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Eol Fefalas
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8901 Posts




Dak’s passed his time at Nost’kano Feldinil’s table in relative silence. He had, on occasion interjected an observation or a detail or two into the narratives Isilmewen provided the commander where the owlbears and their ‘keeper’ was concerned, but, as the ranger had become the troupe’s de facto leader in Arathea’s absence, the shrewd Cid let his friend do most of the talking while he did what he did best… watched and listened; farming the table talk for useful bits of information. There was little that he hadn’t already gleaned from his earlier foray into the commander’s offices, of course, but the attentive little halfling made a few mental notes all the same. When the dinner drew near its close, and Feldinil requested the party’s assistance with the matter, he was unsurprised by Isilmewen’s answer…

“What I might offer, myself, I'll gladly give. I will speak with the others on this as well,” she gave a smile and a nod, “If fortune and will favors, they'll be of similar mind, even if not similar reasons.”

“Agreed,” Dak said around the last crust of stew-soaked bread he’d popped into his mouth, an enthusiastic nod of his head sending his top-knot bouncing, “Our troupe is an adventurous one, and committed to doing what must be done, heruamin. I have no doubt that we will have a consensus even before dawn breaks.”

Following Dak’s initial violation of protocol and etiquette, supper at the Nost’kano’s table had gone as swimmingly as could be expected. Dak had apologized for his intrusion as profusely as was acceptable among the Sylvari and, for her part, Isilmewen had offered support by bolstering the cid’s self-reproach with contrite explanations of her own. In the end, his lapse in manners was overlooked and the little halfling slipped, all but unnoticed, into the remainders of the conversation. There was talk of owlbears - things with which the party were not unfamiliar - and rings of sickly green mushrooms - toward which both Dak and Isilmewen had both provided insight regarding the corrupt cleric of Kithy and their encounter with him. By the time dinner ended, it had been decided that there was certainly more conversation to be had on the topic but, surely, after such an already lengthy voyage, such talks could wait until the morrow. Soon enough, Dak and Isilmewen found themselves outside the dining hall and wandering, almost instinctively, toward quieter environs. When they reached a spot, shadowed deeply by the sun being obfuscated by a towering wall and unlittered by foot traffic, Dak reached up, curled his fingers around two of Isilmewen’s own, and tugged her to a halt.

“We have things to discuss, you and I,” Dak beamed up at the ranger, “More important things, I think, than what we might have talked over with Nost'kano Feldinil. Something much closer to you and I than even the commander might reach, in one instance, melui, and another development that might keep us entertained whilst we await the return of Arathea and our erstwhile wizard. Which would you like to hear of first?”

Isilmewen returned the smile, giving Dak a nod as they stopped in the shadows. Settling herself down on a comfy enough patch of greenery, more to meet Dak's eye level as she had done many times in the past while they had traveled together, she nodded, “You know that I would hear any you'd like to speak,” she chuckled, “But after the weightiness of earlier, I think we might both benefit from something light and playful first, hm?”

“Just how light and playful it might be is debatable,” he grinned, offering a shrug of his little shoulders, “but it is most certainly curious and possibly exciting. Have you ever heard tales of the Ruhuë?”

((OOC: If not, Dak will gleefully tell her the story of “Rin Thistleknot and Tali-something-or-another.” If so, he may share a snippet or two but will be more excited to get to this part…  ))

“Well, mellonamin,” the halfling said, his eyes sparking with mischief, “in my exploring of the keep earlier, I happened to find myself in the Nost’kano’s offices where I stumbled on a rather recent report that old Tali-whoiwhatsis had been spotted near the Mirily-Wen Duin not more than a couple hours march south and east of here!” He rubbed his hands together eagerly; “Can you imagine seeing such a thing with your own eyes? Perhaps even bartering some knowledge it may not already have? What boons might we receive if, for instance, we told it of our Fae friends? The sights we saw in their realm… Mayhap it would gift us one of its feathers just as it did Rin!”

