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Hysteria
06-04-17, 08:13 AM
“Where are the caravans?!”

My day had gone to shit real quick. After a month of negotiations, I had managed to set up a trading deal between the Merchant Guild in Radasanth and the mining town of Stormhope. I should have been kicking back at a bar enjoying a Corone Sunrise and playing with the little Akashima folding umbrella in my cup, and instead after only one shipment the caravans had stopped. Instead I was sitting in the officer one of the Merchant Guild’s representatives getting yelled at by a man who looked like the love child of a potato and a shaved cat.

“Well!?” he spat.

“I don-”

“You don't know! You don't know! I bloody know you don't know!”

“Then wh-”

“Because Miss Remedy Blue, because I wanted to see you say it! Now this is what is going to happen. You will go to Stormhope, you will find out why they stopped and you will start them again. Am I clear?”

I nodded.


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“Y'edda’s butt!”

I paced in my room trying to work out what I was going to do. As soon as I had heard the caravan hadn't arrived I sent out a man to check it out. He had not come back, so I sent another. Then another. None had returned, a sizeable issue given they were only to be paid upon returning the information to me. That left only a few options. Robbers could have taken the caravan and the riders out en route. However it would be rare for robber to take a load of quartz as their prize. Perhaps it was something with the town itself….

I sighed and huffed in frustration. There was no choice, I had to go. The contract had an clause providing me with ongoing stipend to ‘ensure the contract is fulfilled’. A throw away line that is generally just there to ensure a steady stream of income. Now it forced me to investigate the missing caravan. But I couldn't do it alone. Well, perhaps I could have… but it wasn't wise to do it alone. I needed to hire help.



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I had put out the call for hired arms three days ago. I didn’t wanted anything fancy, well to be honest, I didn't want anyone expensive. Fancy was fine, as long as it didn’t cost any more coppers. As long as they could handle themselves in a fight and were not a fall down drunken fool, they would do. The tedious nature of the journey meant that I needed to organise supplies, a few horses and wagon. Three days was enough to get all that sorted well enough. Any quicker and I’d have ended up paying a premium. The notices I had put around the local haunts had been simple:

Mercenaries and Adventurers wanted.
Danger at Stormhope?
Investigation leaves by east gate
Day of rest, third of the morn’

Truth be told, I didn’t like how the writers of Radasanth formed their prose, but they remained resolute in their format. A few minutes to the deadline and I was sitting in the back of the wagon, my chin rested in my palm, and my arm perched on my knee. I had attempted to pack light, at least somewhat. In the wagon was food and water enough for the trip there and back twice over. If all was well and I was able to start the shipments the moment we arrived in Stormhope, I could even sell the extra food to some weary traveller, too hungry and tired to realise the price I was peddling. My red hair was getting long and I had tied it into a single long plat running down my back. I wore a leather jacket over my leather suit. It offered some protection from the cold wind. While there was some time before the harshness of winter, summer had long since left. There was another bag in the back of the wagon full of my bits and pieces. If things really got serious, the contents of the bag would become very handy.

Revenant
06-07-17, 01:24 AM
“Mercenaries wanted. Danger at Stormhope,” William read. It was little enough to go on, but this notice alone stood out among the leaflets and hiring notices tacked to the board. There were plenty of jobs for those brave or foolish enough looking for them, but nothing that caught the attention of a man like William Arcus, who had faced the strongest and fiercest that Althanas could produce. Standard guard contracts for caravan masters, requests to root out bandits, offers of coin to bring protection to this village or that hamlet, these were the types of jobs that lured the fresh meat out. William had slogged through the menial jobs with nothing but coin and gratitude to show for it, he’d done his time.

“Just what the hell am I doing here,” he grumbled, shaking his head.

“What’s it going to be, grandpa?”

William turned to see that a young woman had slid up to the job board beside him. She was a fresh faced thing, glowing with the purpose of youth and exuding an aura of having something to prove. Her hair was dark and shiny, but cut short enough that an enemy couldn’t get a proper hold on it if she had to get up close and personal in a scrap. She grinned at him.

