Author Topic: Seeking of the Butcher  (Read 24085 times)

Mariana Xiechai

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #150 on: April 10, 2012, 02:47:25 am »
Travosh is too stubborn to die.

 ;D True, true, but you just have to have that dramatic moment in there.

Aramara Meibi

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #151 on: April 10, 2012, 04:18:09 pm »
I underplayed Ara's reaction.

What I should have done is this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtE0jcAkvjI&feature=player_embedded
all blessings to the assembled devotees.

Mariana Xiechai

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #152 on: April 10, 2012, 04:41:01 pm »
I underplayed Ara's reaction.

What I should have done is this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtE0jcAkvjI&feature=player_embedded

 ;D Now all day long I'm going to have this image of an akkaio standing there with her arm outstretched and saying "nnnnnnnnnNNNNNNNOOOOOOOOOOOooooooooo!!!!" in really dramatic slow-mo fashion.

Mariana Xiechai

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The Death of Barsidious Whiteni, Part 4
« Reply #153 on: April 10, 2012, 11:10:16 pm »

Timil resisted the urge to pump his fist in the air and shout "Yesss!" Instead, he hurried after Evirea when she fled the cave. Leaving Herihi and Sarras lagging behind, the former began looking around the cave for anything else interesting. Sarras stared at Barsidious's corpse, or what remained of it, for a moment. Curiously, as if expecting it were a hallucination, she stood and kicked his leg, or what was left of it. Most certainly, Barsidious was dead, but something was floating atop the pool of biological fluids he had left behind. A small slip of paper, slowly being drowned in the liquid. The paper caught  the dermorian's eye. She gritted her teeth and reached for it. Her eyes scanned its contents, and she found it legible, if not soaked in blood and bile and whatever else inhabits the human body.

The paper had a simple message on it. It read: "Due to your inability to bring me more of my supply, I am afraid I will soon be discontinuing your services. They are no longer required. If you cannot bring me what I need, I shall simply procure it by another means. You are hereby dismissed from my services." It was completely unsigned.

Sarras blinked her eyes hard from the strain of reading in such darkness. She called to Herihi, "Hey! Come. Read this. Who do you suppose wrote it?"

The Diaboli Herihi gave up her search of the cave and came over to read the note with Sarras. Herihi muttered a few more expletives after reading the note.  "Well I hope they are happy about killing him.  Now we'll never know who he worked for." She began her painstaking search for a light source first and then after finding something to brighten the cave searched it thoroughly for any other clues.

Sarras swore in frustration, "Dammit!" She folded the note in her hand while glaring at the icky, oozy shell of Barsidious. Silently, she thought over their options.

The table in the corner of the room was covered in alchemical ingredients, bottles, a mortar and pestle. Herihi sifted through these things, musing to herself, muttering something about “Wondering if a friend of hers could use those supplies.” She pocketed them, but the dermorian protested. 

"Hold it. We need to collect that as evidence.”

Herihi looked over to her "Oh, evidence?" Herihi thought a moment then nodded "True....evidence of his crimes for sure." She pulled the things out again and put them back where they were.  "Well nothing else around here.  And since he's dead I guess I'll be heading out."

Aramara lifted herself to her feet, picked up her bow, and took one last long look at the smoldering husk of Barsidious's corpse. Her only hope was that things didn't play out exactly like her vision. Perhaps they'd changed the course of fate enough. She could only pray. She exited the cave, took a deep breath of the air outside, and immediately fell to her knees to vomit. When she was finished, she rose back to her feet and wiped her mouth against the fur of her arm. Begrudgingly she started her climb out of the crater. She only shook her head as she walked past Evirea and Travosh and made her way back to Hydlaa and the peace of the garden.

<><><><><><><><><><><>

Evirea  had managed to run out the exit, and made her way laboriously up the hill. She stopped to catch her breath, eyes scanning the vicinity for Travosh, still panicking. "Oh gods, if he's dead, oh gods oh gods..."