((OOC: There is a bit more to this conversation that Rer and I haven’t touched on, as yet, but it can be worked in as we go… backpost style or otherwise, depending on how things play out.  ))

~~~

A bit later, when the troupe gathered in the barracks, Dak continued to watch and listen as Mae’rel called them up and shared what she had learned during her own wanderings of the keep. He was mildly amused and distracted, too, by Ruadhri’s intoxicated state but, aside from a faint smile or a soft chuckle, did little to point it out or have a bit of fun in taunting the bull-man over his indulgences. Isilmewen considered the Lysoran monk’s offerings and, as was her way, offered her analysis and opinions on the matter before appending them with the ‘offer’ Feldinil had made over supper…

“The commander's requested our aid in dealing with them, as we already know the most of our quarry of anyone at this Nost.” She added, "I wouldn't seek to command when that isn't my place, but I do think we should consider it. We are due to await Arathea and Selineniel either way, and if we can see this through to make the journey onward easier, if not also the journey back. I'll also be checking in with a few other taur'ohtar to see if we might better grasp his movements, the better to catch him rather than him catch us. They may be able to put arrows to his eyes in the sky while we track him.”

 “What do the rest of you think?”

“Speaking for myself,” Dak piped up, his feet hanging from over the edge of an upper bunk and kicking lazily at the air, “I think that such a thing is a far better use of our time than puttering about this keep and trying to keep ourselves from succumbing to boredom.” His pipe appeared in his hand and he tapped it on a knee before attending to filling its bowl with a pinch of moonshade. “Somehow, all of this is connected, if even vaguely, to the task for which we were initially dispatched to attend, no? We would be fools not to investigate…”

((OOC: More as necessary… if necessary…  ))

~~~

In the morning, the troupe gathered in Feldinil’s chambers, and the commander worked methodically through the intelligence his own agents had supplied (things that Dak had already learned for himself in his previous delvings) and, when Isilmewen’s analysis of those findings pointed toward the stray encounter to the south-east, his face lit up in an eager smile…

 

“That's the path the owlbears come from, but it might not be where he is.” Isilmewen added, “The southeast encounter strikes me as strange. Split off from the others, that has the feeling of finding something he doesn't want found. A shot I'd take if my prey were straying from the path I wanted them to take.”

“Those are my thoughts just at the first glance,” Isilmewen offered, “Anyone have other thoughts?”

“No,” Dak offered, shaking his head and allowing an almost anxious smile to play on his lips, “Were I to be left to the decision on my own, that would be where my eye would be drawn, as well. The Sendrian border is well guarded, well documented, but this …” he waved a finger at the south-eastern marker, “…This is an anomaly worthy of our attention, I think.”



Posted on 2025-08-19 at 18:14:30.
Edited on 2025-08-22 at 11:01:55 by Eol Fefalas

alovet
Regular Visitor
Karma: 11/0
98 Posts




Relief at finally arriving at Arathea’s hometown–bidding godsdamned Tanna and equally damned Tatheme good riddance, for now–was tempered by a creeping sense of guilt… 

Intruder. 

Seleniniel wasn’t one to worry over social conventions, one of a handful of Isil’nari birthrights she consciously wielded. But an uncomfortable knot tightened into an undeniable, if unfamiliar, sentiment at their arrival. Tightened more at Arathea’s reception. Hometown hero, descending from the sky, quite literally, on the ebbing tide of a beloved father’s death, hero worshipped–perhaps deserved–in a display of communal pride by the humble folk whose eaves and aprons had sheltered Arathea’s equally humble beginnings.

Seleniniel could not have imagined a more foreign homecoming. 

She waded through it tentatively. Not just an interloper. Listened, from a distance, to the genuine affection Arathea received and gently directed back to her people. Condolences taken with honest thanks, turned to queries of families and fortunes. Not deflection, the same genuine concern Arathea had shown the mage time and again in the preceding months. That Seleniniel had grown to expect, and dismiss, as the naivete of youth. Yet, watching now, Seleniniel suspected she saw a father’s reflection. Perhaps Seleniniel had projected too much onto the bladesinger. Not isolated prodigy. This place loved her. Had likely shaped her, set her loose on the world to represent them no less than her father. No wonder…

