Saturday, 12 November 2011

[Session 6.5] Fireside Reverie - Saturday 12th November 2011


Fireside reverie was conducted away from the gaming table and on the campaign's Facebook group. Moderated by myself the write up I wrote was edited by the DM- Dangerous Brian. All player's speech/writings were kept true as much as possible in the edit whilst giving priority to the game setting and the DMs decision as he wasn't present of the actual play itself. It is set after the end of session 6. The party and their new found companions felt it safer to make camp outwith the cave for the night before another day trying to complete it's clear out for the home-less troglodytes.


~ o 0 o ~


The moon rides high her silvery disc shining like a new coin. Ha, money! What use is it here, on an island out of time or place? Inhabited by strange and foul creatures. Even the island itself seems bent on killing those newly stranded there. 
Some of it's newest inhabitants sit huddled round a roaring camp fire for the precious warmth it provides. Some speak, some merely gaze as though lost in thoughts of happier times. The ground and land outside of the roaring glare is ridden with shadows and forms too dark to make out or understand. The shifting dark is the place where nightmares are born, only to fade when another dawn rises.
The party hope for the dawn to come soon. Sleeping out in the open is a restless past time. It would be nice to sleep soundly again without the worry of darts and daggers. That kind of thinking breeds fear, suspicion and discontent.
Bare chested and huge in scale, Boagris stands near the slender fire-haired Thoht. He speaks: "Can you believe we are marooned on this stupid island surrounded by lizard men, and the God’s know what else, because some ‘God’ took a dislike to us?” The big ex-gladiator laughs, drinking some water from his flask.
“The Gods have no patience with us! I say screw the Gods! All of them! They seem no more different than I. Piss me off and I’ll maroon everyone of the guilty to places they can never come back from." Boagris continues laughing at his own bravado, a bit more aggressively now, patting Thoht on his shoulder.
Boagris changes the focus of his attention, "Laugh Shadowdancer! I want to see a smile out of that face! Smile! Or am I not funny enough for you?" he growls staring towards a corner where he last thinks he saw Shadowdancer. 
Looking back at Thoht, Boagris continues: "Creepy little thing that one. I should have smacked him harder the first time, so he knows I mean business. I don’t like him, I don’t like the other sneaks, and I damn as hell don’t like that slaver.” He growls again, glaring in the direction of the slaver in question, Xenos.
Grinning now Boagris speaks with a little less mirth, “Don’t worry Thoht, I didn’t forget you. You I despise the most: always praying to your Gods, that one or the other one. What good did the Gods do when I was in need of them? We're all alone I tell you! Forget them and learn how to use a sword, you bloody priest." 
At that Boagris leaves the campfire to stand on his own, looking up to the stars and back to a small object he holds in his paw-like hand... a toy made out of cloth.
Thoht mutters quietly to himself in Elvish, shaking his head. "Poor dumb brute, had he only the wit to know how much stronger he would be did he only believe in the Gods?”
Euthalia looks up from her fire-gazing. She wishes she could be doing something more useful just now. She cannot get out of her mind the image of Glykeria's mangled body. Grey clammy skin, torn gaping shoulder and the putrid black pile of maggots that was once her fair arm. 
A vision no one should have to see. 
That had been the first time she had not been able to save someone with her gift. To feel the rush of power channeled from on high and to see it dissipate like so much smoke into air. Even worse that she could do no more afterwords than a simple prayer for a departed soul. To leave a fellow priestesses remains to the creatures of decay in a cave did not sit well with her. Even knowing as she did that there had been no-way to bring the body back through that narrow, twisting shaft.
Hot tears well in Euthalia's eyes, flowing freely down her cheeks. She wipes them away quickly when the bulky shadow of Boagris passes over.
Euthalia sighs and gathers her chiton around her closely to guard against the night chill. She walks to his side. It seems she is not the only one who may be in need of comfort. She sees he is fumbling something carefully in his great hands. Holding it so gently, lovingly.
Being such a tiny female, especially in comparison to a man so large, she cranes her neck to look up to him. "Boagris?”, she touches her hand to his elbow, hoping not to startle him with her icy little fingers.
"What troubles your mind, friend?"
Shadowdancer observes Euthalia from the concealing veil of deep shadows, noting her distress and presuming its cause to be the fall of Glykeria.
He shrugs slightly. Glykeria had been reasonably useful to them all, had seemed level-headed enough, but then she given into a moment of stupidity and greed...and died.
He hoped the message was not lost on the others. He was well aware that they held him in little regard and in truth he held them in even greater contempt. To his eyes they were like children playing at being wise. If they chose to ignore his words and hold the wisdom her offered in contempt then so be it. It mattered little to him, beyond the increase in his own prospect of survival that their presence offered, and there were times he felt that their sheer folly made them more a detriment than aid.
His eyes glittered with vague amusement while they followed Euthalia's graceless – by Shidhe terms, at any rate- movement towards the hulking and scarred gladiator, Boagris. Wondering if perhaps she sought more than the comfort of a friend from the male. The young priestess seemed the sort to give into the attraction his looming form offered in the dire fate they all shared.
'Best not to get too close Euthalia' he thought to himself. Though Boagrius obviously had his uses in a fight, and there seemed likely to be many of those in their future, Ailil had still not forgiven him for striking him down when he had merely sought to arm himself with one of the many weapons Alexis had been fortunate to gather from the wreck.
