by Wrenmae on December 4th, 2011, 8:49 pm
Hunger was a strong motivator, it paled the fear of the outside world and protested strongly when the boy tried to sleep, dreams held at bay by the sharp pangs beating his flesh into submission. Groaning, Wrenmae rolled out of his bed again. By now the harried strength of wind had died to a low murmur, the storm passing by overhead and leaving little but the shattered pieces of its tail to waver in its wake. Wrenmae gathered what extra clothes he had, pressing them against himself as he peeked out into the drizzle. Water dripped and the land seemed to sag in relief after the passing. The house, miraculously, still stood strong. The only damage was apparent in the makeshift repairs he had made to the window, bent in slightly by the wind.
Sighing, Wrenmae grabbed the torch and long dagger from where they rested and stepped outside. He sniffed, aware that any discomfort was temporary. He had never been sick, not since the Unforgiving and not since Vayt. Even now the gods name sent a mix of emotions through the boy, most of them unidentified and some frighteningly close to adoration.
Alone he was strong enough to conquer this journey, alone he had survived where other men would not. It was...strange. Was he seeing eye to eye with the Plague god? It wasn't a thought he wanted to think much on, pulling the material closer to him and shifting his eyes once again. The shadows remained at the edges of his torchlight, but to his cat-eyes the fresh prints of rabbit tracks easily caught his attention. Wrenmae stooped where the hole was, a gunny between tree roots and filling with water. The rabbit was inside, woefully trapped between the sunken home and the outside danger. Kneeling, Wrenmae looked into the hole, barely catching the glint of frightened eyes. His stomach growled, protesting this waste of time between hunting and eating, and Wrenmae pushed out his influence into the creature, coaxing it from its hole.
No words needed to be spoken, only the calming peace of a brighter outside world, a safer world, one that wasn't damp and full of flooding ambitions. As the fat creature hopped from its den, Wrenmae snagged it by the years, lifting the limp creature up to his eyes. It looked back at him calmly, hardly afraid by its apparent danger.
There was innocence there.
Gritting his teeth, Wrenmae held up the dagger, prepped it to plunge into the rabbit, end its life and partake of its meat...but it did not struggle, did not screech. It wiggled its flecked nose at him, as if in playful greeting.
He couldn't do it.
Sighing, the storyteller placed the rabbit in his backpack, feeling its weight nestled with some of his other supplies. It didn't have a home anymore...much like him. Despite the easy use of manipulation, Wrenmae had found a strange kinship with the simple creature. Its blind acceptance of the outside world as safe, its willing hop into his power, it was reminiscent of everything else in his life...how people had done things for him till their health soured and their opinions fell. He remembered how he had been all but forced to leave, remembered how pointless his excursion to Lhavit was...how little an impression he made there.
Turning back toward the house, he questioned the possibility of eating his boots.
Livid snarls halted his passage however, the dark shapes of mammoth wolves loping out of the forest to surround him. He froze, heart beating wildly in his chest. He twisted the torch back and forth in his hands, keeping the monsters at bay that watched him with hungry and primal eyes. The rabbit struggled in his pack, released from the spell and suddenly all too acutely aware of danger. One of the wolves snapped at him, jaws narrowly missing his arm and Wrenmae leaped away from it, landing in the path of another wolf that snapped at his legs. Surrounded and afraid, Wrenmae felt his confidence wane.
He hadn't the ability to face this alone. Five of the monsters circled him, watched him, eyed him up like he was a deer or elk. The impossibility of their size nearly broke him, having faced nothing of that sort before.
The horde relented, briefly, letting in one of their largest to face the boy. Wrenmae felt his blood curdle, nearly leap away from his veins and flee. His grip was tight against the torch and dagger, his steps arrested by the location of the wolves. The alpha was to have the first bite of the prey, and Wrenmae was locked into a ring with the beast.