The reception rippled outward, growing into a second wake as the gravity that had pulled Arathea here, in turn, now seemed to draw the village to her. Seleniniel followed, resisting the crowd only enough to give the bladesinger what felt like respectful distance. As respectful as she could manage… having already thrust herself into the midst of it. As Seleniniel let the flow carry her towards Arathea’s home, the mage questioned her impulse to accompany the bladesinger–not for the first time. Indeed, as the emotional currents of the impromptu wake swirled against her own motives, they threatened to churn her guilt into shame. She looked over her shoulder at the now-distant Tatheme, conversing with an older syl who’d mustered the courage to approach the stormrider and his tame monsters. Gods be damned, she wanted nothing more than to leave those beasts behind, yet amid this she felt a cancerous splinter in Arathea’s side. Sarigraamin

She twisted the neglected Isil'nari ring under her robe, working to banish the self pity. Out of your head and into the present. Arathea’s father had been murdered, Seleniniel was sure of it. Not coincidentally. The erestor’s death, the fae’s bargain, the speaker’s stormrider... they orbited a point Seleniniel could not yet see. Fretting over her social gracelessness would not lend clarity. Focus. She took a deep breath. Quieted the din around and in her. You’re here to tend things Arathea cannot. It was a given that she and Arathea were in danger. The bladesinger surely knew it too, likely cared as little as Seleniniel. Even still, Seleniniel owed Arathea her life. Twice now. But that was not where Seleniniel’s value lay. 

Arathea was of this place. These people who measured one another by quality of craft and crop, stickiness to gods and principles, weight of the seeds sown to parochial pride. She suspected most here treated people like Arathea did. Took things at face value. Gave and received the benefit of the doubt. Frank honesty freely offered and expected it in return… The simplicity of it was alluring. But Seleniniel shook off the trance of the wake, reminded herself it was a fragile veneer. An easy way to navigate the world.. if only gods and the rest let you be. These people were lucky, that's all. But Seleniniel did not envy. The lucky rarely saw the world for what it is. An idyll of illusion. Mice pittering happily on the grindstone. Content to feast on the barleymeal, ever blind to the weight of the millstone overhead. That’s why she was here. To keep it from crushing Arathea. If, in the process, she opened her eyes.. All the better. 

They finally reached Arathea’s… home. A humble one... an erestor should know better. Not for his sake. Systems ran on symbols. Although, considering the late Ondolithe’s reputation, perhaps this was his symbol. Not the pride of false humility, but the contrarian seeking to pull down the system into which he… and his daughter… had been born at the bottom–by refusing it. Seleniniel grew more conscious of the ring she continued to fidget. She slid hand and ring into her robe, considering the politics of her presence for the first time, scolding herself for the belated recognition. Arathea didn’t think that way, though. Hopefully her family did not either. Gods knew the s***storm she’d stir up if she plopped down on Burdell’s or Telthathar’s stoop in such circumstances. It would almost be worth it for the headache she’d make for Tansathil. She smirked to herself. Black sheep that she was, she had a reputation to uphold. She wondered idly if her falcon had reached him. The smirk deepened as she imagined his red-faced reaction. 

She was promptly reminded how far Nandina stood from Ela-Ishtel, though. She smiled, genuinely, as Ondolithe’s manservant asked after Arathea’s retainer. She’d grown used to most she dealt with in Alloryen knowing the second daughter of House Isil’nari by sight… or at least reputation. Not many one-armed mages running around, after all. Godsdamned Tanna had carted her a long way south though. 

She responded before Arathea could introduce her. “I’m Selininiel” her hand emerged from hiding, sliding the Isil’nari ring into a pocket on its way out, gesturing down to her robe “of the Circle.” She let her left arm slide out of hiding too, watching the servant register it. “And House Isil’nari.” His eyes widened for a moment, then he bowed his head in a more formal greeting. “Forgive me, milady, I was unaware that mistress Arathea would be bringing such an esteemed guest.”

“Nothing to forgive. I’ve intruded with no forewarning. I won’t linger, though.” She turned to Arathea. “This is not for me. See your family. I’ll tend to myself and return in the morning.” She offered a wry smile. “Tatheme misses my company, I’m sure.” The forced levity was out of place, but Arathea was used to Seleniniel’s quirks by now.. she hoped.

