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Visla Eraclaire
10-05-09, 04:56 AM
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The mountains rose sharply into the early morning sky, their true mass indiscernible in the darkness just before the dawn. As Aelva glided through the air toward the appointed area, Visla scanned the ground below for a pathway, a flicker of light, an unnatural sound, anything to suggest their destination. The monastery they sought was supposed to be cut right into the mountainside, a formidable enclave for which the defensive capabilities far outclassed its strategic value. Isolated in the rugged crags of northern Salvar, built over a mountain spring, it was simply not worth besieging. As Visla was swiftly discovering, one could hardly know it was there amongst the rubble of long forgotten landslides, the snow still clinging to mountain peaks and the dense evergreen forests.

"Stop looking for it and start looking for somewhere to land. If we don't make a choice, the sun is going to choose for us in a few minutes," Aelva warned.

Visla complied, shifting her focus toward the foothills, looking for clearings, but still glancing up at the cliff faces from time to time, knowing that if they had to make camp and climb, the news would easily reach the monastery before they did. Just as daylight started to glow from beneath the mountains to the east, the smoke of a campsite caught her. She pointed Aelva toward it and the pair dove toward the clearing. Just as they approached the ground, Aelva spread her wings to their full breadth and fluttered them to a halt.

They found a small campfire and a shocked inhabitant huddled behind a fine white horse. The man hiding behind the beast was difficult to see, but the animal itself was barded with fine armor as if he had run straight off from beneath a mighty general. Unlike his erstwhile rider, the mount seemed unshaken by Visla and Aelva's sudden arrival.

"W-w-who goes there?" the man stammered, having just awoken moments before the pair came swooping in from the sky. Visla counted another gold piece she was missing out on.

"We'll ask the questions. Where are you headed?" Aelva said, pulling back her hood to glare at the man, but not yet calling upon her persuasive powers.

"I'm… I'm just a messenger. Please," he said as he watched the fierce young woman walking closer to him. The horse he used as a shield stood perfectly still, looking at the two women nonchalantly.

"I don't think the Church would trust just a messenger," Visla said.

"They… they needed to get through… through the League's lands. They couldn't just… s-s-end a cleric," he said, clinging to one of the horses legs.

"Plausible. What about the horse? Seems awfully nice for a cowardly messenger," Aelva inquired, kneeling down next to him and revealing one of her claws.

"It's the monastery's… master… saint… whatever. It's his horse. It knows the way. They almost just put the message on the horse, but I convinced them to let me take it and they gave me a bag of gold and they told me to go immediately and that there would be even more for me when I arrived and so I did and then I had to stop because I couldn't keep my eyes open and so—"

"Good enough," Aelva cut short his ramblings. "Leave the message. Leave the money. Leave the horse. You can go," she said, turning to pet the animal, surprised at it did not startle at her touch as many creatures are wont to do in the presence of a demon.

"Thank you, bless you," he said, and scampered off into the wood.

"We're actually inspiring fear now? Two women with a dagger between them?" Visla said, surprised with the ease of their interrogation.

"Never underestimate the affect of appearing out of the sky on black wings just before dawn. And I have a bow," Aelva revealed the weapon concealed beneath her human illusion.

"Fair enough," Visla said, taking the message from a container strapped to the horse's flank. It was sealed with wax, but she cracked it open and unfurled the parchment. "As I expected, we can't deliver this. It orders the monastery to kill the oldest child and send the head back… along with the head of the messenger."

"Well now I’m glad you opened it," Aelva said, pulling herself up into the horse's saddle and helping Visla up behind her. "What do we do now?"

"Ride. Hopefully we figure something out before we arrive," Visla said and spurred the horse on. It responded swiftly and began to cantor back toward a narrow mountain path, mostly overgrown, shielded by trees, and almost invisible even as one traveled over it.

Visla Eraclaire
10-07-09, 12:21 PM
The horse trotted ably through the wooded foothills, unhindered by gnarled briars and frequent pitfalls. The foliage around them became gradually less dense, replaced by sparse brush and hardened clay-rich soil. As the overhanging boughs fell into the background, a mighty crag towered in front of them. The ascent began, and Visla still had little idea of what to do.

Aelva seemed preoccupied, rehearsing a series of gestures as she bucked about in the saddle. She would be of no assistance in formulating a plan, and so Visla turned to what little she knew as the mount made its way up the rocky trail. A single man with a sword was almost enough to defeat the pair before, and so a frontal assault on what could be a well-fortified outpost was obviously ill-advised. With Visla's clumsy gait and her companion's unsubtle tendencies, sneaking in was almost as bad, especially when anyone perched on the mountain would likely see them coming. A much cleverer plan was necessary, and Visla suddenly thought she had just the one.

