Avatar of Shienvien

Status

User has no status, yet

Bio

User has no bio, yet

Most Recent Posts

Jordan Forthey


The stranger made a slight annoyed sound, then leaped from his position not unlike some wild animal, a cat or some such. It was at least three meters, was it not? The guy was not large, but he wasn't that much slighter than Jordan himself, either. It should have been rather impactful landing, no? He had been right. This was by no means some regular vagrant. The stranger was, at minimum, very well-trained. And more likely to be a combatant than some errant circus performer. Very likely to be somehow magically enhanced. Small feats like these looked easy. Jordan knew full well they weren't.
"Then no, Forthey, errand boy of 'The Viper,' I do not know anything on the supposed happenings of Zerul, whateverintheplanesthatis."
Did the stranger take him for a fool? He knew he was lying, even when he did not know what he was lying about. Another part of Jordan quickly noted: right time, right place, wrong name. The stranger had been waiting for someone, had he not? More than likely, someone whose face he had not seen, but whose name - or whose master's name - he knew... The stranger had been willing to talk until he said a name he was not expecting, had he not? Damn it!
The year and a half he had spent as a guard - this guy was obviously up to something shady! - and his earlier thirst of adventure ... and his his own personal curiosity stated he should intervene. His self-preservation instincts disagreed. Both from natural intuition and what training Sir Yanin had managed to get through to him, he knew this man was extremely dangerous, involved in something shady, and no doubt more skilled than him, as well as rather annoyed by someone unanticipated bothering him. But, he had some kind of duty as a squire, even if he wasn't currently on duty as a guard, right?
Some part of him was also annoyed in turn. Errand boy? No, not at all ... that was something he had decided to do on his own accord. Apprentices could do more than just fulfill whatever tasks their masters desired of them. Especially when said masters had wandered off to do something they appeared unwilling to reveal, too.
For a couple of moments he stood still, watching the stranger rush past him and head towards some more secluded street. No ... if he was to talk to the stranger, then a less public place would hardly do.
"Hey!" he started after the stranger, who immediately whirled around and grabbed hold of the fabric covering his chest.
"I don't know anything, boy!" Cold, annoyed voice was gone. Now the guy sounded like an animal.
Jordan's heart was suddenly beating too hard and fast again, his breath was momentarily caught in his throat, and this time, his hand actually did close around the grip of his sword ... though the dagger would probably have been more useful in an encounter this close. Dumb mistake.
Luckily, the stranger let go almost as quickly as he had grabbed hold of him, and seemed more intent on rushing off than continuing to confront him. "Hack! I-I know nothing, as I said..." Perhaps somewhat unluckily, Jordan was also riled up enough to argue, rather than let go of the matter and shamefully drag himself before his master and admit that he had found something suspicious he could not figure out on his own. Could still go either way ... could end with a rather irritated Viper of Glades, or one who was actually impressed. Granted, he was as of yet unsure whether Sir Yanin even did "impressed". More disconcertingly, it was also possible he had followed him, and was already making judgments...
"I know you're lying," he stated at the stranger's back. "And I know you're meeting up with someone today, and that he was not supposed to be me. I don't know whether you'd prefer to speak to my master rather than I, but we might be able to help you, and you us."
What was he getting himself into?
Ah, must have somehow read the years as months... Curious, though; I'd imagine cities would be much more dangerous. Very many nosy guards and people who might be capable of sensing him, always someone within shouting distance, people having friends nearby and noticing missing people ... whereas in some very secluded places, one could be dead for weeks or months without anyone realizing. Or feasibly get lost in a forest and be eaten by a bear.

And indeed. The Viper? Not likely to have heard of 'im. Sir Yanin Glade? Probable.
"The Viper" on its own is not known at all - "The Viper of Glades" is basically just what his eldest brother jokingly nicknamed him a few times, and Jordan dropped the "of Glades" part. If there are any kind of vipers or adders native to Rodoria, there should probably be at least two dozen Vipers running around to boot...
His actual name (Sir Yanin Glade) is moderately known, especially in Etlon, where his family resides, to some extent in Seclyr, where he served for about year and a half, and to a smaller extent in Zerul City (the last in part courtesy of Lady Alaisi). Primarily known for combat prowess, secondarily just for being a Glade. The more specific speculations are endemic to people who actually know the particular members of the family, and have perhaps met him.
(There is at least one more thing Morgan would be immediately notice about him owing to him having been made a sniffer, but I'd probably PM it when Yanin actually shows up.)

