better time. Preparing yet more spells against the one who had escaped her bramble, it was with great relief that Tovrunn let the enchantments she had been weaving fall to the wayside as their target ran. Breathing a sigh of relief, she took stock of their rescuers, and headed the captains questions by turning her attention to Aeric.

Kneeling on the wooden docks, she evaluated her work. It was hasty and sloppy, but she'd like to think that her great-grandmother would have been proud. "The bleeding has staunched," she assessed, pressing a hand to the heaviest of his injuries and relieved that it came away clean. Placing ear to chest, she held her breath and listened. "And he yet breathes. His heartbeat is strong, and his lungs fill with air. More than that I cannot say until he wakes."

Rising to her feet and pulling forth her crystal, she once again suspended it in air. But this time with a gentle pushing and a deep controlled breath, the light left her skin and joints and hair and eyes and fled to the crystal, and her flesh regained its earthly qualities once again. Retaking her charm, she turned, fully the woman that her companions would remember. "We should move him somewhere warm and dry as soon as can be managed."
May 30, 2025 12:47 pm
For a very long moment, the Sidhe grappled with the notion of striking down their retreating enemies with fire and pain before finally releasing his hold on the dark well of magic within him and relinquishing such decisions to the uniformed soldiers.

"We'll need him ready to ride as soon as possible, we will," Breuddwyd pointed out to Tovrunn with an impatient sort of anxiety to his tone. His strange elven eyes were on the soldiers that had come to the rescue and his discomfort around so many armed humans was clear to those who knew him even just a little. Why did this species only ever look so motivated, so inspired, when they were moments away from killing or claiming something for themselves that they had not truly earned?

Attempting to disguise his unease, the whip-thin Sidhe turned to consider those left behind by their fleeing assailants. Arglwyddes was at his side an instant later, a friendly ghost intent to offer the support of warmth and fur now that her teeth were no longer needed. Gratefully, Breuddwyd stroked the soft tufts about the tall dog's ears.

"I suppose it's worth taking the time to question survivors," he allowed, his expression cold and stony. "I might lend some aid there." He had been given to understand that the superstitions of uneducated common men gave great leeway to elven powers of perception. "Hear their side of this squabble before we're off up the road again. If only to ensure others don't await us in every ditch beyond town."

It was something of a relief to learn that Aeric would pull through; Breuddwyd was surprised to find he cared about that even beyond betraying his family's obligation there. But with the sharp diplomat still indisposed, he turned his attention on the unknown quantity from the ship.

"Breuddwyd Niderfyn di-Ffael," he said to Corson by way of introduction, neither bowing nor offering a hand, though his manner was civil enough. His flowery Sidhelien appellation was a peculiar sort of title he'd assumed for himself and those accustomed to elven language and traditions would likely recognize the abundant pretentiousness of youth behind the Sidhe's comportment. Politely but stiffly through his small, white, perfect teeth, he added, "Your valiant intervention was most timely and not unappreciated."
May 30, 2025 12:49 pm
Wiping his blade, Corson sheathed his blade before turning to regard the others. I had been some time since he was so embroiled in the conflict between life and death. It is nature, I suppose... to face mortality.

At the Sidhe's approach, the Sidhelien title brought a genuine smile to his face. If he was translating it correctly, this youth was quite... confident.

"Corson, the Evergreen," the squire responded in imperfect Sidhelien before continuing in Anuirean to avoid slaughtering the language. "It is I that should thank you for your help in saving my charge, and reviving me after that initial volley."
May 30, 2025 12:51 pm
"You've got red on you," Breuddwyd agreed. He glanced about restlessly for Tovrunn or one of the others. His Sidhelien hands were nimble indeed but ill-matched to patching spilled humours or spackling torn flesh. Mere mortal concerns, really.

"Your charge would seem to be the one we're sent to fetch." For just one idle moment, he considered asking Corson what secrets he knew of this insignificant human lad who drew such dangerous interest. Then he decided it probably didn't matter; at least it wouldn't once the job was done.
May 30, 2025 1:23 pm
"Aye, that I do," Corson looks at the arrows still sticking out of his shoulder, Mayhap I should have a healer take a look at this. At the news revealed but the Sidhe-ling, Corson nods. "I had suspected as much. I was told to expect an entourage when we arrived. Do we have horses awaiting us? Once we have a little time to recover, we should move. I suspect we have not seen the last of these troubles."

The squire pondered his new companions. Breuddwyd, young Elf lord, maybe a little too confident for his own good. The Northwoman, touched by the gods. One of the gifted... In fact, thinking to himself, perhaps they are all of the gift. This will be interesting, to be sure...
May 30, 2025 1:26 pm
Standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Lancaelad, Corson could see a tension around his eyes, a whey cast to his features where they were not mottled with bruises and spattered with blood. That may have been a consequence of the blow to the skull he had taken, but Corson recognised battle-fear when he saw it. A sharp hiss of breath escaped his lips as the constabulary arrived, that throttled look of fear giving way to stormy anger.

"Cowards!" he shouted, taking several bold paces towards the waterline and brandishing his arms and shield at the fleeing assailants. "Let the Sea-Drake gnaw your bones, if the Royal Customs cutters do not take you!" Panting, flushed, Lancaelad caught the urgent conversations around him and wheeled in concern. "Aeric!"

Shaking off his shield and belting his weapon, the young knight knelt at the noble magician's side, placing a concerned gauntlet on his shoulder. "He will live?" he looked up at Tovrunn, finding some relief in her confidence. "He did me a great service once, and stood bravely at our sides in battle. I would not see his honourable blood spilled on this miserable dock for..." Lancaelad glanced over at Adalric Salien, his blue eyes turning flinty for a moment.

Carefully, catching a nose full of sweet-pungent herbal medicine he slipped his arm under Aeric's shoulders and the other below his knees and rose to his feet, bearing the other man with relative ease. "Paedrig, bring the horse!" he called. As his squire approached Lancaelad gave him a stern look. "Tardy, boy. An aspiring knight should discharge his duties with more alacrity." His tone was gruff, but part of him was relieved to see Paedrig intact.

The two of them manhandled Aeric carefully into Victorious' saddle and wrapped a rope around his waist. It would keep the unconscious man upright, so long as they lead the horse slowly, though it would do little to staunch his wounds. As they got Aeric settled a hand tugged at Lancaelad's cloak, and he turned and looked down to see the perpetually grubby, beaming face of his ostler, Geremie. "Fetched this a'fore ya, m'lud!" Geremie chirped, holding up the bloodstained hatchet Lancaelad had hurled at one of the ruffians. Lan nodded, tucking it away and ruffling the boy's hair while shoving him away.

"Yes, Master Breuddwyd. By all means, let us question the prisoners," the young knight said grimly. "But let us also question our guest. You, Master Salien." he advanced on the Suirienese man and prodded a finger into his chest. "Why were so many men set on your capture? Who are you to warrant this effort and bloodshed?"
May 30, 2025 1:30 pm
Nodding tersely at her betrothed's question, Tovrunn kept what comments she might have to herself, supervising the movement of her charge to be sure that none of his wounds had reopened. Finding herself next to Paidrig in securing Aeric to the stout horse Victorious, she quietly commented, "You did well," before stepping away.

Turning her attention to the next most likely to collapse from their injuries, she approached the knight and the sidhe. "Greetings Corson of the Evergreen," she said, having overheard his introduction. "I am Tovrunn Auðunardottir. And while I am not the healer my ancestors were, I would like to see to your injuries." Assuming permission, she then inspected her handiwork. On evaluation, she found that an uncomfortable number of bolts and arrows had pierced the knight's armor and flesh, though the skin around them had magically knit itself closed about the projectiles as evidenced by the fresh pink hue not unlike scar tissue that had grown around them. "This will need tending to," she said humorlessly as she plucked at the fetching of one of the bolts, causing the wooden shaft to bend slightly. "But you are walking, so we shall do so elsewhere. Somewhere with clean linens and bountiful herbs. Try not to disturb them overmuch."

Casting a concerned look towards Lancaelad as if to silently warn him about the dire consequences of a lost temper, Tovrunn instead turned her focus to the guard captain. "Thank you for your rescue, captain..." Leaving the space open enough for an introduction, the icy northern woman continued, "The fight would likely have turned against us were it not for your arrival."
May 30, 2025 1:31 pm
Corson nodded in appreciation to Tovrunn as he attempted to commit her name to memory, "Tovrunn... You have my gratitude."

Having asked Salien the same question before, the squire awaited the same answer that he had been given.
May 30, 2025 1:32 pm
Content with Corson's introduction, Breuddwyd took a position at Lancaelad's side and held out the spare cloak he'd brought for Adalric. It was slate blue in color and well-suited to allaying the chill of any further drizzle.

"Keep the hood up," he instructed with an air of impatience before the young human could respond to the heavily-armed popinjay. The Sidhe eyed tanned complexion gravely. "The shadows beneath may serve to deflect casual scrutiny of those uncommon features. And we've a ways to go just yet, we do."

He handed over the mittens as well, knowing their ride could swiftly turn chilly. Then he glanced back once more at their sole remaining foe, a professional combatant who did not look so dangerous now, surrounded by the barony's steel-clad forces. Breuddwyd was determined to hear answers spilled from that truculent font but lingering in the street for such a discussion would accomplish little save leaving them all exposed.
May 30, 2025 1:37 pm
Without complaint Adalric accepted the muted garment and threw it about his shoulders even as this crowd of strangers talked about him as if he weren't there. Only with Lancaelad's questioning did he finally find his voice, and when he did it had an edge to it.

"I'm a farmer! I have three hundred acres in Baered where I grow oranges, apricots, pomegranate. Fruit!" Remembering their situation he pulled up the hood on the slate cloak and lowered his voice markedly.

"Three weeks ago I was pruning after the crop, and the Lord-Governor sent a summons. Asked me to get on a ship, come here, talk to some Anuirean. Couldn't tell me about what, just that it would be a service to my home. He told me I'd be back before next season. I got on a ship, and then this happened. None of this has anything to do with me."

Lancaelad could see the whites all around the man's eyes as he spoke they were so wide, his wit had been more strained than their own by the ambush. It was true that none of their attackers had named Salien - was it a case of mistaken identity? But then why the low profile they'd been instructed to maintain?
May 31, 2025 2:21 am
Paedrag frowned grimly at Tovrunn. "You're too kind my lady. I should have acted more swiftly, then my master would not be so sorely spent and Master Lecland might have gone unharmed."
May 31, 2025 2:21 am
The captain meanwhile snapped a crisp bow even as her marines surged past to secure the wharf and guide the dripping and shellshocked exciseman back to land. "With your permission we shall take the young master and the prisoner both into our charge. We've a physician at the barracks, and a gaol that will see to both."
May 31, 2025 2:22 am
Lancaeald harumphed. "Then someone has made a grave error as to your identity. I pray we will not be the ones to suffer for it." Turning to the marine captain, he nodded. "We shall accompany you, captain. Our wounds must be tended to," he shifted, feeling his ribs creak under his armour, "And prepare ourselves for urgent travel to Endier. "

No doubt some among the party groaned inwardly at that, as the brash young man thoughtlessly gave away their destination. Gesturing for the company to follow him, Lancaelad took Victorious' reins and lead him carefully, mindful of Aeric's condition. Falling into pace alongside the foreign warrior, he said: "Ser Corson the Evergreen, you said? You acquitted yourself well, brother knight, fighting with ceaseless devotion to your charge. Do you hail from Suiriene, like this fellow?"
May 31, 2025 2:23 am
"Be sure to have your men watch our captive closely until we've time to relieve him of secrets," Breuddwyd told the captain, his tone cool and his dark eyes shining strangely beneath the dismal gray of the sky. "Likely he realises his life is forfeit now. I'd not see him end it prematurely by his own hand out of desperation or singular loyalty to an as-of-yet unknown cause."

He was observing the marines with interest now, wondering how difficult it must have been for the ambushers to maneuver a well-armed attacking force with discretion on protected lands. How much easier with the aid of turncoats or informers within the local regiment's ranks? Humans were, with rare exception, a short-sighted, petty and avaricious lot and he knew too little of soldiers in general to put trust in their vows of service and discipline as a rule. The lifestyle was beyond his ken.

"If he otherwise suffers harm I'll be hearing the names of those responsible."
May 31, 2025 2:25 am
Allowing Lancaelad to take the position that he was doubtlessly convinced was his by right, Tovrunn still pursed her lips at his thoughtlessness at revealing their destination. "Avani guide this man and reveal to him the mysteries of the word 'secrecy,'" she groused under her breath, taking her own horse by the reins. To the captain, she explained, "We will see to Master Lecland's injuries, but as soon as he wakes we must be off. We should like to hear what this prisoner has to say before we do, though."

Casting one last look at the battlefield that was the docks, Tovrunn followed the wooden planks out to the edge of the water, and beyond. Distantly she could still see the remainder of their foes in their retreat. They had been prepared for a flight to the sea. Well prepared. Suddenly her brow scrunched up, the wheels in her mind turning. "You there! Exiseman!" she called out, pointing to the shopping wet administrator and his quick-witted assistant. "You are witness to these events and your testimony will likely prove valuable. Follow."

Turning and moving to join her compatriots as though the idea of the man not doing as ordered had never crossed her mind, when he approached she asked him, "Something tickles in my memory from before the battle, words exchanged between you and Master Lecland as the ship was docking; did you happen to mention something about smugglers?"
May 31, 2025 2:27 am
A micro-expression of guilt flashed on the man's face. "I never made it out of my squire-ship."

There was a moment of hesitation before Corson remembered to add "...M'lord. I am actually from this region, though I have not set foot here for close to a year. I was squired to the Order of the Green, though less commonly known as the Order of the Ivy Wreath, before it was destroyed by rot. Now, I just find my way... M'lord."

It was pretty obvious that he was not used to dealing with nobility and stumbled, using a more commoner's style of address. But he was stalwart, and didn't come off as cold or stand-offish.
May 31, 2025 2:28 am
There was a subtle change in Lancaelad's posture as Corson replied to him. A mere squire? And of a rustic order he had barely heard of, and therefore, to his mind, an insignificant order?

"Continue to carry yourself with such valour in battle, and no doubt you will earn your accolade in due time," he said brusquely, striding ahead with Victorious' reins. It seemed that in his mental table of precedence, Corson had taken a step downwards.
May 31, 2025 2:28 am
Corson smiled sadly thinking to himself, If only I could...
May 31, 2025 2:29 am
Still dripping wet, the exciseman Boso struggled for a moment to recall anything before the sudden violence of a moment ago. He glanced up and down the now quiet docks before responding to Tovrunn's summons, falling into step with the rest. He seemed happy enough to cooperate, though in truth she doubted her purview stretched much beyond the upper class salons of Proudglaive society.

"Yes m'lady. The Port of Call Exchange sent word only yesterday that we should be watchful for craft of of Khinasi, especially those who don't tarry. Some competitor bringing valuables overland into the City of Ilien without paying the proper tariff I understand." He glanced back at the splintered pier-end and grimaced. "Perhaps why they fled with such haste."

Further questioning suggested that the man knew little more than that he'd received a very normal letter from a trade consortium sharing a routine warning. If the timing was suspicious, at least Boso did not seem to find the particulars to be out of the ordinary.

Flanked by a dozen or more royal marines, it was easy to feel bold once more on the short trip to the marines' blockhouse, even if one of their number was borne on a stretcher. The building itself was a modest, Spartan affair but the walls were of thick stone, the windows barred and the doors guarded.

Their prisoner displayed not a flicker of emotion on their return, even when he was manhandled into a small cage where he sat, impassive as his captors patched their wounds and armour.

One of the marines was sent to fetch a priest, and a Haelynite Brother of the Impregnable Heart in his golden mantle had Aeric on his feet before Lancaelad had the dents out of his breastplate.
May 31, 2025 2:32 am
As the hot wine of battle began to cool in his veins, Lancaelad felt his wounds more keenly. His ribs aches and head throbbed blackly as the entered the apparent safety of the barracks. "Mhairie, help me disarm," he said tersely to his armourer. The tall, young woman with the sculpted arms and shoulders of a smith loosened the fastenings on his maille, greaves and gauntlets and helped him lift the hauberk over his head, then unlaced the felt coat beneath. It stank of sweat, and there was a rusty patch under the arm. "No broken links, ser," she reported calmly, examining the armour. "A little work with the hammer and wire brush and she'll be parade-ground ready."

Stripped to the waist, the knight was a fantastic specimen, broad shouldered and hard-muscled with a tapered waist. Lancaelad flexed his arm behind his neck and ran a hand over his ribs, grimacing as he felt the bruise the ruffian had dealt him. The best that could be done for it was a tight binding of bandages, and though each breath stung sharply he felt no snapped ribs and the only broken skin was where the links of chain had been hammered into his flesh. Finding a bowl of water, Lan studied his reflection. There was a tangle of clotted blood and knotted hair on the side of his head, the scalp torn from his fall, and he winced as he worked it out with wet fingers.

By the time he'd tended to his own wounds the Haelynite brother had roused Aeric from the shadow of the Cold Rider. Lancaelad went over and clasped Aeric's hand, smiling. "It is good to see you whole and hale, my friend. Those blackguards did not account against the power of your secret lore."

Finally, he strode up to the cell that held the prisoner, folding his arms and regarding the man with a severe scowl. "There is an old Andu proverb, villain. Vae victis; woe to the vanquished. You find yourself at the mercy of those you wronged. There is no joyful end to your tale, but confess your plans, name and number your employer and fellow malefactors, and you may yet find a crumb of leniency."
May 31, 2025 2:33 am
The prisoner took in Lancaelad through the bars of his cage without much expression. After a long moment the man replied "we're hired blades out of Gulfport. Paid to take that man there-" he pointed across the room to Salien "-to a ship off shore. Vash is on the ship, the ship will have sailed by now, and he's the only one who'd know who we're working for."

He took a moment to consider the details he'd shared. "Ship wasn't very big. Probably wasn't going more than a few days in any direction. But whoever put this together had spare gold." A shrug. "That's it."
May 31, 2025 2:34 am
Corson watched the interrogation in silence. He had seen knights extract information, and it was much more intense than this, but Ser Lancaelad got the job done. It was not much information, but they had a name, at least. Vash.

The squire of the Green shimmied out of his chainmail, his back covered in various scars that almost joined to create an image of a briar patch of silvered skin. The jutting arrow shafts caught in the attempt eliciting a sharp intake of breath before Corson continued.

Inspecting the wounds, he decided to let it be and wait for the Northwoman to tend them, and leaned back against the wall for a short time... ZZzz...
May 31, 2025 7:58 am
Breuddwyd felt distinctly out of place and uncomfortable surrounded by so many men and their serious steel but he went along all the same. He had accepted long ago that his journey had little to do with his own enrichment.

"Bys ar y pwls," he murmured quietly as they marched, reaching out and opening himself to mystic auras and focusing his attention on the captive. Apparently there was no protective magic about the mercenary that he could perceive, nothing to complicate an interview. Breuddwyd liked to think elven agents would be better prepared.

Once they moved inside, he considered how he might angle his incisive attack to glean vital information, fancying himself more a surgeon than a butcher in that regard. He needn't have bothered. Lancaelad beat him to it. And the low-rent footpad immediately squealed, seemingly telling as much as he knew. It made sense—a doomed man had no reason to hold back once cut off from his payday. The Sidhe was disappointed to say the least; engaging his flair for intrigue would have made him feel a bit less of an outsider among these strange, hollow-eyed and blustering churls.

He gave the knight a dark look. A promise of leniency was either a poorly-wrought lie or a weak-kneed self-delusion. There would be precious few tomorrows for this fallen soldier-for-hire.

"How many were you before today?" Breuddwyd asked of the prisoner, pressing for more and watching closely for non-verbal cues. "Are we to expect other surprises awaiting us beyond town? Did your cabal plan around this defeat?" Rare was the mercenary who wasn't prepared to benefit from a timely retreat, he imagined, and he wanted to know if this Vash was the type to cut their losses or to make a second attempt. "What did your employer tell you of us? Our numbers and strengths or just a vague idea of a defending force?"

Simple opposition running counter to their own goals was a much less troubling prospect than possible duplicity in upper echelons of Roesone. That the attackers had a clear idea of the Golden Prowl's scheduled arrival was worrisome enough. Who else knew of their mission? Were they sent to fail?
May 31, 2025 11:39 am
The man turned to Breuddwyd with that same air of disconnection, almost boredom. It was clear that he didn't place much value on this information. He wasn't even bargaining. "Vash said they told him to get the mark when he got off the ship. Simple. Said we'd have backup waiting for our signal, and just like he said those big locals showed up. We brought about twelve of ours ashore, eight waiting with the boats. Hit fast before the fog cleared. Whoever hired us, we weren't the only group. If there were odds on it I'd say you won't leave the city alive."

The matter of fact way he shared that last part made it all the more chilling. It wasn't a threat, merely an opinion. "But Vash and the rest will've cleared out. Once a man in four's down we close a contract. Always been the rule."
May 31, 2025 11:47 am
"Or perhaps it was the sting of arrows and steel they ran from," Tovrunn retorted, though her tone lost much of its initial bite. Following along with the rest, upon reaching the blockhouse Tovrunn returned her attention to the wounded Aeric, calling for scalding water and boiled linens and tending to him until the golden mantle of the Haelynite could be seen. Only then did she turn her attention to herself and the others in the room.

