by C S » Thu Oct 13, 2016 1:43 am
The eve of the night crowd trickled into the tavern frequented by the notable adventurers in Brodudika. As in the way events outlived their moment of time, talks of previous patrons lingered by the bar counter. More recent news was on its way, unbeknownst to a pair of mages, the ambiguous rivals that they were. They sat at their stools, no drinks to be had yet. Orthelia wore her instructor wear with the addition of a black tailcoat that draped over the lip of her seat, while Moira wore one set out of many that continued her motif of smokey, murky colors.
"I really don't know why I'm here, or how you pulled it off," Orthelia said, circling a fingertip on the countertop.
Moira leaned over and said with just a touch of wryness, "Am I really that unlikable?"
Orthelia gave the hydromancer a sidelong look, which hung for a few moments. She then gave a one-shoulder shrug as her response. "I mean, you do wear a hat indoors. All the time. I have to wonder if you really do fancy yourself a storybook witch or something."
"I find the style positively bewitching."
Orthelia pulled in a sharp breath. There was something about an operator that had a knack for wordplay that poked at a raw nerve for her. "So how long have you been bullied before you learned how to let words run off of you like water?"
"Too long," Moira retorted with such a casual tone, Orthelia didn't know what to make of it. She just held that sidelong glance again.
Was Moira really so at ease with past abuse or was she just taking the piss, the pyromancy teacher wasn't going to butt her head against that one. She was here, after all, to unwind. Another day, another overzealous student, another incandescent escalation that she barely wrangled in time to prevent serious injury.
"You really should just get a water," Moira suggested as the bartender made the rounds. "Water can be very relaxing, trust me."
"You will not bewitch my water, woman. Or any drink of mine, for that matter," Orthelia growled. Moira only smiled.
"I could leave, if you want."
Orthelia then reached out and squeezed her shoulder. "No. No, need for that. I'm just..."
"I understand. Seriously. The water? Might help with any lasting effects of the Solstice--"
"I didn't drink for the Solstice. I started the bonfire and kept to the sidelines. Helped some of my students get home in one piece. Responsible adult things."
Moira mouthed a silent "Ah". Immediately after, she stated, "I got really drunk. But water--!"
"You two look like a fun couple of ladies." Kenneth had made a beeline from his arrival through the tavern doors to the counter. He broke stride only to spin around and rest against the edge of the table. Fresh frost on his head and shoulders spoke to a new bout of snowfall, and the rapid rising and falling of his chest conveyed that he had been on his feet for a while. Stopping at all the pubs.
"I bet we looked like one having a conversation," Orthelia deadpanned as she looked up at the stranger. Moira appeared to wave. Kenneth waved back.
"No sir. The snow. I was just getting rid of the snow."
Kenneth looked down at his cleared shoulders, eyes widening with the pleasant surprise. "Ah. So you were. Thanks for that, and sorry. Got a short time schedule and you look like you're still sober enough to listen to me."
"Aren't you one of those... what do they call 'em... Green-Coats?" Moira asked. Kenneth smiled widely.
"Oh good. And you must be Moira Everby. I can tell from the hat." Kenneth clicked his tongue and winked.
"What did I tell you about the damned hat?"
"Everyone says something about the damned hat," Moira replied sweetly. "Mister Green-Coat? Here to talk about the dragon that paid us a visit today?"
"Yes! Um. No. Related, though. Guess which of our esteemed city heads tried to beseech the dragon for wisdom and was turned away like... let's say.... an elf under the old regime?"
Moira gave the Green-Coat a knowing look. "Slander campaign, is it?"
"Would be, if I wanted him to know I was the one calling him out. Instead it is just shameless, cowardly gossip meant to undermine his image and raise some morale for the ones whose suffering he's been ignoring." Kenneth put his hand on his lips and looked around with mock wariness. "Perhaps I've said too much?"
"Said just enough, mister," Orthelia replied. "Pass it on, then?"
"Oh, don't be so quick to send him back out into the snow," Moira chastised her companion. "I don't suppose you know anything of worth about the dragon?"
"I gather he made something useful out of all the snow our Lady of Light's been dumping outside of the walls. A whole chokepoint, made out of snow. He could have made a whole snow fortress for the kiddies to play in but... dragon, I suppose. No time for that." Kenneth snapped his fingers, a thought suddenly occurring to him. "Apparently, he wanted to speak to the benefactor and his... secretary, I believe."
"Know anything about that?"
"The dragon specifically didn't want anything known about that meeting. Magical barrier, no sound, barely anything to see."
