Winter 36, 512 AV
Few men held themselves to the standard of a villain. Deep down, each and every moral challenged monster felt themselves above reproach, somehow beyond the castigation society would lay upon them. If, deep down, there was no evil save the concept born of divinity and philosophy, then did not each and every soul operate within some level of grey?
On the streets again, the click of cobblestone beneath hard boot heel beat a staccato rhythm in the sea tarnished air. The night before had been spent between buildings and within alleys, in the presence of strangers, and speaking sidelong into darkness. For several hours, Wrenmae had gathered information on his target. Trente, master of the Martial Association, Visionary and troublemaker in Zeltiva. His amassing of skilled combatants had caused a stir in the hierarchy when he'd been here before. Now Trente had changed little, back from Sahova with a mind to continue where he'd left off.
But he was yet unfocused, perhaps still tragically short-sighted in his ambitions. The man needed something of a catalyst, a motivation. So Wrenmae had worked his hypnotism with honeyed words and smiles, learned the route the man was like to take home and set himself along it.
In shadows he waited without word, giving pause only to consider the possibility his prey would not arrive, as the day grew longer into dusk and then the eve. Cold air made poor companions and with Zan away, Wrenmae was entertained only by the click-clack of gears turning in his mind. Yesterday he'd taken a life, hung it on a tree, left a message carved in its chest. No doubt Trente would have heard that little story by now, the poor Waveguard murdered and made to be an example. But the boy was proud, too proud to let the threat of a madman in the streets curtail his training and too confident to ask for armed accompaniement.
That pride would pit against the raw skill Wrenmae had chosen to reveal only snatches of the last they fought. With luck, his changed appearance and renewed viciousness would convince the man his fabricated identity.
But first he'd have to survive.
Steps.
They heralded his arrival, sharp beats against the stone.
Wrenmae held his breath, waited, and then swept out of the alley with both long daggers drawn, at his sides. The wide brimmed had over his face, a morphed persona of pale flesh and harsh features, cast him like a ghost over darkness, swaddled in the steel-cloth cloak Rayage had made for him.
"Good evening, Master Trente," The fiend regaled the darkness approaching him, "Such a cold evening for a nocturnal stroll, don't you think?"
Few men held themselves to the standard of a villain. Deep down, each and every moral challenged monster felt themselves above reproach, somehow beyond the castigation society would lay upon them. If, deep down, there was no evil save the concept born of divinity and philosophy, then did not each and every soul operate within some level of grey?
On the streets again, the click of cobblestone beneath hard boot heel beat a staccato rhythm in the sea tarnished air. The night before had been spent between buildings and within alleys, in the presence of strangers, and speaking sidelong into darkness. For several hours, Wrenmae had gathered information on his target. Trente, master of the Martial Association, Visionary and troublemaker in Zeltiva. His amassing of skilled combatants had caused a stir in the hierarchy when he'd been here before. Now Trente had changed little, back from Sahova with a mind to continue where he'd left off.
But he was yet unfocused, perhaps still tragically short-sighted in his ambitions. The man needed something of a catalyst, a motivation. So Wrenmae had worked his hypnotism with honeyed words and smiles, learned the route the man was like to take home and set himself along it.
In shadows he waited without word, giving pause only to consider the possibility his prey would not arrive, as the day grew longer into dusk and then the eve. Cold air made poor companions and with Zan away, Wrenmae was entertained only by the click-clack of gears turning in his mind. Yesterday he'd taken a life, hung it on a tree, left a message carved in its chest. No doubt Trente would have heard that little story by now, the poor Waveguard murdered and made to be an example. But the boy was proud, too proud to let the threat of a madman in the streets curtail his training and too confident to ask for armed accompaniement.
That pride would pit against the raw skill Wrenmae had chosen to reveal only snatches of the last they fought. With luck, his changed appearance and renewed viciousness would convince the man his fabricated identity.
But first he'd have to survive.
Steps.
They heralded his arrival, sharp beats against the stone.
Wrenmae held his breath, waited, and then swept out of the alley with both long daggers drawn, at his sides. The wide brimmed had over his face, a morphed persona of pale flesh and harsh features, cast him like a ghost over darkness, swaddled in the steel-cloth cloak Rayage had made for him.
"Good evening, Master Trente," The fiend regaled the darkness approaching him, "Such a cold evening for a nocturnal stroll, don't you think?"