It dwarfed him, head nearly as big as his chest and eyes a rusty red. The ruff of fur along its neck was flecked with white, the hand of frost gently needling its prescence there. Drool collected at the edges of the monster’s jaws, and as if just noting it, a long tongue rolled out to capture some of the moisture. Wrenmae kept the torch between him and the wolf, flickering fire only marginally useful to deter the beast. As if in some silent agreement with its pack, it snapped forward head over paws as it descended on the boy. Wrenmae hurled himself aside, narrowly avoiding fangs and the heavy paws of the beast, rolling across the muddy ground and scrambling for his feet. His mind raced, the house just beyond the ring of wolves…but even that would not hold if the creatures wanted him. The monster was on him against fangs glinting by torchlight as they descended for his head. Wrenmae had no means to stand, his feet slipping in the wet mud. Instead he thrust the torch into the wolf’s mouth, forcing it down its cavernous throat.
The beast howled, or tried to, choking on the burning wood and jerking away from its intended prey. Powerful jaws snapped down on the wood, shattering it and choking up pieces as it hopped from foot to foot gasping for air. Wrenmae couldn’t let the opportunity to go waste, scrambling to his feet and charging at the monster. The skin on his hands warped and shimmered with concentrated Djed, nails lengthening into claws. Desperation forced the boy to recall the means of smarter predators, more prepared creatures. He leaped onto the wolf’s side, digging the claws of his left hand through its fur and into its back. The monster snarled through splintered torch, turning its head to glance at Wrenmae with baleful eyes. Wasting no time, he plunged his dagger fully into the monster’s back, twisting it, withdrawing it, stabbing again, and again, and again. The wolf choked out a snarl, swinging its back with such sudden ferocity that Wrenmae was hurled off and over the heads of the other wolves, rolling across the mud with a thumping sort of broken progress. The alpha followed, blood dripping from its jaws and hatred bright in its dark eyes. The long dagger was too small to pierce anything of severe note in the monster, not where he was stabbing. Wrenmae’s head swam, his vision twisted. Trying to access Hypnotism was like trying to swim in mud…the world was all turned about. Down came his adversary, the monster biting at the boy as though to swallow him up in one bite. Desperately Wrenmae thrust his dagger up, through the wolf’s open mouth. Its jaws, vice like mechanisms meant to tear and rip, came down instinctively, piercing Wrenmae’s exposed left arm and knifing through the skin. In the wolf’s jaws, the boy had turned the dagger upward and as the jaws came down, the knife went up, skewing the wolf to its brain.
The pain was sudden and agonizing, blood spewing from the teeth marks in his arm. Wrenmae cried out, his voice a strange discordant note in the open forest, yanking his arm from the jaws of death and holding it close to his chest. Blood pooled between his fingers and colored his skin a foul sort of crimson. The dagger was left inside and the wolf bit on it again reflexively, its mind firing the last of its knowledge with its instinct to eat. Collapsing on its side, only the left leg twitched, the soul taking that avenue to escape the beast and filter out into the night.
Pain was sudden clarity and Wrenmae bent his mind to the other wolves, piercing their aura with Djed as he snarled. He only promised pain, fear, and death, instilling panic into the remainder of the wolves and roaring at them to the best his limited lungs could. As if the fall of their leader was the deciding blow, the remainder of the wolves slunk back into the forest, watching the boy with fearful eyes…new respect for such small prey manifesting.
Wrenmae collapsed back onto his knees, tears forcing themselves along the corners of his eyes and out onto his sweat and rain soaked face. With his right, he reached into the jaws of the monster and retrieved his dagger, yanking it from the skull with a twist of exertion. Swallowing his pain, Wrenmae forced his back against the wolf’s still warm body and dug his feet into the ground. Around him the rain fell softly, the sky promising only the fingers of dawn as some far off illusion. Grunting, pushing himself, Wrenmae shoved the wolf toward the house…progress slowed by the blood still coursing from his arm. Eventually he managed to shove the wolf against the door, pushing it open and stumbling into the warmth of the room. Immediately his dagger went onto the fire, blade glimmering in the hot glow of coals. Using his other knife, Wrenmae cut a swatch of cloth from his cape and doused it with the remainder of wine from Lhavit, and a bit of the sailor’s grog from the wreckage. The rest he put on his wound, wincing at the pain shortly following. His knife was heating up, glowing a warm dawn color. Picking it up he pressed the blade to his flesh, snarling as the skin melted together. Immediately he cast the blade aside, wrapping the wound with the alcohol soaked bandage. It wasn’t the best fix, but it was all he had time to do…and especially with such limited means. Falling back against the cot, Wrenmae took a moment to breathe.
