Hiemal
02-13-2009, 05:30 AM
<p>Part 1</p><p> Ill met by runelight</p><p>The streets of Neriak are always filled with sounds: the cacaophony of thousands of Tier'dal being themselves to one another, often at volume, mingles and fills the cavernous city's many chambers with its own echoes. <em>This is an unhealthy place, </em>I thought for the thousandth time since leaving Freeport to make this den of vipers my temporary home. <em>To be submerged in such an atmosphere, noursihed in the isolation of these caverns on its own malice with only death, birth, and the river to bring change. </em>I shivered a bit and smiled. This place was ideal for a follower of the Plaguebringer like myself. Neriak was bridled chaos all around me as I made my way through a maze of shops and homes that in Freeport would have been carts and hovels. Here even the slaves had homes of stone. Many moved through the streets- ogres and trolls mostly, wading trough the crowd as though they were fording a river of small, dark bodies- on their masters' business. I was accompanied as I walked along the cobbled street by whispers. I am sure there were many stares and pointed fingers as well. I couldn't swear to it as I seldom bothered to look, however. Nothing gets to an elf like being ignored.</p><p>They knew what I was, even if in these quarters they probably didn't know who. Even though I was veiled and wore gloves, I'm sure they knew. No amount of covering could disguise the fact that a member of the paragon race of elfdom walked among these, my twisted and grotesque cousins. I heard whispers, on occasion, that went veiled so that I wouldn't be recognized as Koada'Dal. The truth, of course, was that I would not profane the glory of my memory of Felwithe by allowing the beauty of the Sun of elvenkind to shine in these perverse caves. Even after all these years and all that had happened it just seemed... base.</p><p> These imps may hate as they wish and tell each other their lies. They are all afraid to presume upon the kindness of their queen if they should be implicated in any unfortunate accidents associated with one of her guests. Their byzantine loathing was an amusing enigma to me as they relied on arcane customs and protocol for its expression. Even the surliest shopkeeper tends to stay well on the safe side of civility when talking to a necromancer. Particularly here. In most civilized spots the Art tends to be frowned upon, or at least looked at askance. The only respect I ever got in Neriak was more for my trade than for my race, though. Truly twisted people...</p><p>I also heard the other whispers, the ones that threaded their way through the crowd with the subtlety of serpents and influenced every conversation around me. Lines were being drawn, names being noted, sides being formed. The mad queen and her followers were polarizing this city and the resentment was growing like one of the those luminescent fungi the Dark Elves lliked to spread on the distant walls and ceilings of the cavenerns that housed their home city. I could feel the rancor all around me as though who remained loyal to the old ways of Inoruuk and those who pledged themselves to Queen Christanos' vision for the Tier'dal began squaring off in so many small ways.</p><p>I basked in their resentment, allowing its piquant flavor to buoy me as I made my way through the alleys and narrow streets that led me ever deeper into the more disreputable parts of the city, the neighborhoods that visitors were not encouraged to visit due to the crippling weight of Dark Elf pride. All of the Queen's efforts to lead her city aways from the ways of Hate had served only to awaken slumbering embers of resentment and ambition. I made another mental note to be done with business here before it ignited and the entire city erupted into open warfare. <em>Inoruuk does love his little jokes, </em>I thought and began to laugh- drawing horrified stares from passersby as I paused to enjoy the humor. <em>All this little queen has done is ensure the dominance of the Prince of Hate within this pit for another thousand years...</em></p><p>As I savored the humor I heard another laugh in the small eddy of stillness that had formed around me as the inhabitants of the City of Hate withdrew from me in revulsion as though I had suddenly begun showing signs of virulent plague. Standing beside me on a small stand displaying cheap amulets and trinkets an Arsai had her hands on her miniscule hips and was rocking back and forth in the throes of her laughter. Her purple wings like miniature stained glass windows stolen from a chapel of Hate and given life stirred with the passion of hilarity. She eventually noticed that I had stopped laughing and turned to regard me.</p><p>"So who's going to die, tall, bright, and ugly," she asked as she smoothed the pleats of her dark gown- which covered, I noticed, an intricate suit of mail with several concealed weapons. "Nobody laughs like that without someone else suffering in the end!"</p><p>Before I could answer I heard the jingle of tack combined with the asthmatic wheezing and snorting of one of Neriak's finest approaching on warg-back. The musty smell of a predator combined with an unpleasant scent that I associated with certain types of unclean and arcane combustion and I saw the creature's blue, flaming eyes at almost shoulder height as a Dark Elf patrolman manuevered his mount into my face to see what the commotion was about.</p><p>"This isn't a safe neighborhood for one of her majesty's foreign guests to be playing tourist in, outlander," the heavily-armored Dreadguard told me bluntly. "I suggest you take your excursion somewhere more suitable."</p><p>The Arsai leapt and alighted on the horned headguard of the warg, causing it to shift its head this way and that to try and dislodge the irritant. She kept her balance nimbly, with the occasional flap of her colorful wings as she addressed the guardsman. "I am Alizayu of the great and noble house of G'Svinn and my new friend here was about to explain the meaning of his little joke. Never fear, noble warrior of the Tier'Dal, I will see our High Elf friend safely to the Foreign Quarter after I have extracted the truth from him!" She executed an exaggerated curtsy and skipped backwards onto the wargs nose before hopping back onto here previous perch on the delapidated sales display.