by C S » Mon Jan 02, 2017 8:07 pm
From one underground to another.
Pipes, like brassy, scratched veins, wound their way all throughout the shop. They were the support pillars that held up the walls of sheet metal. They were the rafters that ran across the roof. They were the lanterns that kept the place lit, as they reflected the orange and white of furnaces and troughs of burning coals. The space was wide and vaguely circular in shape. Racks and shelves were stood up in the spaces that the wide pipes left to spare. Hefty work desks, laden with tools and parts and shelves like rungs down their legs, were lined up like cubicles. Each one had a dwarf on station. Each one had some kind of metal work underway. Engravings, polishing, or the tedious grinding of edges into quality bevels.
Fires roared and growled curses when the bellows were stamped down by boots plated with steel. The pipes gleamed with enhanced intensity along with them. The artisans tending to the forge were silhouettes against that mighty contraption that dominated the center of the workshop. While their extremities were as armored as the warriors of which they toiled for, their backs were bare to deal with the heat. Only the straps of their overalls reached past their shoulders.
It was not the place for spectators. Even the likes of Urlox was made to respect the delicate operations underway in the workshop, and he stood on the peripheries of the dwarven activity. The burly soldier was near a shelf, but not so near as to obstruct the flow of tools retrieved and returned to its racks. The man's size meant he was very much out of place, but he did not want to be near the pipes, which radiated a heat that made him reconsider not carrying an alternative to his commando gear, and emanated a chilling hiss. He guessed that the gases being passed through them were anything but chilling. They were probably downright crematory.
Urlox passed the time listening to the clink and crash of tools on raw steel. The sound was a rhythm of anticipation, because somewhere out there, he could envision his sword reborn. Legends never die, they were only retold, Walgruuf had once pointed out. The destruction of the guard captain's sword, then, was not the end of its legend, but the closing of a chapter in its storied life at his side. The process of melding the steel together was promised to be finished by now, thanks to dwarven efficiency. That meant every minute that passed was another closer to reunion.
When that moment finally came, Urlox was not what one would call "prepared". His chin was tucked into his folded arms, and his back was propped up by the edge of the shelf, the man half-asleep from the circulating heat inside the shop and general boredom. This was mildly insulting to the troupe of dwarves that were to present the finished product. It took a couple of them to roll the unusual sword over on a very specialized wagon. One that was designed to carry warhammers and battleaxes, weapons that were otherwise out of scale for a dwarven body.
"Outlander," said one of the dwarves with a voice that may have been spoken through ash and soot trapped in her lungs. It was stern enough to rouse Urlox back to wakefulness, over the other industrial ambience of the workshop. The man opened one eye first, which settled on the dwarves in a scouting manner, then he smiled, pleased at what he saw. Atop the wagon, there was a tarp, and the mound underneath the covers that was most pronounced where he imagined the hilt of his sword to be.
There was something he found odd, though. The blade seemed a lot wider, now. Not to mention shorter. Ah, but that must have been in his head! Urlox pushed off from his support and took a knee. "Excellent! It's finished?"
"Don't do that," the dwarf replied succinctly, which made Urlox incline his head questioningly. "Talk to us while standing. Half-men we may be, but we will be spoken to at all times with the fullest regards."
"Oh. I was just assuming the appointing stance -- ah, but you lot probably 'ave no time for an old man and his 'omeland traditions!" Urlox laughed heartily as he rose back to his feet. "Alright then, let me see this beauty!"
The dwarves obliged. With one fell motion, they pulled the tarp away. Urlox's eyes widened, then he squinted. He stepped closer and leaned over the wagon. He hummed appraisingly. The dwarves looked up at him with gaunt faces, not appreciating this exercise in patience.
"There might be a mistake 'ere," Urlox stated uncertainly. The hilt of the sword was replicated masterfully, with the added inclusion of a long guard that almost reached the same length as the pommel. It was pointed to be a weapon in of itself, a spike affixed to what was a slab of metal. It was indeed wider than it was long, and the sword was straight on up until the tip. There, a broad wedge was given a fearsome edge, and the two edges of this wedge gave each side of the sword an axe-like quality. Two narrow points that could be driven through armor with ease, given the rest of the mass behind them. Impressive as it was, this sword was not his sword.