Hmm... Morgan was a blacksmith apprentice from eleven to turning eighteen, when he was made sniffer, then he was a sniffer for ... months, a year? before being turned into vampire, and now he's thirty, so might have spent a bit over a decade as a vampire. How far has he traveled as a vampire? ((Trying to figure out what the actual timeframes are for Morgan.))
@Rhae/Merc: Hmm, I reckon it doesn't make too much difference how long the two interact before Ixion shows up (and whether Ixion shows up before or after "the Viper" does) - as long as Merc lets Rhae/I know when he actually starts writing a post (it has happened a few times people attempt to post at the same time - it can end up being a bit awkward)?

EDIT: Eh... I feel my last post was not much in terms of interaction, but then again, Morgan did ask a rather simple question, and Jordan answered ... can't really assume how Morgan would react, there.
Jordan Forthey


The stranger stilled for a moment at his words - what was it, surprise, confusion, could the mysterious figure really know something of note? -, then stood fully, leaning on a manner of staff for support.
Alright, what can he tell from the stranger's weapon? It was a polearm of sorts, and a fairly heavy one. Studded, so quite obviously intended as a weapon, but not bladed. So, in combat the stranger would have reach advantage, and blocking of any kind would be very ill advised - it'd be a good way to break a wrist or something of the sorts. All in all, a staff like that would be a bit less difficult to counter than a spear, but not ideal when all you had was a sword...
Furthermore, the stranger might also have magic - for instance, Art of the Warden. If that's what was in that one's disposal, it'd make a fight a lot more difficult. The figure did not have the Fokon wardens' outfit, though ... just some robes that reminded Jordan of those of a monk. Well, and then there was the staff. Very monkly choice. The stranger being a conventional mage felt a bit unlikely - they did usually not look like they were prepared to engage in physical combat, unless they were runesword-wielders, and there was no hiding such a cumbersome lump of metal. Smaller trinkets, though? Feasible.
- The young squire was not really preparing to fight; he was simply practicing. Putting his teachings to use to analyze a real person, for once. Perhaps somewhat counter-intuitively, doing so also calmed him - by giving him something specific to focus on rather than leaving his mind to run rampant and get worked up further. Indeed, the effect was twofold: ensuring that he was focused rather than nervous, and giving him some idea what he had gotten into.
Jordan knew his master also did something much like that ... just, in Sir Yanin's case, it was done in half a blink of an eye, and instinctively, not consciously. And Sir Yanin definitely did not need any calming; from what he understood, his master did not really think of anything else while he was in combat. Perhaps it was some kind of trancelike state for him, void of random, mundane distractions.
"Who --hack!-- wants to know?" Male voice. Still somewhat groggy - so he had, indeed, been sleeping in such a peculiar spot.
So ... that was not a denial (though, too abrupt denial usually meant people had something they wanted to stay hidden, too). Neither did the stranger demand to know what did he expect him to know ... meaning there was probably a very specific thing the stranger expected him to want to know. Interesting. Probably even more dangerous now that he had gotten confirmation that there was something potentially shady going on with the guy, but interesting, nevertheless.
Questions beckoned answers, though ... this one, he would simply answer honestly, without any hesitation.
"This is Forthey, apprentice of the Viper."
Not only had he gotten his master involved - it would certainly add authority to his otherwise not too impressive person -, but for some reason he had opted to invoke him by the nickname he had heard Sir Jeran (himself the Falcon) use for his younger brother. On a snap decision, it had seemed appropriate; shady names for shady dealings, correct? What he said was completely true - he was (Jordan) Forthey, and Sir Janin was the Viper of the Glades ... but it would be much harder to track them back to their origins this way. The Viper both was his master, and wasn't, too.
Depending on how much trouble he managed to get himself into, he might yet need Sir Yanin's help in getting out ... by blade or by influence he could do it, Jordan was quite certain (as long as he managed to hold on his own until then). What his master would do with him afterwards was a different matter.
Jordan had no idea, and it concerned him slightly. So, he hoped it would not get too messy.
Oh, Tinysoft...
Jordan Forthey


