The High City of Zaichaer
34th of Searing, Year 122 Steel
Aurin's blade flashed in the unholy light, flipping end over end to embed itself in the neck of something that had once been a horse. Now its hooves split into talons, its teeth become horrible fangs, and the rest of its body unutterably altered by the Dread Mists. The old man shot a glance behind him, the focused gaze of a man of battle in the midst of a melee. He began to smile in appreciation, and that brief lapse in attention gave another monster enough of an opening to attack.
"Behind!" he shouted, and the man reacted immediately. His weapon burned with a much more comforting light, though Aurin couldn't tell in the moment whether it was a physical light or just something he could see with his trick turned on and his senses feeding him more than they could without runic enhancement.
Aurin cast about for a blade. His own had been thrown, but he needed something in case anything got close enough to him to engage. He needed something to help the old man, who was stabbing and stabbing even as the thing gored him. The redhead fashioned a dozen facsimiles of himself, all running in different directions as he ducked, tucked his shoulder under him, and rolled under an overturned cart to pull a blade from a corpse.
Too slow.
"Ansel!" someone shrieked.
The blast had been bad enough, killing so many. Now the distortions of the Mists were hunting them down, too. He had to make good on his promise to the coven leaders now that they had met his terms and taken him in. They were his people now.
The Golden Peacock
74th of Searing, Year 122 Steel
Decorum be damned, the sun was going down and Aurin was in his shirtsleeves on the balcony that let out of his office. From up high, Kalzasi looked much like the neighborhood was called, glittering jewels strewn out into the dark. He took a sip from his tumbler. His grimace was not for the burn it afforded him, but rather at the memories that haunted him still.
He had made good on his promises. Many more witches had survived the attack on Zaichaer than would have without him. He never claimed to be a hero. Still, it felt like a failure all told.
Aurin wasn't a sentimental man, but when they had made him one of them, they had done so in earnest, and he had bled beside them. That counted for something in some primal way that his rakish unconcern couldn't quite dismiss.
34th of Searing, Year 122 Steel
Aurin's blade flashed in the unholy light, flipping end over end to embed itself in the neck of something that had once been a horse. Now its hooves split into talons, its teeth become horrible fangs, and the rest of its body unutterably altered by the Dread Mists. The old man shot a glance behind him, the focused gaze of a man of battle in the midst of a melee. He began to smile in appreciation, and that brief lapse in attention gave another monster enough of an opening to attack.
"Behind!" he shouted, and the man reacted immediately. His weapon burned with a much more comforting light, though Aurin couldn't tell in the moment whether it was a physical light or just something he could see with his trick turned on and his senses feeding him more than they could without runic enhancement.
Aurin cast about for a blade. His own had been thrown, but he needed something in case anything got close enough to him to engage. He needed something to help the old man, who was stabbing and stabbing even as the thing gored him. The redhead fashioned a dozen facsimiles of himself, all running in different directions as he ducked, tucked his shoulder under him, and rolled under an overturned cart to pull a blade from a corpse.
Too slow.
"Ansel!" someone shrieked.
The blast had been bad enough, killing so many. Now the distortions of the Mists were hunting them down, too. He had to make good on his promise to the coven leaders now that they had met his terms and taken him in. They were his people now.
The Golden Peacock
74th of Searing, Year 122 Steel
Decorum be damned, the sun was going down and Aurin was in his shirtsleeves on the balcony that let out of his office. From up high, Kalzasi looked much like the neighborhood was called, glittering jewels strewn out into the dark. He took a sip from his tumbler. His grimace was not for the burn it afforded him, but rather at the memories that haunted him still.
He had made good on his promises. Many more witches had survived the attack on Zaichaer than would have without him. He never claimed to be a hero. Still, it felt like a failure all told.
Aurin wasn't a sentimental man, but when they had made him one of them, they had done so in earnest, and he had bled beside them. That counted for something in some primal way that his rakish unconcern couldn't quite dismiss.