But Travosh was sitting outside where he was left, though he was smoking rather heavily. Rather than reacting to such phenomenon, he was simply covering his face with his hands, the powder of the amulet coating his robes. Evirea darted towards the klyros and knelt before him, shaking. She studied him for signs of injury, the smoking clearly bothering her considering what she just saw from Barsidious, and she reached out to try and grip his shoulder with her good arm. "Look at me," she said. "Look at me, Travosh, are you alright?"

Travosh shook his head. He didn't appear to be injured, just smoking for an inconceivable reason. "I'm... fine."

Evirea shifted her hands to try and feel Travosh's brow, to take his temperature. "Damn it," she muttered. "I swear if you maintained that connection and hurt yourself, I will kill you." Her voice was hoarse with tiredness, and worry. His brow was unnaturally hot against her skin. Hot like someone sitting way to close to a fire for awhile, rather than fever-heat. "It needed to be done. Just wish... He hadn't seen so much."

Evirea 's brow furrowed. "It's alright," she said softly. "He's dead. What...what he saw died with him, nobody knows, now." She gripped Travosh's shoulder again, attempting to be reassuring. "You're going to be okay?"

Travosh did nod back to Evirea, putting both his hands down, his eyes closed however.

Evirea sat beside the klyros, her good arm wrapped around his shoulders. She was content to simply wait for him, offering whatever comfort her present can provide, and remained silent. It was, after all, not the first time that they'd sat in silence, pondering a potentially troubled past. She had no idea what the man's past was, nor was she ever likely to, but as a friend, it was enough to know that the prodding of barely healed internal wounds was enough to bother him.

Travosh opened his eyes at last, the briefest of shimmers present before he snapped his fingers and banished it. "You're lucky I'm too tired to throw you off me,” he stated.

Evirea grinned and pulled her arm from Travosh's shoulders, shifting it gladly enough back over to grip her own injury. "There you are," she said, relieved, and leaned back against the wall. "Good. I was worried. You were being far too cuddly."

Travosh chuckled, "You should get that shoulder looked at. What happened in there anyways?"

Evirea shrugged painfully. "He liked the motif of a hook," she replied. "I'm sure you can only imagine why."

Travosh nodded. "I can know exactly why. You did figure that out, didn't you?"

Evirea frowned grimly. "Yes, I did," she replied. She looked towards him. "I'd ask you what he saw, but I'm not stupid enough to think you'd give a straight answer." She looked back out towards the expanse below. "So I won't bother." She hummed to herself, wonderingly. "Now what to do...I'll need another case, you know."

Travosh looked up at Evirea. "You're right, I would simply tell you he saw someone I'd rather wish he hadn't. As for cases...Who knows. There is still that plague."
Evirea smirked. "I tested it successfully...found a good recipient for it too. It's a rather...painful procedure, but it seems to have worked quite well."

The klyros chuckled again. "Well I hope he deserves it. Lets get YOU a doctor for once now."

Evirea groaned. "You know what they say about doctors as patients," she said, clambering to her feet. "They're terrible."

<><><><><><><><><><><>

A corpse sat unassumingly in the deeper part of the cave, its hollowed eyes peering listlessly outwards as the scene played itself to its conclusion. The reek of rotting had long ago left it, and its structure had been reduced nearly to dust, its flesh peeled back from Velnishi-plucked bones. What had caused the stranger's death was uncertain, but sadly its vantage was an obscure one, at least for those who might see it and bring it to a worthy eternal resting place. So for years it had sat, immobile, broken jaw skewed awkwardly open as the eons passed by with nothing new under the cave.

But tonight it was different. Tonight, those hollow eyes burned a sickly emerald green. Tonight, its head gave a seizure-esque jerk. Tonight, it craned its fractured neck and sought the scene with great import, its dusty limbs rustling and sending particles up into the air. The sounds it made were minimal. In the darkness, it was barely visible, hidden there behind a conveniently placed stalagmite. A necrotic spy, it watched the goings on with one might consider fascination, if in fact its face was a face, and still had the capacity to communicate an expression. Bony fingers curled around the stones available as it watched Barsidious die, and it strained hard, trying to make something out of the gibberish that was pouring from his lips.