"Aelva, get off the horse," Visla said, worried that her succubus would be seen if they went any further together and with little time to explain. She tried to pull back on the reins and stop, but the animal seemed quite determined to continue. Abandoning that, she took off her signet ring and grabbed the message canister from the horse's saddlebag, things that would likely get her killed immediately.

"Excuse me?" Aelva said, glancing to her left and seeing a precipitous fall awaiting her.

"I can't stop the horse. Get off and take these," she replied curtly, shoved the ring and message toward her. "I'll Call you once I'm inside."

"As you wish. I hope you know what you're doing," the succubus replied calmly, transforming into her demonic form and tumbling off the back of the animal, gliding gracefully to a stop on a cloud of shadows. She leaned up against the face of the mountain and began to invoke a veil of shadows to conceal herself, prepared for a somewhat lengthy wait.

"So do I," Visla muttered to herself. Her plan, as far as she had figured it out consisted in being captured and hopefully not killed immediately by whoever occupied the monastery. If she was hurt, Aelva would take the actual wounds, hopefully long enough for them to be curious and keep her around for observation. Once she was left alone, she'd summon Aelva and break out with the children. It was all very simple, except for that last step, and every step before it.

The horse whipped around a blind corner and before she could doubt herself further, it reared back and came to a halt. Before her were two massive stone doors, carved right into the mountainside. Elegant scrollwork decorated the rock face around them, weathered by the passage of many years, and obscured at parts with hardy vines that clung to the unforgiving surface. There were no torches and no guards, nothing she would have had any chance of spotting from the air or the base of the mountain. It was the perfect place to hide out indefinitely.

She walked up to the entrance and pressed her hand against the cold stone. Knocking made little sense; she'd likely scrape up her knuckles long before she made an audible noise through the thick portal. There were slots to pull the slabs open, but they looked as if they would take two or three hearty men to move. Visla knew that was a non-starter, but she was not left to puzzle for long. Behind her, the elegant horse let out a shrieking whinny that reverberated through the air. Within moments, the doors began to slowly open.

Visla stood back, almost hoping that the horse had triggered the doors itself, but was dismayed to see a dozen robed monks pushing the mighty stones from the other side. The horse strode casually into the long, dark hall that opened up before them, heedless of the human doormen. The warlock was given no such privilege. As soon as the door was open wide enough to accommodate the steed and it had trotted through, one of them grabbed her unceremoniously by the arm and pulled her inside.

Visla Eraclaire
10-07-09, 12:41 PM
The area within was dimly lit and it was difficult to discern much beyond general shapes in the shadows, but there were many more people than the dozen that opened the door. The faint murmuring of speech from distant corridors echoed off smooth stone walls. By all appearances, the structure was based on a natural cavern, only slightly modified to accommodate its devout population. Visla tried to glance about and get some sense of the extent of the place's garrison, but she was dragged along too quickly to make any accurate count. One was too many for her to resist alone, and so it mattered little for the moment.

"The messenger's arrived, go retrieve his payment," one of the men said, the last word lingering in such an obvious and villainous way that anyone but Visla would likely attempt flight immediately. The robed men she saw arrayed around her seemed almost disappointed that she did not try. Their muscular limbs outstretched, toned at length by their regimens, seemed ready to rip her to pieces. What little light there was in the chamber danced fiendishly in their eager eyes.

Visla could still see the white horse standing at the end of the hall she was being dragged down. A door opened in front of it, letting in the bright light of an anteroom and wreathing the creature in brilliance. A figure emerged with a drooping hood covering its face. Aged hands protruded from a tattered shawl and stroked the beast along its nose. It exhaled audibly and then took off down a side tunnel, leaving the backlit figure unobscured. It was difficult to tell beneath the old robes whether it was a man or a woman, but a rasped voice answered that query.

"Stay your blades for a moment," a woman, her dread voice speaking to a venerable age, ordered Visla's captors.

"As you wish, Saint," the man bowed and released Visla's arm. "Send her back to us when you are finished," he added with the same sinister intonation as before.

"Come," was all the old woman said to Visla, before turning back into the well lit room.

Visla squinted but attempted to follow. The crone intended to interrogate her, no doubt. She had anticipated the zealots might want answers from her, but she had expected a more lengthy process, being tossed in a cell or otherwise left alone long enough to summon Aelva. It was the first of many miscalculations in her all too hastily made plan.

Visla Eraclaire
10-08-09, 08:18 AM
Inside the room, two braziers in the far corners lit up the rough-hewn walls and the sparse furnishings. Two chairs sat on either side of a small table and the old woman took a seat in the one furthest the door. She pulled back her hood and revealed a face sagging with the weight of decades. Her eyes still sparkled, set like tiny sapphires in the recesses of dark caves. Her lips were narrow and drawn and she spoke her words tersely.