To Lancaelad.

Catching a first, and then a second, glance at him as she removed her outer layers, Tovrunn had to turn her back on him lest she become distracted. Fumbling with the knots of her chain link shirt with suddenly clumsy hands, she shed the armor and inspected it briefly. There was a new opening on the sleeve where there had not been, and a corresponding slit in the sleeve of her dress and mantle. Though no blood stained either, the torn clothing and armor were a grim reminder of the desperate skirmish only just finished. And how close they had all come to needing far more than idle stitching.

Politely asking Mhairie to inspect and repair the broken chains when she finished with her task, Tovrunn pulled up her hair and approached the knight Corson. "I need you awake for this," she said, pulling the man's attention. Snapping fire to life in her palm, she took a blade and ran it through the focused flame, cleansing it of impurities. "This will sting," she warned as she began to open up the magically closed wounds and remove the shafts and steel. Pressing cloth to the bleeding, she applied ointments and minor knitting magics to the injuries, gently encouraging bleeding to stop and for flesh to bind itself together again. It was the most that she could do, for the battle had drained her of her reserves, but she had enough will left in her to not undo her lifesaving work.

"Ask him if his fellows are the smugglers that exiseman Boso had been warned of," she said towards the party of men who badgered their captive with questions as she worked. It seemed an obvious one to her, but it was best to be thorough.
May 31, 2025 11:47 am
"We'd best expect another ambush on our way out of town then." Corson's eyes are still closed as he speaks. "No sense worrying about it. Just best to be prepared."
May 31, 2025 11:50 am
"Gulfport?" Lancaelad mused, rubbing his temple. The aching in his skull had not abated, and the wan morning light through the barracks' arrow slits seemed uncomfortably bright. "Osoerde is a realm that languishes under a usurper duke. Doubtless it teems with ruthless sell-swords like this wretch. You hired local muscle? From whom? That brigand, Orthien Tane?" Hearing Torvrunn's interjection, he struck the bars of the cage. "Answer the lady! Were you the smugglers el-Hadid wrote of?"

The young knight frowned. He remembered poring over a chessboard as a boy, planning elaborate manoeuvres involving bishops and rooks moving in unison under the cover of a screen of pawns. He remembered his father's gentle, weary voice. You're making things too complicated, Lan. A stew of too many parts. When you are on the battlefield or in the court look to a single engagement, not the entire campaign.

"No. Tane and el-Hadid are bitter rivals in their vulgar business," Lancaelad said slowly. "If these ruffians were hired from Tane, it would not make a whit of sense for el-Hadid to assist them by tying up the Golden Prowl with warnings of smugglers. Only someone working with these would-be kidnappers benefitted from that. So, applying Dosiere's Razor, el-Hadid must be their cohort!" He punched his palm in furious certainty.

"This changes our path," he said, looking around at the others. "I had originally intended for us to travel north to the village of Talmoere's Ferry and cross the Spider River to Ilien. But el-Hadid's Port of Call Exchange is headquartered in that city-state – we would be walking into the Khinasi jackal's very den. Instead we must go further and make our crossing at Proudglaive, or even Thoeren's Landing, into Medoere where his influence is less strong. To move where our enemy is blind and feeble is the pinnacle of tactical grace."

Lancaelad sounded very certain, as he always did, with reason or not. His aura of confidence was perhaps a little damaged by the fact his eyes were ever so slightly out of focus and a big purple goose-egg had formed under his hair.
May 31, 2025 11:51 am
The prisoner watched Lancaelad with dead-eyed disinterest. "You don't know what you're up against do you? Vash'n my crew aren't your problem. They'll be heading home before noon. We didn't hire anyone. We're just one group of snatchers. And the way you five run at knives throat first it won't take many more groups before you meet the Rider. And here you are sitting around waiting."

The man shook his head, and slumped against the bars of the cell. Silent.
May 31, 2025 11:52 am
Breuddwyd's expression tightened ever so slightly—though the variation was not so easy to discern on his wan features—as his eyes flicked across the Baronial troops still standing by and then back to the prisoner once more.

"So you'll be staying in tonight, will you?" He smirked mirthlessly at their caged adversary.

"As you say," he then replied smoothly to the knight, his tone eerily placid and level as the surface of a bottomless lake of ice. "But in future might we perhaps endeavour to discuss our top secret manoeuvrers out of ear-shot from all of mankind and creation besides?"

The Sidhe had some ideas about how they might proceed as well but he did not trust the mouths of the rank-and-file marines to keep from repeating what they heard here. A life of service seemed so very dreary that even the most innocent prattling in an off-moment might result in truly dire carelessness.

While Breuddwyd lacked the gift (or honestly the abundant interest) for the hunt boasted by many in the Serensgrech line, he understood some connected principles fairly well. Should one prove unable to claim their quarry in an initial attempt, flushing them out and herding them into more favorable position was the best bet and often a desirable objective from the beginning. But bolting into action as frightened hares now, in which direction should the company from Proudglaive flee to better avoid the net or spear?
May 31, 2025 1:07 pm
Corson perked up. "The Rider? I'd not speak that name out loud from inside a gaol."
May 31, 2025 1:09 pm
The prisoner didn't even look at Corson. It seemed he'd said all that he was going to. The warning he'd given was grim though, and turned everyone's attention to the path ahead of them.

Endier lay perhaps a week away by most direct routes. To the west lay the Twilight Theocracy of Medoere - an ally to Roesone and a small, thinly populated realm. Beyond that though they would have at least a day in Diemed before reaching Endier's boarders. Not only was Diemed unfriendly to travellers out of the Roesonian court since many of the lands of Roesone, Medoere and Ilien has seceded from the Duchy and the Dukes Diem bore a grudge. Worse still, rumour had it that Duke Heirl Diem had been amassing his armies along his eastern border. That might prove a substantial barrier.

To the north only militant Ghoere lay between Roesone and Endier, but the Iron Baron of Ghoere had long looked on his southern neighbours with hungry eyes. Though no specific threat loomed there his Iron Guard kept a firm grip on the border and their passing would not go unchallenged if they took any major route, especially if anyone were to recognise their station.

Skirting the forest domain of the mad goblin Awnsheigh once known as Tal-Qazar, now called The Spider was unappealing. Gnolls and goblins frequently raided these borderlands, snatching those they found there and dragging them into the woods.

Taking a longer path might, of course, be an option but the Seneschal had tentatively suggested eighteen days for the task, and with two weeks on the road there and back that left scant time for detours. Perhaps a message to Proudglaive explaining their predicament would earn them more time, but it could also be intercepted.
May 31, 2025 1:10 pm
Corson listened quietly as the nobles discussed travel plans once privately secured, flinching slightly at mention of The Spider and his goblins.
May 31, 2025 1:11 pm
Finished with her gruesome work, Tovrunn washed her hands clean of Corson's blood and turned to regard the conversation that dominated the room. Listening to Lancaelad make leaps at the identity of their hidden pursuer, Tovrunn couldn't help but pop a questioning eyebrow. She was new to these lands, true, and thus she trusted his word when he named his list of suspects (the name El-Hadid had come up more than once at court, and not always in a positive context), but she found his confidence in his answer somewhat premature. Men and women in positions of power dealt with intermediaries; that was what they themselves were after all. To make sweeping arguments about who wanted Salien was seemingly nearly as pointless as the attempt to answer why.

Still, she saw wisdom in his decision to avoid Ilien, if not the path he took to get there. El-Hadid had a somewhat ruthless reputation, and whatever powers drove this sought to avoid that city-state, elsewise they would have landed their charge there instead. And she saw yet more wisdom in Breudwydd's suggestion of silence.

"I agree, we should not discuss our route openly. Not here, at least," she said, quietly reinforcing the elf's request. "A more important question for now is this: how do we get out of the city safely? If the word of this brigand is true, and I've no cause to believe otherwise, his crew is not the only one after us. We should take stock of our current resources and aim smaller in our thinking."
May 31, 2025 1:12 pm
Ser Lancaelad's expression flickered uneasily as Breuddwyd spoke to him. The sidhelien's aura was uncanny and off-putting, the reason for his presence on this mission uncertain at best. And yet there was something intoxicating about him, like the scent of a familiar forest glade...

He struck the bars of the cage again. "Hold our tongues? Why? This wretch is going nowhere. Save the dungeons of Blacktower Castle, and thense the gallows." But his gaze did run over the marines cleaning their weapons and chatting about the bloody commotion in Abbadiel in the bunk room. Soldiers did have loose tongues when the ale flowed or boredom reigned. Without appearing to acknowledge the sorcerer's good point Lancaelad did step away from the prisoner and the guards and modulate his volume a little, with one final sneer: "If he is an exemplar of the quality of filth arrayed against us, our journey will be swift and sure."

Stepping aside with Tovrunn, the elf, the bandaged-up squire Corson, Salien and the roused Aeric Lecland, Lancaelad requisitioned the armoury to speak in. It was a room with thick stone walls and a good solid door. Examining the racks of pikes and axes, the young knight resisted the urge to stamp his foot and petulantly whine that he had already announced his decision as to what their course should be. A leader should listen to the counsel of his underlings... his valued advisors and lieutenants.

"Your thoughts, my lady?" he asked gallantly, then gestured to the others that they should also speak their minds.
May 31, 2025 2:43 pm
"Our man Salien should disguise himself in the garb of the common locals," Breuddwyd suggested patiently once he felt certain none of the marines or any other errant ears were listening in. "The mercenary's fisherman togs would serve or something from the barracks. Then we send out patrols to decoy our charge's persecutors. Two or more groups would be ideal with but a single man among them, out of uniform, who could be taken for Salien at a distance. It seems the enemy lacks the intelligence to place us individually by description." He almost sounded disappointed to imagine none of the enemy knew to fear him. "That may divide our challengers and give us room to slip through. The key point is we need to move as quickly as we can. If those who escaped have yet to report their inability to find a foothold, the momentary scrabbling for purchase on the part of our remaining foes is an opportunity we can't afford to ignore."

Pausing to take in the expectant gazes of the Anuirean men, the Sidhe sighed before continuing, intent on heading off what he predicted to be a flaw in that plan, at least from their perspective.

"And there's no need for the Baroness's marines to suffer in our stead. I'm confident even the most persistent mercenaries will avoid open combat with well-trained troops once they draw near enough to see their error. And our cat's paws only need to hold their attention long enough to expand the gap between the real Salien and themselves, they do." He frowned, not actually convinced it would be so simple, despite his claims. "Aside from commandeering one of the local vessels, that's our best option. I suspect the ramshackle herring drifters found hereabouts will lack for the speed we'd most desire in any event."

Now he looked to the others for information about the countryside; his forest home was not so far but he had very rarely felt compelled to leave it as an adolescent.

"We need only pick a direction and transmit our orders to the commander here. But let's not tarry or we may never leave at all." The pale, svelte sorcerer smiled grimly. "And do remember that in the natural world a straight line is generally only travelled by those creatures who have nothing to fear ... and those who know with near certainty they have already lost."
May 31, 2025 2:44 pm
Corson watches quietly, and when asked his opinion, only responded "I have been away from home too long to know our best course here." Sparing a glance at Lancaelad, he then added "and, I am a mere squire. It is not my place to tell knights what to do."
May 31, 2025 2:46 pm
Tovrunn was the last through the doorway, and keeping their conversation muffled was foremost on her mind. It wasn't that she didn't trust the Baronial Marines, but, well...at the moment there was a wide gap between 'trust' and 'distrust' and they happened to occupy it.

Turning and thinking for half a moment, she opened her mouth to speak but was cut off by Breuddwyd before she could get more than a word out. Glaring at him for a moment or two, Tovrunn put her frustration aside and listened, and as he went on, nodded her head in agreement. There was much that he said that resonated with her, as though he had plucked the idea from her very mind. Recalling the moment on the docks preceding the violence and how he was able to speak directly into her mind the way he did, the displaced druid wasn't sure that such psychic meddling was beyond him.

"I concur broadly with these suggestions," Tovrunn said once Breuddwyd was finished, "though I'd suggest we all attempt to at least cloak ourselves to blend in at a glance. We must be clever foxes if we wish to outrun multiple packs of dogs. As I understand it, there are only three directions on which we might make good our escape; north along the road, northeast over the hill country, and east into the forest. I'd suggest that we go to the forest to better lose track of our pursuers, but the decision is not mine to make."

Glancing around, she pulled out her crystal. "I have nearly tapped my resources in that fight; I've strength for one more bolt of light before I am reduced to cantrips. I do, however, still possess my ability to shapeshift. And I can become more than what you saw on the docks. Animals, a cat, for instance. Something that would pass by the notice of most and keep pace watching on rooftops. Perhaps, with Breuddwyd's skills we could combine our efforts to see if we are followed?"
May 31, 2025 2:49 pm
"A cunning suggestion. The reputation of your people for slyness is well earned," Lancaelad remarked uneasily to Breuddwyd. "Though two decoys would make the ploy obvious. I suggest we send but one." When Tovrunn mentioned travelling through the forest for cover he noticeably perked up, seeming excited by the idea. He also looked unnerved by the mention that the druidess could assume the form of an animal, looking her up and down strangely. "You... would not cause harm to come to a cat by this, my lady? Stories say that the Roesone bloodline is gifted with the power to speak to cats and see through their eyes. It is a grave crime to hurt one."

The contingent of marines were sworn directly to the throne of Roesone, not subject to the local lord or chivalric precedence; Lancaelad realised they would have to invite the captain into their counsel rather than issue commands. Striding to the door he called for her, just barely moderating the tone with which he would usually address common soldiery. Captain Jordrien Oeniel entered the armoury, a hard-eyed veteran, and the knight laid out their purpose.

"Captain Oeniel, the baroness has commissioned that we escort this man safely through Roesone. As you saw, there are blades for coin that wish to waylay him and care not for the terror they spread in their wake. I know your charge is the defence of Abbadiel's port and shipping, so I do not ask you for manpower to safeguard our journey. But in the name of the oath we share to the Black Barons, I... respectfully... ask you to provide a ruse to cover our swift passage."

Lancaelad yanked the sidhe cloak from Salien's shoulders. "Dress one of your men in this, and send him under loud and boastful escort north to Talmoere's Ferry. This will put you under the eye of our enemies, so travel in force sufficient to defend yourselves. Meanwhile, we shall take to the boughs of the Erebannien and proceed by a more elusive path." Once again, the young knight seemed unable to grasp the concept of not revealing their plans like a town crier.

"Do this for your commander and my liege lady, captain."
May 31, 2025 2:52 pm
"Wrong," said Breuddwyd, following closely on Lancaelad's heels and pressing forefinger and thumb to the bridge of his nose in a familiar sign of effete, highbrow weariness. His tone was silky but his dismissal no less harsh. He retrieved the cloak before it could be handed off. Sidhelien gifts were not to be so carelessly fobbed off.

He sincerely regretted his poor wording regarding multiple Saliens and endeavoured to remind himself that abundant hand-holding would be prudent going forward.

"I'll have your ear for a moment's clarity, if you please Commander," he said to the uniformed woman, ushering her away from her subordinates. He had little comprehension of military doctrine but tossing down orders from outside a hierarchy while in full view of underlings seemed like bad form. For some reason he couldn't pinpoint, he thought of his eldest sister.

"I am Breuddwyd Niderfyn di-Ffael, Scion of House Serensgrech of the Erebannien serving as Special Consul to the Barony of Roesone," he swiftly explained. "We'll require two patrols of your stalwart marines—three if you can spare the manpower for a day—and they should pick separate routes from this fortress, staggering their departures. Four to six men in each group ought to be suitable and I'd like them on horseback, where feasible. One of their number should aim for a passing resemblance to our charge but don't be too brazen on the matter. Some subtlety will serve. And they've no need to engage any suspected ambushers, only to draw their attention for as long as they may." Breuddwyd's drawn, delicate features shifted, possibly evincing sympathy. "I don't believe seasoned mercenaries will have cause to attack your regiment if there's no profit in it, backing down instead once they've closed the distance. And we only need them to buy us time, not to spend their lives in such a bargain. Haste before hostility."

He glanced meaningfully towards his own party.

"Cloaks bearing your unit's blazon would also aid in our deception, with hoods or caps to conceal the most obvious tells among our features," the Sidhe continued, thinking as much of Tovrunn's snowy hair as his own pointed ears. "We will head out as the second or third patrol, angled towards the wood." He sighed automatically at the notion of leading these creatures so close to home, barely even hearing himself. "Sending out but one squad will only lead to dead marines and a swift revelation thereafter. We needs must tuck our shining pebble beneath one of many plain seashells now and make none more appealing than the others."

A sly cast touched his eyes and lips.

"Where we go after that should be no concern to you or your men. But your impeccable service—and discretion—thus far shall be duly noted."
May 31, 2025 2:55 pm
Captain Oeniel looked between the two men, her expression a mask of practised neutrality. "My lords, as the knight says my remit is to keep Roesone's waters and this ports against invasion. My discretion to step beyond that is limited, especially when your prisoner has described a craft that attacked this city still in Roesone's waters."

"If you can obtain orders from Proudglaive - and I am certain you can if your oath is of importance to the crown - then I can serve you in whatever way my commanders instruct. Otherwise I can spare you ten of my best marines until sundown. Should you flush out more foes then it will undoubtedly fall within my duty to lead a counter-attack, though I will be diverting men to ensuring that ship is indeed departing our waters. Were there a greater force in the city, then I cannot think they would stand idle while you held their fellows on the docks."

She cast her eyes down respectfully - though her commission suggested that Oeniel must herself be the scion of some minor line, it was clear that refusing her betters was an uncomfortable situation. "You can, of course, avail yourself of the protection of the barracks for as long as you need."
May 31, 2025 2:58 pm
"We will not be staying."

Sensing that the plan for diversion put forward by the bumptious blond buffoon was gaining traction more surely than his own—and that a dip beneath the cool green shadows of the Erebannien with armed humans in tow was all but inevitable now—Breuddwyd scowled bitterly and relented. What would an elf from southern Anuire know about travelling through uncertain and potentially dangerous terrain while scrutinised by myriad potential foes, after all?

"There is a saying in the wilds," he remarked, mostly to Lancaelad, his tone sharp and peevish. "The strays find their way on quicker and more able feet than the herd. Let's hope such conservative marching orders won't keep our armoured bulls from covering enough ground to be useful here."

Moving to Salien's side while the others considered their impending flight across the countryside, he returned the slate blue cloak, wrapping it almost tenderly around the young man's shoulders.

"When you are offered something from a Sidhe, never take it lightly or without care," he told the hapless dignitary, speaking softly but with an edge of scorn he knew the others could hear. Marginalisation was a fate to which so many elves had long since grown quite accustomed. "I'm not being funny but however you may receive such a gift and choose to bear it going forward reflects on your person and will be remembered long after you are gone."

With that settled, he told Salien, "Now pick something from your belongings for one of the brave marines to wear in your place. Our journey is far from over, it is."
May 31, 2025 3:03 pm
Laying a hand on the cloak with a significance that he had not previously. "I... I am sorry Master Breuddwyd" he began, though it was clear that the Sidhe tongue had little traffic in far Khinasi. "I meant no offence. I'd thought it more loan than gift and... I understand." And he took the cloak carefully from his shoulders and folded it neatly in four before tucking the bundle neatly into his travelling bag.
May 31, 2025 3:04 pm
It took less than an hour for the marines to be assembled and disguised as best the supplies of Salien and his escort would allow, especially those tattered and bloodied by the mornings desperate melee, others in uniform pretending a guard column to make up the numbers. On horseback they rode out of the barracks bound north not long after Haelyn's noble radiance had reached far beyond the whispering canopies of the Erebannien.

Perhaps a quarter of an hour later the real band of travellers left, endeavouring a far lower profile. They wore the sailors garb of the Royal Marines over their own finery, and led their steeds by the reigns. They travelled in twos and threes, never more than a shout apart, but stopping at stalls to leapfrog ahead of one another, in an effort to appear separate.

Above them, Tovrunn stalked the port's rooves in the guise of a sleek black cat, lean and glossy. It was said that the Baroness Marlae Roesone could see through the eyes of her cats, and the animals were protected by law so a great many felines roamed with arrogant impunity through the streets of every Roesonian town. One more would afford no notice at all.
May 31, 2025 3:09 pm
Chwilen was not so large and powerful of frame as the mounts favoured by human men-at-arms nor so swift as those skittish, leggy coursers chosen to bear long-range messengers along the meandering byways scarring Anuire's landscape. Instead, bred in the forbidding Sielwode, the Tharanfollt strider made for a nimble and sure-footed animal, boasting the sort of stamina and sharp senses that made negotiating the uneven sprawl of roots and knolls and tangled underbrush of the deep woods that much less harrowing. Up until this moment in their journey, the mare had worn a peculiar cowl of dark leather and linen to mask her features, the odd angles of which lending her a faintly sinister and otherworldly cast—almost insectile, befitting her namesake—but still a far cry from the proper articulated steel that made up crinet and chanfron of a typical war horse's ensemble. Despite the fearsome garb and her comparatively exotic lineage, Chwilen was a sweet-tempered and docile horse—one of the few in his mother's stable that had ever been willing to tolerate him for long as a rider. Those same influences in his blood that let him twist mystic energy into reality-shaping fact also tended to inspire animosity from many natural creatures in close proximity.

