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Leopold
09-11-13, 04:01 PM
Berevar did not disappoint Leopold Winchester. The journey there, eventful. The journey back, not so much. As ever, it was inhospitably cold. As ever, the beleaguered merchant did his best to ignore the temperature. At the front of a long, forlorn wagon train, he whipped the reigns of tired horses, and peered through the thickening snowfall that made passage back into Salvar increasingly difficult.

“If you’re going to say I told you so, you can forget it,” he spat.

The man sat next to Leopold sighed. As ever, Wilfred Thompson, butler to the Winchester Household for forty years, was scapegoat and confident to the increasingly pressured man’s woes. He slumped, sinking further into his wolf skin cocoon than humanly possible.

“I was merely going to comment on how dire the weather has become.” He turned to look at his employer. “That was all.”

Leopold knew otherwise. He had worked with Wilfred for far too long. When the old man’s bushy eyebrows twitched and his hip flask tipped more than once a minute, something was bothering him. As usual, that something was he.

“Look,” he began. He jolted as the wagon’s wheels smashed over a half-buried rock. “I didn’t know it was going to snow this bad.”

“In Berevar?” Wilfred retorted.

The caravan continued in silence. Save for the bitter howl of the wind as it rolled south down the pass, nothing made a sound. The red and white canopy of the Winchester Rose Trading Company’s supply train was the only colour in a bleak landscape. It was the only sign of life in what had now become a whitewash; wherever Leopold looked, there was three feet of tundra, and then grey nothingness.

“Okay…,” Leopold sighed. “Say it.”

Leopold whipped the reigns, commanding the horses to come to a stop. They reared their heads, whipped their manes, and whining the six wagons to an abrupt decay of momentum. In the distance, the sound of other drivers bringing their loads to a rest whisked away on the gale.

“I told you so.”

Wilfred’s satisfaction would last for a long time. He felt warmth in his chest, and with a cocksure smile, he rose from his cocoon. Leopold touted, but watched his servant jostle with the reigns, adjust his clothing, and emerge back out into the world.

“Is something the matter?” the merchant enquired.

“Oh, no,” Wilfred began, wistful and despondent. “It’s just…”

There were two distinct memories rattling about in Leopold’s mind at that moment. The first concerned what happened last time Wilfred had said those words. A chimera was involved. Several wagons obliterated. A new suit tailored at considerable expense.

“It’s just…?” Leopold erred. Every muscle in his body tensed over his skeletal frame.

The second memory concerned a particular incident involving a band of slavers. They went by the name of the Brigade, and Leopold had little in common with them. He tried to listen to the wind, but picked out only the sounds of his caravan guard barking commands at one another in the obfuscating swirl of snow and inhospitality.

“Something just doesn’t feel right.”

Wilfred was seldom vague.

“Sit down,” Leopold snapped. Wilfred did just that. “Think, you oath, think.”

Wilfred looked up at Leopold, and contrary to employee etiquette, he snarled.

“I am fucking thinking.”

He whipped out a small piece of folded paper from the back of beyond, and opened it onto his lap. He fingered it gingerly, tired, worn digits caressing the detail with ardour. His pallid eyes examined the fading ink that marked out a map. To Leopold, it meant nothing. To Wilfred, a keen cartographer, it was the border between the old world and the new.

“What is it?” Leopold repeated, after several awkward minutes.

“We’re not in Berevar anymore…”

This revelation implied two important facts. The first was that Leopold and the caravan were in immediate danger. The second was that he had not in fact gotten them lost. He was pleased on the one hand, mortified on the other.

“That means…,” Leopold mumbled. He trailed off into his thoughts.

The shouting on the wind stopped. Leopold presumed this meant the crew were busy drinking, smoking, and stretching their legs. They had travelled for three days from the northern steppes of the Ahyark, and it would be three more before they rolled into Knife’s Edge entirely too eager to see churches and ruins.

“Oh fuck…,” the two men, robustly and with intent, shouted in unison.

The arrows embedded in the frame of the tack before the thud and echo filled the ravine. Shouts followed, and then a flash of fire in the mists ahead. From the drift emerged a terrifying edifice of the old ways. Leopold reached for his spear quicker than Wilfred could put his flask away and finger his gun. At the rear of the colonnade, he was certain he could here Jeren Silvers shouting to his men, and somewhere in the middle, Luned and Resolve were trying to get a grip.

“Slavers!” Leopold said, voice erupting into a hoarse, barren tone. He rose from his seat. He spun his pole-arm full-circle, and with newfound strength, leapt from wagon to wasteland.

Leopold
09-11-13, 04:08 PM
Slave To Convention (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQIQxkW9r-0)

http://s.cghub.com/files/Image/240001-241000/240447/968_max.jpg


Closed to Aegis of Espiridion (http://www.althanas.com/world/showthread.php?23038-Aegis-Revisted-(Level-0-3-0)&highlight=aegis+of) and Luned (http://www.althanas.com/world/showthread.php?25706-Luned-Level-3&highlight=).