"Close the door and sit."

Visla saw little alternative to obedience at the moment. In fact, she would have done just that in the absence of any directive, she only hesitated now that she was being told. She pushed the door, that was no more than a wooden gate, shut and sat across the table from her apparent captor.

"You are not a messenger," the woman said, matter-of-factly.

Visla rose a hand, ready to protest, but relented as the woman seemed intent on continuing.

"If the men outside were as perceptive as I am, they would have snapped your neck the moment you walked into this cave, warlock," she said coldly.

"I am not—" Visla began to protest again. She was powerless, after all, though that was more of a technicality than anything else. In truth, she still considered herself a warlock.

"I can smell the brimstone a mile away. Your soul is tainted, your hands bloody. All this, I can see," the cleric averred. "If you are here to kill us, I welcome you to try, but I suspect you have another purpose."

Visla conceded the hag's perceptiveness, but it only made her vitriol for the church more potent. It is possible to hate a fool or an incompetent with enough effort, but hatred comes naturally toward our superiors. It was something Visla realized in the back of her mind, though she'd never confess the old bat's supremacy.

"You're right," she said, but feared that if she admitted any more, it would be just as bad as if the messenger had arrived. "If you see so clearly, why not tell me why I came as well?"

"Ahahahah," the woman laughed not maliciously, but with spontaneity and apparent joy. "The impetuousness of youth. I think you are here for the children."

Visla scowled immediately, not realizing until a moment later that she had given the woman just the satisfaction she was seeking. She crossed her arms and attempted to look unimpressed, but it was far too late for that.

"What would I want with children?" she asked. It was a feeble gesture, she realized.

"I think we've played enough guessing games," the woman said, rising from her chair and turning to face the rear wall. "Would you like the see them?"

Visla Eraclaire
10-09-09, 08:08 AM
The old cleric stepped through the stone wall and vanished without a sound. Visla walked over and attempted to tap on it with her cane before accepting it as a mere illusion. She paused for a moment and wondered why the woman would bother hiding anything in her own monastery, but she chalked it up to some mad paranoia and strode through the figment.

On the other side there was a sleeping chamber with a large bed in the corner. The bed looked like it might have been comfortable, except that it was stripped down to its frame with the mattress replaced by a wooden board. The remnants of its deconstruction lay in three piles next to it, forming smaller improptu bedrolls that looked quite suitable despite their ramshackle appearance. Curled up in two of them were the baron's two daughters, one still a little girl and the other perhaps in her early teens. The eldest child was not in his pile of blankets, which was the most spartan of the three. He was a young man, likely a few years shy of twenty. He sat at a small desk reading a book and hadn't looked up when the aged woman entered, but glanced at Visla suspiciously as she passed through the illusory wall.

“Grandmother, you didn't tell us we'd be having guests,” he asked, still sounding a bit like the spoiled noble's son he was, despite his captivity. Visla paid no mind to his method of addressing the cleric. It was common in many cultures to call old women grandmother.

“She came uninvited. She came for you,” the saint explained.

“I'm sorry, girl. A man of my station can find a much more attractive consort, even in the mountains,” he said, apparently with all seriousness.

Visla scowled, but before she could get a word out the cleric shouted, “Impudence!”

The woman slammed her hand on the table where the young man was reading. It was the first time Visla had seen her rise to anger, and it was a fearsome sight. For all her age, she had an impressive vigor when riled up.

“You'll read five more chapters for that outburst. I will select them once I am done with our guest, who you will address more politely from now on,” the cleric scolded.

“Yes, ma'am,” he muttered and went back to reading.

This was perhaps the strangest form of indoctrination Visla had yet seen, but it takes all kinds, she figured. After all, the family is one of the most central sources of religious and social indoctrination in children, why should it not be mimicked by others? She watched as the old woman gently roused the older of the two girls, whispering in her ear. At first, the girl rolled over, unwilling to rise. The cleric pulled the covers from over her, exposing her to the natural cold of the cavern and she reluctantly rose.

“Good morning, grandma. Good morning strange interloper,” she said, rubbing her eyes.

“Have I raised a group of boors? Where are your manners, girl?” the cleric scolded once again.

“But you didn't raise us. Daddy did,” the girl replied, still yawning.

At the peak of the girl's yawn the matronly woman slapped her lightly in the stomach, giving her a small startle. “And look what that got you,” she said with a grim tone.

Whatever she was referencing, it shut the girl right up.

Visla Eraclaire
10-09-09, 08:31 AM
The cleric did not rouse the last child, but let the little girl go on sleeping, curled in a tiny ball. She looked Visla in the eye before she spoke her next words.

“I apologize, but the little one needs her rest,” she paused palpably before continuing. “Disease has left her crippled.”

