The Last Wolf
04-20-12, 03:31 AM
Three figures were in a rowboat, each one's figure concealed via a dark cloak. Still, it wasn't too hard to tell that the two manning the oars were men, and the one on lookout was a woman. Other than that, the three knew little of each other. They had given one another their names, but it was just as likely a lie as much as it could have very well been the truth.
They wore no uniforms, their clothing was as practical as it was simple. Each had a weapon of sort with them; a burly balding man wore a longsword, a silent man with short black hair had a katana, and a woman with long brown hair had a pair of daggers. It was easy to discern the three's occupation: mercenaries.
Dunland and Faleen, Faleen and Dunland, one could not talk of one without mentioning the other. Two nations, locked in an on-again-off-again-war. It had been this way for decades; twenty-five years by most people's count now. And, when a war dragged on that long, people who could wield a sword became ever more valuable. Just like moths to a flame, or perhaps more appropriately wolves towards a lamb, mercenaries began to flock to both nations, and each nation was eager to snatch up an extra sword or two. Hell, many of the mercenaries were happy to switch sides, or already had, if the pay was better.
Tonight’s pay, in fact, promised to be very rewarding. If the three managed to survive, of course.
The boat came to a slow stop at the edge of the lake. In the distance, not more than half a mile, a large building could be seen. Though no details could be made out from here, each mercenary knew that the building was their destination, and also a Dunland prison.
“Nameless, you said you were good with that katana, so you go first,” the woman ordered. The man with who had the katana at his side gave her a smirk, one that questioned her authority without even trying to. She matched him with a gaze from her green eyes, as every bit as piercing as the daggers on her belt.
“Still not cool with that, by the way,” the man with the longsword muttered, “we told you our names, even if they were fake ones. She’s Sally, I’m Bruce. Hard to trust a guy who won’t even dole out an alias, yeah?”
“That’s the smartest thing you’ve said all evening,” Renault responded with a chuckle. He then, deciding he had waited long enough, jumped out of the boat, and made his way forward. He moved slowly, carefully sifting his way through the sand before him.
“I like you Nameless,” Sally giggled, using the nickname she had given to her unnamed companion of the night, “silence is an all too rare quality in men nowadays...”
The way they conducted their mission was testament to their occupation; soldiers would be all business. They would move in, keep quiet, and get the job done. They would not talk about silly things like names, likes, and dislikes of the opposite gender. Even Renault, who spoke little, did so not out of professionalism ( if he had professionalism, he would not have made that remark about Bruce‘s intelligence), but rather out of caution. After all, the friendliest of mercenaries was still, at the end of the day, a mercenary. He’d kill you if he had the chance; it was only a matter of price.
“Info looks good,” Renault muttered as he finished his sweep of the area, “not a soldier in sight.”
“Odd that, yeah?” Bruce muttered as he leapt out of the boat, “you would think the prison guards would place someone in such an obvious landing space, or at least patrol it frequently.”
“Good point. Not that I’m arguing, but the orders not only said this spot would be clear, but that there’d even be a delay in the shift change so we can make our move. Thoughts, Nameless?” Sally asked as she too disembarked from the boat.
Whether she used her nickname for Renault out of spite, or friendliness, was anyone’s guess.
“Tall orders can only come from men in tall places,” Renault answered as the three made their way towards the prison, "Our client is probably a powerful noble."
“Nameless has brains too,” Sally said with a smile, “hard to find a man who’s smart, and able to keep his mouth shut. You’re looking better every minute.”
“...Shut up,” Renault grunted as the three reached their goal, “we’re here.”
“And not a guard stopped us, or was even out on patrol. Whoever contracted this job had to be high up in the Dunland ranks,” Bruce whispered as the three came to a stop next to one of the prison’s two entrances. There wasn’t even a guard outside the walls, though there was one behind this door, or so they had been told.
“Makes sense. Faleen’s Fire has to have pissed off half of Dunland,” Sally whispered back as she took out a key set; that too had been provided by the client.
“Faleen’s Fire,” Renault muttered, his voice could barely contain the repulsion at that phrase, “Disgusting.”