Aegis of Espiridion
09-16-13, 02:42 PM
Lost amidst the impenetrable white veil, the figure bent low to examine the ground.

Ywain Lazarev, formerly knight of Rousay and now rogue vigilante, braced against the blizzard as he read the tracks etched upon the snow. Violent gusts lashed at thick layers of crudely stitched fox-fur, freezing rime lancing into what little skin he left exposed on his face. Together wind and ice were obliterating the traces of his prey almost as fast as he could identify them.

A score of riders, possibly two dozen, moving in close formation and with great haste. A pair of covered wagons, unlikely to be carrying much weight. Not too far distant from his current location, or he would have missed them altogether. Realisation dawned.

Slavers.

Barely a week had passed since he’d parted ways with Orun Ingar, the taciturn half-orc who’d been his companion and his ally in a cloak-and-dagger war against the flesh brokers of Vorgruk and Stokes. The renowned Salvic merchants had monopolised the slave trade in the north for years, masking their dirty work behind the facade of more respectable activities. In a single violent winter the pair of them had torn asunder the company’s operation, from their base of operations at Bitterwood Watch to the provocative designs upon the warlike orcish tribes further north that would have increased both their supply and the demand for their goods.

Now spring approached, bringing with it the faintest hope of warmth for the lowlands. But the melting snows revealed the infectious rot spreading far deeper than Ywain had dared to fear. Vorgruk-Stokes was merely the tip of the iceberg, the leading edge of the darkness that all could see but none dared supplant. As ridiculous as it sounded, they’d even managed to bring a semblance of control and respectability to their nefarious schemes. But without their steadying presence, anarchy prevailed.

This wasn’t the first sign of slaver activity he’d encountered during the week-long journey south. More than once he’d stumbled upon recently abandoned holding pens, or the lonely looted corpse of an ‘unfit specimen’ left to die. But it was the first time he’d been in a position to do something about it.

The young man stood, fighting the storm as he turned his gaze in the direction the hoofprints led. If he remembered correctly, the Great Northern Road passed through the shelter of a steep gorge nearby. Perfect for protecting merchant wain-wagons from the elements… and perfect for an ambush and a quick getaway.

Capricious wind caught his hood and forced it back. Eyes as cold as glacial ice traced a path through the blinding flurries. Quailing beneath the howling gale, the scent of the chase nonetheless beckoned through the scentless frost like a bloody trophy. One hand, clad in a glove of coarse leather, went to the finely filigreed hilt at his waist as he whispered a silent promise.

If it was in his power…

They will not get away.

Resolve
09-19-13, 10:37 PM
"Not quite," Resolve said, reaching out to correct the tangle of blue yarn in the little girl's hands. With a couple deft movements, she laced them properly through the tiny outstretched fingers once more. "Here, Dina, watch me. This one first…"

Within the shadowy wagon, Luned leaned over to watch their game of cat's cradle. The child mumbled something in frustrated Salvic, the scribe translated it into Trade for the exorcist, and with a twist of the wrist, Resolve showed her again the steps to create an elaborate ladder simply from weaving a bit of string through one's fingers. Such play had a few purposes: it distracted their minds from greater things, kept the children amused through the long journey, and Resolve could practice a new language.

"Almost," the young woman coaxed, guiding her motions. Dina nearly had it, gray eyes and gap-toothed smile wide in anticipation, when the wagon jolted to a stop and she lost grip on one of the loops in delicate transition. Her creation fell quickly into shambles and Resolve expressed impassioned dismay. "Well, shi–– er, darn! We can try again, but let's stretch our legs first." Luned translated, offering the discouraged girl a pat on her head of dark, pin-straight hair, and the many inhabitants of the cramped caravan shifted in their seats. Knees creaked and backs cracked, parents adjusting scarves on their young as others pulled themselves out of mental hibernation. Luned empathized, thoroughly surprised just how tiring it was to sit in a wagon for days on end. She couldn't wait to stretch her limbs and breathe some more of that –– dare she think it –– refreshing Salvic air. Inside the covered wagon had gone stale long ago, and while keeping things under tight wraps helped maintain some semblance of warmth, she felt incredibly stifled.

And then the arrows struck. From the inside of the caravan, they hit like crackles of lightning, leaving the inhabitants cowering in wait for the next onslaught with no relief of distant thunder to soothe the initial shock. Panic set in immediately, and when one elderly woman looked up to see an arrow had carved its way through the heavy layers of canvas precariously close to her head, she shrieked. This inspired cries from some of the youngest, and all looked to Luned for answers. The scribe stared back at them, feeling so suddenly frail and useless under her confident layers of fine furs, and only Resolve brought her out of the stupor with a pat on the shoulder. "Keep them calm, I'll see what's happening," she said, and without a moment's hesitance she whipped open the siding and hopped out into the snow.