Visla gripped her cane tightly and stared back at the woman. The most obvious reactions were sadness, sympathy, and self-pity. Visla felt none of these, at least not at first. She felt she had caught the cleric up in her ruse. She felt anger, vindication, and outrage.

“So, you raise these children but you withhold your healing from them? How noble of you,” Visla crowed proudly making sure the two children heard her. “You can drop your grandmotherly routine now. Your church is using these youths as bargaining chips to keep their father losing battle after battle. You may have kept that from them, but I will not. I'm taking them back to their father, one way or another.”

The oldest slammed his book down on the table and glared at Visla, “Don't speak of what you don't know, wretch!”

The younger girl simply trembled a bit and muttered, almost to herself, “I don't want to go back... I don't want to.”

The saint stared at Visla for a moment, letting the rage drain out of her tiny blue eyes before walking over and patting the boy on the back. “I will forgive you for that one, for even I was tempted to lash out at her, but remember that the ignorant are poor in their knowledge and need the charity of the wise.”

The old woman leaned part of her weight on the table and seemed to settle in for a lengthy explanation. “It's not an act, first of all. I am their grandmother. Their father is my son, and that is my greatest sin. The Sway would tell you it was a sin because it was an unchaste act, but they do not know of it. I tell you it is a sin because of what he grew up to be. Immoral, power hungry, and selfish,” she scowled with disgust, but her tone showed that that anger was turned inward.

“The Church is no better, it wages a war of purgation over the whole land,” Visla said, impulsively defending her swiftly crumbling stance.

“A group of clerics is not the Church, and the Church is not the Faith,” she said. It seemed that they were words she was frequently forced to utter. “I have never harmed another creature by my actions. But I have done great injury by my inaction. You are correct. These children were sent to me as captives. It never would have been so if the Church knew of their relation to me, but through divine providence, I am able to mend their hearts now.”

“Then why don't you mend the girl's bones?” Visla said, still unconvinced. The girl's suffering was the nail in this woman's coffin, as far as she was concerned. Without explanation for that, nothing would redeem this saint.

“That is my fault. For not raising their father, for giving him up as a foundling, he is unscrupulous,” she said. The two children bowed their heads, shamefully. “If you came from their house, you have seen the men struck down by a vile poison. The Baron made that poison for the war effort, invented it himself in a flash of dark genius. For a landed man, he was of humble means. He barely had enough men to guard his lands from attack, and so he made it himself, in his own house, with his children as assistants. The older two were strong enough, but the youngest grew frailer by the day. Still, he did not stop. He knew once a workable sample could be completed, the League would praise him, lavish him with all he had ever desired,” she sighed. “The manor was attacked before he could finish, the children taken. The man who ordered the strike was making a cold calculated decision for the war, but he did great good unknowingly. The children had been in my care since then.”

Visla sifted through her words carefully, suspiciously, unwilling to accept the story at face value. The more she pondered, the more she realized there was no other possibility. As convoluted as the tale was, it explained everything perfectly. If it was a lie, it imitated the truth so perfectly that Visla would never discern the two. She bowed her head and said, “I'm sorry.”

“You are forgiven,” the saint muttered. The four of them all stood downcast for a moment before anyone had the courage to speak again.

Visla Eraclaire
10-09-09, 08:53 AM
Visla was the one to finally break the silence, raising her head to look at the pitiable grandmother. “Why are you telling me all this? You said yourself, I am an infidel, a pact-bound warlock,” she asked. “What can I do about this?”

“What you always intended to do. Take the children and go,” the saint said, reluctantly.

“No! Don't abandon us,” the boy shouted in objection.

“You'll never find a wife in this cavern, boy. Your ambitious spirit is too much like your father's. I hope that I have tempered it some, but caging you with stone will do you no good.”

“Grandma, where will we go?” the girl asked.

“Wherever this woman takes you,” her grandmother answered. “Divine providence lead you to me and now it comes to take you away. I do not question the will of the Sway, though it may come in strange guises.”

Just then, the young child stirred from the back of the room, rustling out from her bedsheets. She leaned awkwardly against the wall of the cave, her tiny legs shaking. “Why's everyone so loud?” she said with a youthful irreverence.

“I'm sorry, Caroline. You need to get ready now,” the old woman bent down and explained. “You're going on a trip.”

“Yay! Gramm's takin' us out of this icky cave!” she cheered.

“Hush now, gather your things,” the matron commanded to all three of them, then turned back to Visla. She leaned in close and whispered, “I am as much a prisoner as they are. I may be saint of this monastery, but my words hold little sway over the young monks. Their loyalties lie with Valshadar, the man who ordered the attack on the manor. Whatever your plan to take them was, I hope it was well-considered.”