Breuddwyd had removed her covering in the hopes of better blending with the local mounts, the splendid hue of her speckled coat and lustrous mane notwithstanding. A more spirited elven steed might have whickered fretfully or otherwise balked at the stop-and-go pace but Chwilen was patient with him as always. And Arglwyddes, of course, had vanished like a vaporous apparition to find her own course almost as soon as she'd found herself outside once more. It was as if the Cu Sidhe understood the plan even better than her bipedal allies.

**May yet regret. Not awaiting sunset.** he thought towards feline Tovrunn, doomed to wallow in perpetual discontent. He fussed irritably with his borrowed cloak, the rough weave of its hood scraping unpleasantly at his ears like the calloused hands of a seldom-visited and overly affectionate relative. **At night they say. All cats are gray.**

He smirked defiantly against his private misery before moving to the next solid block of cover. He hoped observing his effortlessly cautious footsteps might serve to direct the more cumbersome and unwary members who followed behind. Breuddwyd could be helpful when he tried. But it was up to each individual to heed his lessons, presuming they could keep up with him at all.
May 31, 2025 3:19 pm
**Perhaps they are,** Tovrunn purred back from her vantage point, **but all men are suspicious when they walk beneath the moonlight in towns like these. Best to move when the sun is out; we're harder to pick from the crowd.**

Staring down at the group with intensely focused eyes, a lithe black cat sat upon the central beam of a cobbler's roof, bathing it's head lazily as they passed. Feigning disinterest was one of the key behaviors that Tovrunn learned when she first observed the creatures, as it wouldn't do to give those unworthy of hunting or those unlikely to yield their spoils overmuch attention. Observation was the key to unlocking the form of all animals to the druid, and there had been plenty of samples and time to do so here in this new land where these felines walked with impunity. She had chosen her disguise well; what's one more cat amongst the many hundreds that called this port home? With her feline senses, particularly her still-unfamiliar world of smell, she could identify more than a dozen within a stones throw of where she sat now.

Waiting a time for her group to pass, Tovrunn crouched down low and lay her head on her paws, scanning the crowd for ruffians or those with ill intent, watching for those who moved in the same direction as her party and making note of suspicious individuals. And, once the troupe began to pass out of sight, she stretched, her muscles tightly wound like a tinkerer's spring, and took off after them, jumping up and down and over and under the way only a cat could. She would have to pass them, and set up at the next intersection, all the while watching for ambushes and traps. It was not exactly an enviable task, but one that she was now exceptionally well suited for.
Jun 1, 2025 9:08 am
Lancaelad inspected his entourage as they prepared to leave the barracks. A young man, a young woman and a boy who had not been seen in their company at the site of the skirmish at the docks, their good quality clothing now adorned with a little mud and some strategically chosen tattered garb; they would be the least obtrusive of the party, and could probably pass for a family travelling. "Squire Paidrig, take Mhairie and the boy and leave by the north gate. Once you enter the farmlands around Abbadiel take to the fields and make east for the boughs of the Erebannien. There is a tree with notches cut into the bark that marks the entrance to an old woodcutter's trail. We shall meet there." Paidrig nodded unsurprisedly, finding himself commissioned as escort once again. Geremie Trotter gave a satirically elaborate and enthusiastic salute that the knight chose to ignore.

His pride had taken a beating as bad as the one that laid him low on the cobblestones, and it galled him further still to dress up in a cloak that smelled like it had been used to pack salted haddock. His maille was carefully rolled and stowed in his saddlebags, leaving him in just the quilted undershirt, the better to look like a harmless traveller. He sourly reflected on the need for this ruse, silently blaming the harbourmaster, the captain of the Golden Prowl, Salien and Corson and everyone except himself for the shambles. As they made their staggered progress through town he forced his shoulders to slump and head to bow under his hood and resisted the urge to spur his courser into action.

Victorious was a fine enough riding steed, a brisk but headstrong chestnut mare that was eager to be on the road. Not a proper war-mount for a knight, though. Lancaelad turned his keen eye for horseflesh on Brueddwyd's mount for the brief time the elf was within his line of sight. It was almost more a pony, bred for negotiating dense woodlands, but far too elegant a beast to be saddled with that appelation. His mind went to dwell on the stories of the gheallie sidhe, the Hunt of Elves that in some lands charged from the woods with wicked swords and spears to remind the race of men that this land was not won or held without bloodshed. Did they ride beasts such as that? He soon lost the sorcerer in the crowds and tangled streets of the port, however; damnation, but he was elusive.

Having lost sight of the elf, Lancaelad twisted in the saddle to glance back, hoping to keep Aeric and the foreigners they were charged with escorting in view. They would make easy targets, spread out like this. He could only hope that Cuiraécen had been satisfied by the bloodshed this morning, and they would not be targets at all.
Jun 1, 2025 9:12 am
Abbadiel was not a large city - it was scarcely worth of the name - and the port's "walls" were little more than a half dozen fortified gatehouses linked by a ditch of spongy earth and brackish water, just wide enough to slow a man down. As a result it took them less than a half hour, even at a meandering pace, to all exit the city. In that time they were able to narrowly evade no less than two patrols of brutish looking men, the first disguised as a merchant and his guard and the second in the uniform of the city guard.

The first were given away by their nervous watchfulness, but only Tovrunn drawing close enough to overhear their conversation revealed the second group. Even then she was scarcely able to scamper back to the rooftops and give Breuddwyd a breathless warning, whereupon the sidhe had mere moments to redirect the dispirit parties of nobles without so much haste that they drew attention to themselves.

The guardsmen passed so close to Aeric and Breuddwyd as they pretended to examine the wares of a redsmith that they could smell the reek of daily-worn armour and hear the clink of mail and the grumbling of lowered voices. Only after they had gone did the young magician realise he wasn't breathing.

A glimpse at their inn of the night before showed a group of rough looking folk in the garb of commoners making a show of repairing damage that the building had not sported mere hours before. No less than forty men were about in the city, and that was just the number that crossed their path. Had any group been alerted there would have been no fighting. Flight would have been all that would save them from a meeting with the rider and a long walk through mist and shadows.

As the last of their party - Salien and Corson both in the full attire of Royal Marines on duty - left the eastern gate the shared sigh of relief each of the Roesonians breathed was almost palpable though they couldn't risk glancing back at one another. The ill-kept road ahead that snaked into the forest a mere mile or two away where inly logging camps offered an excuse to hide a large band, looked more like salvation than the first step of a long journey.

And yet though she could see nothing, Tovrunn couldn't shake the feeling that they were being followed. It was the feeling of eyes on here now and then, the occasional motion of something slipping into an alley or behind a cart that yielded nothing upon investigation. The fact that now and then the fur on her hackles rose unbidden despite the protection of the dizzying height of rooftops.

Once as she scampered across a busy avenue, Tovrunn even thought something snatched at her, but when she looked back no one was there, and she couldn't be certain it wasn't merely the unfamiliar sensation of a tail.
Jun 1, 2025 9:13 am
At first Lancaelad's knuckles itched to grasp his crow's bill and lay about him as he noticed a few too-well armed, too-unfamiliar with the local streets, too-suspicious figures lurking about. But as he saw more, and more, cold sweat instead trickled down the back of his neck. They were dreadfully out-manned, and his ribs and head ached to prove that they were at least evenly-matched, as much as it chagrinned him to even think. There were dozens of blackguards out and about in Abbadiel. He flicked his gaze towards Salien. Who was this man?

As they broken from the pallisades into the fields east of town, he drew his steed close enough to the others to make himself heard in an undertone. "We should redouble our pace. There is a veritable army of scum filling the gutters, and we have not the time to slay them all. At my lead!" He snapped Victorious' reins, breaking into a trot.
Jun 1, 2025 9:14 am
Corson nodded in agreement before spurring his mare ahead.
Jun 1, 2025 9:15 am
Aeric wanted to scan the surrounding area for any further potential ambushes, but the events of the day weighed heavily upon him, and he was lost in thought. He had thanked Breuddwyd for his efforts to rescue him, and congratulated the others for their bravery afterwards, but it did not change the fact that he had barely escaped with his life. Why would anyone take the risk of attacking the Nobility of Roesone for Salien, apparently a commoner? Our enemies must be nobles as well to have such power and have the gall to take such a risk, he pondered, and realized Salien must somehow be connected to the nobility as well, and perhaps even had a claim to a title through a distant relationship, even if he did not know it.

When he heard Lancaelad urging the increase their pace, he agreed. "Right. Best to move fast to force them to improvise! Hopefully they don't know our destination yet!" he shouted as he spurred his ride forward.
Jun 1, 2025 9:16 am
**Something elusive follows us, I fear,** Tovrunn reported, licking her paw from the barrel she sat on outside the gatehouse. **It is silent, hidden, but I cannot shake the feeling that we are discovered by something.**

As their troupe passed the entrance, Tovrunn leapt silently and softly onto the back of Fegrð, her long-haired chestnut Rjurik rider whom she had trusted to Salien to lead. Nuzzling each other lovingly before her mare's head was taken again by the reins, Tovrunn slipped into an open saddleback which she knew with certainty was empty, her green catlike eyes peeking from beneath the flap to peer out behind them as their rear guard.
Jun 1, 2025 9:18 am
At Tovrunn's update—her cat-filtered thoughts curiously fraught yet precise, like tiny footsteps along a tightrope, deadly claws an instant away from seizing victory—Breuddwyd turned in his saddle. An expression of grim amusement touched his features as he considered the possibilities in absence of any really useful evidence.

"Bys ar y pwls," he murmured almost soundlessly, making a subtle gesture with his fingertips as if tuning an invisible instrument in a bid to make the world show him auras mighty and mystical that might otherwise remain out of sight.

"You might as well come out," the elegant and perhaps occasionally overconfident Sidhe called softly to the empty space behind the party from whence the cat had last approached. Breuddwyd did not look towards any specific hiding place, instead vaguely addressing the foreign human wizard who had vanished from the ship and who he now believed could be trailing them. Who else would seek an exit from the town and not have allies to call upon? Who would follow in their wake as ardently as any captive audience but not wish them immediate ill-will?

"If our travel plans interest you so, why linger in the shadows? We've no objection to sharing the road with those willing to ride beside us. But our time is short so let's waste no more of it on parlor tricks."

He had no intention of holding the party in that spot for long but figured it was worth a try, if there was any truth behind his theory.
Jun 1, 2025 9:20 am
The party sped up as much as they dared without demanding attention from any who might be watching the gate. Though moving to a trot complicated things, Chwilen was well used to Breuddwyd working magic from the saddle. A glance around revealed no magic at work in the range of his spell to the sidhe's sharp eyes, and his entreaty garnered no response. Then again, if it were the wizard from the Prowl lurking just beyond the range of his spell the man had not appeared to speak their tongue when first they met.
Jun 1, 2025 9:22 am
With Abbadiel shrinking at their backs the party sped to a canter and closed ranks. Anyone seeing them now would take too long to mount up to present a threat. It was foes that might lie ahead and not those behind that were the greatest concern now.

Closing the mile or so distance an outcry did indeed come from the city just as the riders reached the forest's edge, but whether they were spotted or some other hapless person had fallen foul of the hidden brigands was unclear. It likely did not matter. As the emerald embrace and dappled shade of the Erebannien took them they were hidden and gone.

The woodland was a familiar ally. Home to Aeric and Breuddwyd, Lancaelad had spent time enough in its secret glades and to Tovrunn any woodland lay close to Erik (or Aeric as these southerners insisted) while Corson's order had called such lands home when once they rode the Southern Coast. Only Salien seemed on edge, his eyes flitting over the hidden recesses of the undergrowth.

It took some persuading, but Aeric knew the lands that he called home better than even the sidhe and he managed to lead the group down a rough looking logger's trail. Though the overgrown and muddy track looked at first to loop back to the coast it in fact proved an equivalent but far less trafficked route. Were there ambushers hidden on the main road they would never have thought to guard this path.

When eventually they returned to the main road to rejoin Lancaelad's servants (who confirmed a group of suspicious and watchful huntsmen on the road proper) the knight's pride had mended sufficiently that he'd had time to put himself into the shoes of his foes. Had his father Traese had held his share of commands in Lan's youth, and the young knight knew enough to try to anticipate what lay ahead. If he had a small army at his disposal, which their pursuers seemed to, then he'd certainly anticipate flight by the river or the woods.

Their pursuers likely did not know the nature of the entourage sent from Proudglaive, or the fight at the docks would not have been so evenly matched. That being the case they had not anticipated a druid of Erik nor a Sidhe native to these lands. The woods were their ally for now. But as word of their party's composition spread this would become the obvious route to any pursuer. An ambush was most likely as they left the woods, and those would only strengthen the longer they tarried.

As the knight pondered the sound of a muffled hoof-beats in the packed earth and the jangling of a wagon came from around the next bend in the trail. Hiding could be a fool's errand, they were so many and with horses, but making ready for battle risked tipping their hand when their disguises may yet hold.
Jun 1, 2025 9:22 am
Corson watched the driver, carefully.
Jun 1, 2025 9:24 am
The shade of the Erebannien was like a balm for the soul. Not only did its gracious overhanging boughs and proud trunks provide shelter from those that hunted them, but its serene verdancy had nourished lovers and inspired poets for centuries.

"Ah, my friends! This, to the Anuirean heart is the original unspoilt woodland! Cerilia unmarred by axe, flame and battle, as it was long ago," he called cheerfully to the party as they rode in.

The young knight visibly relaxed as they entered the depths of the forest, though he did not drop his guard. Indeed, as they stopped to water the horses in a crystalline stream a few miles in he took a moment to redress in mail, eschewing the garb of the common soldier that had disguised them and bearing his hawk-and-tower heraldry proudly. Still, he looked more eager than anxious as they mounted up and continued their flight, his gaze scanning the emerald shadows and dew-jewelled clearings more as if he was awaiting and old friend than fearing enemies.

The sound of an approaching wagon was unexpected; few vehicles plied tracks so narrow and root-strewn this deep in the greenwood. Lancaelad spurred his horse forward, shield on one arm, lance resting at his other side – not pointed threateningly, but close at hand. It was clear he meant to challenge and question the wagon driver, and would give up any hope of subtle passage unless interrupted by his companions.
Jun 1, 2025 9:26 am
Breuddwyd sighed like a sad wind through the bare branches of a tree that wouldn't survive to see another spring.

"Subtlety first, if you please," he softly cautioned the bellicose lancer, looking hopefully to Aeric. He hoped the more cunning negotiator's wounds wouldn't keep him from a bit of healthy social manoeuvring. "Bloodshed benefits no one. We are a patrol now, remember, and nothing more. We belong here but they might also hold such a claim. Be assertive and alert but bored below that, as though you've faced just such a confrontation a hundred times before." He showed Lancaelad a smile that was meant to be encouraging but it seemed a caged and wounded thing instead, forced to entertain its enemies with its final breaths. "Think of it as a game. A ... tilt or a friendly duel. And you only win if you keep up the charade."

He glanced around at the vegetation and decided there was little risk in wielding his magic, if it came to that. Sadly, the horses ridden by the humans would likely risk broken joints if they sprinted off between the trees. He thought briefly of his middle sister Dyddanwy, of how decisively she might deal with errant wanderers through the woods, no matter what banner they bore.

"Flight is preferable to fight here. I shall cripple their wagon, if it comes to that," Breuddwyd assured the others, tugging his detestable hood down further to better conceal his fey features. "See that it doesn't."

**We will meet. With this caravan.** he told the druid. **Don't break character. Until you must.**
Jun 1, 2025 9:28 am
**Until I must,** Tovrunn silently agreed. Spurring her horse forward to Aeric's side, she gently laid a hand on his arm as her other formed a strange symbol. Speaking under her breath in her native language, a spell flared and then settled about the young nobleman like a barely visible mantle. "May Erik guide you as he guides the fox from the hunter's maw," she said, lifting her hand away. "For like the fox, guile and cunning are what will keep us unmarred. Seconded perhaps by speed."

Joining her betrothed, she gives the knight a soft smile and a shrug. "Who knows? Perhaps Aeric knows them. Not all who occupy this forest mean us harm," she reminded him.
Jun 1, 2025 9:29 am
"My thanks, Torvunn." smiled Aeric cordially as he realised Torvunn's assistance. "Yet we have a long road ahead. Should guile and cunning fail us, have faith in your betrothed." he replied, before adding "Recent events have made us suspicious of our own shadows. With any luck, these may be simple villagers."

Nevertheless, Aeric remained uneasy behind his calm demeanor, and scanned the wagon and the villagers warily to check for any potential oddities - such as the villagers being unusually muscular or scarred, before making contact. He also tries to get a glimpse of the wagon, worried by the possibility of mercenaries waiting for ambush inside.
Jun 1, 2025 9:30 am
Holding their path with forced ease the trepidatious nobles drew to the side of the hard-packed road as first a pair of draft horses, and then a sturdy wagon with great slabs of wheels filled with stacked logs rounded the bend. A trio sat at the front on a crude bench, and a dozen more men walked alongside the vehicle and its groaning cargo. Snatches of their low song could be heard as they advanced.

"For the sake of her parents, the girl did assent
To smile at merchants and scholars and lords
But beneath all her smiling her sweet heart was bent
On the goodly young man who comes from the woods.
When the dancing was done, then she did hear his call
So without a candle she crept from her bed
There under the moonlight in his arms she did fall
And then by the morrow they knew they would wed."


The clink of harness and tread of hooves added an odd percussion to the song as the procession rattled and trudged toward the mounted party of nine, still in their common garb save for Lancaelad. As they drew closer the song ended, and a man whose grizzled beard reached to his belt buckle who walked in the lead, gently prodding the pair of horses, raised a rough hand in greeting.

"Good morrow, Haelyn's shield guard ye" he called in a voice like dragged hay, taking in the fine horseflesh and its hastily-dressed riders.
Jun 1, 2025 9:33 am
Lancaelad grimaced at Breuddwyn's unsought for advice. He did not have the measure of sidhelien sorcerer, and he chafed at his presumption to offer him counsel – yet the words were wise, and there was nothing to be gained in bickering in front of strangers. He merely nodded curtly, barely glancing at the elf before trotting forward.

His shoulders unknotted as Tovrunn joined him, stirrup to stirrup, and he smiled at her optimistic words. "You speak the truth and the hopeful warmth of spring, my lady. These woods hold more honest travellers than brigands, I am sure." As the song of the woodsmen approached his visibly winced, however, a harried. guilty expression passing across his features.

Shaking himself, Lancaelad raised his voice. "Good morrow, yeoman. Haelyn guide your lord rightly and Cuiraécen hasten and harden your hand." Glancing askance at Tovrunn, he added: "And Aeric the Old Father of the Forests shelter us all beneath these boughs. How goes the harvest?"

Allowing the man to say his piece, Lancaelad then requested: "Draw your wagon to the side of the road, my good fellow. The way is too narrow for two parties such as ours to pass abreast."
Jun 1, 2025 9:34 am
The man adopted a more deferential air at Lancaelad's tone, but even so he frowned. "If I take her off the road she'll get stuck in the ditch m'lord. If you were to ride single file there's more than room enough here-" he gestured down the heavy wagon's flank "-for your party, surely?"

Following the man's direction down the narrow strip of hoof-trodden road offered Corson an opportunity to examine the wagon. It was ancient - likely serving for generations - but still sturdy as a fortress. Were they single file against the thing and am ambush came from the woods they'd be easy to surround and separate, but no ambusher from the wood could be mounted. But were these fifteen woodsmen to waylay them it might give time for a mounted ambush to come from ahead or behind.

As he pondered his eyes came to rest on an ancient wooden plaque affixed just below the seat. It was undoubtedly unusual for so simple a thing to bear any decoration, but this plaque was of fine, varnished heartwood and bore a device almost like a livery. In an instant, even through the grime and disrepair the wandering exile knew what this was, and knew these men were no ambushers.
Jun 1, 2025 9:35 am
Corson looked the driver dead in the eye and spoke in the old tongue recounting an old saying that his master used to use. "The life of the land is the life of its people."
Jun 1, 2025 9:36 am
Breuddwyd recognized that his even-tempered, weald-born mare was certainly best suited among their mounts to blaze an off-trail course. Agreeably, as Corson slipped ahead for a more private conference, the undercover Sidhe pushed forward to circumvent the heavy wagon. He did his best to overlook the crude methods the lumberjacks had employed in his woods, peering without expression past the boles stacked like gruesome trophies following some barbaric conquest. Breuddwyd said nothing at all, keen to maintain his simple disguise as he merely offered a congenial nod to the wayfarers from beneath his hood. He expected he might look a bit like a man still nursing the results of a prior night spent drinking, cloak pulled in tight to ward his senses from any unwanted excess of light or sound while on the move.

But if it came to a fight after all, he might catch them unawares from a new position to their rear. And Arglwyddes wasn't far, he knew, even if he could not see her. The almost spectral hound always seemed to be watching. In the Erebannien she was in her element, ready to be where she was needed, dutifully keeping her fragile charge from harm.
Jun 1, 2025 9:37 am
Lancaelad's brow snarled at such insubordination. Yes, there was room, but it was the principle of the thing! The man should show deference to a knight wishing passage, and he was damned if he would let the rest of the escort part see him back down in the face of this splinter-fingered churl.

