Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

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A city floating in the center of a lake, Ravok is a place of dark beauty, romance and culture. Behind it all though is the presence of Rhysol, God of Evil and Betrayal. The city is controlled by The Black Sun, a religious organization devoted to Rhysol. [Lore]

Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Shiress on July 13th, 2017, 11:41 pm

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74th Day
Summer 517
Syna sat high in the sky, her warmth blanketing the city. Her presence was a welcomed sight for many of the Ravokians, for she had not blessed the skies with her beauty for some days, it being concealed by somber cloud and rain. This day, however, Syna embraced the city and it's people were taking advantage of her graciousness.

To Shiress, coming from Syliras, Ravok already seemed cramped, but on this day the city felt near claustrophobic. It seemed every single occupant of Ravok must have decided that the Merchant's Circle was the place to be, at precisely the 12th bell. Bodies moved in and out of storefronts, swarmed windows and shop owners, or simply milled around, or stood in place, enjoying some mysterious, sweet treat, obscured in bakers cloth.

Though, packed as the area was, the crowd still remained jovial and surprisingly pleasant. Patron's laughed, slapping reunited friends on the back, children ran in and through the mass, squealing with delight, as only carefree children could.

Shiress weaved her way around such a child, whose small feet were submerged in a mud puddle, before continuing to amble through the throng, arms wrapped around a basket, securing it snugly against her chest. Her long, chestnut hair lay loose, cascading down the length of her back. Clad in a sleeveless, mint green corset, and darker green skirt, the slave had dressed for comfort, all the way down to the sandals wrapped about her feet.

At last, Shiress stepped clear of the crowd, only now having the room to pull her Mistress' errand list from her pocket. Shifting the empty basket to one arm, the slave inspected her orders closely. So closely in fact, that she hadn't noticed the wall, in the form of a man, directly in her path, until she had plowed chest first into it.

The woman's small frame rebounded hard off the man, sending her rear first onto the ground, with a high pitched squeal escaping her lips. Shiress sat, stunned a tick, before slowly trailing her green eyes up from booted feet to a sharp featured and scared face. Shiress' face lost the color that had formed there, paling as the man's cold, blue gaze caught her's, but, more so, at the swords the man bore. She immediately let her eyes fall back to the man's boots, falling instantly into a slaves submission.

"I'm so very sorry, Sir" she said, one hand stretching out toward her basket, the other retrieving the small piece of parchment she had been so closely scrutinizing. "Please, I beg you forgive my carelessness." She added, scrambling awkwardly, trying to find her footing to stand.

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Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Elias Caldera on July 16th, 2017, 5:23 pm

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Twelve bells and the sun was shining. Twelve bells and the streets were brimming. Twelve bells and Ravok, for what felt like the first time in a long time, was truly alive again.

Awash with more than just the remnants of the harsh rains and the dismal gray skies that heralded them, Ravok seemed to be breathing a long awaited breath of fresh air and everyone could feel it. By the time the clocktower had struck midday, the cries of hawkers peddling their wares was as loud and thunderous as the boisterous buzz of bartering and banter by all those who flocked to their stalls. People laughed, they swore, they swarmed and they laughed some more. The most holy Ravok had emerged from the storms not sodden, but shimmering in its jubilant rebirth. It was a thing to be marveled at, to revel in as only a Ravokian could.

Standing amidst it all stood Elias Caldera, squirming in his own skin.

There was a time when a day like this could have brought him no end of cheer and amusement. There was entertainment and opportunity without end in every direction. Where the boy in him would have sought one of those things out out of childish instinct, the soldier that boy was becoming would seek the other and find his own fun in the dogged pursuit. Today however, try as he might to ‘revel,’ try as he might to ‘marvel,’ all Elias could focus on was the number times he’d been bumped into since lunch.

It was thirteen.

He’d counted.

The mental tallying hadn’t ended there of course. How many times had some errant youth stepped on his shoes or splashed mud on his pantleg, all the while giggling in their absentminded merriment despite their victim’s mounting chagrin. How many times had some lowly merchant ring menace crossed his path without showing him the proper respect? How many hands in the crowd belonged to men who were trained to use them for things less scrupulous than handling coin or carrying goods. How many eyes were watching him? How many knives were just waiting for Elias to make that faithful slip?

The answer to that required no amount reckoning, for it was always the same;

Too many.

The mage, to his dawning dismay, realized he had grown accustomed to life outside these bustling streets and watery walls. The madness of the wilds and man’s pitiful places beyond had engraved in the Ravokian a sense of calmness within the isolation. He’d been away from home for too long, and despite the hope that swelled within his chest, the Caldera still struggled to find that sense of home he’d lost so many years ago. Time, he told himself, time would heal this wound as it had done all the others that now littered his pale and battered body, but how long was the exile returned meant to wait before he recognized the bleeding just was not going to stop on its own? Eventually, something had to change. Something had to give.

There’s that old biddy now.” A familiar but distracting voice shook him from his somber musings, but the words themselves held little interest to the aurist. His eyes were already firmly planted upon the frail old woman a mere twenty or so yards from them. Every once in a while the crowds would part like a gust of wind bustling its way through the Nykan fields of wheat, revealing the decrepit old hag and the stall she stood sentry over for just a tick before being enveloped again by the tide of human flesh. In those concise apertures, Elias had witnessed her do little else than her trade. With one hand she held aloft the plump and ripened fruits from her humble shop, shamelessly soliciting those that passed by with her ‘unbelievable deals,’ while with the other she held firm to the small of her hunched back, so senile was she that the very notion of standing at anything other than ninety degrees was inconceivable at this late stage in her life.

Elias admired the dedication in the act. His companion did not.

So, we doing this or what?

Zeb was an antsy child, and in turn that made an already on edge Elias all the antsier in his presence. Practically the polar opposite of the ancient creature peddling her delectable wares across the plaza from where they stood studying her, Zeb was barely in his adolescents, maybe only fourteen or fifteen years of age. Elias was sure he’d asked before, but couldn’t quite recall if the uppity little punk had ever given him a straight answer or not. That annoyance was something the Ravokian was learning to deal with ever since their unlikely alliance had been formed. Young and brash beyond belief, the dark skinned Ravokian was the kind that was all too eager to begin making something of himself, all too desperate to prove wrong those who saw him as little less than an orphan or a beggar, and none more so than the face that glared back at him from the other side of the mirror. Elias knew all too well what that was like. The scars he’d earned when he was the same age were wretched testament to that, and even today still ached when it rained.

It had been raining a lot recently…

Perhaps that was why the Caldera had taken to the kid, tolerated his antics for as long as he had where anyone else would have been reduced to a smoldering stump long ago. The boy's temperament was that of triumph, not hesitation or pesky second thoughts. Cocky, but fearless and smart where it counted, Zeb may have been just a youth, but he knew what he wanted and he knew how to get it… or at least he did now that Elias had so courteously offered to show him the way. The mage may have been loath to say it out loud, but the boy reminded him of himself back before-….

Something crashed into him, or rather, found itself in a disagreement with his shoulder he should say, given the faintness of the impact. “Fourteen,” he mumbled between clenched teeth, exasperation rising in tandem with the climbing number. That had to be too many, right? Anyone would snap at that point, right!?

