Malagen
08-02-08, 07:43 PM
((Open to all who wish to fight Malagen (up to three max). Keep in mind that this is NOT a Citadel battle, so watch your steps. This shit is for real. If you have the 'nads, join the party.))
There were more people in the marketplace than there were fleas on a beggar, and yet Malagen felt alone. It was a peculiar emotion for the barbarian, a novelty that his system couldn’t quite digest yet. Not so long ago he would’ve been able to get rid of these ridiculous feelings as if they were no more than lint on his sleeve. But the infrangible equilibrium that once reigned supreme in his head was nearly gone. He could still latch onto the threads of it, on the fragmented remains that still bestowed him with composure, but that absolute calm, that perfect balance that enabled him to be an infallible killing machine, was gone. And it was all because of that damned woman.
Ira Shinkara had been the culprit, the stone that spread the ripples on the surface that was perfectly still once upon a time. A strong woman she was, unlike any Malagen met before, proud, unyielding, defiant even when they battled and he held her life in his hands. Initially, he found such stubbornness in a woman intriguing, interesting in a way a two-headed calf was or a magician with a trick that was hard to see through. But she turned out to be more than just a forgettable attraction. She grew on him, like a disease that grew on a healthy organ, like a plague that spread and ruined the world. And somewhere along the way she had awoken a side of him that he never knew existed, opened the door that led to a room filled with feelings he had locked away so many years ago.
He thought he loved her because of that.
He wound up hating her instead.
It had happened several weeks ago, in a middle of a night no different than the one before it or the one before that one. The wench that somehow broke through the walls he had been building ever since he could remember, the goddamned bitch that crawled inside of him like the snake she was, she upped and left. Some missions to do, other people to care about, and there was no room for him to tag along. Malagen didn’t hate her because of the pain her abandonment caused. He hated her because she made him vulnerable to that pain. Because that pain made him feel alone now, alien to the people around him. Even when he conversed with them, it was merely out of necessity and little else.
***
On the other side of the counter, in a weapon shop of no particular renown, a blacksmith swore on the grave of his dead mother (amongst other things) that the sword he sloppily brandished was the best blade in all of Radasanth. Could be the best blade ever made if you asked him, thank you very much. The slick-haired man swung it around with the skills of a weekend adventurer, proving once again that sword-makers usually wield hammer and prongs with some skill, but little else. Not that it mattered to Malagen in the long run. He didn’t have the money for the prevalida blade and he couldn’t just kill a man and take it from him. Because that would be wrong. Ira said that. “You can’t just kill an innocent man!” or some other righteous baloney like that. Perhaps it was time to quit listening to the voice that brought him naught but ache and unrest.
“Two and a half thousand and it’s yours,” the shop-keeper concluded his pitch, sheathing the weapon and laying it down on the red velvet in which it had been wrapped. “You won’t find a better offer anywhere.”
Malagen picked up the weapon and examined it. It truly was a magnificent blade, sharpened with delicate care, hilt motifs hand-carved in ebony, sheath polished to the point he could see his disfigured reflection in the blackened wood. It lacked the hilt guard like his saber, but it wasn’t a weapon made for defense anyways. It was a killing machine, an object made for a single purpose; destruction. And it sought an appropriate wielder.
“I have a better offer,” Malagen uttered after nearly a minute of careful examination, the unnatural, dead calm clear in his tone. His sword arm, however, was anything but calm. It moved with such a speed that if you blinked as it started moving, you’d open your eyes to a blade touching the sallow skin of the salesman’s neck. The two watchmen that guarded the shop reacted immediately, their clumsy, sweaty hands reaching for the hilts on their hips. But before they even touched the leather, the barbarian had his saber out with his offhand, pointing it at one of the sentries. His eyes were still on the proprietor of the shop. “I let you and your goons live and you let me have the blade. Three lives spared. I think it’s a fair price.”
The interior of the shop became so quiet that the sounds of the murmur outside the door seemed intrusive, loud enough to disrupt the standstill. It seemed that any one of them could make the entire scene go downhill. “Hmm?” Malagen asked with a grinning gesture. “No?” Still there was no response. “Very well. You won’t deal with reason. We’ll deal in blood.”
Chaos overtook the interior of the shop, sounds of metal clashing, wood breaking and flesh tearing available for every passerby to hear. One of them, a gawky teenager with a sack of flour on his shoulder, was curious enough to spy on the cause of this ruckus. And once he did, his cry “MURDERER!” spread across the Bazaar like a shockwave. Covered in blood, with both his blades drawn and soiled by the life liquid of his three victims, Malagen emerged from the shop, a fuel for the wave of panic that spread in an almost concentric circle around him. Playing the nice guy hadn’t paid off. It was time to play the villain again.