The young knight flexed his shoulders as squire Corson spoke some foreign nonsense to the woodcutters. Making sure the blazon of his was clearly visible, he tightened his grip on the haft of his lance and said coldly: "Clear the road in the name of the baroness, man. I will not speak so kindly again."
Jun 1, 2025 9:38 am
The old lumber man's eyes widened in surprise as Corson spoke and for a moment he struggled to remember something, but the other knight's words cut across his recollection like a headsman's axe. "As you say m'lord" he replied with a bow, and averting his eyes he began turning the horses.
Jun 1, 2025 9:39 am
Corson nodded his appreciation as he spurred his horse to moving. He pulled a small bag of coin and tossed it to the woodsman. Without sparing another look, Corson's spirit was buoyed slightly knowing that some remember the old ways.
Jun 1, 2025 9:39 am
Lancaelad gave a harrumph of satisfaction, trying - and failing - not to look too smug that he had successfully inconvenienced some poor woodcutters. Twisting in the saddle, he made a sweeping gesture for the party to advance as the wagon waddled halfway into the ditch.

He glanced at Corson as he gathered up his reins, watching the man deliver alms. "Squire, have you knowledge of these folk? In what tongue were you speaking to them?" he asked with idle curiosity.
Jun 1, 2025 9:40 am
At the sound of a familiar language, Tovrunn blinked. She hadn't been surprised at Lancaelad's bull-headedness, but what had been unexpected was Corson's code. Looking at the knight (or knight-in-training, as she understood squirehood) she said, in the same language he had spoken, "I should have known you could speak Giantish. Of the Evergreen, you said? Who were those people? What message did you give them?"
Jun 1, 2025 9:41 am
"Aye, I noticed that they venerated the Old Ways. The ancient words of the Formoraigh, the giants that once roamed these wodes. 'The life of the land resides in its people.'" Corson said with an even tone, not making eye contact with the noble, perhaps out of shame?

"They will not betray us."
Jun 1, 2025 9:50 am
"You are certain? Hmmm."

Tovrunn looked at Corson with fresh eyes, reevaluating the man with a more critical and appraising gaze. "Tell me more of this order you were a member of," she said, inviting the man to share some of his story. "You seem familiar with these woods."
Jun 1, 2025 9:51 am
Corson nodded. "Of that, I am certain. A wodesman such as he and his ilk would honor the old ways. My Order once roamed the wode all through Anuire. It was our duty to keep the wilds at bay, while keeping civilization from destroying that which it needs for resources. Maintaining the balance for the betterment of Man and Wild, until..."

The squire seemed overcome with emotion for a moment before continuing. "...until we didn't, we couldn't any longer."
Jun 1, 2025 9:53 am
Breuddwyd was listening in with a neutral expression, not understanding the old tongue either and only half-following the explanation. Much to the chagrin of his eldest mentors, he was no student of history with little skill for retaining esoteric details from time long past. Even so, it never hurt to keep score. This subject would merit further exploration later on.

"Your humble woodchoppers will surely have no reason to forget us anytime soon. Nor will they raise much resistance, I should expect, to passing on our location and descriptions to all who might gently inquire in our wake." His black-ice gaze was on Lancaelad but he was equally irritated with the others who could have reined in the fool's destructive, grandiose impulses. Were all humans such shameless, small-minded clods at their core? It was a wonder anything they did escaped judicious Sidhelien scrutiny. "What has such pride ever truly won you, lordling-at-large? Beyond scant moments of smug satisfaction? How much heavier will that expansive ego you continually polish feel when we're forced to flee through this forest much sooner than we'd like?"

Breuddwyd turned his attention back to the trail, scowling bitterly and quite unaware he was almost certainly the last one among their number who should be offering such a criticism. If nothing else, it had sickened him to see the seemingly capable woodsman cowed by an upjumped stranger and instantly reduced in the eyes of his own confederates. Elves did not play such games with emotional currency.
Jun 1, 2025 9:57 am
Corson didn't need to explain the details for the fate of his order to become clear. "How tragic," Tovrunn said softly, kindly. "Such an order has a divinely guided purpose. I will pray to Erik that it may be born again one day, soon."

Breuddwyd's frustration brought the young druidess back to their more immediate surroundings, causing her to grimace slightly. She could hear the scorn in his voice, and could feel that it wasn't only directed at her arrogant husband-to-be. Did he not understand the bindings that been placed on her due to her position and her gender? That challenging Lancaelad directly as he seemed to believe should have been done is only something another man or knight could do without fear of consequence? She was but a rider atop a mammoth, convincing him of the best way forward, but ultimately if he chose to push through the thickest part of the trees there was little she could do but hold on. "You were more than welcome to step in at any time, A Flawless and Infinite Dream," she said to the sidhe in his own language, an obvious rebuke in any language while subtly bringing to light his own arrogance. "Of all of us you perhaps could do so the most directly. And yet you didn't."

Leveling Lancaelad a look chat could chill ice, she continued in Anuirean. "And yet he has a point. If those woodsmen were friends of Corson's old order, they might have proven to be a boon on this suddenly hostile road. Leant shelter, provide distraction. Even perhaps disguise that we might slip our hunters snares. Now, thanks to your insistence on reaping the minor benefits of heraldry, we must at best hope that they not assist them in their hunt with our description."

Sighing in muted frustration, she averted her eyes, letting them slip to the heraldry emblazoned across his shield. Heraldry that he was so very proud of. "We must be careful from here on out," she said somewhat more calmly, urging her horse forward with a click of the tongue and tap of the heel.

Children. Both of them.
Jun 1, 2025 9:59 am
Lancaelad listened to Corson and Tovrunn speak, bemused. The idea of a chivalric order dedicated to something so abstruse as separating the wilds and the world of men struck him as odd and fruitless. You might as well have knights sworn to keep the tide from encroaching on the shore. Fighting for something other than personal glory or the privilege and power of the realm did not interest him, so he said nothing. If this Evergreen order was no more, that spoke volumes to him of the senselessness of their mission.

And yet... his gaze travelled across the inviting boughs of the Erebannien that formed a processional around the road. That ember of romance in his heart that could be fanned to a flame of passion, moved to tears or verse by the beauty of these woods flared. A knight could do battle for the beauty and honour of a lady. Why not a glade, a brook, a blooming flower? There was something charming in that, if frivolous. Moderating his tone somewhat, Lan barely looked at Corson but asked: "Until? How did the order fail in its duty, squire Corson?" There was something to be said for a good tragedy, a doomed last stand. It made for fine poetry, at least.

His spine and voice stiffened as Breuddwyn dared address him so. A lawless people, these sidhelien. "Pride is not the means, Master Niderfyn," he snapped. "It is the ends. Pride flows from the knowledge one has defended one's rights to the hilt, demanded one's dues and brooked no insult unavenged. I would not expect an elf to understand such."

When Tovrunn chastised him, his cheeks flared red with anger and embarrassment. She was right, of course, but to be gainsayed so by his intended - in front of the commoners, in front of the elf, no less! "As you say, Lady Tovrunn," he said, not looking at her. Flicking Victorious' reins, he said: "I shall scout the road ahead." He tried to sound haughty and unaffected as he trotted forward, but in truth sounded like a surly boy that had been scolded.
Jun 1, 2025 10:02 am
Breuddwyd's expression grew more troubled and, with his ageless features—strained and pale though they seemed—he did also very much resemble a chastened child. He considered letting it go at that, content as usual to stew in morbidly superior thoughts. But shutting down lines of communication wouldn't improve their chances as a unit.

**Has that been what you've seen? So far? As an outsider here? ** he sent to the wintry woman, staring at her back. **That they listen to us? That they hear what we say? These greedy beasts?** The notion was ludicrously myopic. **They scarcely tolerate us. Waiting with bated breath. Each and every one. Until we are no more.**

And Breuddwyd had thought this level-headed human from a distant land, reputed for its untamed wilderness and strong spiritual connections, would understand. The misapprehension upset him but not in the same way his youthful, petulant outburst had. Drawing attention to himself in front of the woodsmen—the single elf among their number, giving orders —would have been just as harmful to their discretion as Lancaelad's wanton flexing.

**Among my people. A woman. Someone like you. Could be anything. You believe possible.**

And he hadn't intended to share that last bit but, just like that, it was out there. The hurt and animosity—part of it, at least—arose from the unrefined esteem he felt for her and no other humans alive. That might have been tangled up with other emotional connections, far away from here. Some magic-users burned even brighter on the inside than the most impressive spells they could bring to bear. In a way, seeing Tovrunn trot demurely to her fate was a bit like watching his own kin chained and led without a fight to the stakes for a public burning.

**Don't let them tell you who you are.**
Jun 1, 2025 10:03 am
After Lancaelad's little outburst, then inquiry, Corson looked him dead in the eye. "Pride. Pride tore them apart from the inside. The knights, unable to let go of ego and pride, turned on themselves. Two of our greatest... And when it was over, one stood victorious over his slain brother. It started the downward spiral."

The squire watched the young noble ride off ahead to stew in his thoughts and suddenly felt embarrassed. I should have died like the rest of them.
Jun 1, 2025 10:03 am
Leaving the woodsmen to manhandle their wagon from the ditch the collected nobles and their charges continued through the forest for a few more hours. The sun rose to its zenith, lighting the dappled wilderness of the wood, and then the shadows lengthened once again. With Lancaelad riding vanguard there was at the least a measure of quiet amongst the group as the still of the woods acted as balm against the shock of the morning.

With the direct route wiser than the circuitous (better to follow a predictable trail than to be headed off) they broke from the cover of the woods into rocky fields divided by rough-hewn walls as Avani's splendour set the horizon afire, and the blue of night had taken the east side of the houses by the time the rode in through the stout gates of Bardenhold.

An old fastness, older than the Barony itself, the small town was redoubtable if cramped behind its high walls and once they had passed by the plump guard who held high a lantern to examine each of their faces, the party were left with the task of choosing a place to rest with the knowledge that foemen may well be on their trail.
Jun 1, 2025 10:05 am
Ranging ahead and riding back to confirm to the party the way was clear, Lancaelad seemed to be hunting for something. Each time he rode off it was with eagerness and a head whipping side to side like a keen hound, and each time he returned he seemed frustrated, even forlorn. It was as if he was hungry for battle - or something else he expected to find in the glorious woodlands.

As they approached Bardenhold, he resumed his self-appointed place at the head of the band and remarked: "Be wary of these folk. Most of them are Bardens by blood, and family holds a greater sway on their loyalty than title."

Nodding haughtily to the guard as they were allowed it, and squinting because the bright like made stars of pain light inside of his skull. "We can find shelter for the night in the hall of Old Nae Barden, the headman of the village and the clan," he said, rubbing his brow with a grimace. "A party such as ours will not pass unmarked, so we may as well claim hospitality rights."
Jun 1, 2025 10:07 am
As they traveled, Tovrunn pondered the events that had occurred on the road, first with a frustrated sense of self-righteousness but then as she calmed with an open-mindedness that the druids in her circle encouraged. And what she found was that, at least in some sense, Breuddwyd was right. She had pointedly ignored his last mental messaging, but as much as she would have denied it in the moment there was in fact something that she could have done to prevent that course of actions. If she had recognized the moment as it was developing, there was a chance that she might have been able to corral Lancaelad's bullheadishness and allow Corson to uncover the hidden benefits that the woodcutters might have offered them. There was a significant part of her that balked at this, arguing that it was not her responsibility to guide the man into good decisions like a mother would her child, and this was undoubtedly true. But it was also true that her responsibility was to see this man Adalric to his destination safely. It was all of their responsibility in fact. And if that meant that sometimes she must remind Lancaelad of that responsibility when his ego took hold of his senses, then so be it. One must accept the positives and negatives of any task, no matter how frustrating.

At the thought of Lancaelad, the man seemed more and more forlorn as his repeated departures and returns grew frantic somehow, as though he was driven by something that she could not see. What was it that would cause his vexation, especially as they drew out of the woodlands so? It seemed as though he was looking for something, their enemies perhaps. And yet he looked so disappointed...

Entering Bardenhold for the first time felt, somewhat oddly, like returning home. Or at least like entering another's hold in Rjurik. She couldn't help but think that perhaps it was these people's close ties to each other by blood rather than by oath that gave her that sensation, but she could tell that Lancaelad was largely right in his assessment. If not exactly his opinion.

"Are you sure that wise, my beloved?" she asked as he suggested claiming hospitality rights. Rights which she was less likely to believe existed in the sense that Lancaelad believed them to. It seemed more likely that demanding hospitality would be only barely tolerated, but such worries were not to be spoken aloud. "Noticed or not, placing ourselves in the safety of others, especially those who hold their ties to the Baroness as loosely as you claim, seems a risk. Especially as we have yet to put a name or face to the benefactor who has hired a small army to hunt us. Better that we keep our own means of defending ourselves or sudden flight from this hold closer at hand than we'd be able to in the comfort of Barden's keep."
Jun 1, 2025 10:08 am
Bardenhold's sole hospitable institution - creatively signed 'The Inn at Bardenhold' - was a square, unadorned building that loomed in the dimming evening. Its thick windows burned with the unassuming fire of candlelight and the gap under the door where fresh straw spilled out promised a fire and the unassuming backdrop of someone playing a drum and whistling a tune alongside it.

A boy at the building's modest stable took charge of their horses, sending his read-headed and freckled younger compatriot to fetch more fodder and water.

Inside the common room the stern-faced proprietress behind the bar informed them, with a decided lack of deferential bowing and scraping, informed them that she had two private rooms free for the night, each with two cots, and of course the common room and the hay loft above their horses were also available. "The dog'll sleep by the fire like as not" she added with a lightly less surly glance at Arglwyddes. "We'll find her a scrap'r two in the kitchen, won't we?"

The matter of whether or not sharing a room was acceptable seemed moot in the face of the powerfully built woman. Paidrig, Mhairie and Geremie knew they'd be in the hayloft without being told, which left six to bed down between the proffered spaces.
Jun 1, 2025 10:11 am
"More than fair. We're grateful for your hospitality," Breuddwyd assured the ogress tending the counter. He recognised that they were not so far from the Erebannien here that elves would seem terribly out of place. Presuming the crude, roughspun comforts of human accommodations ever appealed to any of his kin.

Seated beside him, Arglwyddes's tail drubbed a cursory flip-flop of approval against the plank floor as she peered solemnly up at their host. The perfect diplomat in most company.

"There has been a disagreeable pall hanging about the woods of late, felt all the way from Aerenwe," he said softly to the big innkeep, leaning in closer with a sort of palpable but preternatural sorrow about his manner that only the fey could muster. "We'd rather avoid any spiteful entanglements beneath your roof, we would." He showed her a pained, delicate smile and slid an extra coin with subtlety across the countertop. "I'm sure you see your share of unfamiliar faces but if any should bring unexpected inquiries to your ear—prying into private affairs—we would appreciate swift notice."

The svelte, dark elf glanced back at the others, wondering at their feelings on the place. Breuddwyd's people didn't sleep the same way they did so the common room would serve him. Or, in that sense, he might make a good roommate for their charge, though the bodyguard Corson was most certainly the better fit for that role.
Jun 1, 2025 10:12 am
"But two rooms free?" Lancaelad sounded surprised. Adopting an air of bored curiosity that passed as craftiness for him, he asked: "Have you an uncommon number of travellers besides ourselves passing through tonight?"

Looking back at the group, he said: "Lady Tovrunn shall have one room. Honour demands no less. The rest of us must sleep head to foot like common soldiers in the other, I fear. Discomforting, but such is the nature of perilous adventure with deadly pursuit at our heels!"
Jun 1, 2025 10:13 am
"I expect I can be more attentive from the common room," Breuddwyd put in with a very nearly audible sigh. The thought of cloistering himself in with unthinkable intimacy beside a handful of sweaty, snoring, road-grimy human men for a night in a single room made him distinctly queasy. "I'm much better suited to confronting depredations in the night than the rest of you and require little rest." He tried for a smile to take some sting out of the criticism but it made for a dire sight. "No doubt Arglwyddes would grow lonely in my absence."

The elf returned his gaze to their host, hoping to see some receptiveness to his entreaty for cooperation, if not outright vigilance on the party's behalf.
Jun 1, 2025 10:15 am
Frowning down at Breuddwyd's coin the innkeeper looked between sidhe and knight. "Aye, of nine private rooms two're free. We're the only inn in town, but 'tis true Bardenhold been uncommon busy these past few days. All manner of strangers in town, but folk got a right to make their way so long as their coin's got the Imperial arms." She looked the party over critically. "You'll not get more than three of these lads in a room unless you can sleep standing" she added bluntly "t'ain't a palace up there. There's rabbit and hazelnut for supper, and currant wine aplenty when you're ready."

Going to turn, the woman though better for a moment and turned back, snatching the coin from the bar. "If you've cause to caution, there's a man in the first room at the top of the stair. Too free with his coin and fine in his dress for a place like this I reckon. If he's got no cause to visit with the Bardens it's cos he'd not find welcome." She frowned again, tucking Breuddwyd's payment into the pocket of her apron. "I'm no gossip, mind" she warned in a stern voice, wagging a finger at the six companions, before making her way back toward the kitchens.
Jun 1, 2025 10:16 am
"I can sleep in the stables" Corson said, leaving the next part unspoken: And keep an eye on the horses...
Jun 1, 2025 10:17 am
Gently laying a hand on Lancaelad's arm, Tovrunn spoke up. "I appreciate your concern for honor, Lancaelad. However, so long as I am given privacy enough to clothe myself I can make do with less than ideal circumstances." Glancing at the door she continued, "Perhaps it was the sudden hostility at the docks, but I'd rather remain within arms distance tonight. When it comes to both honor and security I trust none here more than you."

Looking at Corson when he made his offer, and then to their charge, she said, "A man-at-arms should stay with our charge. We are not so far from the docks this morning that we should take our safety as assured. Come. Let us discuss over food. I'll find us a table."
Jun 1, 2025 10:18 am
Lancaelad had resigned himself to sleeping in the stables with his retinue – he had already staked Lady Tovrunn's honour on her privacy, and it was evident he lacked the flexibility in his spine to reverse that statement once uttered. Thus he stiffened as the Rjurik priestess brushed his arm and barely mustered the the self-control to bite down on an instinctive refutation to her offer. But he had, at least, the wit to take the rope she threw to a man about to drown under the weight of his own pride.

"As you say, my lady," he relented, inclining his head slightly. There was relief visible behind his pig-headed demeanour. "I am sure such rough, communal sleeping is not unfamiliar from the longhouses of your home."

As they found their way to the table, he addresses Corson and Salien, though his words were meant for all of them. "I trust you attended the words of the keeper of the house. We may have found ourselves encamped amidst any number of foes. Be prepared to sleep lightly and stay in close quarters. I will have my ostler ensure our mounts are ready to go at a moment's notice."
Jun 1, 2025 10:19 am
Corson nodded and with a sharp bow turned to the innkeep, "We will take two bowls of stew with bread and cheese, please."

After placing a small pile of silvers on the counter, he returned his attention to the lords and lady. "Do we need to meet in your rooms later to discuss our next move?"
Jun 1, 2025 10:20 am
"I'll try the stew as well, if you'd be so kind." Breuddwyd showed the attendant a wan and weary grin.

He looked from Corson to the others and, confirming they were relatively free of errant ears listening in, he softly inquired, "Should we perhaps approach this well-dressed roamer to whom the matron referred? I could arrange some friendly pretense, I could." If the stranger was noteworthy to the working-class proprietor, he might warrant further investigation. The Sidhe actually seemed quite engaged with the notion, his fledgling sense for spycraft piqued.
Jun 1, 2025 10:21 am
The proprietress barked some instructions to a lean young boy with glossy black hair, and he scurried into the kitchen, returning with steaming bowls and tankards. As they accepted what appeared to be at the least acceptable repast and took ownership of a vacant table that commanded a view of the door, the Roesonian entourage took in the common room.

The inn bustled with the subdued early evening mixture of locals and travellers - at least two dozen patrons alone and in groups though the large common area promised room for as many more as the night set in. A minstrel with the unmistakably delicate features of a changeling plucked at a dulcimer by the fire, her tongue poking past her pink lips in concentration, as a curl of ebon hair fell from the turban that concealed the point of her ears. Her companion - a man with a hint of the Krakennauricht in his attire and features, snored quietly with his battered pipes on his lap. Ahead of them a table of peddlars and mongers, first to finish their work and still in their aprons, awaited the performance with pitchers ready.

A big fellow with shorn head and folded arms like tree-trunks shared a table with a halfling who was gnawing on his ragged fingernails with a distracted energy. Both had weapons sheathed and peace-bound on the table before them suggesting travellers as firmly as their muddy clothes. Not far from them a well-dressed man with a reading glass in hand, a neat greying beard and slashed sleeves poured over a ledger dominating one of the place's larger tables himself.

A group of itinerant labourers - young men with wild looks and dirty hands already too deep in their cups - eyed the other server; a girl decorated with a peppering of freckles and mousey hair whose ready smile evaporated every time she felt eyes on her.

If they were to get a look at the man they'd been warned of he'd clearly yet to emerge - but surely a foeman would be out here watching for them?
Jun 1, 2025 10:30 am
Though used to long days in the saddle and the weight of armour, Ser Lancaelad nonetheless grimaced as he settled into the creaking wooden chair. Links of mail seemed to be etching into his skin, and his shoulders attempted to slump with the pressure of his hauberk on them. The rabbit stew was simple, vulgar fare but anything was welcome after the strenuous travails of the day. "By the Stormlord's spear, it's hard to believe we met your boat at dawn, Master Salien," he sighed, running a gloved hand through sweat-matted blond locks. "It feels like a week already." Drawing himself upright despite the complaint of his back, he adopted a brave face. "But there are many leagues ahead of us still."