Contempt followed in the wake of his stare as the brooding mage turned his gaze over his shoulder to behold the next unfortunate causality of his impatience, whoever it was. He found nothing but an empty space looking back at him. His frown deepening, Elias sought out the sound of the squeak he’d heard and eventually discovered the heap of auburn frills settling at his feet. She’d fallen, he now noticed, intensity dampened by the inconvenient realization, but whatever thought he had next, was forever lost to the Ravokian as he more earnestly laid eyes upon the one who now looked up at him from the cobblestone street. Behind a frayed veil of chestnut hair that fell about her soft features in cascading waves, emerald eye the likes of which Elias had never before beheld, met his own, and for a short and peculiar instant, he felt his breath catch. She looked numb in that moment, as if only just freed from a daze, but in the coming realization and her senses return, emerald eyes widened in shock and reality set back in.

Despite his own brevity of numbness, his demeanor hadn’t changed into anything less frightful than how it had started, but the mage had noticed the branding on her arm almost immediately, and was unsurprised when the apologies came tumbling out of trembling lips as quickly and proficiently as they did. A slave, he noted absentmindedly, perfectly subservient and pacified, and one taught her manners it appeared, if not a better sense of her surroundings. She reached for something, hands fumbling across the stones nervously as she tried to find her bearings once more. Elias saw the basket she was aiming for, remembering its crunch against his shoulder earlier. He spotted the piece of parchment a split tick later and almost instantly, a droplet of res poured itself from his finger in quick thinking response. Imperceptible to most unless they knew what they were looking for, the tiny inkling of magic was for all intents and purposes harmless in its size, but still it carried the order of its maker as diligently as any other of his arcane constructs.

It bid the wind to follow.

And the wind obeyed.

The paper suddenly jerked from its resting place, brought to life by a trifling gust of air that saw it bounce just out of the slave’s reaching grasp. It bounced again, following the breeze that tugged at it, which in turned followed the res that compelled them both. Higher and higher it was blown by what would have seemed like nothing more than nature’s fanciful whim, odd as it was. The paper fluttered gently in its final approach, right into the waiting grip of the mage who lackadaisically unfolded it between two fingers and began scanning its contents, unabashed by the impoliteness of such an act.

To anyone else, what had just transpired would have seemed like just a simple accident, an unfortunate mishap that warranted little else but a few awkward laughs and a cordial send off by both parties involved. Elias Caldera however, was still looking for the angle that he was certain was there. Who was this stunning girl, and who had sent her? Had she tried to steal from him using their ‘accidental’ collision as a means to reach into his pockets unnoticed and unpunished, or was their something more sinister at play like always? He felt convinced the note would hold the damning answers he sought, but as his scrutinizing gaze fell upon the small piece of paper, what he found there was no detailed description of his person, nor his name or a promised bounty for bringing in his head, all he could find was a shopping list for that included yellow lily tea and a few new undergarments.

If his frowns had been compounding up until then, Elias would have look almost comically upset at that point. This was no killer clad in green, just some bumbling slave girl who had clumsily bounced off the wrong man on the wrong day. That should have been a relief, a welcome coincidental reprieve from all the troubles he was made to ceaselessly suffer these past few seasons, but why then did the Ravokian feel such a pang of disappointment run through him upon the revelation?

Oi, you daft dame, what the hell do you think you’re playing at!

Unfortunately for Shires -the name on her branded wrist- Zeb was less enthralled by her sudden appearance than he was… ruffled by her brazen interruption. A great deal more ruffled than even his glowering counterpart let show. “Have you got a petching death wish, you-” The outburst of ire had served well in potentially distracting the slave from Elias’s audacious reading of her shopping list, but when the young man reached out to take hold of the poor creature and drag her to her feet, the black clothed swordsman laid a hand of his own on the boy’s arm to halt his unruly advance. He stopped in his tracks, shocked that Elias, of all people, had halted him. Dried and cracked lips worked themselves into a tizzy as they tried to form the words and give voice to the boy’s indignation, but the one who had grabbed him spoke before the boy had a chance.

Be at ease, Zeb. This was simply a mistake.” Elias placated, trying to assuage the hostility bubbling within the boy with a stern but bearable tone. The pale man could hardly blame him for his crass reaction. Considering what they were here to do today, Zeb had been more nerves than he was human, and so to have such a flagrant distraction like the slave coming out of nowhere and shocking them into premature action as she had, it had taken a great deal of restraint not to lash out himself. Perhaps it was in hearing how Zeb was so loudly echoing his own thoughts that Elias found them as unwarranted and uncouth as they were.

We should show this bi-

I said be at ease, boy!” Elias snapped, gloved hand curling into a fist around the captured shopping list with an audible crunch. As always, the kid had gone too far, almost saying something he would have regretted for the rest of his miserable life, but Zeb was too busy bristling with indignation to realize it, glare tightening upon the blue eyed man while his short and nappy hair practically quivered in fury. The mage turned away from him dismissively, reasserting his attention back on the girl hopelessly trying to find her footing.

A hand, its scars and ghastly pallor hidden beneath the black leather glove that adorned it, reached out towards the fallen slave with a graciousness and gentlemanly flair that belied the battle scarred face of the one who offered it. Zeb tutted angrily, sucking wind between his teeth in a vexing display of agitation, but Elias ignored him. He was more attentive instead to simply helping the girl back to the vertical world he had so crudely knocked her from.

Forgive him,” the mage pleaded humbly, “He left whatever manners he may have had back in the dockside hovel I pulled him from.” Another irritated tut in response. “Are you alright?

Check your pockets.” Zeb hissed from over his shoulder, arms folded and scowl stiffening as he turned his back to the two of them. “Who knows where them hands have been."
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Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Shiress on August 18th, 2017, 7:55 pm

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Fumbling fingers retreated, as wide eyes watched the small paper waft gently through the air and straight into the strangers gloved hand. Pushing back a bit of shock, Shiress licked her lips, preparing to beg pardon, but the words froze halfway formed in the wake of arching brows.

Shiress was watching, mouth slightly agape, as the man began to read her shopping list, when another voice stole her attention. The young man, boy rather, Shiress decided, as her attention laid fully on his youthful features, stood by the stranger, his words indicating, quite clearly, that he was more irritated at her clumsiness than the victim of it.

Shiress stared, stunned, at the boys outburst. With his final words, the boy lurched toward her. Shiress frowned, stiffening, with an apparent readiness to put up a fight, as a wave of anger slid across her features. Death wish? Seriously? The slaves mouth opened to take down the boys insolence, slave or not -she wasn't his slave- but a firm hand on the boys shoulder called both their attentions, and eyes, back to the man in black.

After a bit of a show, the boy calmed somewhat, but not before he began to voice a menacing suggestion. Shiress opened her mouth to invite the little shyke to finish his statement, but the sudden show of anger from the man with the swords kept her mouth closed. Something very few people could do. Shiress' eyes darted from the kid, to the man as he demanded calm, then back to the kid, locking in an annoyed glare, as she once again began to fumble to her feet. A proffered, black leathered hand extended into her line of sight, causing the girl to settle back down on her rear.

She stared dumbly at the hand, unsure of what to do. It had been so long since such kindness, even something as simple as an offered helping hand, was given to her that it baffled the slave. After a moment, she found the strangers gaze, old eyes looking up at the man from a youthful face. For what seemed a bell, but only lasted a tick, her eyes studied his face. Those eyes. Such kindness and gentle words, spoken from beneath such cold eyes, threatened to confuse her further, but yet she felt the man's intent true and the kindness in his words genuine.

