13th Day of Winter, 518 AV
This had been a long time coming.
In truth, it had begun with but an idle thought, the kind that floats through the study addled minds of every overworked student at the University in Zeltiva where Elias had once honed his arcane craft; ‘what could my magic do to make the world a better place?’
It was the kind of noncommittal, highfalutin reverie of one’s own oversized ego that every first year mage often indulged in as they probed the boundaries of their magic. Some could of course find the will and the way to make their bold ideals a reality, but most, including Elias, simply resigned themselves to enjoying the dream for what it was, a dream.
Today however, was where all that changed.
It had been a long time in planning, and Elias knew it wouldn't be a simple matter, but the fact that it was at all a possibility now was enough to negate any sense of hesitation or doubt. He’d been thinking on this for years, and as the magecrafter looked about him, surveying the stuffy dockside warehouse he called his labaoratory and breathed deep its saw dust laden air, he felt a passion within him begin to bloom anew. Between the materials, tools and space requirements, the cost of this endeavor would be wild in scope, but the rewards… the rewards would speak for themselves. A sentiment his esteemed benefactor also shared with perhaps even more gusto than the mage himself.
Odell Markham looked up from his toil, sweat laden and lathered in the wood shavings that clung to his muscular arms. He gave Elias an encouraging nod along with a half hearted salute of his handsaw before returning to his work, slicing away at yet another plank of lumber that would soon serve them well in their enterprise. The Ebonstryfe commander was a squat, square jawed man who couldn’t be more than thirty summers at the most. Hair slicked back, face neatly trimmed, and spine rigid like a board, he would have been the very model of a Ravokian officer were it not for the occasional grin that tugged at the corner of his lip… or the remnants of a faded half sun tattoo marring his right hand.
When Odell had first approached Elias with this, the Caldera didn’t know what to make of the man. A Drift officer, proposing unmitigated benefaction for the betterment of all Ravokians? It must have been some convoluted trick, he’d surmised at first, but as Elias came to understand Odell and the factors that drove his determination, he realized that while the other commander may have been stymied in stature, he was colossal in his dauntless will and vigor. The very kind of man Elias’s movement among the ranks of the Stryfe needed. It was no surprise then to realize that it was indeed the movement that had brought the Odell to him to begin with. Apparently Corinthia had made good on her promise, spreading the word to those who had all the talent, tact, and tenacity the Young Bloods were looking for. What was a surprise however, was the fact that all this was originally Odell’s idea.
“Can you do it?” Had been the question the dogged commander had finally landed on after bells of deliberation and discussion. The question held a great depth to it, but when boiled down to its basics it came to this; If he was supplied with all the labor, materials and money he would need… could he do it? Could he actually magecraft an entire ship to sail faster than any other before it? Fast enough to run down any pursuit with ease, to cross the entirety of the lake in an hour or even less, to glide across the waters like a feather in the wind? In the end, Elias had answered Odell with nothing but the truth; “Of course I can.”
What followed next was a blur of activity and haste fueled by a man whose passion far outreached his rank. Odell was almost fanatical in his desire to have his humble new vessel enhanced and promised no expense would be spared. Elias found himself soon provisioned at a rather large and dusty warehouse at the heart of the Ravokian Shipyards; the unofficial bastion of the unofficially named Drift, The Ebonstryfe’s maritime forces. Technically they weren’t any different from regular soldiers despite their duties being focused primarily on the lake itself, but in practicality everyone within the order recognized the rift between soldiers and marines.
Elias didn’t exactly hold any animosity for those brother’s of his that patrolled the sacred waters, but in the eyes of more than a few, the Drift weren’t seen as real soldiers like the rest of them. Most thought them to spend their days lazily fishing in the sun while the real Stryfers were out there in the mud and blood getting shyke done, as it were. Odell however, was no lie about. Far from it in fact, he was a man of ambition, and Elias could tell as much after only knowing him for a few days. He wanted the fastest ship on the lake, and he wanted it for himself. Not to impress his masters with his gumption and resourcefulness, but to one day replace them, and in time, replace those they called ‘master’ as well. He was ardent in his quest, and more than that, fueled by a sense of patriotism that rivaled even Elias’s. It was a drive for ascension that had seen him put his own fortune on the line to fund this entire endeavor, and the costs were far from paltry. In particular, Elias distinctly remembered the moment of having to explain the price for a vile of the glyphing ink he would have to use, and then the look on Odell’s face when he went on to mention that he was going to need a few buckets worth of the stuff… and probably a mop… to paint with.
And that wasn’t even including the thousands of mizas worth of arcane catalysts that would be needed to fuel the magic.
Odell had gone nearly as pale as Elias when he’d been given the estimated total. Considering this was now day three of their work on the ship so far and none of the supplies the magecrafter had thus requested had yet to be denied to him… well, it was enough for Elias to know Odell was the real deal.
“You know,” the mage began, turning from his glyphwork to face Markham, “in all our haste, I never asked you what you were going to name her.”
Odell smirked, setting aside his lumberwork and hauling himself up to his feet before instructing the rest of his men to continue with their own labors. “She is a beauty, is she not. One deserving of an equally fitting name.” The captain cooed as he stepped up beside the Caldera, his gaze falling unto the unfished framework of ship in question. It stood suspended by the scaffolding before them, the half covered skeleton of a sloop of impressive size and scale that dominated the entire building with its girth. Sixty tons of cargo space, enough room for fifty soldiers to board, and two mounted harpoon guns on her flanks. They didn’t make hunters this big in Ravok anymore, for rarely was there a need for it. For Odell to be the captain of one of the few sloops that patrolled the harbors of Ravok must have made him an exceptional captain.
“The Purity of Faith.” Odell chimed in, staring at his ship like a lovestruck fool. “That’s what we’ll call her…”
“A fine name for a fine ship… but we can make her finer still.”
WC - 1293