</p><p> The Dreadguard turned his expressionless face my way again without a word. "I see now that you wear the band of The Dead," he continued blandly. "I will just leave you with the information that my patrol won't take me back here for a few hours, so clean up any messes you leave behind. There may be certain "elements" in that quarter that don't have as much respect for the Queen's law as they should."</p><p> With that he pulled hard on the reigns of his Nightmare Warg and growled a command, allowing the beast a passing snap at the corrupted Fey as he turned to continue along the main roadway that led to the next cavern. She stepped easily backwards and laughed merrily. "Have a nice day, Dreadguard Smiley," she sang to his retreating form. "I thought he'd never leave."</p><p>I turned to make my way deeper into part of Neriak known locally as "The Queen's Budoir". I was stopped moments later as the Arsai grabbed my sleeve and pulled me backwards. I felt an unpleasant shock as the negative energy field I habitually surround myself with reacted with her own arcane energy. Unwelcome memories and associations began to float to the surface of my consciousness like dead bodies in a river. Alizayu gasped and allowed my sleeve to fall back.</p><p>I turned slowly, allowing irritation to displace the last troubling thoughts. She grinned without contrition, "Did you forget that I was waiting for you to let me in on your secret? I have a feeling that something is interesting is going to happen and my instincts don't usually point me too far in the wrong direction."</p><p>"Doesn't it bother you to be ignored?" I asked with genuine interest.</p><p>"Not really," she said serenely as she produced a small, hooked blade that shone slickly even in the dim light of Neriak and then banished it again with a flick of her wrist. "In my line work it often pays to be unnoticed." She grinned expectantly and I felt once again a wave of unconscious recognition.</p><p>I felt the forgotten memories trying to escape the inner wall I had built to seperate my past and present lives. It was a pyschic vertigo that would have doubled me over if I had been a different creature. As it was not a twitch betrayed my momentary lapse of mental discipline.</p><p>Even so my minute companion had sensed somthing. "I thought so! My hunches are always right- you are an interesting person, and I'm pretty sure something interesting will happen if I flit around with you for a spell! Get it! A spell, because you're a Necromancer! I can see why you are a BoneMaster, anyways! You've got a dead person living in your own head. That's awesome! So, what's you're name and who's going to die?"</p><p>Her empathy was utterly unexpected in one the depraved "creations" of Cristanos Thex. That is when it finally clicked and I recognized what the part of me that had died so many centuries ago had been trying to tell me. My own empathetic affinity to certain types of elemental and planar essences, an innate but random gift honed by long years of training and study to the extent that even in this state it was responding to the spirit of the twisted Arsai without my full awareness. It certainly explained my unconscious distate for them, evident only in retrosepect.</p><p>Looking at her with new, or at least forgotten and temporarily rediscovered, eyes I saw her spirit as a bright, fey, and twisted thing lashed onto this material shell. I could feel the malevolent and ungentle alterations that been made this race and it was an almost unbearable thing to see so plainly. With that, the vision dissipated, and the unreliable gift that had, a lifetime ago, made me truly gifted Conjuror, fled for hopefully the last time. As dispassionately as I could, I allowed the gray wall to recreate itself and turned my attention once more to the outer world.</p><p>"So are you going to let me in on your joke or not? I think that it's something important," she declared and emphasized her seriousness by grinding her fists into her hips and leaning back on her heels. I remembered the capricious and willful threads of energy that I had seen woven together in her spirit- the volatile resolution and the unpredictable intuitive mind of an elemental being tied to the material plane by the hand of divinity- probably Tunare herself.</p><p>I remembered also the desicration I had sensed. Inexpertly or indifferently this spirit had been changed in ways that were cruel to point of blasphemy- this was obviously the work of the mad queen of Neriak. Mad indeed of she thought her work contained more of her than of her own Creator, who had made her everything that she is. <em>Hate will always repay Hate, </em>I thought and began to laugh again. <em>The Prince of Hate loves his little jokes.</em></p><p>Alizayu started to chuckle but visibly forced herself to remain sternly focused. "I think it's time for you to share! I since such deliciosly malicious anticipation in your laughter! Won't you share it with me" I was astonished to hear actual pleading in her voice, as unexpected as warmth from an Erudite or sincerity from a Ratonga. She was an astonishing creature.</p><p>"I'm afraid not- that would spoil the surprise for an entire city, I suspect. But don't fret, I have no doubt that your entire race will help to deliver the punch line and that it will bring the House down. It'll really "slay" them, I believe is how the humans put it." I sobered and immediately turned to head deeper into the shadowy corners of the cavern, which seemed for the most part empty. Only the occasional glow from a few windows gave any evidence otherwise.</p><p>End of Part 1.</p><p> Part 2 will continue shortly- stay tuned.</p>