Faleen’s Fire was not, in all actually a fire. It was a nickname for a young girl, who had several nicknames. Silver Maiden was also extremely popular, though her enemies preferred the term Walister’s Witch.
The girl’s real name Arienne Florence, though those close to her often just called her Ari (everyone else always used the nicknames). She hailed from some little town in Faleen, and in a true story of heroism, had taken up the sword to defend her country. She fought hard, fought long, and became a real-life hero to Faleen, and a bitter enemy to Dunland. Now she was captured, and about to be killed by three mercenaries.
No, this wasn’t a rescue mission, this was an assassination mission. Whoever was footing the bill for the three mercenaries wanted the Silver Maiden exterminated, which was quite a lot of people. Dunland wasn’t even offering the girl up for trade; she had already been sentenced to death. Rumor was it was going to be quiet a spectacle, accompanied with degrading torture and humiliation, ending with some sort of painful cutting ritual that involved severing her limbs, or something to that affect. If she begged for mercy though, she was to be promised the quick death of a proper beheading.
What was interesting was that the king of Faleen had not even tried to ransom back one of his country’s greatest heroes. Rumor there was that, upon hearing how the girl would die, Faleen’s king was quite ecstatic. Such a terrible death to such a sweet and innocent girl (Renault scoffed at the thought that anyone was innocent, especially a soldier) was sure to whip Faleen’s people into a vicious frenzy; every king loves a martyr to hold in front of his people.
Really, the whys of it didn’t concern the mercenaries. This could be a mercy killing for all they knew; all that mattered to them was that they got paid.
“I’ll handle this one,” Sally whispered as she opened the door. Before either man could respond, she strolled in with a smile on her face. The lone guard on duty shot out of his reading chair, and reached for his sword.
“Hey hey,” Sally whispered softly, “no need to get so jumpy. Your friends chipped in so you could have some...company on the night shift.”
The guard did not sound the alarm, but nor did he remove his hand from his sword.
“Hey, you don’t want me, that’s fine with me,” Sally gave an uncaring shrug as she brushed her brown hair about, “I’ve already been paid for the evening. Just tell me to get lost, and I’m gone. Let me just say one thing though, hon. You’re friends ain’t getting any refunds.”
That did it. The guard moved his hand away from his sword, grabbed Sally forcefully, and tossed her onto the table.
“Um, are we suppose to...” Bruce began; Renault just shrugged.
“She said she’ll handle this one,” was all Renault answered with. A few grunts and moans later, the two men heard a sickening slice, followed by a gurgling sound. Cautiously, the they opened the door, and peered into the simple room.
Sally sat smiling on the table, adjusting her clothes. The guard lay on the ground with his pants off, and his throat slit.
“They call me Suicide Sally for a reason,” she grinned, “I’m usually nice enough to let ‘em finish, but time was a factor.”
“I heard it was Sally the Slut,” Bruce muttered; he soon found Sally’s knife pointed at a very tender region.
“And you’ll be Ball-less Bruce if you say that again!” Sally shouted, obviously not too happy with that name. She then fixed her stare at Renault. “Same goes for you! I’ve got two knives, one for each of ya!”
“What should I care?” he said with a shrug, “I happen to think it’s a very effective tactic, though one I am not able to employ. I lack your ample talents for it.”
“Did you just make a pass at me Nameless?” Sally said with a smile, “I rather liked it if it was.”
“Don’t stick your dick in crazy dude,” Bruce warned as he scuttled away from the crazy woman with the knives, who let out a part-giggle, part-cackle, all-creepy laugh.
“Business before pleasure. Two guys in the next area, and that’s a little rough for a sweet girl like me. Put those swords to use,” the apparent ring-leader ordered. Bruce complied, happy to get away from Sally. Renault only shrugged, and drew his sword.
It ended quickly. The two guards were strolling down a hallway, laughing about some sort of perk that came with guard duty. The mercenaries didn’t even need to try to locate them, the guards were loud enough to track via sound alone. All it took was a simple ambush behind a door, and Dunland had two less guards.
“Did you give Nameless the tougher one on purpose?” Sally asked as she strolled down the hallway, not even bothering to avoid the puddles of blood that were beginning to pool upon the stone floor.
