34 Searing, 122
The manservant nodded to his master and stepped away without a single word. With the same efficiency with which he tried to fulfill all of his duties, Dienerin moved through the halls filled with confusion, down into the underbelly of the Windworks, to where the Nachtherr had sat, concealing the silent menace of its presence since it had returned from the ill-fated trip to Kalzasi.
It felt strange to enter the ship alone, in the darkness, but then, everything felt strange that day. Entering the ignition code, known only to four people, he felt the regular engine hum to life. The second engine, one made not for propulsion but for revulsion was something he accepted might be needed, but could hope otherwise. Taking the ship out into the city was like stepping out of deep water into chaos; the echoing quiet of the deepest caverns of the Windworks giving way to a city in the midst of destruction. The utterness of it threatened to overwhelm the stolid ex-soldier for a moment before his mind came back together on Lord Dornkirk's words.
Get your family.
As in all things, their purpose was aligned.
It should have taken only a few minutes to reach the small but respectable house he had purchased for his wife and daughters, but he dared not reach the heights of flight the ship normally would have, not with the storm of mists rending the skies. He kept to just above the line of buildings, thanking the ingenuity of Dornkirk's design that reflected as close to no light as possible without magical hiding. The ship avoided the notice of what creatures might intend him ill, and though there were some close calls, Deinerin managed to steer her away from the worst of the lightning. Landing in the street directly outside his own front door he stepped nearly from the hatch into the house. His good wife was there, standing in the entry hall, a look of frightened determination on her face and dressed for traveling with his three girls, similarly attired, each holding a carpet bag of what he could only assume were their most needed and most treasured possessions. Stepping forward he wrapped them in his arms briefly, saying only,
"Come, we must leave." Before leading them out and onto the ship. Leaving his wife to strap the girls into seats he returned to the cockpit. White Knight Hall was the next stop, but getting there was even harder than navigating to his home had been. The storm, far from abating, seemed to be whipping itself into a maelstrom a fury, intent to see Zaichaer shattered from the face of the earth. Twice the ship was hit, grazingly, by strikes of energy, and once a building collapsed as it passed, sending showers of stone against the hull. The plating that kept all eyes from the Nachtherr was surely damaged, leaving them vulnerable to any creatures that thrashed their way from the Mists.
At last, he was able to land, shakily, on the grounds of the Hall, thankful that the master of the place had thought to give leave that the Nachtherr could pass through the extensive wards. Telling his family to stay on the ship he left at a run, making for the house and its occupants. When he was admitted he was confronted nearly immediately by the contingent of guards, both members of the army and the Order, that were now stationed to protect the noble families. When he asked where Lady Delia and Lady Luca were a look passed between the soldiers that did not bode well. As he made his way, at their instruction, deeper into the family rooms he heard a sound that startled him and then drained the blood from his face as his mind caught up with its meaning.
A long, high shriek pierced the closed doors between the servant and his mistress. After attending the births of his own three children, the wail was all too familiar. Entering the main bedroom with less decorum than he ever would have thought to under other circumstances he beheld the ladies of the house, one standing at the bedside of the other, and said,
"My ladies, Lord Dornkirk sent me, I am to get you away, to the country where your Lord husbands will join us."
The manservant nodded to his master and stepped away without a single word. With the same efficiency with which he tried to fulfill all of his duties, Dienerin moved through the halls filled with confusion, down into the underbelly of the Windworks, to where the Nachtherr had sat, concealing the silent menace of its presence since it had returned from the ill-fated trip to Kalzasi.
It felt strange to enter the ship alone, in the darkness, but then, everything felt strange that day. Entering the ignition code, known only to four people, he felt the regular engine hum to life. The second engine, one made not for propulsion but for revulsion was something he accepted might be needed, but could hope otherwise. Taking the ship out into the city was like stepping out of deep water into chaos; the echoing quiet of the deepest caverns of the Windworks giving way to a city in the midst of destruction. The utterness of it threatened to overwhelm the stolid ex-soldier for a moment before his mind came back together on Lord Dornkirk's words.
Get your family.
As in all things, their purpose was aligned.
It should have taken only a few minutes to reach the small but respectable house he had purchased for his wife and daughters, but he dared not reach the heights of flight the ship normally would have, not with the storm of mists rending the skies. He kept to just above the line of buildings, thanking the ingenuity of Dornkirk's design that reflected as close to no light as possible without magical hiding. The ship avoided the notice of what creatures might intend him ill, and though there were some close calls, Deinerin managed to steer her away from the worst of the lightning. Landing in the street directly outside his own front door he stepped nearly from the hatch into the house. His good wife was there, standing in the entry hall, a look of frightened determination on her face and dressed for traveling with his three girls, similarly attired, each holding a carpet bag of what he could only assume were their most needed and most treasured possessions. Stepping forward he wrapped them in his arms briefly, saying only,
"Come, we must leave." Before leading them out and onto the ship. Leaving his wife to strap the girls into seats he returned to the cockpit. White Knight Hall was the next stop, but getting there was even harder than navigating to his home had been. The storm, far from abating, seemed to be whipping itself into a maelstrom a fury, intent to see Zaichaer shattered from the face of the earth. Twice the ship was hit, grazingly, by strikes of energy, and once a building collapsed as it passed, sending showers of stone against the hull. The plating that kept all eyes from the Nachtherr was surely damaged, leaving them vulnerable to any creatures that thrashed their way from the Mists.
At last, he was able to land, shakily, on the grounds of the Hall, thankful that the master of the place had thought to give leave that the Nachtherr could pass through the extensive wards. Telling his family to stay on the ship he left at a run, making for the house and its occupants. When he was admitted he was confronted nearly immediately by the contingent of guards, both members of the army and the Order, that were now stationed to protect the noble families. When he asked where Lady Delia and Lady Luca were a look passed between the soldiers that did not bode well. As he made his way, at their instruction, deeper into the family rooms he heard a sound that startled him and then drained the blood from his face as his mind caught up with its meaning.
A long, high shriek pierced the closed doors between the servant and his mistress. After attending the births of his own three children, the wail was all too familiar. Entering the main bedroom with less decorum than he ever would have thought to under other circumstances he beheld the ladies of the house, one standing at the bedside of the other, and said,
"My ladies, Lord Dornkirk sent me, I am to get you away, to the country where your Lord husbands will join us."