This chapter is mostly story, character-building, and combat. Don't worry, it's not too gory. Oh, and there's like, awkward romance and sex near the end of the chapter.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Tatiana Vittori
The Midlands, Kingdom of Solais
10
th
of Starset, 1282
D.f.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Three cloaked riders crested the grassy hillock and looked down upon imminent ruin. There, a small cadre of eight Orcs were advancing on a train of retreating peasants, who cried and screamed for dear life as they were harried.
Talos, the rider in the center, shifted in his saddle. "Great. Guess we better get to it. Got any more tricks up your sleeve, Tatiana?"
She glared at him. "They're not tricks
,
Talos, they're
illusions.
"
Talos smirked. He unsheathed his blackened blade after another moment's thought, and urged his stallion to a gallop with a kick.
"
Yah
!"
Tatiana and Alanna followed him into the fray. Judging from their previous encounters with the Orcs over the past two suns, the green dimwits were horribly susceptible to magics of all kinds. Tatiana's
trick
today was more of an experiment, but from what she'd seen of Talos' sword arm as of late, she wouldn't need to play a particularly large role here.
She extended a gloved hand and signed the Invocation of Nehara with her forefinger and thumb. The image of Talos the swordmaster before her suddenly split into six, although five of them were faceless, ghostly apparitions which anyone with a brain could distinguish from truth. Fortunately for them, the Orcs were dumb creatures who sought only rape and plunder, and so they believed that half-a-dozen mounted swordsmen were headed their way.
All of the brutish Orcs but one halted their advance towards the hapless peasants, and prepared for the imminent combat with roars and much beating of chests. Alanna split off from the charge and rushed towards the crying peasants.
She met the single Orc harrying the peasants with a burst of flame. The Orc roared its defiance, then screamed a burbling cry, then fell to the ground in agony. Alanna halted her horse's steps two feet from the creature and let loose another jet of flame directly towards its face. The Orc stopped howling.
Talos, meanwhile, shifted his charge towards the right-most Orc of the band, and Tatiana shifted her illusory attack pattern to compensate. The swordsman leaned from his saddle to slice through the Orc's chest as he galloped past them. He dismounted when he was thirty feet from the remaining brutes and smacked his horse on the rump, causing him to whinny and retreat from the battle. Talos then turned about, and extended his arms as if taunting the Orcs, but none of them paid him any attention.
Talos, you see, wasn't aware of Tatiana's illusory riders; instead, he tilted his head in confusion as the Orcs swung at air, roared at the wind, and stumbled over themselves to retreat from a chill breeze. He advanced on them anyway, twirling his sword in a lazy vertical circle as he did.
One of the creatures had the right idea when Talos neared, but its life was ended by an unfortunate slash through its neck. The next wasn't even aware of the swordmaster's presence before a blackened blade plunged through its back and reappeared between its ribs. One spied its comrade's death, only for a crossbow bolt to strike it in the neck as Talos pulled his blade free with his other hand.
The last three Orcs ran from the carnage, two dropping their stone axes into the grass as they did. Talos trudged towards them with that...
that look
in his eye, a look to strike fear in any creature no matter their disposition, and they ran faster. Alanna then rode in front of them, and they stopped in their tracks.
Tatiana could sense the enchantress's will, but wasn't entirely sure what spell she'd invoked to force the Orcs to retreat from her. Whatever the spell, it was frightening enough to those green morons that they decided to test their luck with Talos and the five mounted illusions beside him instead.
Talos ducked under the first Orc's swing, then cleaved through the back of its neck without looking. The next was dispatched with a swift horizontal swing, and gargled its defiance as it fell to the bloodied grass below. The last didn't have time to think before it, too, was sent to the beyond by another slash from the swordsman.
Talos looked left and right once all had fallen, then whistled for his horse. "Status?!" he bellowed as the fresh blood dripped from his blade.
"Okay!" Tatiana replied as she cantered towards him. She didn't hear Alanna's response, but she saw Talos nod. He remounted his stallion when the horse soon returned to him, and the trio made their way to the train of peasants, who were standing about on the hillock in awe.
"Praise the almighties! Thank you lord, thank you!" a distraught woman said to the man riding at the fore when they neared.
