The 15th Day of Winter
The 11th Bell
The 11th Bell
The crack of thunder overhead heralded the arrival of two men upon the barren bridge that night. They stared at one another from either end of the cursed crossing, their features revealed only when the lightning, like a painter’s stroke across a blackened canvas, illuminated the night.
On one end stood the knight, his steal gleaming dimly in the heavy rain and his body tense against its relentless assault. Blond hair, matted and flattened, was pushed aside to reveal the weary blue eyes glaring out from beneath. He stared at his counterpart across the way, hand at his hilt and nerves long since steeled against threat this city had to offer. On the other side, waited the stranger, unmoving, unflinching even. Garbed in all black save for the sword at his back and the unnerving white mask hiding his face beneath a drenched hood, he simply stood there, blocking the way with all but his weapon drawn. When the lightning came again, the knight finally took notice of the length of rope coiled around his shoulder; there was a hangman's noose knotted onto the end.
The storm’s intensity picked up once more, its frightful noise overwhelming to the point that if either had wanted to speak, their words would have been hopelessly lost in the raging winds that now whipped about them wildly. The Sylirian shifted under his sodden attire uncomfortably, fingers gripping tighter around the pommel of his great blade as he readied himself for what he knew was about to happen next.
Lightning snapped, a dancing, jagged serpent lacing a path across the sky and signaling a sudden movement from the masked man. The knight ripped free his massive blade from its sheet as he began to take heed of what was happening around his silent foe. Impossibly, the rain had stopped falling and the wind had ceased its dogged offense, but only around the stranger. Instead, it seemed they now refused to touch him, their natural rage ebbed and swayed by something unexplainable. Caught it some kind bubble around him, the forces of the storm swirled and coalesced into something altogether unnatural around the man in black.
Magic. The thought raced to forefront of the knight’s mind as he looked on in disgust and growing anxiety. He charged without a second thought, blade at the ready as his masked assailant whipped the air and wind around him into a frenzy of flailing, watery tendrils and howling gusts. The mage too flung himself headlong into the fight, freeing his steel and racing forward with surprising speed.
The two rushed at each other with silent vigor, their clash to be settled in blood at the center of the bridge neither man could cross until the other was dead.
Steel met steel as the storm worsened with each passing moment. The clang and clatter of two swordsmen dulled by the incessant pounding of the rain and the deafening thunder that had cleared the streets and sent every living thing scurrying for shelter. No one could hear them as they fought, nor could anyone bare witness to who would be standing as the victor by end, but there bout wasn't to do with glory or bragging rights. Each warrior wanted the other dead -needed him dead- as the alternative would be their own life forfeited. They both had already come to terms with this in their own ways.
The fight had gone on for more ticks than either of them had time to count as the desperation of the battle left little room to focus on anything but. Guttural grunts and hissed curses went unheard as the fighters pressed into one another without relent. The mage was quick and clever, his blade arching at awkward angles and with dangerous precision. The knight however, was a tower of might and an unwavering bulwark that withered the flurry of attacks with startling ease. With a roar tethered behind clenched teeth, the knight swung his massive great sword, the veritable wall of steel cutting a swath through the curtain of rain that divided both men. The mage panicked, caught completely off guard by the power exerted and the agility demonstrated. His sword met the swing and was effortlessly torn from his grip, its sharpened edges glinting every so often as it tumbled down into the abyss below them.
With hands outstretched the masked man did beckon upon the storm to serve him once more and a torrent of water came rushing to his aid. Like his weapon before it however, it crashed against the unyielding metal monstrosity like waves upon a shore and was smashed aside, leaving him open and all too vulnerable. The mage barely managed to duck under the second heaving swing that followed, but the clenched fist that awaited him next seemed utterly unavoidable. The masked man reeled back, shards of his porcelain mask mixed with his blood as both sprayed from his face, the blow planting him unceremoniously on his backside with a wet thud.
With the mask broken the knight could now see his attacker's face for the first time, and what was revealed in that instant made his actions in the next clear as the morning this he knew storm, like every other storm before it, would soon relent to. He raised his sword and readied to lay the final blow. Elias lay prone on the ground before him, his bloodied smile and wild eyes glaring up at the swordsmen and the enraged heavens beyond him. With the promise of a swift and ugly death spurring him own, the Caldera reacted hastily, hands haphazardly cast out in front him as he ushered forth his res in one last desperate effort. He wasn't sure what to expect, but the skies answered his call with terrifying fervor. A bolt of lighting, swifter and deadlier than blade in this world, sliced through the air and crashed right into the summoning res waiting between his fingers... or at least it would have, had the knight not been standing in its path.
The blonde man cried out in unexpected agony as his back was struck by a force unlike any other. His blue eyes, wide with shock, looked down at Elias's with confusion written on every feature of his twisted face. Then his body spasmed out of control as a second strike ripped into him from behind. The bastard sword fell him his grip, fingers helpless to obey under the duress that every muscle beneath his skin was abruptly put under.