Visla swallowed hard and went over to the table where the boy had been reading. There was a small vial of ink and enough surface area on the wood to suit her needs. She dipped her finger into the inkwell and began drawing the sigils to summon Aelva. She hoped the succubus was waiting in human form, so as not to terrify her new charges, but she sincerely doubted it.

Visla Eraclaire
10-09-09, 09:16 AM
When the ritual was complete, the children stood ready with little hemp satchels. They watched in amazement as the warlock painted out the last lines of the circle and uttered the final words to bring forth her companion. A swirling maw of darkness appeared for put a moment and Aelva was pulled through. She stood before the group in full demonic fashion, ready for battle. Her claws were bared and her horns curled up through her hair. The youngest squealed and her elder sister cupped her hand over her mouth.

“Change of plans. We'll be walking out,” Visla said simply.

“Interesting. You'll have to tell me about it once we're clear. These are the children, I take it,” Aelva said as her appearance shifted back to that of a relatively unassuming young woman. She smiled at the terrified little one and handed Visla back her signet ring.

“May the Sway forgive me,” the saint muttered as she stepped through the illusory wall, leading the way out. The group followed her as she pushed open the door to her unfurnished office and stepped out into the main hall.

“The saint graces us with her presence!” one of the monks announced as he caught sight of her. The others rose out of respect, some more reluctantly than others. None questioned her as she walked with her new entourage toward the massive stone doors.

“Indeed she does,” a more sly voice called out from one of the hallways. A tall ruddy-haired man with leather patches of armor over his robes strode out into the open and glared at them. At his appearance, two of the monks took up positions near the doors, blocking the way. In truth, Visla found the heavy gate as impediment enough, and she wondered how they would be able to open them without the monks' assistance.

“I am going on a pilgrimage, Valshadar. Tell your lackeys to step aside, or better yet to clear my way. It is not your place to question me,” the saint ordered with a confident voice and a heavy heart. She knew her words would not be obeyed, and the men by the door remained.

“It is very much my place to question why our saint is abandoning us, taking our important captives, and in the company of two strange women. What heresy are you perpetrating now, harlot?” the commander snapped, a growing number of monks standing beside him as he approached the group.

“How dare you speak to me like that,” the woman replied.

“Ah, but I speak the truth. Your bastard son is the one who made the poison that cripples our men. I know many things, so-called saint, and now that your treachery is manifest, I will tolerate you no longer.” He had grown nearer to her the whole time as she stood proudly unshaken. The man took a final step toward her and drew a short sword from his belt. There was only a flash of steel and he had buried it up to the hilt in the saint's chest.

“Heresy!” one of the monks who had not yet joined him shouted as the saint fell to the floor. Her hands glowed with white light and she pressed them against her flesh again and again, but the wound still bled a deep crimson.

“You'll find that your ill-deserved powers are useless. Your vile offspring has damned you with his own poison, which I have perfected,” Valshadar boasted. “Those who are loyal to me already have their blades coated in it.”

Out of the monks robes, a dozen or so dropped a pair of daggers into their hands. Their blades were slathered with a black ichor and they grinned toward their unarmed former comrades.

“Why would a member of the Church manufacture a poison whose only use is to harm his own people? You're the traitor,” Visla shouted at him. She knew her words would carry little weight in this place, but if even one man could be dissuaded from joining the mutiny, it would make their slim chance of survival that much better.

Visla Eraclaire
10-09-09, 11:48 AM
“I would not dignify that with a response,” Valshadar said, “except that there are those present who need to hear the answer. Saint Denebriel is the traitor. This war has risked all to win all, and while such grand gestures might play well with her siccophantic advisors, I find that we are losing. I will not have our faith snuffed out because of overreaching ambition.”

Visla nodded. This man was immoral, but he was not insane. He had the sense to see the coming future. So too did his victim. The saint knelt on the floor motionless as her lifesblood drained from her chest. Her eyes were glazed over as if catching glimpses of something beyond. Looking up from her to meet eyes with the mutineer, Visla responded.

“Then we are of the same mind and there is no need for further bloodshed. I am an agent of the League. Put away your daggers and bring your men and your poison back with me. You'll be given a fief and you can do what you like with it,” she proposed.

“How idyllic, living under the yoke of noble oppression. I will have nothing of it,” he replied dismissively. “This mountain goes deep and until today was beneath the League's concern. Once you are dead and forgotten, they will neglect it once more. Slowly, I will grow my legion, hone their steel, and empower their venom. Then, when all seems well, I will do what the Saint could not. I will be a scourge upon this land and --”

Even with her frail voice, the dying saint interrupted him.

“You are mad. You will be damned,” she coughed and blood trickled down her lips. “Sooner than you think.”

