Open Either Way, You're Gettin' Wet

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Not found on any map, Endrykas is a large migrating tent city wherein the horseclans of Cyphrus gather to trade and exchange information. [Lore]

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Either Way, You're Gettin' Wet

Postby Konrad Venger on January 3rd, 2017, 1:26 am

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16th Bell - 40th Day of Winter, 516AV - Upper Lari Lake, Sea of Grass


Calendar EventThe Conclave vote unanimously to ignore the normal path of The Run for a small portion of Winter's journey. Instead of tracking north towards the Bluevein River, the horseclans hold south and make camp along Lari Lake instead. The city rests on the northern bank for ten days from the 36th to the 45th. To prevent the spoiling of the water source and the fouling of the camp, the clans condense their herds and drive them around the lake and along Lari River in large numbers. Extra hands are pulled as well as every willing body to defend the livestock. The Watch sets double patrols around the city as well as Webbers to monitor the herds.

Fishing is encouraged especially since there appears to be no huntable game nearby. A Watch patrol discover a cluster of old canoes made from hollowed out tree trunks. These are free to use by all but the elders and ankals ask that people be respectful of the needs of others and limit their time to two bells.

Players: Players are welcome to have fun with this event. At this point, I am not going to moderate any threads though I am always open to interrupting your plans. Do not engage any wildlife aside from fish and waterfowl during this time frame. The entire area is void of animals except the ones owned by the Drykas and listed in the previous sentence.


Before he'd ever known how to gut a man, he knew how to gut a fish. That was thanks to his mother.

She'd been a fishwife in Baroque Bay, which always stank of the sea's bounty (and effluence). Every day tons of wrigglers had been hauled ashore and they all needed to be treated somehow. Most times they were just beheaded and salted and sent along to whatever market would sell them, but his mother was always on hand to go some dressing, too.

Extra duties for extra mizas, of course. She was always like that. Either doing more or cutting corners, whichever got her better compensated. So some nights Konrad watched as she went through a great, stinking basket of fresh fish, scaling and cutting and gutting and salting and leaving the next morning with scores of fillets fit for the kitchen.

Watch something enough times - even help out some, when her hands were too sore and the bells were late - and you're going to remember it, know how to do it. A quarter-century later, that hadn't changed.

Getting them was a bitch, though.

Konrad grunted and finished making the rude little pyramid of twigs and sticks outside his tent. Around him, the Pridesun Pavilion was a beavering hive of activity, all of it soggy and smelly. Water had been found, and with it, and abundance of fish! Men and women who'd grown half-mad on salted lamb and steppe nuts were catching as much fish and fowl as they could, and Konrad thanked himself again for getting that shyke done good and early.

He closed his eyes and readied his djed before remembering the tinder box he had. This wyrd he had was a wonder, truly, but it didn't suit to get over-reliant on anything. The metal rasped and scraped a dozen times against the flint, little showers of sparks spattering onto the dead fire until...

Konrad smiled, and made a note to make it bigger. His breeches were still soaking.

That accomplished, the Sunberth man sat down with his legs crossed and drew the hunting knife that he always kept fine enough to split hairs. Most would assume that was in case he ever needed to kill a man with it, and they would be partially right. Just not a big partial.

Sharp knives and patience. Half the job of cooking, right there.

He reached over and grabbed the scaly morsel he'd caught, thumb scraping along the ragged arrow wound that had killed it. He knew that nets and rods were the best preferred means but, well, he didn't have those. He had a few hooks with little string, and a bow and arrows. So he'd improvised.

"Now," he mumbled to himself, as he straightened the fish on its side and he made the first cut, a half-Leth behind the fin, on the side of the fish. "Lesse if I 'member how t'do this..."

The fins nicely sliced out of the equation, he moved on to the head, or just behind it. It was the feel of it, that's where the real skill came in. He went in smoothly, metal probing a quarter-inch at a time until... and there was the backbone. He licked his lips and squinted, though everything was under the scales, of course.

