“Oh lord, is it going to bruise? It’s going to bruise, isn’t it? Unbelievable! I mean come on, who throws a collar? Honestly!?” The swordsman bemoaned between brooding crunches of his cattail snack. He was about to start in again on how he could have absolutely dodged such a stupid surprise if he’d been serious when the telltale din of snapping twigs and rustled foliage alerted him to the wolf’s return.
“Ah, the pup has come back, and with a gift no less.” Elias smirked, shooing away a fussing Maria who had been lackadaisically tending to the Stryfer’s bruised nose with a kerchief. She seemed relieved to be discharged from her less than appealing duties and hastily scurried off to join her husband and daughter who were still busy gathering up the spilled crop that had fallen out of the cart following Sedric’s abrupt outburst and the subsequent chaos that had followed. “I had bet our friend here we’d likely never see hide nor hair of the two of you again after you disappeared into those trees. Looks like I owe you, Sedric.”
The bandit’s response was a groggy groan from his unceremonious seat on the ground. He was lying against the cart he’d only moments ago been hiding in, though now he had a freshly busted lip to add to his already impressive collection of cuts and scrapes, but that seemed to be the least of the man’s troubles. No bindings or shackles held him in place, yet he remained an unmoving heap none the less, and it was evident why. Sedric was... bewitched, for a lack of a better term. His dark and bloodshot eyes were distant, hollow things that reflected the dazed and dulled mind behind them, and it was plain as day to tell wherever he was, it wasn’t here in the present. The shaggy maned bandit wasn’t going anywhere anytime soon, and the moment the kelvic cat Jessica’s slave had dragged back realized as much, she quickly began limping her way over to his side. The bobcat -Pellia he presumed- seemed much worse for wear after her short stint in the pup’s company. Not that Elias had any judgments on the boy’s method, he was just glad someone had taught the creature how to fetch as well as they did, though given the look in the red head’s eyes, he thought better of saying so out loud.
“Mmmm, in fact,” the swordsman continued, taking another healthy bite out of his reed, “Sedric and I have been talking a lot since you left. Why don’t you tell my friend here what you told me?” He said, finishing with another of his strange claps. To the others it was exactly what it seemed, an odd gesture without reason or purpose, but to the hypnotized Sedric whom Elias had conditioned to its sound, it was like a trumpet going off in his brain. The djed flowed from the Caldera like a slithering serpent, its fangs finding purchase in the befuddled bandit before swiftly injecting its serene venom deep into every crevice and cranny of the man's thoughts. Ever since the hypnotist had taken hold of him, Sedric had been lost in a churning quagmire of Elias’s arcane influence that kept his mind addled and his senses dulled. It made him particularly chatty when properly motivated, and just as the Stryfer had suspected, the poor fool did indeed have something worth hearing.
“I’m… I’m a bandit.” He finally answered in a shaken tone. “I steal, I hurt, I do a lot of bad things. N-n-not because I want to. I got… I got a lot of debts. A lot people that need their piece, a lot of people who need me. And Pellia… Oh, Pellia. She’s a good girl. Too good. Too loyal. Should have never… should have never…”
“Ah, ah, Sedric.” Elias interrupted, giving Rook and abashed and apologetic look, “I don’t want your petching life story again. Just the important part, like we talked about, remember.”
“What have you done to him!” Came a wrathful scream from amidst a burst of light. The kelvic had managed to drag herself to Sedric’s side despite her injuries, and despite her injuries, she seemed more concerned for her cohort than she did herself. Curious. “Sedric! Sedric, snap out of it!” She cried, shaking her partner with increasing violence and desperation to no avail.
“Enough.” Elias snapped. “My patience is not infinite. Do not test it again, woman.”
The tone in which his threat carried held a great deal of malice, but the defiant look in Pellia’s eyes said she didn’t care one petch for his threats. It was only when she noticed the way the mage’s hand stroked at the hilt of his dagger did she look to Sedric and her demeanor softened into something more compliant. She lay her head against his chest, finding a place amidst the cheap leather and the stinking, tattered cloth as if she’d done it a thousand times before. “Leave him be.” She muttered. “I know what you want.”
“Oh.”
“The slaves.”
Elias gave the wolf a quick look, his face poorly hiding the delight in his eyes. He was like a child who’d just spotted something shiny in the sand, and now there was no stopping him.
“The one’s who did this to us.” She continued, gesturing vaguely to the plethora of minor wounds that plagued both her and her man. “We stumbled on their little hiding place and they weren't too pleased about it apparently. We’d only just gotten away from them and stumbled unto the path -unto these petching yokels, when we noticed you coming down the road. We did what did just to survive. I know Sedric said some shyke, but he was just trying to scare them. He’s a petching softy. Always has been. He wasn’t going to do anything, honest.” The pale mage watched in disinterest as her hold around Sedric’s limp shoulders tightened.
“Slaves you say.” The Caldera impatiently prodded.