The boy however...

"I'm fine." she said, allowing herself to be lifted from the ground, eyes never wavering from their scrutiny.

Once back to her feet, Shiress' green gaze lingered a moment longer on the man's blue before falling away, as she began to smooth down her skirt. Glancing back up, she offered the stranger a sheepish grin, mouth opening to speak, but the man's youthful companion spoke first, and Shiress had heard enough from this kid.

Shiress' body, a tapestry of painted abuse, riddled with scars, both old and new, stood a true testament to the slave's inability to keep her mouth shut when she needed to.

Shiress foolishly rounded on the boy, her emerald eyes flashing as they narrowed "Exactly who the petch do you think I am?" She asked, her voice pitched low as she strained to keep some type of control on her temper. Taking a small step toward the youth, Shiress lowered her voice even further. "I have faced death more times than you have known summers, you little shyke, I have no need to wish for it! I never once meant you," She gestured toward the man in black, "nor him, any harm at all."

Her ire cooling slightly, Shiress turned her attention back to the stranger. "I am truly sorry for causing you and your...friend so much trouble. If you would be so kind as to," her eyes flicked down to the crumpled paper hidden inside the man's gloved hand, before nodding toward it, "give me back my shopping list, I'll leave you with my sincerest apology and be on my way."

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Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Elias Caldera on August 27th, 2017, 8:32 pm

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Wide eyed and slack jawed, Zeb reeled back against the sudden onslaught, helpless to do little else than gawk at the once demure and dazed slave who was now bearing down upon him with all the fury and bluster of a battle-hardened veteran. The surprise was evident in his reaction, as was the doubt that had abruptly taken hold in light of this unexpected verbal flurry. The boy glanced nervously towards Elias, no doubt seeking some kind of aid in escaping the mess he had foolishly gotten himself into, but the pale man looked just as gob smacked, Shiress’s ferocity catching him as off-guard as it had his younger counterpart. To even Elias’s discredit, both of them had expected a lamb when they’d first laid eyes on the girl, only to be greeted with the roar of a lion instead.

The swordsman almost flinched when she pointed at him, years of experience drenched in the depths of life or death combat screaming at him to duck and roll the petch out of this woman’s way lest his story meet its grim end caught up in the path of her furor. It was a sight to behold to see Zeb cowed so quickly, that was for sure, but the strange feeling had managed to actually bring a astonished smile to Elias's thin lips. This girl –this slave- whoever she was, burned with a fire that the scarred stryfer found all too intriguing now that he’d been witness to its spark. That said, while the mage appreciated strength when he recognized it, he also knew he wouldn’t appreciate his uppity ward getting a thrashing in the middle of the market square for all to see, regardless of how much the little shyke deserved it.

With his bravery renewed, Elias cleared his throat, ever so subtly trying to redirect the girl’s harsh attentions away from poor Zeb and back to the one who she’d bumped into in the first place. “Such diligence. Such spirit.” He said, handing her the crumpled list as requested, though it returned with a notable lack of an apology. “Your master must consider himself a lucky man to have you in his service… or in dire need of rescuing.

And You! What have I told you about picking fights you can’t win? Of biting off more than you can chew?” He chided, attentions now turned swiftly to Zeb’s beleaguered form as he doubled down on the young thief’s admonishment, if only to satisfy its emerald eyed purveyor. “He’s sorry, I’m certain of it. Isn’t that right, boy?” Zeb regained his composure just long enough to give the man an astounded look, but Elias’s dark hues darted to the side, to the crowd and all the eyes looking back at them. The attention was bad enough as it was, but one gaze in particular among the rest should have been familiar.

The old woman was looking right at them.

The orphan was keen enough, and the Caldera assumed he too would eventually realize they had been spotted. It was hardly of any surprise considering the outburst they’d been swept up in, and that was to say nothing of everyone else in the market that day who had been near enough to overhear. The chagrin of such a stupid folly on his part was damning, but its sting was lessened somewhat by the presence of the girl who had caused it all.

Regardless, things needed to be remedied, and he wasn’t speaking of just hurt feelings either. Necessity may have spurred the Ravokian to action next, but it was this new unshakable interest guiding his thoughts that kept him from fighting it.

Right, yah.” It was halfhearted and distracted to say the least, Zeb’s focus clearly lost elsewhere as he followed Elias’s gaze, but it was something at least… kind of? To be fair, it wasn’t even an apology, let alone a proper sentence, but Elias was not a man to be dissuaded by such trivialities. “There we are. All is settled then.” The soldier smiled, pointedly aloof, but before Shiress could flee all the trouble their little run-in had brought her however, he raised a stern hand to halt her escape. “Apologies are nice. Sincere ones even better, but perhaps there is another way to make amends. You see, we’re... looking for something.

The palm that had stopped her turned on its side then, extended into an open gesture that ‘invited’ the slave to join Elias as he walked. “We are?” Zeb challenged quizzically as he realized with a start that they were on the move again. Elias shot him a grimacing glare from over his shoulder. “Right! Right, we are…

Maybe you can help. Were looking for…” The hesitation was brief, almost unnoticeable, but Zeb pounced on it none the less.

Dinner.” He finished with an impudent grin. He had saddled up to the two of them now, Shiress abruptly flanked on two sides by a pair of suspicious strangers as she was bustled along. The boy gave her an annoyed if not anxious look at first, clearly still upset, but his new found ‘appetite’ and the enthusiasm that came along with it were a thorough distraction it seemed. Elias on the other hand, couldn’t have been any less amused. The little bastard was trying to take advantage of him, goading his handler into buying him and his bumbling crew of degenerate gutter rats their next meal, but the mage knew they needed to get themselves lost in the bustle of the crowds again lest the old hag grow any more apprehensive than she no doubt already was. With few other options before him, Elias was forced to play along, though he suspected the regret he now felt bubbling in his gut would only grow worse as the day went on. “That’s it, were looking for something to eat.

Only the best. We’ve got little ones to feed, don’t we.

There was a twitch in his eye, but Elias persevered. “Only… the best.” He sighed. “If it’s not too much trouble, that is. I’d be very grateful for your assistance. Very grateful indeed.” Already the magic was at work as the hypnotist set about his wicked business. Shiress didn't know yet, but she'd say yes. They always said yes to Elias Caldera.
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Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Shiress on September 13th, 2017, 6:19 pm

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"Your master"

Those two words cut through her like a blade, severing the remainder of the mans flattery from her ears. Shiress' eyes lingered on the man's lips until he turned away, then fell to the useless, meaningless scrap of paper, clutched between her fingers.

He knows, she thought, he knows I'm a slave, but how could he possibly... The hand that held the paper turned over, revealing the old slaves brand on her wrist and her eyes closed, wearily.

That brand marked eight summers of chained obedience in Sunberth; an existence escaped, so long ago. Now, after four Summers of living free in Syliras, a Eypharian propels her into a darkly familiar existence. Hypnotically acquiescent, a slave again.

Why are the Gods so cruel?