William simply stared back at her.

“Hey just kidding,” the woman held her hands up. “No offense intended. It’s just that you look a little more weather-beaten than the rest of the meat in this place.”

This time William couldn’t keep his look from twisting into a frown. The girl blanched a little before twin spots of heat blossomed in her cheeks.

“S-sorry,” she sputtered, “I’m not good at this sort of thing. I just mean that you look like you’ve got more experience than the rest of us here put together. I figured it couldn’t hurt to see what kind of jobs a guy like you is looking at. There’s got to be some potential in that. My name is Celeste.”

Celeste stuck her hand out with an apologetic look. William frowned at it, thinking to write the woman off but let his annoyance fall away and took her hand.

“William,” he replied.

“So what do you think the deal is with Stormhope?” Celeste asked. “I’ve never heard of the place. Do you think it’s anything serious?”

William shrugged. He’d never heard of Stormhope either but he doubted it’d be anything that he’d find serious. Still, Celeste looked like a handful of cutthroats would be enough to get her blood pumping. The excitement of youth, he thought.

“What if some renegade band has taken over the town?” Celeste went on, either oblivious to the fact that William wasn’t terribly talkative or else simple ignoring it. He hadn’t snapped at her after all, so he must not mind it that much.

Celeste’s eyes widened with a flush of eagerness as a thought struck her. “What if it’s like that private army that tried to take over Corone a couple years ago? What do they call themselves, Erickson’s Knights or something like that?”

This time William couldn’t suppress a chuckle. “Ixian,” he corrected. “They were the Ixian Knights.”

Celeste beamed, taking his reaction as a sign of her victory at winning the older mercenary over. “Yeah, that was the one. What if it’s some hold outs from the Ixian Knights coming out of hiding and making another try to take over Corone, only this time they’re starting with Stormhope?”

The thought made William wince. It wasn’t possible, was it?

“Unlikely,” William said. “That ship has long since sailed.”

“You’re probably right,” Celeste went on. “But it sure would be exciting, wouldn’t it? So far the only thing that I’ve managed to get hired on to do is dealing with rabid wildlife and bandits too drunken to do more than raid the local chicken coop.” Celeste made a face.

“We all had to start somewhere.” It was William’s turn to respond.

Celeste groaned and made a face. “True,” she sighed, “but for once I wish that the job I was on turned out to be something grand.”

The two of them stood facing the postings, letting the other mercenaries move around them. A moment of silence finally lay between them.

“Are you taking the job?” Celeste finally asked, breaking the spell.

“Stormhope? No,” William said with a shake of his head. “Most of my adventuring days are behind me. I thought I’d just come down here to see what’s posted for old times’ sake.”

Celeste was visibly disappointed. “Oh well,” she said, deflating. “It sounds a little too mysteriously dangerous for me.” She took a flyer asking for experienced hands to deal with a wild animal that was hunting livestock out in another rural farm area that William had never heard of. “Maybe I should just stick with what I know, eh?”

William wished her good luck and left. He’d lied to Celeste, knowing full well that he’d be setting off with the team to investigate Stormhope. But it was for her own good, he thought remembering his time with the Ixian Knights. After all, everything that got close to his fire burned up in one way or another.

The next morning, William approached Remedy’s wagon loaded for travel and ready for whatever lay on the road ahead.

jdd2035
06-08-17, 09:37 PM
Cain looked longingly back over to his ship in the distance the Private Man of War Peregrine of fourteen guns. With one last look at the beautiful ship Cain guided his mule towards the town of Stormhope. In the pocket of his number sea coat was a flyer which read.

"Mercenaries and Adventurers wanted.
Danger at Stormhope?
Investigation leaves by east gate
Day of rest, third of the morn’"

Off he went packing his two pistols, cavalry saber and topped off with his trust Tricorn hat. The mule bellowed and Cain began to sing...

"Come, cheer up, my lads, 'tis to glory we steer,
To add something more to this wonderful year;
To honour we call you, as freemen not slaves,
For who are so free as the sons of the waves?