That day neither Boagris nor Alexis had been able to look beyond the petty humans concerns of property and ownership to see that survival was their greatest challenge. Some day there would be a reckoning for their insult.
Boagris looks down at the slender form whose hand rests upon his elbow. But only for a moment. His gaze returns to to the small cloth toy dwarfed by the cage of his mighty fingers. After a moment, the gladiator speaks: 
"It has been long since I had time to think. Most of the last 10 years I've spent fighting. You priests are lucky. You read and learn. I sat for years in a cell, then traveled for years more in a cage. I didn’t know where I was, or how I got there. They would always mask me. After some time I stopped caring. I tried to escape but it was the lash when they caught me”. 
The big warrior laughs. “Now we are marooned here. My master is no longer in business. Odd, is it not? I lost all I had. My home... " He turns to fully look at the priestess, "Don’t pray for me girl! The Gods don’t know me." With that Boagris returns to the fire where his bedroll awaits. His eyes linger on the flames, his hands still fumbling with the little doll.
A mocking smile plays on Shadowdancer’s lips; Boagrius’s dismissive words to Euthalia drifting to him through the night. A blatant rejection to her subtle advances and an insult to her beliefs and her Gods too! As good as a slap in the face, though he doubted the plain spoken gladiator saw it that way. No doubt the fool felt he had likely never been closer to - and revealed more deep heartfelt to- anyone in years.
The shihde shook his head softly from side to side, as if disbelieving the eccentricities and foibles of humans, once again reminded of how like children they were. Unaware of the subtleties and nuances hidden in all things. Even their own actions.
Watching Boagris lie down and roll over, apparently intending to sleep, Shadowdancer quelled the rising Unseelie urge to simply glide across the camp the moment Euthalia's back was turned and slit the man's throat. Instead he let his gaze slide back to Euthalia, waiting to catch a glimpse of her reaction so that he could glean more about which way the wind blew between her and Boagris, and indeed discern greater insight into her character.
Close by, Andros too gazes up at the night sky. Hoping to at least see a star, a beacon of some hope. After gleaning much from the short interactions between Boagris and Euthalia, she needs to take her mind off events. Everyone has a story. Everyone has hopes. And everyone stranded upon this isle has a life awaiting their return. The blacksmith sighs, receiving no love from the sky. She asks the Goddess why she has been punished? Punished from the very moment she was pulled squalling from her Mother's womb. She could easily imagine her father's disappointment at the knowledge his wife had delivered to him  yet another daughter. She could not help being born a woman, but dammit, she was born a brilliant blacksmith also! 
Andros fumbles in the darkness for her blacksmiths bag. Withdrawing a square of cloth, she absently begins cleaning her blade, still tainted with the rotting, fungal pus of slain plant-men. The lingering smell making her gag even now, after many such cleanings. Absently, she wonders what price she would not pay for a simple bath. A proper one. In a hot tub of beaten copper filled with fresh water from the well. The muscled yet still feminine woman smiles weakly to herself in the darkness, imagining if her sister Vasilias could hear her now! She would laugh and remark, "You? Bathe? You would sleep in the ashes and soot of father's forge and think it better even than a king's bed!" The smile fades quickly at the thought of her sister. At the sudden pangs of longing. She thought again of the practice fights they shared with father's sword. Andros rarely won. Vasilias was a champion of the blade in her own right. But Andros had learned more from her -improved more- each time they had crossed blades.
Leaving her reverie behind for a moment, the blacksmith directs her gaze towards Boagris, wondering if he is asleep. She could hear the sadness and anger in his voice. So much hate. She wishes that he could find peace. Mostly, she wishes he has the sense not to direct his rage at any of their companions.
Euthalia listened to the troubles of the gladiator without a word, reflecting upon the teachings of the ancients. The wise tell us that the Gods gave us two ears, two eyes and one mouth. It is the way of things that we should watch and listen twice as much as we speak and act. 
She allows the big man to say his piece and remained where she stood when he returned to his place by the fire. Such a huge man, blessed with the shoulders of a giant and, it seems, the weight of the world to settle upon them. Yet lying as he does, curled and vulnerable, he seems to her in that moment little more than an ailing child. Poor creature.
In a gentle and even voice she turns to address the gladiators broad back.
“I will pray for whom I wish, though it is kind that you bid me not waste my efforts upon you. You say the Gods do not know you. The Gods know everyone. Haestia knew you before you arrived screaming forth from your mothers womb. Just as a parent must let a child go forth and experience the ills and trials of life so that they might grow into manhood, so the Gods must allow we mortals to experience what we must in order to become the people we are fated to be. It is possible that you ignored the help offered to you by the old ones in your ignorance. Just as you shun my simple act of friendship. I feel your pain and wish you a peaceful rest.”
Without waiting for a reply she strides back to fire, bedding down for the night. Perhaps sleep would help ease the pain of her loss.
Thoht watches quietly while Euthalia attempts to ease the troubled Boagris, to little avail. Despite the harsh words the gladiator directed towards him, Thoht knows that he must find common ground with such ex-slaves and dregs as he finds himself among if they are all to survive. His thoughts turn darkly to the recent loss of his fellow priestess, Glykeria. such senseless waste of one so blessed by Far Seeing Miranda. 
