By the time Izvilvin made his sudden reappearance, the trio was back inside the singed house, scavenging for anything that might’ve remained usable after the arson. Sienna and Edward were mostly bystanders though, loitering around the depressive interior while Letho sifted through the ashes. Primarily, the Marshal searched for some weapons – his entire arsenal was confiscated in Gisela after he was decimated by the Scarlet Brigade soldier – and so far he found only the heavyset composite bow. It was stashed away in a massive iron chest, where Myrhia’s weapons should’ve rested as well, but her spear, her twin daggers and her leather bracers were missing. His full plate mail, forged out of tough Cillu glass from the land of Fallien, was there though, but Letho couldn’t don it, not with a broken arm. Instead, he stuffed it in a rather large duffel bag, together with some extra clothes and a peculiar, ancient-looking key that he didn’t recollect acquiring anywhere. He was in the process of inspecting the unfamiliar key under the faint light of a petroleum lamp when the Drow uttered his name.
All three of them recoiled at the voice of the intruder, but only Sienna was jittery and wary enough to brandish her rifle, lining it up with the man as dark as the night that swallowed the landscape. She remembered the dark elf as a member of Letho’s posse, and needless to say, there was little fondness in her eyes. “You know this Drow?” Edward asked, examining Izvilvin suspiciously and keeping his hands at his belt, ready to draw metal if need be. There were many who wanted the Rangers dead and not all of them wore an Empire patch on their arms.
The tension was prominent, but only for the duration of several seconds that Letho needed to acknowledge the identity of the grim elf. Izvilvin maybe wasn’t a best friend – or a friend at all – but the Marshal heard the full report regarding the “Gisela Massacre” from Christina and others that had the misfortune of being caught up in it. And he knew that the Drow sided with the rioters, that he was one of the good guys. How he managed to escape imprisonment was quite a mystery, but it wasn’t one that Letho was keen on solving at this particular moment.
“Yes, he’s alright. He fought with the rioters back in Gisela,” Letho said, lowering Sienna’s rifle gently before approaching the dark elf. There was still some old beef between them, he knew, that drew roots from that one time when the Marshal locked Izvilvin in the cage for insubordination. But according to the Drow’s words and tone, it was water under a bridge. Letho’s mobile left hand clamped the shoulder of the dark elf in a gesture of greeting. “Good to see you make it, Izvilvin.”
Realizing that the white-haired elf probably couldn’t understand him, Letho continued in what he hoped was comprehensible Drow. “Christina in Underwood,” he spoke, letting go of the elf’s shoulder before gesturing to himself and the callous-faced Edward. “We go there now. Fight the...uhm...” The word for the empire or bastards or anything else that befitted their current enemies evaded the Marshal. Luckily for him, his veteran companion seemed to have much more experience in speaking foreign languages.
“...those responsible for the deaths of the innocents. Our headquarters are in Underwood. You are welcome to join our cause,” Edward spoke, his face tough and stern, still pertaining a portion of incredulity.
“Yes. Come on, there are many miles to Underwood.”
A gale welcomed them as they stepped out of the manor, slapping their faces with the combination of chill and moisture, but aside from its whistling sound and the tapping of the rain drops on any coherent surface, the night seemed dead. Farther down the road, the crowns of the weeping willows danced to the tune of the wind, their long thin branches moving in wavelike fashion. Their horses were restless, miserable, as tired as their riders of being sodden and ridden down the mushy roads. But once the trio climbed into the saddles, they snorted and lifted their heads readily, as if on some subconscious level they too knew that there was still a lot of ground to cover. The acrimonious teen blonde, whose inner child fell victim to the devices of the Empire, looked up towards the man that was once the embodiment of everything good in the world.
“You coming?” Letho asked her.
“Can you promise me vengeance?” she retorted with a question of her own, her pale face drenched by the torrent of fat drops that slipped down her cheeks like tears.
“No. I can promise you a fight, not its outcome. Will that give you satiation?” the Marshal asked, extending his healthy arm towards Sienna. She didn’t accept it instantly; her once beautiful face was contorted in a frown that made her both less and more attractive somehow.
“It will suffice,” she finally decided, shouldering her rifle and climbing into the saddle behind Letho.
***
It took them the entire night and most of the following day to reach Underwood. Edward took them down the paths that even Letho had no knowledge of, navigating through the dense forest unerringly, but it was still a lengthy and utterly uncomfortable journey. The rain found it appropriate to lower its intensity to a mild drizzle, but by then the four already had a thick canopy of leaves above their heads as protection against the elements. Twice they encountered rangers that kept to the trees and remained invisible until the very last moment, but the middle-aged ranger took them past unharmed by speaking the password to his comrades. They seemed better organized then Letho originally anticipated, and it was almost enough to spark optimism within his negative mind.
Almost. Because the deeper they ventured into Concordia, the stronger was the pull in the opposite direction. He was distancing himself from Myrhia, and even though he practically didn’t have a say in the matter, it didn’t prevent him from feeling like he was abandoning her. Tormented by this treachery, Letho, who was never the most talkative man, remained withdrawn into himself even further. Luckily for him, none of his companions seemed too eager to palaver. Izvilvin had a language barrier that he preferred not to cross too often. Edward was focused on getting them through the forest. Even Sienna, usually chatty and filled with questions, was locked in her own world. For a long while now she wanted to get close to Letho, she dreamed of being the position she was right now, her hands embracing him, his body pressed against her. She couldn’t even imagine that now that the moment finally occurred, she had to restrain herself from stabbing him in the back.
The double wooden palisades of the Concordia capitol were a welcome sight. They were just the first line of defense, standing before and after a deep moat. Last time the Marshal visited Underwood, the moat was as dry as gunpowder, but the last time he visited, Corone wasn’t caught in a civil war. Beyond the outer fence were mostly homesteads and small farms, but instead of farmers and stock, armed men patrolled the proximity. Windows were boarded up, fences reinforced with wooden spikes, turning the once quaint suburb into a warzone waiting for the assailants. Beyond this first defensive ring were the first and only real stone walls of the city, encompassing the core of Underwood. The ramparts themselves were rather unremarkable, twice as short and thrice as thin as those of Gisela, with most of the mortar falling off. It was rather clear the protecting Underwood wasn’t nearly as important as preventing the troops from actually reaching the heart of the forest. It was a viable tactic, Letho thought; in this war, Concordia was their greatest ally.