Heart of Oak are our ships,
Jolly Tars are our men,
We always are ready: Steady, boys, Steady!
We'll fight and we'll conquer again and again!"

In such a deep and loud voice that he could be heard miles off being used to shouting over cannon fire. Captain Cain was not any where near subtle. Between the bellowing and Cain's singing (actually quite good) the entire caravan probably knew he was coming. Eventually Cain and his mule finally made it to Remedy's wagon train. There he dismounted strode over the Remedy and after a moment or two of confusion touched his knuckle to his tricorn to Remedy. "Ma'am I am Captain Cain Jodin of the Private Man O' War Peregrine. Request permission to join your crew."

Hysteria
06-10-17, 09:23 AM
“William was it?” I asked, raising an eye brow at the sight of the man in front of me. He seemed capable given his calm, self-assurance. In the merchant business we called people like him rivers. You can do your darndest to dig a channel for them to move into, but in the end the river choses its own direction.

“Who’s your friend?”

William turned his head to see the beaming face of Celeste. I could almost taste the enthusiasm radiating off her.

“I knew you’d take it! I knew it!” she started some inane conversation and help up the process of marking names.

“Come on, come on, we don’t have all morn’ to… puff around in,” I said.

Celeste shot me a cold look, and I returned it with deadpan boredom. William climbed into the back of the wagon and plonked himself down in a seat. I jotted a question mark next to his last name and turned to the young woman.

“Name?”

“Celeste” she said, pulling herself up and sitting next to William. I grunted something between acceptance and annoyance and turned to the next man literally singing his way towards the wagon. I realised it was going to be one of those days where you seem to attract all the nutters. I shoved the thought aside and affixed my face with a grin. At least sea folk liked to keep things simple.

“Request accept Cap’n,” I replied, “Always good to have someone with salt blood in their veins along.”

Josette
06-21-17, 04:33 PM
"Wait."

The black horse's nostrils flared, a hot, wet snort blowing the hair back from Josette's face. The knight's blue eyes narrowed, and she gave the reins a downward tug. "Wait," she growled again, keeping her gaze steady with her mount's even as he pranced in place. He was a majestic creature, with a long, flowing mane and feathered hooves. Those hooves were the size of dinner plates, meant to accommodate his massive size. At sixteen hands, the horse was not especially tall, but he was built like a tank. Thick ropes of muscle rippled beneath his silky black coat, completing the overall package. The best horse in the region, the stable owner had boasted. Then the only horse he had available, when she asked for another option. She had preferred mares, or geldings, as stallions were too showy, too high-strung. This equine, who he had called Dante, was no exception. But the woman had haggled for an acceptable price, and made arrangements to sell the horse back when she was finished in Corone. One day, if everything went as planned, she could buy a horse without a return agreement. When that time came, it would not be an explosive Friesian.

"Wait," she commanded a third time. Wait and watch. Before she approached the wagon, the meeting place for the potential job, she preferred to collect some information. Reconnaissance was an important step for the knight, and she was not the sort to leap into anything without careful consideration. Granted, that was not to say that emotion played no part in her decision. Though she could use Letho's creature-hunting guild as her excuse for being there, her true reasoning was more complex. There was a town in danger, a town worth saving. She had not saved the other town, the other Stormhope, the other people who had looked to her for safety. Instead, she had brought it all down around her, and those flames still remained with her, months later. Saving one town would not bring back another, but perhaps it would work to cleanse her demons.

The crowd collecting appeared harmless enough, and the woman in the iron armor finally chose to approach after the bard arrived singing. A crooner on a mule? Was there anything less intimidating? So the raven-haired woman led her beast of a horse toward the waiting party, one gauntlet-clad hand on the reins, the other perched atop the hilt of her gleaming sword.

Hysteria
06-25-17, 09:47 PM
“Josette Hawkes” echoed Remedy as she wrote down the knight’s name, “good to have you with us.”