Realizing how very close he was to suffering the same fate, Elias began to hastily scramble away, his creation of res forgotten in his haste but still calling out to the storm above where he had left it. His entire focus was on escape at that point as more and more shafts of burning light struck the gilded knight and the stone walkway all around him. Many dissipated into the aperture's gaping maw, but others cracked the ground and split brick to bits with their unchecked ferocity. The sight of it was awe inspiring to say the least, but just as quickly as it had begun, it was over. In it's wake was left the smoldering remains of the once great knight, his shallow gasps and blistered, smoldering skin belying the threat he once posed.
Elias sauntered towards his beaten enemy, a smile returning to his freshly busted lip as he quietly took in his victory. Clearing his mouth of blood, the reimancer knelt down before the blonde man, his one remaining good blue eye still open and defiant in the glare it pinned on Elias. The mage ignored it. There was only one question had for the dead man; "Now, where are your friends?"
Something small and hard bounced off his cheek in response, and when Elias looked down to where it had fallen he realized it had been half a tooth, spat at him by a man whose body had been so mercilessly wracked by the lightning he had crushed his own dentures in the pain. Elias grimaced at the thing for a moment before turning his attention back to the crumpled swordsmen. "Funny. That's what they always say."
He chuckled and rose, deft hands going to work unraveling the hangman's rope from around his shoulder.
They would find the wretched remains of the knight's body swinging from bridge in the morning, the scars of the fight that had claimed his life evident all across the cursed archway. That was, unless the Aperture had other plans for him. Irregardless, Elias was done here. He had managed to retrieve a leather bound journal on the dead man's person before the rope had snapped taut, though its secrets still remained as much until he could find the time to explore them. For now though, he could move on to what he had been really looking forward to since his arrival in this city.
A little time alone with the family.
A bell later he was battering down the door to some some gray-grim shack tucked away in the heart of the Eastern Quarter. Neither his city map -now thoroughly soaked- nor his memory of his last visit to Nyka had helped much in its locating, but by the grace of some god above Elias had managed to find it in all this mess. His fists crashed against the oaken door once again, its meek rattle competing poorly with the tumult of the storm bellowing around him. Wincing against the now almost painful shards of rain, he managed a glance upward at the sign above the smithy as it danced madly in the wind. The... The Ocean's Forge. He grinned. How very Zeltivan of you.
When the door finally swung open, Alija would find herself met with the expectant, smiling face of a stranger looking back at her, lip swollen and eye already turning blue and black from some earlier trauma. At his stomach the man clutched at something, forcing his figure to bend at the waste. It wouldn't be until she managed to get some light on it would the blacksmith recognize all the blood his gloved hand was trying to staunch.
"Hello cousin. His smile widened.
"Let me in would yah, its chaos out here."
On one end stood the knight, his steal gleaming dimly in the heavy rain and his body tense against its relentless assault. Blond hair, matted and flattened, was pushed aside to reveal the weary blue eyes glaring out from beneath. He stared at his counterpart across the way, hand at his hilt and nerves long since steeled against threat this city had to offer. On the other side, waited the stranger, unmoving, unflinching even. Garbed in all black save for the sword at his back and the unnerving white mask hiding his face beneath a drenched hood, he simply stood there, blocking the way with all but his weapon drawn. When the lightning came again, the knight finally took notice of the length of rope coiled around his shoulder; there was a hangman's noose knotted onto the end.
The storm’s intensity picked up once more, its frightful noise overwhelming to the point that if either had wanted to speak, their words would have been hopelessly lost in the raging winds that now whipped about them wildly. The Sylirian shifted under his sodden attire uncomfortably, fingers gripping tighter around the pommel of his great blade as he readied himself for what he knew was about to happen next.
Lightning snapped, a dancing, jagged serpent lacing a path across the sky and signaling a sudden movement from the masked man. The knight ripped free his massive blade from its sheet as he began to take heed of what was happening around his silent foe. Impossibly, the rain had stopped falling and the wind had ceased its dogged offense, but only around the stranger. Instead, it seemed they now refused to touch him, their natural rage ebbed and swayed by something unexplainable. Caught it some kind bubble around him, the forces of the storm swirled and coalesced into something altogether unnatural around the man in black.
Magic. The thought raced to forefront of the knight’s mind as he looked on in disgust and growing anxiety. He charged without a second thought, blade at the ready as his masked assailant whipped the air and wind around him into a frenzy of flailing, watery tendrils and howling gusts. The mage too flung himself headlong into the fight, freeing his steel and racing forward with surprising speed.
The two rushed at each other with silent vigor, their clash to be settled in blood at the center of the bridge neither man could cross until the other was dead.
--------------------------------------
Steel met steel as the storm worsened with each passing moment. The clang and clatter of two swordsmen dulled by the incessant pounding of the rain and the deafening thunder that had cleared the streets and sent every living thing scurrying for shelter. No one could hear them as they fought, nor could anyone bare witness to who would be standing as the victor by end, but there bout wasn't to do with glory or bragging rights. Each warrior wanted the other dead -needed him dead- as the alternative would be their own life forfeited. They both had already come to terms with this in their own ways.
