January 1
st
, 1886
The crackling fire that sat in the center of our camp was the center of more merriment than was likely warranted on that rainy, overcast January evening. But while the new years day celebrations were likely filling the streets of Tarant, Caladon and every other major city in Arcanum with revelers and party-goers, we were stuck in the vast wilderness that stretched between the Hadrian river and the Stonewall mountains, beneath the bows of evergreens and bare-branched deciduous trees. And despite being hundreds of miles from anywhere of note, we still managed to contrive quite the celebration. Sally had brought out her best vodka and shared it liberally, while Virginia -- who had had at least two entire mason jars of the hard hitting stuff -- told the story of how we had met, though I was finding her tale somewhat hard to believe, as it involved her mounting me on the wreckage of the Zephyr. A remarkable feat in the telling, even if the telling included more than a few hiccups, coughs, burps, and stumbling 'uh, no, wait, lemmi go back a bit.'
The rest of us were in our cups as well, even the more taciturn Gillian, and I had just gotten to my feet to go and piss when Virginia thrust her finger at me.
"Living One! Living One!" she said, wobbling as a single raindrop slipped past the shelter we had taken to sizzle alarmingly in the fire-pit. "Speech! Speech!"
Before I knew it, the entire rest of the party was chanting along, slapping their knees and clapping their hands. "Speech speech! Speech speech!"
I held up my hands. "Very well!" I said, my voice as serious as I could make it considering my currently inebriated state. I had to repeat myself three times before Sally stopped her chanting -- and even the third time wasn't the trick. It literally took Virginia elbowing the muscular ogre woman to get her to really and truly quiet up.
I coughed. "Very well," I said, again, before reaching up to stroke my mustaches down flat. "It's been one hell of a year, my gentlewomens." I coughed. "We've been up and down this bloody continent and we still haven't found those bloody dwarves. But we've given villainy what for, spat in the eye of a pirate or two, and run bloody fast away from an army of wererats. Oh, and something such about returning a dwarven king, tracking down some dark elves and all that." I paused, feeling a hiccup trying to crawl up my throat. "Anyway, I think I need more sausages."
I grabbed up the two pronged fork we had used to turn the sausages and speared the last two slightly overdone chunks of meat.
"Booo!" Gillian called out. "Down with the Living One!"
"Hear hear!" Virginia called out. "Did you know that he...
buggered
me."
I put my hand over my face. "Oh not this again," I mumbled.
Maggie poked Virginia. "Youuu told us this story-" She yelped as Sally clapped her hand over the dwarven lass' mouth.
"Tell us -
hic
- Virginia. Tell us about the bugger...buggering...buggery!" She nodded, slightly.
Virginia put her finger to her nose. "Now, you's all got to remember to never ever tell anyone..." She said, wobbling slightly. "Is a crime and all. But anyway, this beast..." She pointed at me. "Was pounding away at my unmentionables. And
that
beast..." She pointed to my left. "Started sliding into my bum!" Her accent had been slipping from her somewhat middle class diction to something more akin to a dockside Tarantian slum. I shook my head slowly. Her finger wobbled, pointing at the phantom double that she was clearly seeing through her alcoholic haze.
"Fine!" I said. "I'll give you a sausage!"
"Oh!" Virginia flopped forward. Her cheek mashed against the joining of my pants and she rubbed against my groin through the clothes. "Goodie."
"I have had too much to drink," Gillian announced.
"You know what that -
hic-
means?" Sally asked, leaning in close, whispering loudly enough in Gillian's ear for all of us to hear.
"No, I mean..." Gillian set her mason jar of vodka down, rubbing at her nose. "It's...because...I am
seeing
things." She looked out beyond the campfire, at the thick curtain of the rain that filled the gathering dusk of the forest.
"More drinks!" Sally boomed.
Virginia was attempting to get my belt off with her teeth, mumbling under her breath about sausages when I looked to see what it was that Gillian thought she had seen. A pair of glowing red eyes, peering from the darkness, caused my heart to spike into my throat. I grabbed at Virginia's head. "Heal! Heal! Heal!" I said, quickly. Virginia's brow furrowed and she mumbled against my thigh as more red eyes flared to life -- nearly a dozen in total. They slouched from the darkness to stand about the campfire. Each pair belonged to a different hideous ghoul of some kind or another. Several were the classic zombie -- green skinned and rotting with their open wounds clear and visible on their bodies. Others were skeletons, their bones shining in the continual downpour that sleeted over them. Others were draped in mummy wraps, containing their desiccated flesh, even if the rain soaked that cloth to the rotting bone.
Virginia saw the horde, finally, and squalled. She put her hands to her head, blue magick crackling around her fingers.
"Oh, I believe it is a touch late for that," a smooth voice spoke from the darkness. Stepping past two of the mummified bodies was a man in leather armor, his pale skin glistening with moisture. He was covered in winding tattoos, and his head had been shaved utterly bald. A Molochean Hand amulet hung from around his neck and a gleaming dagger was being passed from palm to palm. Other robed figures were stepping out -- putting the count at a dozen of the undead and four of the Molochean assassins. The robed fellows cast their robes aside, revealing they were armed with swords and leather armor as well.