"It looks nice, but... uh. It doesn't look like the other one. That one also looked nice, and this one is also pretty... but the other one had a sort of... reputation, you know?" the man explained to the thoroughly unamused dwarves, gesticulating with his hands.
"The other one was made with some kind of sorcery to make it function, outlander," another dwarf in the group asserted, and left no room for contention of that so-called fact. "Its proportions defy that of the largest claymore, and other similar two-handed weapons. Of course it was going to be broken as it was. The fact that it lasted so long, as you said, is simply sorcery."
Urlox felt the need to point out that Daavenian craft was exceptional among the denominations of mankind, but that ran the risk of some very far reaching implications as far as a certain Wanderer was concerned. "Aye," agreed the faux mercenary with a damper on his enthusiasm.
"This one will not break unless you are wholly irresponsible or stupid... or both, on a scale unprecedented over the course of history on this land. On this world. Nevertheless, the truth is as such: you will be long dead before this steel is rended again," assured one of the metalworkers with a harsh bluntness. "But this durability comes with a price: can you even lift this bloody thing?"
"That is a good question," Urlox replied. It was the same material as his previous sword, but packed denser into a truly unique weapon. A hybrid of a sword, hammer and axe. The steel looked to be sturdy enough to block blows along its broadside, as well, not just parry! With these possibilities, Urlox found it within himself to overlook the deviation in this legend. It all depended on whether or not he could lift it, and use it with the same proficiency as before...
The red-bearded man reached out and wrapped the fingers of one hand around the handle. Then the next. He took one last breath, and used the moment to remind himself of the long road he'd walked throughout his lifetime. Failures with bows and arrows, warhammers... his first love was the sword. Did it reciprocate this care?
"Don't reject me now, lass, now that you're all gussied up!"
Urlox heaved the sword up and over a shoulder. It was only after he did this dramatic swing that he found it to be completely unnecessary. "Oi. It's just fine!" he reported. He held it out at the ready in front of him. It was tempting to start practicing with its reduced range and the inherent change of stance and style, however, it would have been unwise to injure the dwarves that resurrected his sword. It would also be unwise to damage their equipment. It had costed him a pretty piece to commission this work, and there was a lot to lose if anything went off-kilter now. "I'll take it!"
"You have no choice. We've already assembled its sheathe and mounts. It's either you take it or we sell it."
"Aye!" Urlox said with a twinkle in his eye. He was speedily growing fond of this weight. This sword that can crush.
Contrary to the vented heat of a stone vessel dedicated to creation and transformation, the interior passages of Brodudika's city hall were temperate for the season, comfortably warm. As usual, it was a busy place to be already, and people rearing to get on the road had their bundles of clothing on, though unbuttoned so as to not suffer while indoors. It was already bad enough that most of them were carrying every facet of their travel on their backs or in their hands. The droves of people ready to take their assignments was a normal scene for the gray-clad woman with the pointed hat. What she found noteworthy, peeking over the top of the book she inconspicuously carried around lately, was the few people who were not out to embark, but were returning.
Standing at one of her regular haunts, in this case: a lobby column, Moira got a good look of them once they were through the hall past the building's doors. She couldn't say for certain what made her look up from the text she was reading; they were a discreet bunch that would have gone unnoticed in the din of adventurers. Maybe it was their impressive stature, made more so by the bulky hide coats and backpacks that had bedrolls slung atop them. They were a tall and wide lot because of their gear, and the cold of the outside still followed them. Even though they were polite in asking pardon as they worked their way around the room to avoid the lines, it was enough of an off-key occurrence to draw Moira's eye. Shouldn't they be dressing down and waiting to claim their questing rewards, she wondered. The mysterious lady caught onto the trail of a mystery, and so turned her attention from her book about draconic legends to this minute happening.
The group were making their way to the side passage that led to city hall's archives. Well, that wasn't so mysterious, Moira had to admit as she shadowed the newcomers on light feet and an adherence to a respectable distance. If one of them gave even the slightest hint of a turning motion, she would plaster herself to the near wall nonchalantly and act as though she were always there, reading her book. It was an act she had perfected. Of course, in the way of those carrying out mischief did, one of the strangers did turn to peek past their hood and luggage to make sure they were not being followed. Of course, they saw Moira, her face buried within the pages of her book.
Mischief confirmed. "But is it the kind of mischief that I should be trotting off to prattle to a guard?" A mystery within a mystery, that one was. Another layer of mystery was, what manner of mischief was worth doing after that public fiasco with stalkers that took after a snake? Moira slid along gradually as the shade she was dressed as, a sleuth to give men in green coats a run for their money. If it did turn out that she needed to go to a detective rather than a city guard, she might as well have some leads for the city's crime solvers on loan. Now, how they would react to her knowing what she did as a result of spying, that was something else entirely. Moira did find that notion more than a little funny, though she kept that firmly inside her musings.
The leader of the pack opened the door the library and the others funneled in after him. He took one last cursory look about the hallway and saw the woman engaged in reading her book. He arched a brow. He could have sworn she was farther away, yet for all it appeared to be, she hadn't budged an inch. She was holding her book the same way as he last saw her holding it, her eyes were lazily passing over the page she was on. The man observed Moira for a little while after and he saw her turn to the next page. He was convinced then that she was just a bystander too caught up in her reading. The man stepped into the library and shut the door behind him.
"Aw, nuts."
Moira tiptoed as fast as she could to the door and pressed her ears up to it. She heard footsteps growing softer, so she waited a few moments before opening it up just a crack with the most precise care to being silent. "You're going to have to speak extra-soft if the Storyteller's at his post."
And the mysterious bunch was, for the most part. They couldn't disguise the sounds of their boots on the library floor, though they did a better job of it than the benefactor could ever hope to, so they had that going for them. All the same, Moira opened the door slowly, closed it with the same amount of care, and followed on quiet slippers, one aisle of bookshelves over, using the tomes as cover. They had no idea she was practically right next to them when they finally came to a stop deep within the archive. Moira was crouched down low and kept her ears peeled.
At first she heard the jangle of their travel supplies as they rummaged through their bags. This went on for some time, long enough for the hydromancer to consider that these people were just after a secluded place to indulge herbs or some other sort of frivolity. Lazy though she was at times, as an instructor, Moira did have a respect for books and places where knowledge was kept. If she smelled odd smoke or heard noises best unheard, she would fetch a guard in a heartbeat, this she swore to herself with a certain grimness. So much for her mysterious mystery, if that ended up being the case.
But after the rummaging ended, the strangers started to speak. They spoke of cryptic things. A nondescript forest, which could have been anywhere on Aster. A hidden cabin out in those woods, wherever on Aster those woods were. "Warlocks". "Drakeblood".
"They made a hefty sacrifice. And for what? Their hydra simply disappeared from record. We can do them one better, can't we? Our righteous hearts will birth a true dragon savior. Our tribute to Greshlynk. And like poor Chromatus before it, the farce known as Brodudika will disappear from record. Grymhaven will rise again under the Tribute's wings as it crushes the benefactor within its clawed grasp. When Grymhaven rises, all of Draxon will rise."
That was as coherent as their discussion got. Coherent, in that it framed everything else in a strongly negative light and definitely associated what Moira heard with the previous plot to use a wyvern to burn the city to ashes. The woman would have questioned the wisdom of jumping from capturing a wild drake to trying to make one from scratch with occult warlock magic if it wasn't so staggeringly disturbing as a possibility. It actually happened.
This 'poor Chromatus', the hydra that disappeared?
Whatever it was that the strangers retrieved from their outing, they hid it away in the shelf separating them from the hydromancer. She heard the books being shuffled about to make space for the library's newest, undocumented additions. Moira waited for their footsteps to fade away before sneaking around to the other side, and then began to search the area they would have been standing in front of. Sure enough, she found the small books, if they could be called books at all. Their covers were crude wraps of leather of a scaly sort, dark and pebbly. Moira felt a sense of wrongness when she took one in her free hand. That feeling alone dissuaded her from opening the cipher. Chromatus.
Either the strangers would be back later, or someone was slated to stop by the library soon to peruse some new choice material, Moira deduced. Well, there was a saying about even the best laid plans, and how often they were prone to going awry. "Always account for the Hats," Moira muttered as she retrieved the small, pamphlet sized works and stuck them in the pages of her book.
In the hallway outside of the library, the strangers took note of their book-reader's absence. The most superstitious of them found it very timely.