It had most definitely moved, and it was not by wind (there had been no wind, for starters). Right before Jordan hailed ... whoever it was. Upon hearing his voice, the mysterious figure stilled. They might have slightly inched forward, but it was difficult to tell, from down here.
So ... it was a person. That much was clear. A person who, for whatever reason, had tried to stay out of the way, and was perhaps not overly eager over being bothered. There, granted, were multiple reasons for wanting not to be bothered, or wanting to stay out of sight...
If the individual simply did not want to, or have the money to pay for an inn, staying up there would have avoided thieves and horses' hooves alike. Which might or might not have explained the reluctant reaction - the city might not have had the best opinion on vagrants, and neither would've the house's owner, chances were. No matter to Jordan, though - he happened to be neither.
Another option was that the ... person had been up there with more serious, or perhaps even sinister intentions than just slumbering. Eavesdropping, for one. Or surveillance. Or making plans to thieve. In that case, being spotted probably meant that whoever did the spotting was a threat. Which might set him in danger. If the mysterious form was half as skilled as Sir Yanin, that'd be bad. Then again, in the middle of city, during the day ... even empty street would be too much risk, right? Anyone could show up, at any moment, not unlike he had. Maybe there were even people right behind the wall he was leaning against.
Once again, Jordan felt the urge to reach for his sword's hilt, but refrained. That refurbished piece of "still decently well-balanced" metal was somehow very dear to him, now. But he should not preemptively threaten strangers, either, now should he...
The unknown individual must have decided to show oneself, and stood, still maintaining their high ground. It was impossible to tell whether it was a man or a woman - whichever they were, they sported loose robes, cloak, hood ... mask. Covered head to toe. Completely. Even the eyes. You tell how someone was built under that all, and the figure was yet to make a pip. At best, Jordan could tell the other was slightly shorter than him ... maybe. Always be wary of people who cover their faces when it's not in a snowstorm. It's too damn restrictive to do it just because. They desperately want to be not remembered. Or have something to hide. Or have prepared to fight. Maybe all three.
So ... more likely "trouble", than "vagrant"?
Jordan was becoming more and more acutely aware of being stared at. In silence. He had obviously called for the figure's attention. For the lack of anything better, the young squire imagined the face behind the mask bore his master's usual "Well, I'm listening; what (the heck) do you want of me?"-mien.
Truth to be told, he had not planned too far ahead ... just seen something unusual, and decided to investigate. The stranger was waiting. Probably. Now, what had he been doing before he ended up here... Trying to investigate what was going on. Right. Well, might be better than outright asking who in the planes the strange individual was, and what was he doing up there.
"There are strange things going on around these parts," he began, he hoped confidently enough. "I was hoping you could shed some light on the happenings."
On the flipside, maybe this was obtrusive, too. Maybe he should have simply said that he had mistaken the figure for someone else entirely... (How was the figure to know he did not have friends who slept on building walls?) The excuse should still work, if he were to insist he was looking for another concealed figure somewhere around here upon hearing any protests. Say ... a true deigan assassin. Who knew things. From ... being shady and doing assassin-things. Having contacts and stuff. Yeah. That'd probably work.
Mhh... Just two vampires drinking one another's blood indefinitely wouldn't have worked much in my head, either - after the first exchange, they'd already have stacked their two individual parts of the curse, and everything after that would just have done nothing. I imagined it less as an uniform power, and more like different vampires carrying different "parts" of the same curse, as it were. Parts which, potentially, could be gathered up again.

@Rhae: He is not going to give up and leave immediately, no... What he actually does might depend, though.
Alright, posted. Rhae, I made a couple of assumptions about Morgan's whereabouts - namely, that he's pick a quieter street, and he'd be at least somewhat visible from the ground (how else would have Ixion spotted him, either, otherwise?). Let me know if I was off with my guesses.

(Also a lot of backstory in that post. Oh well.)

And now I'm wondering if eating, say, the hearts of two dozen unrelated twelfth-generation vampires would be somewhat cumulative, and make one closer to eleventh or lower generation vampire, or just comparable to the most powerful one of the two dozen.
Jordan Forthey


The city felt almost overwhelmingly massive to the young guy wandering the streets. The houses counted in many thousands. The people, probably hundreds of thousands. To the best of his knowledge, he only knew two of them ... one was behind the walls of the Magic Academy, and the other had explicitly dismissed him to take care of some personal business. Which is to say, his wandering was more than just slightly aimless.

