The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

(This is a thread from Mizahar's fantasy role playing forums. Why don't you register today? This message is not shown when you are logged in. Come roleplay with us, it's fun!)

Not found on any map, Endrykas is a large migrating tent city wherein the horseclans of Cyphrus gather to trade and exchange information. [Lore]

Moderator: Gossamer

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Dravite on September 23rd, 2015, 12:53 am

Image
.
.

36 Fall, 515 AV
7th Bell, Morning
Zeis River, Endrykas


It had taken him a good part of the night to track down the missing oxen and by morning, Dravite felt too tired to make the journey back to the Zeis River. He drove the oxen back to camp and tethered them to a post, letting them be for a day and night in-between before his time was up. Two days, the Dhani had warned him, any longer and the snake-man might come looking for them.

Dravite woke early on the morning of the 36th; it was still raining outside and for spending so much time in the river and later in the rain, he seemed to have earned himself a nasty cold. He sat up on the bed of furs coughing; Belkaia at his side, trying to talk him out of making the trip back to the Zeis.
“You don’t have to go you know… If that thing comes anywhere near Endrykas The Watch will cut him in two.”
“I know,” Dravite nodded, “But if I renege on the deal we made I fear I will anger more than one snake.”
“So concerned with your gods,” Belkaia teased.
“Our gods,” the man corrected her, “I should have died, and I would have died if the Dhani wasn’t gracious enough to strike a deal with me.”
“Don’t go,” she leaned in and kissed his jaw.

He didn’t hear anything after that, choosing to slip into a trance that would take him out beyond the city to the river’s edge where he had run into the Dhani. There were parts of the web that seemed to need repair in the area, but Dravite was able to see that the strange creature hadn’t moved from his spot in the river; one that was popular for travellers and tradesmen. As Dravite traversed the net of webbing, he found that his dagger hadn’t gone far and that he might be able to reclaim it if he did not push his luck.

Outside the tent the oxen looked soggy and wet, their heads down, backs turned to the light showers that slowly moved over the tent city. The horse lord’s leather tabard had failed to dry out in time and he was forced to wear the winter jacket Pearl had bought him from the marketplace at the beginning of fall; he had planned to save it for the first snow but knew the best way to fight a cold was to keep warm and dry.

Bayon met him outside the Wind-knotted gates, sitting high atop his creamy, palomino mare, “they look ill,” he pointed with his eyes at the oxen.
“Wouldn’t you, knowing what awaits?”
“I would like to see this Dhani,” he agreed with a nod, “He sounds a terrifying thing to behold.”
“He is something,” Dravite smiled before kicking his Strider lightly to move ahead.

He had come prepared, with Bayon to witness the exchange and Bones, his driving horse, to hitch to the empty wagon in the hopes of bringing it back to Endrykas to make some repairs and clear the river-crossing of the mess. Dravite set a landmark for himself before continuing on and guided Cree back and forth, keeping the oxen headed forwards to the river.
“Any word on the original driver?” Bayon asked.
“I tracked him north in the web, I think he is trying to follow the river in the hopes that it will guide him back to the stone city.”
“Fool.”
Dravite smiled, “indeed.”

A good way back from the river’s edge they stopped their horses. At first glance it was difficult to tell if the Dhani was lurking nearby, “Wait here,” he told the older man and led the oxen down to the river, putting them between him and the water, “Snake!” Dravite called in common, “oxen Dravite promised.”

.
.
.
Last edited by Dravite on September 28th, 2015, 9:44 am, edited 1 time in total.
Dravite
Ra’athi of The Watch Troha to Tavehk
 
Posts: 722
Words: 775240
Joined roleplay: April 20th, 2015, 12:38 am
Race: Human, Drykas
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes
Medals: 3
Overlored (1) Advocate (1)
2015 Mizahar NaNo Winner (1)

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Ssenislin on September 24th, 2015, 2:09 am


At first there was no reply. While Bayon was too far away to notice, Dravite's keen eyes were easily able to pick out two minute bumps in the rain churned water: the eyes and nose of a great snake. Ssenislin's tongue flicked out briefly, sending ripples that were quickly lost by the infinite minute waves and splashes each raindrop made. The downpour made it difficult to smell, but he sensed something large and warm in the distance. Then again, he sensed many things large and warm passing the riverbank. Indeed, it was his reason for staking out this particular part of the river to call his. Besides, if the squishy human wanted to double cross him, would he not bring many friends instead of one, and put them closer? No, for once the flesh-thing thought smart and kept his word.