“Maybe I‘m just better, yeah?” Bruce spat as the two cleaned their swords. His target hadn’t even managed to get his sword out; Renault’s had taken three swings, one of which had managed to make a small cut on the mercenary’s shoulder.
“I doubt it,” she giggled, “Nameless’s sword was out faster, and struck swifter. More messy too.”
“It’s more fun that way,” Renault threw in as he sheathed his sword, and began to move. The cell the Silver Maiden was locked in was at the end of the hall.
“When they fight back, or when it’s messy?” Sally questioned with another laugh, “I agree on both counts.”
“Dick. Crazy. Don’t do it,” Renault heard Bruce advise him under his breath. The mercenary’s only response was to motion towards the door; Sally still had the keys.
“Anyone seen what this girl looks like? Does she really have a fiery aura of righteousness that strikes down people?” Bruce asked as the door was unlocked; the man seemed incapable of keeping his mouth shut.
“Beautiful maiden, untouched purity, golden hair, eyes as deep a blue as the sea, and a virgin asshole. All the damn stories are the same. All the ones with involving a warrior maiden and a fiery aura of righteousness anyhow,” Sally spat as she stepped into the cell. However, she was two steps behind Renault, who was laughing.
It wasn’t a loud laugh, it didn’t have to be. His laugh conveyed every possible thing he wanted it to. Cruelty, hate, malice, and satisfaction, were all contained in his hauntingly low laugh.
“Is that so? I think the stories are a bit off on this one,” Renault said with a sick grin. Sally raised an eyebrow, peered inside, and took a look at the cell’s sole occupant.
She was anything but radiant or righteous, chained to the wall like that. Faleen’s Fire was famed for her beautiful silver armor, a gift from the king himself, but that was nowhere to be found. Instead she wore a simple prison dress, one that had been ripped to shreds. She was also sobbing immensely, much as any girl normal girl would. There was nothing heroic in this cell, nor was their any untouched purity.
“Ah, you’re right,” Sally said with a smile, “her hair is more a dirty blonde than gold.”
“I take it back. Stick your dick in her, you’re both obviously crazy,” Bruce muttered. He was the last to enter the cell, but he found nothing funny about a raped girl crying in the corner of a cell.
“Oh piss off!” the sole female mercenary spat at him, “you just killed a man, you’re getting paid to kill this girl, and you’re gonna act all high and mighty? You’re scum, he’s scum, I’m scum, she’s scum! We’re all scum, right Nameless?”
His eyes were locked upon the girl in the corner of the cell. His golden eyes bore into her, as if it was a sublime pleasure to observe a so-called valiant warrior languish away in prison. This girl‘s suffering, a girl who could not have been more than nineteen, seemed to send a wave of ecstasy throughout Renault’s body. As Sally watched his eyes drink in every detail, Sally’s breath grew more and more heavy.
“Yeah yeah YEAH!” she shouted, “Now that’s a man I can like! Let’s make the goody-two shoes here do the kill Nameless!”
“You’re here to kill me?” the terrified voice of a child, the so-called Silver Maiden, sobbed, “Wait! I don’t wanna die!”
“Heh. Wouldn’t have lasted a minute. They were going to torture you to death in public to see how long you’d hold out, but you would have begged for mercy in an instant,” Renault’s grin was every bit as sadistic as Sally's; a perfect match the two were, “They called you a hero, a savior to the country, and a holy warrior. All lies. You’re just a sad little girl, crying in a corner.”
“Just hurry up and kill her you sadistic freak!” Bruce ordered. This was not what he had signed up for.
“Shut up!” Sally ordered back, “Let him have his fun!”
“Sick slut!” Bruce shouted as he reached for his sword. This was too much, even for a mercenary like him.
“I warned you!” Sally giggled like a manic as she whipped out her knives. In this close of a range, her smaller weapons had the clear advantage.
“Die die DIE!” she sang as she stabbed Bruce repeatedly, spilling his life blood all across the floor, “Kill her Nameless! Kill her kill her KILL HER!”
