.
31st Day of Summer, 514 AV
It had started with a drink, something strong and fiery and all together foul to numb the aches that plagued his battered bones. It was something he had needed for weeks now, yet had denied himself with what must have been the epitome of self restraint. For days on end Elias had been crammed into the hovel he called home at the boarding house, and for all those countless bells his mind was left static and directionless, forced to toil away on useless trivialities and philosophical conundrums alike while his body rotted beneath the bed sheets. The doctors at the Healing Hand called it ‘rest’ and had demanded it with a sternness that startled. Elias found he had little will or choice against the matter.
The events that had seen him bed ridden with injuries and agony galore had also seen him forced into paranoia and hiding. While he and the morpher Daegron had survived that dreadful day and had amiably went their separate ways when all was said and done, in the end neither could deny the very worrying truth that they had barely escaped with their lives, and worse yet, they had done so without any answers to satiate the burning questions of ‘who and why?’ It had been annoying to say the least, neither knowing who had tried to kill you in such a grizzly and monstrous manner, nor what conceivable reason could drive this faceless enemy to go through all the trouble of murdering Elias in the first place.
Such useless speculations had forced Elias into action after so long alone with nothing but his own thoughts to bother him. He could sit idle no more, and roused by his own fiery spirit and aimless outrage, he burst from his lair in search of something to stave off the steadily encroaching madness that haunted him. What he found instead was a bar; dark, seedy and neatly tucked away somewhere discreet within the shadows of the Plaza of Dark Delights. It wasn't long before he was staring at his own murky reflection within the vile depths of whatever pungent concoction the establishment claimed was ale. It was cheap, noxious and exactly what he needed.
He found the drink helped with the lies he had been telling himself lately. He could feign ignorance and confusion all he liked, but in his mind Elias knew he already had an answer to his two questions, and no amount of contemplating in solemn silence while he brooded in the dark was going to console the fact that he already knew who, and he already bloody knew why.
Facing the truth would just have to wait for a while longer however, there was another mug of ale calling his name, and while Elias was not the sort to partake in such delights often -if at all- tonight was a special occasion.
He sat at his dilapidated table alone, attention fixed solely on his own fuzzy and blurred musings. He was growing impatient waiting for the full force of the drink to finally take him away from reality and throw him squarely into that drunken, blissful stupor he so often had seen others enjoying after stumbling out of bars and taverns late at night. All the young mage felt however, was a bit dizzy, a little sick, and even more sullen than when he had wandered in. With a dour sigh, Elias pushed his filthy cup aside and finally managed to raise his eyes from where they had fallen after sitting down. The tavern, if the dingy place could even be called that, was a dank and decrepit thing to behold. Old, disused and disquieting in its elderly architecture. It was made all the worse by the dancing shadows that flickered over the walls and faces of the even more ominous patrons that filled the place. Elias imagined it was a throwback to ages past, a literal memorial of the early days when Ravok was but a few slapped together boats and poor souls looking for salvation in all the wrong places. The way the innards of the building laid out before him, even with his buzzed point of view, told a derelict tale of an old building converted from an even older ship’s hold. The outside had been deceptively welcoming, and Elias was easily lured in with by the swaying lantern lights and promise of relief that the exterior exuded. The city of Rhysol was tricky like that though; always offering the opened hand and a smile full of promises, while at the same time, behind its back the other hand would tighten around the dagger’s hilt.
Well the Caldera had promptly learned his lesson when the stink of the place had hit him like a brick wall after he first opened the sturdy tavern doors. When the tears finally cleared from his eyes, he was then greeted by the even more troubling glares of the patrons within. Hard, dangerous men and women barely visible in the shoddy candle light as they eyed him from the shadows. Thankfully he had ignored them all and boldly made his way to the bar, but hiding the feint limp that harried his step none the less. That had proven the right choice, as it seemed most quickly grew bored with his curious presence among them, or perhaps they simply sensed a kindred spirit in the fallen apprentice and found that far too mundane and familiar for their liking. He himself hadn't cared much initially either, far too distracted with accosting the imposing mountain of muscle that was the bartender with his orders and demands. As he surveyed the room again now however, Elias realized he was more than a little thankful no one paid any attention to his hunched form drinking alone.
A small blessing given that the tavern wasn't at all reflective of its grim ambiance. The place was ruckus with laughter and rowdy conversations between rum drunk criminals and cutthroats alike, a harsh contrast to the young, brooding Ravokian himself. There was something however, among all the rotten teeth and shanking scars that caught the mage’s attention. A man in particular, his body well defined and his large arms bare for the world to see the tattoo adorning his shoulders. A tattoo Elias had seen on only one other man before.
Caiden… Came the name unbidden once more to the forefront of his thoughts. It had happened before when Elias had first spotted the man earlier that night, his marking too painfully familiar to ignore. With little else to do, he had followed the stranger into the shyke hole he now found himself in. It hadn't taken long to realize why he knew that mark, or why it called to him with such a haunting sense of nostalgia. The muscled stranger was a mercenary, a warrior for hire, but not just any sell sword, he was a Rum Hound. The same company that his uncle had once been a part of before- Elias swallowed hard, the words not even said yet still caught in his throat. He pushed the thought aside with a violent shove of resolve.