He fell silent, concentrating on filling his belly by the spoonful for a while. As he ate, his gaze slipped towards the dark-haired half-elven minstrel, tracing the delicate points of her ears, the way she held her lips as she played, the lissome grace of her form. He wasn't nearly as subtle as he thought in his observation, and there was something wistful, almost melancholic in his eyes.

Tearing his gaze away as Corson spoke, he nodded. "Indeed. We should not announce our plan and path with so many ears about." He ease with which he said this, give how garrulous he had been in Abbatoir was perhaps galling.

He looked at Brueddwyn suspiciously when the elf made his suggestion. "To what ends? What hope you to learn from him, as opposed to what you might reveal by your presence? There are no so many of your folk about, even here. Well, apart from her," he gestured at the minstrel.

Finishing his stew and enjoying the nourishing warmth rising through him, Lancaelad picked at a bit of hazelnut in his teeth with the point of a belt knife, and his gaze fell upon a chess set on one of the corner tables. The pieces, carved from rich red deiswood and silvery birch were set up all wrong. "Do any of you play the game of kings? A round might clarify our minds and hone our wits," he asked hopefully.
Jun 1, 2025 10:32 am
Breuddwyd's expression didn't change. He would not be baited again. "If those who seek us are already here, we have no hope of hiding who we are," he said evenly, still leaning forward to maintain some discretion. "I'd be insulted if our tormentors weren't at least that adept, I would. Far better to lay eyes on all who would by design espy us."

He looked back over his shoulder as the minstrels prepared for their show, clearly interested in their progress. It would be a lie to say the thought of music didn't excite him; rare was the Sidhe who would not take careful note of the craft on display. More to the point of current contention, the role of traveling musician was an ideal guise for both fugitive and information gatherer alike. If Breuddwyd ever found himself charged with coordinating a spy network—and, if the fates could be kind, someday that would indeed be so—he would most certainly employ tough and charming and resourceful bards to do his bidding.

"I might see if they'll allow me to join in their merriment," he mused, almost to himself, and the irony of his choice of words was likely lost on him. Getting close to the performers could be valuable from a defensive standpoint but he would enjoy the chance to play with strangers in any event. He fancied himself quite adept with the crwth he carried.

Pausing then, he refreshed the mental connection once more with Tovrunn.

**The man upstairs. If here by falsehood. May come out to watch. To uphold his ruse.** He smiled faintly, meeting the human woman's eyes. Anyone journeying for long who was not already asleep would glom onto any idle entertainment to stave off the boredom of the road. **Then we take his measure.**

He let that resonate before adding, **If he stays away. You might force the issue. Blunder into his room. By accident. Play the outsider. Brusque as you can.** He winced, his smile grew apologetic. **Looking to ... freshen up? Female things. You got turned around. Allay his doubts. Then you take his measure.**

Rising from his chair, he knelt by his pack with that characteristically weird and starchy sort of grace to fetch his instrument, still swaddled in waxed canvas for the road. Unwrapping the crwth with great care and keeping his eyes downcast as if deep in thought, he awaited Tovrunn's response.
Jun 1, 2025 10:34 am
Corson shooks his head brusquely to Lancaelad's query, though it wasn't likely the young noble was speaking to him. Hunched over his bowl, he shovelled the stew into his gob, having learned to eat quickly and return to watch.

The coarse squire leaned back and brushed his hand against the intricately carved wooden rod held by a thong at his back, knowing that if they were attacked that he was armed despite the peace tie on his sword.

For now, he would sit and watch... they would make a move soon...
Jun 2, 2025 2:09 pm
Taking a seat with the others and ordering the soup as well as a mug of wine which she barely sipped, most of Tovrunn's focus was on the minstrels, her eyes heavy and distant. It wasn't until Breuddwyd forcibly pushed his thoughts into her mind that she gave the conversation at the table any real consideration. **The key emphasis being 'if' and 'might'** she thought back to him, still not quite over his presumptive tantrum on the road, no matter how close he came to the mark. **Stirring up trouble when there is none is inadvisable, especially if we are only staying the night. But...you may be right. Whoever hired that army of mercenaries that hunted us in Abbadiel has deep pockets and long reach. It would not surprise me if he had cast his net widely in case we managed to slip his snare. We should be careful tonight.**

"I do admit some passing curiosity as to who this mysterious patron is," Tovrunn said verbally, pivoting the tension between her betrothed and their sidhe companion. "It does seem rather odd that, based purely on what the proprietress spoke of, he would choose to room here. Our own decisions were based out of an abundance of caution; what would drive a man like that to choose the same?"

Shrugging and setting the topic aside with a sip of her wine, Tovrunn leaned forward towards the blonde-haired knight opposite her. "I can't say that I have played this game," she admitted, "though I am eager to learn. Have you any lessons to offer?"

Once the game was underway, she asked casually, "So tell me good sirs, how you came to be here in this tavern with us. We heard a shortened version on the docks, but now that time and good company have found us aplenty, I'd like to hear the full of it."
Jun 2, 2025 2:10 pm
Corson looked at the young Northwoman, regarding her carefully. "The man needed an escort. It is what I do, protect travelers along the Trade Road. Never realized that my blade would be needed so much."
Jun 2, 2025 2:12 pm
Hearing no objections that might give him pause, Breuddwyd approached the minstrels, cradling his crwth and his dark eyes shimmering uncomfortably with brittle hope.

"You've arrested their attention, blodyn," he said, addressing the presumed changeling with a gentle smile. She was clearly the one who chose the beat. "Now I'm as eager as the rest to hear you play, I am. But perhaps you'd let me join you for a few songs?"

He made a vague gesture with his instrument towards the woman and her mates.

"Do you know "Ymyl y Niwloedd?"" It was a slower tune, one that might be taken for a lullaby in human terms and better suited to the end of the night, but he liked it well enough. Almost apologetically, he added, "I have some others in my repertoire as well, if you've a mind to indulge an amateur. That is, if you're feeling charitable this evening."

Pausing for a moment, Breuddwyd extended one hand to be clasped in greeting, as any Anuirean might expect.

"I'm called Osian," he said impulsively, using his real name though it's one that almost none would know outside his wooded realm. Ordinarily he disregarded this as the appellation of a child but, curiously, in this moment he thought it lent him a simple sort of elegance. Was this nostalgia?
Jun 2, 2025 2:13 pm
"It's true" Salien added "there's little more to add. You doubtless know of Suiriene, a land Anuirean in appearance despite being in the far east. I have a small estate there - we produce fruit, some spirits. Some months ago the Lord Governor, Mieles Buired summoned me. He commanded that I sail for Anuire, told me that a political ally wished to ask me a few questions. He promised that I would be generously compensated, but it was clear that I had no choice in the matter. I met with Ser Corson upon the docks of Masetiele on the day the Prowl sailed, and the last we were told was that we would be met at Abbadiel by an escort who would know our destination."

The man gave a shrug "that's the whole of it. Whatever those men want, they've mistaken me for some other traveller." He turned to Corson "Perhaps the wizard? He disembarked with us."
Jun 2, 2025 2:14 pm
Next to the fire the minstrel looked up at Breuddwyd, her dark eyes wide. The changelings were not so timeless as sidhe who remained amongst their own kind, and so he could tell at a glance that she was young - scarcely out of her teens. "I'm certain if ye took the lead m'lud, we could follow" she replied in a piping voice that promised a clean alto despite a thick provincial accent. "As long as you don't plan to share in the coin - it's the first full house all week."

Her companion cracked an eyelid a sliver mid snore to regard Breuddwyd from beneath bushy brows before returning to his fireside doze. She nodded toward the crwth with some apprehension. "Is that, ah, some kind of harp?"
Jun 2, 2025 2:44 pm
"More like a lyre, really, but you don't have to take my word for it," Breuddwyd replied, pleased at his own little joke. "And we're agreed on the coin. I merely seek enjoyment from making music with kindred hearts and minds. Think of me as naught but humble accompaniment to your craft."

He produced the bow of his crwth with a flourish and, slipping the strap over his head, he moved to join the band. Considering the faces looking on, he saw the error in his initial suggestion—dangerously sleepy for a well-fed audience.

"Perhaps we would be better off starting with a livelier affair. I am yours to command, blodyn. Then I might teach you something you've not heard before, I might."
Jun 2, 2025 3:37 pm
"From the easternmost shores of Cerilia on the Sea of Dragons to within a stone's throw of the westernmost," Lancaelad mused as he set up the board with Tovrunn. "That is a considerable journey to command merely to sate someone's curiosity. You must hold secrets greater than the recipe for peach brandy, my good man." He gave Salien a long, speculative look before shaking his head and turning to the board. "Whatsoever that may be, we shall see you safely to your destination. I merely hope that it justifies the blood and sweat spent for your sake."

He explained the aptitudes of the chess pieces to his betrothed with a fanciful, boyish enthusiasm: the resolute obedience of the pawns, extolling the reach of the knights, begrudgingly crediting the ordinal slyness of the bishops and approving of the unstoppable charge of the rooks, and glorious power of the baroness (as the queen was called in the Roesonean variant). Taking the throne-piece – for the chessboard's position of rule had sat as empty as the Iron Throne of Anuire for five and a half centuries – was the objective of the game

He was a fair enough player, skilled if not inspired, though seemed prone to losing sight of the strategic lay of the game in favour of the epic narrative about it he was writing in his head. He gave the impression that, if not for company, he might have been making little sword clashing noises with his mouth and reciting death-soliloquies as the pieces contended.

As they played one of the inn's cats, a billowing ginger hopped up onto the table, attracted by the intent gaze of the humans on the board. Settling down nearby, she watched in case any of the pieces turned out to be a mouse in disguise, her tail sweeping the crumbs from dinner. Lancaelad glanced at the cat, smiled warmly and bowed his head. "My lady," he addressed her. He reached into his pocket, removing a scrap of rabbit meat he had wrapped in a kerchief and offered it to the observer on the tip of his finger. She sniffed and gulped it down readily enough, then graciously consented to let him give her a good scratch under the chin and behind the ears, rumbling a purr.

Half concentrating on the game, he addressed the Rjurik woman across the board from him as well as Aeric, who had always given him good advice in the past. "This well-dressed, spendthrift fellow the proprietoress mentioned, Lady Tovrunn... do you truly believe he may post a threat? If so, would you counsel avoiding his attention, or confronting it?"
Jun 2, 2025 3:43 pm
The other musician awoke properly, and the pair picked up a jaunty tune with a skill Breuddwyd judged more than passable for a country inn. Though he didn't know the piece Anuirean jigs were universally unexceptional from a musical standpoint, and it only took a moment to follow the melody. The locals sent up a polite cheer, not so many cups deep as to get rowdy just yet, and began swinging their tankards to the tune. The freckled serving girl gave a little twirl, skirts flying out for a moment, before vanishing into the kitchens.
Jun 2, 2025 3:47 pm
"Da iawn! Well done, indeed," Breuddwyd declared as the minstrels finished their first set, something not entirely dissimilar from true warmth in his smooth and typically sour voice. He considered what he knew of regional human songs that might appease a casual crowd hankering for the familiar following their repast. "Perhaps we might give "Leave Your Cloak by the Door" a shake next? Or let "Old Piggy Mayhew" out for a run?"

He set his bow to the strings of his crwth, prepared to hold up his end and let the quaint girl's sweet tones carry the number. While he preferred to engage with slower and more introspective fare—some might say perpetually gloomy—his instrument of choice was well-adapted for frivolous and upbeat music as well. Even if the musician in question was not.

But Breuddwyd found himself mouthing the lyrics along with the mixed race maiden, quite possibly enjoying himself. For fleeting instants, he didn't even feel completely superior to the crowd within the inn. He did remember, however, to cast a wary glance about the room on occasion to see if the secretive boarder had chanced to reveal himself.
Jun 2, 2025 3:47 pm
From outside three long peals of a bell marked the last call to the gates. Like many walled towns, Bardenhold closed its gates at full dark and the bell was a call to any with business beyond the threshold that their time was short.
Jun 2, 2025 3:51 pm
Sitting there and listening to Lancaelad while the music picks up and the atmosphere of the inn begins to lull away the clouds of frustration and anxiousness that had obscured most of the day, Tovrunn found herself relaxing. Her head cocks to the side, taking in the sight of the man across from him as he spoke with a boyish, imaginative enthusiasm.

Truthfully, she had told a minor white lie in service to other goals. While it was true that she had not played much of the game, she had some preexisting idea on how the game was played. The movements of the individual pieces was easy enough to grasp as a passive observer, and while the finer stratagems and more complex maneuvers were somewhat hazy to her, she had enough knowledge to make the knight's explanation somewhat less than necessary. But then again, the explanation, and his delivery of it, was exactly what she was looking for.

For perhaps the first time in this flesh, she saw him display something other than pride bordering on arrogance or stiff dismissal or thoughtless haste. Indeed, his exuberance was infectious, and she found herself smiling at the fancifully descriptive language he chose. Were it not for the darkening bruising about his eye, she might have imagined them somewhere else entirely, with the worries of their journey distant memories or imaginations. The thought was...nice.

She wished he spoke to her more often like this. She wondered wistfully what it was that kept him from doing so.

Looking on as he doted on the cat with a knowing smile, Tovrunn took his bishop with her knight, a clumsy mistake that he might have made had he thought to look for it. She could see the wheels turning in his head, but clearly they were focused on producing another sort of outcome. More of his poetry perhaps? He was, after all, so doting on cats. She could hardly blame him for his distraction.

As Lancaelad turned conversation to their current environment, Tovrunn glanced to the stairs, and sighed. She sat still for a moment, gathering her thoughts before she spoke. "I cannot say anything with certainty," she began, moving a pawn into position. "I am so unfamiliar with these lands, and the people who occupy them. But what I do know is that earlier this very day, a veritable army and possibly even a magician of some skill sought to hunt us, even after we drove off the sea-borne smugglers. Such an array of force is doubtlessly an expensive investment, and while I would be shocked if the holder of the purse strings will be seen here, it would be equally shocking if they did not have an agent within easy reach of the operation. Such a figure would like to avoid official recognition by local lords or magistrates, yet be somewhere where they can maintain some anonymity, all the while in possession of coin enough to reward the mercenaries should they complete their mission. And we are, after all, within a day's ride of both the border and Abbadiel."

Pursing her lips and shrugging, she looked away from the chessboard and into Lancaelad's eyes. "To be clear, I mean to levy no accusations; I merely speak as I see it. Without taking this man's measure, it cannot be said with any certainty whether this spendthrift is such an agent, or if my musings are anxious daydreams. If however, we were to take his measure, and find him as I speak, then we must tread carefully. Either we must evade his notice entirely, or we must take him swiftly and silently."

Looking back down at the board, she blinked. "Um. I believe this is...what is the word? Check?"
Jun 2, 2025 3:52 pm
As it turned out, the perky changeling lass put out a rather charming rendition of "Leave Your Cloak by the Door" and Breuddwyd's uncommon ebullience grew. Perhaps this group could handle some of the deeper, haunting and evocative material generally attributed to Sidhelien song. And the resonating toll of the bell outside that heralded another cool and watchful night put him in mind of an older and more intricate lay known by few outside the weald he called home.

"This one is called "Dim Iachâd i Gariad" but I'm afraid you'll not have the lyrics out of me." His rich, low voice was splendid for matters of diplomacy and offering wry and timely criticism but he was no singer. Not like his sister Ceindeg, who had taught him the melody and could deliver each strain with ethereal bewitchment.

He smiled at the girl and her bushy-browed piper. "Follow only if you dare."

It was indeed a lovely ballad that spoke of a love so secretive and intimate that it was virtually inconceivable to any not trapped within its lush and tangled vines. A delicious, consuming sort of ache that numbed the senses even as it redefined the world entire for the beings who surrendered to its whispered, perfect promise. The beginning, the middle, and the end of a tale all in the very instant of first espying another, of awakening to the new bond between two individuals. The twilight of loneliness and an eternity enclosed in a heartbeat that made every one that followed infinitely more meaningful.

Yes, it was just the sort of song that would appeal to sweet, passionately free-spirited Ceindeg.
Jun 2, 2025 3:52 pm
Corson listened, but couldn't help but anticipating the shoe to drop.
Jun 3, 2025 11:32 am
Lancaelad's enthusiasm for showing Tovrunn the game soon became surprise as he found himself falling into trap after obvious trap on the chessboard. Confounded, he flailed to free himself, sacrificing pieces and leaving his baroness exposed to a bold gambit. He stared at the board in disbelief as he saw the position he was in, and finally knocked the baroness over with more force than was warranted. The harsh clack of wood on wood woke the cat from its nap on the end of the table, and it gave the knight a disdainful look before slinking away. Any pleasantness in Lan's demeanour was lost behind the veil of a sullen, thwarted child. "Well played, my lady," he muttered without a trace of good sportsmanship.

As Breuddwyd began to play his song of sweet and poisonous love the ginger padded over to him and began encircling his legs in an endless figure of eight, purring and rubbing against the elf's ankles. Lan's attention was torn from the lost game and he adopted a look of surprise, growing into wistfullness and pleasant pain that seemed to take his mind elsewhere. Scarcely breathing, his gaze turned to the shuttered window as if looking back at the Erebannien beyond the walls of the inn and the town, emotion glistening in them. He was not entirely alone in his reaction, even if he seemed to feel it more acutely; the jigs had got feet tapping and knees slapping, but this ancient lay reminded people of the dread passions and eternal melancholy of the elves who had ruled these lands before man.

There were more sighs and wiped eyes than applause as the tune trailed away like morning mist fading. Lancaelad rose abruptly from his table and strode over to the elf, grasping his elbow roughly. "Master Breuddwyd," he said in an urgent, gruff undertone. "Whence did you learn that lay?"
Jun 3, 2025 11:34 am
The warmth Breuddwyd evinced for the minstrels was gone in a blink as Lancaelad seized his arm, making his bow squeak urgently against the crwth's strings. A shadow passed over his face as he considered the lout at his side.

"It's a Sidhelien song and not so uncommon among the folk," he coolly explained, though this was not entirely true. "You've heard one like it, have you? Can you be certain?" His lips twitched for just an instant in derisive amusement. "I'm sure your ear is... glogyrnog about such matters, it is. Easily misled?"

And then the perceptive Sidhe saw something in the brusque lad's eye that gave him pause and he felt a very small and fleeting trace of pity for whatever it was lurking about Lancaelad's chaotic emotional interior. He reminded himself that few humans were ever in control of themselves, hulking infants that they were, but being close to their feelings was rarely indicative of weakness.

""Dim Iachâd i Gariad," it's called, if it has any name at all. Blunted on your Anuirean tongue, it might be spoken as "No Cure For Love," perhaps. I learned it growing up at Ysgelynwen in the Erebannien, not so far from here." Breuddwyd cocked his head to one side, narrowing his eyes slightly, curiously. "Now wherever might you have heard such a thing?"

Arglwyddes, who had been dozing near the fire and only spared a momentary interest in the local cat sovereign—some believed Cu Sidhe bore near as much feline consanguinity as canine—had lifted her head with fixed and sudden interest when the human warrior grabbed her elven charge. Now she dropped her chin to rest on her paws once again, nothing moving save for her shrewd green eyes, still wary of any escalation.
Jun 3, 2025 11:36 am
Lancaelad's expression was haunted, not by fear but by longing and wonder. "No Cure for Love," he murmured to himself, releasing the elven lord's arm and wiping his palms down a face suddenly flushed and dappled with sweat. "Oh, what a bitter truth that title proclaims. No poison but love is so sweet men would willingly lift its chalice to their lips and quaff their fill, even though it be the last draught they imbibe."

He turned to the inn's fire place, gazing into its depths as if seeking the guidance of Laerme, the goddess of flames both literal and figurative. "I... heard that selfsame song not a half-dozen leagues from here. While I stood vigil over my armour in the Chapel of the Black Hart, under the boughs of the Erebannien I... it came to me. The sweetest song, the most poignant air. Love's own truth transmuted into music, the secret that only bound hearts may share. My Lady of the Woods..." the title escaped his lips as a sigh, then he shook himself, tearing his gaze away from the fire. Breuddwyd saw shame in Lan's eyes as they glanced back at Tovrunn, and it seemed he wished to say more but dared not – at least not here, not now.

"Your pardon, Master Breuddwyd," the knight said with a curt halfbow of his head. Hastily, he strode to the bar, in desperate need of a mug of that blackcurrant wine to steady his nerves.
Jun 3, 2025 11:37 am
Evening wore into night, and though Breuddwyd's efforts to culture the local Roesonians were met with polite attention they were hardly so roundly cheered as the boisterous standards that got feet stomping and hands clapping. Likely such refined tastes were beyond beings so shortlived anyway.

Beaten until pride demanded his withdrawl, a wistful Lancaelad left his playing pieces to the rest of the group. Of course he'd let them win - one had to be magnanimous about such things so as not to drive them from the game. There would be other long nights keeping to themselves at low inns before this was over. Surprisingly it was Aeric who proved the shrewdest tactician, going all but undefeated thanks to tying up a game in a few decisive moves, before his opponent had time to truly consider a strategy. A particularly impressive win saw him corner Adalric's Emperor in only eight short moves.

