"Why are you here?" the man in red inquired of the woman in his doorway as he shifted about his various merchant's tools. She didn't seem to make any apparent effort to respond, instead proceeding into the heart of the room with a dreadfully sluggish pace. The Red Wizard looked annoyed by her presence—or, perhaps, a lack of apparent profit in his day's sales—but his tone suggested otherwise. He slowly measured out stacks of trade bars and coin, spreading them out atop the elaborate table he sat at, and calmly spoke to the unidentified female without giving her a sincere look in the eye.
"Let me guess: you wish to barter, hmm?" he began. "I've already told you several times that I am no longer interested in the ... 'spiritual trinkets' you have to offer. I also am not keen on giving you any sort of discount without first—"
The woman smiled coyly and cut off his words, insisting, "I will pay the full price this time, Aloth Zura." The mage paused his activity and glared up at her. Frankly, her smile annoyed him, but he feigned light-hearted interest and sat upright in his court chair. The relaxed posture beckoned the female closer to his desk, where she leaned down at its front and rested her elbows on the polished surface.
"I am listening, devil-worshipper," sighed Aloth, a subtle hint of an exasperated lie on his tongue. He motioned to gather his hands and interlock the fingers, as was a habit of his amidst conversation, but his companion's hand lashed forward and she caught him by the wrist.
"I require the services of an illusionist in your employ, but just any apprentice will not do," she said. Her words intruiged the man, but he was otherwise uninterested ... until he felt the discomfort of her skin on his own. Averting his eyes to locate the cause, Aloth noticed the horrible deformation that was her hands. The fingernails were completely torn off from the tip of each phalange, and it appeared as though an animal had been chewing through the flesh and bone. The tips were formed into beastial claws, and the skin was so bruised and shredded that it persistently bled.
A disturbing sight. He recoiled back his hand in disgust and began frantically readjusting the hem of his sleeve, double-checking the expensive fabric to ensure no stains had formed. The woman only chuckled.
"I understand why, Marona," Aloth conceded. "However, you used to intentionally mutilate yourself in the past, and your appearance in public was not a priority. Why is it now that you wish to conceal it?" Marona pursed her lips together and shifted her gaze to the menagerie of objects and baubels on his desk. A hand tapped against the wood in thought, and she offered him a smile.
"I need it for a deception that is very important to me."
---------------------------------------------
Marona darted through the halls of the citadel in haste, barefoot and gowned in a loose chemise that trailed along the tiles after her. It was early in the evening—perhaps not even a few hours after dusk—so the area was not terribly lit. Windows were sparce and torches long burned out. She frequently passed open doorways and squinted hard to see inside, but as time drew on she eventually skipped rooms altogether. In her hand, she toted a large ring of keys constructed of various metals; based on the sheer number of doors in the building, they belonged to the locks.
Eventually, she reached a door on the third floor of the building, and quickly parted the key ring to unlock the latch. It was the smithy's old chambers when the citadel was still alive with people, caked with dust and soot and tools. She held up the hem of her gown with a hand and outstretched the other for balance, and she proceeded carefully into the room. The scent alone was alarming: it strangled her with the burnt residue of tools long rusted, or the pungeant stench of oils and overused whetstones. Maneuvering around in the room was also overly difficult to tolerate.
Many old materials for crafting had been spilled on the floor or misplaced when the residents still lived. Calipers and hammers had to be edged aside to make room for her footsteps, and she ocassionally had to avoid spilled nails or broken weapons. Several difficult moments passed until she reached the corner of the room opposite the doorway, where finished items were usually placed. Marona settled into a proper stand and she sighed dejectedly at the sight before her eyes.
The wooden table and display racks were covered with weapons, and inches of soot and debris rested atop them. She tested an area for thickness by wiping an index finger along the surface, and pulled back a digit that was nearly permanently stained with blackness.
"How could they let it come to this?" she mused, attempting to vainly shake the residue from her hand. After a clump detached, Marona slipped the key ring onto her wrist and picked through the small blades on the table. They were not terribly varied and she was in frantic haste, so she reluctantly nabbed one at random and rushed from the room as she entered.
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"Deception?" the mage echoed in confirmation and the woman responded with a short, stiff nod. He tilted his head back and rested his wrists on the table again, the long fingernails on his right hand caressing a bracelet of gold links that choked his left forearm. His stare was intense, as if he wished to divine her intentions with a single glance, and it prompted an cryptic explanation.
"Yes, deception. The sweetest sort," Marona began, gestuating passionately with her words in a sadistic mimicry of poetics. "The kind that leaves an audience in an uproar following a play. The kind that the weak of heart would beg not to experience. The kind that—" She paused and shifted her eyes towards the right, having been alerted by another presence in the room. A lesser mage waivered in the doorway and patiently awaited Aloth's acknowledgment.
"What is it now?" Aloth inquired with irritation and the mage-apprentice timidly shifted his posture.
"The caravan is here, Master Zura, but the merchants refuse to unload the supplies until you personally visit them," he announced. The Red Wizard curled his lips into a frown.
"Then kill them," he responded firmly. The apprentice immediately bowed in response and darted away from the doorway to reallow lukewarm light into the room. Marona turned her gaze to Aloth, but he calmly lifted his hand to halt the continuation of their conversation. They rested in silence for a few minutes, listening to the boisterous racket of spellcasting in the distance until it finally died down, and the mage lowered his hand.