He cut down the back of the fish, from the top to the tail, deep enough that he could pull the freshly-made fillet from the rest of the carcass with his bare hands. He peered inside and frowned, spying little ridges of white bone where he'd left the spine attached. He kept pulling until he'd peeled a half-foot-long strip of scale and flesh from the fish like a banana, then cut it loose.

Konrad held it up to the ever-staring Syna, studying his work. His hands would stink for bells, but he was pleased. There were still shreds of bone in the fillet, but he could pick those out later. And hells, if they weren't too big or too solid, then why bother? Long as no-one choked on them...

He turned the fish over, slapping it onto the desiccated side, and repeated the process. He cursed softly as the blade went too far, juddering gently as he cut through bone. When he peeled that side off, he frowned at the jagged length of bone attached to it, and knew that would take longer to prepare.

But the first one? He skewered that on the end of a stick and left it sizzling over the fire for a chime or two. He had other business.

Lari Lake was a curious calamity of water, scale, shell, fur and hooves that day. The Drykas had driven their herds of horses, cattle, lambs and goats into the water, knowing how close to death many of them were and how pointless it would be to try and draw enough water out by bucket. Endrykas was a moving city, and it would take days to water all of them. Easier to bring the Wind Oak to Sylir, as it were.

Konrad walked to the edge, until the rustle of his boots was replaced by wet squelches instead and he could feel the bottom of them soak. Before him, shaggy cattle bobbed through the water, horns like the fins of sharks. Horses danced and frolicked and goats trotted through the surf. Hundreds. Thousands. A city's worth, after all.

His lips twitched as he wondered if Dapple was out there. He figured the pasture had put their animals in there, too.

"Damn well better be takin' care a' him."

Not that he'd be surprised if they weren't, though. Konrad knew he wasn't too popular among Endrykas, especially not beyond Jonas Pridesun and his litle band of zealots. If it wasn't for the debt he owed the unhinged old man, Konrad would have been gone, but still... it irked him.

Had he scragged anyone? Had he even raised his voice? Thrown a punch? No, because he was a killer, not an idiot, and intended to die an old, rich one. But it was the same complaint, the same reason that he'd heard so many times it didn't even hurt anymore. It was just how things were.

They took one look at him, and saw trouble. Mutilation means monstrosity, and Konrad knew it. So he was alone and apart, in all things. Trapping and training, errands and minor adventures, it was just him, as if he were a leper.

"Aaaaaaaahhhhhh..."


Konrad made the water yellow and let his head roll around on his shoulders as he drained the dog into the lake. He spat at the same time and seemed to direct both sources of fluid towards the Drykas sprawled out with their herds.

"Sod the horse-petchers," he said to himself, buttoning his breeches back up and wandering back to his cooking. "Hardly be the first time f'me, would it?"




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Note: As of Fall 517AV, Konrad is known only as "Hansel" in Endrykas
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Either Way, You're Gettin' Wet

Postby Konrad Venger on January 6th, 2017, 8:59 am

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Seven bells earlier, and Konrad was starting to get bloody annoyed.

"Bloody shyking petching bollocks!"

A waterfowl nearby looked up furtively and set it's wide little bird eyes on the curious biped apparently doing a dance on the shore of the lake. It hadn't seen such a thing before. Clearly the biped was angry, it could feel that sharp, dangerous heat radiating off it from where it stood - but it didn't seem to be directing it at the fowl.

No. At the lake. Which was even more curious.

Konrad glared at the arrow sticking up uselessly from the sand and shale under the surf, pinning exactly bugger-all down there. The fat little fish he'd aimed at had shot off the second it broke the water, and now the shallows around him were emptied of life. He cast up his eyes and saw Syna unblinking above him. Already it was too petching hot. Another few bells and he would have to seek shelter, but his growling stomach kept him out there.

That and his pride, soaking legs be damned.

Really, it was a stupid thing to be so difficult, in his opinion. It wasn't like he was trying to shoot a bird flying or a deer running; he was trying to skewer a fish, practically at his feet. What was so hard about that?