Why did not Ki & the elf prevent her from such a reckless act? Damn them both! Worse still, the cleric considered darkly, the others seem intent on ignoring my own wisdom - and even that of the Haestian Priestess! Are they fools? I must pray for guidance and hope that the Lady Of Oracles grants me understanding of their brutish ways. Still, I may not belong here, but I shall place my faith in the knowledge that the Gods have placed me here for good reason. I must only determine what that reason is...
The cleric of Miranda moves to sit at the edge of the light cast by the fire. Reverie comes slowly and the restless movements and grumbles of those by the fire are a constant background to his thoughts. Thoughts of the elf, Shadowdancer, impinge briefly upon his reverie. 
I must watch that one. For good or ill, the Lady grant me the sight to see our fates.’
Shadowdancer, having held by a derisive snort on over-hearing Euthalia's cutting reply to Boagris -cold words veiled behind a kindly voice- switches his gaze to Andros. The elf notes that she watches the interaction as intently as he himself, but the blacksmith seems somewhat lost in recollections of her own. Idly, he wonders what secrets lurk there in her thoughts.
'It is possible that you ignored the help offered to you by the old ones,' He mouths silently through a wry smile, mocking Euthalia's words.“What would any of you monkey's do if you knew the truth?”
[OOC: Shadowdancer is old. Very old. Old enough, in fact, to remember the forms the God's re-shaped to produce the race of man.]
He muses upon his esoteric knowledge in a soft whisper, his first words spoken out loud in the fragile, false lull from danger that is the campfire they all share.
Boagris’s neck-hairs are aquiver, the familiar sensation of being watched learned from long, brutal nights in the slave pens. His eyes slowly roam around that portion of the camp visible from his bedroll. He relaxes somewhat when his eyes settle upon his observer. Just the blacksmith. It occurs to the warrior that no one is sleeping well this night. He beckons Andros to come closer.
Andros glances around the campfire, as if unsure to whom the gladiator beckons. Sighing, unsure what the gladiator could possibly have to say to her, she approaches him. Sword and rag still in hand. 
Boagris looks at his reflection mirrored in the polished blade of her weapon. His gaze moves to study the striking figure of the female blacksmith standing before him. He wonders at her story. Why was she aboard a trade ship carrying envoys to the mighty city of Zama? Feeling the unfamiliar desire for conversation, he struggles to form his questions. Settling instead for the simplest of questions. One he has already asked himself. "What's your tale blacksmith?” 
He shifts himself, lifting his muscled, scarred frame out of his bedroll to sit upon the cold stone, his legs crossed before him.
Not distant, a single elfin brow lifts with jaded curiosity. Shadowdancer watches as Andros stalks over in apparent response to Boagrius's summons. The unspoken words of 'This had better be good' seeming to hang in the air as she very deliberately slaps the blade of her sword into the palm of her left hand.
The elf could not help but feel there was an outside chance that Boagrius might boldly invite her to share his blankets. The fallout from that might prove to be deliciously amusing indeed.
Folding his long-cloak closer around him, ward off the night's chill, he settles against the rock that guards his back and waits to see how events play out. A soft blue glow of delight at imminent mischief radiates from the shifting constellations of stars that glisten in his fae eyes.
Curled up tightly in her canvas blankets, sails rescued from the wreck of their ship, Euthalia finds sleep to be a reluctant bed-mate tonight. Her mind is sore and roiling from the remembered images of a pale face and clouded eyes. A dead stare that seems to her full of recrimination. Desperate to find at least some rest this night -for her prayers will not doubt be needed on the morrow – she decides upon quiet meditation as a means to settle her mind.
Eyes closed, the cleric attempts to block out all noise of the activity around her. The fire flickers as it should. Mortals speak, and cough, and move, and breathe as they must. She breaths herself. Slowly. In and out. Trying to still the waves of sound and focus on the inner silence. Distractions fade away beyond the tightening circle of her awareness. A point of light in her inner eye becomes all, she knows that light. The sacred-hearth. It is the gentle blessing of the Goddess Haestia, whom she serves.
“My story?” Andros clearly could not be more surprised! This man, this brute whose arms seem wide and brutal enough to snap the likes of Shadowdancer in twain; wants to hear her story? She stares at him, perplexed for a moment and, her sword still ready at a hand and wearing a face that promises trouble at the slightest hint of any lascivious intent on the gladiators part, she sits by him and tells the story of her father, Vasilliakos Tsiminis, a great warrior in his time. The gladiators slow, respectful nod tells her that Boagrius knows of whom she speaks. She tells on of how the great Vasilliakos had always felt sure he was fated to  have two sons. One to become a warrior like himself and the other, to adopt his second passion: that of the forge. And yet, his wife bore no sons. Only daughters. Andros and Vasilias. Both women. Both cursed to bear the names of men all their days. 
After a moment more, Boagrius asks, "What of your sister?" 
"Oh, she is intent on winning fame as the greatest warrior of Mysos.” replies the blacksmith, shrugging carelessly.
Boagrius frowns for a moment. Thinking, he admits, "I knew your father, you know. I fought alongside him once. In the Arena. At Mysos. He seemed a happy enough man. Not the sort to find fault in his family." 
The gladiator glances upon the sword and then at the darkness, looking for the being he thought of as the ‘creeping one’. "He would happily kill me that one.” Boagrius states, not feeling any need to explain whom he means. Sure that the blacksmith will know. “But he needs me. As we need him. One day I will save his skin  and neither he, nor  I, will like it.”
