by C S » Wed Jun 08, 2016 4:21 am
Desrium was indifferent to the sandblasting he was receiving just from standing near the bowsprit of the sledship. The scalding hot sand rolled across the metal that comprised his face and chest in billowing sheets. Though he lacked the means to feel it, the vicious sands did a number on even his hardy body. Tiny streaks were engraved onto his armor, the marks following the flow of sand bombarding Desrium. The scratches were alight with a barely visible green glow, as well as the tiny sparkles that jumped from the marks. Though the damage was mitigated considerably by the armor's nature, not even it was impervious to the hardships of the desert.
But what was it that had Desrium's attention so?
He too heeded the flag-bearer at the Thimeyran port all the way across the tan, striated gulf. So intrigued by the policy, which was another similarity he noted with seafaring ships, he was absolutely oblivious to the disastrous exposure he was subjecting his body to. In one of his rare times of quiet, Desrium sought to reason what the different signal flags meant, in relation to how the ship maneuvered. He had felt the Dunefox alter course whenever a curious yellow flag with blue stripes was raised, the stripes invoking the cardinal directions with the way they were crossed. Though he did not know the specifics of it, it was one of the few signals he'd come to guess at its significance.
Syria was off on her own, led wayward by her own curiosity. While she was not too far away from Septimus -- not that she could lose him, his aura being what it was, what she saw was more than just an unbelievable blue in the ice. So deep into the mountain, the walls of winter contained more than just water.
The mage ran her hands against the surface of the ice, which she thought was far too smooth for a natural occurrence. Her eyes were wide with wonder as she traced the immortalized air pockets with her fingers. The tiny bubbles seemed to be filled with shadows whereas the rest of the ice had a glowing quality to it. Closer to the ground, the ice bore a misty texture of many colors, though most of them were overwhelmed by the blueness. Syria inferred this was due to minerals settling in the freezing water. Each layer in the pattern was some kind of rock swept by once-mobile water and suspended indefinitely as powder.
It got the mage thinking. She stuck her tongue out of the corner of her mouth as she stepped away from the frozen wall, engaging in great focus. She pulled her hands together but did not clasp them, her palms bowled as if to hold water. Syria stood there, leveling her breathing and maintaining her will until everything around her became subdued. Light and sound faded from her perception while she stared into her gloves, summoning her magic to make her desires reality.
Little by little, moisture in the air condensed over the material of her green gloves. It was a gaseous, amorphous gathering that started small, and did not grow much more. The still air within the cave stirred around Syria, taking up specks of dust and rock with it and adding it into her ever-developing creation. The bits of earth intermingled with the gas, and when she was satisfied with the dispersal, Syria commanded the vapor to become liquid, and from liquid to ice.
Her frozen ball was tiny, just big enough to be held by her thumb and index finger. It was crystal clear, however, with the particles at the center held as a spiral cluster. Syria held it up to her eye and looked through it, pleased with herself.
Baaz was lying down in her bunk with her arms crossed behind her head. The vibrations running through the planks as the sledder plowed through sand were especially noticeable now. For some time now, all she had done was lie still and stare at the ceiling, caught in deep contemplation. She hadn’t been like this since the fall of Draxon. Being called home was not anything near that bad, was it? What supernatural beast was there to slay after Immanis? Though there was horror in warfare, were the things she had seen out in the desert on par with bodies set ablaze by the arrows of those who were once called countrymen? Baaz searched herself in the silence for an answer. Could she honestly say that those things were worse than leading survivors through the carnage and then setting them loose in the wilderness in the hopes that they could start their lives again elsewhere?
There was no definitive way to quantify the things she’d been through, she was beginning to find, the longer she thought about it. For instance, whereas the official report of the incident in Freyr-Lunge took note of a lost battle-mount, Baaz retained the memory of Brambleblight as a comrade slain in action, not something bred to give its all in combat. The Frondfoot was equal to any person wearing the uniform in her eyes. She was told to let go and move on. Baaz was indignant, and it only fed her dark mood in those days after returning to Daaven. The fixation was back in her head as she stared at the ceiling, nagging at her.
Brambleblight served Daaven as a soldier’s tool, endured a most inhumane agony before her ultimate fate, and was replaced by another.
“She was more than just a lizard... she was a friend, and I failed her...”
“If only I had done things differently, maybe she would have still been alive...”
Thus the question remained: was the desert truly something worse than what came before it? Was she already broken, and her decision to abandon her rank a sign of her failure as a ranger? Or was everything equal in how awful it was, and only now was it becoming clear where she stood in relation to it all?
The only thing missing was some wretched soul to hunt down in the depths of her frustration, the ranger noted silently. And that was when she heard the door swing open and the footsteps entering the room.
Trist ambled past her bunk, boots thudding dully along as she did, before doing a spin on a heel and letting herself fall into a sitting position on the edge of the bed across from Baaz. She crossed her legs and folded her hands over her lap. Trist looked disarmingly civil.