If they'd hoped for the man the proprietress had spoken of to emerge then that hope seemed in vain, for though the labourers and ploughhands who lived within the walls filled the common room as the night lengthened, no one emerged down the worn stairs to join the merrymaking.

Bowls of food came and went. The repast was acceptable, if gamy - really the best they could hope of a small village on the outskirts of the woods - and eventually the crowd thinned as the locals began to stumble home.
Jun 3, 2025 11:39 am
Breuddwyd avoided Lancaelad's game, knowing the contests of men to be feeble exercises in petty self-aggrandizement. Instead he finished out the evening with the girl and her piper, finding the company of these earnest, entertaining strangers a welcome respite from his new colleagues.

And once the crowd began to clear out and the locals commenced the arduous trek back to their lonesome, lowly abodes, the Sidhe packed up his crwth and considered his next move. Finding Tovrunn's mind in the taproom, he renewed his previous proposal.

**Our fancy fellow lodger. Does not seem. To have made an appearance,** Breuddwyd sent to the wintry woman. **If further investigation. Still seems. A prudent course to you. I may provide diversion. To aid. Your clandestine ingress.**

Moving to the bar he finally partook of the currant wine being offered. Unlike many of his kinfolk, Breuddwyd didn't weather his alcoholic beverages well at all. Perhaps it was something about his most unusual lood but, upon imbibing, he grew especially maudlin or incrementally more silly far too quickly for comfort. Either was bad enough among family and would be unforgivable adrift in human lands, filled with watching eyes and insensitive minds.

**Do follow my cue. If there's still. A bit of wily. Four-legged scouting. Left in you this day.**

Thanking the barkeep, he sipped enough to lend his aspect the possible hint of mild inebriation before heading up the stairs to face the door he believed might conceal their elusive quarry. Trying it first to see if it was barred against his approach, the elf than banged heavily upon the wood, giving a deceptively lusty impression of his interest in passing through. "What waggery is this?" he blustered in vaguely affronted bewilderment at a door shut against him—channeling the callow blond knight for an instant—before taking on a slightly more insinuating tone. "Ho now, gwmnïwr. You're in there with someone else tonight, you are."
Jun 3, 2025 11:40 am
Taking part in several more games following her surprising and frankly accidental upset, Tovrunn held true to the adage of 'beginners luck' by losing every single game she played in after the first. As she conceded her third loss in a row, she briefly felt the frustration that her fiancee must have felt, and imagined the added salt that came from losing to an absolute beginner. She was in the process of mentally mapping out a possible way to ease the bruising of his pride when Breuddwyd's intrusive thoughts forced their way into her mind.

**It seems he has not,** she agreed, glancing surreptitiously towards the staircase. **A quick glance could not hurt any, and may prove useful.**

Excusing herself from the table, Tovrunn made her way outside to the privacy one could expect to find fron the latrines before her form twisted and shrunk. A cat returned to the inn and found a perch on the stairs, locking eyes with the Elven wayfarer.

**Ready when you are.**

Following Breuddwyd up the stairs and to the room, she hid out of sight as he clumsily made his attempt at getting the occupants attention, waiting patiently for a crack in the door before attempting her infiltration.
Jun 3, 2025 11:42 am
The doors of the Bardenhold Inn were much like the town: old, sturdy, redoubtable. So much so that Breuddwyd's raps sounded soft and muffled, but if his knocks could be missed his added tipsy caterwauling could not. After a long moment in which Tovrunn's enhanced ears could hear the scrape of something metal in the room, a voice with a well annunciated accent that neither could quite place, but lacked the mumbled slur of rural Roesone called out "wrong room friend."
Jun 3, 2025 11:49 am
**Find a way. I will keep him. Focused here.** Breuddwyd told the cat. **Good luck.**

He paused outside the door, dragging his knuckles across the wood with what he imagined might seem like slow and steady drunken consideration in a world of confusing possibilities.

"No," he finally answered. "That's wrong." He still sounded muzzy but there was also an air of petulant denial there, as from a very believably spoiled child who won't easily be convinced he is wrong about a petty matter. "This chamber has been claimed by my warrior friend. The surly lady by the bar declared it so, she did." He held for another moment, trying to decide what might impress a human traveler, before inspiration struck. "He let me leave my spellbook in there. And now I have need of it. Sidhelien magic is a wild thing ... not easily subdued."

Breuddwyd wasn't yelling—indeed he almost never did—but when had a member of any noble house anywhere ever needed to raise his voice to sound demanding? If nothing else, the well-dressed voyager might at least lever the door open a crack just to tell the haughty elf off.

"Hastily now. I'm a forgiving soul, I am, but I'll brook no more of your intrusive shenanigans this night."
Jun 3, 2025 12:10 pm
A couple of cups of the dark, sour-sweet wine took the edge off Lancaelad's mood. His hearty frame and the cushioning of the rabbit stew kept it from going to his head, but did serve to blunt his roughness a little. He watched with little interest as Breuddwyd climbed the stairs, looking tipsier than he felt – damn elves, lightweights the lot of them – but did glance around as Tovrunn made softly for the inn door.

Wiping the purple from his lips on the back of his hand he set down the wooden cup and decided to follow her. A knight should not let a lady go about unescorted in these dangerous times... and, his alcohol-mellowed heart informed him, he might do well to apologise her for his ungamesmanlike behaviour. Lan rose and went to the door after the Rjurik woman exited, stepping out into the chill late-winter evening. A persistent drizzle was blowing in from the Straits of Aerele, and he pulled his cloak tighter about himself as it fell cooly on his face. He looked around, frowning, puzzled as to where Tovrunn could have disappeared to – all he saw was another cat winding its way in to the warmth of the inn. He reached down absently and scritched it behind the ears as it passed.

Tovrunn must have gone to the privies. He cheeks coloured at the realisation. Well, he hoped no-one would be vulgar enough to ambush her there. Unwilling to walk back inside like a pillock who had forgotten his hat on the doorstep he let his gaze wander over the meager delights of Bardenhold for a while. Slowly, his feet began to drag him forwards, and Lan made his way to the pallisade around the town. Ascending a ladder he stood on the wooden platform of the battlements, resting his hands on the log spurs and gazing out at the eaves of the Erebannien. The silvery, ambrosia notes of Brueddwyn's song echoed in his ears and in his aching, conflicted soul.
Jun 3, 2025 12:13 pm
**It seems as though he does not intend on letting you in,** Tovrunn thinks, making for the dead ended hallway wherein she saw a window on her way to the room in question. And then, half a breath later, **Does sarcasm translate well though this thought-speech?** she asks, though it is not clear whether this question was a deliberate one.

Jumping easily to the window sill and finding the shutter cracked to ward against the drizzle while still allowing the rain-cooled wind passage, she nudged it open further to allow for her own temporary departure. Finding the rain to be uncomfortable yet bearable in her feline form, she again exercised the considerable acrobatics that cats were known for and leapt to the next sill over, listening carefully to better gain a sense of where its occupants attention was before risking a glance. And then, gently slipping inside.
Jun 3, 2025 12:14 pm
Bardenhold was an old town - while many places in Roesone boasted the thick glass windows that distorted light and made plump blurs of the view beyond Bardenhold kept cool in the hot summers by eschewing glazing for ornamented shutters. The windowsills were not generous, but the timbers of the second floor and bracings of the eaves might as well have been a bridge to the paws of a cat.

The shutters of the next room, however, stood wide open. A metal storm lantern sat alongside a pipe and pouch of tobacco, but seeing more than that would mean dropping down into the sill in full view of the room's inhabitant. Of course, cats were protected by law in Roesone thanks to the Roesone's special link to them - but for the same reason enemies of the Barony would have cause to mistrust such an otherwise innocuous visitor.

Outside the door to the room Breuddwyd received no further reply to his entreaties. With as little sound as possible that wouldn't be made by a slovenly drunk the sidhe channeller checked for a key, but like many roadside inns such things were too costly a luxury to afford a guest. The door-jamb was well crafted and let out only the faintest suggestion of light. He'd have to press his face to the flags to get the slightest glimpse at the room's occupant - a motion that an observant and alerted individual might well mark by the change of light.
Jun 3, 2025 12:15 pm
Outside the blue of evening had long since deepened into the dark of night, but the benefit of a walled city was that the houses and shops stood shoulder to shoulder, each offering its own sliver of light to the riverstone-cobbled streets.

The guard (perhaps a half dozen strong) at the gate spared Lancaelad a few hard looks as he ascended the low wall that surrounded the town, but they recognised his livery and wisely left well enough alone, with only a few muttered words amongst themselves.

Out to the south of the town, the way they'd come, the farms of Bardenhold were scattered thin with fields more fallow than not. The handful of farmhouses between here and the wood were all lit up, smoke from their chimneys, but their lights were too few to dilute the bright glory of the night nor the austere stillness of the trees. The nearest structure - a barn with hay-loft - glowed with light, its doors stood open toward the road and the shadows of a great cluster of animals jostling against one another. The house to which it must belong stood dark beyond a field of barley.

Near a low hillock of hay a man with a large crook, visible only as a vague outline, straightened from his work and gave Lan, himself silhouetted against the lights of the town, a wave.
OOC:
At this point Lancaelad stumbled into a mercenary ambush. Fleeing out of the village and then back in time for his reappearance later. Sadly with the loss of Tavern Keeper, this thread was not properly archived.

At one point he fell out a barn window and twisted his ankle. It was truly a comedy of errors.
Jun 3, 2025 12:59 pm
Corson watched Lancaelad leave the inn, made an internal note and returned to watch.
Jun 3, 2025 1:00 pm
For a breath or two Tovrunn considered her options. Going down was a risk if this man was truly an enemy of the court, but that in and of itself would be valuable information. But if the man took violent action against her, she would not be able to hold her current form, which would be problematic to say the least.

Ultimately she decided to risk it. Better to have full knowledge than pure conjecture. **Keep his attention on the door,** Tovrunn thought towards Breuddwyd, hoping that the man's attention had been successfully captured. Carefully and quietly as a cat can manage, she hopped down to the open sill and peered inside.
Jun 3, 2025 1:01 pm
**Diversion. Incoming.**

Breuddwyd had minor magic available to him that tended to be amusing in small quantities but was not woven of the stuff that would change lives and nations. Of course, in a world where unnatural wonders weren't precisely common occurrences, the peculiar displays he might conjure could serve to distract and bewilder. Bending a knee to get a better angle on the crack beneath the strangers door, the Sidhe whispered the appropriate mystic mantra, formed arcane and subtle gestures with his capable fingers, and visualized the effects he wanted to convey.

"Hawdd â hynny."

First a small number of glowing embers spilled beneath the portal, sure to catch a wary observer's eye. Then, with a swift second casting, Breuddwyd made the area surrounding the same spot grow warmer, if one were to drawn near. And finally he produced a faint but not inconsiderable odor of burning wood, freshly kindled. With that done, he rose to his feet once more, hoping that would be enough to arrest the cagey target's scrutiny.
Jun 3, 2025 1:02 pm
Dropping lightly onto the narrow sill, Tovrunn cast sharp eyes around the room. The place was unremarkable - dominated by a pair of beds flanking the window with only a narrow stretch of floor in between. A single strong box stood open against the wall with a pair of saddlebags lying across it, and a pair of expensive but scuffed riding boots sitting next to it. Perhaps alarmingly there was smoke wafting into the room from under the door, though Breuddwydhad promised a distraction so perhaps this was it.

On the bed farthest from the door reclined a man in a velvet doublet half emerald green, half burgundy. He wore a green cap on his head, a gold chain about his neck, and his neat moustache was waxed and sat atop a small, pursed mouth. A small book sat discarded on the rolled blanked that was propping him up, but despite his nonchalant posture he held a crossbow propped on this knee and aimed squarely at the door.

As Tovrunn leaned her furry head into the room the man glanced at her an considered this feline visitor for a moment, narrowed his eyes, but returned his attention to the door.
Jun 3, 2025 1:03 pm
Aeric had taken longer than the rest to finish his meal. The young nobleman had been lost in thought since they left the forest as if something troubled him and he couldn't quite lay a hand on what. With the meal done and Breuddwyd and Tovrunn off scouting the stranger the proprietress had mentioned he rose and smiled weakly at Corson and Salien. "Best not let that hothead on his own too long - he'll only put more foes at our back."

With that he made after Lancaelad out of the inn.
Jun 3, 2025 1:04 pm
Left alone for the first time since their arrival in Anuire, Salien watched Aeric go before leaning across the table to Corson. "These folk have an army at their backs. They have already said where we are to go - this Halfday - would it not be safer to leave them to their affairs tonight? We can take the horses once they're all asleep and be done with all of this fighting. Surely the guard would open the gate, and we could be done with this affair and on a ship home in days." There was pleading and urgency in the man's eyes - he still couldn't conceive that any of this was to do with him. In truth, perhaps it wasn't. None of these brigands had uttered Salien's name, and if he were so valuable the surely the Governor would have engaged more than a single bodyguard?
Jun 3, 2025 1:05 pm
Corson smiled at his charge. "What happens when someone recognizes you? You are the one they want. These folk, despite some of their arrogance, are capable and blooded. I would feel more comfortable with them at our side, wouldn't you? You obviously know something, whether you know what it is or not. Something that someone wants silenced."

The squire softened a bit. "I understand that it is terrifying, but have a little faith. We will get you to safety. You have my word."
Jun 3, 2025 1:07 pm
Tovrunn froze. **He has a crossbow,** she thought at her companion on the other side of the door. That was unexpected. Deciding to buy time by giving herself an impromptu bath, the displaced druid considered her options.

Option one was to leave, to report what she saw to Lancaelad and let him decide whether or not it was worth further disturbance of peace here. But what could she prove here? That the man was concerned with his own safety after Breudwydd lit the door on fire? That would be among the flimsiest excuses that Tovrunn had ever heard for the arrest of a man.

Option two was to investigate further. But that had its own complications, the greatest of which being the crossbow. Would she go to the man's belongings, poking her head where it didn't belong and search for a way to identify this man more thoroughly? That meant risking the bolt to her flank. Or did she investigate the man himself as well as his book? Perhaps he was writing there? It seemed safer to be closer to the man than further given his weapon of choice...

Making up her mind, Tovrunn shivered the dampness away and fully exposed herself, preparing to hop down into the room. **Keep it up please,** she telepathically messaged her sidhe companion. Perhaps this would be for naught, but she had to know for sure. And it was best to discover the man's intentions with her in her cat form before she did any more exploring.
Jun 3, 2025 1:08 pm
A crossbow didn't sound so good to Breuddwyd, who moved to one side of the door on soft elven footsteps almost unconsciously.

Contemplating the challenge, he uttered his magic words once more and generated a rythmic pounding sound of mallet on wood, as of a wedge being driven beneath the door to hold it in place. It was not lost on him that such a block would do little against a portal that opened inwards but a drunken, irrational elf might not care.
Jun 3, 2025 1:13 pm
For a moment Corson felt odd. After giving his word his mouth dried and a lump rose in his throat that he couldn't swallow, but the sensation passed quickly.

"This has nothing to do with us" Salien insisted in a low voice. "No one has said my name or yours. I'm a farmer. These folk have been good to guide us, but we're embroiled in their affairs and I don't trust their foes to realize we're bystanders. Better to let them alone before more mercenaries come - they have the might of their home to protect them, but we have no such standing." He wrung his hands as he spoke. "Surely you can see we've walked into the middle of something. It would be lunacy to think that dozens of armed men marched to this place on this day to capture a pomegranate farmer from half the world away."
Jun 3, 2025 1:14 pm
The embers faded, replaced by a muffled hammering. The colourful man with the crossbow seemed unconcerned by Breuddwyd's magic - it was true that it wasn't so convincing as a true illusion, but the change in activity was at least enough to arrest the greater share of his attention. Shooting a glance at Tovronn as she continued to press into the room, the man fumbled for the little book with his left hand and awkwardly tossed it over the body of the crossbow at her and hissed "shoo".

With scarcely an arm's length between them the little volume smacked her in the hindquarters, but to little effect.
Jun 3, 2025 3:12 pm
Starting as the book with her flank, Tovrunn's ears pinned back and her tail flicked, an unconscious display of annoyance. Slowly her eyes drifted from the man to his poorly aimed missile, looking down close and inspecting the book, disguising the more human recognition with a sniff.
Jun 3, 2025 3:14 pm
Bound in poorly dyed blue leather, the little tome was about the size of an open palm. The pages were block printed but unadorned, and the small tight text on the page that had fallen open appeared to be a section on the fall of Kiergard in 347 MR, translated from a Müdenese marine's first hand account. Pocket histories were expensive, but not uncommon reading material for travellers and this one looked neatly bound and relatively new.

As Tovrunn sniffed cautiously at the fallen text the man rolled his eyes and rose near silently to his feet, not taking his eyes or aim from the door. Switching the crossbow to his off-hand he reached to move the lantern and pipe that would otherwise prevent the shutters closing.
Jun 3, 2025 3:14 pm
Deciding she'd had enough and that nothing further would be learned without direct confrontation or at the very least the ability to speak words, Tovrunn jumped at the sudden if silent movement of feet touching floorboards and leapt back to the windowsill and out the window. And good thing she did, as it became clear what the man was about to do. Better to be seen as a slightly odd cat (which, in her experience, was just a cat) than risk being trapped in here with him.

**Best to leave this man be for now,** she mentally cautioned Breuddwyd, presumably on the other side of the door, once she was safe. **There's nothing to be gained without a more in-depth and in person probing. Though it's clear he's not fond of cats and thus, worthy of more suspicion.**
Jun 3, 2025 3:15 pm
Before Corson could reply a soft foot on the stair saw Breuddwyd return to the common room, followed a moment later by Tovrunn. Neither had an urgency about them that suggested they'd found some clear danger at least. The patrons of the Bardenhold Inn were either dispersing to their homes or retreating to their rooms, leaving the few staff to clear the tables and snuff the candles.

https://i.imgur.com/qY146QO.jpeg
Jun 3, 2025 3:16 pm
"Well, that proved to be a dead-end." Tovrunn sat again with a huff. Returning to her human skin after experiencing the lithe athleticism of a cats was a strangely draining affair, as though her joints had fused into wooden knots, her limbs dead and heavy, the warmth of the fur ripped away like a blanket in the snow. Though perhaps the ache in her muscles and joints was more from the riding. "At least we can assume a reasonable amount of safety. We should still be vigilant, however."

Looking this way and that, she looks to Corson and Alaric. "Where are Lancaelad and Aeric?"
Jun 3, 2025 3:17 pm
Corson nodded toward the door, the warrior specifically facing said portal. "They went out for air, I would guess."
Jun 3, 2025 3:18 pm
Somewhere out in the night there was a bellowing whooping - almost a cry of alarm. Someone crying out something about an arm. Then a burst of loud laughter and somewhere out on the street a dozen or more voices rose in boisterous song.

"A coin for the beggar,
But the purse to the thief.
A sword for a solider,
But his soul to the priest.
A quill for the scholar,
But his words to a lord.
A snare for the rabbit,
But the pot's his reward.
A plea for the consul,
But a bribe works as well.
A cup for the barman,
How 'bout drinks for us all?"
Jun 3, 2025 3:22 pm
Corson couldn't help but smile briefly at the merriment outside, but returned to his conversation with Salien. "Things will be okay. We will get you to safety. I do wish we could figure out why you were summoned... it would give us an idea of how to obfuscate our travel."
Jun 3, 2025 3:22 pm
"Went out for air?" Tovrunn repeated, somewhat put back. Did they somehow miss the danger they were still potentially in? Looking out the window as revelers passed them by, Tovrunn's mood settled into a worried exasperation. I'll give them an hour. After that one of us needs to go looking for them.

Putting her fiance and his friend out of her mind for the moment, she settled down and refocused on Salien. "Perhaps we can puzzle it out ourselves. Care to tell us about your family, Salien?"
Jun 3, 2025 3:24 pm
Adalric gave a shuddering sigh, his face in his hands and his elbows on the table. That seemed enough to steady his thoughts. "My family? Where to begin? It's not a large one. My great grandparents on my mother's father's side purchased their freehold from Suiriene perhaps a century ago, the lease was for five generations. Before that they were coffee merchants. My mother was an only child, and she was the third generation to hold the land, making me the fourth. My father came from a line of sailors who traded with the Dragon Isles. I've lost both parents, but I have a half dozen aunts and uncles on my father's side and most of them make their living on the sea. My uncle Gerric still knows the way to the Dragon Isles, but his sisters aunty Haylia and aunty Maylen married men with fishing boats, and my uncle Chlōdmun dives for pearls."

"My parents met at market, their marriage was negotiated by their families, but both were older than I am now. Mother passed three years ago, and father's been gone for at least five. No, wait, longer. I had an older brother - Baird - but he fell in with a rough crowd. Last I heard he was sailing with a privateer crew out of Aftane. He'd rather a life of blood and fire than one of soil and sweat. I don't even know that he knows our parents are gone."

"I am unwed, and my steward keeps reminding me that I have a fine lease to pass on - one that's quite prized - but I'm still finding my feet running things on my own. I couldn't teach a son or daughter the skills they'd need. Not yet." He spread his hands "what could any of that possibly mean to anyone but me?"
Jun 3, 2025 3:27 pm
"Hmmm..."