But it got nothing, save for a single name.

In silence it waited until they slowly left, ebbing like a tide, their valiant deed at an end. When they were finished, it leaned back against the stone again, studying the wall. Its limbs gave a few twitches, and with a frustrated grinding of bone, whatever possessed the thing bid it to stand. The long-unused ligaments splintered, and the fractured bits of cartridge went spraying outwards. It collapsed into a pile of dust.

For a few moments the green flame remained hovering over the remains. It fled like a parasitic thing into the husk that was Barsidious, but with his liquified innards, found him even a less convenient host. The Ylian's eyes glowed emerald as he stared at the ceiling, his hands twitched, but he did not move. The head turned right and left, searching, perhaps, for more information, as though the force was a curious, childish thing, and sought to learn more through different vessels. It found nothing, however, nothing salvageable in the frail and tattered mind, nothing that could be gleaned from the now-fried synapses.

It only had one name, and a few others. Simple names. Nothing to inspire any real concern, but curiosity, ah...yes. There was a curiosity in the thing.

It opened up the once-terrible killer's mouth like an escape hatch and poured out. The sickly fire flickered faintly, as though its very being were being compromised without the ability to feed. It began to die, the crackles and hisses sounding like curses, until the faintest ember hovered suspended in the air. It, too, died, and floated down to the earth as a crumb of useless ash.

End Seeking of the Butcher
Part One
« Last Edit: May 11, 2012, 08:47:31 pm by Mariana Xiechai »

Knightspark9

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #154 on: April 10, 2012, 11:38:11 pm »
Wonderful! What will happen after Barsidious's death, is the question. ;)
Ardoin: So, do you drink moonshine?
Earowo: As long as it has alcohol, I'll drink it.

Aramara Meibi

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #155 on: April 11, 2012, 12:22:24 am »
DOOOOOOOOMMMMMMM!!!!!
all blessings to the assembled devotees.

Mariana Xiechai

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #156 on: April 11, 2012, 03:33:53 am »
Don't forget destruction

Knightspark9

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #157 on: April 11, 2012, 03:41:49 am »
As well as some new tools/servants for some characters?  :whistling:
Ardoin: So, do you drink moonshine?
Earowo: As long as it has alcohol, I'll drink it.

Phantomboy86

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #158 on: April 11, 2012, 06:05:42 am »
Ten thousand cycles of darkness, tentacled monsters, cthulhu r'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn, ect ect.

Mariana Xiechai

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #159 on: May 11, 2012, 08:48:54 pm »
Seeking of the Butcher
Part Two

The messenger was rambling something at him. He was a decent rambler, really. He had an incredible talent for deviating from the subject while remaining on a somewhat relevant track, so that he appeared to be conveying something worth noting without actually admitting to the presumably unpleasant information he possessed. And it certainly wasn't that he blamed the man. He was understandably nervous, and it showed rather well: a hint of sweat soaking his collar here, a wringing of the hands there. Indeed, he might have found the entire ordeal rather flattering if it wasn't for this infuriating run around, which had already taken up fifteen whole minutes of his precious, priceless time.

“So you see sir...” Ah, another twitch there in the left cheek, how quaint. “So you see, m'lord Teeleh, it would appear that your supplier has been...been...compromised.”

The dermorian leaned forward in his chair. What a lovely way to gloss over a homicide, he thought to himself, as he folded his hands together and fixed the Ylian with a withering look. There was a considerable increase in tension as the messenger back-peddled towards the door, his eyes widening to admirable saucers. The elf often pondered how much of this was actually true terror, or rather simply an overreaction meant to convey a sense of respect. He hadn't the foggiest idea what the man could possibly have to fear from him besides his monetary wealth. Which, while formidable, hardly meant that he could simply have him eliminated out of spite. Well, not without hefty compensation to many greedy hands. Perhaps he should inform the messenger that he simply wasn't that important. It might make the paranoid individual feel better.