"Looking for something?" Shiress queried, slowly surfacing from her thoughts, eyes narrowing as they flicked to the teen, the boy clearly coming up short to the man's meaning, narrowing further at his belated understanding. The man spoke again, this time to her, but before her eyes caught up to the one speaking, the boy interrupted, finishing the man's sentence. Shiress slid her fingertips up along her forehead, slightly amused at the confusing exchange.

The amusement fled, however, when the young boy took up beside her and accompanied by the man in black, two stronger, broader shoulders escorted her along the crowd, crumbled slave's basket, helplessly dropped moments earlier, lying forgotten in the wake of a forced retreat.

The slave's mouth worked feverishly to form audible words as she was ushered along, but none would surface past the shock of being abruptly thrust into the chores of two strange men..or..man and a half?

Little ones?

Shiress' thin lips pressed together, attempt to form words momentarily neglected, as a scrupulous look was swung to the dark-skinned boy. Was he old enough to have little ones? Surely not.

"Look," she began, "I'm sure you would be grateful, but I am sorry I really must..." Words trailed off as Shiress swayed dangerously, the mans hypnosis flowing into an already hypnotically abused and fragile mind. She blinked. "Of.." she blinked again, recovering fully, and smiled, "of course, I would be more than happy to help you."

Without another word, or thought given to her own chores, the slave led the man and his sidekick through the crowd. As the trio navigated, the slaves fingertips played over the telltale mark on her wrist. "By the way," she called over her shoulder, addressing the taller man, "my name is Shiress," she gave a rueful shake of the head, "but I think you've guessed that already. She fell silent for several heartbeats, before adding "And I have no master. I have a Mistress." Looking ahead, her voice dipped below a whisper. "I killed him long ago.

The throng finally thinned, spilling Shiress and company out at a store front, the sign hanging above the door read 'Odds and Ends'. The girl stepped aside, glancing to the swordsman. "We should be able to find anything you need in here." She gestured through the doorway, smiling sweetly, before disappearing inside.

Pulling a basket from a table, the girl made her way through the store, selecting a few items, changed her mind about one, selected another, then turned to a large table covered in a variety of dark and light colored breads. A woman, obviously the baker, covered head to toe in flour, round as she was tall, and topped with less hair than a balding man, watched carefully as Shiress scrutinized over the many loaves. Shiress, however, was just stalling, trying to figure out if the woman staring at her was, in fact, a woman. Suddenly, she wasn't entirely sure. Deciding the bakers gender would likely stay a mystery, she chose a large loaf, the top braided and baked a golden brown, and turned to the swordsman, basket presented forward, a proud smile playing at her lips.

"Smoked beef, mushrooms, a round of cheese, some dried cherries, and bread" looking sideways, she slid a jar of honey from a carefully stacked display, dropping it into the basket. "and honey." she added, smile broadening to reveal a row of white teeth. "A fine dinner, I think."




BillSmoked Beef- 4GM/lb
Dried Mushrooms- 1GM/lb
Cheese- 2SM/lb
Dried Cherries- 5SM/oz
Bread- 2CM/loaf
Honey- 1SM/pt
The quantities are up to you :D

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Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Elias Caldera on December 20th, 2017, 3:23 am

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Curious

Though but a slave and no doubt accustomed to bending to the will of her betters, the manner in which the woman’s mind surrendered to his arcane whim seemed almost… too easy. As if willingly, her thoughts acquiesced to his magical influence without even the consideration of a struggle, almost like it were a point of habit instead of contention. The rewards of fine breeding and top notch Ravokian domestication perhaps? Or perhaps in typical Ravokian fashion, something a bit more nefarious was at play here. Either way, it seemed a shame. There was clearly an emerald flame burning behind those startling eyes, the idea of it being collared and dimmed by forces beyond her ability to resist felt almost tragic in a way.

Beauty lies in the struggle. He mused bitterly as the trio were hurried along by his swift pace. Someone had apparently denied her that struggle, and in turn denied him his enjoyment as well. Unfortunate.

The ding of the store’s bell upon the door heralded their entry into the welcoming embrace of so many sweetened honeyed pies and freshly baked bread. The aroma caught him off guard for a moment, but Elias’s focus reasserted itself over the delightful scents and sights assaulting his wits. This place smelled like a dream, and Zeb, the little bastard, had already disappeared somewhere within the wonderful maze of goodies on his own personal hunt. Luckily for the both of them, the Stryfer still remembered why they were here. His back against the wall, eyes cast over his shoulder, the mage peered back out into the bustling city street and beyond, keeping a close watch on all those that caught his attention. The old hag may have been looking for a soldier, maybe even a soldier and the scamp accompanying him, but she would have never given a second notice to a quaint little family of three going about their merry market day business. Thankfully, that much had proven true. He saw her now, distracted and distraught, clearly unable to find the thing amidst the crowds that had given her such worry to begin with, meaning the disguise of their acquired company had worked wonderfully, at least for the time being.

It would have to do for now.

"Smoked beef, mushrooms, a round of cheese, some dried cherries, and bread…" The words leashed his attention abruptly, tearing him from his attentions elsewhere and returning them to the auburn haired beauty who he’d so crudely cajoled into joining him. The swordsman smiled a practiced smile at the sight of the filled basket being lifted for his inspection. It only faltered just a smidge when Zeb came floating around the corner, his delight exploding into new found wonder as Shiress coyly nudged a jar of honey into her collection. He’d no doubt filled his pockets to the brim with his own impromptu shopping list by now, but it seemed the sticky sweet substance had been an oversight even his rapacious scrutiny had missed.

Can you imagine what a haul like this would cost back in the Old Quarter?” He smirked, taking the basket with a nod that wasn’t as much grateful as it was begrudging. Being the frugal petch that he was, Elias was already trying to tally up the damage of this debacle without trying to seem too obvious about it. Oh gods, is that the good cheese? Of course she got the good cheese! What is that, a whole silver? Two?!Don't look so surprised. I spent enough years running around West Street and the University to recognize one of the locals when I hear one.” He went on, hoping to distract himself with this new found line of intrigue he’d stumbled upon. He’d taken note of the inflection with curiosity earlier, but it hadn’t been until just then that he’d realized what was catching his ear so. The accent seemed faint, almost obscured, but if Zeltiva had taught him anything, it was how to recognize a Zeltivan. It helped tremendously in avoiding their lot…

That said, if I’d heard a bit of East Street in your tone, I might have just turned right around and run in the other direction.

The jest felt flat, even to its pale purveyor who was clearly distracted yet vainly attempting to keep up appearances. He'd noticed two men were now with the old woman outside, cloaked and concealed in black hoods to deny his prying gaze, but clearly sporting the tell tale signs of weapons hidden beneath their long flowing clothes. Bumps, bulges and sharp corners pressing against their cloaks that a warrior like Elias had spent years teaching himself to keep an eye out for whenever he turned a corner. The three were in heated conversation about something now, and it was something clearly amiss to have invited such an angry look from the wrinkled hag in particular. Whatever it was, it was a complication, but not a necessarily a deal breaker. He and Zeb were still on as far as the swordsman was concerned.

"Sorry." He winced apologetically, returning his cold scrutiny back to Shiress and remembering to lighten his glare into something less ugly and sinister as he did so. "I learned a lot of things as a student at the college there, but I'm afraid a less cringe inducing sense of humor was never one of my lessons."

