88th Day of Fall, 518 AV
When they came, they came in darkness.
As the twelfth bell of midnight toiled, more than a dozen skiffs and rowboats crossed the cloudy waters of Lake Ravok under the cover of twilight’s fall. Lost in the stirring shadows and silent as the night they traversed, the small, ragtag armada sailed together loosely and without a single torch among them to guide the way. ‘No fires.’ Had been the command given as they set off, and so no fires they had lit. They moved only by the grace of Leth and his radiance, traversing the open, gentle waves of the lake, their destination but a meandering mountain of murky blackness in the distance.
They were close now though.
Closer than they had ever been before.
“All speed.” Came a low and rumbling hiss from the lead vessel. A chorus of grunts and shuffling bodies responded immediately, as the oars of every boat behind it began to drive harder and harder. This was not a date they could afford to be late to, but nor would Elias allow them to be stupid in their haste. If this was to be the hour of their triumph and not another tragedy like so many that had befallen him before, then all had to go according to plan, for even one mishap could spell doom upon the entire contrivance and all would be for naught. That thought alone had the swordsman, now perched at the bow of the cramped dinghy, craning his neck to study the two men sitting behind him.
“Are you certain Vernon Lark received my missive?” Caldera all but demanded for the third time that hour. His blue eyes reflected a harsh intensity about them as he leveled his gaze upon the subject of his harassment once more. Guldo Barsavi stirred, broad shoulders tensed and dark brow furrowing in exasperation. “Like I said,” The cutthroat grumbled, “I delivered the letter to the doorman and even gave him enough coin to consider not tossing it in the bin the moment I turned around. Just like all the other times. Just as you asked.” His voice was but a tense whisper half lost in the night breeze. Despite his stern posture and bristling indignation, it was clear he was nervous, or at least as uneasy as a man like him could allow himself to appear. It wasn’t as if the work they were up to tonight would prove any less bloody and dangerous than the thousands of other shady undertakings he’d been a part of during his long and illustrious career as one of Ravok's less than reputable entrepreneurs, but this was something altogether different, and they all knew it. They all felt it. The trappings and veneers of Ravokian subtly were abandoned and the nervous tapping of a stray finger on the hilt of his dagger was the giveaway that told Elias Guldo was far from happy about it.
The soldier scoffed under his breath, frustration and annoyance hackling at his own nerves. If Vernon Lark would not respond, then this could only end one way. Then so be it. he thought with no small amount of cold indifference to what exactly that meant. There is no stopping now.
As he mused, Elias’s scrutiny swept across the other men and the other boats that skimmed across the lake alongside them. He saw hard eyes and undaunted expressions glancing back at him from across the dark waters. Most were Guldo’s boys. Hardy toughs and thieves the lot of them. The kind that called Ravok’s back alleys and secret harbors both their homes and their place of business. The glint of sharpened steel flashed here and there under the moonlight, hinting at the lethal kind of work these men were accustomed to. Yet among their numbers sailed in silence those to which bloodletting was not just their trade, but their scared charge.
The men and women of the Ebonstryfe waited amidst their ranks, shrouds of shadowy, inky black armor interspersed among the rough and tumble assortment of leathers and chainmail that made up the criminal scum they now called allies. They were easy enough to pick out among the rabble. Like coiled snakes in the tall grass, he felt the tightening auras of each and every one of them as he looked out upon the lake. They weren’t eager, and they weren’t excited, but they were ready, and more importantly, they were loyal. Many were merely apprentices however, thus calling them ‘men and women’ was likely a privilege they had only ever received from their pale commander and no other. They were still children in every regard as much as he tried to consider them otherwise for the sake of morale. Trained but untested, they were accustomed to heeding the beck and call of their instructors like cattle. The louder one could yell from across the training grounds and practice halls, the more deference they showed. It was instinct, beaten into them over the course of years as the Stryfe endeavored to mold their soft bodies and childish minds into that of hardened killers and holy men.
Such concerns were of little matter though. They followed him, and that was all that counted now -and so they would be counted. Their numbers added to the lot of fools and hapless servants the sorcerer had massed under his banner.
Nearly fifty souls among a dozen different boats they totaled.
Elias grimaced.
His ‘army.’
It wasn’t pretty and it wasn’t perfect, but it would have to be enough.