After a couple ticks, Dravite saw a shift in the water. Slowly, the head and shoulders of Ssenislin emerged from the river, ropes of water streaming down his face and arms, sheets of it washing over his barrel chest and splintering into thick ribbons. The Dhani's lips pulled apart in a preternaturally wide grin, threads of water or saliva pulling taunt then snapping between his teeth. "You done the clever thing, little human." Ssenislin rumbled. "D'j you bring your friend to make ssssure I didn't eat you?" he asked with an innocent lilt and a decidedly less innocent snap of his teeth and cackle. After a few ticks of laughter, the pleased Dhani, still chuckling softly, beckoned Dravite forward with a fat finger. "C'mere, little human." he said with a leer, "I want you to shake my hand. Ain't no deal without a handsshake where I'm from."
Last edited by Ssenislin on September 28th, 2015, 2:01 am, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Ssenislin
Gourmandizer
 
Posts: 39
Words: 21124
Joined roleplay: July 3rd, 2015, 11:50 pm
Race: Dhani
Character sheet

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Dravite on September 24th, 2015, 2:43 am

Image
.
.

There. Dravite caught a first glimpse of the snake before the pair of eyes that watched him dipped below the pebbled surface of the river. He took a subconscious step away from the river’s edge, expecting the snake to lash out and take what was rightfully his. The creature’s menacing presence caused the watchman behind him to call out to Dravite; feeling ill at ease when the Dhani did not appear as soon as he had expected, “Where is he?” Bayon bellowed.

The horse lord held a hand up as if to ask for silence, just as the snake-man rose from the water, and with the dappled sunlight at his back, his shadow stretched out to reach for the Drykas man hidden behind the oxen. Though Ssenislin seemed pleased with the offering, he would not deem their deal complete unless the guard stepped forth and shook his hand. After leaving a dagger in the creature’s tail some days before, Dravite wasn’t too sure that was a good idea.

Though the drumming of his heart skipped and thumped its warning, Dravite decided to swallow his fears and move around the meat-wall he had put between himself and the snake to step into the water until it met his knees and held his right hand out to Ssenislin. He didn’t quite know what to expect, a cold wet hand, or something much warmer; would his flesh have the same give as that of a natural snake, or should he assume shaking the Dhani’s hand was much like shaking that of an overgrown man.

He hooked the thumb of his free hand over the head of his hatchet; he may be brave, but he was not stupid. If the snake planned to go back on their agreement now, he was going to carve him a new face before meeting an untimely end. “Bayon has joined me to help clear out the river-crossing,” Dravite spoke, forgetting himself; he tried again in common, “Dravite with Bayon take wagon, Snake take oxen.”

.
.
.
Dravite
Ra’athi of The Watch Troha to Tavehk
 
Posts: 722
Words: 775240
Joined roleplay: April 20th, 2015, 12:38 am
Race: Human, Drykas
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes
Medals: 3
Overlored (1) Advocate (1)
2015 Mizahar NaNo Winner (1)

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Ssenislin on September 24th, 2015, 3:31 am


Dravite's hesitation elicited a fresh peal of laughter from the Dhani, his clammy grip on the man's hand tightening slightly as he rocked in mirth. "What'sss wrong?" he finally purred, leaning in so his flitting tongue just barely grazed Dravite's forehead, "Do I sssscare you, little pony? Is that why your coward friend is back there, sssskulkin' in the bushes!?" Ssenislin suddenly shouted, tugging the horse lord to his side like a drunken stepfather might drag a noisome child and setting nearby birds aflight. "Come on out, ssssneaky fleshling!" the Dhani jeered, the oxen lowing and shrinking back at the noise. "I like to sssee my ssssssupplicantsss!"

Whether or not Bayon chose to heed the command, assuming there was no show of force, Ssenislin, now drawn up to near his full height, would look down at Dravite with a predatory smile when he explained the purpose of the second man. "Now, we never bargained for no wagon, did we?" he said with the air of an affronted gentleman, free hand lightly touching his chest in a parody of the rich men of Kenash. the crocodilian rumble in his voice almost drowning out his last two words. "Ass I recall, it wasss oxen for your precsiousss hide." he added with a mocking jab of his finger.

It was while saying this that Dravite's glinting torc caught Ssenislin's eye. "Maybe I like having a wagon." he said distantly, captivated the shiny thing around the horse lord's neck. "Maybe I want sssomething more to let you in my river." he growled, tongue flicking across his teeth and lips as he leaned slightly closer to Dravite's neck. "Sssomething ssssspecssial."
Last edited by Ssenislin on September 28th, 2015, 2:00 am, edited 2 times in total.
User avatar
Ssenislin
Gourmandizer
 
Posts: 39
Words: 21124
Joined roleplay: July 3rd, 2015, 11:50 pm
Race: Dhani
Character sheet

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Dravite on September 24th, 2015, 4:12 am

Image
.
.