I pushed myself to my feet and weaved between the passengers towards the driver's seat. I couldn't help myself, I stepped onto the driver's seat, then twisted on the spot for some dramatic flair. The rag-tag band of hired goons didn't look like much, but they'd have to do.

“Gentlemen and gentlewomen, we are about to depart for Stormhope. Now, a word of warning. We are most likely dealing with a band of armed robbers or highwaymen that have cut off communication with the town. Once we are on our way you will need to keep an eye out for anyone or anything that might attempt to stop us. We have just shy of a day's ride in front of us. Any questions?”

“What sort of coin are we talking about?” asked Celeste.

I smiled, she was the only one to enquire about money. It would have been the first thing I'd have asked.

“Ten gold per day, plus twenty danger fee. If this turns out to be a some robbers and we can dispatch them on the way, it'll be forty all up. We'll stay the night in Stormhope. Food will be provided,” I added with a smile, “any other questions?”

jdd2035
06-28-17, 07:20 PM
Cain shook his head to the negative "No ma'am just let me know where you want me." He touched his knuckle to his had at the rest of the group and upon seeing the shoddy way the wagons cargo was tied into the bed he absent mindedly knotted and spliced the cargo something more ship shape. Finishing the task he returned to the group.

"For any one who did not hear when I introduced my self to the caravan leader, I am Captain Cain Jodin, of the fourteen gun corvette Peregrine." He smiled most cheerfully at the group he was a genuine sort with a tanned face which caused his clear eyes to shine like emeralds. His mule bellowed out a chorus of high pitched whines in introduction as well causing the Captain to mention under his breath "lubberous beast" before patting the creature.

After his introduction of the group he stepped back to see if any one else would introduce them selves. While he stepped back he gauged what kind of people he might be working with. A young lady that wore more iron than his best bower, a dangerous looking man with a five o'clock shadow, his assistant and the caravan leader a mystery. Things would be interesting to say the least.

Revenant
06-29-17, 10:19 AM
William listened to the others making their introductions with muted interest, all the while watching Celeste from the corner of his eye. He’d hoped to put the girl off his trail at the work boards yesterday but clearly she was a lot sharper than the starry-eyed thing he’d taken her for. He just hoped that her eagerness to follow his wasn’t going to get her killed. There weren’t many who could say the same.

“M’William,” he grunted as the conversation came back around to him. He gave a half-shrug and grunted assent at Remedy’s mention of payment. It was pretty standard for the type of work that she was peddling, perhaps even a little bit on the generous side. But William wasn’t taking this job for the money. Besides, he’d certainly sold himself for less than a handful of coins a time or two.

As the rest of the group was finishing up Celeste gestured to the massive pack William had strapped to his back. “So,” Celeste whispered at him, “do you really think it’s going to be that bad?”

“Supplies,” he answered back with a shrug. Celeste raised a questioning eyebrow. “I like to be prepared,” he said, shrugging the bulky weight off his shoulders. Truth be told he didn’t need much in the way of supplies, but if he was going to play the experienced, grizzled mercenary then he’d fit the part. Besides, the added bulk of the hiker’s travelling pack served as a good way to hide some of the more exotic items that he carried with him.

He hefted the nearly six-foot long bundle over the side of the wagon with an easy, practiced motion and secured it to the vehicle’s sideboards with a set of thick straps. The leather straps groaned in protest from the weight but held firm. William thought about the handful of coins Remedy was offering and then to the sheer amount of wealth he’d just strapped to the side of her wagon. He lived an odd life.

Task accomplished he gave Celeste a knowing smile and a nod to the rest of the group. Then, with a mercenary’s practiced ease, he leaned back, closed his eyes, and drifted off into a shallow doze.

Josette
07-06-17, 11:29 AM
Easy assignment, easy coin. Though Josette was never one to be motivated entirely by gold, she still recognized its importance. Living without much of it for the past few years had taught her that life was a bit easier with extra weight in your pocket, even if it merely ensured a sleeping in a bed instead of an alley. She had had her share of alleys, and though she could handle it, she was not eager to.