Leaning back off the table from the position of apt attention she had adopted as she listened to the man tell his tale, Tovrunn crossed her arms and considered all that he had said. His words did not taste a lie to her, and he had little reason to be anything but truthful as far as she could tell. But what to make of it all?

Weighing his words, she focused on the holes that he had left out or alluded to. Could his brother, the pirate, envious of his lease be responsible for the violence on the docks? Perhaps, yes, but that did not explain the smugglers words nor the small army they scarcely avoided in Abbadiel. Perhaps one of his relatives that he hadn't mentioned was of some importance even he was unaware of? But who? And how far up his family tree would such an inheritance be of any substance? Tovrunn was still new to these lands, and as apt as she had become navigating their court she still did not fully understand how these southerners weighed the value of blood relations. Lancaelad would know...

Without meaning to Tovrunn glanced at the door.

"...I must admit, while I'm grateful for the tale, from what you've told me, it isn't the clue to this riddle that I had hoped for," Tovrunn admitted after a moments silence, and with a good deal more empathy than she had shown anyone else this day. "It's a terrible riddle to be caught in the middle of. But for what it's worth, you should know that you being here on these faraway shores is no accident. Nor is our commission to seeing you across this fair country, or our commitment to your safety. Whatever else is to happen, know that, and take heart in it. I would encourage patience, counsel that you keep open eyes, ears, and mind, and hope for your trust."

Again, Tovrunn glanced at the door. Which remained frustratingly, maddeningly still.

Tovrunn could take no more. "Oh by the gods, what's taking him so long?!" she demanded, standing with a huff. Though, the more discerning of audiences might question to themselves: was it anger that drove her words...or concern.
Jun 3, 2025 3:28 pm
It was not the first time Tovrunn had shot a furtive glance at the door. They'd been attacked and pursued scarce hours earlier, and now two of their number thought it prudent to take a stroll? The it seemed inconceivable that the gravity of their situation could be so easily overlooked. And yet when, only a moment after she turned away, the heavy door sung open it still came as a surprise.

From the chill night Aeric stepped into the light of the inn, bracing himself against the doorframe. As the light fell on the young noble's face they could see that it was ashen and slick with sweat, the pupils dilated until his eyes were almost black.

Pressing his free hand against his brow, Aeric stumbled forward a few steps, lost his footing and made a snatch for the nearest chair. But the furnishings weren't up to his dead weight, and it gave way underneath him sending the magician, chair, the table and its contents to the floor with a crash.
Jun 3, 2025 3:29 pm
Corson scanned the room first, to make sure that no one was going to capitalize on the distraction...
Jun 3, 2025 3:29 pm
"Aeric? Aeric?!"

Rushing over to the man, she gave as quick and thorough an assessment as she could. She was no healer by trade, but she was at least familiar with the process. "Aeric. Speak to me. What's wrong??"
Jun 3, 2025 3:30 pm
Breuddwyd took note of Aeric's dramatic re-entry but was hesitant to charge over. He recognized a possible use of the Wounded Soldier strategy when he saw it. No one grew up under the same roof as Dyddanwy without learning a thing or two about crushing the spirits and sowing chaos among an organized, entrenched and vigilant foe. Any adversary lurking within the taproom or beyond these walls could be waiting for the perfect moment, while backs were turned and desperate acts of healing were invoked, to strike. He might try the same thing in their position. And no Sidhe would be caught unawares among this lowborn human rabble.

Glancing from Tovrunn to Corson, Breuddwyd decided to make an educated guess, trying a connection between their minds. From the old faith and affiliations the modest human warrior had mentioned earlier, it actually seemed possible he might have some comprehension of the intricacies in the Sidhelien language.

**We are no healers. You and I.** The elven words appeared inside Corson's mind as Breuddwyd made an effort to keep his own guard up, spells at the ready. **Something unseen. And wicked. Is at work. Watch for trouble. I am with you.** The off-putting rhythm of the pronunciation was like the stertorous breaths of some forest beast best left concealed in shadow and straining to keep its appetites from bursting free.

He could not see Arglwyddes at the moment but he had no doubt the valiant and clever animal would be exactly where she needed to be when the time was right.
Jun 3, 2025 3:31 pm
While Corson and Breuddwyd remained more cautious, eyeing the pair of serving staff for signs of deception, Tovrunn ran to the stricken nobleman's side. The young boy and slightly older girl who'd been collecting spent tankards and dousing candles until Aeric's appearance had both instinctively moved toward the safety of the kitchens, but both were lingering by the bar with an air of uncertainty. Self preservation in stalemate with duty until the situation played out.

Rolling Aeric onto his back, Tovrunn could hear the raggedness of his breath. A tear in the neckline of his doublet quickly led the Rjurik maiden to a crimson and swollen puncture wound where shoulder met neck. Be it toxin or infection something had entered Aeric's body here but beyond that she could guess little.
Jun 3, 2025 3:32 pm
"Sur-surrounded" rasped Aeric as he met Tovrunn's eyes with a glassy stare, then with a sudden thrashing urgency "the windows!" He struggled to rise, but Aeric's legs woundn't cooperate and he sprawled back into the fallen furnishings. "They offered surrender. Cure. Passage." Aeric slumped back, the force of his words alone enough to exhaust him.
Jun 3, 2025 3:32 pm
Tovrunn's eyes went wide at Aeric's words. Surrounded? Here? But...

Leaving her charge for the moment, Tovrunn made her way to the nearest window facing the same direction as the door, peering carefully out into the darkness.
Jun 3, 2025 3:33 pm
The Bardenhold Inn was lit by the many tapers still burning on knife-pocked tables, and by the embers of the two great fires flanking the common room. By contrast the night outside was black as good ink, lit only by the shaft of blue moonlight that lanced down the centre of the town's main street. As her eyes adjusted to the dark, Tovrunn knew that anyone out there would see her long before she would see them. For that reason she kept as much of her body behind the window's sturdy frame as she could, and she tanked Erik she had.

With a vibrating thud a crossvbow bolt struck the shutter next to her shoulder, the force sending the thing swinging wide open to present at least two distinctly humanoid silhouettes in the night. How many more lurked in the darkness of the roadside would be risky to say.
Jun 3, 2025 3:34 pm
"Antidote" rasped Aeric, dark veins standing out at his temples "in trade for him." And he writhed onto his back and pointed a shaking finger at Salien before violently twisting back into the foetal position with a groan of pain.
Jun 3, 2025 3:35 pm
Flinching backwards as a projectile embedded itself beside her head, Tovrunn looked at her traveling companions with an increasingly widening fear. Not here! Not now! We're at the verge of exhaustion! We should have crossed country instead of following the roads! Stupid stupid stupid!

Forcing herself to take deep breaths to calm herself, Tovrunn considered her move. Finally she locked eyes with Breuddwyd. "What do you have left that's useful?" she barked, all pretense of decorum lost in a barely controlled panic. "Do you need to see Lancaelad in order to speak to his mind?"
Jun 3, 2025 3:37 pm
Breuddwyd watched with little reaction as the quarrel failed to find its mark between Tovrunn's eyes. Her pale hair framed by the window would make her an easy target indeed. Aeric's suffering must have been hampering her judgment. It was then that the soft but assertive edicts left his familial predecessors arose in his mind and the debt he owed that stricken man through blood came into focus.

"My full mystic might is flagging this night," he admitted to the northerner as he darted forward, staying low between the tables. "But a Sidhe is never without defenses. Presuming their minds can be broken and their flesh turned to ash."

Crouching down, Breuddwyd did a quick count of the windows visible from that spot, wondering how many directions they might guard against. And for how long.

"I must lay eyes upon a being to join my thoughts to theirs," he confirmed softly, privately examining possible but risky strategies others might not consider. Was it even remotely credible to imagine the braying, belligerent beast of burden that was Lancaelad understanding elegant Sidhelien words whispered directly into that vast emptiness between his ears?

"How long will he survive like this?" he asked of Aeric with subdued but genuine concern.
Jun 3, 2025 3:38 pm
Now's as good a time as any. Corson fished into a pouch producing a handfull of bright red berries. "If anyone falls, give them one of these. This is a blessing of the wode that I can produce, but once a dawnbreak. Sadly, I can do nothing for our friend."

Corson gave him a look and cycled through his memory to see if there was something he could do to spare Aeric.
Jun 3, 2025 3:39 pm
Corson might have looked like no more than a weapon, but the Order had stressed the preservation of life to go beyond merely its defence and field triage had been drilled into him until it was second nature. The puncture wound just above the breast bone looked worrying. Blood was rushing to the ugly wound, turning the skin around it a bruised purple and causing the veins in the region to bulge - a sure sign that the body was fighting something. He'd seen Aeric step out within the hour, so something that could take hold this swiftly made for a short, nasty list of poisons. Furthermore the wound was clean and perfectly positioned to deliver the poison near a major artery without puncturing it, and there was no sign of arrow head or bolt. It looked like someone had captured the young noble, struck with a stiletto or similar while he was restrained, and then loosed him with the warning he carried.

Looking into Aeric's eyes, they were open and staring but not seeing. Without knowing the toxin all Corson could say with certainty was that time was short. Bleeding the wound might buy time, but the reality was that they were in a race to neutralize the toxin before it found Aeric's heart. There were priests who could do such things with a touch - otherwise he'd need leeches, blood fortifying tonics and a sharp blade.
Jun 3, 2025 3:40 pm
"Boy," Corson calmly addresses the serving boy. "Get me a kitchen knife, and hurry."

Turning to address the girl, Corson's face softened a bit. "I need water boiled and some clean cloth. Can you do that for me?"
Jun 3, 2025 3:40 pm
Wide-eyed the two inn staff looked between one another, and then reaching an unspoken accord they both scurried into the kitchen, the boy returning a few moments later with a gleaming butcher's knife. The girl took a few moments longer, balancing a steaming kettle alongside a large white apron.
Jun 3, 2025 3:42 pm
Breuddwyd did not risk rising but moved closer to Tovrunn's position and projected his most imperious tone towards the open window.

"I am a Sidhe of the Serensgrech line and you would do well to remember my kind are never meek nor gracious when suffering threats," he fairly snarled. "We've barricaded the mewling human you desire in a room upstairs but will not lay down our lives in his stead. Neither are we so foolish as to leave this floor unguarded while we fetch your quarry. Send two of your bravest to collect him, if you wish."

His dark eyes roved over his own unlikely allies, wondering where Adalric might actually be at that moment. With luck, Lancaelad was keeping him safe, though it seemed equally possible the knight had found an even deadlier scenario out there in the gloom.

"Know that I've woven sophisticated wards of arcane flame within this place through elfsong this night, I have," he continued ominously, the sinister smirk evident in each throaty syllable. "Now, I have no patience for additional posturing. If you've any more tricks in mind, be certain this upjumped shanty shall burn to the ground, robbing you of your prize unless blackened bones will serve. Who lives or dies matters little. Test my resolve at your peril."

If nothing else, Breuddwyd hoped he might get some loose indication of their adversaries in response, whether or not they took him up on his invitation.
Jun 3, 2025 3:44 pm
Corson set to task, sterilizing the knife. "I will need alcohol too, something strong."

Corson let out a breath after a gruelling surgery, wiping his hands on a cloth. Turning to the boy, the green squire instructed the serving kids, "You two take turns keeping pressure on the wound until it stops bleeding."

Satisfied that they understoond him, he turned his attention to Tovrunn and Breuddwyd, "The immediate threat is passed, but the question is, What now?"
Jun 3, 2025 3:44 pm
Gesturing vaguely at Corson who, for the moment, appears to have the issue of Aeric's survival well in hand, Tovrunn does not answer Breuddwyd's question, though the concern in his voice is noted. Passing the man a bottle of brandy that Tovrunn had taken for medicine at first glance, she watches the door and Breuddwyd both, and as he makes his threat, she snaps to life a ball of fire, colored a ghostly blue in a manner that she hopes their unseen enemy will find as uncommon as the sidhe himself.
Jun 3, 2025 3:47 pm
The night had no reply for Breuddwyd, which might have meant a number of things. Was stealth a priority? That would seem in line with their strategy in Abbadiel - bold attacks under the noses of armed settlements. But why then send a warning? Why not storm the place and be gone before anyone knew it? Did that suggest that their numbers were few enough that a fight would take too long, or even that the doubted victory? Or was poor Aeric merely a decoy, a conjurer's trick meant to hold their attention while a different plan unfolded? Or had they stumbled into an ambush potent enough that their foes could simply wait them out? That would explain how swiftly and quietly their numbers had already been thinned. But then if victory was such a certainty why not simply take the place? No, they'd believed the elven wyrd's ruse, otherwise the threat would have been as good as a refusal. They were held back for now. Or at least that was the hope.

For now the choices seemed clear - find a place to hold, or a path top flee down.
Jun 3, 2025 3:48 pm
Turning to the kids again, Corson asked thoughtfully "is there a way out of here through the cellar?"
Jun 3, 2025 3:48 pm
Letting the flames die in her hand, Tovrunn waited...and waited...and waited until she could wait no more. Turning to the pair, she followed up the squire's question with another. "Or in the kitchens? Go and fetch the men-at-arms from the manor, tell them that the inn is under siege by brigands in the night."
Jun 3, 2025 3:49 pm
The pair of youngsters were farmers kin, and the sight of bloodletting seemed not to trouble them so much as the prospect of a fight. The girl replied quickly "aye miss, there's a door through the kitchen to the alley", and her younger companion nodded in needless affirmation. At that the pair scurried back towards the kitchen to fetch help.

Adding that to the one she'd seen in the stairwell, Tovrunn counted three entrances. And with the town gated there was likely little cause for a public house to lock its doors until the proprietors were abed. With Aeric feverishly in and out of consciousness that left four able bodies to hold three doors were they to stand here - and that was if Salien could hold his own - the man did not appear to go armed.
Jun 3, 2025 3:50 pm
Watching the two of them go, she turns to the others. "We can all agree that we're not going to be leaving this building or handing anyone over, correct?"
Jun 3, 2025 3:51 pm
Corson nodded silently, sliding the intricately carved ashwood rod from its sheath along the back of his belt. "If it comes to a fight, we will give them one. Go ahead and grab your things from the room. I will stay with Salien and Aeric for the time being. I can grab my own possessions, and Salien's, after you return. We best be prepared to move."
Jun 3, 2025 3:51 pm
"I disagree," Tovrunn said firmly. "We should barricade ourselves in. Put Aeric and Aldaric in the room with no windows and have them bar the door, and then the three of us make our stand upstairs. Move a table to block the stairs and hold until help arrives."

Tovrunn left the question of whether or not help was coming unasked.
Jun 3, 2025 3:52 pm
Corson looked sceptical. "Forgive my impertinence, but you put a lot of faith in the local nobility. How can you be sure that they have not been bought off by our invisible enemy?"

Despite his misgivings, the green squire noded to Salien and up the stair. "Stay away from the windows. Stay low."
Jun 3, 2025 3:53 pm
"I can't be," Tovrunn replied as she made her way up the stairs after Aldaric. "But I can be sure that if they are, wandering about their hold with your sword and our meager magicks alone would lead to our swift capture, or worse. Now hurry! Time is of the essence."
Jun 3, 2025 3:53 pm
"Okay, m'lady," Corson relented. "Let us hold out hope."

Corson shouldered Aeric's unconscious form and made for the stairs up to the rooms and their final stand.
Jun 3, 2025 3:54 pm
Tovrunn and Corson, with the added burden of Aeric, made their way toward the door at the rear of the tap room beyond which lay a cloakroom and a stairwell. As the door opened Tovrunn was reminded of the stout back door that led out to the stables, but thankfully no armed men lunged in from it. No doubt Breuddwyd's ruse had given them pause. Or perhaps the men outside hadn't had time to scout the inn?

Mounting the stair she passed innkeeper's quarters and the darkened chamber she'd scouted as a cat not long before. The rooms they had rented were not together, but both lay beyond the turn in the passage and the common area where four other travellers deep in their cups were already hunkering down for the night, some snoring loudly. Six rooms besides stood barred, candlelight still apparent beneath a couple. A dozen more patrons might well be abed here.

The nearest of their rooms had a single window commanding a view of the inn's yard and the street beyond. The farther shared all of its walls with other rooms. If they were to try to hold a single room it would be close quarters, but holding the stairwell would put the wealthy traveller with the crossbow at their back. But either seemed easier to hold than the taproom below.
Jun 3, 2025 3:55 pm
Breuddwyd followed the two humans, honestly still thinking that setting the inn ablaze might provide suitable chaos for a hasty escape. Watching their meal ticket vanish beneath a tumultuous conflagration would likely make their unseen foes desperate. Somehow he expected his comrades to contest this very reasonable notion so he left it unspoken.

The Sidhe moved warily as he crested the stairs, not having a complete understanding of the architecture and the lodgers within.
Jun 3, 2025 3:55 pm
While it would put them at opposite corners of the building, the stairs were the most natural chokepoint, and so while Adalric barred the door to their room Tovrunn, Corson and Beuddwyd dragged one of the beds from the common area to the landing and stood it on its side across the arch. A few of the sleeping drunks put up a complaint, but most seemed to sense the urgency of these travellers, and just watched on warily.

Behind them a door opened revealing the redoubtable proprietress in a night gown, a hefty table leg in her hand. "What in the Rider's range is going on here?" she barked gruffly, looking at the upturned bed.
Jun 3, 2025 3:56 pm
"Doom comes to Bardenhold," Breuddwyd told the woman simply, his manner characteristically grumpy as he swiftly confirmed his belongings were ready to move in a heartbeat as necessary. "'Ware the windows."

He fingered the fine amber amulet beneath his tunic, wondering how many more human lives he would end before the night was through.
Jun 3, 2025 4:00 pm
https://i.imgur.com/B7KPZvd.jpegThe woman scowled. "All I see is guests ruining my linens. You'll be paying for that mattress come morning, mark me." She drew herself up to her full, surprisingly imposing height, and as she did the uncanny sidhe's gaze fell on something beyond the woman: Another stair wound down from the owner's private quarters into the kitchen. It was another front to hold, but doubtless the woman's complaints would be a fine alarm, callous though it felt the door to her quarters would be easier to hold than another stair. These mercenaries hadn't proven themselves ruthless enough to target civilians so far. After a few moments of grim silence the woman blustered back into her quarters with a snort. Then all was still.

Bardenhold was quiet; it's citizens abed and the night pensive. Sounds of movement below were cautious - it was clear that Breuddwyd threat had impressed itself on the men outside. They didn't even hear the heavy front door groan.

Then a door up the hall opened and a face poked out - a ruddyfaced man with a bristling beard glanced down the hall. He took in the scene then stepped back from sight. The shuffling of feet from the stairwell below said someone had braved the rear entrance. The men outside were in, but they weren't coming up yet. They were scared of fey dweomers.

In one of the rooms someone stomped a crisp rhythm on the floor, and then silence reigned again for a long stretch. Downstairs the shuffling feet of two... maybe three bodies? This was a smaller party than Abbadiel then. How long had these men had to summon reinforcements? All night? Would they just pin them down here until overwhelming numbers arrived? But then why bother revealing themselves now? Perhaps then something had forced their hands and they weren't so certain of their victory?

Speculation was pointless. There was a task to do, and once done this would all be behind them. As if to punctuate that the door to the first room off the landing suddenly swung open and the gaudily attired guest shot out into the corridor, a pair of short, straight blades flashing in his hands.
Jun 3, 2025 4:02 pm
Tovrunn's hands had long weighted themselves with her magically imbued talismans, the words of power clear in her mind and at the tip of her tongue. The appearance of the stranger with drawn steel did not change her intent nor her focus, merely her target.
Jun 3, 2025 4:02 pm
Corson narrowed his eyes at the dandy, readying his shield, the intricately carved rod of white birch clenched firmly in his hand.
Jun 3, 2025 4:03 pm
For whatever happened next, the Sidhe was ready.

Narrowing his darker-than-night eyes at the uncooperative subject of their previous investigation, Breuddwyd simply hissed, "Tyllu amheuaeth," at the swordsman to undercut his bold approach before moving back behind the better armored Corson.
Jun 3, 2025 4:03 pm
Breuddwyd felt his spell bite home, but it barely slowed the man. With the fluid grace of a practised warrior the man swung his paired blades in a variation on the black strike used by the Brecht, slashing with the first weapon before turning and using his body to disguise a stab with the second. Corson was first in his path thanks to the sidhe's wise retreat, and though the doughty warrior was able to parry the first slash the second struck true and cruel.
Jun 3, 2025 4:04 pm
As Corson matched blades with the swift and deadly Brecht duellist, another figure emerged at the end of the lantern-lit inn hallway.

At first it may have seemed to the beleaguered defenders that another enemy had joined the battle. But as the large shape broke into a run, they saw it heft a shield with familiar heraldry – a silver hawk swooping above a black tower on a blue and green field – and the glint of a wickedly sharp war-pick coming up to strike.

"Glory, like lightning..." Lancaelad began to intone as he charged towards the signalman at full speed. He looked a frightful, but fearsome mess: he wore a soiled, commoner's cloak, and under it his quilted surcoat was stained with mud and grass as if he'd rolled down a hill. A broken crossbow bolt jutted from his shoulder, and the armour was soaked with a half-moon of dark red blood. His hair was wild and his face bruised, but his lips were locked in a snarl of purpose as he bore down on their foe.

"...should oft appear..."