Back at home, it had just been his family, the neighbors, and the occasional trip to the market with the bartering it entailed. After that, since age twelve, he had been the Glades' stable boy, and mostly interacted with the other stable folk, guests and their servants and squires, and the occasional Glade, from the gentle Lady Glade to the indeed quite intimidating Sir Tareon himself. The latter, was, luckily, a rare sight. For the longest time, the head of the hold only seemed to acknowledge his existence if he needed his horse prepared, and Jordan on his part had not managed to fade into the background quickly enough.
The younger Glades had been more common visitors; Lord and Lady Tareon rarely left the premises unannounced and on their own, but their offspring of his age and older had come and gone quite as they pleased. From Sir Jeran, who treated even common servant with respect; to the late Sir Manin, usually jovial but crude; to the noble Lady Eleanor; to the always slightly distracted Elan; to mirthful Alaisi; to Sir Javien, who seemed to actually see him even less than his father; to Gerain, a boy close to his age who always followed him to the stable door and drummed his fingers against the stable wall as he made the preparations; to ... yes, Sir Yanin himself.
It was strange, really. Back when he first agreed to work there for food, bed and a couple of rodlin - during the winter, when there was less to do on his parents' farm, and it was more economically viable to just send him off rather than feed him themselves -, he would not have thought he would one day become Sir Yanin's ... back then simply Yanin's, apprentice. Squire, even. He had seemed to barely care about him more than Sir Javien. He just came, stated what he wanted done, and went.
His future master's reputation - even as a teenager - had preceded him. He had started training when barely in double digits, and defeated an actual knight when he was barely fourteen, had he not? He had seen said knight - Sir Marcus -, who was later the master of another of the Glade siblings. Didn't look like a weakling. More like the old, tough man - although he was about a decade younger than Sir Tareon. Maybe thirty-eight, at most forty, perhaps. Just with hair that was already graying.
Soon after first defeating his master, the Viper of Glades had furthermore proven more proficient than any other who dared openly challenge him (or who accepted his challenge), too. It stood to reason, then, that it was less about his mentor's shortcomings, and more about the Viper himself being extraordinary.
Much later, when Jordan had gotten to know Sir Yanin better, he figured some of those supposed Yanin-(not-yet-Sir)-sided challenges might have been his personal way of defending Sir Marcus's honor. So you thought you were better than him because you did not get beaten up by novice squires? Come then, come prove that you can do what Sir Marcus couldn't, and beat that exact same squire.
It only lasted a couple of years, the Yanin-(not-yet-Sir)-initiated challenges. The novice squire started sounding like a man rather than a boy and soon towered over majority of people. So, the argument lost its validity - the person they'd be fighting now might be the same Yanin, but his body was not what it had been. And people tended to be slightly more reserved in general when the opposition was looking down on you not because of his opinion on you, but simply because you were a head shorter. Especially if that person had garnered a little bit of local reputation for being a superior combatant. As an aside, perhaps Sir Yanin himself had grown up; these days, he mostly tried to convince people not to even try.
Of course, everything about Sir Yanin's earlier years, Jordan had heard second-hand. When Yanin (not yet Sir) was fourteen, Jordan was still small enough to almost stand fully upright under the tall kitchen table at his parents' home. The one mother stood at when she was preparing food, before she brought things over to the dining table. When he first arrived at the Glades' holdings, Yanin (not yet Sir) was already seventeen. Still a youth, but no longer a child. Especially in the eyes of someone who oneself was no older than twelve.
Idly, Jordan had wondered whether even Lord Tareon himself could have stood against his son by that time. Perhaps not. Perhaps it was why he had never tried. It'd be admission of being worse than not his most favorite son. Sir Jeran had practiced with Yanin (not yet Sir) a few times, and he was no match. Little surprise, there. Jeran was narrower, and did not practice half as rigorously. Sir Yanin found time to practice even when on the move. Preferably at least two hours. Regardless of weather.
It had been one of the times Yanin (not yet Sir) had just finished training that he had first asked him a question on his own accord.
"What is that?"
Yanin (not yet Sir) had looked at him. The young Glade did not seem angry, but something in that look made Jordan uncomfortable. It felt like the look of someone who was trying to decide what to do with you. Usually not a good sign.
