[Loras] Night Crawlers

The lands of Tyrclaid surrounding the capital city.

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Arlen
Posts: 120
Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2020 1:28 pm
Character Sheet: viewtopic.php?f=43&t=695

Wed Aug 05, 2020 4:26 am

33rd day of Searing, 120 AoS
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Shaking hands and farmer’s clothes. That was the first thing Arlen noticed when he was out of blue approached by two strangers whilst having lunch in the Duedrop Inn. Along with them came a shower of Kokalath spoken rapidly on quick bursts of breath.
Arlen swallowed the bite and looked at the duo. The man had broad shoulders but less muscle on bones. His bushy eyebrows were pulled together. The woman stood a step behind him, but close enough to hold onto the man’s shoulder and arm. Arlen did not sense shyness in her, quite the opposite. Her face spoke of urgency in the way her eyes bore into his when their gazes met.
Yet, Arlen's blank expression must have given away that he understood nothing of what was said. The farmer stumbled to a hesitant stop and the woman whispered something in his ear. The two exchanged a look before staring back at Arlen. The man’s face twisted a little when he understood the predicament, but it was the woman who got over her cultural predisposition and with broken Common said: “You speak Common.”
“Yes, I do,” Arlen answered, putting the spoon down into the bowl of soup. He looked between the two as though he was watching a game of ball.
The man grumbled something at the woman, making a move to leave. Yet, she barked back and held him in place with arms that Arlen was sure made the most delicious sourdough bread.
The woman continued talking, each word punctuated with some minor gesture - a nod of her head, a sharp and short point in Arlen’s direction. Whatever it was she said, the farmer seemed to be convinced albeit against his will.
Huffing and puffing as though the words were the hardest to say, the man was squeezing his own hands when he said. “You guard, yes?”
“Yes.” And Arlen controlled himself from cocking his head to a side in wonder. Though a job could come dressed in a variety of clothes and attitudes, he was entirely certain what these two needed.
“You...help us?” It wasn’t hesitation on the man’s part. Arlen saw the twitch of the man’s nose. He didn’t want to ask for help from Arlen. But it seemed as though he had no choice.
“Depends. What do you need guarding?”
The man and the woman exchanged a look and the woman likely offered her idea of what was said.
“We think Dranoch,” the man said. At that moment, Arlen’s face dropped the mask of confusion and politeness and levelled into stone chiselled sobriety. He heard of the threat. After his arrival, he saw some of the damage and heard the stories. Whatever these creatures were, they belonged into the Chasm no the North.
“Aren't the Loras guards on this?” He said, recalling that the lady of the town apparently put together an expedition to subdue the threat.
“What?”
Arlen looked around. “Other people.” he moved his hands in a circular motion to encompass the Duedrop Inn and outside. “Loras Guards. Better?”
The farmer huffed and it seemed to break the woman’s patience. She sat down opposite from Arlen.
“No." She dropped the word like one would slam knead bread dough. Her hands were flat on the table, fingers spread out. “Others busy. You free. Yes?”
The farmer uttered something in her direction, hand on her arm to pull her away. Yet, she just swatted at him with fierceness and he fell silent.
“You free?” She then made a quick turn, nimbler than Arlen thought possible and reached for the man’s belt. In a moment of a feeble struggle, she retrieved a modest purse and placed on the table. “We heard you guard. You free, you help.”
Even in the face of the coin laid in front of him, Arlen did not immediately respond. Dranoch was a threat he had not encountered before. Years back, he entered the Chasm with bravery and youthful disregard for his own life. Things had changed. He now knew he would not reincarnate if he were to die and that reality often coloured his decisions these days.
“Other guards? Other---” He asked but even before he finished, the woman was shaking her head, strands of hair falling from her bun.
“No, no. Others busy. You help.” And she stabbed a finger in his direction, her voice breaking. It was then that he saw it, before the man recovered her into his arms. She tried to shake him off but she was shaking too much herself.
She is frightened out of her mind. Arlen swallowed hard. His back prickled. Put their ages together, these two couldn't be older than Arlen and they were already mortally fearful of death.
So he leaned forward and pushed the purse back towards the woman. Her lips quivered, eyes swimming.
“Let me see first,” Arlen said, looking straight into her eyes. “If I can help, I will. You pay after.”
Because prepayment was too hard to negotiate without a common language and he wanted to scout out the location first to understand what he was getting himself into. The couple exchanged a confused look.
"So you help?" The woman asked, voice still trembling.
"First look. Then maybe help."
The couple nodded with hesitation.
word count: 929
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Arlen
Posts: 120
Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2020 1:28 pm
Character Sheet: viewtopic.php?f=43&t=695