“Speak. Tell me more. I have time to spare." Boagrius turns his cold eyes back to the fire.
Deep within her meditations, a voice reaches out towards Euthalia, from the darkness.
“Euthalia. Do you hear me? There is much that has been left unsaid. I must speak through you to the others.” Though she knows her body sits in warmth, by the fire, within herself she feels the cold grasp of hands upon her shoulders. Icy chills make her shudder, a motion so sudden and violent that it captures the attention of all those still awake within the confines of the camp.
Though her mouth opens in a pained gasp, a familiar acerbic tone issues from her mouth- the voice of Glykeria.
“Listen to these words I tell!”
Euthalia shivers with the chill of channeling a presence from beyond the grave. Understanding at least the theory behind the strange events that have befallen her, Euthalia squeezes her eyes tightly closed with the effort to maintain the link.
Shadowdancer surges to his feet, a move so fluid and quick that a single flickering blink and the human eye would miss it.
“Release your hold on her, shade of Glykeria! It is unseemly for the dead to possess the living so!”, the elf calls out while striding angrily from the shadows.
“If you have come to speak of some warning or insight  then do so quickly, the strain you place on Euthalia's frail human body is great indeed. Many lives depend on her strength.”
Euthalia hears the voice from outside her link, but it is distant. Faint. Almost as though she wear hearing a conversation mumbled through wadded cloth.  A strange fierce blue light like that of the frozen moon enters her mind. With barely a twitch from her body. The other-wordly voice erupts from her mouth once again. 
“Oh for the sake of.... do you really think, oh high-and-mighty lord, that I would endanger her? The only reason I can speak through her voice  at all is because she allows me  to do so. And because she  got so very near at the time of my soul's passing. Not to mention close to perhaps becoming my friend. I do her quite an honor by using her as my vessel. Although she is not presently aware of events in the mortal realm any more than mortals are aware of events in the Summerlands.”
“I do agree with you however. I cannot pass on much knowledge of what fate has been chosen for you. Yet you are correct in that you will need her aide. More than hers alone actually. I am doing what is possible, but even having passed so recently, it is difficult to influence events on the mortal realm directly.”
“You met your fate through your own folly shade of Glykeria,” comes Shadowdancer's growling retort, “do not expect me to credit you with gaining much in the way wisdom in the few hours since your passing.”  As if to emphasis his glaring disapproval, the elf leans back, folding his arms across his chest and glaring at the shade which has bound itself in the body of another.
Glykeria's half-cackle echoes eerily from a place not quite inside the body of Euthalia. 
“Of every being in the presence of my voice, I expect YOU to comprehend the afterlife the least. But time is wasting. Chastising you is not a priority.”
My second gift is to offer answers where I can.” Euthalia's head jerkily glances at the moon's progress through flickering lashes. “And while I can! Be quick! Ask your questions!” 
The strange and otherworldly conversation has finally caught the attention of more than those involved. Andros looks on mouth agape while Boagrius dashes desperately to Euthalia’s side.
“Glykeria! Is that you?” the gladiator calls, “What of my wife? My child? Are they with you in the Summerlands?”
Euthalia’s body shakes a little at the startling new voice and presence barging it's way into her awareness . A thought crosses her mind, this one feels red and warm. Like a bale fire.
The thought disappears, there is a pause where her face freezes a moment. "Your wife... I cannot reveal to any mortal what lies beyond the paths of the dead. There is no comfort  I can offer you, mighty Boagrius. Only in death may mortal man learn such secrets.”
Quietly watching and listening to all that transpires, Thoht keeps his own council, knowing that his past is not for the likes of these to know or hear. He will observe and no more.
Overhead the Goddess Tanith reaches the peak of her nightly patrol of the heavens. Euthalia's body takes on a faint glow. 
Euthalia speaks, “My time is up and over. Know you have at least one voice beseeching the Gods on your behalf. Hold fast to your hope, worse is yet to come....” Her voice fades out a little, and with a faint pop the glow dissipates. Euthalia's sense slowly return to her body, leaving her weak and tired as a day old kitten.
Suddenly, she inhales with explosive sharpness, her eyes thrown wildly open. Her eyes frantically searching for some sign, some landmark with which to once again anchor her perceptions in this reality. She slumps to the side, numb from the sudden emptiness of feeling. She closes her eyes against the confusing visions that swirl within her still. Fatigue overcomes her at last, and she descends into a dreamless sleep.
Thoht lets out a muffled and somewhat enigmatic chuckle at the specter’s visitation before slipping into reverie once more.
"En-lil lugal kurkurra ab-ba dingir reneke inim ginanita dninĝirsu dšarabi ki ene sur." Ki Oman takes out his lyre and plays a low slow melody, singing softly in a strange language. The bard’s voice and music comforting all those who wish to listen. Food for the hopeless soul on a dark night. 
Boagris settles back down to sleep, a different man from the one who stood earlier, gazing down upon the doll that once belonged to his lost daughter. When last they had walked the world together she had been only four. At his leaving, she had presented him with her fondest toy. Saying: “Take it daddy, will keep you safe on your travels.” 
How little she had known of the evils that walk the earth in the guise of men. After the battle, he had returned home to find his wife dead upon the floor of their coastal home. But she had given him one last glimmer of hope. His daughter had run from the men who had defiled their mother. She had escaped and was free. Somehow, he would find her. He knew it in his mighty heart. For it must be so. 


