Starr Redmaw
07-28-13, 05:34 PM
Open to one.
Deep in an illusory recreation of Scara Brae’s wild lands, in the heart of the salt stained Shea Woods, a tribe waited. The Ai’bron monks had delved into their history books to find description of the requested arena. They found themselves perplexed, for there was little chronicled on the place north of the Windlacers.
Hey had thought goblins inept, wild, and maddened savages.
Apparently, only one of those was true. They happened to organised, industrious, and quite fond of ritual sparring…they just left out the ‘to the death’ part when they lured somebody, or something, into the pit.
Starr Redmaw had come to the Citadel to find answers. He wanted reasons for the wars and ways of the Scara Braen.
He would do anything…
Anything at all…
“Give me a sign…,” he said with defiance.
The flames of the fire pit danced. Smoke curled into tendrils of potential, before they rose into the sky and dissipated. Starr Redmaw, occasional prophet, full-time shaman, peered into the shifting shapes. He tried to divine a reason, a portent, and an excuse.
“Anything to get me out of here…,” he wheezed. Giving up on his attempt to bolster his nerves.
All around his withered skin, beyond the mud and sluice, a tall, spiked fence penned him in. The arena was sunken, and above, teetering over the edge, a gaggle of cackling Innari jibed and leered. They were baying for blood, and they did not care how, or from whom their hunger was sated.
“Anything at all…,” he continued. His voice was hoarse, from fatigue and dehydration, and his heart beat in the depths of his chest. He clicked his spine, trying to stand straight, but gave up. He leant on his staff, which rattled with fetishes and beads, and dropped his gaze to the distant door.
On the horizon, the sun died, but Starr was not lucky enough to see it. The sunset was beautiful, but the goblins of the Red Raven tribe did not pay it any attention. The only red they longed for would come from below. The drums on the edge of the camp grew louder, their beaters driven to frenzy and outrage with every swing of bone, stick, and blade. The tanned leather skins bounced, and feet stomped in tawdry union.
“Here ‘e comes!” the crow roared in unison. The gate opened. “’Ere ‘e comes!”
Starr braced himself, though this only amounted to a raised eyebrow, a whistle, and a roll of his neck to loosen the stiffness. He felt warmth rise in his stomach, and linger in his fingertips. He clung to it, hoping to draw on the sensation to conjure some sort of illumination. He remained blind to the future, and grew fearful.
“May Skargo guide me…,” he mumbled, a final observance of faith before he gave it all up for the madness that his god succumbed to in summer – he felt the wild hunt take him, and, before an opponent stepped into the arena, he charged.
Scrabbling over mud, rock, and sodden puddle, the fetid base of the arena offered no resistance to the shaman’s frenzy. Though far from a warrior, what Starr Redmaw lacked in skill, finesse, and strength, he more than made up for in blind obedience, dumbfounding self-belief, and ridiculously bad breath.
Deep in an illusory recreation of Scara Brae’s wild lands, in the heart of the salt stained Shea Woods, a tribe waited. The Ai’bron monks had delved into their history books to find description of the requested arena. They found themselves perplexed, for there was little chronicled on the place north of the Windlacers.
Hey had thought goblins inept, wild, and maddened savages.
Apparently, only one of those was true. They happened to organised, industrious, and quite fond of ritual sparring…they just left out the ‘to the death’ part when they lured somebody, or something, into the pit.
Starr Redmaw had come to the Citadel to find answers. He wanted reasons for the wars and ways of the Scara Braen.
He would do anything…
Anything at all…
“Give me a sign…,” he said with defiance.
The flames of the fire pit danced. Smoke curled into tendrils of potential, before they rose into the sky and dissipated. Starr Redmaw, occasional prophet, full-time shaman, peered into the shifting shapes. He tried to divine a reason, a portent, and an excuse.
“Anything to get me out of here…,” he wheezed. Giving up on his attempt to bolster his nerves.
All around his withered skin, beyond the mud and sluice, a tall, spiked fence penned him in. The arena was sunken, and above, teetering over the edge, a gaggle of cackling Innari jibed and leered. They were baying for blood, and they did not care how, or from whom their hunger was sated.
“Anything at all…,” he continued. His voice was hoarse, from fatigue and dehydration, and his heart beat in the depths of his chest. He clicked his spine, trying to stand straight, but gave up. He leant on his staff, which rattled with fetishes and beads, and dropped his gaze to the distant door.
On the horizon, the sun died, but Starr was not lucky enough to see it. The sunset was beautiful, but the goblins of the Red Raven tribe did not pay it any attention. The only red they longed for would come from below. The drums on the edge of the camp grew louder, their beaters driven to frenzy and outrage with every swing of bone, stick, and blade. The tanned leather skins bounced, and feet stomped in tawdry union.
“Here ‘e comes!” the crow roared in unison. The gate opened. “’Ere ‘e comes!”
Starr braced himself, though this only amounted to a raised eyebrow, a whistle, and a roll of his neck to loosen the stiffness. He felt warmth rise in his stomach, and linger in his fingertips. He clung to it, hoping to draw on the sensation to conjure some sort of illumination. He remained blind to the future, and grew fearful.
“May Skargo guide me…,” he mumbled, a final observance of faith before he gave it all up for the madness that his god succumbed to in summer – he felt the wild hunt take him, and, before an opponent stepped into the arena, he charged.
Scrabbling over mud, rock, and sodden puddle, the fetid base of the arena offered no resistance to the shaman’s frenzy. Though far from a warrior, what Starr Redmaw lacked in skill, finesse, and strength, he more than made up for in blind obedience, dumbfounding self-belief, and ridiculously bad breath.