by The Kingpin » Fri Oct 07, 2016 3:57 pm
The Knight paused to consider what Arsenic had said. He'd become so used to Nick's comments about his loud mind that he had grown to assume the Mute Assassin knew everything he was thinking, almost all the time. It was a combination of the fact that that was no longer the case and the fact the Assassin trusted him enough that he was willing to allow such a conversation to occur that kept him from responding...immediately, at least. A couple of moments of silence lingered before he managed a quiet, thoughtful "Something to discuss tonight, perhaps."
Far from the homes of recovering Brodudikans, the Stormweaver lingered in wait, hidden amidst snow and trees warped into a shelter that kept him concealed from prying eyes. The soot that mingled with the snow was a side effect of his actions in the village of Amplefield. Well, the former village of Amplefield. It had been a ghost town when he arrived, abandoned by its occupants some time ago, the harsh weather inflicted upon it year after year killing their crops and sealing off their trade routes, until finally, they migrated. It made for a perfect spot to set his trap. Buildings provided cover, however, and he could not give the Millenial Mage that advantage. Burning the place to the ground was an unfortunate necessity, but he could not allow Morrelie any potential advantage. In a place where nothing but ash and snow covered the ground, seemingly undying embers glimmering defiantly in the cold, it would leave Morrelie with very little to exploit.
After that, the demonic miasma was a simple thing to replicate. While Gilgamesh himself was no longer capable of it passively, the many demons enslaved by the Stormweaver were. All he needed was one. A lesser Afreet stood at the heart of the destruction, powerful by Aster's standards, but a mere footnote in the Stormweaver's list of victories.
Waiting enabled the Experimentalist to think, reflecting on what the Scholar had told him. Septimus had seemed quite distressed by the power he sensed Morrelie wielded. That was to be expected, he supposed. Septimus's encounters with powerful beings had been restricted to vengeful, corrupted guardians, demons and Hueilin. To see such power in a being that was technically human was baffling for the young Hueilin.
Arashi knew better, however. Three thousand years had given him many a strange and spectacular sight, but it had also dulled his sense of wonder. He had come to expect everything as possible. Morrelie having the power to rival a hardened Millenial Hueilin was not outside the realm of possibility, not when Elven Sages had matched that feat.
What did concern him however was her decision to specialise in Peredomancy. It was not a discipline he had given the Zuppolandian Order of Magi in any extensive depth. He had warned them that it was destruction incarnate, liable to destroy far more than just the demon they sought to eliminate. Ironically, it was probably for that very reason that she took up the discipline. He himself had had a considerable amount of time to refine his skills in Peredomancy, but the fact that the margin between himself and Morrelie's entry into the discipline was only one of a few hundred years meant he could not depend on it. She could very well have gathered sufficient knowledge in his time within Drakhunmiir that she could match him, perhaps even surpass him in that regard. No. This conflict would have to be one of a more wary sort. A more varied sort.
"Ah yes, organised chaos. the sign of a clever but ever-busy mind. To the perpetrator, a carefully woven web of belongings and intrigue, but to the bystander? Madness!"
–William Beckett, Lore of Leyuna RPG