Baaz turned away from the ceiling and eyed her with an expression devoid of any endearment. “I thought the devils were only supposed to appear when you spoke about them.”
Trist snorted in stifling a laugh. “I’m not here to stir up drama and discord, relax.”
“Forgive me, I’m not inclined to believe you,” Baaz deadpanned.
“Not too long from now you’re going to be gone,” Trist said. She looked off to one side of the quarters and shrugged her shoulders. Her eyes wandered further, up and down, before she added, “we might as well have one sensible conversation together. No egos, no stress.”
“What sense does that make?” Baaz asked bluntly.
Trist shrugged again. “All our fun times will be coming to an end. Riling you up and watching you go will be something I’ll miss. Cassidy... she’s too reserved, too stuck in her head to get as angry as you do.”
“You’re dumb,” Baaz retorted without fanfare.
Trist turned her hands up, conceding. “I never won a battle of wits. Bolts and swords, sure, plenty of those.”
“I bet.” Baaz had to admit that Trist was scariest when she wasn’t taking herself seriously. A dimwit holding a weapon, executing whoever her superiors pointed to with regimented efficiency, boy oh boy. She sat up in her bed, deciding to humor Trist for now. “So what do you want to talk about?”
“Dunno. It just set in that I won’t be seeing you, and soon after that I’ll be working on another ship with another bunch.”
Baaz shook her head. “And you’re going to press any and all weaknesses they show you, huh?”
“Gotta keep myself in good spirits somehow. I’ve been told that once you start enjoying the killing, you’ve stepped over some boundary or something, so I’ll just stick to tormenting people.”
“Lesser of two evils.” Baaz rolled her eyes. And she was the one called a *****?
“I guess if there’s anything I want to know, it’s whether or not it’s true... about you and the captain.”
“With Jhotan? Purely professional,” Baaz responded even as she heard the echoes of Jhotan’s words in her head. The daughter she wished she head...
Trist scoffed. “Urlox, the big captain, beginning and end of all soldiers in Daaven. Is what they say true?”
“No, you stupid *****,” Baaz spat. She wanted to hit Trist over the head with her pillow but resisted that much. “If you must know, my eyes were set on an elf by time I was shipped out here. I had a few flings here and there, but nothing with Urlox.”
“I am really going to miss your wonderful personality,” Trist said, propping her chin up on her palms, elbows planted on her lap.
“If only I could say the same, Trist. If only.” Baaz shifted about on the bed and lied back down.
“You think Elisa and Roundha are going to work out?”
Baaz cracked a smile. “I wish them the best.” Hell if I know in other words.
“And what about Dole? What do you think he’s been through to make him mister-knight, defender of right?” Trist pantomimed a retch.
“Why don’t you go ask him?”
Trist snickered. “He’s a man of patience. I fear I’ve whittled it down to the point that the moment I go after him --”
“He’s going to level your ***?” Baaz asked.
“Yeah.” Trist laughed. “You have some experience with that, I take it?”
“I was the one being crossed. Part of the reason I’m here, really.”
Trist’s amusement drained away. “Oh...”
“I almost had a repeat a while back, you know.”
“After Jhotan crashed those raider sleds...”
Baaz, reveling in the other ranger’s dawning revelation, grinned wildly. “Goodbye, Trist.”
Suddenly lacking words to say, Trist uncrossed her legs and stood up. She gave Baaz one last wary look before heading out of the door. When she heard it close, Baaz chuckled bitterly to herself.
She couldn’t deny how good that felt.
Not a moment later the door opened again and Dole stepped into the room. It was almost karmic how he followed in the wake of Trist. Baaz sat up a bit to look at him. He didn't seem to be on some crusade to figuratively skewer their joyously obnoxious crewmate. He seemed somewhat melancholy. He opened his mouth, and Baaz knew why.
"Captain says we're just about back at homebase."
"Ah. Pulling into port, then?" Baaz asked. Dole nodded.
"Just about," he said again. He looked sternward to the back of the rangers' quarters. "Need any help gathering your things?"
Baaz sat up fully and crossed her legs. She surveyed the room. She had her desert ranger's uniform, which she suspected she'd have to swap out for her old green and silvers soon enough. Her sling-bow was on its rack, as well as her quiver and supply of bolts. "No, I think I can manage just fine."
Dole grunted. "What about your collection out in cargo?"
"You keep it," Baaz told him. She then pressed a finger against the side of her chin and thought about it a little more. "Actually, you might want to see if you can't offload some of that stuff. The ship might get a pretty big supply to run, and you'll need all the spare space you can get."
Dole crossed his arms and leaned against the doorframe. His gaze was intense with deep thought. After a silence, he was visited by inspiration. He smirked and said, "How about I just get that chest and stow it up in here?"
"Uh..." Baaz considered it, then shrugged. "With one less person in here come shuteye-time, a big block of wood lying around won't be so bad. The question is: how's it going to work out when someone else takes my spot on the crew? Or, what happens when you get swapped out?"
"I'll figure it out."
Dole seemed content to leave that as that, and Baaz put up her hands, conceding.