Wed Aug 05, 2020 7:12 am

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They arrived at their farm that afternoon. The two turned out to be a married couple with two sons and a small farmstead of few cows and two fields. In the larger picture, they were probably insignificant contributors to the local economy and perhaps that was why they struggled to find help and had to turn to Arlen.
Their dog, Pipo, was an old useless helper partially blind and likely deaf. But the younger boy doted over him, saving the loyal friend from a certain end.
The family took him around their humble land. One of the fields was sown with budding wheat and a selection of vegetables. The other was a pasture for the few cows they possessed. Though now, since the Dranoch threat alarm, the cows were housed in the cowshed, primitively reinforced with boarded windows and extra lock on the door.
There was also a barn where they stored produce, harvest and other items of daily use in their profession. It was there that Arlen noticed the marks on the wood. There were thin scratches on the boxes and barrels, on some of the supporting columns close to where a dead pheasant was hung to age. Arlen concluded a pest problem with hopes of being right.
The barn also had a ‘second-story’ platform where dried hay and grass was kept. It had a small door at the very back which lead to a steep ladder outside and through that door, he could see a large portion of the farm.
He saw no traces of Dranoch. But then, he wasn’t an expert.
“Today only,” he said not wanting to tie himself down for longer yet.
The man shook his head and answered in Kokalath before grunting, searching for the right word in common. “More.”
Arlen shook his head and stated his rate per day for this type of job. The man’s face pulled a little.
“Today to start. Then maybe more,” Arlen reiterated not wanting to bleed the man dry and also not seeing much danger around to justify his stay, even if it was for the family's peace of mind.
The farmer huffed in frustration, his shoulders drawing up a little before he gave a nod. They shook hands and the farmer returned to his family inside their home.
And Arlen’s watch had started.
word count: 416
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Arlen
Posts: 120
Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2020 1:28 pm
Character Sheet: viewtopic.php?f=43&t=695