Arienne Florence locked eyes with Renault Nox. She stared into his golden eyes, and cried.
“Please...I....I JUST WANNA GO HOME!”
“Disgusting,” Renault muttered as he raised his sword.
They wore no uniforms, their clothing was as practical as it was simple. Each had a weapon of sort with them; a burly balding man wore a longsword, a silent man with short black hair had a katana, and a woman with long brown hair had a pair of daggers. It was easy to discern the three's occupation: mercenaries.
Dunland and Faleen, Faleen and Dunland, one could not talk of one without mentioning the other. Two nations, locked in an on-again-off-again-war. It had been this way for decades; twenty-five years by most people's count now. And, when a war dragged on that long, people who could wield a sword became ever more valuable. Just like moths to a flame, or perhaps more appropriately wolves towards a lamb, mercenaries began to flock to both nations, and each nation was eager to snatch up an extra sword or two. Hell, many of the mercenaries were happy to switch sides, or already had, if the pay was better.
Tonight’s pay, in fact, promised to be very rewarding. If the three managed to survive, of course.
The boat came to a slow stop at the edge of the lake. In the distance, not more than half a mile, a large building could be seen. Though no details could be made out from here, each mercenary knew that the building was their destination, and also a Dunland prison.
“Nameless, you said you were good with that katana, so you go first,” the woman ordered. The man with who had the katana at his side gave her a smirk, one that questioned her authority without even trying to. She matched him with a gaze from her green eyes, as every bit as piercing as the daggers on her belt.
“Still not cool with that, by the way,” the man with the longsword muttered, “we told you our names, even if they were fake ones. She’s Sally, I’m Bruce. Hard to trust a guy who won’t even dole out an alias, yeah?”
“That’s the smartest thing you’ve said all evening,” Renault responded with a chuckle. He then, deciding he had waited long enough, jumped out of the boat, and made his way forward. He moved slowly, carefully sifting his way through the sand before him.
“I like you Nameless,” Sally giggled, using the nickname she had given to her unnamed companion of the night, “silence is an all too rare quality in men nowadays...”
The way they conducted their mission was testament to their occupation; soldiers would be all business. They would move in, keep quiet, and get the job done. They would not talk about silly things like names, likes, and dislikes of the opposite gender. Even Renault, who spoke little, did so not out of professionalism ( if he had professionalism, he would not have made that remark about Bruce‘s intelligence), but rather out of caution. After all, the friendliest of mercenaries was still, at the end of the day, a mercenary. He’d kill you if he had the chance; it was only a matter of price.
“Info looks good,” Renault muttered as he finished his sweep of the area, “not a soldier in sight.”
“Odd that, yeah?” Bruce muttered as he leapt out of the boat, “you would think the prison guards would place someone in such an obvious landing space, or at least patrol it frequently.”
“Good point. Not that I’m arguing, but the orders not only said this spot would be clear, but that there’d even be a delay in the shift change so we can make our move. Thoughts, Nameless?” Sally asked as she too disembarked from the boat.
Whether she used her nickname for Renault out of spite, or friendliness, was anyone’s guess.
“Tall orders can only come from men in tall places,” Renault answered as the three made their way towards the prison, "Our client is probably a powerful noble."
“Nameless has brains too,” Sally said with a smile, “hard to find a man who’s smart, and able to keep his mouth shut. You’re looking better every minute.”
“...Shut up,” Renault grunted as the three reached their goal, “we’re here.”
“And not a guard stopped us, or was even out on patrol. Whoever contracted this job had to be high up in the Dunland ranks,” Bruce whispered as the three came to a stop next to one of the prison’s two entrances. There wasn’t even a guard outside the walls, though there was one behind this door, or so they had been told.
“Makes sense. Faleen’s Fire has to have pissed off half of Dunland,” Sally whispered back as she took out a key set; that too had been provided by the client.
“Faleen’s Fire,” Renault muttered, his voice could barely contain the repulsion at that phrase, “Disgusting.”
Faleen’s Fire was not, in all actually a fire. It was a nickname for a young girl, who had several nicknames. Silver Maiden was also extremely popular, though her enemies preferred the term Walister’s Witch.