She saw one Mr. Winchester up ahead, having leapt to the ground from his own ride with spear brandished in hand. "Leo!" she shouted, struggling to reach him through a drift. Being used to rather minimal clothing made moving in the leather and fur required for the Salvic wastes all the more restricting, but even in spite of the required change in wardrobe, she refused to leave Fallieni spice completely behind. The long end of a crimson scarf, woven bright with gold threads, spilled from the collar of her heavy coat and trailed behind her in the breeze. Finally, after all too much effort, she reached her colleagues at the head of their procession. From behind, she heard hollering as Jeren led an organization of men. "What's going on?"

"Slavers," the man confirmed darkly, and as Wilfred climbed out behind him through the din of the second wave of arrows, Resolve conjured a shield of energy to peek safely around the wagon. There they were, all too real and ominous against the frozen horizon, barreling toward them with dangerous intent.

The exorcist breathed deeply, steeling herself. Luned had explained what her involvement in Chronicle might entail, but no amount of pep talking could have prepared her for the weight of responsibility she bore over the lives of those refugees. When the thought nearly crippled her, she focused on one alone. She couldn't promise the safety of dozens but perhaps, by the grace of the gods, she could protect Dina. No –– no perhaps. She would.

Leopold
10-02-13, 01:51 PM
In the course of a few moments, Leopold Winchester broke a dozen oaths. He killed a mortal soul, in self-defence. He spurned his elders, though through wisdom, and not rage. He used his spear against land creatures, though they flew on wings of anger.

“Damned!” he heckled, spinning full-circle out of a lunge.

All around him, snow fell, blood oozed, and dog-ends smouldered with acrid smoke and the scent of cloves. The men of the Winchester Rose Trading Company were putting their money where their mouths were.

“Everyone!” Luned proclaimed, eyes sparkling, “keep your heads down!”

A hail of arrows streamed along the pass. With a single act of kindness, Luned Bleddyn outshone them all.

“Turn the wagons inwards,” Wilfred shouted, appearing next to the exorcist as though he knew exactly where to be. “Resolve, could you make sure everyone stays indoors, and if anyone makes it to the wagon…,” he trailed off.

Resolve nodded grimly. She knew what he meant.

“Off we go, then,” the butler mumbled. He turned up his collar, did up the top button of his coat, and scuttled through the drift to Wilfred’s side.

“Don’t worry miss,” Jeren chirped, appearing, in a similar fashion, out of nowhere. He had tended to the orders of his men. His business done, he came to the ‘rescue’ of the wagon’s precious cargo. The refugees they were shipping were priority over the profits of the company, and the lives of its employees. “He will see them off.”

Jeren had seen Wilfred plough, quite literally, through more rabid and dangerous hoards than the one in the ravine.

“If he doesn’t, I’ll torment him through nine hells and beyond,” Resolve vowed.

She disappeared back into the canopy, leaving Jeren titillated, wanting a fight, and denied the opportunity. The wind whipped his demure expression from his face, leaving him cold, bitter, and torn between two minds.

Leopold
02-24-14, 04:45 PM
“Need a hand?” Wilfred bellowed.

Leopold turned, for just a brief moment, to see who it was. He smiled, turned back, and continuing thrusting his spear through an orc’s gullet. It made a satisfying snick, and when he twisted it, it gathered tendons and sinew in a fatal knot.

“Always,” was his only reply.

The situation at the front of the caravan was grim, but not beyond hope. The slavers had attacked too soon; giving up their element of surprise had worked for over the last few days. Their beasts, giant cat-like creatures Leopold could not describe, had grown too hungry – too wild and reckless.

“We have to take out those…,” Leopold trailed off. Wilfred, he hoped, was on the ball. “Quick, ideas?” He pulled his spear free of the corpse with a hefty kick to the orc’s groin. It fell away unceremoniously.

The wind howled up the pass, oblivious to the intrusion. It made hearing difficult beyond a few feet, and though the merchant kept his ears strained and his eyes dancing between slaver and saddlebag, the fate and state of his cargo was beyond his knowledge.

“Always,” Wilfred chuckled. He loosed a trio of shoots with a bend of his knee, and three approaching elves thundered to the ground, head first, and lifeless. He kissed the smoking barrel, its heat worthless in the frozen hearth of the wilds, and began to reload. “Bullet to the eyes.”

“That is not,” Leopold whelped. He saw an orc mount one of the encircling creatures, and he froze. “Shit…get back to the caravan Wilfred, warn Resolve and Jeren. Keep that thing away from…”

Before he could finish his order, Wilfred was scuttling, despite his age, back towards the relative shelter of the wagons. His eyes sparkled. His gun remained aimed ahead, and his heart beat with a thunderous din. To the right, pounding along the pass’ cliff face, the tiger rider made directly for Jeren.

“God speed,” Leopold prayed, as he turned back to unify his fragmented battle line. “If another gets through to the wagons, you’re all fucking fired!”

He loosed an abyssal ball of energy through the snow, knocked a human clad in red wool from a beast, and raised his spear to charge. If they lost here in the pass, Luned’s scolding tirade would be a fate far worse than death.