((OOC: unsure what Arathea’s response will be, including whether she’d want S to give her and her family space or consider it rude for her to avoid the presumed hospitality of her home. Seleniniel is obviously uncomfortable but will stay if invited in))

A ghost of a voice came from deeper in the house. It rooted her for the moment. “You came.” The sight of the aging woman resurfaced the guilt of her trespass. She had Arathea’s cheekbones… well, Arathea had hers, she supposed. Her mother? Arathea seemed stunned, staring at the figure in silence as she approached… frailly. The syl wore her grief. In her eyes. Her gait. Her posture. Her presence transformed the home into something else. A place of mourning. With the transformation, Seleniniel yearned to be anywhere but here. She did not belong. She was the last person the grieving wanted or needed. The syl’s palpable grief tugged at Selininiel’s own demons. Gods be damned. She remained rooted, like a child hoping to go unnoticed. The aging syle spoke to Arathea. The words of a mother. 

The manservant waited a respectful moment, then introduced Selininiel. She had no choice. Stepped forward. “Lady Ondolithe.” Selininiel looked into those violet eyes as they reluctantly pulled away from her daughter. “I knew your husband by reputation only.” Seleniniel swallowed, mouth dry suddenly. “I’ve come to know your daughter, though.” Her eyes flicked to Arathea’s blue, unreadable as she watched Selininiel. She shifted uncomfortably beneath her robe, gaze returning to violet eyes. “The measure of him in her gives me a sense for the hole he must have left.” She looked down, smoothing her robe. Lowered her voice, almost as if to herself. “Nwalma'arwen haunts us all, eventually.” She looked back up, violet eyes. Cleared her throat, then spoke more clearly. “I hope you find a way back.” How many times she’d been offered similar platitudes. How empty. She cursed herself that it was all she had for a grieving widow who wanted nothing more than for Selininiel to leave her and her daughter to grieve in peace. 

She began to turn. To leave them to it. And to find a drink.

((OOC: will chart next steps based on Arathea’s and her mother’s responses - S wants to leave but she will not refuse genuinely offered hospitality if doing so would make things worse))



Posted on 2025-08-19 at 21:18:31.
Edited on 2025-08-19 at 21:40:38 by alovet

vibechecker628
Occasional Visitor
Karma: 3/0
46 Posts


yapping about the past

"The incident to the North could easily just be grouped in with the other Northeast incidents, or perhaps a simple stray. But the Southeast is far more difficult to dismiss as such, in my opinion. I agree with you two, our best bet, at least in my own opinion, is to investigate the south east first. Maybe then we can return with our findings, and regroup with Madams Arathea and Seleniniel to be at full strength. Assuming we don't find him at that first marker."

(OOC: Assuming the group travels to one of the markers)

Mae'rel had it occur to her, she didn't actually know much about her travel companions. Sure, they had shared some stories over the campfire, and most of them knew eachother better, but most of Mae'rels late nights were spent freshening herself, worshipping, or simply isolating herself and as such, she didn't often join the group at the campfire. She didn't engage in much small talk either, not even on the roads where it seemed like small conversation was what kept some of the group sane. As such, she decided it was perhaps time to do a little socializing, and who better than the Rogue?

Cidals were interesting creatures. Mae'rel had only seen a few in her life and they all had such vastly different personalities, like any other race, but they had that overwhelming tie, things that kept them together. This Cidal they traveled with was perhaps one of the most interesting she had ever seen, and it was the longest time she'd been acquainted with one. So it was without say that of course, she had a few questions.

Adjusting her position, Mae'rel made her way over to Dak as they continued to march. "So.. Dak. I've never actually been to your homeland. Though I suppose maybe you haven't either, considering you live with the Syls. I didn't visit the Sylvari homeland until I was well past my first 150 years. But.. if you have been, or were raised there, I have to ask.. what's it like?"