Dravite wheezed as the snake jolted him forwards, clutching him against his side; it didn’t restrict his movement too much, which caused the horse lord to hesitate instead of attacking on the promise he had made himself a moment before; cut his face up if he tries anything. Perhaps it was Bayon who made the Dhani uneasy, Dravite thought, looking across the grasslands to where he saw his better wade through the tall grass towards the river’s edge, “leave him be, snake,” the dark haired watchman ordered calmly, his voice laced with an air of authority that was hard to deny.

Bayon, with a lot more experience dealing in common, had no trouble communicating with the snake, “we can’t leave Semele’s river in this state,” he pointed to the discarded malt barrels left strewn along the shore and then to the wagon that looked well and truly stuck in the mud, “this is an official transport crossing; you cannot live here, Dhani.”

Dravite remained still while his heart beat like that of a small bird’s, frightened for his life, concerned Bayon might say something that would anger the snake. When Ssenislin poked at the lion head, silver torc around the horse lord’s neck, Dravite slapped the Dhani’s fat hand away and thrashed against the half-man, “promise me you will make a fine rug of his hide if he eats me,” Dravite muttered to Bayon, who smirked back at him.

“What do you want, snake?” The senior watchman piped up, “It would be wise for us to come to some kind of agreement which doesn’t involve threatening my men or taking what is not yours.” Bayon gestured to the oxen then, taking them by the leads that were tied around their necks to coach them forwards, “are you not satisfied that you can trust us?”
Dravite tried to break loose again, “Half-man lies!” He spat before reverting back to Pavi, “I should spill his guts while I have the chance.”
Bayon signalled for the man to still, “you need supplies, work?” Bayon suggested, “Nothing is free in Endrykas but if you’re willing to cooperate, there is no reason why we can’t all be happy; of course, you will have to move further down the river.”

.
.
.
Dravite
Ra’athi of The Watch Troha to Tavehk
 
Posts: 722
Words: 775240
Joined roleplay: April 20th, 2015, 12:38 am
Race: Human, Drykas
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes
Medals: 3
Overlored (1) Advocate (1)
2015 Mizahar NaNo Winner (1)

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Ssenislin on September 28th, 2015, 12:55 am


As the Watch officer belted out his spiel, Dravite would see something creep into the Dhani's face that he hadn't encountered even when he plunged his dagger in the creature's flesh: contempt. While he outwardly chuckled at the little human trying to tell him what to do, Dravite could see how the beast's eyes flared dangerously at every insulting order that spilled from Bayon's lips. For Ssenislin, this was unacceptable. The fleshlings were getting complacent, and if they were allowed to get complacent, then what would stop them from ignoring the natural order of things and stealing from him, or throwing rocks in his river? No; for sanity's sake, they needed to be corrected.

When the Drykas slapped the serpent's hand and Mister Big Shot had the gall to smirk at him, that was the trigger. An animal gleam in the Dhani's eyes was the only warning Dravite got before a violent tug almost threw him off his feet and the hand that held him let go and clamped down like a bear trap around the back of his neck. Ssenislin surged out of the water, a trail of white foam left behind him as he churned through the muddy bank, hauling Dravite almost five feet off the ground as easily as if he were made of cotton, fury in his eyes. "You wanna run that by me again, white boy?!" he roared, spittle flying from his enormous mouth, free hand balled into a fist.

"'Can't live here?' Who'sss gon' make me move, fleshling?" Ssenislin snarled as he slithered towards Bayon, face twisted in a venomous grin. "You? I could crush you like a grape." As he said this, Dravite felt the grip around his neck tighten slightly.
If Bayon allowed him to, Ssenislin would stop within a yard of him, forked tongue slipping out between his teeth before he spoke again. "You here actin' ssso high and mighty, but you’sss ssstill followin’ my orderss. Mine! Ssso how about you sshow sssome ressspect fittin' your place, and then we'll talk about what to do about my river."