"No questions," she replied simply, shaking her head to emphasize the point. The mission seemed straight-forward enough, and her training with the arcane knights prepared her for apprehending simple robbers. This would be an easy, uncomplicated assignment, if Josette had her way. No magic involved.

The stallion pawed excitedly, feathered hooves clipping at the hardpacked earth. The knight leaned into him, pressing her shoulder against his, her physical presence both a comfort and a warning to calm down. She also kept a gentle pressure on the reins, grounding him to the spot as the introductions continued. They were a necessary evil, Josette supposed. It was vital that she know the names of her companions, and their abilities, were they willing to share them. But it was always an uncomfortable experience. She did not care to draw more attention to herself, and honestly, listening to the others talk also felt like a waste of valuable time.

Short and sweet was her preference. Therefore, when it became her turn, her response was curt. "Hawkes." No first name needed, as she had already provided it to the woman in charge. Her surname would be enough. And it appeared to be, as the party moved out shortly after.

Josette mounted up, though it required more effort than normal, given the horse's height. After lodging her boot in the stirrup, she bounced twice on her right foot, then hauled herself up and over. Dante was already prancing off as she settled into the saddle, happy to remain a few paces ahead of the wagon. "Wait," she murmured for the umpteenth time, collecting his head as she slid her fingers forward along the braided reins. It was going to be a long journey.

Hysteria
07-11-17, 07:06 PM
To my delight we got underway without too much fuss. I had quite a number of dealings with mercenaries, and I found them to generally be belligerent and greedy. I’d have wagered that most of this group saw themselves as heroes rather than mercenaries given the way they accepted the coin without too much fuss. As the thought ran through my head and a cold pit of dread burst in my stomach… am I paying too much…?

“What's in the bag?” asked Celeste.

I snapped back into the present and turned to smile at the girl. I reminded myself that I needed to focus on the here and now. I could recalculate the wage at another time.

“I don’t normally lead groups of mercenaries across the countryside. I'm a tinkerer by trade, a pauper profession, but one I enjoy,” I said, reaching around and fishing a small ball out of the bag behind me and holding it out for Celeste to take.

“Is that a flame?” Celeste squealed as the small blue flame danced within the glass ball.

I thought I saw William open an eye at the mention of fire, but when I glanced at him he seemed steadfast in the dozing stupor. There was something about the man that made me think of him as a soldier. He didn’t smell of liquor, but he seemed to have the ability to fall asleep on cue. That was a soldier’s trait. The captain was humming a tune, something I didn’t recognise, but seemed to change slightly every time he repeated it. I turned back to the road and flicked the reins to keep the horse moving as a decent pace.

“Yes it is, you select the dial on the side for the release time, then boom! Flames enough for most purposes,” I said.

I gestured to the bag.

“Would you mind taking out the large box and pass it to me?”

The countryside had slowly changed as we had been travelling. Around Radasanth was mostly farms. The soil wasn’t great, but the city needed food enough that quality wasn’t an issue. Plus you throw in some resourceful waste management services in the city and you’re able to grow some rather good potatoes. The last farm however had passed some time ago. There were mostly trees now, with the odd patch of grass here and there. The road had forked a few times and we had stayed on our course to Stormhope. Some of the roads had gone north towards the tip of Corone. Others had branched south-east and towards the fishing villages of the east coast. We were now off any sort of main road, the only place this road led to was Stormhope.

If we were going to ambushed, this next stretch of road was going to be it. As I showed Celeste the Blue Blaze Bomb© I was watching the tree line. There had been a movement of black, the sort of thing you might catch out of the corner of your eye.

“Ugh, this is heavy!” whined Celeste, “what is it?”

She hauled the box onto the seat next to me and flopped back down into the wagon. I saw another flash of black and knew something was about to happen.

“Captain, William, do you know what it is?” I asked, more loudly than needed, “Perhaps our knight Hawkes would take a guess?”

I pulled the reins of the horse slightly, taking us to the side of the road and opening up a decent amount of road for Josette. The beast snorted and huffed at the sudden change. I wasn’t sure how observant my hired swords would be, at least I knew that Celeste was ignorant of the impending attack. I reached to the bottom of the box and pulled out a small square device and placed it next to me.