"The ... weapon. I don't think I've seen something like that before." For some reason he had continued, rather than retreated. You treat them with respect, you hear? Do as they say. Don't make demands. Don't whine. Don't be nosy. He had ignored his mother's advice a little bit with Sir Jeran, Lady Alaisi, and Lady Melone, but they had decided to talk to him first. Yanin (not yet Sir) had ... not.
"The man who sold it called it a headhunting axe." The same voice Yanin (not yet Sir) had normally used to order him around. You will get Prince saddled and ready tomorrow at sunrise. It is a headhunting axe. The exact same intonation. Both were statements.
Jordan's eyes had moved from Yanin (not yet Sir) to the weapon. He had seen battleaxes before. This here did not look much like a battleaxe. It looked like a scythe someone had snapped half the blade off of, and then ground the remainder into a sharp curve again. And there was a spike of sorts at the back. The Glade maintained the look.
Jordan was split between digging an even potentially bigger hole for himself, and just apologizing and hoping for forgiveness. Was it a good thing the Glade answered, or a bad thing he took so long to decide? Back then, the height difference between them was even greater. Yanin (not yet Sir) was, for all intents and purposes, an almost fully grown man, and a large one at that. Jordan was barely pubescent. He sounded like a boy, looked like one, too. His work was physical, but consisted of lifting a spade, not swinging something that, by the sound of it, was designed for detaching people's noggins.
"Uhh... Yeah. It certainly looks like something you could take someone's head off ... with. I mean, I saw what you did to the target. The damage, I mean. Or maybe it's just because it's you. You could probably take off a person's head with a spade, too." Indeed, facing Yanin (not yet Sir) who was armed with just a spade would not have left him with much, nay, any better odds.
For a moment, the young Glade's face remained unchanged, but then his one eyebrow lifted ever so slightly. Still not angry. Still thinking? Surprised? Maybe this moment was the one Yanin (not yet Sir) decided that the nonsense he spouted meant he was too dumb to be worth bothering to punish him for his insolence. A lost cause, so to speak.
"It'd be rather easy to kill with. Handles well. Deals massive damage. But it's more commonly a tool. A lot of those foreign weapons are. Cutting through thickets, carving furniture, doesn't matter, they're meant for utility first. Not quite as restricted to status and combat as most of our swords."
Huh. So perhaps the thoughts about scythes and spades were not that far off... "I see ... thank you."
"Hmh." And without any further sign of acknowledging his existence, Yanin (not yet Sir) had wandered off, leaving Jordan standing where he was for several long minutes before he remembered what he was doing before he stopped to watch the tail end of the Viper of Glades' practice. Not exactly friendly. But he had actually replied to him rather than demonstrate his new toy's ability to pierce actual human skulls. Jordan's, for instance.
Later on - after seeing the same expression on Yanin's (not yet Sir and Sir alike) face numerous times - he had come to figure that specific look was less "what am I to do with you after what you just did" and more "well, I'm listening; what (the heck) do you want of me". Potentially with some amount of actual irritation mixed into the latter, depending on when you bothered him ... he still couldn't tell, after five years of being around him. Maybe it was better not to poke at him too much. He'd seen Sir Yanin truly angry a couple of times. Just not at him. He'd prefer to keep it that way.
In spite of a number of people's apprehensiveness towards Sir Yanin, though, he did not think he was actually a cruel guy. More just a very ... well, irreverent one, on one hand. That's for certain. Very blunt. Abrupt. Confrontational. But never cruel just for the sake of being cruel. Nor was he violent. Again, somewhat contrastingly to his combat prowess. He could be dedicated, though, if he set his mind to something. Occasionally other things but combat, too. For all his irreverence, he did have a sense of duty. Sir Yanin himself insisted you just had to not be stupid about it. Duty, that is. And there were things his master cared about, even if it was sometimes hard to tell what they were.
In any case, it had been easier to ask other questions from Yanin (not yet Sir) after his curiosity had gotten better of him once. He was never not quite sure whether he was annoying the guy or not, but he gave replies, and he was outside more commonly than the other Glades. Probably another thing his mother would not have approved of. Bothering the Glades. But they were the only not-peasants he knew who were around on a consistent basis. Who had more knowledge and experience than the common folk. Who not only knew tales, but had lived them. Who possessed real ancient tomes and real steel weaponry. To a twelve-year-old no one, it was a kind of a big thing.