While Ssenislin could certainly attack and, by his judgement, likely kill both Drykas, he was also painfully aware that he couldn't live solely off the land quite yet. If he wanted to make his time in the Sea of Grass productive instead of fatal, he needed Endrykas. Even so, he simply couldn't allow such an insult to his pride go unanswered. Thus: an obvious chance for Bayon to get things moving in the direction he wanted, but also a demand for deference. In Ssenislin's head, it wasn't too much to ask.
User avatar
Ssenislin
Gourmandizer
 
Posts: 39
Words: 21124
Joined roleplay: July 3rd, 2015, 11:50 pm
Race: Dhani
Character sheet

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Dravite on September 28th, 2015, 2:18 am

Image
.
.

As the creature rose up out of the water with one of Bayon’s finest recruits trapped in his grasp, the older watchman’s eyes glazed over as an inner storm masked the brilliant green they had moments ago been, darkening as he bowed his head, as defiant as the human Ssenislin had dealt with moments before. Bayon drew his daggers silently, though he made no attempt to hide the action, taking one in each hand. His mouth formed a slow, unamused line across his face that made him seem neither threatened nor fazed by the distress of his fellow Drykas.

Dravite, meanwhile, had managed to fold his arms around the Dhani’s limb which eased some of the pressure building between his shoulder blades, as if his head might have popped clean off his neck had he failed to act. “What are you doing?” the horse lord choked, his face quickly glowing red; are you insane! his eyes seemed to suggest, wild with disgust where fear had once taken up residence.

Bayon looked up at the giant snake, white knuckled and full of rage; outweighed or not he would not bow to a creature that thought himself better than everyone else just because of his size, even if that did mean losing another watchman; what was one more, he seemed to rationalise with himself during a moment’s hesitation.
“Bayon?” Dravite’s hissed in a strangled tone of voice.
“Shut up, rookie!”

It had been as simple as flipping a switch, with those three words Bayon had made clear exactly what he thought of those below him both in status and in rank. Dravite brought his right foot back against the snake until he felt the tread of his boot meet the creature’s flesh and a familiar click released the spring action of the hidden blade in the toe of his boot.
“As for you, snake” Bayon started, “If you so much as dar---”

It was fast, timed poorly perhaps, but quick. Bayon’s hands sprung to his throat as blood spewed through his knitted fingers, gushing from the knife wound in his neck; the same blood that painted the steel blade at the point of Dravite’s right boot. The horse lord spat as Bayon went to his knees, his hands falling away from the wound, too weak all of the sudden to try and stop the blood that spurt from his neck each time he tried to draw breath in order to curse the man who had been his undoing.

After that Dravite didn’t struggle but seemed to accept his fate, at least, he thought to himself, while it seemed they would both die anyway, he could go now with the satisfaction that the man who deemed him unworthy of breath no longer had the ability to draw his own. His inner anguish left his limbs and face hot, or perhaps that was the untamed fire in the res that seeped from his sweat glands like a poisonous gas; permeating the air of its own will. The man’s hand tightened about the Dhani’s bicep, trying to hold himself up while his free hand went to his belt, clutching blindly at the hatchet he remembered packing before leaving that morning. Whether it was lack of air, the strange sensation of pooled djed, or both; Dravite felt that he might just do something crazy, even more so than killing one of his own.

.
.
.
Dravite
Ra’athi of The Watch Troha to Tavehk
 
Posts: 722
Words: 775240
Joined roleplay: April 20th, 2015, 12:38 am
Race: Human, Drykas
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes
Medals: 3
Overlored (1) Advocate (1)
2015 Mizahar NaNo Winner (1)

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Ssenislin on September 28th, 2015, 6:03 am


Ssenislin licked his lips at the foolish little man who thought to assail his bulk with tiny knives, mentally preparing to give what would soon be the sole survivor of the journey a practical demonstration in what happens to those who stand up to Dhani, but before he could make good on any of his plans, the uppity officer was sprawled out in front of him, breathing his last. Of all the things Ssenislin expected, this was not even on the list.

The Dhani's arms went limp and opened, dropping Dravite rather unceremoniously to the ground, his face a blank mask of surprise. "You done killed him." he said matter of factly. Ssenislin looked over at Dravite and blinked dully at him. He wasn't entirely sure where to go from here, if he was to be honest with himself. It appeared his meal ticket was dead, but- and this was where the craftier part of his mind creaked slowly to life- perhaps a new one just got created.

"Ox done got scared an' gored him." Ssenislin said after a brief delay, a hint of wariness on his face. "Nothin' we could do. Ain't gon' be a body for them to find either. Right shame, yeah?"
The Dhani went silent for the better part of a chime as he pulled the aforementioned oxen back to their old place on the wagon, snake lips pursed. A few ticks after he'd fastened them to their yoke with the yoke, he looked back somewhat uncomfortably and suggested in about as sheepish a tone as his guttural crocodile voice allowed, "Mead?"
User avatar
Ssenislin
Gourmandizer
 
Posts: 39
Words: 21124
Joined roleplay: July 3rd, 2015, 11:50 pm
Race: Dhani
Character sheet

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Dravite on September 28th, 2015, 10:14 pm

Image
.
.