The massive stone doors behind them shuddered and dust shook loose from the ceiling. The mighty slabs scraped against the floor and daylight shone into the cave. A unit of six score men-at-arms from the League's armies let go of the ropes that had pried open the doors and rushed into the enclosure. Visla raised her signet-marked hand and they flowed in past her, into the waiting knives of the monks.

Visla Eraclaire
10-09-09, 12:03 PM
As the battle was joined, Visla urged the children to flee. The older boy took up his hobbled sister in his arms and the three rushed out onto the mountain path, away from danger. Aelva remained by Visla's side, eyes vigilant for those who would strike at her. As she waited, she showered Valshadar's monks with balefire, spreading panic through their meager ranks.

“Fall to the ground if you wish to submi--” Visla started to say, hoping that many of the monastery's inhabitants would see the sense in surrender after all that was said.

“Slay them all!” came a strong voice that interrupted her. A League commander, saddled on a grey warhorse, gave his command from the mouth of the cave. “Leave none to question our rule.”

Visla slinked back toward the brash man, careful not to be caught up in his bloodlust. As his men thrust their swords into Valshadar's men, she glanced at her ring and saw nothing. There were no streams of white, no faithful spirits for the Godshard to consume. These men truly were infidels.

Valshadar himself would not fall so easily. As he drew his sword forth once more, a helmeted head fell to the ground, severed from its body. Sickly black ichor flowed from every wound he inflicted and even as all his men were slain, still he stood with merely a nick on his face. A group of men trembled in front of him, standing between him and the mounted commander who had yet to move an inch.

Their comrades dug their swords into monks who begged for their lives, cowering in corners and supplicating themselves to the floor. The men were loyal to their orders and they executed every one. These were the souls which sent ripples of white energy into Visla's ring. Those who would not die for nothing, those who still believed in the good of men who stood over them with swords extended. As they perished, so too did the matronly saint, breathing her last as the final faithful monk fell. Her spirit came forth like a torrent of brilliance and made the Godshard gleam.

As Visla looked up from her ring, she stared right into the eyes of Valshadar as he dispatched another of the guardsmen. Only two stood between him and the warlock. Aelva had already wreathed him in balefire and it burned across his back. He was heedless of it, eyes determined, fixed forward. He continued to inch toward the commander and Visla, even as the men who had served as executioners circled in behind him. He lunged forward, the tip of his blade leveled at Visla's throat, dripping with venom.

There was a gruesome sound, sinew snapping and blood gushing.

Visla Eraclaire
10-09-09, 12:25 PM
Valshadar's grip on his blade loosened, just as it was pressed ever so slightly against Visla's skin. Blood poured from his chest, his back, his arms. A dozen blades had dug into his flesh as he remained fixed on but one thing. Aelva drew back bloody claws and the soldiers flicked the blood from their blades as his body fell limp onto the ground. The same as his followers, his spirit held no sustainence for the Godshard.

As Visla stepped over him a bed of sweat trickled down her neck. Her knew that Aelva would have absorbed the blow for her, but her heart still beat swiftly. She thought she would never get used to facing death like this, and she hoped that soon it would be a rare enough occurrence that her inability to adapt would no longer be a burden. The soldiers marched behind her, bearing torches, as she continued on to examine the rest of the cave. Before she turned the corner, she gave a glance to the children. The commander had finally stepped down from his horse and brought up another mount from further down the path. He was helping the girl up onto its back as Visla glanced back at him. There was compassion in his heart, if only for his own kind.

Within the dark caverns, Visla found a vast alchemy lab with vials of a dozen different ingredients all flowing to make the slick black poison that was at the root of all this. She ordered the men to gather what they could and they obeyed. The warlock remained somewhat surprised that strange soldiers would heed her commands, but it was a satisfying discovery. The rest of the cavern held little else. Most importantly, it held no more monks, and Visla was forced to witness no more thoughtless slaying. The eyes of the man from the makeshift hospital still haunted her, though she never saw them. They glared back with the blue hue she had imparted to them until she shook her head and banished them. The last thing she found was a small stable for the saint's horse. It slung its head low, as if it knew of the horrible deeds done above. Visla took its reins and it followed her out from the cave and back to the surface.

When she finally returned to the entrance, her eyes took a moment to adjust to the light. It was nearly mid-day and she had not rested since two nights back. She pulled herself up into saddle of the fallen saint's horse and Aelva joined her, taking the reins. Visla's eyes fell closed and she slept the remainder of the journey back to the nearby Baron's keep. On the horse beside her, the frail young girl had fallen asleep in her brother's arms.

When she awoke again, it was to a great banquet in her honor. As usual, she ate little, even as she sat at the head table with the rescued children. The Baron there spoke highly of her deeds, her heroism, and her service to the League. The children and their mother embraced and the crowd cheered. All the while, Visla whispered to her succubus the truth of what had happened, a tale of an unchaste cleric, a thoughtless father, and a family nearly ruined by misfortune.

