Herald of the Storm
08-07-12, 04:54 PM
“Not … not like this,” the dying guard wheezed, his fingers clawing at the air in a last futile effort to escape his fate. His failing strength gave him one last push forward before giving out completely, dumping him unceremoniously to roll in the spreading pool of blood spreading quietly beneath him. “Mitra, please,” the guard begged, staring up piteously into the abyssal Fallien night.
Next to the guard, casually watching him expire, Vaahnzerekh stood with the uncommon lack of motion shared by all of the Kron’tyr constructs. No sign of emotion showed on the cold metal skull plate which made up his face, and indeed none was possible. But though he couldn’t show it, and though he couldn’t even realize it himself, Vaahnzerekh wasn’t completely without emotion. Watching the human squirm and expire under the light of his sickly green eyes brought the slightest of stirrings to life in the power orb which animated the shell that the construct currently animated. It was disgust; the lingering disgust felt as a racial memory throughout all of his kind. Disgust for the weakness of the flesh creature squirming in his own fluids at the Kron’tyr’s feet. Disgust for how low his glorious race had been laid by both the ravages of millennia and the jealous treachery of those who had feared and coveted the power to shape the stars themselves as the Kron’tyr had.
But the moment was fleeting, wafted away on the currents of time like the fresh breeze of summer. And just as the moment had passed, so too had the guard at Vaahnzerekh’s feet, alone and unanswered in his final moments in the firmament. An irregular tapping broke the silence as the last sigh of life’s breath rushed from the newly christened corpse.
“Oh course Vyrabron,” Vaahnzerekh answered the question that his mute companion’s tapping had asked. In his infinite wisdom, the Storm Herald had seen fit to imbue the shells of living stone that the Kron’tyr inhabited with autonomous self-reparation. Unfortunately, the long years in hibernation had proven more difficult for Vyrabron than it had for most of the infiltrators and as such Vyrabron’s ability to create speech had been almost irreversibly damaged. Even now, months after reawakening and being tasked to gather information for Khotemi, their mutual master, Vyrabron’s self-repair had failed to make any lasting effect on his infirmity.
Not that the damage had caused much grief to them while on the surface. They had found the people’s who had infested the Fifteenth Circle of Tyr’Erekoh, called Fallien in their own tongue, to be a superstitious and gullible lot. All it had taken to waylay any suspicions against them on Vyrabron’s behalf was to explain that whomever it was that had been Vyrabron’s current persona had taken a holy vow of silence and all suspicious of the infiltrator’s intent fell away.
That wasn’t to say that Vyrabron was incapable of communication however, as the tapping motions of fingers on the infiltrator’s chest indicated. It was a coded language of sorts, one developed in the earliest days of the Kron’tyr’s rise from darkness and savagery. It had been all but forgotten amongst their people until the Storm Herald ascended, found it, and passed it back to his people. Now it was Vyrabron’s primary means of communication, and a subtle enough one that most viewers saw it only as a nervous tic, never truly understanding the sinister meaning underneath.
Nodding to indicate that he understood, Vaahnzerekh stepped away from the fallen guard’s body and assumed a position over the one of the corpulent merchant whom the guard had been protecting. Such was their method of operating. Vyrabron, always the more martially inclined of the two, assumed the role of warrior and guard, while Vaahnzerekh, with his ability to speak and fluidity of words, was the honoree. It only took a moment for the infiltrators to split the bodies that they were to wear, their own forms flowing to take up residence within while the sickly green glow of their power orbs began to seal the damage the process caused.
But before the highlighting green of the assimilation glow could fade from view, Vaahnzerekh heard a stifled gasp from the darkness. The Kron’tyr’s assumption of their new forms had been witnessed.
That just would not do.
Next to the guard, casually watching him expire, Vaahnzerekh stood with the uncommon lack of motion shared by all of the Kron’tyr constructs. No sign of emotion showed on the cold metal skull plate which made up his face, and indeed none was possible. But though he couldn’t show it, and though he couldn’t even realize it himself, Vaahnzerekh wasn’t completely without emotion. Watching the human squirm and expire under the light of his sickly green eyes brought the slightest of stirrings to life in the power orb which animated the shell that the construct currently animated. It was disgust; the lingering disgust felt as a racial memory throughout all of his kind. Disgust for the weakness of the flesh creature squirming in his own fluids at the Kron’tyr’s feet. Disgust for how low his glorious race had been laid by both the ravages of millennia and the jealous treachery of those who had feared and coveted the power to shape the stars themselves as the Kron’tyr had.
But the moment was fleeting, wafted away on the currents of time like the fresh breeze of summer. And just as the moment had passed, so too had the guard at Vaahnzerekh’s feet, alone and unanswered in his final moments in the firmament. An irregular tapping broke the silence as the last sigh of life’s breath rushed from the newly christened corpse.
“Oh course Vyrabron,” Vaahnzerekh answered the question that his mute companion’s tapping had asked. In his infinite wisdom, the Storm Herald had seen fit to imbue the shells of living stone that the Kron’tyr inhabited with autonomous self-reparation. Unfortunately, the long years in hibernation had proven more difficult for Vyrabron than it had for most of the infiltrators and as such Vyrabron’s ability to create speech had been almost irreversibly damaged. Even now, months after reawakening and being tasked to gather information for Khotemi, their mutual master, Vyrabron’s self-repair had failed to make any lasting effect on his infirmity.
Not that the damage had caused much grief to them while on the surface. They had found the people’s who had infested the Fifteenth Circle of Tyr’Erekoh, called Fallien in their own tongue, to be a superstitious and gullible lot. All it had taken to waylay any suspicions against them on Vyrabron’s behalf was to explain that whomever it was that had been Vyrabron’s current persona had taken a holy vow of silence and all suspicious of the infiltrator’s intent fell away.
That wasn’t to say that Vyrabron was incapable of communication however, as the tapping motions of fingers on the infiltrator’s chest indicated. It was a coded language of sorts, one developed in the earliest days of the Kron’tyr’s rise from darkness and savagery. It had been all but forgotten amongst their people until the Storm Herald ascended, found it, and passed it back to his people. Now it was Vyrabron’s primary means of communication, and a subtle enough one that most viewers saw it only as a nervous tic, never truly understanding the sinister meaning underneath.
Nodding to indicate that he understood, Vaahnzerekh stepped away from the fallen guard’s body and assumed a position over the one of the corpulent merchant whom the guard had been protecting. Such was their method of operating. Vyrabron, always the more martially inclined of the two, assumed the role of warrior and guard, while Vaahnzerekh, with his ability to speak and fluidity of words, was the honoree. It only took a moment for the infiltrators to split the bodies that they were to wear, their own forms flowing to take up residence within while the sickly green glow of their power orbs began to seal the damage the process caused.
But before the highlighting green of the assimilation glow could fade from view, Vaahnzerekh heard a stifled gasp from the darkness. The Kron’tyr’s assumption of their new forms had been witnessed.
That just would not do.