"It is a wonderful thing, what I have planned; something you would approve of. This is living poetry: the sort of thing you would find in a children's storybook, albeit graphic. All I require is a potent illusion spell to conceal my hands."
(( To be continued.
"Let me guess: you wish to barter, hmm?" he began. "I've already told you several times that I am no longer interested in the ... 'spiritual trinkets' you have to offer. I also am not keen on giving you any sort of discount without first—"
The woman smiled coyly and cut off his words, insisting, "I will pay the full price this time, Aloth Zura." The mage paused his activity and glared up at her. Frankly, her smile annoyed him, but he feigned light-hearted interest and sat upright in his court chair. The relaxed posture beckoned the female closer to his desk, where she leaned down at its front and rested her elbows on the polished surface.
"I am listening, devil-worshipper," sighed Aloth, a subtle hint of an exasperated lie on his tongue. He motioned to gather his hands and interlock the fingers, as was a habit of his amidst conversation, but his companion's hand lashed forward and she caught him by the wrist.
"I require the services of an illusionist in your employ, but just any apprentice will not do," she said. Her words intruiged the man, but he was otherwise uninterested ... until he felt the discomfort of her skin on his own. Averting his eyes to locate the cause, Aloth noticed the horrible deformation that was her hands. The fingernails were completely torn off from the tip of each phalange, and it appeared as though an animal had been chewing through the flesh and bone. The tips were formed into beastial claws, and the skin was so bruised and shredded that it persistently bled.
A disturbing sight. He recoiled back his hand in disgust and began frantically readjusting the hem of his sleeve, double-checking the expensive fabric to ensure no stains had formed. The woman only chuckled.
"I understand why, Marona," Aloth conceded. "However, you used to intentionally mutilate yourself in the past, and your appearance in public was not a priority. Why is it now that you wish to conceal it?" Marona pursed her lips together and shifted her gaze to the menagerie of objects and baubels on his desk. A hand tapped against the wood in thought, and she offered him a smile.
"I need it for a deception that is very important to me."
---------------------------------------------
Marona darted through the halls of the citadel in haste, barefoot and gowned in a loose chemise that trailed along the tiles after her. It was early in the evening—perhaps not even a few hours after dusk—so the area was not terribly lit. Windows were sparce and torches long burned out. She frequently passed open doorways and squinted hard to see inside, but as time drew on she eventually skipped rooms altogether. In her hand, she toted a large ring of keys constructed of various metals; based on the sheer number of doors in the building, they belonged to the locks.
Eventually, she reached a door on the third floor of the building, and quickly parted the key ring to unlock the latch. It was the smithy's old chambers when the citadel was still alive with people, caked with dust and soot and tools. She held up the hem of her gown with a hand and outstretched the other for balance, and she proceeded carefully into the room. The scent alone was alarming: it strangled her with the burnt residue of tools long rusted, or the pungeant stench of oils and overused whetstones. Maneuvering around in the room was also overly difficult to tolerate.
Many old materials for crafting had been spilled on the floor or misplaced when the residents still lived. Calipers and hammers had to be edged aside to make room for her footsteps, and she ocassionally had to avoid spilled nails or broken weapons. Several difficult moments passed until she reached the corner of the room opposite the doorway, where finished items were usually placed. Marona settled into a proper stand and she sighed dejectedly at the sight before her eyes.
The wooden table and display racks were covered with weapons, and inches of soot and debris rested atop them. She tested an area for thickness by wiping an index finger along the surface, and pulled back a digit that was nearly permanently stained with blackness.
"How could they let it come to this?" she mused, attempting to vainly shake the residue from her hand. After a clump detached, Marona slipped the key ring onto her wrist and picked through the small blades on the table. They were not terribly varied and she was in frantic haste, so she reluctantly nabbed one at random and rushed from the room as she entered.
---------------------------------------------
"Deception?" the mage echoed in confirmation and the woman responded with a short, stiff nod. He tilted his head back and rested his wrists on the table again, the long fingernails on his right hand caressing a bracelet of gold links that choked his left forearm. His stare was intense, as if he wished to divine her intentions with a single glance, and it prompted an cryptic explanation.
"Yes, deception. The sweetest sort," Marona began, gestuating passionately with her words in a sadistic mimicry of poetics. "The kind that leaves an audience in an uproar following a play. The kind that the weak of heart would beg not to experience. The kind that—" She paused and shifted her eyes towards the right, having been alerted by another presence in the room. A lesser mage waivered in the doorway and patiently awaited Aloth's acknowledgment.
"What is it now?" Aloth inquired with irritation and the mage-apprentice timidly shifted his posture.
"The caravan is here, Master Zura, but the merchants refuse to unload the supplies until you personally visit them," he announced. The Red Wizard curled his lips into a frown.
"Then kill them," he responded firmly. The apprentice immediately bowed in response and darted away from the doorway to reallow lukewarm light into the room. Marona turned her gaze to Aloth, but he calmly lifted his hand to halt the continuation of their conversation. They rested in silence for a few minutes, listening to the boisterous racket of spellcasting in the distance until it finally died down, and the mage lowered his hand.
"It is a wonderful thing, what I have planned; something you would approve of. This is living poetry: the sort of thing you would find in a children's storybook, albeit graphic. All I require is a potent illusion spell to conceal my hands."
(( To be continued.
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