Elias tensed, his cold eyes narrowing as a hand hesitantly fell to the hilt of his blade.
Something was…
coming.Something vile, and wretched, and all together wrong in every sense of the word. Something that was hard to explain, yet he could feel it like oil under his skin, slithering and oozing, corrupting like a sickness. A sickness that was steadily creeping closer and closer with every passing tick he dawdled upon trying to discern its-
The door began to creak, and the mage went rigid. Slowly, cautiously, the decrepit and disguised hunk of old wood that served as the only entrance to the den was pushed open, and that ‘something’ began to enter. The Caldera was glad for his years combat training in that moment. It helped a great deal in fighting back the grasping claws of fear that tried so desperately to latch unto his heart and sink his nerves. That calm that only a warrior knew before the break of battle served to keep his hands steady as he unsheathed his blade and readied his magic for whatever horrible beast came crawling into the grotto. It must have been some kind of stray creature birthed from the dark places of the wilds by the monstrous impression even just the hint of its aura was giving off. A beast of unspeakable depravity and noxious-
Oh no.
Recognition came like a void portal torn in open in the pits of stomach.
This was no monster… it was worse. It was-
“
Evarista!”
The swordsman hissed through clenched teeth, his tone low and frantic as he abandoned his blade and instead threw up a halting hand to impede the pale girl’s entrance. It was too late though, she’d already taken one step too many to turn back now.
“
Hmmm, w-what is that racket? Hirem, I told you I was not to be disturbed! Who is there? Who comes to my door?”
The words echoed throughout the small cave with a resounding air of impetuous imperiousness even despite the half asleep timbre of the voice that uttered it. As the man at the other end of the dimly lit cavern partially turned ever so slightly to peer over his shoulder at the uninvited guest, Eva would notice how low his eyelids hung, how dropping and sluggish his features were. Half asleep may have been giving him too much credit, but not entirely misleading.
His name was
Baltazar Black, archon and author of the arcane arts, magister of the mystical and the magical, sorcerer both supreme and sublime, imperator exemplary of the- the list went on and on like that for some time and the Ravokian had forgotten much of it since he’d been first forced to memorize it all for the sake of his ruse. Baltazar -which was obviously an alias, it had to be- stood hunched over a desk at the far end of the cave opposite Elias and the heiress. His posture was lackadaisical for lack of a better word, and seemed in grand contrast to the airs he gave off, even in his strangely addled state.
He was a young man, perhaps in his late twenties at most, deeply tan of skin and svelte of posture. Upon his lips twitched a finely combed and wispy mustache that had been drenched in as much fragrant oils and preservatives as his slicked back ebony hair. The sides of his head had been shaven down in a styled manner, but on top still held enough length to flow over his neck and down below his shoulder in disheveled raven black streaks. His eyes were an uncanny shade of silver and gray that threatened to condemn one to staring in awe had they not been half encapsulated and hidden in their drowsiness. Jewelry adorned almost every inch of the man, gaudy and expensive to the alst. His clothing also bore the trademark of money and prestige, made of rich flowing fabrics that served little purpose other than displaying the wealth of the one who strode about in them. Though there, a story in of itself could be told. Tears in the cloth were apparent, and stains of mud and broken foliage marred the once pristine silks, telling a tale of things gone awry. Tinges of blood had also left their mark, and it was clear by the reddened scratches on his arms and neck that Baltazar had likely been stumbling through the wilderness in a mad dash.
He was Ethaefal, as Elias had learned. A surprising discovery given the fact that the soldier had rarely ever beheld one of their divine kind without the jangling of slave chains heralding their approach. Yet, somehow Baltazar had not only made Rhysol’s domain his home as a free man, he’d even gone so far as to have thrived amidst Ravokian society at one point. No doubt in part thanks to his abilities as a mage. The only thing more overbearing than his arrogance had been his immense propensity towards magic. The man radiated power like a bonfire in the night, and it was hard to ignore. A testament to his prominence and power… and to the gravity of the woes that saw him fallen so far.
Elias had tracked the wizard from the shoreline, following that flame of his arcane aura amidst the darkness. Driven from Ravok and forced to flee, Balatazar had purchased a horse in his haste and rode the thing half to death getting here. The other half had come when the poor creature had caught its leg in a sinkhole that had snapped it like a twig. He hoped the man had done the proper thing and ended the creature before he abandoned it to the voracity of the wilds, but something told him the animal hadn’t been so lucky.
From there, it had been a simple matter of following the scattered remnants of Baltazar’s carelessly cobbled together belongings the terrified fool had dropped in his stupor. A scroll here, a dowsing rod there, Elias gathered them up one by one as he trudged through the forest in nonplussed pursuit of his prey. The summoner had been frightened, and rightfully so. The wrath of the Nitrozians wasn’t something so easily escaped, especially not when they unleashed the likes of the Ebonstryfe upon their victims. Baltazar had failed them, his benefactors, and the price of his failure had been tantamount to the prestige and adoration their backing had afforded him in Ravok; steep.
