by The Kingpin » Mon Feb 06, 2017 1:02 am
The sharp snap-snapping drew the Scholar's under-stimulated attention towards the edge of the riverbank. There, standing amidst the snowdrifts and what grass still stood on the frozen banks, was a bird with black and white plumage, a long, slender red bill, shaped like an ice pick, holding its head close to the ice and snapping its beak noisily in a way that seemed disproportionate for its size. The Scholar noticed that the bird had a facial disk not unlike an owl's, with the areas around the ears flushing a rich orange-yellow in tune with the snapping of its bill. A second later, it started stabbing at the ice as it dug itself a small hole. At first, this caught Septimus off-guard and took him by surprise. Why was it digging away at the ice over there, when there was exposed water over here? A couple of types of waterfowl had already moved in here, and yet that tall bird, roughly the height of a grown person, insisted on chiselling away at solid ice.
He found out why a few moments later. Pulling roughly at something in the ice, the bird emerged with a bulbous brown object that, after a few vigorous shakes, was soon revealed to be an enormous, limp orange toad. No doubt, it had been hibernating under the ice. The bird then, in a feat of gluttony that boggled even his mind, swallowed the entire thing whole. He had thought unhinging jaws were a characteristic of reptiles, but it seemed this bird had proven otherwise. It then began to walk along the bank, snapping its beak periodically, presumably in search of other hibernating toads.
Ceridwen's trilling was muted and controlled for the most part as she sat, huddled up in her wings and buried in her own dense plumage by the riverbank, coaxing songs from the few breeds of waterfowl that had been drawn in by the Scholar's acts of ice-breaking. These birds had beaks like hatchets, flat and narrow at the tip, growing wide further back. Their heads were armoured with bony plates, as were their necks and the leading edge of their wings. Long, thin, saurian tails covered in plumage terminated in arrow-fletching tips, and the Scholar was, with a bit of thought, able to piece together what they were. Vanguardian ice-breakers. Their scarlet eyes and black wings were distinctive, but the fact that this species of bird-wyvern, as opposed to other ice-breaker breeds being this far south was a telling sign. It was undoubtedly an exceptionally cold winter. For once, they must've been driven south to where the ice was thinner. He pondered how that boded for the people of Vanguard themselves. It was also interesting how they differed from other sorts of bird-wyvern he had encountered, most notably the jungle variety he had encountered on that very day he met Thurduunax. The day his life was torn free of the stagnation that had cursed him since his birth.
This year was a year of firsts for many. The first time in hundreds of years that Crestvale's trade district was unsheltered from the elements. The first time the snow had crushed the shades. The first time the Crestvale treasury was losing more than it was earning in an effort to repair the damage. The first time the entire Crestvale fleet was out on patrol. The first time the gallows were holding daily executions, reaped from the vast numbers of pirates that thought they could prey on Crestvale's vulnerable sea trade and falling victim to the vigilant patrols.
It was also the first time in history that a leader of Tyrbenetus set foot on Aster.
The Tyrbenetan brig Equinox was anchored in port, markedly less extravagantly decorated than its peers in the harbour. The crew, however, were simultaneously out-of-place and inconspicuous. Creatures resembling wolves and lions if not for their two legged stance carried cargo off, some of it their own, others goods intended to be offered to the Valenhadian authorities in exchange for their ability to stay. At the trailing end of this group were two figures.
One, taller than most, clad in some leather and scale armour that seemed distinctly oriental, dark red and overlapped with pale steel plates. The armour was layered and seemed to be topped on its exterior by a coat that extended almost to the ground, made of relatively light leather. Under his armour, a black shirt with a standing collar split at the throat, revealing a triangle of white fabric beneath. For a traveller, he was armed to the teeth, two yataghans at his sides and a double-ended sword of a form unfamiliar in Aster, located on his back. Black blades engraved with some form of dragon pattern that could not be made out in the shadow of the harbour extended from either end of the long grip, curving in different directions. On his head, a wide brimmed hat that cast his head in shadows just enough to obscure his features to the unattentive, and designed to shelter him from a harsh, unforgiving, apocalyptic sun.
The other was shorter, but more stockily built, clad in dark grey armour that seemed more fitting for a man going to war than one travelling. The plating, despite the dark hue, still managed to shimmer as if polished, and the borders of the plates themselves shimmered with a shade of gold that was faded, but unmistakeable. On his chest was imagery of a divinity that had been lost for over a year. His head was hidden under a hood that left nothing but his glowing eyes visible; a trait that the two shared. On his back was a massive heater shield, likely too heavy for any human to carry, and a relatively plain steel longsword engraved in runes of a sort that had never been seen in Aster save for once, and at his sides, two shortswords, more elegantly refined than the frightening weapon that was no doubt his preferred method of killing. Not that he needed weapons to be lethal. Gauntlets on his formidable hands looked like they could shatter a carriage with a backhand, and on a man this visibly powerful, walking comfortably in that much armour, nobody dared question the likelihood of that being the case.
These two figures were strangers here, but in their homeland, they were the leaders of a resistance that had fought against an unstoppable force for aeons. Each was unfathomably older than anyone in this city, and between them, may likely have fought more battles than the rest of Aster's living human and elven soldiers had combined.
"Ah yes, organised chaos. the sign of a clever but ever-busy mind. To the perpetrator, a carefully woven web of belongings and intrigue, but to the bystander? Madness!"
–William Beckett, Lore of Leyuna RPG