Perhaps I was too overt in my actions, or perhaps the place was right for the attack. Either way, the assailants darted from the tree line. They moved quickly, faster than the wind and even more silent. There were, half a dozen or so darting forwards, dressed head to toe in black except for the fabric mask pulled across their faces. There was a distinctive white skull pattern that fitted over their faces.

“Time to earn your coin!” I shouted as I grabbed the zap pistol off my waist.

jdd2035
07-12-17, 03:40 PM
Cain's eyes focused on the tree line and caught the sight of seven black garbed assailants "Ha! I smoked you! There's a vanguard of seven men clad in black, two points to starboard, at random shot!". All hands prepare to repel borders!" Cain shouted as he drew his pistols. The mule he was on bellowed and squalled in an upset manner before circling on itself a few times before Cain fell off "mutinous lubber!" the Captain said taking aim at the attackers and firing off a shot.

The three tenths of an inch steel ball erupted from the barrel of his pistol speeding through the air at nearly twelve hundred feet per second, hissing through the black cloth of one of the seven raiders and into its flesh, with a hearty slap!

The mule squawked and mewled some more and stomped to the other side of the wagon as things started to get interesting.

Another shot rang from Cain's second pistol sending another ball wheeling through the air followed by seriousness slap! Cain pulled the ram rod placed it between his teeth and reached into a pouch on his weapons belt and pulled out a cartridge tearing it open he dumped powder, a wad and a round ball of shot in a most practiced fashion as he continued to watch the attackers.

Cain may have not been the best horseman but now he was more into his element aside from not being on a rolling deck he was quite familiar with fending off black guarded attackers looking for booty. He grinned as he pulled the ram rod from his teeth and drove home his shot and shouted his battle cry "Fill your hands!"

Revenant
07-16-17, 05:37 PM
Chaos erupted around the wagon and though William had seemed asleep, he sprang fully into motion the instant Remedy cried out. There was a smoothness to the act that was more than human, belying the simple mercenary façade that he’d put on. He bumped into Celeste as he turned to face their attackers, unconsciously shielding the young woman with his own body.

Celeste cried out as William jostled her, the blue fire sphere slipping from her hand as she reached out to steady herself. “Watch out,” she cried out and then flinched from the twin percussion of Cain’s pistols. William glanced back as her, not surprised to see a toothy grin spread across her youthful features.

“Come on,” she said, breathlessly and pushed past him, jumping over the side of the wagon to engage the Skulls. She pulled her sword free with a cry and charged forward to support Cain while he reloaded.

William grimaced and moved to follow Celeste but paused. He narrowed his eyes and scanned the scene in front of him, calculating. Remedy’s caravan had been on the road for the most of the day. Early twilight was the perfect time for an ambush, giving the Skulls enough light to see by but also plenty of shadows to hide themselves in. But this road was obviously not a major caravan road, which meant that the bandits had had lookouts to watch for traffic.

It was apparent that the Skulls knew what they were doing. They were old hands at this sort of thing. But skilled bandits didn’t charge a heavily guarded caravan without the weight of numbers behind them. It didn’t matter how skilled a combatant you were if the weight of numbers was against you. The element of surprise only went so far.

William cursed and spun around, knowing what he’d see before he did so. Another group of Skulls melted from the shadows on the caravan’s other side, now that the initial force had drawn everyone’s attention away from them. There were a dozen or more assassins melting from the shadows, far stealthier than the diversion force had been. And all of them had bows drawn, with arrows ready to fire.

“Archers!” William roared. William pulled his leather cloak he wore tightly around him as the archers loosed. A normal cloak would provide little protection from such an attack, but William’s cloak had been made from the hide of a monstrous creature the size of a barn. Experience told him that it was more than capable of keeping the Skulls’ arrows at bay. Assuming they weren’t magical.