"Must be the water," he mumbled, trying to reason his way out of his black, usless mood. He notched another arrow and willed himself to calm. "Make 'em... look like where they're not, or sumfin'."

It seemed logical, and so he decided to watch. Just like he watched the Drykas on the other side of the Lake, stalking through the surf as if they were in the grasslands, bows half-pulled as they scoured the shallows. Now and then one would pause, slowly raise his weapon... aim and pull, utterly still save for their arm... then the arrow would fly and, invariably, an impaled fish would be pulled triumphantly from the water.

More than a bell he'd been out there, and where was his sodding triumph?

You've been firing that thing for a score of days, he reminded himself, flexing his bare toes in the water and enjoying the cold sensation tickling his feet. More time, more practice, better results.

So stop being a big kid.


He waited. He watched. Let Syna toast his legs, half-exposed with his breeches rolled up past his knees. It took chimes, but the fish trickled back into his little patch. Didn't have much as far as memory went, and soon the need to hunt fresh food drove them away from the safety of the deeper water and into the shallows.

Although, judging by the chaos in the lake, there wasn't much safety to be had.

Thousands of animals called Lake Lari home now. The Drykas were watering and cleaning them all at once, and Konrad guessed that the fish and eels were either fleeing further down, or out to the edges of the lake. He'd asked before about granidles, and the Pridesun Drykas just chuckled and shook his head.

"Not likely," he said, with a shrug and what Konrad could see was an attempt at humor. "Still... not unheard of."

The mercenary was not amused. He kept a very close eye on any "logs" that just happened to be floating close by.

Eventually, flickering flashes of silver were at his feet again. They came hesitantly at first, unsure of these strange, warm, fleshy and thick roots sprouting from the mud. But they weren't moving, so after a furtive nibble - thank buggery they haven't got much in the way of teeth - they were soon gliding around him... and Konrad raised his bow.

He thought it out. He didn't have the time, the practice, the raw skill to just aim down his arrow and bang, hit what he aimed at. He had to consider what he was doing, and what would affect that action. He thought about the water, lapping up... nearly up to his knees. About a foot, and the fish were lower than that. Would the water mar his vision of them that much? He assumed, but... if he could find one who was still, waiting, slower...

Size. He wanted a big one. Less chance of missing a big target, but those juicy sods were less common in the shallows. Konrad guessed they didn't survive to be big unless they were wary. He licked his lips. Sweat was dribbling down his face and he decided he was getting a drink after this shot.

Something a foot long came hoving into view, edges blurred and shimmering under cover of the water. It was green with black stripes like a tiny, aquatic tiger, dwarfing the spit-fast minnows around it. It came closer, and Konrad sighted down his arrow.

First things first: don't hit your bloody toes.

It wasn't in a hurry, but didn't know the danger. Konrad wondered if fish could see out of the water. If they could, would they even know what danger looked like? Probably just anything that wasn't them, that seemed to be the way of most animals. Konrad breathed shallow, not wanting his heaving chest to spook the fish, or the motion spoil his aim.

Stop, you little sod... just for a moment...

The fish dipped lower and found something worthy of attention. It was sucking or nibbling at a rock just to Konrad's right, and he pulled the string all the way back... closed one eye...

Everything swam in the water, mostly because of it. Still as it was, the bass looked like it was dancing, jumping, moving up and down and Konrad's lips pressed into an irritated line. He had to keep staring, trying to guess which of the up-and-down images was the real one.

He swallowed. Time to find out-

TWANG

SHUNK

"... shyke!"


He got it, but just barely! The arrow crashed through the water, bow that could send it hurtling hundreds of paces making the four-foot-journey take place in less than a blink. The fish was fast, though, turning to flee-

-too slow, and the arrow ripped through it's tail-

-but it was still thrashing, willing to rip it's own tail apart to get away-

"No you bloody don't-!"