Dogmeat, who had been sleeping happily near the fire, woke up and growled loudly.
"We have been waiting for quite some time to strike, Living One," the black clad, bald headed assassin said, grinning. "Thank you so very much for-"
"Tha' one," Virginia said, her voice still muzzy with drink. She pointed her finger directly at one of the nondescript Molocheans, a man holding a gleaming blade in two hands and glaring at us as if we owed him a great deal of money. I jerked my pistol out, dropped it, and stumbled as I tried to reach for it. Before I could grip the pistol in my hand, though, Dogmeat bound to his feet and sprinted directly for the blighter that Virginia had pointed out. The assassin lifted his hand, glowing red energy flaring around his palms, but before the magick could begin to coalesce, Dogmeat's paws had struck his chest and our lovable mongrel had fastened his jaws around the magick user's throat. A spray of arterial blood spurted into the air as the assassin died and Dogmeat turned to face the skeletons surrounding him with a growl -- but before he had even completed his turn, the skeletons, mummies and zombies fell literally to pieces before my eyes.
"Good boy!" I said, laughing.
The black clad assassin charged. "Die, fool!"
I stumbled back and away, seeking to put some distance between myself and the knife. This did work out fairly well from the perspective of the knife and my tender flesh. It worked
less
well when it came to actually getting my hand back on my pistol. Then the man was upon me, his hand on my shoulder, his knife plunging towards my throat. I gripped his wrist, forcing his knife away from me, snarling as I tried to get my foot up against his belly. His eyes widened, suddenly, as I saw an immense green-gray hand claps around the back of his neck, as if he were a naughty school child. This expression of shock was the last that I saw of him before Sally turned and heaved him into a tree with a sickening speed. The red spray that came as a branch pushed itself through his cheek and jaw flecked along my body and I threw up my hand to protect my eyes from the arterial gushing. Sally, meanwhile, growled as one of the other assassins thrust his sword into her back and side, the blade piercing as deep as its edge could bite into her hide.
A wave of purple force struck the hilt of the sword, wrenching it from the assassin's grip. He leaped backwards, evading the crushing blow that Sally would have delivered to his jaw by the width of a hair, and not an inch more. The assassin, though, proved to have more than one weapon. He drew a pair of knives, gripping them by their straight edges, and tossed them with quick flicks. Sally lifted her arm to protect her face and throat. One blade skittered off her knuckles, but another pierced through her hand, bursting from her palm.
Sally bellowed, but before she could charge, the assassin had drawn two more knives -- these longer and sharp on both ends. He dove forward as she thundered towards him -- and his knife flashed out, cutting deep into one of Sally's ankles. The assassin sprang to his feet at the end of his roll, while Virginia scrambled for her sword. Past the melee, I could see that Maggie had the Harrower -- the magickal ax gifted to her by King Longhaire. Blade met blade as she hacked wildly at the last of the assassins. As I watched, Harrower sliced entirely through the longsword that the assassin held, leaving him open for a backswing that crushed into his belly. The assassin bent forward, vomiting onto the ground.
The assassin with two knives had locked them together to parry and catch Virginia's blade. She snarled and leaped backwards, then lifted her palm to blast at him with her telekentic cantrip. However, the assassin had seen this trick once and was more than ready for it. He dove left, then kicked off a tree, landing on his feet with the nimble grace of a gymnast. He drew a leg back to ready himself for a charge when Dogmeat lunged from the underbrush and clamped his teeth down on his knee. The man cried out -- and the top of his head vanished with the sharp roar of my accelerator pistol.
"I found it!" I shouted, stumbling to my feet, my accelerator pistol smoking in the evening twilight.
Maggie stepped back and away from her opponent, looking faintly green at the way Harrower had cut him from the top of the skull down to his ribcage. She shook her head, then looked out at the rest of us.
"Ow," Sally grumbled.
"You all right, Sally?" I asked.
Virginia, panting, sheathed her sword and placed her palms to her temples. The adrenaline of the fight had clearly been enough to drive some of the drink from her body, allowing her to focus the amount required for the spell she wished to cast. Just as she could purge toxins and poisons caused by traps and giant spiders from our bodies, so too could Virginia purge the inebriated state of alcohol -- which did make me wonder as to the relationship between poison and Arcanum's favorite drug. But with her own body cleared of the intoxicant, Virginia was able to clear the rest of our minds and set to mending Sally, who seemed chipper about the whole affair.
As Virginia worked, I looked down at the corpses of the four men who had attacked us -- after dragging them together. Each had the Molochean Hand amulet on their throats. I frowned.
"How do you think they found us?" Maggie asked, her voice grim.
"Oh, finding us is hardly the issue," I said. "They've jumped us before -- outside of Shrouded Hills, on the way to the Black Mountain Mines..." I shook my head. "Hells, if it hadn't been for the wererats, they'd have attacked us
in
the mines." I pursed my lips. "I'm thinking, though, who might have hired them to attack me in the first place?" I looked at Maggie. "If I don't miss my guess, it would be the Dark Elves. Assassinations, knives in the dark, suddenly lethal accidents, those do seem their modus operandi, no?"