Dak looked up at the Dove-masked monk and offered a bright smile. "It has been quite a while since I've seen the lands of Goodhome, arwenamin," he confirmed, resting his bata over a shoulder as they walked, "I was quite young when I left, in fact, and, sadly, in all of my travels, I have yet to make it back."

"As for what it's like," he gave a litte shrug and scratched thoughtfully at his cheek a moment, "It's not unlike this..." he gestured expansively at the forest around them, "...though the woods aren't quite as vast. Many rolling hills, some of which serve as homes to those of my kind known as Stumps. Most of what I remember, though, is the food, the stories, and the songs."

"Like you, Mae'rel," the halfling continued, "I spent the better part of my formative years in Coria... a little village called Stones Hollow. Do you know it?"

"I do. I'm not intimately familiar, I must confess, but it's just some forty miles south of my hometown. From what I remember, it was a quaint town, and its locals were enjoyable. I do also remember the town had a mixed population, a few Cidals, maybe even a Khord or two. In fact, I was there treating the sick, which included a Cidal." Mae'rel explained. She found it interesting that someone else on this crew, recruited for a mission of utmost secrecy, wasn't even born in Sylvari land. Very odd, indeed.

"Coria was nice, I have to admit, I miss it sometimes. But Calestra.. I don't." Even through the mask, there was something unmistakable that Mae'rel tried to hide. There was guilt, and there was slight fear, underneath her literal and figurative mask. 

Dak arched a brow at the shift in her expression, his own smile fading a bit. "I had a few misadventures of my own in Calestra," he offered, "it was one of the first sizeable Sigie cities in which I ever spent much, in fact. Despite the trouble I got myself into, there, I seem to recall it being rather fun..." His head cocked curiously to one side as he tried to meet her eyes through the holes in her mask, "...If you don't mind my taking note of it, my lady, I get the impression that we have seen Calestra through very different eyes, no?"

"We have. The city has.. an underbelly, as you may be aware of. No offense intended, of course. I simply would expect someone of your profession to know such things. And, that's not mentioning the Weeping Plague." Mae'rel hesitated for a moment. Maybe it wasn't best to tell a spy a secret few knew. Why Mae'rel took her vow to begin with, why she was so focused on concealing herself. She didn't need to speak further, at least, not on that, but with what she'd said, it was clear she had seen much death at the hands of Ashlung. She continued, and changed the subject. "But of course the Healer has seen plagues. Is that not what the hand of Lysora is for? But what about you then, why have you walked the path you travel on today? Wealth? Adventure? Something else?"

"I am familiar with the seedier sides of a few cities," the little Cid bobbed his head, his impish grin brightening again, "Calestra included. For the likes of me, such places are all but irresistible, I suppose. Servants of Lysa, though, aren't often encountered in those warrens. I can understand why you'd find them... unsettling."

He had hoped to draw a little more out of Mae'rel in regard to exactly what might have happened to her in Calestra's more shadowy side, but she seemed keen on turning the conversation to lighter topics. When she inquired as to what had brought him to where he was, now, he pulled his pipe from beneath his cloak and chewed on the stem for a moment, seemingly contemplating the question.

"All of those things, I imagine," he chuckled finally, "and none more than the others." He skipped onto the fallen trunk of a tree that lay along side of the path, gaining a bit of temporary height from it as he continued. "As with most Picks, it started with little more than wanderlust," he explained, not having to crane his neck so much to meet her gaze, "Just an urge to see more of what's in the world and how much of it I might manage to see, hm?"

He pulled the pipe from between his teeth and pointed the stem at the path ahead. "That eventually brought me to the banks of the Mirily-Wen Duin, not far from where we are now, in fact," he chirped, "It was there that I first encountered Lady Raina Mithethiel... she mistook me for a faerie, at first, if you can believe that."

"Wanderlust.. I've heard of the concept before, though Sylvari get nothing like it, and neither do humans to my knowledge. Such a strange thing to me. The idea of urges to adventure, to see the world? It almost seems like a fairytale character to me, but I suppose it's quite real for all of you."