In the end, he managed to convince his family and the Glades' other servants that he could stay as a stable hand past the winter, and Lady Glade approved. And then the year after that. And another. Once his father and one of his sisters died, he still opted to stay. Shame, the sense that he might have his own life he'd have to yield ... he did not know. He suspected his remaining family were quite bitter at him. They seemed like a part of an entirely different life. And then there was the feeling that if he'd gone back, he'd just be waiting to contract the withering himself, like his sibling and ancestor both had. Whereas out here, he might at least hear something. Or so he told himself.
Eventually, Yanin (not yet Sir) was knighted and and became Sir Yanin. And Jordan, probably with some impression that he was ... well, not Sir Yanin's friend. Definitely not that. But given that the other Glade brothers either had squires or - in case of Elan - did not have time for them, or were too young ... and because Sir Yanin had mentioned he intended to leave his family grounds for a while... Due to something mostly between himself and his father. Sir Yanin never specified in more detail.
In any case, Jordan had inquired about potentially becoming his squire. Or apprentice. Or just coming along and being his servant or something. Sir Yanin had stated he'd think about it. A few days later, Sir Yanin had - for once, approached him for a change. The answer was yes.
And so they took off. Found a place in Seclyr. He was not entirely certain on the specifics of it all, but Sir Yanin was soon in charge of a small number of people. A few properly decked out guards, and a dozen other guys and gals who did not truly seem professional. Since Sir Yanin was now responsible for the guards, Jordan, by proxy, became one of them. Some fields, some houses, a street with a small shop and the occasional unaffiliated seller by the side. And a tiny pub, which was by far the only actually interesting place. There was little in the way of actual guard duty. Mostly just checking that no one was hunting on the grounds without permission, or taking off with baskets full of someone else's drakehorn fruits, or initiate a fight in the pub.
"Why this place?" he had inquired.
"It's quiet. And away from Lord Tareon."
"But it isn't all, is it?"
"No."
"What more is there, then?"
"You need practice, for one."
He ... guessed there was really no arguing with that. Sir Yanin was ... well, he probably held back. And held back a lot. But he did not let Jordan win, either. Worse, he always made defeating him seem easy. Even when the weapons they were fighting with were not equal. Practice lasted however long Sir Yanin seemed to see fit ... probably until either Jordan got too tired to keep up with even his own meager baseline. Or until Sir Yanin got too annoyed with, or bored of trying to teach him something. His master never outright stated either of the latter, but felt like it. To add insult to injury, training usually took place before Sir Yanin's own regime.
He had asked Sir Yanin why he usually told off people who attempted to challenge him for a duel, these days.
"What for? You could probably count the humans in Rodoria who could defeat me in a fair swordfight on your fingers," his master had replied. "But these worth fighting won't fight fair. They won't use the same weapons as you. They won't stick to metal and wood. They won't wait in a queue. And they might not even be human." There had been a pause. "You can't change what you are, only practice. And pick how you fight, when, and with who. And use everything in your disposal, fair be damned."
"That doesn't seem very knightly."
"Honor is for duels. Consider it one of the few lessons my dear father truly taught me. How do you think he became known as having tactical skill? Or how did anyone? It was not by fighting fair, I can tell you that much. History is not made with fair. It just swipes the unfair under the rug."
"The history is always written by the winners. Right." He had heard the phrase. It was sobering to hear it asserted like that, he supposed.
Sir Yanin shrugged. "By whoever is currently in charge."
For himself, his master had been quite talkative that day.
Over a year as a guard had passed quite quickly. Surprisingly so. There were a couple of incidents of note. He had managed to befriend a couple of the villages and guards. Sir Yanin was, as always, more reclusive, unless he meant business. It wasn't until he pointed out that these people might not be quite as kind to his Lady Alaisi as either of them when that Jordan began to realize why his master might have more than usual reservations towards the locals. Maybe most of them wouldn't give them out ... out of respect for Sir Yanin, if nothing else. The others probably would, the bigoted lot.
Recently, though, something had been bothering Sir Yanin. It was hard to tell what exactly, but something had. His habits changed. And one day, he had handed his duties off to to his second in command, and well, here they now were. In Zerul City. Visiting Sir Yanin's sister and taking care of some other, unspecified business.

