A lot below, as I was inspired by the moment and the game.
Still love DT, J. Always appreciate your efforts.
His mind, constantly calculating, considered the risk. Thorn and Maeriks were in bad shape. Ivor, who had been a cornerstone on the front line, was dead, lost in that hellish trap room. Food for stirges, who had feasted greedily. All that remained of Ivor in this shit hole 'palace' was a dried out husk of corpse.
Smoke curled into Kray's nostrils from a dying spliff as he closed his eyes, looking inward for answers.
Ivor. Talius. Qiu...
The list was far longer than Kray ever wanted to remember, but it was always in the back of his mind. Many of the dead, some names he couldn't remember, had died by his hands, as Kray had, ultimately, led them in battle.
Thorn and Maeriks needed rest and time, both of which were in short supply, not another bloodletting.
The risk was, without any doubt,
heavy. Especially for those two. Kray knew very well that they might not come back.
The moment had passed, his eyes opened as he took another drag. Kray looked outward now for answers, first to Thorn and Maeriks. He didn't want to lose them. Maeriks he considered a friend now, far removed from their first chance meeting in the Borgh Riac. His relationship with Thorn was one of brotherhood, born from battle. They'd fought back to back and side by side for almost four years now.
They weren't losses he was willing to take. They wouldn't be names he would ever forget. They would, however, be the shadows in his nightmares. Phantoms of the blood on Kray's hands.
At the same time, he was aware that Thorn and Maeriks had come here with purpose, as had the rest of their dwindling squad. All of them had known the risks. None of them, however, were likely to have considered it would be this bloody.
Ezeriah sent a note to Xorthan,Constablebrew
Kray looked to Elam, weighing the Cursed and their longing to be free.
The wealth. The risk versus the reward. Once more he surveyed the men.
Finally, Kray spoke, his voice grim, somewhat detached. A reflex, cultivated over the last decade.
"For some of you, this might be a tomb. This is not a place for heroes or the reckless, but survivors and killers. A place to kill or be killed." He paused, to let the statement sink in, then locked eyes with Thorn and Bryn, in turn.
The decision had to be considered. Lives hung in the balance. It was not to be taken lightly.
Again, his voice cold, measured.
"That comes to an end. Now. The next to jeopardize the rest with that shit will answer to me." His hand came to a rest on the hilt of his dark, Otessite sword.
"And face Judgement."
Kray had executed men in the past for multiple reasons, most recently during the brutally cold War in the North, when he'd had deserters tracked down and executed, while on campaign, to make a clear example to any troops considering desertion. Kray had employed multiple methods to express his displeasure with desertion, all by his own hand, when possible, or hands on direction: flogging, hanging, impalement... the list went on, as Kray had no lack in creativity. Hell, he'd even had a pathetic bastard suspended from a tree in a wooden egg-shaped cage, left behind for the crows. His preference, however, was beheading, using the cruel serrated edge of Judgement.
Kray let out an exasperated sigh, an effort to release the burden of the memory along with his frustration at their predicament.
Abruptly, his demeanor changed, a sarcastic chuckle making it's way to the surface, the hint of a smile. A glint in the eye. His voice rose, just barely, building momentum.
"If you do make this your final home, you'll find good company with Ivor, who is likely whoring with the finest demon bitch spirits in this fucking 'Palace.' A fine resting place indeed!"
Bullshit but it sounds good.
If Ivor's ghost or some such was trapped here, he was eternally damned. They all knew as much.
The former Mercon warlord wasn't much for long speeches. Rather, his preference was efficacy. Results without waste.
"The Cursed long to be free, as do we all. Let us then be liberated by wealth and the power that is wealth's sweet, succulent whore. The Fates favor the bold, gentlemen! Tonight, let us makes the Fates our personal whores!"
I'm for moving forward, but there's serious risk, especially for Thorn and Maeriks. Personally, I'm fairly damn attached to my character and can't imagine a re-roll. But that's me.
I think an option is to keep Thorn and Maeriks in reserve, like a heavy hammer waiting to drop. Of course, that depends on the circumstances. But, if we can keep them like an ace up our collective sleeve, that minimizes their exposure and risk.
In sum, I don't even want Thorn or Maeriks targeted or spotted until later in battle, even if that means they lag behind. Once the battle starts, we might be able to pull some hammer and anvil, or some flanking maneuver.
Also, our once formidable front line is currently crippled (Ivor down, T and M playing through the pain). So, a couple options off the top of my head:
(1) Bryn and Iasu play front line with Kray and Elam, make sure Thorn and Maeriks are not targets, if possible. T and M strike when the enemy is already engaged, minimizing shots at T and M.
(2) Kray and Elam take the front and brunt of the hits from the start, with Bryn and Iasu launching bow shot sneak attacks from the shadows. Kray has Commander's Strike, so I can get one of you an extra sneak attack on my turn. Also, Iasu and Bryn can safeguard T and M this way (with T and M providing backup for B and I).
Either way, I'm putting Kray up front. It's what he's made for.
Bring that shit, Palace Bitches.
J, Kray would want to know as much about Suter-Set's chamber as possible for tactical purposes. Dimensions, access (one badass door, I'll assume, of course), traps... any damn thing Elam knows about the approach and that room. Especially the room where Suter is. Basically, range concealment are major concerns.
Last edited February 26, 2019 7:29 am