An instant before the arrows struck, Remedy’s metal box rose sharply into the air beside William. It hummed with internal energy and flew apart into four charged coils. The device pulsed as the arrows struck, sending a wave of energy into the missiles and scattering them like a child throwing a hand of jumble sticks.

William would have appreciated the defensive screen a lot more if the device hadn’t also pushed against the metal in his breastplate, pitching him headlong out of the wagon. He pitched forward with a cry, spilling awkwardly out of the wagon. He tried to brace himself but found his arms caught in the folds of the cloak he’d hoped would protect him. The irony was lost on him as he slammed into the hard packed road with a loud whump.

A barrage of breathless curses spilled from his lips as he lay, dazed, in the dirt. Two of the ambushing Skulls sprinted from cover, seeking an easy kill. The rest of them, seemingly undeterred by Remedy’s device, silently knocked another set of arrows.

William managed to free himself in time to catch both Skulls charge. They assassins had dropped their bows and had drawn thin, triangular shaped blades. William had seen blades like those before and knew that though they weren’t very good in a drawn out fight, they were excellent at punching through heavy armor. Armor like the breastplate that William wore.

The assassins drove their blades forward in concert, seeking to puncture William’s heart in a single well-timed thrust. His hand snapped out to grab one, ignoring the pain that flared as the triangular blade bit straight through the flesh of his hand, down to the bone. The second blade, however, stabbed deeply into William’s side. The only thing William could do was to roll away from it, ripping a jagged hole open in his side and letting the tip lodge in his lung rather than his heart.

He reached out with unnatural speed and grabbed the first blade, ignoring the stab of pain as the steel bit into his flesh. Pain was a constant in his life. But there was no way to stop the second blade from biting home and William could only roll as the Skull stabbed down, the blade sliding easily between his ribs to lodge in his right lung rather than his heart.

Steaming blood fountained from William’s lips and he could hear someone yelling but the meaning behind it was lost as the red tide rose in his vision. He’d tried to play the veteran warrior, hiding his true power, but these damnable bandits weren’t making it easy. A sharp smile flashed at the Skulls from beneath bloodstained lips as William allowed the molten heat of his strength flood from his core.

And then the bomb that Celeste had dropped exploded, splashing up across the side of the wagon and engulfing William and his attackers in a ball of intense blue flame.

Hysteria
07-25-17, 08:13 AM
I aimed my pistol towards the tree line and the archers within. I could just make out their darting figures, loosing arrows that smashed ineffectually against my electrical barrier. The field shuddered, and I knew in a moment or two it would collapse. I pulled the zap pistol back to my face, letting the spinning electric charge in the pistol’s glass chamber cast dancing lines of light across my face.

“Thanyes damn these arseholes! Hawkes! The tree line!” I screamed to the knight. She pulled the reins of her horse and diverted away from the melee fight and initially back down the road we had come. She pulled the reins again, her horse arching up onto its back legs and launching into the tree line and disappeared with her sword trailing behind her.

A heard a few shouts of surprise coming from the Skulls in the treeline, but I didn’t have time for that. I grabbed the contraptions Celeste had handed me and clicked it onto my belt. I leapt towards the electrical barrier just as it collapsed and landed with a crunch on the road. I still had the reins of the horse in my hand, and I pulled them tight and wrapped them around the side of the wagon. There was no way I was going to get the horse bolt.

I still had my doubts about the hired swords. Celeste was as absent minded as I feared, and William managed to be caught in both the electric shield and the blue blaze bomb. I had images of me caring for the old fool all the way to Stormhope and back. For now I needed to focus on turning the tide of the fight while the meat bought me some cover. I pulled out another flat device from the dispenser on my side and flung it into the middle of the road. It burst open, sliding metal on metal to form a one metre by one metre, slightly curved wall. I ducked behind it, hopefully drawing any wayward arrows to me and away from our horse. I lifted my pistol towards Celeste and focused. She brought her sword down, but the Skull caught it against his own and with a flourish caused her to stumble backwards. The moment she did I fired my pistol, a stream to white hot electricity arcing from the tip of the zap pistol, into the Skull’s weapon, down his arm and then it cascaded from his limbs into the ground. Celeste seemed shocked, but less than Skull. The moment the electricity stopped she stepped forward and brought the sword down across his chest with spray of red.