The fight had gone on for more ticks than either of them had time to count as the desperation of the battle left little room to focus on anything but. Guttural grunts and hissed curses went unheard as the fighters pressed into one another without relent. The mage was quick and clever, his blade arching at awkward angles and with dangerous precision. The knight however, was a tower of might and an unwavering bulwark that withered the flurry of attacks with startling ease. With a roar tethered behind clenched teeth, the knight swung his massive great sword, the veritable wall of steel cutting a swath through the curtain of rain that divided both men. The mage panicked, caught completely off guard by the power exerted and the agility demonstrated. His sword met the swing and was effortlessly torn from his grip, its sharpened edges glinting every so often as it tumbled down into the abyss below them.
With hands outstretched the masked man did beckon upon the storm to serve him once more and a torrent of water came rushing to his aid. Like his weapon before it however, it crashed against the unyielding metal monstrosity like waves upon a shore and was smashed aside, leaving him open and all too vulnerable. The mage barely managed to duck under the second heaving swing that followed, but the clenched fist that awaited him next seemed utterly unavoidable. The masked man reeled back, shards of his porcelain mask mixed with his blood as both sprayed from his face, the blow planting him unceremoniously on his backside with a wet thud.
With the mask broken the knight could now see his attacker's face for the first time, and what was revealed in that instant made his actions in the next clear as the morning this he knew storm, like every other storm before it, would soon relent to. He raised his sword and readied to lay the final blow. Elias lay prone on the ground before him, his bloodied smile and wild eyes glaring up at the swordsmen and the enraged heavens beyond him. With the promise of a swift and ugly death spurring him own, the Caldera reacted hastily, hands haphazardly cast out in front him as he ushered forth his res in one last desperate effort. He wasn't sure what to expect, but the skies answered his call with terrifying fervor. A bolt of lighting, swifter and deadlier than blade in this world, sliced through the air and crashed right into the summoning res waiting between his fingers... or at least it would have, had the knight not been standing in its path.
The blonde man cried out in unexpected agony as his back was struck by a force unlike any other. His blue eyes, wide with shock, looked down at Elias's with confusion written on every feature of his twisted face. Then his body spasmed out of control as a second strike ripped into him from behind. The bastard sword fell him his grip, fingers helpless to obey under the duress that every muscle beneath his skin was abruptly put under.
Realizing how very close he was to suffering the same fate, Elias began to hastily scramble away, his creation of res forgotten in his haste but still calling out to the storm above where he had left it. His entire focus was on escape at that point as more and more shafts of burning light struck the gilded knight and the stone walkway all around him. Many dissipated into the aperture's gaping maw, but others cracked the ground and split brick to bits with their unchecked ferocity. The sight of it was awe inspiring to say the least, but just as quickly as it had begun, it was over. In it's wake was left the smoldering remains of the once great knight, his shallow gasps and blistered, smoldering skin belying the threat he once posed.
Elias sauntered towards his beaten enemy, a smile returning to his freshly busted lip as he quietly took in his victory. Clearing his mouth of blood, the reimancer knelt down before the blonde man, his one remaining good blue eye still open and defiant in the glare it pinned on Elias. The mage ignored it. There was only one question had for the dead man; "Now, where are your friends?"
Something small and hard bounced off his cheek in response, and when Elias looked down to where it had fallen he realized it had been half a tooth, spat at him by a man whose body had been so mercilessly wracked by the lightning he had crushed his own dentures in the pain. Elias grimaced at the thing for a moment before turning his attention back to the crumpled swordsmen. "Funny. That's what they always say."
He chuckled and rose, deft hands going to work unraveling the hangman's rope from around his shoulder.
--------------------------------------
They would find the wretched remains of the knight's body swinging from bridge in the morning, the scars of the fight that had claimed his life evident all across the cursed archway. That was, unless the Aperture had other plans for him. Irregardless, Elias was done here. He had managed to retrieve a leather bound journal on the dead man's person before the rope had snapped taut, though its secrets still remained as much until he could find the time to explore them. For now though, he could move on to what he had been really looking forward to since his arrival in this city.
A little time alone with the family.
A bell later he was battering down the door to some some gray-grim shack tucked away in the heart of the Eastern Quarter. Neither his city map -now thoroughly soaked- nor his memory of his last visit to Nyka had helped much in its locating, but by the grace of some god above Elias had managed to find it in all this mess. His fists crashed against the oaken door once again, its meek rattle competing poorly with the tumult of the storm bellowing around him. Wincing against the now almost painful shards of rain, he managed a glance upward at the sign above the smithy as it danced madly in the wind. The... The Ocean's Forge. He grinned. How very Zeltivan of you.
When the door finally swung open, Alija would find herself met with the expectant, smiling face of a stranger looking back at her, lip swollen and eye already turning blue and black from some earlier trauma. At his stomach the man clutched at something, forcing his figure to bend at the waste. It wouldn't be until she managed to get some light on it would the blacksmith recognize all the blood his gloved hand was trying to staunch.
"Hello cousin. His smile widened.
"Let me in would yah, its chaos out here."
ReceiptLength of Rope -1 GM
City Map -2 GM