Friday, 2 July 2010

[Session 11] Dragon Age - Friday 2nd July 2010

Ser Lothryn ran through the night as much as he was able to before the torch gave out and the ground lost all sense of depth. The sound of dogs and footsteps had receded long since past, a small blessing from the Maker. He still stood in the dank of the marshes in the forsaken Korcari Wilds, with no support, no idea of which way Lastford was in and no idea if his Lady were alive or dead. Not his best evening he reflected to himself in a spot of black humour and breathless laugh. He hoped things would look better in the light. 
As luck, or Andraste, would have it. Things did.
As the sky lightened he could make a pretty good assumption of which way was north. He pressed on and kept his eyes open for any other clues as to where to go, open for any dangers underfoot. Various thoughts passing through his mind. ‘Who would wish to hunt in the wilds? A hunting lodge in the wilds? Such notions!’ All he said aloud was an incredulous huffed “Meh!”, shaking his head. 
As the day wore on further he began to feel a bit more optimistic. The ground was firming and the plant life changing too. It was still a wet miserable day with more rain and more grey sky but at least he could be in a warm dry place before his toes dropped off from wet rot or his blisters bled from so much uneven walking. A knight is a riding man, serfs walk! Another sigh and shrug of his shoulders “Ah well.”, realising there would be no time for luxuries such as drying himself. The upside was that he could be in Vintiver just now knocking heads with Cobden. Maybe the marsh was a welcome change after all. 
By the time his feet hit the solid muddy ground of the stubbly fields it was dark. He could see the distant lights of Lastford, or what he hoped was Lastford for if it were not he was sorely lost, he trudged on. There was work to be done before the night was over, despite how tired he might be.
Willam was getting tired of all these disruptions to his life. People banging about in the night, visitors coming to stay, waking him at unreasonable hours of the day, requests of him... too much. He wondered if he shall be pleased when the master and household returns. He has grown to like his peace.
The banging began again in earnest.
“Awright don’t knock the bleedin door in! Ooo is eet this time?” 
“It is Ser Lothryn and if you do not open this gate at once I shall beat you myself! There is an emergency and my Lady is in danger! Get this open now!” Lothryn was in no mood to humour the old goat and stormed past him as soon as the bolt was slid. With the safety of his Lady paramount the matter of Willam's grandson was quite forgotten.
Quickly he made his way to Ser Shelby’s room and rattled the door, demanding he meet him downstairs. On his way back down he found a rather shocked Myrtle and Ser Garrett standing at the bottom in their soaked, mud spattered traveling clothes. Not long arrived themselves it seemed.
“Whatever is the matter Ser Lothryn? Where is my Lady Iah? Laria?” Myrtle looked at him, taking in his state of disarray. 
“Follow me.” Lothryn looked at them both then made his way into a room as Willam was lighting some candles. Once the old housekeeper had gone he quickly related to them what had passed since they parted ways in Restenford. Shelby arrived not long into it, still in the act of dressing and girding his equipment. 
By the end Lothryn looked pale and drawn in the flickering light, even under such muck. “We have much to do.”
~ o0o ~
In the Wilds, Fossett and Laria had agreed that moving Iah in her condition was pointless and it may be better if they were able to infiltrate the lodge for some cover for the coming night. It was a good plan but a highly dangerous one. They chose to move as a group and, while Fossett had scouted the first room whose window they were able to open, Laria and Iah very nearly got caught by some patrolling brigands. Once inside they were glad that the room was warm in comparison but were not content to just sit tight.
Ser Fossett managed to open the door and search some of the other rooms in the corridor he found on the other side. In one such room he finds a man passing his prime, bound by the wrists, blindfolded and gagged. 
Along the reasoning of ‘an enemy of my enemy is a friend’ he slips the mans blindfold and gag. It is not a thankful welcome he receives. 
“Who in the blazes are you!” The man, who is clearly a knight from his attire and vocal presence, glares at him.
“I, I, I am Ser Fossett of Restenford. Who are you?” He manages to stammer out while under the threatening presence of what could only be described as an angry father figure. A man who has certainly seen fierce battle.
“Ser Edmund of Lastford. What are you staring at boy? Untie me now!”
The young knight quickly slipped a dagger and cut the bonds on Ser Edmund’s wrists. Before he knows what is happening he is on the floor and the dagger is pressing against his throat. “Why are you here? Who sent you? Who are you really, because I am quite sure that evil-hearted little runt did not send you in here to let me loose!” 
Fossett very quickly explains about Lady Iah, the situation, and that she is here. 
Ser Edmund gets up off the ‘boy’ and quietly looses his temper. “You fool!” he seethes. “You brought her here to the people who are trying to kill her? Where is she now boy?”
Before opening the door a crack Ser Edmund offers a hand to Fossett to bring him to his feet. “Lad, we are going to have words when we get back to my practice room.” He flicks the knife as a hint and looks out into the hall.
Once they are all in the room where Laria and Lady Iah wait he is furious to find the new Lady of Restenford has a fever. People die from such carelessness and stupidity. What are the young nobility of today coming to? As for Laria he has nothing but dismay for a young woman dressed as a man. He can tell this is not going to be a good night.
Assessing all present to be too young, inexperienced and hair-brained to know what to be doing with themselves he takes charge. Lady Iah is carefully lowered out of the window and supported by Fossett. They are in Ser Edmund’s lands and naturally he knows his way around like he knows every cut and scar on his own hand. Looking into the sky the moon appears in one of the few gaps in the clouds, it is dry for now. He whispers that it must be after midnight  and asks Laria to keep an eye out at the rear as he moves off into the night, skirting any of the camp's tents.
Somewhere in the night Iah vomits violently but remarks at how much better she feels. The world is a blur but her head does not hurt quite so much.