Wed Aug 05, 2020 8:06 am

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The barn’s hay platform by the small door turned out to be the best stakeout spot. From the height, Arlen saw the majority of the farm - half of the house, the cowshed and both fields. He was sitting next to the door, leaning against the wall and partly hidden behind a heap of hay. So unless someone walked in looking specifically at his location, Arlen was confident that he could not be noticed.
By now, he had been up there for all the afternoon, getting used to the sounds of the farm, cataloguing them in his mind with his eyes opened and closed, preparing for the night.
His sword and kukri laid unsheathed by his side to eliminate any sounds at the time of need. His bow and arrows were also prepared if needed. He was pleased with his preparedness even if sweat trickled down his skin underneath the full set of leather armour he wore.
He pressed against the armour in the middle of his chest and moved his body within from side to side. It was the best he could do at scratching where the bundle of dry herbs rested against his sternum.
“Guard you,” the farmer’s wife told him when she ventured out soon after the deal with her husband was struck. He took it as a sign of thanks and out of politeness. Though in his experience, unless the dried herbs were medicinal, they were just old women’s tales of uselessness against beasts of the wild. But her care warmed him and he wondered if she really made that tastiest sourdough bread.
In his musings and preparations, the sun measured the day away. The shadows started growing longer. In a few more hours, his sight would be nothing but pitch black and he would be seeing blind once more.
Eventually, the sun dipped behind the horizon, retrieving the last rays of its sunlight to recover for the next day. The night, only in shyness, began peppering the sky with diamonds.
Then he captured a new sound that he had not heard yet during the afternoon and evening - an excited, high pitched blabber.
His eyes shot open and his ears pricked. He forced himself to listen harder to locate the source. He shifted and turned his head, gaze pinning to the main door which remained wide open to allow some light to stream in.
In the growing obscurity, he saw them then. Six hunched over shapes were entering the barn. His heart picked up the pace. Something about them was unusual, tugging at Arlen’s memories. In the dim light, he saw the shapes scatter so he could no longer see them. But he heard them. Carefully shifting his weight, Arlen moved towards the edge of the hay platform. Below him, the scratching, chewing intensified. As well as the chittering and growling, yapping as the creatures fought for spoils.
None of it fit the bill of what he heard about the Dranoch in passing - bloodthirsty humanoids made in nightmares. Not refined beings to eat grains and carrots with their portion of gore.
His fingers reached the edge of the platform and he leaned forward, seeing a creature right below him at the crates...with a tail sticking out its rear end.
Pest. He lifted his sword. If he did not take his shot now, he would not have the light to do it later. And the family needed proof to feel safe. Or so he thought.
Arlen part hurled his sword down like a javelin and part dropped it down sharp point first at the beast closest to him, allowing gravity to be the force of the blow. He heard the squelch and the squeak of surprise before he trusted his eyes to see that he hit the target.
As expected, its mates screeched, scattering. Below, Arlen saw the pinned body twitching.
He retrieved the kukri and by memory traced his steps back to the stairs that led along the wall down to the barn floor.
As he was descending, a creature shot out from underneath the stairs with a combination of a growl and a cry. At that moment, the man shifted his feet, extended the hand with that kukri and was ready to fight. But instead, he saw the creature dash away on all fours, its tailed puffed-up thrice its size.
At that point, Arlen lost his fear. Nothing he saw thus far aligned with what he heard about Dranoch. They certainly did not possess a hairy tail with rings of different coloured fur.
Anymore? He asked himself and waited in his spot a little longer, listening for any other unusual sounds. But aside from the pained whining and mewing of the creature bleeding out on the floor, there was nothing else.
So he flooded his surroundings with the light of Lothas and saw his kill.
“A Ringtail,” Arlen muttered to himself. Its sharp angular head was turning to find its escape. Its nimble front paws scratched at the ground for escape. Yet, the sword buried in its side kept it from moving. In this way, the animal twitched away its last life force before it lay still at last.
word count: 893
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Arlen
Posts: 120
Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2020 1:28 pm
Character Sheet: viewtopic.php?f=43&t=695

Wed Aug 05, 2020 8:50 am

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The watch was far from over. And although the Ringtail confirmed Arlen’s thoughts about the pest, it did not clear him from his duty regarding the Dranoch. Just how did one guard against those creatures?
He retrieved his sword and cleaned it off on the creature’s hide. He’d leave the carcass there as a proof for the family. So to prevent it from getting eaten by local wolves, the sellsword closed the main doors into the barn before retreating back to his viewing spot on the hay platform.
The place now bathed in darkness and Arlen had to rely mainly on his ears.
Nighttime wildlife was rather active, almost forgetful of the deadly force possibly lurking in the shadows. But it wasn’t until the moon moved into Arlen’s view through the small door, that he heard the scratching anew.
His head snapped to look towards the main door. It was there, like a dog’s begging to be let in. Only, a moment later, he heard the door open and saw the blackness shift.
His heart made a jump before it dropped. A deep inhale came from below followed by a sigh of pleasure as though the delicacies of the world were gathered in this one spot.
“Poor thing,” a child whispered in all the innocence it was born with. Its words were shivering but not with tears. The slap of feet across the floor brought it further into the barn and it giggled. The innocence was turning to the sound of a manic growl and unrestrained greed.
A child, he thought. It’s a child... A snap of a bone filled the air, tearing of flesh followed. Then the mix of giggling growls transformed into gorging, sucking and loud chewing.
In the darkness of the barn, he saw nothing but heard it all. The creature was just underneath the edge of the platform, only a few crawls away. It was crunching and biting, enjoying the fresh kill with the vigour of a starved person at a banquet. His fingers wrapped around the handle of his sword and the kukri. His heart pumped stronger and stronger in his chest.
He fought beasts in the Chasm and the forests of the North, bandits and criminals on the road. But never...a human beast child. A creature that could possibly reason with him. Suddenly it wasn’t a matter of whether he could kill it.
Arlen's blood flooded with adrenaline and fear. His body thrived on that combination. It assured his survival. It heightened his better judgement. To survive was to be afraid. Without fear, he wouldn’t fight with calculation and precision. Without fear, he would have died so many times over already.
But there and then, he didn’t know if it was his better judgement or shock that stayed him. All he knew was that his limbs turned to stone as he continued listening to sounds of feasting below, the humming of delight.
Arlen didn’t know how long the feast underneath him continued. But he was painfully aware when silence settled over the barn again and he heard only the smacking of lips, punctuated by a burp.
He counted his breaths, forcing calm over himself as he did back in the Chasm.
Then, the slaps of naked feet followed the boxes where the Ringtail passed away. The creature stopped and moved, then stopped again.
Only Arlen's eyes followed the hypothetical route the intruder was taking.
It was kicking the barrels, hitting the columns. It was grunting, unhappy. And among the sounds of frustration, he heard it growl: "Still. So. Hungry." It turned into a whimper, a sob even so similar to a human child.
It hit a support column again, and Arlen's body tightened.
Outside, a howl rose towards the night sky. The Dranoch child snorted. A quick series of steps carried it further away from Arlen until it stopped.
There, wherever that was, it took in one deep breath.
The hilts of Arlen's weapons pressed into his palms. Did it see him? Did it...smell him?
He prayed his hearing not to fail him, cursed his eyes for being useless, and tried to manage his breathing to stay even although his heart danced the rhythm of expectancy. Everything in his body screamed to burn with Lothas, to fight this creature for there stood his glorious death of liberation. But he didn't. No. He couldn't. For the face in the darkness could have been a child and he knew in the moment's hesitation, it would gut him.
Arlen wasn't aware how much time had passed until the first rays of sunlight peeked into the barn. His body was numb, his senses hypersensitive. And he saw bloodied footsteps leading out of the barn and away.
He did not know when it left, where it went, or if it was truly gone.
word count: 849
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Arlen
Posts: 120
Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2020 1:28 pm
Character Sheet: viewtopic.php?f=43&t=695

