2nd of Fall – 511 AV Muldris Koffurn sat in the darkness of his room while working on his small table. It was a fine day to go find a ghost. The Legate didn’t really have a protocol when it came to ghosts. He just would go with the flow. Sometime they were mean and got slain, but most of the time he would just want to chat with them. Ghosts were interesting folks. Most of them had some conviction or experience that wasn’t easily found in the living. How many living folks can tell a story about their death? Koffurn gave an amused sigh at the notion. “Making some soulmist... so the cranky ghosts don’t get pissed!” Koffurn sang and then hummed tunelessly for a little while. He mixed the egg, flour, and cheese in a jar. The next part was his least favorite. The Legate pulled one of his daggers out and examined its edge. Slowly, he ran the semi-sharp knife across his palm. He winced in pain, but the cut wasn’t deep at all. The blood flowed into the jar, turning its contents a dark pink. He lifted up the mixture to smell the odd concoction. The scent was strangely pleasing. It smelled earthy and strong. The soulmist was actually making Koffurn a bit hungry, but he was always hungry. Eating was a low priority for the Legate due to the abundance of so many fascinating things to do. He drank the grayish pink sludge quickly. The taste wasn’t all that bad, but it did strange things to a long empty stomach. Koffurn felt oddly bloated and hungry simultaneously. He stretched, slammed his hands on the table, and stood up abruptly. He tossed on his clothing haphazardly and made for the door. Koffurn didn’t bring his bag or anything except his daggers. The two blades rested lightly at the sides of his calves. The Legate couldn’t use them particularly well with his physical arms so he found putting them on his calves, where his projection could easily reach, seemed more sensible. Koffurn glanced around the room as he opened the door. The outside light illuminated the small space despite the sky being laden with heavy rain clouds. The sound of heavy rain on the roof was soothing, as was the sound of it on the streets. By the time Koffurn had put considerable distance between him and his house, he began looking for ghosts. A small, empty street, which looked as much an alley as a road, caught his eye so he decided to travel in that direction. The sun was staining the horizon a lighter shade of grey when a male ghost came into view. The Legate praised his luck. Koffurn ran over to it full of excitement despite interacting with ghosts many times a month. The ghost’s first instinct was to flee. It wasn’t every day that a ghost has a scrawny kid sprinting towards him, but the ghost ended up standing his ground, perhaps to maintain a sense of pride. Koffurn dodged a sloppy punch and sprung forward with an extended hand. “I’m Koffurn,” he blurted. The ghost blinked in utter confusion. The ethereal man reach out and returned the handshake. The feeling was odd but Koffurn wouldn’t call it unpleasant. Given, this is coming from the kid who didn’t find much anything unpleasant and just about everything odd. The ghost blinked a few times and responded unsure of what it should be feeling exactly, “You got soulmist?” Koffurn nodded solemnly and the ghost nodded in response. “My name is Terva.” Terva gave the boy in front of him a few looks and then waited. Some ghosts are so boring... The hazy man in front of Koffurn looked impatient, but the Legate didn’t really care. He lived at his own pace and some ghost wasn’t about to change that. The rain was really coming down a lot harder than Koffurn had expected. The ground glistened slightly as water accumulated on the surface. The ghost of course didn't mind, but he began to shiver. The cold was great but he couldn't help feeling a little bit frigid as the night air and cool rain robbed the warmth from his bones After a few minutes of examining the ghost, he spoke up, “So if I give you soulmist... What do I get?” Ghosts are such a pain sometimes... Sometimes I don’t know why I even bother! Dealing with ghosts seemed like an endless cycle of trading and negotiating. It was half business transaction and half conversation... It wasn’t the most enjoyable way to spend time, but it was certainly an interesting one nonetheless. Terva scoffed and then started to laugh. The silence of the streets banished momentarily by the ghost’s moment of amusement. The ghost’s voice was drowned in antagonism, “Your soulmist is probably so poor that I would need to find a real spiritist to mend the wounds I get from absorbing yours.” The joke wasn’t funny and Koffurn just scowled in response. The ghost certainly did not seem strong enough to be so particular and mean. His punch had been sloppy, his materialization was amateur at best, and his overall manner was less than impressive. The Legate decided not to argue and give Terva a bit of soulmist to see where the encounter went from there. Luckily, the sun was still young and the street was empty except for a few critters. Koffurn opened his mouth as wide as he could and slowly reached his hand to the back of his throat. He gagged and bent over, but his natural inclination to resist vomiting was too great. He stuck his hand in again, this time more forcefully. Unfortunately, he gagged and could practically taste it in the back of his throat, but again, nothing came out. The ghost failed, likely on purpose, to stifle its laughter. Which brought color to Koffurn’s cheeks. Gods, why do I do this to myself? Finally, he managed to cram his hand back so forcefully that the faintly glowing ooze filled his mouth. The Legate swallowed about half of it and then spat the rest into his hands. Terva absorbed it after Koffurn offered it politely. With a sneer, the ghost barked, “Ha! I was right... Garbage...” He would say that even if it was the best soulmist he ever had... He’s just trying to cheapen the value of his favor. It didn’t matter though. Koffurn had decided a few minutes into the interaction that he would take his favor. After a moment of hesitation, the ghost, smarter than Koffurn had given him credit for, went and grabbed one of Koffurn’s daggers with his soulmist projection. Koffurn had detached his arm and his dagger jumped from its sheath under the influence of his astral body. The Legate plunged his functioning hand into his mouth and barfed up the remaining soulmist. The ghost’s dagger flew through the air and bit into the boy’s side causing him to yelp. The knife Koffurn controlled scraped loudly against the ground in order to absorb some of the soulmist puddle before cutting upward in large arc. |