~ o0o ~


In Lastford Ser Lothryn and Ser Shelby have arrive outside of a traveling inn. Shelby steps forward and begins banging against the closed door. It is the dead of night and all sensible fellows are asleep.
After some more banging voices begin to stir and threats of murder are cried if the racket does not stop. Lothryn nods and stays Shelby’s hand from further attacks on the door.
“Aye swear if you don’t stop that aye’ll pour a chamber pot out o this window!” The screeching voice of the inn-keepers wife could be heard clearly from above.
Quickly the door opens a crack and a man in a kettle helmet confronts them with a loaded crossbow. A forest of swords are brandished behind him. 
Ser Lothryn is in no mood for any nonsense for time is of the essence. He introduces himself and Ser Shelby and explains that there is money to be made if they are willing to sacrifice some sleep for it. He is up front and tells him he needs men to accompany him into the Korcari Wilds as the new Lady of Restenford is in grave danger. The men behind the door don’t seem as keen as they did when the money was mentioned. Lothryn finds himself invited inside when he offers winter barracks for the captain and his men. 
At this the kettle head invites him inside to discuss the terms. He finds that he has a company of twelve and there are a further forty-six for hire with two other captains. A contract is arranged on the agreement that they will all be paid on the safe return of Iah to her home.

Out in the Korcari Wilds Ser Edmund stops and shakes his head, admitting that he has no clue where they are at the moment. Looking to the sky he thinks they are halfway til dawn and explains he has been looking for certain landmarks and clues that are dotted around, which allow those who live in the vast marshlands to find their way around. He is missing the mark of three rusty arrow heads in the sheltered side of a leafless tree, he hopes they are still there. He leads them back the way they came in the hope of finding the right markers. 
In Lastford the mercenaries take quite a time to ready themselves. Some are certainly quicker than others. By the time they all stand outside the inn, ready for duty, the light of the coming dawn has begun to brighten the eastern skyline. 


~ o0o ~

In the manor of Lastford, Myrtle has been trying to keep Old Willam busy though it seems to her the silly old coot is loosing his faculties. “Oo are you?” He looks at her with a quizzical expression after she asked him to ready the rooms as the ladies will be arriving in the morn.
“Myrtle! You let me in but a few hours ago. I am Lady Iah’s lady in waiting and I am mearly..” Willam cuts her off mid speech.“Oo’s that then?”
“What?” she looks confused. 
“Oo’s this Iah yer talkin about?” The old warden looks very confused.
Myrtle offers a prayer to the Maker and washes her hands of him. “Do what you like you old fool!” She bustles upstairs to find her own way around. The old idiot would only make a mess anyway.
Willam smiles and chuckles to himself, “Get’s em ev’ry time!” and wanders off back to his bed. 

