63rd Day of Spring, 516AV || A mile north up the beach from The Terraces, East Bank
Syna was falling, and Konrad walked towards the fire she would make of the Suvan. Every step he laid through the dry sand brought him closer to the inferno. A slick and shimmering landscape of flames that spread and grew to waves lapping, crashing, reaching and receding again. Konrad almost wished he could savor the sight more, but while the incandescent sea was on his left, his eyes swung to his right more and more as he marched.
The swamp bore no fire. No light. Just the black maws between trees and tangled, vine-encrusted limbs reaching out towards him. The mangrove swamp started proper a little further away, gnarled roots of those strange trees reaching up through the water and then forming, impossibly, into trunks, branches, leaves, limbs. But to the right, beyond the sand and the surf, was the canopy of the swamp, and Konrad didn't like it.
Hide a petching army in there and I'd never know it until they were pouring out after me.
The Sunberth killer knew there would be valid reason for that, now. Days before, he'd been the man laying open throats and stomachs when a Radacke Dynast had been attacked trying to bed some wench, of course on the night when Konrad was chosen to protect him. They'd been Rujaro, or said they were. Suicidal with rage at the slave beaten to death on the 45th, desperate for any Dynast blood to equal out the equation.
Konrad snorted now and tasted salt as he did, just like he had that night. He understood the philosophy, the need to balance pain with pain. He also knew it was a loser's arithmetic, a fool's errand... and besides which, no-one accomplished shyke for a cause by dying for it. Only by killing.
They hadn't. He had. And now, he was sure, the Rooj knew about it.
So the man's hand was resting on the hilt of his kopis as sand parted under his feet as he walked. No crossbow, however, too cumbersome a device for that walk. Every other blade he had was on him, though, and Konrad felt secure even without Three Eyes trailing after him like a pudgy dog.
Ah, that thought was enough to get a smile on his face. Dumb petching sod. He'd gone and got his willy wet while the Dynasts were busy debauching and deflowering everything with a cock or a cunny the night before, and now he was suffering the same as them. Writhing in his bed back at the Terraces, an ice pack pressed to his crotch and howling like a pitbull was chewing at it.
Petching idiot, he thought as he stopped squinting, dipping Syna casting less and less light. Soon night would come and Konrad would feel a little better. He knew it was an outrageous thought, following the one about a band of rebel slaves mayhap wanting his head, but Konrad always did better cloaked in the night. He was safer there. More comfortable. And things are always more private.
Which, after all, was the whole reason for his evening jaunt. He flexed his dangling hand and breathed in, willing into life the circuit he knew raced around him-
waves and lanes and arteries, veins from toes to scalp, pulsing and pumping with power beyond muscles and bone, pressing against them from the inside
-responding to his simple thought, rising as greenish-black gas from his palm and then congealing into water, a ball of whirling res like a miniature world, ready to be lit-
No... not yet... Out.
As with it's creation, the construct died with a thought. As Syna sank into the flaming sea, the djed ball sank back into his hand. Konrad smiled softly, scars and scruffy, gaunt face lit by the dying ball as it tingled and crackled across his palm... then vanished.
His hand clenched into a fist and he waited... waited for that clench in his muscles, the pain that was payment for power... and felt a tingle.
Huh. Always nice to progress.
The mercenary chuckled at his progress, sand flying in little arcs from his boots as he kept walking, the light dying as he went, the night rising, and a rank of sharp-heeled footprints following in his wake. Another half-mile or so, or until the night had truly arrived, and by the light of Leth on the Suvan, he would begin his practice proper.