Hastily, he set about picking through his array of empty mugs looking for the one most full among them. He found something relatively not drained and grabbed it, climbing from his seat of stupor in the corner and –shakily at first- stumbled his way over to the stranger with the dog’s head tattoo. The Caldera suddenly remembered he had a plan.
The night may have started with one drink drink, but before it was done, it would end drowned in many more, Elias was counting on it..
.
The events that had seen him bed ridden with injuries and agony galore had also seen him forced into paranoia and hiding. While he and the morpher Daegron had survived that dreadful day and had amiably went their separate ways when all was said and done, in the end neither could deny the very worrying truth that they had barely escaped with their lives, and worse yet, they had done so without any answers to satiate the burning questions of ‘who and why?’ It had been annoying to say the least, neither knowing who had tried to kill you in such a grizzly and monstrous manner, nor what conceivable reason could drive this faceless enemy to go through all the trouble of murdering Elias in the first place.
Such useless speculations had forced Elias into action after so long alone with nothing but his own thoughts to bother him. He could sit idle no more, and roused by his own fiery spirit and aimless outrage, he burst from his lair in search of something to stave off the steadily encroaching madness that haunted him. What he found instead was a bar; dark, seedy and neatly tucked away somewhere discreet within the shadows of the Plaza of Dark Delights. It wasn't long before he was staring at his own murky reflection within the vile depths of whatever pungent concoction the establishment claimed was ale. It was cheap, noxious and exactly what he needed.
He found the drink helped with the lies he had been telling himself lately. He could feign ignorance and confusion all he liked, but in his mind Elias knew he already had an answer to his two questions, and no amount of contemplating in solemn silence while he brooded in the dark was going to console the fact that he already knew who, and he already bloody knew why.
Facing the truth would just have to wait for a while longer however, there was another mug of ale calling his name, and while Elias was not the sort to partake in such delights often -if at all- tonight was a special occasion.
He sat at his dilapidated table alone, attention fixed solely on his own fuzzy and blurred musings. He was growing impatient waiting for the full force of the drink to finally take him away from reality and throw him squarely into that drunken, blissful stupor he so often had seen others enjoying after stumbling out of bars and taverns late at night. All the young mage felt however, was a bit dizzy, a little sick, and even more sullen than when he had wandered in. With a dour sigh, Elias pushed his filthy cup aside and finally managed to raise his eyes from where they had fallen after sitting down. The tavern, if the dingy place could even be called that, was a dank and decrepit thing to behold. Old, disused and disquieting in its elderly architecture. It was made all the worse by the dancing shadows that flickered over the walls and faces of the even more ominous patrons that filled the place. Elias imagined it was a throwback to ages past, a literal memorial of the early days when Ravok was but a few slapped together boats and poor souls looking for salvation in all the wrong places. The way the innards of the building laid out before him, even with his buzzed point of view, told a derelict tale of an old building converted from an even older ship’s hold. The outside had been deceptively welcoming, and Elias was easily lured in with by the swaying lantern lights and promise of relief that the exterior exuded. The city of Rhysol was tricky like that though; always offering the opened hand and a smile full of promises, while at the same time, behind its back the other hand would tighten around the dagger’s hilt.
Well the Caldera had promptly learned his lesson when the stink of the place had hit him like a brick wall after he first opened the sturdy tavern doors. When the tears finally cleared from his eyes, he was then greeted by the even more troubling glares of the patrons within. Hard, dangerous men and women barely visible in the shoddy candle light as they eyed him from the shadows. Thankfully he had ignored them all and boldly made his way to the bar, but hiding the feint limp that harried his step none the less. That had proven the right choice, as it seemed most quickly grew bored with his curious presence among them, or perhaps they simply sensed a kindred spirit in the fallen apprentice and found that far too mundane and familiar for their liking. He himself hadn't cared much initially either, far too distracted with accosting the imposing mountain of muscle that was the bartender with his orders and demands. As he surveyed the room again now however, Elias realized he was more than a little thankful no one paid any attention to his hunched form drinking alone.
A small blessing given that the tavern wasn't at all reflective of its grim ambiance. The place was ruckus with laughter and rowdy conversations between rum drunk criminals and cutthroats alike, a harsh contrast to the young, brooding Ravokian himself. There was something however, among all the rotten teeth and shanking scars that caught the mage’s attention. A man in particular, his body well defined and his large arms bare for the world to see the tattoo adorning his shoulders. A tattoo Elias had seen on only one other man before.
Caiden… Came the name unbidden once more to the forefront of his thoughts. It had happened before when Elias had first spotted the man earlier that night, his marking too painfully familiar to ignore. With little else to do, he had followed the stranger into the shyke hole he now found himself in. It hadn't taken long to realize why he knew that mark, or why it called to him with such a haunting sense of nostalgia. The muscled stranger was a mercenary, a warrior for hire, but not just any sell sword, he was a Rum Hound. The same company that his uncle had once been a part of before- Elias swallowed hard, the words not even said yet still caught in his throat. He pushed the thought aside with a violent shove of resolve.
Hastily, he set about picking through his array of empty mugs looking for the one most full among them. He found something relatively not drained and grabbed it, climbing from his seat of stupor in the corner and –shakily at first- stumbled his way over to the stranger with the dog’s head tattoo. The Caldera suddenly remembered he had a plan.
The night may have started with one drink drink, but before it was done, it would end drowned in many more, Elias was counting on it..
.