~ o0o ~

As the sun cuts the horizon under broken cloud cover and a brisk wind, four people stumble out of the marshes to see over two score mercenaries making their way for the Wilds. 

The main mercenary captain, Gregor, sees what he thinks are two men caked in mud and two un-discernibles in an even worse state of appearance. “Peasants, ha!” He spits on the ground. Everyone seems so barbaric this far south in his mind, just look at them, rolling around in the mud. Worse than swine.
Ser Fossett sees that among the many armed men is Ser Lothryn and he begins to walk forward.
A bowman beside Lothryn asks “Shall we shoot em boss?” Peering through the early morning mist he just recognises Fossett’s tabard and calls for the men not to be shooting anyone unless at his command.
Ser Edmund strides past the young knight and straight for the mercenaries. “Who are you to march forty odd scruffy men through my lands?” He looks pointedly at Ser Lothryn in his fresh tabard. 
Your lands? Who are you to be making such claims? I am Ser Lothryn and the Bann of Restenford is currently in the Wilds being pursued by enemy forces.
Ser Edmund pulls himself up into his full height and announces who he is and why he is here. He tells Ser Lothryn that this is his wife and daughter beside him and that Lady Iah and her attendant have been captured by Malegaunt and held captive. At that point Ser Fossett has reached his side and tries to interject but Ser Edmund stands pointedly on his foot to make sure he understands what is meant. He asks if it can be arranged for his family to be taken to his manor at Lastford and he shall accompany the troops into the Wilds and show them the way.
Ser Shelby is given the task of accompanying the womenfolk and once at a safe distance explains what is happening.  

Free of the womenfolk, Ser Edmund, Ser Lothryn and Ser Fossett scout ahead, searching for the knoll under the knowledgable guidance of the older knight. Safely out of hearing of any of the mercenaries, Ser Edmund explains his plans and apologies for the lies used to get them to this point.

"Good Ser's you will have to forgive me for I have not been entirely honest. The ladies I sent back to my manor, as the boy knows" he nods at Fossett "are in fact the Lady Iah and her 'companion'. The fact is that I do not trust these sell-swords you have hired Ser Lothryn, and that is no slight upon yourself. I am quite sure not one of them would have had a second thought against capturing your lady and handing her over to that evil little runt Malegaunt. A little subterfuge negated that fight completely. Also, for my own part, my family are still at the lodge and I fear there is little time to save them once I am found to be gone. We must hurry."

Both Lothryn and Fossett nod in acceptance. No further explanations are required for the moment and Lothryn is, in truth, impressed at such quick thinking. "I am grateful for your understanding, believe me." Ser Edmund begins explaining how best he feels they should approach the hunting lodge and what is to be done as the mercenary captains reach the hill to hear the tactics under discussion.

~ o0o ~

"My lady! By the Maker look at you!" Myrtle cries as she runs across the slippery courtyard to the bedraggled figures coming through the gate. She is careful to hoist up her skirts to avoid the muck. Ser Shelby busies himself with closing the gate while the women fluster over Iah, helping her into the manor.

Laria finds that her friend's lady in waiting has been true to her task. There is a fire stoked and radiating blessed heat in the room prepared for Iah. Fresh water and clean sheets for bathing her. New clothes looked out of the chests and laid neatly. Food and drink on the table nearby. 

Once her lady is clean and comfortable in bed, sleeping soundly. Laria attends to herself before assisting Myrtle out in the herb garden. The plants at this time of year are sparse and beginning to die-back but they can find enough to make a healing draft. Though in honesty Laria does more of the carrying and cutting than finding. The herb garden had always been Iah's forte. If her friend had been but a horse instead of a woman, she would have been better equipped to care for her.
~ o0o ~


By now the escape of Ser Edmund has been discovered and the upstart Malegaunt is furious at such an affront. The ego of a lesser man is a fragile thing, more so that of a boy. His plans are not working out as he had designed. Against any better judgement or council all further plans are brought forward in a pique of rage. The fight begins now. He will not wait for more to go awry. All brigand mercenary companies present at the lodge are rallied and lead by the Black Brigand himself. The barbarians are similarly rallied and follow suit. They march for Lastford.

While paused at the knoll of slightly drier marsh used to gather their thoughts to guide their actions, Ser Edmund of Lastford and accompanying mercenaries and knights hear the approach. The noise of an army on march. Scraping and clanging of metal, voices and grunts of displeasure at such a land to be marching in, dogs of war barking. The obligatory curses. A band of mercenaries are no quiet thing.

The barbarian tribes are horrified by their fellow warriors. The towns people will hear them coming long before they arrive. This was not as was agreed. Whispered disagreement blows between the tribesmen and their leaders.

The sounds of the approach are clear to hear. Ser Edmund and Ser Lothryn move into action. Orders are whispered harshly to the mercenary captains, signals to lay low and ready their weapons. 

