14th of Searing, Year 120
"They're here. I know they are."
"Eleanor..."
"We've been following their trail for days now, but they don't know it. And last track we found, it was fresh. Hours ago. They can't have gone from the town that quickly -- at some point, they need to let up."
"Why do you even need this, El? We know they're Dranoch -- Helena, at least. We have enough information to call it conclusively. There's no need for..."
"Taelian," the woman nearly hissed, her lips morphing into a grimace. "This is what we need for our certainty. With this, we can continue knowing for sure. And perhaps we can use the information we receive -- living or dead -- to persuade others. This is the casus belli to our cause. With it, we can be certain we are on the right side of history."
He frowned. There was something about this entire series of events that perturbed him. Every interaction, every piece of the puzzle, had only managed to make the full picture clearer... but more ominous. He began to realize that Westweald, and Helena, were larger threats than they had originally envisioned. It was no mere manager of a trade port -- but a vixen at the head of an empire of deception and subversion.
The two of them approached the town on horseback. Taelian was dressed far more regal than his peer; he wore his black-dyed satin jacket, his slim satin pants of the same color, with his half-cape draped over his shoulder. Silk boots, well groomed hair, skin clear of grime or dirt. And a poise he'd never known before the Covenant. The Siltori man looked something like a noble now; the courtier Eloise had made him, while Eleanor still cast a brutish and dejected shadow. She remained one with their grim homeland. The younger of them, though -- he had tried to change.
Both of them were warriors, though. That was clear. Ard Fuil was strapped at his side, and all the daggers one could imagine, hanging from his belt wrapped in their sheaths. They almost looked like ornaments; they weren't.
"You should fraternize with the Lordlings. Whoever runs this place. I still don't understand shit about this nation," the woman spat.
"It's all built around Kinships. I'll explain it to you some other time," he said, glancing upward. He caught a glint of what appeared to be a central building -- an estate, of sorts, robust in size. "I'll head there. You're going to the tavern, right, El?"
"Yeah," she said. "Duedrop, it's called. Meet me when you're done with the leaders of this place. What are you going to tell them? Iulide's courtier, or--"
"That I'm a member of the Covenant," he quickly answered. "They're headquartered right south of Grimholdt, and have significant influence in this region. I'm no longer an understudy, so I can start to use my weight. I have their emblem."
"Right," she said, motioning for her horse to resume movement. They parted ways, though Taelian wouldn't gallop through town the way she did. By the entrance to Loras he found a stable, and left his horse in the enclosure, going the rest of the way on foot -- at least at first. The town's manor came into view in the northern sector of the town, surrounded by walls like the location's exterior. Taelian opened a portal, the natural aether of the area before him coalescing into a node that appeared to look much like a vortex of wind. The other side formed before the estate, and cutting a few minutes from his journey the mage hastily stepped through. Upon emerging, he kept his posture and form, though he looked up to capture the full image of the manor. It was large; the architecture was immaculate. In some ways, it betrayed the typical style of Atinorin estates, though he enjoyed the difference. He'd not seen many places like it.
The entrance appeared to be open, and in fact there were a collection of fraternizing parents and children in the foyer and the central hall. He frowned, uncertain of where to find the leaders of the locale, or someone who could direct him. He understood that he would eventually need to speak with whoever was in charge of incoming merchant traffic, but he would need clearance for the information he was seeking. Time was short; he needed to cut the fat and get it before they moved on. If the merchants even still remained.