“Yah. We were... negotiating a travel fee with this kid who'd come from the lakeshore by himself. The little shyke tried to give us the slip by running right into the woods. I tracked him, 'cuz tracking is what I do. I got caught up in the chase though, wasn't paying attention. I didn't even notice until it was too late that we had just sprinted head long into a petching trap. it was a whole bunch of escaped chattel, all hiding out together in the bog. They didn’t exactly explain it outright, on account of them being too busy trying to bash our heads in with rocks, but it was easy enough to figure out with all the scratched up brands and the wild looks in their eyes. The kind of look that says they weren’t going back, no matter what. It’s the kind of look I’ve only seen in slaves who’ve tasted freedom before and can't fathom another way to be.” Pellia finished, wiping the moisture from her cheeks and trying her best to compose herself as he she sat upright. A difficult task given that she was thoroughly naked and bleeding quite profoundly, but even Elias had to admit she was doing a fine job of it all the same. She didn’t exactly strike him as a woman use to crying, and he didn’t need his auristics to tell him something bound these two together more closely than just mere necessity.
"They had this… thing. A little arts and crafts project hanging from the tree near where they lived. A bunch of vines and twigs all tied up and stuff. If you’ve ever seen a Vinumia, I think it was supposed to look like that. Might have even convinced us it was if it was dark enough… and my nose hadn’t picked up on the truth. Well, anyway, when they realized their scarecrow didn’t do the job, they started pelting rocks and spears at us, chasing us. We barely made it out of there. We got turned around in all the confusion though. Been wandering the swamp for a while until we finally found the road again.”
“And, while you were there, amidst their camp, I don’t suppose you came across any brewing materials by chance? Say, a large quantity of stolen hops?”
Pellia shot him a confused and annoyed side eye. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” She grumbled, her attentions refocused on her bondmate. “I’ve told you everything, Ravokian. Release whatever curse you’ve put on Sedric, there’s nothing more we can do for you.”
There was a pause.
“I suspect you’re right.”
The snap of ice crackling to life carried like thunder across the quiet road. Pellia’s eyes went wide at the sight of the floating, spinning spikes of ice now suddenly at hovering at the Stryfer’s side. “Which means I don’t have much use for you anymore…”
It was Eldrin and Maria's turn to panic next as they watched in mounting horror as three of the five frosty weapons slowly began to turn towards them as well. Elias’s equally cold gaze followed. “Or you.”
There was a moment of hesitation. A quiet, fear filled instant in which the reimancer belayed his hand from giving the faithful flick that would have ended so many lives. Instead, he turned to Rook, expression hard, grim, yet shaded in a difficult veneer of indifference that made it hard to read. “What do you think, pup.” He asked darkly. “Do I have a reason to let any of them go? These thieves, these traitors, these cowards and reprobates. They’ve all wronged me, and thus they’ve all wronged Ravok itself. What should be done with them?”
The choice, it seemed, was now in the young Kelvic's hands.
“Ah, the pup has come back, and with a gift no less.” Elias smirked, shooing away a fussing Maria who had been lackadaisically tending to the Stryfer’s bruised nose with a kerchief. She seemed relieved to be discharged from her less than appealing duties and hastily scurried off to join her husband and daughter who were still busy gathering up the spilled crop that had fallen out of the cart following Sedric’s abrupt outburst and the subsequent chaos that had followed. “I had bet our friend here we’d likely never see hide nor hair of the two of you again after you disappeared into those trees. Looks like I owe you, Sedric.”
The bandit’s response was a groggy groan from his unceremonious seat on the ground. He was lying against the cart he’d only moments ago been hiding in, though now he had a freshly busted lip to add to his already impressive collection of cuts and scrapes, but that seemed to be the least of the man’s troubles. No bindings or shackles held him in place, yet he remained an unmoving heap none the less, and it was evident why. Sedric was... bewitched, for a lack of a better term. His dark and bloodshot eyes were distant, hollow things that reflected the dazed and dulled mind behind them, and it was plain as day to tell wherever he was, it wasn’t here in the present. The shaggy maned bandit wasn’t going anywhere anytime soon, and the moment the kelvic cat Jessica’s slave had dragged back realized as much, she quickly began limping her way over to his side. The bobcat -Pellia he presumed- seemed much worse for wear after her short stint in the pup’s company. Not that Elias had any judgments on the boy’s method, he was just glad someone had taught the creature how to fetch as well as they did, though given the look in the red head’s eyes, he thought better of saying so out loud.
“Mmmm, in fact,” the swordsman continued, taking another healthy bite out of his reed, “Sedric and I have been talking a lot since you left. Why don’t you tell my friend here what you told me?” He said, finishing with another of his strange claps. To the others it was exactly what it seemed, an odd gesture without reason or purpose, but to the hypnotized Sedric whom Elias had conditioned to its sound, it was like a trumpet going off in his brain. The djed flowed from the Caldera like a slithering serpent, its fangs finding purchase in the befuddled bandit before swiftly injecting its serene venom deep into every crevice and cranny of the man's thoughts. Ever since the hypnotist had taken hold of him, Sedric had been lost in a churning quagmire of Elias’s arcane influence that kept his mind addled and his senses dulled. It made him particularly chatty when properly motivated, and just as the Stryfer had suspected, the poor fool did indeed have something worth hearing.