The fight is coming to them!

As the men on forced march trudge round a bank of fog and marsh scrub the signal is given. A whistle of feather-flighted death fires overhead and thuds into the screaming enemy. The volley of arrows was not what they were expecting this far from the town. The Black Brigand and the captains bellow to bring order to the chaos and, those of Maleguant's forces still alive to listen, split and roar up the hill in retaliation. First blood had been drawn. 

The Korcari tribesmen hold back beside Malegaunt. Assessing the onslaught before them. 

Death and confusion continue as blood seeps into the boggy ground.

After minutes that wing by as moments Malegaunt signals for the barbarians to wheel round back to lodge. A change is in the air.



~ o0o ~


Iah's fever has risen again and she struggles to take down the herbal concoction. The strange taste chokes in her throat like fire. Myrtle admits to herself that healing is not her strong point either. She fusses over smoothing her lady's black hair away from her sweat soaked brow before applying a cooling poultice. 

"Lady Laria could you have Willam bring us the local priest? I need someone of greater skill than myself here. We may need more assistance too if those soldiers you spoke of are to be coming back here after battle."

Laria nods and quickly rises to leave the bedside. Before she reaches the door Myrtle speaks again, "Oh... a moment.", she says stroking her chin thoughtfully. "Have Ser Shelby go with him, for I believe the old fool's faculties are not what they should be. We will also need food and a cook for this evening. The pantry is almost bare. A shocking state to see a knight's household in." She tuts to no one but herself. "We may need to feed those returning too. Can you see to it?"

"Of course." The young swordswoman has never been one for words. She nods, closes the door quietly and goes about what needs done. It is midday already and a meal for so many will take a long time to prepare in a kitchen so cold and neglected. She half smiles, half grimaces at some of the chores the sisters had her complete growing up in the Abbey. She always preferred the sword to the soup spoon but she supposed those experiences had their uses.


~ o0o ~

In the heat of adrenaline and blood thirst it takes some time for those fighting to notice Malegaunt has slipped away. The Black Brigand is the first of them and is torn between his options. Continue with the killing or double back to follow the boy that pays for his services? He looks around to assess how their chances stand. Not good when fighting uphill against armed bastards with the upper hand. 

"Fall back!" The call is raised and all those able to hear back their way down the hill before splashing through the bog the way they had come. 

There is no point playing the loosing game. 

At seeing his opponents run for their lives, Ser Fossett cheers and whoops. Thrusting his sword in the air in delight. "Cowards! You have no honour! Stand and fight!"

The allied mercenaries shake their heads and laugh at the boy in armour. "He's only a pup." One chuckles to his friend. "He'll learn."

Ser Lothryn turns from freeing his sword from a crumpled body to see what all the cheering is over. His expression turns from tired to grim. Looking round for Ser Edmund, he catches his attention and they exchange a nod.

"It's not over yet! Follow them! To the hunting lodge! Find Malegaunt!" The older knight may be passing his prime but he can still unleash a voice to carry over the loudest of battles. All men left standing turn and batter down the hill, leaping over branch and body mangled in the mud.


~ o0o ~



By the time they reach the hunting lodge it is ablaze. The makeshift camps are nothing but smouldering fires and abandoned items common to any armies retreating litter. 

Bodies lie strewn around the lodge where they were felled. The staff of Lastford's manor had been killed in cold blood. They were no longer useful to those who had kept them. Why not slaughter them? You do not keep animals that are no longer of use.

All draw up short at the scene that greets them. A moment of shock as the backs of the last mercenaries and Black Brigand disappear into the smoke and fog. Twilight is approaching once again. The shortening days of mid-autumn.

Laying on the steps of the lodge are shapes most familiar. Ser Edmund walks forward in a daze to stop just short of the bodies before him. The cold dead eyes of his wife and daughter stare into the nothing of the past. Their clothing is soaked in the pool of blood now oozing from their pale open throats. He is undone.

Falling to his knees, eyes wide and hands limp by his side, his sword thumps into the dirt. A useless piece of metal.

Voices and people swirl as the outside world disappears. The real world fades.

Without a thought his dagger is in his grip and aiming for his chest. A blow in motion to end a sorry day and a sorry mess.

As it sweeps down the short distance to his heart it flies clean out from his hand, as do the wind from his lungs, and the world swings sideways. 

Sense of the here and now come back to him in a breath. 

Fossett is atop him. He weakly pushes at the boy to leave him be.


Thoughts wound him like the dagger could not have done. He is alive. His family are dead. His whole home and heart are gone. 


Ser Edmund of Lastford turns his face to the churned earth and screams a feral cry of pain that ends in an uncontrollable sob. 

All those nearby begin picking through what is left. No one wishes to see a grown man cry. Someone usually so strong, now so distraught, is an uncomfortable sight.

The fight is over. For now.


[next] part 2, session one
[previous] session ten
[first] session one
[background] life of lady nimue