ringulreith
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all hail the ocean's daughter at old Bren's yearly slaughter her onrushing tide will sweep all aside and bring the crown to water So went the song, that a nameless minstrel had composed in her honour last night. “It's true”, she had declared, to the thud of mug slamming down on table. The contents of that mug had proceded to slosh about, as her clambering form climbed the stool and stood, swaying and gesticulating wildly. “I was born in tha middle o' tha ocean! On deck twas, durin' a mighty vicious storm. There was a flash of lightnin as I came into tha world, and thunder boomed with me firs' cries. Me ma was a servin' maid on ship, and me da was tha ocean 'imself!” The now mostly empty mug had slid from slackened fingers to make another thud, and she had proceded to give the table a personal introduction to her face; but it had stuck, and she was now the ocean's daughter. As these things usually go, it didn't stop there. Cue a panoply of bad ocean jokes, an audience that was too inebriated to know better, and the presence of a musician; and there was no way it wouldn't have ended in being carried to her room on the shoulders of a croud singing in clashing, off-key voices. She loved it. Old Bren's yearly slaughter, as it had been so aptly put, drew all sorts; there were the righteous with a lord to champion, the determined with a point to prove, the enigmatic with a secret to hide; rare among them were those who saw the championships as an end unto themselves, who reveled in the attention of the crouds rather than spurning it, who fought for the cheers and the screams rather than inspite of them. Bren's fine establishments could attest to her position among those cherished few, for whom the people celebrated and drunk to and bet upon, and composed songs for, in her case. She had become quite the local fixture during her brief stay; and undoubtedly tails of her debauched exploits would keep the townsfolk entertained long after the anual bloodbath. It was to this furor that she descended, the tourney dawn lapping at the sky with tongues of anticipatory scarlet flame. Breakfast called out a warm and hardy greeting at her accustomed table. After a meal rife with well-wishes and the shouted conversations of enthusiastic supporters, she ordered a bath be brought up and drawn, and headed back up the inn stairs in much better spirits. The maid that carried in the wash basin gave no reaction at the disrobed form that met her, merely murmuring a greeting and proceding to carefully lower the tub of steaming water. A click whispered through the room as she stood back up. Steam had already begun to gather, as the wicked smile led a pair of sultry brown eyes ever closer. “Give this champion a kiss for good luck, hon”. The voice was the low pur of distant thunder and waves lapping hypnotically at the shore. The serving girl blushed, turning around with wide eyes. Fingertips brushed down her cheek and teased at her chin. “A token o' a sweet maiden's favour...” The smile drew ever nearer, and the eyes, and the room was getting very, very steamy. She brushed one more strand of the girl's hair aside, then slipped out from between the sheets. The poor dear was very enthusiastic to give her favour, but had exhausted herself and fallen asleep. A quick rummage later, and a handful of coins gleamed from atop the bedside table. Now that she was fully satiated, battle, a far more tempting mistress, beckoned. A well-practiced routine saw her quickly clothed – in the naval standard of breeches and a tunic striped blue and white – and ready to depart. Feet were stuffed into leather boots, two cutlasses were strapped to her back, two pistols were holstered at her hips, and a pouch of necessities was belted on. A fluid motion that flung open the door and swept a vest over her shoulders, and she was clomping down the hallway and belting out a song. One for the Morning Glory Two for the sweet brown brew Three for the man wholl stand his round And four for the love of you, me girls Four for the love of you Her throaty voice trailed out the inn door, drawing people as she progressed through the bustling streets. Soon enough a sizable croud had formed, escorting her towards the arena complex with their enthusiasm and baudy sea shanties. Bren was a hub of trade, and here and there merchants recognized her and called out 'Evensong!' and 'Capn Ranlae!'. The song had quickly spread, too, and people around her would occasionally burst out into snatches of 'all hail the ocean's daughter'. All the way there, Ranlae's grin was the largest, and her voice was the loudest. Once they passed a man taking bets on the champions, and she had paused to put down some money for herself, to the enjoyment and laughter of the croud. “Well if I don' think tha chances are good enough fur me, I would'na try, would I?” The booky had flashed a toothy smile in agreement. A final 'and bring the crown to water' was uttered, and the croud dispursed as she neared the gate to Fountain. Ranlae took a bow, waved and hollared and clapped shoulders, and then she was alone. Some of the playfulness left her eyes, and her entire body tensed with anticipation. A smile still played about her lips, as she