Konrad dropped the bow and lunged at it without a beat of worry. His hands plunged into the lake and a minor wave crashed into his face, cold and bracing and blinding for an instant. His hands shot out and a slimy, slippery body was under his hands, and he squeezed, gripping it wherever he could find a purchase-

-before pulling it out, curtain of droplets made into a diamond rain as the fish twitched in the open air, and Konrad twisted to the side-

-tossed the fish onto the mud to die.

He picked up his floating bow and waded ashore. Part of him was still alert, in case by some stupid miracle the sod managed to flop his way all the way back into the water. But luck was, finally, favoring him. The fish's struggles became weaker and weaker and Konrad wondered idly how best to quickly kill it. Where was it's heart? Would a knife be too much? How would-

CRACK

A tiny head jerked back up a few dozen yards away and blinked at that same biped swinging a fish over its head by the tail and bashing its head against a rock. It seemed to make it very happy.

Such a strange breed.

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Note: As of Fall 517AV, Konrad is known only as "Hansel" in Endrykas
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Konrad Venger
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Either Way, You're Gettin' Wet

Postby Konrad Venger on January 7th, 2017, 7:52 am

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Just like he'd learned to cut up a fish from his mother, Konrad had learned to cook one. But while the shack he'd grown up in wasn't much better than living wild, it had a proper stove in one corner, and he had but a simple fire with a sharpened stick.

So he decided that overdone was better than raw, and just made sure it was good and blackened before he started ripping the fillet apart.

As he peeled the sizzling meat from the crispy skin with his teeth, he watched the parade of humanity across the lake. Endrykas never stopped, like any other city. It couldn't. A hundred moving parts needed to be constantly in motion, just to ensure it survived, and Konrad saw hundreds of Drykas go about the important business of herding, hunting, fishing, cooking, darning, sewing, a dozen more pursuits.

He slurped down the rest of the first fillet and gnawed thoughtfully at the skin. Not one to waste a scrap, was Konrad. The rest of the fish - comically grotesque now, with the goggle-eyes still staring from an untouched head, set above a body now just a skinned backbone with a ragged fin at the end - would go back to the pavilion with him. Throw it in a pot with some water and broth, and it'd make a good enough stew to sustain a man.

A hawk keened overhead and Konrad peered up from underneath his hat. It was lost in Syna's glare, save for the shadow that flickered across it. Another bell and there'd be worse than buzzards circling, and not just in the sky. The noise and smell and sheer numbers of Endrykas were keeping the true predators of the Sea of Grass at bay for now, but when night fell...

Maybe not even then, Konrad thought warily, moving on to the second filet and the rest of his dinner. Bastards are desperate.

He bit down a little too fast and cursed his burned lips as the fish finally got some measure of revenge against him. Glared and puffed his cheeks, shaking his head to toss the flaming piece of fish around in the hollow of his mouth before swallowing it. He blew on the rest and took his time, the last of it cool as a breeze when he gulped it down... followed swiftly by the skin.

Feet beat a crashing, crunching staccato through the undergrowth and Konrad turned to face the noise. One hand hovered near his kopis, an old habit he was unwilling to break... even when a young couple burst from the reeds, all smiles and giggles and affectionate hands dancing in the air around each other-

"Oh... d-didn't see you."

Konrad blinked dully as the girl stammered out the world, he mate giving him the perfunctory "don't be making eyes at/disrespecting my girl" glare that males across the multiverse seemed to perfect by the time they were in their adolescence. Konrad blinked at that, too.

For a few awkward ticks, the threesome just stood and squatted there in silence. Konrad tried to make out clan markings but was getting nothing. Just breeches and leather straps, typical Drykas wear, along with bows over their shoulders. A few more went by, and there were no more words... so he turned his back and picked up the two other fish he'd speared - arrow'd? - that day.

The male muttered something that Konrad couldn't make out all the way. "To", "him" and... "it"? Yes, that seemed to be most of it. "Leave him to it"? Either way, they scampered off and not a tick later there was that damned giggling again, Konrad rolling his eyes as he pierced the two fish with hooks under their mouths. He tied the hooks to a single string that he'd rest over one shoulder, an easy way to carry them back to the pavilion that left his hands free.

