Faerdin
Rune Knight
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Chapter Six The Coming Storm Dearest Valen, You are most cordially invited to attend the renewal of vows between the good King Alteon and Queen Lynaria of Swordhaven on the first Friday of October. The occasion requires formal attire that would be proper to wear among Lore's most noble and notable citizens, as well as foreign emissaries who might be gracing the presence of His Majesty this night. Further questions should be addressed to His Majesty's royal advisor, Iago Rafaj. Sincerely, Iago Rafaj P.S. Your plight is known throughout this castle, but Your Majesty was insistent. Your presence would surely be an eternal reward to him. The parchment still lay upon Valen's writing desk, where it still held his gaze. A nearly unnoticeable frown only drew more attention to the lines that had since begun to form on the young warrior's face, granting his visage the appearance of a far older man. Weariness had already begun to seep deep within his bones. Valen could feel it. Why do they even want me there, he thought. When they don't need me? Do they just want to remind me, now? I already went to their wedding... A jolt shot up Valen's spine at the sound of his door creaking open. Standing in the archway was a new recruit of the Pactagonal Knights, a meek boy from the Vey family. "Sir?" "Yes, yes, come in. What is it?" "Well," The Vey child mumbled. "King Alteon wishes to speak with you." Valen's frown deepened and caused the initiate to step back. Not intending to intimidate the child, Valen kindly inquired, "Do you know why?" "No, sir. He hadn't told me. He just wanted to speak with you." Just as I thought, he thought with a sigh, glancing back at the invitation. He knows I'm not going. Valen reached into his pocket for his gold pouch, taking fifteen coins and placing them into the Vey child's hands. "Tell the king I'm busy for the time being. I'm writing to a good friend of ours in Doomwood and can't be bothered." "Alright, sir." The apprehension at returning to King Alteon with such an answer glinted clearly in his eyes, though he dared not to show it. Placing his hand on Vey's shoulder, Valen said, "Your message was well-delivered. I fully expect to see Sir Vey among our ranks soon." He was content to see the Vey child smiling hopefully as he saluted to him. Valen returned the gesture and, not moment sooner, Vey had left the room. Once again, that dreaded parchment commanded his attention. That physical embodiment of his frustration and endless despair. It was only a second later that Valen found himself leaning over the bin at the side of his desk, the paper crumpled in his hand. A jade monster had taken refuge in the depths of Valen's heart for so long, and it demanded that he let go of the parchment. He was so close, and his fingers had begun to twitch just as the door creaked open once again. Scowling, Valen turned to face the new arrival. Vey had returned. Hesitance permeated his stature and his very bearing, yet some force compelled him. "Sir, if I may?" When Valen nodded in approval, the boy stepped further into the room. "I think you should go." "To what?" "If there's anything I'm not," Vey reluctantly said. "It's an idiot, sir." "How do you know? I haven't even told my mother about this, and I was... under the impression that only Alteon's close friends and servants knew." The crushed invitation remained clutched in Valen's hand. Heat rushed to the child's face. Shrugging, he explained, "People tell me that I'm observant, and I've just heard some things." Drawing from some reserve of inner strength, Vey looked directly in his eyes and stated, "You would be a good friend if you went, Sir Valen." Whether it was the boy's resolve or his struggle to throw off his timidity, there was some quality about the Vey child that Valen could not help but admire. The determination in his eyes conjured memories, fleeting like the resplendent torrents of color that flare into being when stealing a glimpse of the sun, of a life not too different from his own. A recruit's struggle to prove himself and command the respect of a true warrior- that was an issue Valen could understand and sympathize with, and the reflection could not help but make him smile. Relief swept over the boy as Valen said, "Being a Pactagonal Knight means more than being a good warrior; it means living with integrity, wisdom, and courage. I'm happy you understand that. Thank you, Vey." Saluting once more, the recruit answered, "Glad to be of service!" For the final time, he withdrew from Valen's room and returned from whence he came. It was during the Vey child's departure that Valen took another glance at the invitation and stuffed it back into his pocket. *** Gredal watched the gold shimmer in the hands of his apprentice, merrily catching the rays of light that fell into Faerdin's living quarters. There was an entire pouch filled with the coins on his bed; a hefty sum, no doubt, but it would be unbecoming of a Rune Knight's disciple to wander into Swordhaven without the means to bribe away whatever harm came to him. Yet apprehension still clogged Gredal's chest. Even then, doubt was worming slowly into his heart like the roots of a venomous weed, and it was all Gredal could do to stop himself from preventing Faerdin's departure altogether. Something is wrong here... I cannot put my finger on it, but all cannot possibly be well, Gredal thought as his apprentice returned the money to its pouch. "Are you sure you want to trust me with this, master?" "Yes... The other elders and I have very important matters to discuss, and so I cannot travel to Swordhaven with you this time." At the crestfallen frown that crossed Faerdin's face, Gredal continued, "I have faith in your abilities and know that you will easily see this task through. Am I understood?" He nodded. "Yes, master." Like the iridescent metal they beheld moments before, the Sigil of the Avatars on Faerdin's hand shifted color in rapid succession. He then placed his hand upon his heart, and Gredal smiled. Such had been their order's display of respect for many a century. The elderly man returned the gesture and proceeded out of the room at his side, where they went their separate ways. Some facet of Gredal's mind shifted into its proper place at that moment. Only now did he realize why he