Talos glared at her, and pointed his blackened, bloodied steel towards the horizon. "Get yourselves to Castle Eastwatch, now. There aren't any Orcs between here and there. You'll be safe there."
"W-we will. Thank you, m'lord, thank you," she said again.
"Don't mention it," Talos grumbled, turning his horse about towards the east. His sorceresses smiled at her, then turned about to follow Talos in silence.
-=-=-
The trio encountered two more raiding parties that day. No matter where they trode, the roars of Orcs could easily be heard echoing off of the jagged peaks of the Ironpoints to their left, or over the endless hills in front of them. Talos, for one reason or another, sought these creatures out intentionally, and his sorceresses agreed to his bloodlust without question. At last count, they had rescued twenty-eight Solaisian peasants over the course of three days. While the swordmaster had originally intended to ride in the wake of the King's army, the army's progress was now limited to patrols around Castle Eastwatch as the King awaited the main band of Orcs to the east. And so, Talos decided on a north-easterly course to travel around the main Orcish army, but didn't shy away from a skirmish when it presented itself.
"I don't get it," Alanna sighed, breaking a silence that had persisted for far too long. "Where is the army? Why do they allow these Orcs to raid unopposed?"
Talos shook his head, but kept his eyes fixed on the horizon. "They aren't playing by the rules of warfare is why. The King likely expects a decisive engagement here, a single battle to end the raid in its totality. The Orcs, as dumb as they are, aren't stupid enough to fall for that, and so they split up and harry behind their lines instead. The elves do the same. Saw it aplenty in Tardia."
Alanna frowned and slumped in her saddle, and Tatiana looked to her man for inquiry. "And how did you resolve it then, Talos? In Tardia?"
"We struck at the only static targets we could; we burned their homes down. That's rule number one in the book of warfare, really. There are no damned rules. I wonder how many peasants the King'll have to bury before he realizes that."
Tatiana pouted. She'd never read of
that
part of the campaign, but the thought process of young Talos made sense to her in a 'the end justifies the means' sort of way. Still, Talos wasn't giving the King nearly enough credit here.
"Well, we can't see the whole painting," Tatiana replied. "Perhaps the King is only-"
Talos turned his glare her way. She stopped talking.
There were reasonable times and places to play demon's advocate with the man, but this obviously wasn't one of them. She exhaled when he returned his gaze to the fore, and the trio rode on in silence for another half-hour as the howls of Orcs echoed over the hills on the horizon.
Tatiana wanted to take her mind off of it. Normally, she would look to Talos for conversation at this point. She could laugh at his dry jokes, or pretend to be angry when he teased her like he always did. They could speak of deep things that Talos had no right knowing, being the mundane man that he was. But Talos definitely wasn't in the mood at the moment.
She turned her gaze towards Alanna; the peasant-turned-sorceress that fate always seemed to smile upon. Tatiana simply couldn't believe it when she saw the ruby-laden ring on her finger. What in all the aetherius did she have that Tatiana didn't?
She bore a child for him
, Tatiana gloomily thought to herself. But that wasn't enough for a
ring
, right? It's not like Talos was going to marry the Oracle next,
right?
Oh, if only she hadn't ported her kitty back to Redstone. Dusk always loved her, even when she didn't have treats for him. But it wasn't safe here for Dusk. No. It was the right decision.
She then contemplated the logistics of reading a book on horseback. All she would need is a levitation spell, and perhaps some sort of potion to induce ocular stabilization. Wait! Perhaps she could stabilize the levitating book instead? It could bounce along as her horse did, so it always remained at the perfect level for reading!
Superb
!
Problem was, Tatiana didn't know how to make objects levitate, and she would need a book that she didn't have to learn how to do so. She sighed, then willed her horse to slow so she could ride alongside Alanna. Sure, she was a slut who had been fortunate enough to meet Talos before her, but at least she was a sorceress.
"Hey, Alanna," she faintly greeted her with a manufactured smile. The enchantress glanced towards her wearing a sullen frown.
"Hey," she murmured in reply. Alanna dropped her gaze, but then appeared to have recalled something and bounced back with a grin. "Wait, hey! What's up, Tatiana?"
"Oh, um, you know..."
think of something!
"th-that's a really pretty ring. That he gave you. I don't think I ever congratulated you."