There were more people in the marketplace than there were fleas on a beggar, and yet Malagen felt alone. It was a peculiar emotion for the barbarian, a novelty that his system couldn’t quite digest yet. Not so long ago he would’ve been able to get rid of these ridiculous feelings as if they were no more than lint on his sleeve. But the infrangible equilibrium that once reigned supreme in his head was nearly gone. He could still latch onto the threads of it, on the fragmented remains that still bestowed him with composure, but that absolute calm, that perfect balance that enabled him to be an infallible killing machine, was gone. And it was all because of that damned woman.
Ira Shinkara had been the culprit, the stone that spread the ripples on the surface that was perfectly still once upon a time. A strong woman she was, unlike any Malagen met before, proud, unyielding, defiant even when they battled and he held her life in his hands. Initially, he found such stubbornness in a woman intriguing, interesting in a way a two-headed calf was or a magician with a trick that was hard to see through. But she turned out to be more than just a forgettable attraction. She grew on him, like a disease that grew on a healthy organ, like a plague that spread and ruined the world. And somewhere along the way she had awoken a side of him that he never knew existed, opened the door that led to a room filled with feelings he had locked away so many years ago.
He thought he loved her because of that.
He wound up hating her instead.
It had happened several weeks ago, in a middle of a night no different than the one before it or the one before that one. The wench that somehow broke through the walls he had been building ever since he could remember, the goddamned bitch that crawled inside of him like the snake she was, she upped and left. Some missions to do, other people to care about, and there was no room for him to tag along. Malagen didn’t hate her because of the pain her abandonment caused. He hated her because she made him vulnerable to that pain. Because that pain made him feel alone now, alien to the people around him. Even when he conversed with them, it was merely out of necessity and little else.
***
On the other side of the counter, in a weapon shop of no particular renown, a blacksmith swore on the grave of his dead mother (amongst other things) that the sword he sloppily brandished was the best blade in all of Radasanth. Could be the best blade ever made if you asked him, thank you very much. The slick-haired man swung it around with the skills of a weekend adventurer, proving once again that sword-makers usually wield hammer and prongs with some skill, but little else. Not that it mattered to Malagen in the long run. He didn’t have the money for the prevalida blade and he couldn’t just kill a man and take it from him. Because that would be wrong. Ira said that. “You can’t just kill an innocent man!” or some other righteous baloney like that. Perhaps it was time to quit listening to the voice that brought him naught but ache and unrest.
“Two and a half thousand and it’s yours,” the shop-keeper concluded his pitch, sheathing the weapon and laying it down on the red velvet in which it had been wrapped. “You won’t find a better offer anywhere.”
Malagen picked up the weapon and examined it. It truly was a magnificent blade, sharpened with delicate care, hilt motifs hand-carved in ebony, sheath polished to the point he could see his disfigured reflection in the blackened wood. It lacked the hilt guard like his saber, but it wasn’t a weapon made for defense anyways. It was a killing machine, an object made for a single purpose; destruction. And it sought an appropriate wielder.
“I have a better offer,” Malagen uttered after nearly a minute of careful examination, the unnatural, dead calm clear in his tone. His sword arm, however, was anything but calm. It moved with such a speed that if you blinked as it started moving, you’d open your eyes to a blade touching the sallow skin of the salesman’s neck. The two watchmen that guarded the shop reacted immediately, their clumsy, sweaty hands reaching for the hilts on their hips. But before they even touched the leather, the barbarian had his saber out with his offhand, pointing it at one of the sentries. His eyes were still on the proprietor of the shop. “I let you and your goons live and you let me have the blade. Three lives spared. I think it’s a fair price.”
The interior of the shop became so quiet that the sounds of the murmur outside the door seemed intrusive, loud enough to disrupt the standstill. It seemed that any one of them could make the entire scene go downhill. “Hmm?” Malagen asked with a grinning gesture. “No?” Still there was no response. “Very well. You won’t deal with reason. We’ll deal in blood.”
Chaos overtook the interior of the shop, sounds of metal clashing, wood breaking and flesh tearing available for every passerby to hear. One of them, a gawky teenager with a sack of flour on his shoulder, was curious enough to spy on the cause of this ruckus. And once he did, his cry “MURDERER!” spread across the Bazaar like a shockwave. Covered in blood, with both his blades drawn and soiled by the life liquid of his three victims, Malagen emerged from the shop, a fuel for the wave of panic that spread in an almost concentric circle around him. Playing the nice guy hadn’t paid off. It was time to play the villain again.