Moira nodded. "Fascinating. You know, I saw the Lady of Light and the benefactor earlier. Heard something about her jumping out of a window for some reason. I think it was after that when I saw her talking to Desrium outside of the weaver's. Brodudika's banner is finished! It looks like this... fin. It's round at the end but has these fringes, and an emblem. Any of you familiar with the Changeling?"
Orthelia hung her head, hands gripping her forehead. "I thought we came here for drinks."
"We have time, we have time!" Moira assured her.
"One of the war heroes of the Battle for Aster." Kenneth nodded. One of the many fallen honored over the years. Honored in Brodudika as well, he took it.
"'Let the face of the Changeling put a face to us all' is what I heard Desrium say. I don't know how accurate it is, but the insignia is this side-view of a maw that belongs to a serpent unlike any I'm familiar with."
"Probably the Changeling," Orthelia pointed out shortly.
"Probably. You say that Desrium has a secretary?"
Kenneth shrugged. "I found it weird too. Heard he got the job trying to break into city hall."
"He was in here a while ago!" someone in the crowd called over the rest of the chatter.
Desrium looked up at the banner flapping away in the flurry-streaked night, lit on the left and right by bright lamps burning away their oil. Purple, fringed, with the golden face of Tzeentch emblazoned in the center. The banner sat over the gates of Brodudika, and the way it was presented, it would be the first thing visitors saw from afar.
"The night is darkest before the dawn. One of your gifts to this land," Desrium said from his place on the road, standing in between unassuming houses. "May your likeness steer us all through the darkest of nights, so that we may see a new dawn."
With that, the armored being turned away from the gate to head back into the heart of the city. Another night of patrolling.
Brodudika was not caked in snow by the next morning; not as much as Solstice day. The snow on the ground, a couple of feet deep at most, did not leave the city lethargic. Bundled up to deal with the biting wind that howled through the streets, people with busy days left their homes and leaned into the assault, scarves whipping about behind them, while carts rolled by with work animals kicking up snow that the large wheels charged on through indifferently. Things had to be done, and no manifestation of wind with an aptitude for the polar would stop these stubborn individuals, or the needs that came with keeping the city running on a basic level.
A couple of feet of snow was more to a dwarf. Solaurn extrapolated that much snow must have been that much more of an inconvenience to a vaun. "She doesn't wear any shoes..." Then again, her little friend carried a feather that belonged to a very large bird evidently. A mysterious bird that was in the thick of fog, snow, cold air. "Gwen could probably clear any path too difficult to traverse with that feather," Solaurn mused out loud, rubbing her chin that was tightly bound by her scarf. She had a hat pulled snug over her head and ears. The collar of her thick coat went up to her cheeks. Her boots went up to her thighs. Her trusty slab was strapped to her back. She was ready to hit any snowbank, no matter how intimidating.
Solaurn wondered how Gwenviere fared so well -- excluding the feather -- as to not only wake before her, but to beat her across the city. The vaun was making her runs at the Gateside Clinic as she did before class. "She must have sound sleeping habits. Maybe the snow was more manageable a little while ago?" The dwarf huffed as she made her way through a small park.
"No it wasn't," Solaurn heard Dahnae reply. It made her stop and look for the jungle girl.
"Dahnae? What are you doing up there?" Solaurn did not know this particular detail, but the branch that Dahnae sat huddled on was the same as the one she lied on when she came across Firel. Or was it vice-versa? Her legs were pulled into herself and she hugged her shins.
"What are you doing down there?" Dahnae retorted without missing a beat.
Solaurn found it oddly philosophical in a way. "Uh... in the most plainly stated terms, I'm off to meet Gwen before class. What are you doing up there, though?"
Dahnae shuffled about uncomfortably. Solaurn cleared her throat. "If it is something you wish to do by a peculiarly feline compulsion, know that I won't judge you. Sometimes, I dream about cheese. Wine too, of course, because where I come from--"
"I had a bad dream."
Solaurn paused. "Oh?"
"About Weirdo Spook."
Solaurn cocked her head. "Weirdo--"
"The one who stabbed me."
Solaurn hummed her understanding. "Is it anything you want to talk a--"
"No."
Solaurn crossed her arms, tapping a finger against her cheek thoughtfully. "I don't feel right just leaving you here."
"Everyone else does," Dahnae countered swiftly.
Solaurn, shaking her head, she replied, "Well I'm not everyone else. Do you want to accompany me for a walk? I'm not going to ask you about your dream. I'd rather not have you be blown off of that branch by a rogue wind."