"Kids," he muttered, in the classic tones of a man who was openly contemptuous and secretly, slightly, undeniably envious. But they served another purpose, too: time for him to get moving.

He hadn't taken much; just what he needed. Bow, arrows in a quiver, his useless trapping kit in a knapsack because, hey, you never knew when it might be useful. He kicked and slid mud and dirt onto the fire until it was nothing but half-buried smoke, hooking the desiccated bass he'd eaten onto a spare hook, then tying it with the rest, flapping gently across his back.

Not a bad day, he thought. He'd eaten well, practiced skills that neded honing if he wanted to survive out there, and would return to Jonas Pridesun with food for his people. Or, in Konrad's understanding of things, show he was still worth keeping around.

For now, he reminded himself, eyes always to the future, soon as we get close to a proper sodding city-

Something honked in the reeds. Something close. Konrad stopped: walking, moving, breathing, all of it. His eyes swiveled in their sunken sockets and when he heard it again - comical and definitely avian - he licked his dry lips and pondered...

... sod it. Worth a try.

Slowly, painfully so, he crouched down and shrugged off the knapsack and the fish. Took up his bow instead, notching an arrow. He didn't straighten back up all the way; settled into a crouch and kept his eyes on the reeds and the arrow drawn halfway back.

Around him, Endrykas howled and bleated and whinnied and shouted and lived. Konrad listened to it all, then made it grow smaller in his head. Focused instead on the sound not yet to be made, until-

"Honk!"

Once to get his attention. Twice to get a direction. Thrice to get a bearing. With that in mind, Konrad stalked into the reeds, body parting them, feet sinking into the cold, thick mud.

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Note: As of Fall 517AV, Konrad is known only as "Hansel" in Endrykas
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Konrad Venger
Long is The Way and Hard
 
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Either Way, You're Gettin' Wet

Postby Konrad Venger on January 8th, 2017, 6:28 am

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Konrad wasn't much of a reader, but he didn't mind watching a mummer's show now and then. They were always entertaining, at least the ones about the old nights and rogues, monsters and fire-beasts, gods and men crazy or desperate enough to stand against them. Of course, it was their skill with weapons he particularly liked hearing about. How they could become artists with steel, or arrows. Armies and daemons were just trifles before them: all they needed was a sword in their hand or a clear line of sight to their enemy, and that was that.

The older he got, the more Konrad realized the most important thing the mummers left out: the decade or so of grinding sodding practice you had to go through to be that good.

Now it's your turn.

A couple of bells after he caught his first fish, Konrad was still wading through the shadows, bow and arrow in his hands, and not much else. He didn't know if fish could speak to each other, but they seemed to be spreading the word: "Steer clear of that part of the shore, the one with the big guy in the hat on it!"

But word hadn't got around to them all, apparently. Something that looked like a long smudge of black-and-green paint bobbed and glided through the water a few yards to his side. At once he stopped moving. He'd seen how quickly they reacted to movement, especially under the water. He brought up the bow, slowly, drawing it as he went, until the feathers of the arrow were tickling his cheek by the time he aimed down the shaft.

Come on... little closer...

He had no idea what it was called, but it seemed to have a couple of little whiskers growing out of its mouth... and seemed to like flies. They were more common on the water than fish, or so it seemed, and Konrad had to bite down the urge to swat and smack and crash them out of the sky whenever they landed on him. Not just them, but a whole crowd of odd little bugs that rowed and scooted their way across the surface of the lake. Konrad had studied them once or twice, marveled in his silent, stoic fashion how they seemed to treat the top of the lake as no less solid under their feet at dirt was under his.

Now his fascination had some benefit: he'd found a fish that liked to come up close to the surface, expose itself and not allow the water to cloak it with its dazzling mirage. Konrad tracked it with the head of his arrow, feeling his healed-but-weak shoulder start to twinge. Tremors were only ticks away. But still the fish wasn't close enough.