He studied the girl for a moment in the quiet space between words. As he gazed down upon her lithe form, a jovial expression twisting his scarred features into the softest visage he could manage, something new and altogether wicked was beginning to take form amidst his torn thoughts. Something that was quickly sewing the two contrasting focal points of this peculiar moment into one finely spun web of perfect happenstance. Shiress, this stunning slave who had appeared out of thin air at his feet, perhaps had more of a role to play than merely a cloak of convenience. She could serve as so much more, and maybe that was why Rhysol had placed her upon his path in the first place? Yes, this girl had a purpose, and it was obvious now that he allowed himself to see it.

"Shiress."

She would be his messenger.

"Forgive me."

She would be his harbinger!

"Obey."

His words, his will, his magic, all as one they slithered their way like a serpent into her mind, twisting and contorting her thoughts to match his own. Her feeble defenses, already so weak and undermined, fell in an instant, and in the harrowing moment that followed, Shiress would find herself no longer standing in front of the black clad soldier amidst the sweet smells of the storefront, but instead amidst the buzz and busy crowd outside, her eyes all of a sudden locking with that of an old and surprised merchant woman trying to sell her fruits to any who would take heed. The same old woman Elias had been watching with such interest from the beginning. Having pushed her way through the crowds amidst a haze of magical influence, Shiress's concerns had been absent save all but the alien incentive that drove her forward. Before she could even think of why, the broken slave would find herself handing something to the old woman she hadn't realized was in her clutches. It was a scroll, plain and unmarked, and one the old crone gave a ruefully suspicious glance at.

"Whats this then, lass? For me?"

Slowly, but inevitably, she took the scroll, and Shiress would feel her mind's load lighten as if a great weight had been shifted off her shoulders. In that moment she had been freed of Elias's blinding compulsion, his arcane command completed and her role as his unwilling servant fulfilled. The hag on the other hand, would not be so lucky.

"Alright, lets see what we have here. I'm sure old Valla can-"

The moment the scroll was opened between her gnarled, painted fingers, old Valla's sweet old smile vanished, and all pretenses faded into the wrinkles of her weathered face. In that instant of revelation, the sweet old senile facade she had worn as a mask for decades now came crumbling apart to reveal the cruel, cold eyed truth beneath. Valla was no mere merchant, and whatever she really was underneath it all had been dragged out into the light for just a tick, only to have its back broken with a single unspoken word written on that parchment.

'Castia' bold and red.

To Shiress, it would seem as if nothing at all had nearly brought the old woman to her knees. She swayed and tottered upon her feet, stumbling against her stall for support and even knocking aside the glistening arrangement of apples and pears that had been neatly arranged to catch the eyes of passersby. With trembling hands gripping the paper tightly, she finally managed to look up to Shiress once more, having been lost in the parchment's dreaded meaning for so long. "Tell him..." She paused, swallowing hard as she tried to collect her composure off the floor where it had shattered. "Tell him... he's won."

But Elias already knew as much. With Zeb at his side, basket swinging in bliss, the two of them were already leaving the market, their victory assured without so much as look back over their shoulders.


Here we go!Getting back in the swing of things, one awkward and obscenely late post at a time.

Shiress and I have agreed that for the sake of convenience and pacing, it would be alright if we controlled the other character's action just enough to get the plot rolling.
Last edited by Elias Caldera on December 27th, 2017, 2:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Shiress on December 26th, 2017, 2:46 am

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Old Quarter

Zeltiva

Thoughts of home, the harbinger of confusion, doubt, and an unwilling acceptance. A remembered family, beloved and missed; a loving and free existence, long sought to resume, all truths rerouted to coerce subservience to a malevolent Mistress. A mind laid bare, long molested, and left a bloodied battleground, conditioned to Sayana's hypnotic will.

You have no home, Shiress. You have no one. Only me.

Shiress' gaze fell to the man's lips as he spoke the familiar location, her visage slipping into something depicting heartache, before a reluctant determination drove her eyes downward to the basket as it left her hand, remnants of a crafted perturbation slipping covertly across and through her mind, like a serpent through tall grass.

The slave shuttered, forcing her eyes closed, as if in doing so would also deafen her ears to the naming of the beloved locations of her childhood. She managed to force a smile, and hoped it looked genuine, as if she was fondly remembering and not quaking in fear, anticipating the debilitating onslaught that this topic of conversation usually precipitated.

West Street

The University

East Street

The man fell silent and Shiress used the respite to somewhat compose herself. So, when the man spoke again, she lifted her emerald gaze and managed a more genuine smile. "Dont be sorry.." she said, but her words trailed off, as the warrior's blue eyes bored into her. The look he was giving her was not unlike that of a butcher studying an auctioneer's prized cattle; kindly, but with a spiteful want beneath. Unable to hold the man's blue gaze for long -there was something about those eyes that made the feat almost impossible for the slave- Shiress' eyes began to trail away, but he called her name. She looked up, frowning, then...

She was walking. Shiress knew she was walking, and knew it was okay to be walking, but it was like sleepwalking, in complete darkness, but with more awareness. A familiar awareness. Then she was standing in front of an old woman, handing her a small piece of paper across the table that separated them. When the senior took the proffered item, Shiress felt a snap in her thoughts, like a band breaking, and swayed where she stood, disoriented.

So disoriented was she, that she failed to see the woman's reaction to the delivery. Instead, she dazedly looked back from where she had come. From beside her, she heard the woman speak, but just then, the man in black and Zeb, stepped out of the storefront, with not even a glance her way, only their back's visible, as they turned and walked in the opposite direction from where she had been sent. Completely ignoring the old woman's intended reply, Shiress started off in the same direction, intending on finding out what in the God's names was going on.

She managed a few steps forward, before she was brutally shoved aside as two black clad and fully cloaked figures forced there way past her. As they passed, something beneath the cloak of the one nearer to her caught on her arm, causing the dark fabric to swing open, revealing the sharp angled edge of a crossbow. Shiress stiffened. Who hides a crossbow under their cloak? The two men stopped just ahead and slightly angled to Shiress, their heads together. Shiress moved slowly past the two, pausing to feign interest in some woven baskets aligned along the ground, then chanced a glance beneath their hoods. The look on their faces was so intent and malicious, that she quickly trailed their line of site.

Both sets of eyes were locked on the retreating back's of her earlier companions.

"They are moving." She heard one say, then they, too, were moving.

Heart pounding, the slave moved in behind the stalkers, green gaze flicking from the cloaked figures, to the man and boy. The crossbow carrier leaned in close to the taller figure on the right, the man nodded, pulling something from his cloak. His pace quickened, as a hand holding a scroll went up before him, his voice rising enough for Shiress to make out a repetitive tone.

Shiress froze.

She had seen this before, in the streets of Syliras, with..Kise.

These men meant to kill.

Not knowing why, Shiress bolted forward and done the first thing she could think of; grabbed the top edge of the crossbow protruding through the man's cloak... and yanked. The man stumbled backwards, arms splayed, and, not knowing the warrior's name, Shiress screamed...

"ZEB, BEHIND YOU!"

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Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Elias Caldera on December 27th, 2017, 8:22 pm

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Was that really it?

Yes.

You think a piece of paper is enough to get that old bitch off our backs for good?

Yes.