Not bracing himself for a fall, Dravite fell limp against the ground, his right elbow soaked in the water. He rolled onto his belly and washed his face before getting to his feet, still trying to catch his breath when he moved to stand over Bayon and lost it again, "what have I done..." He mouthed. Bayon was a man with no family, no wife or children; he had been married to his work and carried his title so long he often let it go to his head, but that didn't make him worthy of this. No matter how Dravite tried to rationalise the situation he was in the wrong; he had no right to take the watchman's life. Who am I?

He rolled Bayon onto his back before tucking his hands under the man’s arms and dragged him away from the river’s edge, returning shortly after to collect the two daggers belonging to the dead watchman. Once the daggers were fixed on his belt, Dravite looked back at Ssenislin who was dealing with the oxen; it was now or never. The horse lord took Bayon’s arms and pulled him forwards so that he could get the man into a position that would make him easier to lift and then managed to get him over his right shoulder and slowly make his way up the rise towards the horses.

Bayon was noticeably heavier than Dravite and the man struggled with carrying him to his mare, forced to set him down half way; he decided they were at a safe enough distance to bring the Strider to him. As he ran up the rise and the horses flinched and danced away from him, “Cree!” The man ordered his Strider forward but the usually tame buckskin had been spooked by the smell of blood. He was defeated, his mind and thoughts chaotic; if he took Bayon back to Endrykas he would be forced to tell them, he wanted to tell The Watch, but if he left him here, Ssenislin was right; there would be no body to find, the Sea of Grass was merciless.

Dravite sat down on the knoll, looking down at the dead watchman and the scene beyond; telling the truth was easy, but it put his whole family in danger, without him the pavilion just wouldn’t survive, and that is why you did this in the first place, the little voice in his head chimed, you wanted life more than him. He bowed his head between his knees and tried to catch his breath, it seemed he had made his mind up; the hardest part now was following through.
.
.
.
Dravite
Ra’athi of The Watch Troha to Tavehk
 
Posts: 722
Words: 775240
Joined roleplay: April 20th, 2015, 12:38 am
Race: Human, Drykas
Character sheet
Storyteller secrets
Scrapbook
Plotnotes
Medals: 3
Overlored (1) Advocate (1)
2015 Mizahar NaNo Winner (1)

The Song Of The River Ends Not At Her Banks

Postby Ssenislin on October 7th, 2015, 4:33 am

timestamp

Ssenislin snorted lazily at Dravite when he decided instead to pack up and get the heck out of dodge. "Ssssuit yourssself." he muttered, reaching for one of the empty barrels. The Dhani had barely lifted the container halfway to his lips when he heard the limp thud of Bayon's body and froze, molten yellow eye darting to the fresh body. While he didn't go out of his way to kill humans due to their relative scrawniness and the trouble their deaths caused, this one was already dead, and it would be downright criminal to waste fresh meat...

As Dravite sat and brooded, the Dhani slowly slithered out of the river again, his body leaving faint ripples behind as he wormed his way over to the dead watchman. "You wouldn't mind terribly if I partook in thisss here morsssssel, would you?" he rumbled, red tongue sliding out and flickering over his lips. If the Drykas didn't react quickly, Ssenislin wouldn't wait for an answer, roughly pulling the belt and any other hard things off the corpse and lifting Bayon up over his head as if he were a chocolate covered cherry.

Assuming he didn't intervene, Dravite would then have the chance to watch a Dhani's jaw unhinge as Ssenislin threw back his former comrade like an owl choking down a dead rat whole. The former watchman formed a visible lump in the Dhani's throat as it traveled down and eventually settled in Ssenislin's corpulent belly. A tick later, the beast burped loudly and sleepily. "Good luck to you, brave human." purred Ssenislin from deep within his chest as he slid back towards the river. "Sssee you around..." And with that, the Dhani's body elongated skull tapering and flattening into that of a green anaconda, arms flattening as he sunk beneath the murky river. Finally, Dravite was alone.
User avatar
Ssenislin
Gourmandizer
 
Posts: 39
Words: 21124
Joined roleplay: July 3rd, 2015, 11:50 pm
Race: Dhani
Character sheet

Next

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests