Peacehammer (part 5)
Mr Zoat
Dedicated ragequitter
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17th Vorhexen 2512
Mid-day
Dayrak Rainslick -late of Lord Barblash's reavers- and the leader of the Swordmasters detail stare at each other. The Swordmaster's hands are on the hilt of his sword and his body is tensed to spring into action, while Dayrak slouches at ease with his hands hooked into his belt.
"You know, the humans tell a joke about those who carry greatswords. Particularly those who rub the pommel like that."
Dayrak has taken surprisingly well both to having his priorities rewritten by the orange light and to fatherhood. A disadvantage Aranei had as an early adopter: I didn't entirely know what I was doing when I worked on her, and like a poorly set bone that's left her with a few problems. By the time I got to Dayrak I'd got far better at integrating new desires and diminishing rather than scrubbing antisocial ones. It made me feel less monstrous when I saw that he still had the freedom to question and mock my decisions, because it made it clear that I hadn't just created puppets.
Even if the result was that Aranei wouldn't needle someone to their face like this when I'm trying to forge an alliance.
Teclis regards him curiously.
"From where do you hail?"
"Clar Karond, though it is here that I was…" He looks at me with an expression of pantomimed curiosity. "What is it that the religion of your homelands calls it? 'Born again'?"
It turned out that the violent nature of Dark Elf society caused him to keep his mordantic tendencies under control, lest he provoke someone into stabbing him. With that threat largely off the table he tends to let his tongue run free.
I nod. "Yes, that's what we call it."
Teclis looks to me. "My spies reported that you retained the services of an elf wizard, but I had no idea that the elves you claimed had settled here were Naggarothi. And I feel not a single trace of dhar about them."
"One of the ring's more subtle applications allows me to change people's desires. I encountered a group of Dark Elves raiding this village, and after I took them into custody… I didn't actually want to kill them, so I gave them the chance to volunteer to be 'de-Darked'." Huh. "Actually, that's a possible solution to your population problems. I could raid Naggaroth, repeat the process on those I capture and then transfer them-."
"No." Finreir glares at me. "I do not expect you to understand the depth of enmity between our two peoples, but the suggestion that we could become one once more is obscene."
"That's.. fine, I'll keep them? Ah, anyway, Dayrak, is Klavaella-?"
"NGWAAAAAAAAAHHH!"
Dayrak smiles as he turns around.
"A father's work is never done. But, come! See my daughter."
He strides purposively towards the houses the Dark Elves built for themselves when they decided that even if they did force the human peasants to create something for them, it wouldn't be good enough anyway. As sea-farers, they all had reasonable carpentry skills. I had to fetch slates for the roofing and put my foot down on the issue of the giant blades that they felt needed to be stuck on every corner, but the buildings generally turned out pretty well.
Loremaster Kaleina starts after him before either of her male colleagues.
"I will conduct the examination."
I-. Dayrak is a veteran reaver, but she's a Mage Lord. I'm not really happy with her assuming that she can just walk into his house and start poking his infant offspring, especially considering the fact that I'm the only person on 'our side' who would have the slightest chance of stopping her.
"I-."
Teclis raises his right hand.
"Kaleina, ask them permission. We are here as guests."
I nod. "They don't have any outstanding warrants. Unless you have evidence of a crime for which they have not already been sentenced, I'm going to have to ask you to observe local law."
I get stink eye, but she nods at Teclis before following Dayrak towards his home, one of the Swordmasters in turn following her.
Hm.
"Though that does raise a point. What about their children?"
"It isn't a matter of magic. The divergence between Ulthuan and Naggaroth is cultural and historical."
"And we're not in Naggaroth and they're developing their own culture. By the time they're of age… What are they going to have in common with the elves of Naggaroth that elves from Nagarythe don't have?"
"I would have thought that someone as well-acquainted with dwarfs as you are would understand that centuries of strife do not simply disappear."
"No, because with dwarfs they do if you pay your fines. We might think that they're obsessive about it, but they apply their irrationality in a perfectly rational way."
Teclis chuckles quietly. "I suppose they do have that going for them. Alas, High Elves are creatures of passion as much as-"
"Nay, good sir! 'tis the perfect time!"
"-intellect..?"
I frown as I fly upwards to check-. Yes, Mallobaude's taking advantage of the autumn slow down in farm work to try and train local volunteers as men-at-arms. This is a fairly standard practice in Bretonnia, and it would relieve pressure on the small number of elf professional soldiers and on me if they could handle small numbers of attackers. Or at least contribute meaningfully to their own defence. And then there's the fact that according to Bretonnian custom, a local likely lad should have been appointed Knight Errant by now.
They're not being that enthusiastic. They've basically survived by having nothing worth taking. By not being worth the trouble to drag out of hiding. Getting organised makes them start to look like they're worth coming after.
There's an odd rumbling sound below me, and a moment later Teclis rises up next to me on a pillar of rock with a stone staircase wrapped around it. The whole thing is covered in moss and shrouded in mist, which-. Well, that's magic for you.
Mallobaude grabs onto a teenage boy and corrects his stance, moving his wooden sword into a proper guard.
"The local Knight of the Realm?"
"Technically, he's a Questing Knight. Ah, look, I need to ask a favour."
"Another favour."
"No, the others serve our mutual interest. This is just for me."
He shrugs. "You can ask."
"I'd like for you to arrange for someone to teach my girlfriend High Magic."
He bows his head slightly, shaking it. "I'm sorry, but while humans might in theory be capable of learning to use qhaysh eventually, your species' relatively short lifespan makes it a practical impossibility."
"Ah, good news! She's not human."
He looks at me, and-.
"The.. Dark Elves' sorceress. You're bedding her."
"She was the first person to volunteer to have her mind altered. She was inclined to suck up to powerful figures…" I shrug. "I didn't fully consider the likely consequence of leaving that desire in place. She's still using dhar, but obviously I'd prefer it if she moved away from that. I've bought a few books from the Imperial Colleges of Magic, but…"
"She considers 'human' magic to be beneath her." He nods. "I understand her problem. What do I get out of this?"
"Ah? So mercenary?"
"Why should I ask for less than the dwarfs?"
"Fair enough." I look him over. "I could probably fix your body up, if you like."
His eyes narrow.
"What do you mean by-?"
I hold up my right arm wither it and then cause it to swell with muscle before darkening the skin and lightening it again.
"I know nothing of the precise effects of the Curse of Aenarion-."
"Deal."
Mid-day
Dayrak Rainslick -late of Lord Barblash's reavers- and the leader of the Swordmasters detail stare at each other. The Swordmaster's hands are on the hilt of his sword and his body is tensed to spring into action, while Dayrak slouches at ease with his hands hooked into his belt.
"You know, the humans tell a joke about those who carry greatswords. Particularly those who rub the pommel like that."
Dayrak has taken surprisingly well both to having his priorities rewritten by the orange light and to fatherhood. A disadvantage Aranei had as an early adopter: I didn't entirely know what I was doing when I worked on her, and like a poorly set bone that's left her with a few problems. By the time I got to Dayrak I'd got far better at integrating new desires and diminishing rather than scrubbing antisocial ones. It made me feel less monstrous when I saw that he still had the freedom to question and mock my decisions, because it made it clear that I hadn't just created puppets.
Even if the result was that Aranei wouldn't needle someone to their face like this when I'm trying to forge an alliance.
Teclis regards him curiously.
"From where do you hail?"
"Clar Karond, though it is here that I was…" He looks at me with an expression of pantomimed curiosity. "What is it that the religion of your homelands calls it? 'Born again'?"
It turned out that the violent nature of Dark Elf society caused him to keep his mordantic tendencies under control, lest he provoke someone into stabbing him. With that threat largely off the table he tends to let his tongue run free.
I nod. "Yes, that's what we call it."
Teclis looks to me. "My spies reported that you retained the services of an elf wizard, but I had no idea that the elves you claimed had settled here were Naggarothi. And I feel not a single trace of dhar about them."
"One of the ring's more subtle applications allows me to change people's desires. I encountered a group of Dark Elves raiding this village, and after I took them into custody… I didn't actually want to kill them, so I gave them the chance to volunteer to be 'de-Darked'." Huh. "Actually, that's a possible solution to your population problems. I could raid Naggaroth, repeat the process on those I capture and then transfer them-."
"No." Finreir glares at me. "I do not expect you to understand the depth of enmity between our two peoples, but the suggestion that we could become one once more is obscene."
"That's.. fine, I'll keep them? Ah, anyway, Dayrak, is Klavaella-?"
"NGWAAAAAAAAAHHH!"
Dayrak smiles as he turns around.
"A father's work is never done. But, come! See my daughter."
He strides purposively towards the houses the Dark Elves built for themselves when they decided that even if they did force the human peasants to create something for them, it wouldn't be good enough anyway. As sea-farers, they all had reasonable carpentry skills. I had to fetch slates for the roofing and put my foot down on the issue of the giant blades that they felt needed to be stuck on every corner, but the buildings generally turned out pretty well.
Loremaster Kaleina starts after him before either of her male colleagues.
"I will conduct the examination."
I-. Dayrak is a veteran reaver, but she's a Mage Lord. I'm not really happy with her assuming that she can just walk into his house and start poking his infant offspring, especially considering the fact that I'm the only person on 'our side' who would have the slightest chance of stopping her.
"I-."
Teclis raises his right hand.
"Kaleina, ask them permission. We are here as guests."
I nod. "They don't have any outstanding warrants. Unless you have evidence of a crime for which they have not already been sentenced, I'm going to have to ask you to observe local law."
I get stink eye, but she nods at Teclis before following Dayrak towards his home, one of the Swordmasters in turn following her.
Hm.
"Though that does raise a point. What about their children?"
"It isn't a matter of magic. The divergence between Ulthuan and Naggaroth is cultural and historical."
"And we're not in Naggaroth and they're developing their own culture. By the time they're of age… What are they going to have in common with the elves of Naggaroth that elves from Nagarythe don't have?"
"I would have thought that someone as well-acquainted with dwarfs as you are would understand that centuries of strife do not simply disappear."
"No, because with dwarfs they do if you pay your fines. We might think that they're obsessive about it, but they apply their irrationality in a perfectly rational way."
Teclis chuckles quietly. "I suppose they do have that going for them. Alas, High Elves are creatures of passion as much as-"
"Nay, good sir! 'tis the perfect time!"
"-intellect..?"
I frown as I fly upwards to check-. Yes, Mallobaude's taking advantage of the autumn slow down in farm work to try and train local volunteers as men-at-arms. This is a fairly standard practice in Bretonnia, and it would relieve pressure on the small number of elf professional soldiers and on me if they could handle small numbers of attackers. Or at least contribute meaningfully to their own defence. And then there's the fact that according to Bretonnian custom, a local likely lad should have been appointed Knight Errant by now.
They're not being that enthusiastic. They've basically survived by having nothing worth taking. By not being worth the trouble to drag out of hiding. Getting organised makes them start to look like they're worth coming after.
There's an odd rumbling sound below me, and a moment later Teclis rises up next to me on a pillar of rock with a stone staircase wrapped around it. The whole thing is covered in moss and shrouded in mist, which-. Well, that's magic for you.
Mallobaude grabs onto a teenage boy and corrects his stance, moving his wooden sword into a proper guard.
"The local Knight of the Realm?"
"Technically, he's a Questing Knight. Ah, look, I need to ask a favour."
"Another favour."
"No, the others serve our mutual interest. This is just for me."
He shrugs. "You can ask."
"I'd like for you to arrange for someone to teach my girlfriend High Magic."
He bows his head slightly, shaking it. "I'm sorry, but while humans might in theory be capable of learning to use qhaysh eventually, your species' relatively short lifespan makes it a practical impossibility."
"Ah, good news! She's not human."
He looks at me, and-.
"The.. Dark Elves' sorceress. You're bedding her."
"She was the first person to volunteer to have her mind altered. She was inclined to suck up to powerful figures…" I shrug. "I didn't fully consider the likely consequence of leaving that desire in place. She's still using dhar, but obviously I'd prefer it if she moved away from that. I've bought a few books from the Imperial Colleges of Magic, but…"
"She considers 'human' magic to be beneath her." He nods. "I understand her problem. What do I get out of this?"
"Ah? So mercenary?"
"Why should I ask for less than the dwarfs?"
"Fair enough." I look him over. "I could probably fix your body up, if you like."
His eyes narrow.
"What do you mean by-?"
I hold up my right arm wither it and then cause it to swell with muscle before darkening the skin and lightening it again.
"I know nothing of the precise effects of the Curse of Aenarion-."
"Deal."
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