"I'd land on my feet," said Dahnae. After a few more moments in which the dwarf patiently waited, she leaned backwards while simultaneously latching onto the branch with her hands. Dahnae hung from the branch upside down before she let herself fall completely, in which she flipped in midair and landed in a feral manner, arms and legs spread apart. Solaurn could imagine Dahnae's fingers splayed apart like claws underneath her benign mittens.
As she pulled herself to her feet, Dahnae mumbled, "Let's go."
"Right. Let's." The jungle girl and the mountain dwarf then walked side by side, one having an easier time moving through the snow than the other.
Evisa poked her head around a corner and looked up and down the street. "They tell me he's not at city hall..." She jogged over to a streetlamp, jumped, and clung to the very top before fitting her boots through the ornate loops of metal so that she could stand over the fire roiling about behind the glass. "And he hasn't been where I've looked so far..." Carefully, Evisa pulled her feet from the metalwork and then gently nudged herself off of the streetlamp. The gentle nudge was still enough to fling her several feet into the air, and she hit the street with the same oddly heavy thud that betrayed her relatively light build.
"Some days, you just can't find a red-eyed walking suit of armor, can you?" She heard the approach of a wagon, squeaky hinges and crunching snow, and called out her inquiry. "Hey! You've seen Desrium anywhere?" The wagon driver issued his reply, and Evisa nodded. "Thanks a bunch, buddy!" The benefit of having multiple pairs of eyes in multiple places and constantly moving: directions on the fly. On the road, rather. Evisa tore down the road and weaved through the alleys. If she felt that the buildings in front of her were short enough and it would be easier circumventing them entirely, Evisa leaped from the end of a passageway and landed in the next street over.
Doing this, it was not long at all before Desrium saw the dark blur arc over chimneys and shingles before thudding into the snow in the middle of the roadway. The impact threw much against the walking paths and the windows of nearby houses. Evisa stood up and shook off the snow that lined the overlapping scales of her armor. "And a very good morrow to you, benefactor," she greeted the armored being while walking out of her small crater.
"A good morning to you as well," he replied.
"I hope I am not interrupting a matter of some importance or anything," Evisa broached, and Desrium insisted that she wasn't. "Great. So, one tiny thing I forgot to mention the other day when we were talking about flags and stuff; it's a bit of a major thing to spring on you suddenly, but seeing as you take surprise visits from a dragon thousands of years old in stride, it shouldn't be too much of a shock to you."
"I will consider anything that anyone has to say if they took the time out of their day to find me," Desrium assured her. "I do not mean to make myself scarce."
"Not implying you were. You're just difficult to pin down at any given moment. Unrelated to why I'm really here, but maybe you should consider a secretary. Or a dozen."
Desrium's eyes were fixed on the viking in a quite literal blank stare.
"Anyway. The baby-bunch are a joy to work with, but when winter funsies are over, they're going to need something to do that doesn't involve whacking each other over the head for the jollies of it."
"They are not quite ready for academic pursuits, are they?" Desrium asked.
Evisa chuckled ruefully. "Not for a while, yet. But, they can still add to the city in a pretty major way. How would you feel about giving Brodudika the sea?"
"I would not lay claim to any sea or ocean," Desrium responded.
"Not in that way," Evisa clarified. "I mean, having a harbor, with ships, and a channel wide enough for cargo galleons to roll in. Not to mention, a quicker way to get here from up north and down south that doesn't involve trekking across Aster."
"That would be very useful," Desrium stated. Evisa couldn't know of the thoughts that circulated in his mind. Images of old Zuppo harbors, the place of his "youth".
"Useful enough that you would let me and a bunch of active nature-babs start carving out the ground come spring time?"
"Yes. I trust you to oversee this project. If, as I suspect, it proves successful, I will have the city planners begin work on designing the docks and Brodudika's own fleet of ships."
Evisa stood tall and proud. "Makes me impatient for the spring."
"As it should. Is there anything else you would like to discuss?"
"No sir," Evisa replied, then excused herself.
Sir. Man. Friend. Desrium did not believe he would ever get used to being called such things, as much as he was deeply grateful for it.
Far away, Morrelie woke. Out in the open, her many wards were broken by the opening of her eyes. One by one, puffs of various colors rose lazily into the air, disturbing the surrounding grasses in the meadow devoid of flowers. Her protective dome dissolved from the top down, the barrier warbling and distorting light all the way until it ceased to be completely. The old mage pulled herself from the ground, heeded the position of the sun, and then looked off into the horizon.
Another regular day.
Time to get moving.
