by Tarot on August 16th, 2009, 8:59 pm
The Kova III docked in the early afternoon of a very normal summer day; it would be many hours before Akuaysun would be forced to shift into his celestial form. Sahova was a miser land, but if nothing else it had good weather to share with the adventurers. Summer days here were warm but not unbearably hot, and a light breeze helped dispel the heat that might otherwise have plagued the middle of the day. Sahova was a place of undead, and it had been specifically chosen, over five centuries prior, as an optimal place for the undead to exist in, with their bodies prone to decay. This was also why they were rarely seen around the docks - the salty air did not do their tissues any good.
Port Silence, that's what the sailors called it. The gathered adventurers had heard the name plenty of times throughout the journey, whether they paid attention to it or not. There was not much to do on the Kova III, truth told. When people were not sleeping, eating, or minding the occasional menial tasks, there was little distraction or entertainment to be had except maybe studying everyone else on board. There were people from all walks of life. An Isur, a Myrian, two Akvatari, and of course most of them were Humans. Some spoke with a heavy Zeltivan accent, others carried the more refined tones of Syliras and a few were unmistakeably mercenaries from the horseclans of Cyphrus. These were pretty much disliked by everyone else, called "barbarians" by some of the crew and avoided as much as someone could be on the deck of a small ship. They were probably to be used as meat shields in the event of an attack.
True to their name, the docks were silent, just two lines of bleak grey warehouses. It did not take long for the place to slowly populate with presences that, while not alive, were at least moving. Some of the adventurers were looking forward to seeing golems in action - well, they were quite different from what the stories told. Making a bipedal golem was expensive. Very expensive, in terms of materials, crafting and instructing. Animators had long since realized that they need not be humanoid at all, and so these low-level grunts were little more than assembled scraps with a purpose.
There was the one idly looking at Dranquay from below for some hidden reason. It was a tiny one, no larger than a cat; basically four wooden wheels with some iron mounted on them, and two lenses obviously serving as eyes of sorts. It was watching the Akvatari, maybe because it had seen him practice magic a while back, when they were still far from the port. The wizard could instinctively feel this one could do nothing but watch, but its sight was incredible. Its glass eyes were not leaving Dranquay, though they occasionally shifted over to Chaelnomyl and Akuaysun - no, not really... more like his hoe.
Two sailors stood ready to place the gangplank, waiting for a golem to give the order. Indeed, a Communicator type golem showed up, this too on wheels; a more or less cylindrical body with just two joints on its shoulders, and a metallic head that was nothing more than a mantlepiece, so people had something to look at when they interacted with it. This golem screamed 'expendable' just like the first one.
"Welcome to Sahova," the golem spoke from the docks. Its metallic voice did not come from the head, but from somewhere inside the body. No emotion had been programmed into this one - what good would that do to a golem made for trade and assessment of goods? "You may disembark now. One of the Masters has come to greet you personally."
This was highly unusual, for the golems existed just so the wizards did not have to bother coming this far. The crew hastily put down the gangplank while a figure appeared from behind the corner of the warehouses. The crew did not even notice him at first, because his demeanor was much like a golem's. It was difficult to decide if the golems had learned from the undead, or the other way around.
The wizard took his time approaching the Kova III and its disembarking crew. He was a Nuit, a bona fide undead. He was tall, with thin limbs that suggested some elaborate embalming for better preservation of the tissues. He was bald, deathly pale, had no eyebrows and barely any lips. Dark rings made his grey eyes look empty and grotesque. There was something stoic and disdainful to the way he carried himself, no unnecessary movements, decked out in red, loose-fitting wizard's robes. All robes were loose-fitting on Sahova; partly to conceal the actual state of decay of the undead's bodies, and partly because some experimented on their own bodies, with results that were not always pleasing to the eye.
"I am Lector Qiao," he announced in a raspy voice, hand clenched in a fist behind his back, "the Archwizard's right hand man."
"Aye, I'm..." Captain D'Ardenne, who had been the first to get off the ship, began somewhat nervously as he closed in on the undead. For all his experience with Sahova, this was the first time he actually saw one of its masters. He was going to learn the hard way.
"Silence." Qiao's empty eyes met the Captain's for but a split second, and the man collapsed, convulsing and frothing at the mouth. It was not clear what he just experienced, but the warm pool oozing from his crotch suggested that it could not have been anything good. "Life is weakness," he commented casually. "You shall not come within three paces of me for any reason."
He gazed idly upon the assembled crowd. "Too many," he judged. "Five come with me. The rest shall wait here." This man never, ever blinked. "Half dead," he pointed at Javen - maybe he found the sickly build intriguing. It reminded him of the undead. "Hoe man," his finger indicated Aquaysun. "Muscle woman," his gaze transfixed Ialari. And finally, he pointed two fingers at Chael and Dranquay. "Whatever you are."
"Any objections?" he asked, as if wishing to redefine the meaning of 'rhetorical question'.
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