A fat, black bug with legs like oars capered obliviously across the water, and the carp roared up like a sea monster to gulp it down-

TWANG

-and Konrad knew he'd get no better chance, letting fly the arrow, trying to make sure that his fingers were the only things on his body that moved-

"Gotcha!"

The carp was still coming up when the arrow struck it, rowing insect still trapped in its mouth. If it was already swimming down and away, maybe he would have missed it, but luck, for the moment, was with the human, not the fish. Three feet of honed wood topped by three inches of broad, tough and far-more-honed steel crashed through it with ease. Instantly the water around it became a froth of spastic, desperate, primal struggling-

-ended when Konrad lashed out with his free hand, fingers feeling around frantically until he found-

-the shaft and-

-lifted the whole fish-and-arrow mess out of the water... with difficulty

"Heavy sod, aincha?!"

One hand wasn't going to do it. He dropped his bow and grabbed the arrow with two hands, the carp only struggling harder. Konrad respected that, in some quiet corner of his mind. Mortally wounded, out of its element, moments away from Dira, and all it did was keep fighting.

Maybe that's all it can think of.

The arrow grew slippery. His shoulder was on fire. Konrad flashed a look to the shore and heaved with a wild yell-

-carp cartwheeling through the air, gaping in utter, uncomprehending surprise-

-before smacking onto the shore-

Crack

"Ah... sod it."

It was the angle it had landed that did for the arrow. As Konrad got closer, he could see the shaft had snapped in two under the weight of the fish, but enough was still inside to finish it. Now there was not struggling, just pitiful, reflexive gaping. Black eyes that already looked dead were staring at him as a gummy mouth worked dumbly under... gods, they really did look like whispers.

Got to watch that, next time, Konrad said to himself as he held the fish steady with one hand and drew out the arrow with the other. These ain't cheap.

His hand jerked out, arrow held tight. Even snapped in half, it was still tipped with a steel head, and went straight through the carp's eye, and the tiny brain behind it. One more gasp, and Konrad could swear he felt the ghost of breath on his wrist... then it was dead.

"... shyke, the bow!"

Muttering curses imaginative, exotic and unlikely, Konrad ran back into the shallows.

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Note: As of Fall 517AV, Konrad is known only as "Hansel" in Endrykas
User avatar
Konrad Venger
Long is The Way and Hard
 
Posts: 923
Words: 1060755
Joined roleplay: November 23rd, 2015, 4:05 pm
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Either Way, You're Gettin' Wet

Postby Konrad Venger on January 8th, 2017, 9:29 am

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Now, as the afternoon waned into the evening, Konrad clutched that bow and walked in the steps of hunters timeless. Before him, his father, before humans and Drykas and Myrians, before nations had names and men spoke them, there were those who walked as he did. Some rude weapon clutched in their hands, their only other aids their wits and senses. Tracking down prey through grass or sand or jungle or wood.

Konrad was not alien to such an adventure, in the broadest understanding. He'd hunted rats through the sewers in Sunberth, in those hazy, early years. When he couldn't beg or steal bread, he'd resorted to other means, and his home under the city had its own bounty. Fetid and clawed and broiling up from gutters and tunnels, they'd fought back with a man-hating ferocity that only urban animals could possess.

He still killed them. Skinned them, most times. Ate them half-cooked over garbage fires, setting and mien every inch as savage as a Myrian or a Zith, thousands of leagues from such dark climes.

Now he was a man, and his weapons were improved, as was his quarry. But his expression was the same. He was not driven by hunger now, not in the immediate understanding of it. His stomach wasn't growling but it would, and the added motivation of the Pridesun folk praising him was strong.

Their praise would be useful. Such was how Konrad saw the world. Things were of use, or they were not. They aided him or stymied him. He knew how to handle both, and right now, that involved an arrow through the heart of-

There you are.

He stopped himself from whispering the word when he saw the blue-and-white bird through the grass. The image was diced up by a screen of stalks but he could make it out well enough. Sitting atop some nest of scrap and straw, probably eggs under it. He wondered if it was female, which seemed likely, and if the male would soon return-

Stop overthinking! Make your shot before it moves!