took the first step into battlefield, but she had left port and set sail. Cold. That was the first impression, upon entry: The biting cold of northern seas and lashing rain and howling winds. Needles of ice pricked at Ranlae's exposed skin, tipped with seering poison that numbed and slowed and stiffened. Ranlae took her first breath as a combatant, and it came back out as a visible swirl of mist and crystals. Chatter, went her teeth. “Shiver me timbers, indeed.”, went her blue-tinged lips. Crunch, went her boots against the frost that rimed the rocky ground. Crunch crunch crunch. The arena was seemingly a bowl, ground sloping down towards something that glared blindingly white under the midday sun. Ranlae descended the slope at a diagonal, footing cautious and eyes flitting along instinctive patterns of surveillance. You didn't survive long on the high seas by being unaware. A good ship captain had to be as aware of the conditions of the winds and the waters as of those of the crew and the passengers, and she was the best. A few steps in, and a general picture of the arena's current state had been formed. Fighting had already broken out, clustered around the marble structure at the centre. Surprisingly enough, what appeared, from the shimmer of water, to be a fountain inside the building had been left open and unoccupied. Crunch. Thud. The temperature rose artificially fast with her descent, so the pinpricks of cold had vanished. The ground got softer with soil, muffling her footsteps. Here and there a shrub rose from the landscape, and was noted as possible future cover before being forgotten. Right now her priority was the fast-approaching tactical advantage which the others had so thoughtfully left open. A tactical advantage with burning steps, as became evident quickly. There was a railing that went around the rest of the gazebo, which thankfully really wasn't much of an obstacle. Thud. Scratch. The flaura were growing larger, and she used one of them as a pivot to slide step and change direction. Coming in on a wide oblique to the steps, she circled around the ongoing firefight and approached the side of the building. Sweat beeded her brow now, and the heat pressed down upon her and stole her breath. The sight of another figure executing the same maneuver tugged at her lips, and then some when she recognized what he was. A water troll, of all things. Common enough of an encounter, living most of your life on water as she did. Perhaps a bit reclusive, but not rare. More importantly, most probably a devotee of Water. Most probably, direct competition. “Ahoy, dweller o' tha deep! Shall we clash, fur water's favour?” There was a flash, as the gazebo's glare reflected off the cutlass she had reached up and brandished in challenge. “Hoy, seafarer.” Confident the voice, and friendly that smile. “Doubt the Lord'll smile upon me if I cut your service to him short. Much rather have someone watchin' my back, and I bet you would too so how 'bout we show our skills by taking the rest out, and let the lord pick his Champion?” She could tell there was a tension about his otherwise lax form, as he prepared for her answer. Ranlae considered it briefly. He was right that it was up to the gods to decide in the end, regardless of combat outcome. That was how the bards had made it out, with their songs of warriors fallen in the field, chosen even after death and brought back to champion their lord's honour. What better a second in this pit than a fellow denizen of the ocean, then, to crush the other competetors under water's might? “Don' be watchin' me back too closely, y'old lech!”, a quick wink, “But if ye don' wan' t'rumble, then let us make this arena more seaworthy with tha blood o' tha rest!” Her sword arm came down into a more neutral grip, as she stepped closer. “Don't get your hopes up, lass, I'm a married man.”. Some of the tension flowed out of his body, and chuckles shook his broad chest. “Fountain's our best option, yah." In a move she could never have pulled off herself, the troll jumped and rolled horizontally over the gazebo's railing. It was going to be very useful, to have an ally to make up for her own admitted frailty. She had worked hard to get past the limitations of her body, but it was nonetheless still an obstacle, and a soar spot. “I'm sure you'll be able to keep up with an old troll, won'tcha?.” Oh, she couldn't let that jibe pass. “I've seen deckhands faster than ye!” That pronouncement lost much of its weight a moment later, when Ranlae had to clamber up the railing herself. With one hand, she grabbed one of the virtical rods, then stepped up onto the marble platform. Ignored went the hand the troll had proffered; that level of trust would have to be earned in the heat of battle, not forged with words. The top rail came to just below her chest, so she through her sword arm over and hauled her miniature frame upward. Some grunting and ghasping saw her legs come over, and then she jumped down to the other side, panting and rumpled. “And I like me some lasses jus' as much as the next seadog, I'll have ye know.” With that slightly indignant retort, she turned inwards towards the arena's namesake, and began to stride. Clack. Clack.
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