He had, once again, survived what would otherwise have killed another person. He was strong, or damned lucky. The rabbit had long since stopped moving, crushed by the storyteller in his frantic struggles. Pulling the blood thing from his pack, he placed it on the ground in front of him. Innocence could not survive in the face of strength and adversity. Even the warm hearted must steel themselves against the winter of loss and death. He had spared the rabbit, and then lost it in the same bell. Rather than staying where it might have survived, he had it die alone, crushed in a dark place. Good intentions only bred death.
Or at least it seemed to be that way.
He kissed the rabbit on the head, an apology for what he did…although it was far too gone to care at this point. Taking his dagger, he cut along its body, removing skin from flesh with messy efficiency, fashioning a stake from a piece of wood he had yet to throw on the fire and spearing the meat. As he held the dead rabbit over the fire, watching the flames leap and dance along the crumbling wood, he found himself alone with his thoughts, his ideas. He had tried, tried as hard as he could to be a good person despite his curse, his mark. Vayt seemed to know best when he marked him, the world itself was turned inward and lashed out at every attempt he made to do the right thing. Far away in Alvadas, they were better off without him. Here…wherever here was, he wasn’t hurting anyone.
But what did it matter?
Taking a bite of the steaming meat, Wrenmae gnashed it in his teeth, stealing the vitality and strength from the ligaments. He could live alone and away from everyone if he wanted, deny them the plague, but why? To him, it was the equivalent of denying his own life, forcing his days to remains cold and alone. No. Vayt had marked him, he had survived, he was strong. Petch the world for their fears and weakness, he would not lose himself simply because no one else could stand to live with a little plague.
Maybe he would kill Vayt one day, find a god slaying knife and stick it in his smug face…or maybe he wouldn’t. But to find the perfect story, a story that would even call the attention of the gods…now that was a quest worth having. Some part of him was shattered tonight, some piece of optimism that all would be well, that people would somehow help him carry on…help him survive…help him live.
That was dead, or close to being so.
Knife at his side, Wrenmae set upon the rabbit bones.
To the first bit, the leg bones, he carved the shaky circle with his dagger, again and again pausing to make sure the effect was perfect, before carving the word ‘Speed’ along the bones themselves. With hair from the rabbit’s body he gently wrapped and burned the edges till he’d made a string, gently pressing holes through the leg bones and looping them around the necklace. Malediciton was difficult work, but the rewards could be favorable. The finished product was a grim and grisly trophy, rabbit bones on a necklace of its own fur. Slipping the item into his pack, the sea of Djed inside him at last a simmering silence, Wrenmae lay back against the cot and allowed his eyes to close briefly. His wounds still throbbed, but he was alive.
He would continue to live.
Not even the sea and the forest could stop him.
Finally starting to his feet, he moved to deal with the wolf, perhaps there would be useful power in its bones he could make use of in his journey ahead. Struggling to his feet he pushed open the door, holding the knife in his hand and ready to deal with his kill...the one that had nearly cost him his life.
This PC has the Blight gnosis. As such, you as a player need to be aware of what that consists of. Wrenmae has an invisible aura that amplifies sickness and disease. Wounds may become infected, small sneezes may become coughing, and a slight fever may become more serious. A nuit's body will also break down faster in the presence of the Blight. These effects may not be immediate, but within the few days following your encounter, the symptoms will manifest. Some sooner than others. I cannot control your character, so creativity will be left up to you. Best wishes and stay healthy!
Special shoutout to
Fallon for my new CS