Mae'rel admittedly wasn't even that familar with the ideas and concepts known to Cidals. They were overall a strange race to her, not quite as unknown as the Khords, but certainly far less known then the humans or Sylvari she had come to deal with regularly. And she just hadn't heard many stories from them, funnily enough, despite how known Picks were for their stories.

"A Fae?!" Mae'rel couldn't help but laugh for a moment, quickly gathering herself, "Certainly this Lady must have never seen a Fae, no offense intended, but you look.. nothing like I would ever imagine a Fae to be. And now that we actually know, you look even less like a Fae! You must tell me more of these stories one night over the campfire. And perhaps it'll strengthen our bond further."

Mae'rel found herself chuckling a moment more after they had finished their conversation. Perhaps she had been missing out. But she couldn't risk the idea of them getting too close. She still had a vow, and at the end of the day, that was what was most important to her, even more than this mission. But right now, her mission aligned in a way with the vow, and as long as it did, she would cooperate with this group, and to do that, she would need a bit stronger bonds, and so she decided she would make a better effort to be involved in the group from this day forth.

 



Posted on 2025-08-20 at 12:39:21.
Edited on 2025-08-20 at 12:39:45 by vibechecker628

Octavia
Regular Visitor
Karma: 6/0
86 Posts


Beating a dead bear

The night before had been... eventful, to say the least. These soldiers may have been far from the pathfinders drinking like there was no tomorrow, as for most there wasn't, but they had that same... spirit, proof of fear of the lingering threat, even if their youthful pride didn't allow them to show it. They certainly had stronger and better wine than the bofír did though.

Ruadhrí agreed to meet the commander that morning, even though his head stirred and ached. The commander spoke of the owlbears, where they were, and those damned, gods forsaken mushroom rings. In truth, the rings made his blood run cold. those damned fungai were the closest he'd been to death in.., ever since his lá breithe.

Friends. Can I have your attention for a moment? I was in the infirmary this afternoon, and I've heard.. some reports from soldiers. Most disturbing ones. I believe that very same Hermit and his owlbears are attacking the military patrols that this keep sends out. I think he's chasing us.. for whatever reason. Perhaps he wanted to collect Ruadhiri from his.. strange injury?" Ruadhrí listened closely, but shook his head as she spoke. "With me in the state I was, if he was looking to take our heads, he would have done it while I was close to síoraí ithir dearg, not while we sit in a reinforced fortress." Ruadhrí knelt down and pulled a map from his bag, careful not to wake Lennox, then spread it out and pointed out the areas the captain did, with less detail, of course. "If he cleared this much ground in... however long it took him to get through those mushrooms, he could and would have cut us off, assaulted us with an ambush of his strongest - his owlbears - and left us a rotting puddle on the path. No, he wants the fort... or at least the people in it, but why? I'm not sure." Ruadhrí then stood up, grabbing one of his horns to crack his neck "However, there is one thing for sure."

"His beast will be wrend into fur rugs, his ghouls rotting, and I will crack his spine with my horns."



Posted on 2025-08-21 at 21:51:58.

Esther Suddeth
Regular Visitor
Karma: 7/0
66 Posts




Home, Arathea was home again for the first time in years. The child of the village, the rose of the Ondolithe family, the hometown hero was finally back. This community grew her father and her mother, this community birthed her and gave her a net of safety when returning from training or the capital. So many childhood days had been spent here, running through the streets here and playing with other children. Arathea recalled other children playing with toy swords, she dominated of course. It reached a point where she was barred from playing army or soldier off of it being unfair, any team with her on it had an incredibly unfair advantage. She had made so many friends here, and now some of those faces were the ones greeting her with open arms as she arrived from the sky.

 

Arathea had been hoping to return again sooner rather than later, yet these were far from the conditions she had hoped for. Despite the many excited greetings, the children with stars in their eyes, the elders with pride worn on their faces, a cloud of grief still hung over the air. The community had lost someone near and dear to them all, a leader who had shown nothing but courage and strength, the ideal syl. And Arathea felt the loss deeper than many others ever could, returning her did not help mend the hole left in her heart from the news of her father's passing. All the memories with him came back to her here, it was like a whole bottle of salt getting poured all over her wound. It was suffering, she soon found herself fighting to maintain a smile.