I don’t know… What did you do to that girl, the angry one I mean? Did she know you? Did she know Valla? If Valla decides to come back, I don’t know-

Valla didn’t grow as old as she is playing this game by being stupid. She’s done because she knows she lost, and the risk is no longer worth the reward.

Castia... Such a pretty name for such a pretty girl. Old Valla had thought herself so clever when she hid her away from the world. That child had been the old hag's only misstep in their little war in the shadows over the past few weeks, and as it turned out, her only weakness. Well Elias had found her granddaughter, and now the hag knew she was beat, her only option to concede and surrender her attempts at bringing Zeb and his gang of misfits under heel. That was his plan, and now that hers were undone, there was nothing stopping him from reaping the rewards.

Family had a way of bringing ruination, and none knew that better than the Caldera.

Elias paused, squinting irritably at Zeb who hurried to catch up to him as they walked. “Will you throw that shyke away already!” He snarled, eyeing the basket of goods he’d absentmindedly had assembled for him at the cost of a girl’s free will. For some reason he didn’t want to look at them anymore, let alone think about the cost, both monetary and otherwise. Zeb however, had different plans, and clutched at the basket as if it were his new born babe being circled by a pack of hungry wolves. He gave the stryfer a dangerous glare, hissing something about “from my cold, dead hands!” before tightening his hold to a chorus of crunches and cracks from the basket’s strain under his embrace. “You don’t how hard it is to come across this much food for us, rich boy. Shay is gonna bust a blood vessel when she sees how good I did. This could feed my little ones for days!

You forget,” Elias grinned wolfishly, his false teeth bared in grim and mocking delight, “Now that our deal is complete, they’re my little ones now.

Zeb didn’t say anything after that, he didn’t get much of a chance to. His name, screamed out in horror and trembling recognition, caught both the Ravokians off guard, their conversation discarded as the two spun on their heels, wide eyed and wary to face whatever new dread awaited them.

It all happened so fast that even the battle hardened mage had little time to comprehend what he was seeing; but what he could make out amidst the mayhem chilled him to the bone. First, he saw the crossbow going off in the middle of a struggle, Shiress the slave girl at the very heart of it as she fought against one of the men he’d recognized from before. The cry of his cloaked compatriot followed swiftly as the misfired bolt caught him in the leg from behind and he began to tumble into the canal. He saw the scroll that one gripped in his hands even as he fell, and he saw the glyphs painted unto the paper too, pointed at him like an executioner’s axe.

Shyke.

He saw them begin to glow, and then Elias saw nothing but a white hot flash of light as the magic was unleashed.

Blinded, he panicked. Dropping to one knee to keep hold of his sense of balance, the world seemed to take entirely too damn long before its shapes and colors returned and his vision became clear once more. When his eyes had finally adjusted again however, Elias realized he had returned to a very different situation that the one he’d blinked away.

Smoldering near inches from his feet ran a blackened line of cracked cobblestone and burning brick than trailed all the way from where the man in the hood had been holding the scroll. From there it had veered off its course, cutting a turbulent path into the canal that had left the waters churned and bubbling. From the canal it had continued unabated, burning its way through a nearby bridge and nearly cutting the thing in half before racing across the face of a building that sat across from where this whole ordeal had first started. The swath of devastation had left sundered mortar and shattered shards of glass raining from the ruined side of the structure, and the bridge fared little better having been brought to precipice of collapse by the might of whatever magic had torn into it with such ferocity.

The scroll had unleashed a bolt -no, a practical storm of lightning with such savagery and power that if it had reached Elias as intended instead of having its trajectory dragged into the canal by its wounded wielder, the Caldera knew there would have been nothing left of him to even bury save his boiled boots.

Such power. Such destruction. It left the mage dumbfounded in its aftermath, but when the gravity of the situation finally became clear, the solider found himself forcing aside both the awe and animalist fear that had taken hold in the attack’s wake, and instead replaced it with the warrior’s instinct that had seen him through so much over the years. Now more than ever, he would need its help. His focus returned in an instant, wrestled under control, it rose slowly to meet that of the crossbowman gawking at him from the other side of the market square.

As their eyes met, realization dawned on both men.

They knew what was about to happen next would decide which one of them was going home that day, and which would not.

As far as Elias was concerned, there was no choice. Already, the res was taking shape in his palm.

The assassin, desperate and furious after his companion’s failed attempt, drove a hard elbow into Shiress’s abdomen, wrenching the crossbow from the interloper’s fumbling grasp and shoving the woman to the ground in one fell swoop. He growled, reaching for another bolt and loading it into his weapon with a steady and practiced hand, his gaze never once leaving his pale quarry as Elias readied his own magical counterattack. A shard of ice, sharp and cruel, had begun to take shape within his grasp, no longer than his hand, but pruned and sculpted into something far more deadly than its glistening frame belied.

The screaming hadn’t taken long to start after that, and soon the market had turned into a frenzy of terror and turmoil as frightened souls made for their escape. The uproar left the square in a dizzying furor as people of all creeds and class pushed and shoved to get away from the madness. Yet while everything else around him was coming apart at the seams, for Elias, time seemed to slow to a crawl, and all of a sudden the swordsman found himself in that incredible, singular moment. It was the moment between you and them. Those fleeting ticks between victory and defeat, between life and death that defined everything that came afterwards. It was a place he knew all too well, a place that he had come to think of as a second home. Ever since he could wield a blade, this was where he knew he belonged. It had raised him. Groomed him. Made him into what he was today.

Here, in that moment he lived for, Elias Caldera thrived.

Snap! Twang!

The bolt was loosed, and so too was the reimancer’s shard of ice, launched from his hand in the same instant.

In the time it took to blink, the stryfer felt the air next to his face sliced in twain by the bolt as it careened by. Something had tugged on his collar, and he could feel a strange wetness on his neck, but he ignored it, focusing instead on the shard as it punctured the heart of the bowman a tick later with a satisfying thud. With a gasp, the man dropped like a sack of stones, dead before he even hit the ground. Hazy and dim eyes fell upon Shiress in that final moment, staring at the girl that had cost them so much, then through her entirely as life forsook him.

Elias wasted little time reveling in his win, and instead drove himself back unto two feet and shouted for Zeb to follow. The two needed to make their departure now lest he have to explain anything to the guard, or worse yet, his brothers in black. “Come on, were moving boy!” he roared into the din of the stampede, but no voice answered him. Frustrated, he turned to find the bastard, and quickly found the kid standing there, still and unmoving as if petrified in place. He was staring down at something, lips working as if to say something, but no words ever made it. As the soldier’s eyes followed suit, he realized with a start what had happened.

The basket fell to the ground in a clatter, its goods spilling across the walkway as Zeb collapsed unto his knees, his hands reaching tenderly for the bolt that now protruded from his side.

With a cry, the warden sprang to his side, sliding into place to catch the young fool before he could fall any further. The stunned fear and bewilderment in his face as he looked up at Elias, still trying to find his voice, and still failing to manage anything more than a squeak. There was no time for words anymore.

With a concentrated effort, the scarred reimancer willed his magic into being, and the eagerly res obeyed, flowing from his fingertips in drooping tendrils before flinging themselves into the nearby canal. One of the ravosalamen there was fighting perilously to keep his craft afloat amidst all the bedlam, but without warning he was suddenly flung into the air by a powerful force crashing into his vessel from beneath. By the time he’d resurfaced to catch his breath and find his wits, he was watching his own ravosala gliding away as if by under its own power, betraying him to a pale man in black who carried in his arms a crying, bloodied boy.