“I do trust you understand how pressing this matter is,” Teeleh said, moving to steeple his fingers and rest them contemplatively against his lips. “I trust that you realize how unappreciated withheld information will be.”

Someone might as well have ignited a lava pit in the middle of the room and moved to throw him into it. The threat was gloriously subtle, but it was more than enough to light a fire under the man's heels. He rambled off random tidbits of what he'd heard around the city; that somehow his supplier had gone insane, that some of the citizens of Hydlaa had as a result taken it upon themselves to eliminate him from their midst. It didn't seem he had anything useful, like names, which made Teeleh glad he'd already taken it upon himself to do some rather...impromptu digging of his own. When the messenger had finished his rambling, he stood gape-mouthed at the door like a water-starved fish, trying to suck air into lungs not quite designed for the task.

The dermorian waved his had to dismiss him. Instantly his fins became legs, and he bolted out the door like a rabbit.

Teeleh leaned his head forward into his hands with a tired sigh. He tried to be careful. He knew that nobody was the wiser when it came to his hand in these things, and that even if they knew by some incredible miracle, well...it would not be a difficult task to take care of the rat, as it were. Yet he was also aware that being exposed could be a potential problem, one that he did not have the time nor the energy to deal with. His only connection to the crime scene was an unsigned note, and certainly that was hardly enough to incriminate anyone.

Decisions, decisions, he mused, leaning back in his chair and enjoying the feel of the lush cushions that greeted him. Ah, yes, another thing, that. If he decided to visit the Dome level, then he would also have to leave his luxurious lifestyle. It hadn't always been this way of course, but now that he had the niceties that copious tria could provide, he was loath to leave it.

Unfortunately it only took one small fissure in the monument that was his plans to send it toppling to the dust. The prospect of that many years wasted made his gut churn enough to instantly put him off food for weeks.

Meddling meddling meddling. Always with the meddling. Ah, well. Perhaps hiring a half-crazed killer was somewhat of a mistake, but with a body count like that the harvest was simply too delicious to pass up.

“I suppose that settles it, then,” he admonished aloud, rising grudgingly from his chair. Though he would never admit it, there was also a small kernel of curiosity in the pit of his unshakable logic. He didn't know many who would stand up to the likes of a master mage, especially one wielding a dagger that had the capacity to sever souls. Such people were ripe for plucking; motivations often noble but so easily manipulated. All one had to do was find out enough to know what made them tic, what made their actions so passionate, and soon they were a tightly bound puppet dangling from strings. No magic required. Simply the magic of their own repressed psyche.

Decision sliding into place, Teeleh Daleth quickly set about the task of gathering the things he would require for what promised to be a remarkably interesting visit.

Cairn

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #160 on: May 11, 2012, 09:04:16 pm »
/EXCITE!
I regret to announce that this is the end.

I bid you all a very fond farewell

Phantomboy86

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #161 on: May 11, 2012, 10:45:44 pm »
Daggers have pitifully short range, get a longsword and maybe people will start worrying!

Mariana Xiechai

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #162 on: May 12, 2012, 01:32:48 am »
Daggers have pitifully short range, get a longsword and maybe people will start worrying!

Shoulda been clearer...that was a reference to Barsidious, not Teeleh. Teeleh doesn't need petty things like weapons... :devil:

Knightspark9

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #163 on: May 12, 2012, 05:09:52 am »
Teeleh makes happy tears flow from my eyes. Such a wonderful man.  :'(
Ardoin: So, do you drink moonshine?
Earowo: As long as it has alcohol, I'll drink it.

Phantomboy86

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Re: Seeking of the Butcher
« Reply #164 on: May 12, 2012, 07:36:56 am »
Daggers have pitifully short range, get a longsword and maybe people will start worrying!

Shoulda been clearer...that was a reference to Barsidious, not Teeleh. Teeleh doesn't need petty things like weapons... :devil:

That was the point... I was mentioning barsidious. >.< (C->E mari. We've worked on this!)