In turn, Aelva told her summoner of how the League's forces had come to her rescue. Impatient with waiting, from the mountain's peak, she had caught sight of a group out on patrol and lured them over with balefire signals and suspicious blots of darkness on the horizon. They were more than eager to sack the monastery once she told them of it and showed them the message Visla had left behind. The only cause of delay was her being summoned from their midst in the middle of her explanation. Visla conceded that the succubus' plan was far better than her own, though she wished she had been told of it before the soldiers pried open the doors.

“And with the heroic Lady Eraclaire, we send word to Baron Roinberg that his family is safe once more. And with that word of hope, she will bring the weapon that will be our salvation, that he might join the fight at Knife's Edge and bring an end to the Church once and for all!”

The Baron's speech concluded to thunderous applause and Visla nodded, accepting the charge. She would bring word to Roinberg, whose name she had not even heard until this moment. She would bring the poison he brewed in his basement. She would bring it and bury it in his heart for what he did to his daughter.

Visla Eraclaire
10-09-09, 12:30 PM
Spoils:

Godshard Body Count: 12 loyal monks of the Sway, 1 visionary healer saint

After consuming the saint's soul, the Godshard now allows Visla to heal wounds by a laying of hands once a day, so long as the ring has absorbed at least one divine spell. The ability is capable of sealing up any normal wounds and easing pain. Serious internal trauma remains.

The Saint's Mount: Visla may now ride the fine white horse belonging to the fallen saint. It is unusually intelligent for a beast and is barded with armor and capable of being ridden into battle. This spoil is temporary for the moment and will persist only till the end of the FQ. The possible permanent addition of it can be discussed then.

The Black Poison: In addition to the stores of poison Visla is carrying to Baron Roinberg, she had stored away a vial for herself. This spoil is only for use in the next quest and cannot be used in battle or kept outside the FQ.

Saxon
10-11-09, 12:53 PM
Yet another installment of your story within the FQ. Color me impressed, because after reading it I see that you've taken much of my advice to heart and have improved with your storytelling in many of the areas you were having trouble with earlier. As I mentioned in your previous judgment, I suspected that many areas of your score were adversely affected by the time it took you to complete that quest. Having read a more relaxed, drawn-out version of your work I feel myself hungry and eager for more. Great job, Visla and I can't wait to read the next installment of this story.


STORY

Continuity - 10/10 - By dividing these stories up you've been able to give them the proper attention they deserve and therefore they each bear an important piece needed for the overall story. I really like that form of strategy when telling a story and I wish it were used more. It really lets me and other readers focus on the objective of each of your installments and they seem more like chapters out of a book than play-by-play post threads on a fantasy roleplaying site.

That being said, the continuance of this story having read the first thread was obvious. I really enjoyed it, and you left nothing out of the previous thread in this one that would lead a reader astray as long as they were keeping up with the story. That's a key technique, because even though much of the burden of responsibility is on the writer to engineer an intriguing story to grip a reader, it's also up to us to read what you've written and develop a comprehensive understanding of it.

Setting - 9/10 - This setting really came to life here, and I saw the monastery in the mountain very vividly and it felt almost like I was there with your characters. While the setting wasn't much utilized or taken advantage of, you did more then your share when trying to make use of what you described. While I reserve 10s in scores not as a sign of perfection in one area but as a signal of truly exemplerary work, I give the next of best to those who do everything that is asked of them in a particular score and then some. For that reason, I gave you a 9.

Pacing - 8/10 - The pacing here was great. There were no dips in the story that left me bored or disinterested, and I was really on the edge of my seat as I was reading post after post. Of course, I think it may have started off a little slow, but I believe when setting up a story properly that's to be expected. You need to describe the environment, the plot and everything to get the reader prepared to eat the pulp of the story later. You did so sucessfully.

My only problem with this story in terms of pacing was Aelva's summoning and the League's arrival. While I assume Aelva's coordination with the League was a last minute tie of loose ends, I think that it could've been much better prepared. When the League came in to beat down the door, I was really sort of dumbfounded. After all the explanation as to how this fortress was well hidden and everything, I kind of found myself at a loss how the League wandered over to the fortress at just the right time to save Visla and crew from a brutal ending. However, your explanation at the last post through Aelva tied it all together and allevied any confusion I might have had, even if it was really puzzling at first. Just watch out for disconnected conclusions like this when in the middle of action because it can really throw a reader through a loop.

CHARACTER

Dialogue - 10/10 - The dialogue in this installment was superb. Everybody who talked seemed to have a purpose while being painted as actual people who have problems and personalities of their own. I think you successfully have given Church members their area at the table to express themselves what with the Saint's plight and past sins as well as Valshadar's immoral yet completely understandable behavior. The reason why I'm mentioning this now rather then later in the score is that you really achieved this through dialogue and descriptions, and it seems that communication is really your source of strength as a writer. The strength of your Dialogue helped supplement many areas of your score, giving you much higher marks in many areas than you would have if you had weaker dialogue.