There was no need for a pole as more res was added to the mix, plying the waters beneath the sleek ship into service as it carried the boat along the canal. They couldn’t go under the bridge lest the damn thing collapse upon their heads, so Elias had turned them around and went back the way they came, his magic intent on propelling them the hell out of there as fast as possible until something on the shore caught his attention. Something emerald and pure.

She had saved his life, plain and simple, and it wasn’t because he’d compelled her to or forced her hand. She had done it of her own free will because… well, he didn’t know. In fact, he didn’t why the ravosala had slowed to a stop next to her either, or why he was doing any of this truth be told, he just knew he had to.

With hand outstretched and a tone that left little room for argument, Elias tried to give Shiress something he’d so thoughtlessly stolen from her before.

A choice.

Get on!

Little did he know that the shadow of a man looming behind her had other plans for the both of them.
Last edited by Elias Caldera on February 15th, 2018, 5:24 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Shiress on December 28th, 2017, 9:08 pm

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Shiress held onto the crossbow as if her very life depended upon it, and It very well may have. She felt and heard the bolt release, and all she could do was hope it would miss it's intended target. The next moment, she was bewildered and numbed by a flash of the brightest light that the slave had ever seen. It stunned her, and the attempt to bring down the cloaked figure paused, and in the moment after it had imprinted itself onto her retinas, she found herself writhing on the cobblestone, begging her lungs to take in the air that had just been forcibly removed.

The slave lost the better of a chime, before disabled lobes finally expanded, filling with glorious air, and her vision cleared. Just in time to see another bolt leave the man's weapon. A heart beat later, the cloaked man standing above her collapsed, lifeless beside her, his glazed eyes staring sightless. Shiress clapped a hand across her mouth, stifling an upcoming, instinctual scream, as she saw the projectile protruding from the man's chest and the dark stain spreading around it.

She stared at the prone figure for a horribly long time, before making it to her feet with a stagger. Chest heaving, the slave stumbled away. The market square was in shambles, Ravokian's fleeing in all directions around her. However, Zeb and the man in black were no where to be seen within the mass exodus, and neither was the other cloaked figure -the one with the scroll. Shiress swallowed hard, fighting back her own panic.

What had she gotten herself into? Again?

She followed the rush of crowd, somewhat of her own volition, but her stunned and numbed frame was herded along easily by the evacuating patrons. Elbowing and shoving her way from the throng, Shiress picked her way over strewn rock and glass and pressed her back against what was left of a building -a building that had been intact only chimes earlier.

Wide, green eyes swept the crowd as she again wondered what she had gotten herself into, when something caught her attention. Turning her head with a squint, she caught sight of the familiar figure she had been searching for. Picking her way back across the rubble, Shiress stepped up to the edge of the canal and watched as the ravosala reversed its path and moved toward her. A black gloved hand extended before her, offering an invitation, but all Shiress could see was the pain riddled boy in the man's arms.

"Zeb" Shiress whispered, stunned.

Just as a trembling hand raised to take that of the man in black's, a cold, wet arm wrapped around her chest from behind. Instinct drove her hands around the strong arm, but any struggle was in vain; the man's embrace was like a vice. All attempts to loosen herself from the man's grip abruptly ceased, Shiress stiffened, daring not move, as cold steel pressed against her cheek.

"Put the boy down and get out, Elias, or the bitch dies."

The voice that came from within the hood was a cold and demanding one, and in that moment, Shiress knew that the man easily holding her life at the point of a blade, would just as easily end it. Fear filled, emerald eyes desperately locked on the warrior's scarred face. This man knew nothing of her. Cared nothing for her. Would he let her die? He had already used her and walked away without a backward glance. Beneath the scarred visage, she thought she had seen something -something softer, but now..

Beneath the vice-like grip, Shiress' heart began to pound against her rib cage like a wild, caged bird. There was no doubt in the slaves mind that this hardened man, this Elias, would let her die and then walk away.

But then again, he had come back for her...

"Now! Or she dies!"

The captor's weight shifted and by the way he pressed his body against her's; his weight pulling her to the right, it seemed that the man was favoring his injured, left leg, or so made sense to the slave. Either way, the man was unsteady and She intended to use that weakness to her benefit. So, with a steadying breath, the girl forced her eyes closed, whispered a prayer to what ever God was listening, and thrust back her head as hard as she could manage.

The tall figure grunted with a gasp, as the back of Shiress' head slammed into his chest. His arm loosen it's hold oh so slightly, and Shiress flung herself away, but not before she felt the bite of the dagger, as it slid across her scalp, just above the hairline. She screeched in pain as she slipped free of her opponent, but the man reached out, grabbing a fist full of chestnut locks. Then they were falling onto the cobblestones, Shiress on her belly, the man beside her on his back. The telltale clatter of metal hitting stone rang out beside her and Shiress scrambled hands and knees for the lost weapon.

As soon as her slim fingers wrapped around the hilt, Shiress felt the weight of her foe descend upon her, his arms, once again, attempting to wrap themselves around her. A memory flashed across her thoughts; her Sunberthian master doing the same. In that instant, a dormant and angry monster unleashed itself within her and her hand met with the other on the daggers hilt. Reversing the grip she held, she rammed it backwards above her head, with a feral scream. She felt the blade hit home just before she heard a gasp leave the man's lips that would haunt a hundred of her nightmares.

The cloaked man fell away from her, taking the weapon with him.

Shiress stayed in the same position long enough to heave several breaths, strands of misplaced hair flowing to and from her mouth in time with every in take and exhale of air. The elapsed time from beginning to end was a mere chime, but Shiress felt as if she could have lived a lifetime between. The slave bolted to her feet and all but flung herself at the ravosala and Elias. Holding onto the man's leather clad bicep, she waited for the boat to settle beneath her, then she broke. Blood trickled down her cheek and dripped from the long chestnut hair veiling one side of her face as she pressed her forehead into Elias's arm, trembling. Had she just killed another man? Had she really, truly just killed again?

"I dont want to know." She sobbed, "I never want to know, do you hear me?"

The hand holding onto Elias brushed the head nestled in the man's elbow and the slaves sobs subsided as she remembered the wounded boy the warrior held. She could hear his own sobs coalescing with a pitiful whimpering that brought her eyes forward. He looked so small in the man's arms. A little gasp left her lips when she saw the bolt protruding from the small frame and the blood stain steadily spreading.

"You have to get him to a healer!" she demanded, but even as the words left her lips, she saw the look on the scarred face. Green eyes bored into blue, knowingly, resolutely, then she brushed a sleeve across her face, clearing away the blood from her eye.

"Lay him down."

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Thwarted Attempts (Elias)

Postby Elias Caldera on December 31st, 2017, 6:11 am

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The swordsman was quiet for a long time as they traveled the canals, his mind adrift amidst his own seething sea of thought and speculation.

How had it come to this?

One moment he was putting the final touches to a master plan that had taken him nearly all season to see complete, and in the next, he was covered in blood, his ward and key to all this as good as dead, and now some knife wielding slave girl he had nearly gotten killed as well had gone and gotten herself inextricably entangled in his miserable misfortune to boot.