A shift of movement came from the smoky area William and the two assailants had been engulfed by fire. I jammed my pistol back into its holster to recharge and point my other hand towards the movement. At a moment’s notice I was ready to unleash a direct blast of blaze blue flame from the nozzle on my wrist.

jdd2035
08-01-17, 09:57 PM
Cain was busy reloading his second pistol when ~THWACK!~ an arrow embedded itself near his foot causing him to stammer backwards with a second arrow finding its place where his body would have been an instant before hand. "Bloody hell!" Cain exclaimed he didn't have time to finish reloading his second pistol as two masked assailants closed in their unique swords drawn intent on skewering him. The Sea Captain raised his loaded pistol aimed it at the nearest of the two attackers and fired. The ball penetrated the mask and flesh behind it leaving a large hole out of the other side of the attackers head. The second attacker thrust his specialized blade at Cain causing him to parry with his just fired pistol.

To counter attack Cain shoved the barrel of his partially loaded gun into the masks eye and pulled the trigger. Even with out a ball the exploding powder and flames shooting out of the barrel with in the mask was more than enough to cause carnage and mayhem with in it. The voice inside the mask was a gurgling crying scream muffled by his own mask. Cain grabbed the second attacker and charged toward Remedy's barricade both of them rolling as yet another arrow ricocheted with a loud ~GONG!~

"Got you a live prisoner!" Cain said a crooked grin on his face as he fished for a pair of charges to reload his pistols. Finding a special kind of shot covered in ruins his grin grew ever wider and he reloaded.

Revenant
08-10-17, 05:51 PM
Blue fire filled William’s vision. The heat of the blast enveloping both him and the two Skulls that he’d attracted. He was surprised by the explosion, but unfazed by its chaos. It was only heat, after all, and heat was his life’s blood. Literally.

William rose through the flames, tossing the charred, lifeless corpses of his attackers to either side. His eyes blazed full with the power of his molten core, shimmering a bright orange which pierced through the dying blue light. But even though the flames themselves left no impact on either him or his gear, which had been specially treated to resist his own fiery temperament, William’s sight hadn’t fared quite as well.

Bright motes of light twinkled in front of William, a blurry afterimage swimming in front of him. He reached out to rend it apart, fingers momentarily curling into jagged splinters of razor-sharp blackened bone. A quiet gasp and a sharp intake of breath played from the shape before another gout of flame washed over him. The burst of flame, like the explosion before, washed harmlessly over William and he cursed himself as a fool. He’d taken the figure to be another of the Skulls who’d come to his comrade’s aid. He hadn’t counted on his own comrades rushing to assist him in that manner. After all, he’d downplayed his abilities throughout this entire journey. How were they supposed to know that he wasn’t in any real danger from a couple of thugs and a bit of fire?

“That’s enough,” he hissed at Remedy through clenched teeth. He swiped at the flames before her hard and fast enough to splash them away from him, human skin once again taking the place of twisted claws. He glared at the tinkerer for a moment before swiping his thick cloak in front of her, deflecting three of the arrows that the snipers had fired at her. Two of them pinged off the titanium breastplate he himself wore beneath his outer garments, but two of them caught him mid-thigh where he’d swept his cloak up to protect his employer.

“See to the others and then get the wagon back on the move,” he commanded. It looked like the initial distraction attackers had been taken care of anyways, between Cain’s rapid pistol reloads and Celeste’s blade.

Remedy’s eyes blazed in indignation at his command but before she could speak William tore out the warped blade that the charred Skull had left inside him and threw it aside, turning away from her as he did so. The sizzling blood on the blade smoked where it struck the matting of dead leaves beside the road. A single tongue of flame briefly licked up from beneath it before puffing out in a burst of smoke.

The bandits were shouting at one another as they prepared another volley, this time training their shots solely on the man who so casually shrugged off fire and steel.