The horses and their things had been taken care of, and so he had been dismissed. Staying in the room didn't seem of too much interest. The bars and inns were many. And a whole lot bigger than the one in Brow's Rest. He did not feel hungry just yet, though, and stepping into one without the intention of ordering either a drink or food seemed inappropriate, somehow. The eight rodlin he carried weighed down on his pocket. Giving one of those away to acquire nourishment he did not need felt like a waste. Chances were the room Sir Yanin had ordered already came with food included.
He'd found a market ... quite the garden-variety sort. Just a lot bigger than the one he had been used to. And with some wares he was quite unfamiliar with. He had inquired about a few of those, but without him displaying an intent of buying, the merchants tended to quickly become impatient. He had also found a couple of standalone shops with magical wares, whose owners or workers kept a close eye on him. And one shop which sold jewelry. He had felt even more out of place there than in most other places of the massive, sprawling city. As if he had no business being there, and was thought of as a potential thief rather than a potential client.
There was also something obviously wrong ... as if the withering was not enough, the city was also full of, well, he supposed refugees was the most apt term for them. And quite a lot of the higher ups were off to a wedding of the future duchess ... who would have otherwise become the future duchess? ... Jordan did not know what exactly his matter with the topic was, but for some reason Sir Yanin seemed almost irate when he mentioned the fact. Perhaps it interfered with his plans, whatever they were, somehow. Maybe it meant some of the people he had been looking for were not there.
He had lingered by the gate for a while. Tried to get a few accounts out of the later refugees. Nemhim's capital was ... destroyed? By what? Something in his chest felt cold. They might not have lived in the city, and they might have been bitter towards him, but his remaining family were in that duchy. Were they safe? One man with blood-soaked bandages around his limply hanging left arm whose packages he had offered to carry claimed he had seen the ... beast. And the corpses. Their chests ripped open. The beast was something four-legged, and dark. Not black. More murky reddish-brown. It chased after people.
To top it all off, the Anaxim Forest was gone. The thing must have been millenia old, and now it was gone, razed and burned to ground... All that, it seemed, within a span of a few days. Had Sir Yanin somehow been aware that any of this was going to happen? Was any of those things why they were here now? Was this the beginning of one of those adventures he had only heard of? If so, the reality was quite depressing already...
After aiding the man, he had wandered off in deep thought, heavy brown boots hitting the cobbled street in a monotonous, lulling rhythm. Gray pants, brown belt, sword and dagger by his hips. His woolen coat was draped over his shoulders, rather than bound closely, baring some of his white, cotton shirt. Most of the way, his eyes were downcast, blond-brown hair curtaining his face.
It was mostly the quieting down of his surroundings that finally had him raise his head. Somehow, this street was almost empty. The light-colored stone houses stood tall. Probably quite rich region, comprised predominantly of residences. No shops. No pubs. No interest for anyone, unless they lived here, or were just passing through.
He had only a vague idea where exactly he was, but seeing he had not been walking for much more than a dozen minutes, it could not have been too far. He can always just backtrack. Should be easier than backtracking in a forest - forests did not have streets, after all. And he had not made too many turns. The sun had been positioned towards the opposite side of the city, and it shouldn't have moved much, so if he leaves it behind his back, and starts walking, he should get back close to the gates ... maybe a few streets off, but no worries.
He looked up towards the sky to determine where the sun was - even with clouds, there was usually a lighter splotch -, but as he did so, something else caught his eye. Something which seemed to get a raise out of the remnants of his time spent as a guard. There was ... definitely something on one of the decorative cornicles attached to one of the houses. It was hard to tell what exactly it was, but it was quite long and evidently at least partially made out of cloth. If he had not incidentally backed against the side of the opposite building in his search of any indication of the stellar body overhead, he'd not seen it.
What was that? Had wind carried it up there? Had it been thrown out of one of the windows? With no overly obvious access, he doubted the house's inhabitants had knowingly stowed it there. Was it ... a person? Could it be? If so, was it a homeless person who had figured he had found a particularly safe spot away from thieves and horses' hooves, or perhaps a watchpost of some sort? Maybe an eavesdropper?
Somewhat restlessly, his hand wanted to move to his sword, but he reconsidered.
"Hey!?" he shouted at the ... whatever it was. Part of him felt dumb, should it turn out to be some wind-driven cloth up there. Another part of him warned that, should it indeed be a person, it might mean trouble.
© 2007-2024
BBCode Cheatsheet