Something Elias himself was now keenly reminded of.
Smartly, he’d run. Not so smartly, he apparently hadn’t planned much further ahead that that. By the time the Caldera had found this place not too far from the lakeshore outpost, the refined arcanist was on verge of collapse, teetering upon unconsciousness after his grueling trek through the trees and up the small but dangerously precipitous cliff face to get…
here. Elias mused it had likely been a respit once upon a time, for hunters straying far from home when Ravok was still in its infancy, then smugglers later on when she’d matured enough to garner the likes of such men’s attention.
It was small, true, but whoever had originally settled this place had clearly meant it to be a home away from home. Instead of dirt and cave moss lining walls, planks of wood made up the floor, and even a few support beams created a homey -if not rotted and termite ridden- feel to the place. Ancient tables, chairs and even a fading fireplace littered the den, there was even a run down old bed to boot, and Baltazar had wasted no time on unpacking the lab he’d fled with on his back unto whatever could sustain the weight of so many beakers and scrolls and magical doo-dads that not even Elias could recognize all of. Now, it seemed, the hideout had become the impoverished sanctuary of an exiled sorcerer of all things.
What the stories this place must hold...
Baltazar’s story had nearly ended then and there when the hunter loosed upon him had discovered his retreat, and through his auristics, could see the man toiling desperately to establish a number of glyphs across the entrance of the den. So haggard with fatigue was he, that it had been simple child’s play to entice his mind into slumber with just a few hypnotic suggestions unleashed from the other side the door. Since then, Elias had been making himself at home, not just in the hideout, but in Baltazar’s mind as well. He’d been hammering away at the summoner’s thoughts for the better part of a bell now, inducing a trance and building a world for the other mage to scamper around in like a rat in a cage. A great deal of work had gone into staging all this, and it was all about to come undone thanks to one the infuriatingly unpredictable nature of one little spoiled-
“
Hirem!”
Exasperated, the Caldera turned back to Balthazar, then again to Eva, caught in between the two and growing increasingly frustrated as he was reminded he’d been asked a question. “
Eh, its nothing, master.” The scarred killer responded over his shoulder as he locked eyes with the heiress once more. His voice was strange, a hint of an accent on his tongue and a weak, subservience behind his intonation. “
Just more uh… more students, come begging for your tutelage, oh magnificent one.” His fingers made a gesture for the pale girl to follow them where he pointed even as he spoke, and as his icy gaze wandered to the ceiling of the cave directly above her head, she’d notice the glyph staring back down at her. Amateurish in design though none the less threatening for it, it spread over the entrance like a massive black spider in waiting. From its spindly center, a number of lines split off, trailing from the ceiling to the wall, and as Elias slowly pointed it out, to the very spot the Nitrozian’s foot had planted itself.
She was standing on a booby trap.
A wave of fresh hypnotic energy flowed towards the Ethafeal, surging through his already mangled thoughts and setting a notion of impatience and the necessity for lack of distraction. “
Well send them away!” Baltazar half barked, half murmured after a tick. Impatiently, the dazed summoner returned to his work, and under his breath mumbled “
My work can't be interrupted...”
Elias, noticing with a breath of relief that his trance was still intact, took a hesitant step towards the Nitrozian. Balthazar may have been a barely competent glypher, but any aurist with half an eye open could feel just how powerful he was with his reimancy. Whatever magical malevolence he’d left swirling inside that trap the heiress had stepped on was not something either Eva or her bodyguard would want to find out.
Placing a finger over his lips to make sure she understood the need for quiet, Elias lowered himself to one knee before her, taking her leg in his hand to steady it. He hadn’t paid the thing much mind after he’d caught Black hastily trying to scribble it upon the cave floor with a half spilled pot of enchanting ink, but now the situation had changed. It was simple in design really. Upon the ceiling was where the magic waited, eager to be unleashed and devour whatever poor bastard disturbed the markings on the floor. The moment Eva removed her foot, she'd interrupt the sigils and send a signal to the ceiling, more than likely ending both of their lives in a horrifyingly painful instant.
“
Don't. Move.” His words were barely even a whisper as his scrutiny engaged the runes.
This was going to be tricky, he groaned inwardly.
Petch.
Angrily, and with a hand still brazenly wrapped around her calf, the stryfer glared up at the pampered girl outfitted in her strange attire, the niceties and practiced pleasantries gone from their usual commerce of words as he addressed her plainly. "
What are you doing here!" He already knew the answer of course, and he already knew he wasn’t going to like it.