Wed Aug 05, 2020 9:03 am

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That morning the family saw the blood smeared all over their barn with no traces of the dead Ringtail. Small bloodied footsteps exposed the intruder’s path through the inside and out onto the grass. The woman cried in her husband’s arms and the boys looked as though they saw a ghost.
“You need help,” Arlen told them. “Not me. Someone trained.”
“How?” The farmer asked and pointed at the bloodstain.
“Ringtail,” Arlen answered and did not elaborate further on the details that his kill likely attracted the Dranoch to farmer’s home. There weren’t enough simple words to do that and the guilt was enough for him to bear.
Yet the farmer gave him a quizzical look. He did not even know of Ringtails, or perhaps they were called something else in Kokalath.
“Pest?” Arlen tried a different word, using his hands to estimate the Ringtail’s size. To that, the man nodded his head slowly.
“But,” Arlen then spoke again with urgency. “You need help. Better help. Trained people.” He tried to come up with words which delivered the message. “Ask Loras again.” Then he pointed at the bloodstain. “Proof. They help.”
Yet, the farmer didn’t speak, and neither did the wife. Arlen turned his gaze away from the scene, hoping the daylight would keep the memory of last night away.
“Pay.” The farmer’s word brought Arlen back. He saw a purse extended towards him. Yet, Arlen lifted his hands in refusal.
“No,” the farmer spoke decisively, almost punching the purse into Arlen’s chest. “You see Dranoch. Guard. Give proof. We pay.”
Perhaps their safety was in knowing. Their fear now had a purpose and a drive.
word count: 308
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Mirage
Posts: 118
Joined: Fri Jun 05, 2020 5:10 pm

Fri Aug 07, 2020 9:46 am

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Arlen

Lores
Skill
Tactics: Consider threats involved before taking action
Tactics: Pick a stakeout point to see as much as possible
Blade: It might make a sound when drawn
Appraisal: Recognize beast from a man
Appraisal: Pinpoint opponents location by hearing
Psychology: Manage fear by breathing and focus

Non-skill
Location: Loras: Under Dranoch threat
Species: Dranoch: Bloodthirsty beasts
Species: Dranoch: Can be children
Species: Dranoch: Eat everything
Species: Dranoch: Very hungry

Loot: -50 DF for lunch.
Injuries: N/A

Points 5

Comments: Now this is interesting. The fact that there is a child suggests the infestation is worse than was originally anticipated. Arlen I think was very wise to seek out expert help in this situation. If you attack a child Dranoch, one can be sure the parents are likely to be near as well.

Question your Reality,
Mirage

word count: 148
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