 

Seleniniel's presence only added a strangeness to things, she was clearly foreign to this type of environment. It made sense, and helped to remind Arathea of the harsh social divides that served to plagued society in her view. Her father had all of his reputation, all of his experience, and yet to Seleniniel's kind he was still far beneath them. It felt unfair, and while Arathea had not paid deep attention to her class divide with Seleniniel before now it seemed so plain. 

 

They would arrive finally to Arathea's home, that humble building that sent her back all through the years. Arathea paid her respects to her father's steward, but another person was the one to take up her mind. Her mother, the only parent she had left now, Alwen. Upon seeing her, and seeing the light drained from her once energetic eyes, Arathea lost her composure. Alwen's words flew past her head, the same with Seleniniel's, instead she just stood there for a moment as a tear began to fall down her cheek. Then she ran forward as Seleniniel stopped speaking, it wasn't polite and it was far from courtly but none of it mattered. She wrapped her arms around her mother in a tight embrace as tears started to fall freely, she sobbed and sobbed before finally mustering words. “I'm sorry it took me so long,” she began with pain in her voice. “I'm sorry I wasn't here, I'm sorry for leaving you alone.” 

 

She stayed in that state for quite some time before finally being able to compose herself, she was embarrassed, she felt weak. But she had bottled up so much of her loss, her pain, and her grief. She needed to let go, now was that time. “I apologize,” she said with a deep breath. “I am ready to say my goodbyes to father when you are.” She looked over to Seleniniel, her expression read as her saying she had the option to follow Arathea but that it was not necessary.

 

Later when she had the option to speak to Vinalis alone she had composed herself, though a cloud of sorrow continued to follow her. She listened to the story and through it she could not shake off the feeling of wrongness she had ever since she first learned of the death of her father, this was no accident. Nothing about the situation seemed right, and as the day went on things seemed more and more wrong. A terrible accident? Vinalis you know much better than that, you know that is far from the case. “I want to do my own investigation,” Arathea stated after taking a deep breath. “I will take Lady Isil'nari with me, I understand what you are saying but I simply cannot leave it at this conclusion. You….you know how politics can be, you know there must be more to this.” Pain was clear in Arathea's voice as she spoke, she would not take no for an answer, she would not be reasoned with. She would find out who did this.

 



Posted on 2025-08-22 at 00:24:24.

t_catt11
Fun is Mandatory
RDI Staff
Karma: 379/54
7237 Posts


paying respects...

22nd Bre Uthan, 452 E.R.
Ondolithe home


Seleniniel offered her respects, and Alwen nodded her head in thanks.  "Thank you for your kind words, Lady Isil'nari.  Yes, Moreuron has indeed left behind a hole.  I am glad that you have come to see some of his spark through our daughter."  Her expression twisted somewhat.  "Yes, pain visits us all, does she not?"
 
Seleniniel attempted to take her leave, but Alwen would have none of it.
 
"You traveled many leagues with my daughter to come here, Lady Isil'nari," the widow spoke, her expression wooden but the manners of an erestor's wife still showing through.  "I will not see the daughter of a Great House relegated to the inn.  Our home may be simple for your tastes, but you will have free use of it, of course."
 
The tired eyes came to rest upon the steward.  "Vinalis, please see to any needs of Lady Isil'nari," she requested.  
 
Naturally, the servant scurried to her imediate aid.  "This way, my Lady," he offered.  "I will see to your refreshment and comfort."
 
When Arathea broke down with her mother, it seemed to touch the grieving widow's eyes.  For a moment, she straightened, feeling tall and strong despite her stature.
 
"You will apologize for nothing, Arathea Ondolithe," Alwen stated in a tone that brooked no dissent.  "None could have hoped you would arrive as quickly as you did; you are not Adaron, able to stride across the entire forest in one day."  She shook her head.  "You are in service of the Speaker, daughter.  You father was so incredibly proud of you.  You were his light, his legacy.  He spoke of you tirelessly.  No, you will not diminish his memory with apologies for being everything that made him so proud.  I will not hear it."
 