The girl’s real name Arienne Florence, though those close to her often just called her Ari (everyone else always used the nicknames). She hailed from some little town in Faleen, and in a true story of heroism, had taken up the sword to defend her country. She fought hard, fought long, and became a real-life hero to Faleen, and a bitter enemy to Dunland. Now she was captured, and about to be killed by three mercenaries.
No, this wasn’t a rescue mission, this was an assassination mission. Whoever was footing the bill for the three mercenaries wanted the Silver Maiden exterminated, which was quite a lot of people. Dunland wasn’t even offering the girl up for trade; she had already been sentenced to death. Rumor was it was going to be quiet a spectacle, accompanied with degrading torture and humiliation, ending with some sort of painful cutting ritual that involved severing her limbs, or something to that affect. If she begged for mercy though, she was to be promised the quick death of a proper beheading.
What was interesting was that the king of Faleen had not even tried to ransom back one of his country’s greatest heroes. Rumor there was that, upon hearing how the girl would die, Faleen’s king was quite ecstatic. Such a terrible death to such a sweet and innocent girl (Renault scoffed at the thought that anyone was innocent, especially a soldier) was sure to whip Faleen’s people into a vicious frenzy; every king loves a martyr to hold in front of his people.
Really, the whys of it didn’t concern the mercenaries. This could be a mercy killing for all they knew; all that mattered to them was that they got paid.
“I’ll handle this one,” Sally whispered as she opened the door. Before either man could respond, she strolled in with a smile on her face. The lone guard on duty shot out of his reading chair, and reached for his sword.
“Hey hey,” Sally whispered softly, “no need to get so jumpy. Your friends chipped in so you could have some...company on the night shift.”
The guard did not sound the alarm, but nor did he remove his hand from his sword.
“Hey, you don’t want me, that’s fine with me,” Sally gave an uncaring shrug as she brushed her brown hair about, “I’ve already been paid for the evening. Just tell me to get lost, and I’m gone. Let me just say one thing though, hon. You’re friends ain’t getting any refunds.”
That did it. The guard moved his hand away from his sword, grabbed Sally forcefully, and tossed her onto the table.
“Um, are we suppose to...” Bruce began; Renault just shrugged.
“She said she’ll handle this one,” was all Renault answered with. A few grunts and moans later, the two men heard a sickening slice, followed by a gurgling sound. Cautiously, the they opened the door, and peered into the simple room.
Sally sat smiling on the table, adjusting her clothes. The guard lay on the ground with his pants off, and his throat slit.
“They call me Suicide Sally for a reason,” she grinned, “I’m usually nice enough to let ‘em finish, but time was a factor.”
“I heard it was Sally the Slut,” Bruce muttered; he soon found Sally’s knife pointed at a very tender region.
“And you’ll be Ball-less Bruce if you say that again!” Sally shouted, obviously not too happy with that name. She then fixed her stare at Renault. “Same goes for you! I’ve got two knives, one for each of ya!”
“What should I care?” he said with a shrug, “I happen to think it’s a very effective tactic, though one I am not able to employ. I lack your ample talents for it.”
“Did you just make a pass at me Nameless?” Sally said with a smile, “I rather liked it if it was.”
“Don’t stick your dick in crazy dude,” Bruce warned as he scuttled away from the crazy woman with the knives, who let out a part-giggle, part-cackle, all-creepy laugh.
“Business before pleasure. Two guys in the next area, and that’s a little rough for a sweet girl like me. Put those swords to use,” the apparent ring-leader ordered. Bruce complied, happy to get away from Sally. Renault only shrugged, and drew his sword.
It ended quickly. The two guards were strolling down a hallway, laughing about some sort of perk that came with guard duty. The mercenaries didn’t even need to try to locate them, the guards were loud enough to track via sound alone. All it took was a simple ambush behind a door, and Dunland had two less guards.
“Did you give Nameless the tougher one on purpose?” Sally asked as she strolled down the hallway, not even bothering to avoid the puddles of blood that were beginning to pool upon the stone floor.
