88th Day of Spring, 515 AV
Steel clashed against steel and the reverberations of fury behind each blade rippled silently across the black, murky waters of the long neglected fountain standing sentinel nearby.
Icy blue eyes settled calmly on a panicked pair of hazel, both hues illuminated fiercely by the firelight of the torches that surrounded the two men like a burning arena. Just beyond their flickering boundaries, hidden and obscured in the haze of night, spectated a cabal of shadowy figures cloaked in ambiguity and darkness. Though their features were lost to the black of night, it was clear each and every one of them was looking in from the outside, transfixed by the blood being spilled for what they no doubt assumed was their entertainment alone.
Elias continued to ignore them. What he could see were arms quaking, veins bulging, sweat beading, it painted a picture of dire strain and desperation. His foe was struggling to keep his blade locked in place against the mage’s that now pressed down upon him. The Caldera knew that wasn’t fatigue he smelled in the air, it was fear… and he reveled in it.
The telltale rippling of muscles beneath flesh and the gritting of teeth warned him of another attack soon to come, and as predicted, the guardsman growled and shifted his weight. Elias answered him with disinterested silence as the two broke contact.
They both knew this was already over.
The man lunged forward again, swinging his blade wildly about him with a roar. Such a change of pace from the warrior he had been earlier, calm and collected and surrounded by his comrades. Funny how imminent defeat made strong men weak. Then again, the Ravokian knew all about that, didn’t he... Elias quelled the dark thought as he stepped to the side with a grace that belied his impatience, blade swung lazily skyward to catch the wrist of his careening foe. Edge met flesh and a blood curdling scream echoed out across the courtyard in answer, sword and sword hand both sent flying through the air before landing with an unceremonious ‘plop’ in the stagnate fountain waters.
The faceless, nameless goon fell to the ground, gripping at his bloody stump as he howled in equal parts horror and disbelief. A hard boot to the side of his head a tick later ended his nightmare however, and left him unconscious on the floor, bereft of anymore pain and agony, at least for moment. Elias felt no pity for the man, nor the ring of his battered friends lying next to him. He had warned them all, giving the fools that courtesy he knew full well they would have thrown back in his face with a jeer, but he had warned them none the less. Four total they had been, all so confident and full of bluster with their posh uniforms of gold and blue, they were plainly more accustomed to carrying trays filled with expensive wines than they were carrying swords. The fight had ended almost as soon as it had begun, and now many of them squirmed and moaned in puddles of their own blood at his feet, broken and bested… but alive.
They were just slaves after all, undeserving of something so final as death despite Elias’s sneering. They suffered for their owner’s arrogance because they had to, like any good slave would, for they had no choice in the matter. No, despite their arrogance, they avoided Dira’s grasp that night because they hadn’t been his target, just an annoyance and a stepping stone along the way to his true prize.
“Ah, mister Caldera.”
The sound of imperious clapping reached him, and Elias looked up from the pile of bodies to find the one responsible. The one they called master.
“Welcome home.”
Icy blue eyes settled calmly on a panicked pair of hazel, both hues illuminated fiercely by the firelight of the torches that surrounded the two men like a burning arena. Just beyond their flickering boundaries, hidden and obscured in the haze of night, spectated a cabal of shadowy figures cloaked in ambiguity and darkness. Though their features were lost to the black of night, it was clear each and every one of them was looking in from the outside, transfixed by the blood being spilled for what they no doubt assumed was their entertainment alone.
Elias continued to ignore them. What he could see were arms quaking, veins bulging, sweat beading, it painted a picture of dire strain and desperation. His foe was struggling to keep his blade locked in place against the mage’s that now pressed down upon him. The Caldera knew that wasn’t fatigue he smelled in the air, it was fear… and he reveled in it.
The telltale rippling of muscles beneath flesh and the gritting of teeth warned him of another attack soon to come, and as predicted, the guardsman growled and shifted his weight. Elias answered him with disinterested silence as the two broke contact.
They both knew this was already over.
The man lunged forward again, swinging his blade wildly about him with a roar. Such a change of pace from the warrior he had been earlier, calm and collected and surrounded by his comrades. Funny how imminent defeat made strong men weak. Then again, the Ravokian knew all about that, didn’t he... Elias quelled the dark thought as he stepped to the side with a grace that belied his impatience, blade swung lazily skyward to catch the wrist of his careening foe. Edge met flesh and a blood curdling scream echoed out across the courtyard in answer, sword and sword hand both sent flying through the air before landing with an unceremonious ‘plop’ in the stagnate fountain waters.
The faceless, nameless goon fell to the ground, gripping at his bloody stump as he howled in equal parts horror and disbelief. A hard boot to the side of his head a tick later ended his nightmare however, and left him unconscious on the floor, bereft of anymore pain and agony, at least for moment. Elias felt no pity for the man, nor the ring of his battered friends lying next to him. He had warned them all, giving the fools that courtesy he knew full well they would have thrown back in his face with a jeer, but he had warned them none the less. Four total they had been, all so confident and full of bluster with their posh uniforms of gold and blue, they were plainly more accustomed to carrying trays filled with expensive wines than they were carrying swords. The fight had ended almost as soon as it had begun, and now many of them squirmed and moaned in puddles of their own blood at his feet, broken and bested… but alive.
They were just slaves after all, undeserving of something so final as death despite Elias’s sneering. They suffered for their owner’s arrogance because they had to, like any good slave would, for they had no choice in the matter. No, despite their arrogance, they avoided Dira’s grasp that night because they hadn’t been his target, just an annoyance and a stepping stone along the way to his true prize.
“Ah, mister Caldera.”
The sound of imperious clapping reached him, and Elias looked up from the pile of bodies to find the one responsible. The one they called master.
“Welcome home.”