After the megilindar expressed that she was ready to say her goodbyes, Alwen seemed to shrink a bit again.  "Ah, yes.  We will go early in the evening, that you may visit as the sun sets," she stated.  "He would appreciate that, I think."
 
The widow drew her daughter into an embrace.  "For now, rest a moment, refresh yourself," she spoke.  "Thank you for coming."
 
********************************
 
When Arathea had a chance to be alone, she spoke of her intentions to Vinalis.  He nodded, his face stony.  "I understand, Mistress," he replied.  "I wish that I did not.  How can we claim to bathe in Solanari's light when we know of the terrible things that are done in the name of... of what?  Pride?  Standing?  Influence?  Pfagh."  The older syl spit on the ground in a show of his disgust.
 
"Would that such things were unthinkable.  You know, of course, that I have held the same fears.  Your father was an accomplished soldier, yet he dies in a carriage crash, and his driver with him?"  Vinalys shook his head.  "It feels rotten, Mistress.  Rotten, indeed."
 
The stweard shook his head.  "The Moritaur is a dangerous enough place, Adaron knows," he stated.  "But the troops that found him reported that his blade had not been drawn.  Náriel said... forgive me mistress, but if you are to investigate, you will hear this soon enough.  Náriel said that the animals had been at him by the time he was found, but it seemed to her that he must have died in the crash, as his neck was broken.  Speak to her yourself, perchance she overlooked some detail."
 
********************************
 
All too soon, the time came to visit the cemetary.  The chill in the air was very palpable, and the little spits of rain that fell only added to the misery of the occason.  The wind was restless, blowing with little pause as the small party made their way along the wooded path to the final resting place of the inhabitants of the town of Nandina.
 
Arathea followed her mother to a very simple crypt; the physical remains of Moreuron Ondolithe would lie in an unremarkable structure of gray stone.  An unadorned plaque bore his name, the dates of his birth and death, mentions of his military and civil services, and some personal details of the erestor's family.  
 
Alwen knew, as did everyone who loved Moreuron, that sunsets were his favorite.  It was not lost on Arathea that the skyline here did provide a favorable view of the western sky; one would presume that this was why the widow had chosen this time for her daughter to visit.
 
Ample time was given for silent reflection and for goodbyes, and the sun had disappeared beneath the horizon for some time before the somber group began their return journey.  On the sober trip, the wind began to pick up noticeably - to the point that the torch carried by Vinalis struggled and guttered.  Winter's chill was just around the corner; the bite in the air caused everyone to pull cloaks close.
 
The group had traveled perhaps a third of the way home from the cemetary when a sharp crack rang out.  Arathea glanced up, only for horror to sweep into her expression - she realized that against the twilight of the sky, a huge branch was falling.

Alwen was standing directly beneath.
 
There was no conscious thought.  There was no debate.  Near legendary natural reflexes further honed by decades of intense training caused Arathea to react, launching her body into her mother.  The force of the bladesinger's jolt cast the surprised woman to the ground, safely out of the zone of impact.
 
Arathea herself was not so furtunate.  The massive branch - easily hundreds of pounds - came crashing down, somehow missing the warrior's head by the narrowest of margins.  Even so, the weight impacted Arathea's left shoulder with incredible force; the other three could all clearly hear the crack as bone snapped under the impact of the blow and crumpled Arathea to the ground below.
 
Vinalys immediately began to call for help, for Arathea - while still breathing - was pinned beneath the colossal branch. 
 
For the briefest of moments, Seleniniel was certain that she saw a figure move among the trees, but momentarily, shouts anwered the steward's cries for help, and a half dozen sylvari came at a dead run.  In short order, the branch was leveraged off of the injured warrior; the wizard lost sight of the shape in the chaos... if, indeed, such a shape ever exited. 
 
"We must take her to Náriel at once!" Alwen cried.  Multiple of the benefactors jumped to form a litter and carry the injured hero to aid.
 
As darkness deepened, the chill of the wind only increased.  


Posted on 2025-09-02 at 00:36:18.
Edited on 2025-09-02 at 00:44:38 by t_catt11

   
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