“I’m… I’m a bandit.” He finally answered in a shaken tone. “I steal, I hurt, I do a lot of bad things. N-n-not because I want to. I got… I got a lot of debts. A lot people that need their piece, a lot of people who need me. And Pellia… Oh, Pellia. She’s a good girl. Too good. Too loyal. Should have never… should have never…”
“Ah, ah, Sedric.” Elias interrupted, giving Rook and abashed and apologetic look, “I don’t want your petching life story again. Just the important part, like we talked about, remember.”
“What have you done to him!” Came a wrathful scream from amidst a burst of light. The kelvic had managed to drag herself to Sedric’s side despite her injuries, and despite her injuries, she seemed more concerned for her cohort than she did herself. Curious. “Sedric! Sedric, snap out of it!” She cried, shaking her partner with increasing violence and desperation to no avail.
“Enough.” Elias snapped. “My patience is not infinite. Do not test it again, woman.”
The tone in which his threat carried held a great deal of malice, but the defiant look in Pellia’s eyes said she didn’t care one petch for his threats. It was only when she noticed the way the mage’s hand stroked at the hilt of his dagger did she look to Sedric and her demeanor softened into something more compliant. She lay her head against his chest, finding a place amidst the cheap leather and the stinking, tattered cloth as if she’d done it a thousand times before. “Leave him be.” She muttered. “I know what you want.”
“Oh.”
“The slaves.”
Elias gave the wolf a quick look, his face poorly hiding the delight in his eyes. He was like a child who’d just spotted something shiny in the sand, and now there was no stopping him.
“The one’s who did this to us.” She continued, gesturing vaguely to the plethora of minor wounds that plagued both her and her man. “We stumbled on their little hiding place and they weren't too pleased about it apparently. We’d only just gotten away from them and stumbled unto the path -unto these petching yokels, when we noticed you coming down the road. We did what did just to survive. I know Sedric said some shyke, but he was just trying to scare them. He’s a petching softy. Always has been. He wasn’t going to do anything, honest.” The pale mage watched in disinterest as her hold around Sedric’s limp shoulders tightened.
“Slaves you say.” The Caldera impatiently prodded.
“Yah. We were... negotiating a travel fee with this kid who'd come from the lakeshore by himself. The little shyke tried to give us the slip by running right into the woods. I tracked him, 'cuz tracking is what I do. I got caught up in the chase though, wasn't paying attention. I didn't even notice until it was too late that we had just sprinted head long into a petching trap. it was a whole bunch of escaped chattel, all hiding out together in the bog. They didn’t exactly explain it outright, on account of them being too busy trying to bash our heads in with rocks, but it was easy enough to figure out with all the scratched up brands and the wild looks in their eyes. The kind of look that says they weren’t going back, no matter what. It’s the kind of look I’ve only seen in slaves who’ve tasted freedom before and can't fathom another way to be.” Pellia finished, wiping the moisture from her cheeks and trying her best to compose herself as he she sat upright. A difficult task given that she was thoroughly naked and bleeding quite profoundly, but even Elias had to admit she was doing a fine job of it all the same. She didn’t exactly strike him as a woman use to crying, and he didn’t need his auristics to tell him something bound these two together more closely than just mere necessity.
"They had this… thing. A little arts and crafts project hanging from the tree near where they lived. A bunch of vines and twigs all tied up and stuff. If you’ve ever seen a Vinumia, I think it was supposed to look like that. Might have even convinced us it was if it was dark enough… and my nose hadn’t picked up on the truth. Well, anyway, when they realized their scarecrow didn’t do the job, they started pelting rocks and spears at us, chasing us. We barely made it out of there. We got turned around in all the confusion though. Been wandering the swamp for a while until we finally found the road again.”
“And, while you were there, amidst their camp, I don’t suppose you came across any brewing materials by chance? Say, a large quantity of stolen hops?”
Pellia shot him a confused and annoyed side eye. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.” She grumbled, her attentions refocused on her bondmate. “I’ve told you everything, Ravokian. Release whatever curse you’ve put on Sedric, there’s nothing more we can do for you.”
There was a pause.
“I suspect you’re right.”
The snap of ice crackling to life carried like thunder across the quiet road. Pellia’s eyes went wide at the sight of the floating, spinning spikes of ice now suddenly at hovering at the Stryfer’s side. “Which means I don’t have much use for you anymore…”
It was Eldrin and Maria's turn to panic next as they watched in mounting horror as three of the five frosty weapons slowly began to turn towards them as well. Elias’s equally cold gaze followed. “Or you.”
There was a moment of hesitation. A quiet, fear filled instant in which the reimancer belayed his hand from giving the faithful flick that would have ended so many lives. Instead, he turned to Rook, expression hard, grim, yet shaded in a difficult veneer of indifference that made it hard to read. “What do you think, pup.” He asked darkly. “Do I have a reason to let any of them go? These thieves, these traitors, these cowards and reprobates. They’ve all wronged me, and thus they’ve all wronged Ravok itself. What should be done with them?”
The choice, it seemed, was now in the young Kelvic's hands.