Seeing the man's side-sword come away crimson from Corson's flesh, Lancaelad hurled himself forward. Shield raised to cover his head and body, his pick swung slow to sweep the man's legs out from under him. "You Brechts," Lan grunted as he felt like he had a good hook on the man's well-turned ankles. "Always swishing about with your needleswords and frilly shirts. You must be taught to fight like men!"

The signalman hit the creaking floorboards of the inn with a disdainful outlet of breath.
Jun 3, 2025 4:07 pm
Corson hesitated for a moment, but threw caution to the wind. Using his shield, the stalwart warrior attempted to pin the duelist to the ground!

Brandishing his intricately carved club, the squire raised it and it seems to grow and writhe into a gnarled mass of roots ending in a clump at the end, and brought it down on the pinned man!
Jun 3, 2025 4:08 pm
Things unfolded quickly, from Tovrunn's perspective. The charging noble, whom she had spied on not 3 hours hence, now found himself pinned to the floor by the very man whom he had struck. And her betrothed, Azrai strike him, had returned by route unknown from whereabouts unknown. Though from the look of him, it seemed as though he had dragged himself through a battlefield to arrive here. She felt pity for his armorer at having to repair his mail twice in a single day. And, perhaps, for him as the arrow that pierced him was doubtlessly unpleasant.

Glancing to the stairwell whose access was blocked partially by the bed, Tovrunn moved forward, whispering words beneath her breath and tracing runes in the air. "Hold him steady, brave squire," she bid Corson as she laid a magically imbued hand on him, soft light pulsing and driving away his weariness. Looking at the man pinned to the floorboards, she nearly felt a smidge of pity for the storm that was to come breaking on his head. But her eyes laid on him for only a moment before she turned them to her betrothed. "Hold him still so that justice may be done upon him," she said, her eyes and voice cold and sharp like ice.
Jun 3, 2025 4:09 pm
As the Roesonians piled onto the swift Brecht warrior the sound of running feet on the stair saw a mercenary with a crossbow appear behind the hurried barricade and set a nervous eye on Breuddwyd. An outraged cry from the innkeeper's chambers announced that the other stair was also being advanced upon, while up the hall another door burst open and a man in leathers with a shortsword stepped out and quickly appraised the situation.
Jun 3, 2025 4:09 pm
"Do you believe I was bluffing about the flames?" Breuddwyd called to the newly revealed mercenary, his throaty growl defiant. "How far away are your healers right now?" Stepping between past his companions, he drew his blade and ducked low in the hopes of finishing one target swiftly before the others could arrive.

In a sonorous purr as he thrust the elven sword down, he grimly added, "This one will just have to imagine the fire."
Jun 3, 2025 4:10 pm
Grounded by the two knights, and pinned against the wall of the stair the gaudily clad warrior squirmed aside under Corson's rain of blows and Breuddwyd's own timely thrust showing barely a scratch. But instead of fighting for his feet against stronger opponents the man was like an eel, or better yet a viper, dividing flashing blows between his assailants from his back.

The man on the stair who wore blackened leathers crept forward, hearing only sounds of a fight, and levelled his crossbow at Tovrunn - the first target he saw, but the bed barricade sacrificed itself in a burst of straw mattress. His fellow up the hall ran to join the melee, vicious blade raised but Arglwyddes materialised as if from nowhere, interceding between the new attacker and Lan's exposed back with a guttural growl.
Jun 4, 2025 3:15 am
The slam of a door, the silken growl of Breuddwyn's elven war-hound – as his companions piled on the floored Brecht with enspelled staves and narrow swords. Lancaelad's head snapped to the side. His eyes widened as he saw the man barrelling out of the room he had passed being harried by the snapping jaws and fierce play of the dog. There were too damn many of the ruffians, coming from too many angles – this inn was bound to become a slaughterhouse if they tarried.

"...to... to... few men's ruin..." he continued his poetic invocation, but there was an audible crack of fear in his voice. The young knight hefted his crow's bill and swung it down at the Brecht, an unsportsmanlike and unsatisfactory blow considering the foe was so thoroughly pinned and surrounded.

"This is no bastion - we cannot hold here long," he said, turning and raising his shield to meet the sellsword that had fought past Arglewyddes and was moving to strike him.
Jun 4, 2025 3:16 am
Corson looked at Lancaelad. "Yes, this is untenable, at best. Let us rectify that."

The squire locked his gnarled, writhing club, grapevining the Brecht duelist's arm and dragging him along the floor. When he got to the barricade, Corson heaved using his hip as a fulcrum in an attempt to throw his assailant into their opponents below!
Jun 4, 2025 3:17 am
"Courage, my love," Tovrunn uttered as she pulled her starlight-infused crystal from beneath her tunic. "Our strength has not left us yet."

Light shown out once again, and as it had that very morn the Druid's skin rippled away to reveal the clear night sky. A crossbow bolt whistled by her, but she paid it no heed. Arrows made of moonlight very much like it now hung suspended about her arms. Drawing one as though it were nocked at the string of an invisible bow, Tovrunn loosed the first of many at the sole remaining foe in the hallway.

The door she stood by, however, drew her attention. From the commotion in the room beyond, more assailants were arriving by way of the proprietress's quarters. "Breuddwyd! The door!" she called, popping the corks of the two water skins she kept strapped behind her shoulder blades. Pulling the water forth, she bade the liquid to fill the cracks and tumblers and latches of the innkeepers door, counting on her mystically inclined sidhe companion to recognize what she was doing.
Jun 4, 2025 3:18 am
Pinned to the pitted floor under Corson's shield, their ambusher proved he was only a little less dangerous and the man hadn't had the fraught battle or tense flight that they had. He was sharp where Corson and Lancaelad were growing dull and anxious as the day wore thin. There was only one thing for it - the man couldn't be left at their backs.

With a mighty heave Corson sent the warrior up against the wall, and even as one of the blades found his flesh the adherent to the Green manhandled his foe to their hurried barricade and pitched him over it. The warrior tumbled like a carnival acrobat (though truth be told more heavily) as he flew down the inn's narrow stair, but couldn't arrest his momentum until they turned to the left where another of the mercenaries was emerging. With a flash of irritation the Brecht snatched the crossbow off the surprised mercenary (he must have left his in the inn room), and took aim at Corson who was scarcely visible at the top of the stair, and the fellow who'd already fired followed suit.

The first bolt, aimed in frustration thudded harmlessly into the bedframe, but the second was on the mark and cut a painful gash across the knight's clavicle even as he ducked below cover.

Upstairs the unshaven, wiry men who was waylaid by Arglwyddes had fought forward into reach of Lancaelad, and even as he did another figure emerged from the room he'd been in. The innkeeper had said the inn was full - how many of their fellow guests were also enemies?
Jun 4, 2025 3:19 am
Seeing the wisdom in Tovrunn's elemental improvisation, Breuddwyd swiftly fixed his attention momentarily on the door jamb she had doused and reached out to the fat droplets suffusing the grain. Envisioning the result that would be most advantageous, he raised loose fingers that curled from fluid movement into a rigid fist to emulate water flashfreezing into ice.

Then he glanced past Lancaelad to the most visible mercenary, realizing that Arglwyddes could not restrain the man for long, though brave be her efforts. This was going to get ugly.

"Methiant arwrol," he hissed to take some of the starch out of the nearest sellsword's stride. The Sidhe toyed with the amber talisman beneath his shirt as he pointed at the approaching enemy. "This one next."
Jun 4, 2025 3:19 am
Pulling back around the corner, Corson moved quickly to recover his shield and strap it to his arm, his wounds becoming evident in his movements. The stoic warrior, however, just grimaced through the pain.
Jun 4, 2025 3:21 am
Lan flushed, his bruised cheeks mottling as Tovrunn's words reached his ears over the clamour of battle. To be told to hold his manhood by a woman, his intended fiance, no less! He heard the rustle of cloth and grunt of effort from behind him, and spared a glance to see the Brecht go roughly down the stairs at Corson's hand... a ploy he had tried himself against the imposter-guard atop Bardenhold's battlements, to less success. Hissing bitterly through clenched teeth, ego as bruised as his body, he snapped his gaze back to the hired killer struggling to reach him.

Lan used the shield raised high to protect his head and breast as a screen as he hefted his weapon to the left, then flicked the shield aside and uncoiled his arm and shoulder (ignoring the pain of tearing flesh around the bolt burrowed into it, or rather pushing through it with mule-headed stubbornness), bringing the crow's bill around in a devastating half-circle.

The gambit worked perfectly, and the six-inch beak of blued steel dug into the ribs of the enemy with a greenstick crackle of bone and a pop of ruptured lung.

"...BUT TO ALL MEN'S FEAR!" he finished he recitation with a triumphant bellow, secretly as a surprised as anyone by his success.
Jun 4, 2025 3:22 am
"WELL STRUCK!" Tovrunn shouted as Lancaelad landed a mighty blow ok their enemy's chest. Stepping forward, Tovrunn pulled another luminous arrow and loosed it at the man whose appearance was justly timed. "You are mighty, my beloved!"

Looking behind her, she snapped fire to life and made her way to the short wall, tossing it down almost casually amongst the two enemies standing there before retreating to her fiance's side. "Take care, Green Squire," she cautioned. "I've not the magicks to heal you any longer."
Jun 4, 2025 3:22 am
With the attacker Arglwyddes had harried swiftly falling to Lancaelad's steel, Breuddwyd risked a peek over the side to fasten the dread misfortune of his magic elsewhere. Better to finish each threat quickly and completely.

"Newid safleoedd," he whispered, assigning the same sort of curse upon the arbalist he saw there. He followed that with the words and gestures to release a fiery bolt just after. "Adain dân."

Then he ducked low behind the barricade, hoping to avoid the appearance of any fresh holes in his Sidhelien head.
Jun 4, 2025 3:24 am
Breuddwyd's spell burst on the soot-blackened leathers of the crossbowman on the stair, startling him but failing to ignite. Mebhaighl was a capricious energy, and there was neither time nor use for cursing ill fortune. Not when their pursuers seemed to keep coming. Even from his vantage the grim spellwielder could see another enemy peeking around the base of the stair. It seemed that they'd diverted as many bodies as they could to the rear of the inn.

At the sound of a cry the sidhe turned to see the increasingly-familiar shining outline of Tovrunn fell one of the already-wounded warriors up the corridor, leaving just a single foe blocking their way for the moment.

There was a crash and the sound of breaking crockery beyond the ice-sealed door, then a frustrated grunt. But guessing at what was happening in the proprietress' personal quarters was moot since enemies were advancing on their own barricade. Denied both Green Knight and sidhe for a target the Brecht and the man with the now-scorched armour loosed their bolts at Tovrunn instead, but the space between bed and arch proved too tight and the bolts thudded harmlessly into the timbers above. Even as they did Breuddwyd heard the garish warrior bark "break it down" and he felt the barricade at his back judder violently at a heavy blow.

Left with the choice of taking cover or closing for battle, the mercenary in the hall chose to take advantage of Lancaelad's bottleneck by charging the increasingly ragged knight with his blade ready. The knightly deftly wove around a flurry of downward blows, before catching the upward slash on his armoured wrist and turning it aside with effortless ease.
Jun 4, 2025 6:05 am
It was hard to forget the sound of a man's lifeforce exiting his body via a puncture in his flank – the wet, fleshy whistle of breath escaping; the pink foam of aerated blood that stained the floor as he fell. Lancaelad wrenched his crow's bill from the man's collapsed form, his bolt-pierced shoulder groaning in complaint.

It was hard to forget the sound, but easy to overlook it in the moment as the trembling thrill of battle filled his veins, the thudding relief of having won another heartbeat of time, the surging clamour of proving himself better than this rabble.

The knight's cheeks flushed with more than anger and hot blood as he heard Tovrunn's call of approval. Measuring the distance as the next enemy approached, he risked a glance back at the Rjurik woman. "And you are..."

His tongue caught like a rabbit in a trap, and his eyes widened in awe as he beheld the sight of her for a few moments too long. Her skin, burnished the blue-black of night's cloak, glimmering with intricate and ominous patterns of diamond stars. "...radiant," he finished breathlessly, before the clank of steel and creak of leather reminded him of the enemy at hand. He barely turned back in time to avoid the strikes raining down on him and parry what could have been a cut to open his belly, feeling the force of it bruise his forearm.

"You cannot win, churl," he spat, using his shield to push close to the mercenary, close enough to smell the rot of his teeth and spit to fleck each other's face as they struggled. Lan tried to swing his crow's bill but the warrior shoved against his arm, making the blow go wide. On the backswing, Lan managed to clip him with the back of the head rather than the bill, scraping a red gouge in the mercenary's upper leg. "You can only fall, or flee!"
Jun 4, 2025 6:06 am
"I..."

Tovrunn audibly gulped at the unexpected compliment. It was true that her form, a reflection of the night sky under which she took her oaths to her circle in the far north, was impressive to look upon, but hearing such words from Lancaelad was...unprecedented. In fact, if she cared to think of it, she might have wondered when ever before this moment she had heard him say an unforced word of kindness that was not dependent on their station.

The assault on her betrothed robbed them of what (at least, in her mind) could have been a sweetened moment, and she bitterly cast a magical arrow at the man for daring interrupt them. "And whichever you do, get to it quickly!" she spat as she did so.

But in truth that man was not her worry. It was the man behind their barricade, giving orders and hacking away at the bedframe, that held her true attention. "Haelyn forgive me," she said, conjuring another ball of fire and flinging it at the ripped sheets and exposed downy feathers. Quickly, she darted into the room the Brecht had emerged from, the saddlebags and discarded books in her mind.

Their position here was forfeit, but that was no reason to count this as a loss.
Jun 4, 2025 6:08 am
Battered by a flurry of Lancaelad's heavy blows, the final mercenary in the upstairs corridor staggered. He was alone and outmatched with jarring suddenness, and Lan could see in the dart of his eyes that he was ready to flee, but before he could take a step an arrow flew over the knight's mailed shoulder and struck the man squarely in the throat - its gory tip protruding suddenly from the other side.

The man only had as moment to finger the thing in shock, before his legs gave out and he fell to the floor in a ruined heap, his life gurgling out of him in ragged breaths that sounded like the trickle of a forest spring.

Looking back he was surprised to see the barricade at the top of the stair spring into flame. It burned like tinder, becoming a roaring bonfire in what seemed like moments and the warriors on the stair could just be heard over the roar retreating with cries of alarm. The barricade wouldn't stand for long now, but it was practically unassailable for the moment.

Corson staggered to his side, the young knight had proven to be reckless in the day's battles, but he was resilient and undoubtedly courageous. If Lan had placed a wager he'd've lost a good pouch of coin betting they'd both be dead by now. Thankfully the young Noelon had taken the time to alert his small entourage to his infiltration, and with the man in the hall fallen Mhairie could emerge from her hiding place amongst the common bunks and with a businesslike gravity she tightened and adjusted the Green squire's battered armour. That at least should keep him standing if another foe were to emerge from one of the sturdy inn doors.

Tovrunn darted past the pair of warriors as they took a moment to regroup. She'd seen the interior of the Brecht's rooms and knew that even the simple possessions left there might carry some hint as to the identity of their pursuer. Glancing around she saw the small volume the man had tossed at her in her first intrusion still lying on the sill. The lantern that had accompanied it was now lit, its beam focused into a single frame of red glass, casting an eerie shaft out the open window and into the night and striking the building on the opposite side of the alleyway. Beneath in the alley she could hear voices and the scrape of boots.

The mercenary's crossbow stood against the bedpost alongside a case of bolts, and the pair of saddlebags she'd seen earlier were now on the unoccupied bed rather than atop the inn's footlocker.
Jun 4, 2025 6:10 am
The foul smell of smouldering down filled the air as Tovrunn's druid-fire began to spread, and Lancaelad's attempts to catch his breath were foiled by the smoke from mildewed sheets and the bedframes starting to billow up to the rafters. Shaking water from his eyes and wheezing, every stretch of his chest a painful chore from the multitude of bruises, gashes and other insults his body had taken, he watched as his betrothed raced away from her arson and darted into the room the Brecht had come from.

He glanced at Corson, offering a curt nod of recognition – the most acknowledgement he had given the squire since that morning at the docks, a hundred years ago – then pushed himself after the star-lit blonde. He lurched down the corridor, his shield scraping against the wall as heat bloomed at his back, and followed her into the room. It was clear what she was doing, and Lan hurried to help: he hefted up the saddlebags and draped them over his uninjured shoulder with a grunt, and cast a glance at the crossbow and the lantern. He had seem similar devices used by sailors and lookouts to signal in the dark. "So that is how the villain orchestrated his treachery," he muttered.

Leaving the crossbow for someone with a spare pair of hands, he smacked the red-lensed lantern, knocking it to the floor in a crash of metal, glass, and blossom of fiery oil. Why not? The inn was already ablaze.

"With haste, my lady," he panted, backing towards the door. "I climbed up the sheet rope to Salien's room – we may escape the same way!"
Jun 4, 2025 6:10 am
The fire spread almost instantaneously and Breuddwyd entertained an errant thought regarding the questionable materials in human bedding and their safe use under regular circumstances. His view of the stairwell was obscured so ranged magic seemed unfeasible.

"Out the window then," he agreed, hefting his pack. "I've one spell left that should protect Aeric in his descent." The Sidhe was thinking of his familial obligation to their stricken ally. "But someone else will need to go first and catch him at the bottom, they will."
Jun 4, 2025 6:11 am
Corson nodded and joined the others in their room, the blood streaming down his arm. He showed little discomfort, probably out of some inane sense of pride, but concentrated on the task at hand... delivering his charge.
Jun 4, 2025 6:12 am
"So it would seem," Tovrunn said breathlessly, as the scope of the assault revealed itself. There were more coming, and their reserves had met their end. Rummaging through the room, she evaluated the contents with only seconds worth of consideration, allowing Lancaelad to heft the saddlebags while she looked through and looted the footlocker of anything that seemed valuable or informational. Once she was satisfied, she grabbed the crossbow and left the room.

"Lead onwards Lancaed," she encouraged once they reached the room, giving the knock that they had pre-arranged with Salien. Entering the room in a hurry, she then saw to it that the door was closed and bolted once more. "We will hold here and manage Aeric while you act as our vanguard!"
Jun 4, 2025 6:14 am
With the burning bed beginning to roar, Tovrunn felt confident that she had at least a few moments to rifle the Brecht's room. Thankfully after tossing the saddlebags to her betrothed and slinging the crossbow across her shoulders it became apparent that a moment was all she'd need. It was immediately clear that the gaudily clad mercenary wasn't a long term guest, as both footlockers were bare of all but motheaten spare blankets of scratchy grey wool. And it was a good thing that her investigation was so brief, because as the Rjurik noblewoman stepped back into the now-smoky hallway it was clear at a glance that the icy lock they'd improvised on the innkeeper's door had no more than moments left in the heat of the burning bed. The mercenaries would have another way up in moments if they hadn't already abandoned that route.

A distant memory, that of some clan warchief in the misty past, stirred in the exhaustive breadth of her many lifetimes: Lan had reported a dozen men outside, and likely at least a few more lurked in rooms up here, lambs to the slaughter if they revealed themselves now. If those men were all of the calibre of the mercenaries arrayed against them so far then the Brecht was the only true threat. Even with their resources spent they could likely hold a choke point and win the day, but the risk was great and there was little to win. A carpet of dead would speak to their path as loud as the living.

She was the last to reach the room at the front of the inn where Lan stood ushering their companions toward his makeshift rope, and was pleasantly surprised to see Corson helping a dazed and sick Aeric to his feet. The quiet Roesonian was drawn, his flesh the blue-grey of a corpse and his hands shook violently but he stood, the modest lore of the Green Order giving him what little strength it could afford. But that relief was short-lived, and just as she slammed the hefty door shut behind her everyone could hear a shattering of timber and rough cries of triumph from down the hall. Slamming the bolt into place she raced to the window.

Outside the night was still. Breuddwyd's ruse had forced them all to the back of the inn, and their numbers were slim enough that the hadn't left guards in the front yard. Good. It would be a short dash to the stables and they'd be on horseback then. Their enemies just had to search the top floor long enough for them all to get to the ground, and they'd be off into the night. After that... it was clear that they'd need more than speed to escape Roesone. Thankfully their home held as many friends as foes.

With a quick check to make sure the inn yard remained unguarded, Salien lowered the rope of knotted sheets Lancaelad had used to re-enter the second floor, and the Roesonians hurried out. Lan and his young entourage went first, the knight securing the yard while Geremie went for the horses. As they did Tovrunn followed, while Breuddwyd worked a spell on Aeric that would see the weakened magician drift to the ground like a falling leaf. The sidhe then followed, with Arglwyddes leaping gracefully from the sill and circling her master as he descended.

With the horses ready, cries of "fire" and of alarm and anger from within the inn masking the jingling of their tack, Salien went next, and as Corson readied himself to lower from the window's edge there was a thud and then a crack from the door to the room they'd all stood crammed into only minutes before, and the head of an axe bit through the heavy timbers.

Not waiting to see how many bodies might follow it, the squire merely dropped from the window sill and fell with a grunt into the dust and, dashing the last few steps to his mounted companions, he swung into the saddle of his new steed and put his heel to the skittish animal's flanks. As the whole company thundered out of the inn yard the face of one of the mercenaries from the stair appeared at the window and they heard their pursuers cry out an alarm as Corson was the last to round the corner and into the night.

End of Session 1

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