Guldo noticed his ‘master’s’ distraction and took the opportunity to give voice to an unanswered question he’d had bubbling in his chest ever since they’d left the docks. “Perhaps now would be a good time to tell me something.” The gangster began, scratching the scruff of his rough beard with an idle hand. “See, I know why I’m out here, and I know why you’re out here, but pray tell you could enlighten me as to why the hell you have me riding alongside this mangy motherpetcher currently residing on my right, hmm?”
As the mage once more made his reticent tally of their ranks, eventually the pale man’s attentions fell upon that of one who could not be considered either soldier nor gangster. One whose scars marked him as apart from the others despite the fact he sat among them.
Einar the wretch of Sunberth was not a fellow Elias would have ever considered to be one he’d be marching into the abyss with, yet there he was on the same boat as Elias, sharing an uncomfortably cramped seat next to Guldo, his distinctive polearm resting in his clutches and ready to be wielded on a moment’s notice.
Even among the other criminals the mangled man stood out. Though outlaws and bandits by any other name, Ravokians at least had a measure of grace and culture about them. They may have wielded knives and cudgels under their coats, but they were still fine coats none the less. It did men like them little good to stand out amidst the well to do crowds of their most serene city, and often being well to do in their own right -at least by the rest of the world’s standards- their garb reflected as much. They weren’t ‘Berther born thugs or animals. They had class. They had pride. They had Ravokian sensibilities. Einar however, had almost an animalistic nature about him that set him so far apart from the others it was like staring into a flame at night. He was a different breed of man, if he could even be considered as much anymore. A killer. A monster. A beast of no nation or creed. His was a weapon that slew for no purpose greater than that of coin and desperate self-preservation.
He was dangerous. Perhaps more so than any goon or soldier there -and tonight, Elias intended to use that against those who would be foolish enough to stand against him.
“He is with me.” Was all the stryfer responded with. Guldo frowned, lips working themselves into a snarl before turning to face the scarred sellsword, thought better of it, and let the matter drop.
Elias pulled something from his belt and tossed it unceremoniously to the mercenary. The ruffling and crumple of parchment would herald the scroll landing in the foreigner’s mitts. “Use it if you have to, but don’t speak the words written unless you mean them.” Elias instructed. What he had given Einar was a pair of glyphed scrolls, each containing a destructive reimancy spell sealed within. Another went to Guldo, who caught the thing like one would a hissing skunk tossed into their lap. He balked and grimaced at the paper, knowing full well what was inside and what could be outside, burning him to a crisp in all but an instant if he made the wrong move. He glared at Elias, ungrateful for the gift but tucking it into his pocket carefully none the less. If all went well, then by the end of the night he’d be collecting those back and sparing the poor crime lord the heart ache of its presence.
Einar however, judging by the man’s plethora of new wounds and injuries since their last interaction, could keep his. He looked like he could use the help. He just hoped the wolf pelt wearing warrior could read nader-canoch.
“Remember your oath to me, slayer. Remember your oath to her.”
“We draw near.” Came a hushed bark from nearby.
“Quiet. Quiet! Leash your tongues you louts.” Another harsh hiss joined them from elsewhere.
Elias turned, focusing his eyes forward into the night. They were right. Not forty or so meters sat their prize; The Lark’s most indulgent and gaudy proclamation of prosperity and pride to date. The massive, forested pleasure barge known as the Floating Botanicals.
“Stow the oars. We run silent until the signal.” Elias commanded, making sure his voice was just loud enough to carry among their party but little further. He heard the quiet compliance of his troops respond back to him along with the muttered acquaintance of Guldo’s crew.
Now they waited. Waited for their man on the inside to give the signal that all was clear and they could land unimpeded. Radcliff may have agreed to this parlay, but that didn’t mean he trusted it not to go tits up the instant they set foot on that eyesore of a floating jungle. It was what he would do after all. Set an ambush. Lay in wait. Kill his enemies before they had a chance to kill him. The imported foliage provided the perfect cover for such treachery.
Well they’d already taken their gods damned opportunity to end his miserable life and missed… more than once! Now it was his turn, and all Elias needed was one shot to end this war once and for all, and this was where he intended to take it.
“Come on, pup. Light the way.” Elias muttered under his breath as he scanned the horizon.