How had it come to this…

With the waters churned and flowing beneath their vessel, the ravosala’s pace had slowed to something less conspicuous and noticeable, though the fact that no pole guided the boat was still drawing more skeptical glances than the Caldera was comfortable with… plus all the screaming wasn’t helping matters either.

You motherpetcher!

With tears streaming down his face in the moment he had caught the street urchin and held him in his arms, Elias had been abruptly reminded that Zeb was, after everything, just a child in the end. Though as the fear and confusion ebbed just enough to give rise to anger and disbelief, the mage was given another stark reminder that Zeb was still very much Zeb regardless, and no amount of blood loss was going to spare the mage what was coming.

You said this- Ah god! You said this would be easy!

Squirming and hollering all manner of curses and vile insults that would've made even a Zeltivan sailor blush, the boy had quickly devolved into a bloody, wriggling nightmare upon the floor of the boat. The bolt had punctured deep into his flesh and Elias knew all too well the kind of pain such a wound would could bring. He was surprised the little bastard was still conscious, let alone so full of vigor and venom. What also surprised him was the manner in which the slave had taken control of the situation, even if her attempts to bring the lad some modicum of peace were in vain. On occasion he would look down at her from his perch at the back of the ravosala where he pretended to focus upon the magic that kept them mobile. With blood streaming from the knife wound to her head, she looked almost as ghastly a mess as the irascible pickpocket now under her care. By some impossibly lucky coincidence, it was clear she was a healer, but what wasn’t clear, and what truly distracted him so, was how she had managed to slay that assassin who had come for him. She had saved herself with more than just desperation and the god’s favor. The way she had killed that man… it raised more questions than even the Caldera could process.

The main one being why?

Why had she saved his life? What madness had compelled her to dive into fray as she had and stop that scroll from unleashing its horrors upon him and him alone? Did she serve some unseen master’s bidding, was this a ruse to gain his trust, or was she truly so selfless she’d been willing to sacrifice herself for a stranger? No! No one was that maddeningly noble, not in a city like Ravok. Whatever the case, the truth of the matter was still a simple one; if Shiress hadn’t acted, he’d be a dead man, no ifs ands or buts about it.

That strange feeling of guilt as he watched her struggle with the boy took hold again, and some part of him demanded he make amends before anything worse happened to her because of his foolishness.

Listen, slave, leave the boy, he's not your concern.

You vagik!” Somehow, amidst all his squirming, Zeb had managed to get his hand on a stray bucket laying at the bottom of the boat. He’d promptly chucked it at Elias’s head, whose expression and tone hadn’t changed from the conciliatory one he’d been trying to use for Shiress’s sake.

If he dies, I will find another. His kind are a dime a dozen.

Next came a fishing rod. The tackle box accompanied it soon after, but Elias deftly avoided both.

I’ll petching kill… I’ll petching- I’ll.

And like that, the battle ended, and Zeb was silent.

Panic gripped the swordsman by the throat as the boy drifted away. Whether it was into unconsciousness or death’s embrace, he couldn’t tell. He turned the Shiress expectantly, cold, hard eyes demanding an answer to his unspoken question as Zeb’s arms went limp and fell lifeless at his sides. He was about to rise and push her aside to discover the truth for himself when the boat suddenly bucked and bounced violently against the docks they’d unknowingly slipped into.

They were here.


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



God damn you, whore, I didn’t ask for your vexxum lip, I asked for a room and bloody privacy. Now get out of my way or so help me-

The slap took him by surprise and nearly popped him out of his boots. His eyes bulged in fury, but as he turned on her again, another blow caught him, and this time he was sure one of his false teeth had been popped out of place.

You have some nerve, Caldera.” The tall woman hissed between golden piercings. Lexa was an exotic beauty to put it mildly, bronze skinned and buxom, she had all the curves and bounce that drew men wild, but for Elias, it was her accent that had caught his attention when they'd first met. A strange and almost mesmerizing thing that came from so far away it strained the imagination to picture anything being that far south. Unlike the other whores at the House of Immortal Pleasures however, her hands were not all velvet and honey, instead they bore callouses from hard work and past toil. A fact that would have explained the brightening redness in Elias’s cheek. That, and all her accursed, petching rings.

Her emerald eyes glared defiantly into his, unwavering in the face of the sword clearly strapped to his back or the bleeding boy in his arms.

Lexa, damn it-

No.” She raised a commanding hand that seized his tongue in its place. Even as scantly clad as she was, with all her distracting little golden chains and transparent silks, she still controlled an air about her that left him hesitant to open his mouth again lest her next blow snapped his jaw. She turned briefly to glare at Shiress for a split second, her expression particularly hard to read in the dim and hazy ambience of the brothel. When her gaze swept back to Elias, he had to restrain himself from flinching. “I will not waste anymore words on you, Caldera. Just know that I have kept a tab of what you owe me.

Owe you?! Listen her you wretched slag-

And now the debt is doubled.

You bitch!” He growled, overcome with an impotent rage only this blasted woman had ever elicited out of him.

Tripled, and I’m adding a cleaning fee for your bloody friends here.” She said curtly, crossing her arms and turning her back on the rag tag trio with an infuriating ‘harrumph.’

Woman, can’t you see this is not the time. Look at us for Rhysol’s sake.” He hefted the practical corpse in his grasp and even went so far as to shake it at her so as to punctuate his point. Zeb grimaced and moaned quite convincingly, but Lexa barely lifted her gaze over her shoulder to respond. “You think I haven’t seen stranger kinks in this place… within the last bell?

Elias was practically vibrating with anger. “I am a soldier of the Ebonstryfe, you will-

Oh, well why didn’t you say so, soldier boy? I’ll give you the Ebonstryfe discount- Triple!

Alright!” He barked, frustration reaching its zenith as all other options other than acquiesce seemed to have fled with his good sense. “Alright. Whatever you bloody well want, I swear I’ll make good. Lexa… Lexa look at me.” The sudden shift of his tone into something altogether defeated and humble seemed to catch the prostitute off guard, and she finally turned around to face him. “Please,” he said, taking a step closer as Zeb groaned within his hands, “I need a room, and I need supplies. I can’t let this boy die, Lexa…

After a while, her expression softened and Elias knew he had broken through. He always did. “Up the stairs, first one on the right.” She sighed, waving a dismissive hand that sent Elias scurrying without another word. He made sure Shiress followed close. If he lost the poor slave now in a place like this, he wasn't sure he'd ever find her again. “You should have just taken him to the Healing Hand you fool, but I’ve got a man who can stitch him up for you, I’ll send one of the girls to go fetch him.

No,” the Ravokian snapped back, feet still climbing the accent with the boy in hand. He looked to Shiress with a curious gaze. “I’ve got my own… and Lexa, if you tell anyone ab-

Her hazel orbs hardened in an instant, and she jabbed a painted nail at him with all the fury of a blademaster’s sword. “If this is the part where you threaten me to keep your petching secret, Caldera…” But Elias knew better and promptly fled up the stairs and away from her wrath.


ReceiptI'm gonna say 30g for everything, groceries included.
Last edited by Elias Caldera on February 15th, 2018, 5:18 am, edited 4 times in total.
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Elias Caldera
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