“Maybe I‘m just better, yeah?” Bruce spat as the two cleaned their swords. His target hadn’t even managed to get his sword out; Renault’s had taken three swings, one of which had managed to make a small cut on the mercenary’s shoulder.
“I doubt it,” she giggled, “Nameless’s sword was out faster, and struck swifter. More messy too.”
“It’s more fun that way,” Renault threw in as he sheathed his sword, and began to move. The cell the Silver Maiden was locked in was at the end of the hall.
“When they fight back, or when it’s messy?” Sally questioned with another laugh, “I agree on both counts.”
“Dick. Crazy. Don’t do it,” Renault heard Bruce advise him under his breath. The mercenary’s only response was to motion towards the door; Sally still had the keys.
“Anyone seen what this girl looks like? Does she really have a fiery aura of righteousness that strikes down people?” Bruce asked as the door was unlocked; the man seemed incapable of keeping his mouth shut.
“Beautiful maiden, untouched purity, golden hair, eyes as deep a blue as the sea, and a virgin asshole. All the damn stories are the same. All the ones with involving a warrior maiden and a fiery aura of righteousness anyhow,” Sally spat as she stepped into the cell. However, she was two steps behind Renault, who was laughing.
It wasn’t a loud laugh, it didn’t have to be. His laugh conveyed every possible thing he wanted it to. Cruelty, hate, malice, and satisfaction, were all contained in his hauntingly low laugh.
“Is that so? I think the stories are a bit off on this one,” Renault said with a sick grin. Sally raised an eyebrow, peered inside, and took a look at the cell’s sole occupant.
She was anything but radiant or righteous, chained to the wall like that. Faleen’s Fire was famed for her beautiful silver armor, a gift from the king himself, but that was nowhere to be found. Instead she wore a simple prison dress, one that had been ripped to shreds. She was also sobbing immensely, much as any girl normal girl would. There was nothing heroic in this cell, nor was their any untouched purity.
“Ah, you’re right,” Sally said with a smile, “her hair is more a dirty blonde than gold.”
“I take it back. Stick your dick in her, you’re both obviously crazy,” Bruce muttered. He was the last to enter the cell, but he found nothing funny about a raped girl crying in the corner of a cell.
“Oh piss off!” the sole female mercenary spat at him, “you just killed a man, you’re getting paid to kill this girl, and you’re gonna act all high and mighty? You’re scum, he’s scum, I’m scum, she’s scum! We’re all scum, right Nameless?”
His eyes were locked upon the girl in the corner of the cell. His golden eyes bore into her, as if it was a sublime pleasure to observe a so-called valiant warrior languish away in prison. This girl‘s suffering, a girl who could not have been more than nineteen, seemed to send a wave of ecstasy throughout Renault’s body. As Sally watched his eyes drink in every detail, Sally’s breath grew more and more heavy.
“Yeah yeah YEAH!” she shouted, “Now that’s a man I can like! Let’s make the goody-two shoes here do the kill Nameless!”
“You’re here to kill me?” the terrified voice of a child, the so-called Silver Maiden, sobbed, “Wait! I don’t wanna die!”
“Heh. Wouldn’t have lasted a minute. They were going to torture you to death in public to see how long you’d hold out, but you would have begged for mercy in an instant,” Renault’s grin was every bit as sadistic as Sally's; a perfect match the two were, “They called you a hero, a savior to the country, and a holy warrior. All lies. You’re just a sad little girl, crying in a corner.”
“Just hurry up and kill her you sadistic freak!” Bruce ordered. This was not what he had signed up for.
“Shut up!” Sally ordered back, “Let him have his fun!”
“Sick slut!” Bruce shouted as he reached for his sword. This was too much, even for a mercenary like him.
“I warned you!” Sally giggled like a manic as she whipped out her knives. In this close of a range, her smaller weapons had the clear advantage.
“Die die DIE!” she sang as she stabbed Bruce repeatedly, spilling his life blood all across the floor, “Kill her Nameless! Kill her kill her KILL HER!”
Arienne Florence locked eyes with Renault Nox. She stared into his golden eyes, and cried.
“Please...I....I JUST WANNA GO HOME!”
“Disgusting,” Renault muttered as he raised his sword.