Death or destiny, one way or another, this all ended tonight.
As the twelfth bell of midnight toiled, more than a dozen skiffs and rowboats crossed the cloudy waters of Lake Ravok under the cover of twilight’s fall. Lost in the stirring shadows and silent as the night they traversed, the small, ragtag armada sailed together loosely and without a single torch among them to guide the way. ‘No fires.’ Had been the command given as they set off, and so no fires they had lit. They moved only by the grace of Leth and his radiance, traversing the open, gentle waves of the lake, their destination but a meandering mountain of murky blackness in the distance.
They were close now though.
Closer than they had ever been before.
“All speed.” Came a low and rumbling hiss from the lead vessel. A chorus of grunts and shuffling bodies responded immediately, as the oars of every boat behind it began to drive harder and harder. This was not a date they could afford to be late to, but nor would Elias allow them to be stupid in their haste. If this was to be the hour of their triumph and not another tragedy like so many that had befallen him before, then all had to go according to plan, for even one mishap could spell doom upon the entire contrivance and all would be for naught. That thought alone had the swordsman, now perched at the bow of the cramped dinghy, craning his neck to study the two men sitting behind him.
“Are you certain Vernon Lark received my missive?” Caldera all but demanded for the third time that hour. His blue eyes reflected a harsh intensity about them as he leveled his gaze upon the subject of his harassment once more. Guldo Barsavi stirred, broad shoulders tensed and dark brow furrowing in exasperation. “Like I said,” The cutthroat grumbled, “I delivered the letter to the doorman and even gave him enough coin to consider not tossing it in the bin the moment I turned around. Just like all the other times. Just as you asked.” His voice was but a tense whisper half lost in the night breeze. Despite his stern posture and bristling indignation, it was clear he was nervous, or at least as uneasy as a man like him could allow himself to appear. It wasn’t as if the work they were up to tonight would prove any less bloody and dangerous than the thousands of other shady undertakings he’d been a part of during his long and illustrious career as one of Ravok's less than reputable entrepreneurs, but this was something altogether different, and they all knew it. They all felt it. The trappings and veneers of Ravokian subtly were abandoned and the nervous tapping of a stray finger on the hilt of his dagger was the giveaway that told Elias Guldo was far from happy about it.
The soldier scoffed under his breath, frustration and annoyance hackling at his own nerves. If Vernon Lark would not respond, then this could only end one way. Then so be it. he thought with no small amount of cold indifference to what exactly that meant. There is no stopping now.
As he mused, Elias’s scrutiny swept across the other men and the other boats that skimmed across the lake alongside them. He saw hard eyes and undaunted expressions glancing back at him from across the dark waters. Most were Guldo’s boys. Hardy toughs and thieves the lot of them. The kind that called Ravok’s back alleys and secret harbors both their homes and their place of business. The glint of sharpened steel flashed here and there under the moonlight, hinting at the lethal kind of work these men were accustomed to. Yet among their numbers sailed in silence those to which bloodletting was not just their trade, but their scared charge.
The men and women of the Ebonstryfe waited amidst their ranks, shrouds of shadowy, inky black armor interspersed among the rough and tumble assortment of leathers and chainmail that made up the criminal scum they now called allies. They were easy enough to pick out among the rabble. Like coiled snakes in the tall grass, he felt the tightening auras of each and every one of them as he looked out upon the lake. They weren’t eager, and they weren’t excited, but they were ready, and more importantly, they were loyal. Many were merely apprentices however, thus calling them ‘men and women’ was likely a privilege they had only ever received from their pale commander and no other. They were still children in every regard as much as he tried to consider them otherwise for the sake of morale. Trained but untested, they were accustomed to heeding the beck and call of their instructors like cattle. The louder one could yell from across the training grounds and practice halls, the more deference they showed. It was instinct, beaten into them over the course of years as the Stryfe endeavored to mold their soft bodies and childish minds into that of hardened killers and holy men.
Such concerns were of little matter though. They followed him, and that was all that counted now -and so they would be counted. Their numbers added to the lot of fools and hapless servants the sorcerer had massed under his banner.
Nearly fifty souls among a dozen different boats they totaled.
Elias grimaced.
His ‘army.’
It wasn’t pretty and it wasn’t perfect, but it would have to be enough.