He raised the bow, drew, aimed... all motions he did separately, carefully. One day they would be reflexive, he was sure. He didn't need to think about breaking a man's nose with his crown, or his fist, or use his elbow and knees as efficiently as another man might a hammer. He just did them. One day, it would be the same with this bow, but for now... patience...

Konrad lined up his shot. Squinted down the shaft and rested the broad, flat tip of the arrow across the center of the duck. Maybe fifteen yards. A cough, a sputter, a slip and the thing would see him. Maybe bolt. He couldn't waste any time, not with all Endrykas providing endless chances for some other careless bastard to ruin his chance.

He breathed in. Held the breath, lest the motion spoil his aim, and flicked his fingers-

-from curled to straight-

-letting fly-

The duck screamed, high and ragged and squawking in agony. It flapped crazily but only with one wing; the other was pierced and half-pinned to it by the arrow, and it just flopped around on the bed of reeds, fat blue eggs under it revealed. Konrad made a note to grab them, too. Nothing to waste, after all. But for the moment he closed in faster, drawing his hunting knife. The duck wouldn't escape, not crippled. He just had to finish it before it got over that log-

that

split

and

Teeth. So many teeth.

That was all Konrad remembered from that instant. The log reared up as if struck by a tidal wave and in an awful, endless tick, Konrad saw water and scum stream off scales like knightly armor. Half the log seemed to break down the middle and ranks of teeth gaped at Syna as if they would tear it in half. The duck careened towards it, mad with pain, with fear-

CRUNCH

It was gone. A single feather fluttered away from the space it had occupied. Replaced instead by a vast set of jaws that ground bone and gristle as if they were toffee, red-rimmed reptile eyes staring above them with endless, remorseless hunger.

"PETCH ME!"

Konrad ran, and faced with such a thing, no man would call him coward. The granadile was sating itself on fresh duck and so gave no chase, but even if Konrad had worked that out, it wouldn't have mattered. He flew across the mud that had seemed to sucking and impassable moments before; exploded through rows of reeds like a boulder hurled by a trebuchet. By a miracle he remembered to snatch up the fish he'd left, his knapsack, and only by doing so did some vestige of his reason come back to him.

Not that it slowed him down. There could have been more. That one alone could have been hungry again moments later, and could they run on land? They had feet, didn't they?

Konrad didn't wait to find out. He didn't look back, not once, until lake-side mud became steppe scrub and he was back among the Horse Lords.

||Common||Thoughts||Pavi||Fratava||Myrian||Other's Speaking||
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Note: As of Fall 517AV, Konrad is known only as "Hansel" in Endrykas
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Konrad Venger
Long is The Way and Hard
 
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Either Way, You're Gettin' Wet

Postby Rufio on January 27th, 2017, 10:50 am

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g r a d e


xp

Observation +3
Wilderness Survival, Plains +1
Cooking +2
Weapon, Hunting Knife +1
Weapon, Shortbow +3
Logic +2
Planning +2
Fishing +2
Organization +2
Hunting +1
Bodybuilding +1
Philosophy +1
Running +1



lores

Cyphrus: Lari Lake
Konrad: Always an outsider
Philosophy: What is useful, matters
Perseverance: More time, more practice, better results
Wilderness Survival: Striking a fire & putting one out
Cooking: Requires sharp knives & patience
Cooking: Filleting fish
Cooking: Fish over open fire
Cooking: Fish bone broth
Fishing with a bow
Fishing: Carp
Fishing: Water refraction impedes aim
Hunting: Waterfowl
Weapon, Shortbow: Less chance missing bigger targets
Cyphrus fauna: Granadile


penalties
- 1 arrow
Light sunburn wherever Konrad was exposed healing in 9 days without/7 days with treatment


rewards
+ carp fish


  
Rufio
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Joined roleplay: June 21st, 2015, 10:40 pm
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