felt so worried about Faerdin's lone journey. He's growing up. Discarding the thought, Gredal adjusted his robes and approached the ornately carved stairway that would lead him to his destination. For the longest while, he descended these cold, stone steps. Each footfall pulled Gredal inexorably deeper into the bowels of the castle. Each step hid the afternoon sun all the more completely behind a veil of masonry and enchantment, leaving only torches that lined the walls to light the path. As opposed to the cool grey of the upper areas of the castle, the walls were painted orange and red by the torchlight, like molten rock. The air began to taste musty and stagnant, and Gredal knew that he was drawing close. Though many seasons had passed since the last time he sought it, an aged oak door stood at the end of the corridor to confirm his suspicions. At Gredal's coaxing, the portal opened to reveal a gravely familiar sight. Twenty-nine other elders of the Hand sat, almost meditating in a tenebrous and forlorn amphitheater. The blackened and unforgiving crags that made up its walls were so roughly hewn that only the wrath of nature could have forged them. Shadows had engulfed the entirety of the room save for areas illuminated by torches, burning brightly and yet barely able to pierce that suffocating cloak of night. Water sparkled like liquid sapphire at the pool in the amphitheater's core, and plunged within it was a massive column of ice. The very air chilled Gredal. Scowling, he walked to his proper place among the elders, his every step echoing hollowly across the obsidian floor. Century after century this audience chamber has endured, and still there has been nothing done about a spell that can warm these accursed seats, Gredal wryly reflected. I understand why all of this is necessary, but forcing ourselves into the cold is not necessary and makes fools of us all. Upon taking his seat, all of the elders seemed to shift and lift their heads in unison. Arcane symbols engraved around the middle of the room suddenly began to flash and hum with untold power. While wave after wave of energy seemed to sear the elder's skin beyond endurance, Gredal felt his mind and his very being drawn inexorably toward the others, every identity melding like pools of molten iron to make a seamless whole. The elders had lost themselves and yet they had not. All earthly concerns, all trivial signs of weakness had melted away to be replaced by single-minded determination. Together, they had become an entity, a spirit of the elements embodied. This spirit lifted its hands and chanted, low and rumbling: "Blessed creators, it is to you we pledge our eternal and undying loyalty. It is for you that we sacrifice our flesh and blood, for you that we bring balance and justice to your hallowed battleground upon the earthly plane of Lore. It is your Sigil, branded upon our bodies from the moment we are thrust into the warm embrace of life, that we bear and swear to honor until our days have come to an end. It is now that we plead for your mercy and your guidance. O Lords of the Elements, reveal to us the fate that lies ahead of us, when the Great Darkness looms over to conquer your domain!" Just as quickly as it had begun, a force of incomprehensible strength and fury had shattered the entity and forced Gredal back to himself. The very earth beneath the elders' feet trembled and quaked while their abrupt return caused many to cough and sputter. Suppressing the terrible itching at the back of his throat, Gredal glanced upward. Suspended in the middle of the amphitheater were the Elemental Avatars. Cast in a divine and unearthly glow, the eight deities stared down at the recipients of their power. Every present member of the Hand fell off their seats and onto their knees, even Master Gredal. The aspects of each primal element- Fire, Water, Ice, Earth, Wind, Energy, Light, and Darkness- possessed a regal and yet startlingly unnatural appearance. Even in his old age, their very presence struck Gredal's heart with fear and awe as it had when he was a mere neophyte. "If you so wish," murmured the Elemental Avatar of Fire, Fiamme. "Answers shall be given," finished Kyanos, the Elemental Avatar of Ice. Voidstar, the Elemental Avatar of Darkness, raised his voice to growl, "Though they may not be the answers that you seek." Yet another wave of immeasurable power emanated from the Elemental Avatars, causing many of the Rune Knights to shudder. Each elemental aspect seemed to sharpen and shimmer all the more fiercely with energy. The ground shook once more beneath the mighty aspects' effort to divine the future of Lore, and it was only a moment longer before they uttered: "Past the elusive veil your answers rest, Entangled in the perilous shadows. From the hands of Fate these three clues are wrest To evade your place in the world's gallows. Slumbering now are two mighty creatures Untouched, unbound by our sacred power. The beast of chaos that destruction lures, Destined to kill and a world devour, And its opposite, so noble and pure, That it will shield your home from annihilation. Should this titanic duel the land endure, So too shall you all meet your salvation. A crimson blade, without impunity, Shall meet the blessed shield of unity." The haunting words continued to ring through Gredal's mind, resonating with some integral part of his being. One bold disciple cried out, "But who shall bear the shield? What is the final clue, blessed creators? Who is our champion?" A low rumble echoed throughout the halls of the Rune Knights. Emotion, perhaps amusement with a trace of undeniable certainty, colored the following words of the Avatars. "One of imbalanced blood and a heart so pure that he may align himself as you have not, mere mortal. We have spoken, and you would do well to heed our words." That last statement seemed to hang in the air for a moment. Not a single expression in the room was decipherable as the Elemental Avatars dissipated and left the chamber a cold, empty husk without their presence. An eternity passed while Gredal's fellow elders sat in silence, still attempting to process the information their blessed creators had given them. Deep within his heart, Gredal knew their troubles had only just begun.
< Message edited by Faerdin -- 9/21/2013 16:11:13 >
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