Guldo noticed his ‘master’s’ distraction and took the opportunity to give voice to an unanswered question he’d had bubbling in his chest ever since they’d left the docks. “Perhaps now would be a good time to tell me something.” The gangster began, scratching the scruff of his rough beard with an idle hand. “See, I know why I’m out here, and I know why you’re out here, but pray tell you could enlighten me as to why the hell you have me riding alongside this mangy motherpetcher currently residing on my right, hmm?”
As the mage once more made his reticent tally of their ranks, eventually the pale man’s attentions fell upon that of one who could not be considered either soldier nor gangster. One whose scars marked him as apart from the others despite the fact he sat among them.
Einar the wretch of Sunberth was not a fellow Elias would have ever considered to be one he’d be marching into the abyss with, yet there he was on the same boat as Elias, sharing an uncomfortably cramped seat next to Guldo, his distinctive polearm resting in his clutches and ready to be wielded on a moment’s notice.
Even among the other criminals the mangled man stood out. Though outlaws and bandits by any other name, Ravokians at least had a measure of grace and culture about them. They may have wielded knives and cudgels under their coats, but they were still fine coats none the less. It did men like them little good to stand out amidst the well to do crowds of their most serene city, and often being well to do in their own right -at least by the rest of the world’s standards- their garb reflected as much. They weren’t ‘Berther born thugs or animals. They had class. They had pride. They had Ravokian sensibilities. Einar however, had almost an animalistic nature about him that set him so far apart from the others it was like staring into a flame at night. He was a different breed of man, if he could even be considered as much anymore. A killer. A monster. A beast of no nation or creed. His was a weapon that slew for no purpose greater than that of coin and desperate self-preservation.
He was dangerous. Perhaps more so than any goon or soldier there -and tonight, Elias intended to use that against those who would be foolish enough to stand against him.
“He is with me.” Was all the stryfer responded with. Guldo frowned, lips working themselves into a snarl before turning to face the scarred sellsword, thought better of it, and let the matter drop.
Elias pulled something from his belt and tossed it unceremoniously to the mercenary. The ruffling and crumple of parchment would herald the scroll landing in the foreigner’s mitts. “Use it if you have to, but don’t speak the words written unless you mean them.” Elias instructed. What he had given Einar was a pair of glyphed scrolls, each containing a destructive reimancy spell sealed within. Another went to Guldo, who caught the thing like one would a hissing skunk tossed into their lap. He balked and grimaced at the paper, knowing full well what was inside and what could be outside, burning him to a crisp in all but an instant if he made the wrong move. He glared at Elias, ungrateful for the gift but tucking it into his pocket carefully none the less. If all went well, then by the end of the night he’d be collecting those back and sparing the poor crime lord the heart ache of its presence.
Einar however, judging by the man’s plethora of new wounds and injuries since their last interaction, could keep his. He looked like he could use the help. He just hoped the wolf pelt wearing warrior could read nader-canoch.
“Remember your oath to me, slayer. Remember your oath to her.”
“We draw near.” Came a hushed bark from nearby.
“Quiet. Quiet! Leash your tongues you louts.” Another harsh hiss joined them from elsewhere.
Elias turned, focusing his eyes forward into the night. They were right. Not forty or so meters sat their prize; The Lark’s most indulgent and gaudy proclamation of prosperity and pride to date. The massive, forested pleasure barge known as the Floating Botanicals.
“Stow the oars. We run silent until the signal.” Elias commanded, making sure his voice was just loud enough to carry among their party but little further. He heard the quiet compliance of his troops respond back to him along with the muttered acquaintance of Guldo’s crew.
Now they waited. Waited for their man on the inside to give the signal that all was clear and they could land unimpeded. Radcliff may have agreed to this parlay, but that didn’t mean he trusted it not to go tits up the instant they set foot on that eyesore of a floating jungle. It was what he would do after all. Set an ambush. Lay in wait. Kill his enemies before they had a chance to kill him. The imported foliage provided the perfect cover for such treachery.
Well they’d already taken their gods damned opportunity to end his miserable life and missed… more than once! Now it was his turn, and all Elias needed was one shot to end this war once and for all, and this was where he intended to take it.
“Come on, pup. Light the way.” Elias muttered under his breath as he scanned the horizon.
Death or destiny, one way or another, this all ended tonight.
WC - 1864