This isn't a bad thing, because every writer is really different in their styles and how they approach writing things. For example, my strength in writing is really describing and utilizing action in a story whereas I generally suck at dialogue, so I try to make up for it by using communication strategically and maximizing the use of action in threads. In any case, you showed a definite mastery at working with dialogue and I felt a need to give you a 10 here. Keep it up.

Action - 8/10 - Though the action was limited in this thread, when it happened it played out very well. I was expecting more violence and action in this thread, but that might have been just to sate my own bloodthirst, and in any case you delivered on your promise from the previous thread. Action was delivered and performed well, and even when you weren't fighting you utilized the saint's active gestures to keep the reader drawn into what could otherwise be described as some long-winded, if interesting speeches. You're definitely on your way to acheiving a 10 in this area.

Persona - 9/10 - Pretty much what I mentioned in Dialogue. You painted every character in here successfully as people and I got the feeling that if I had been in this story I could really talk and relate to these people and their problems. As I've mentioned, Dialogue is definitely your source of strength when writing, and when you do it successfully it helps support many other areas of your score. The Church members here were performed and used well in the story and you've overcomed that particular weakness in your previous thread of not giving characters outside your main cast room for growth. The thing to remember is that a supporting cast is there for just that reason. To support. There's a reason why there was so much talk of why people wanted Heath Ledger to get a posthumous oscar for best supporting actor in the Dark Knight and that was simply because his shocking and stellar performance helped support the overall story and strengthen the roles of the rest of the cast members.

While not every character needs to pull a Heath Ledger to get a reader hooked, it's a strategy that really works if you use your supporting characters properly and give them the attention they deserve. Be aware of it, don’t forget your supporting cast and you’ll never go wrong.

WRITING STYLE

Mechanics - 7/10 - You definitely possess a mastery over the english language and seem to be very successful with it when you write. Much of your work that I've read so far is definitely quality stuff, almost to the point that I'd even go so far to challenge you to write a book because I think you'd be successful with it if you attempted it.

However, there were a lot more errors in this thread then there were in the last, at least from what I spotted. I think this is more because I'm growing familiar with your work and I'm able to confidently spot spelling and grammar mistakes then I would if I were looking at your work for the first time. There were very, very few errors here, and none of it really detracted from the story but I think mechanics is always something we as writers need to constantly work on. Mechanics such as spelling and grammar are our bread and butter, and if given perfect marks in it all the time we as judges would be doing you a disservice in giving you over-confidence in that area that could even border on neglecting the fundamentals.

Here are some of the spelling errors I caught and the corrections:

siccophantic = sycophantic
sustainance = sustenance

While these are really campy, minor errors I feel that lower marks will at least put up a red flag for you to be aware that this area of your storytelling is dipping and it needs some attention. In any case, I believe you'll go stronger from it.

Technique - 8/10 - Your analogies and metaphors in this thread were very, very good. I often found myself reading them, such as the Saint's explanation as to why she wanted the eldest son to go with Visla, as very fitting. You definitely take advantage of your firm grasp over english and use it to the best of your ability. I've also noticed by the way you're breaking up these threads and some of the hurried explanations in some areas of your stories that you've often used technique strategically which is the sign of a good writer. Keep it up.

Clarity - 7/10 - There was very little I didn't understand when reading this thread. The only thing that threw me through a loop was the arrival of league soldiers, but that was eventually remedied by Aelva's explanation at the end of the thread. Just be mindful of it next time, but otherwise everything in this thread was crystal clear and concise making for an easy, but enjoyable read.

Wild Card - 6/10 - You've taken advice I've given you to heart and attempted to improve in areas that you were hurting in and did so successfully. I believe that is to be rewarded because it's often that members will ignore advice given to them and take only what they want to hear. You understood what I was asking of you and did everything you could to build on your flaws which is all I or any judge should ask of you. For that, I've given you 6 points in the Wild Card.

TOTAL: 82/100

Given the award of 2x experience for completing a quest within the time frame of the chapter and the 1.5x multiplier of an Approved Quest you've gained 10,530 EXP. You've leveled to 6, Congratulations!

You've also earned 500 GP.

All of your spoils are approved, and you can keep the saint's horse permanently if you choose. You've earned it.

The League has also been awarded 2 points for the completion of this quest.

Taskmienster
10-12-09, 03:56 PM
3345 is base * 2 for this being an Approved Quest = 6691 exp gained.

Regular FQ threads are going to be receiving 1.5x bonuses, but approved quests will be getting 2x.

Visla is now level 6!