This chapter's all story.
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Lord Talos of Evora
Kingdom of Solais
21
st
of Starset, 1282
D.f.
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Gloomy clouds of gray reigned overhead as the party traveled the plains of eastern Solais. Any remnant of civilization was now a three-day's ride behind them, and was an idea so very distant that it may not have existed at all. The brisk autumn wind smelled of rain, and the rolling horizon held nothing but grass, streams, and the occasional tree.
And plenty of rabbits. Talos, riding point, kept his crossbow at the ready lest he rode within ten yards of one of those frolicking bunnies, but otherwise made no change of course as he led his sorceresses through solitude and desolation. Fresh meat was merely a luxury when traveling with a teleporter after all, and his crossbow bolts would be worth more than a meal if he ever needed them.
Talos typically enjoyed solitude on his travels, but solitude of this magnitude typically led to an idle mind; and idle minds oft turn to anxiety, as if reminding itself that it's wiser to struggle than to live comfortably. Talos did not mind the struggle, of course; he was one to pick the difficult road over the simple when given the chance, and would never shy away from danger as long as he could swing a sword. Yet, his mind now always turned to one particularly gnawing worry; the fate of Casiama,
his Cass
, and what she would think of him when they finally reunited.
The day of answers drew nigh. Only eight to ten days remained on his journey to the straightened shore, a journey which would have already been completed if he'd traveled alone and not gotten himself distracted. There he would find Casiama alone atop a hill, fall hopelessly in love with her once again, and then have his soul shattered when she enlightened him of an infallible truth. At least, that's what the Oracle had told him two months ago.
To Talos, this prophecy now made distractions more valuable than food or water, no matter how they slowed his travels. He calmed himself with a deep breath then turned his attention to his lovely enchantress, who was riding thirty yards behind him beside the gorgeous Tanya.
Alanna was just then attempting to stifle a laugh as she looked on a concentrating Tanya. Tanya had her eyes glued to the book at her side, which levitated in the air beside her as she rode atop her terrifying black stallion. She had a hand raised skyward as if attempting to grasp the clouds above, and muttered a silly phrase under her breath which was clearly the source of Alanna's joy.
"Be the water... I am the water... I am made... of water..."
Alanna couldn't help but snort with laughter. Tanya had been trying her hand at elemental evocation for the better part of a week now, and hadn't gotten much further than a pitiful trickle of water.
"Go!" Tanya cried to the heavens, a sudden burst of steam exploding from her palm. The enchantress beside her giggled, shaking her head.
"Nooo Tanya, you have to
be
the water," she teased, puffing out her cheeks and bobbing her head as if it were a vessel at sea. "Like this!"
Tanya huffed, shooting her a look of disgust. "How is
that
water? And why must I say these words? Humans are
already
mostly water."
"I'm telling you! You can't study your way into elemental mastery, Tanya. You have to
feel
it."
Tanya rolled her eyes. "And what does water
feel
like?" she scoffed. Alanna puffed out her cheeks again, causing Tanya to giggle at her silly face and Alanna to giggle in turn at her sweet laugh.
"Okay, okay, let me help you. Shut that book and shut your eyes, Tanya," Alanna warmly said. Tanya gave her a smirk of disbelief before snapping her book shut with the wave of a finger, then closed her eyes just after. Alanna willed her mare two lengths closer.
"You
are
the water, Tanya," Alanna softly said. "You are everywhere. You rest, you wave, you splash about when asked by the wind, and you never mind her asks. You're calming, you're powerful, yet you are always modest. You are only water. You're... transparent, you're refreshing, but most of all..."
Alanna raised a palm, then willed a spout of water from it to splash Tanya in the face.
"You're wet," she grinned.
"Alanna!" a soaked Tanya thinly screamed, glaring at her. She wiped her face clear of water, but certainly not of shock. "You'll rue the day you ruined my makeup!"
"So liike... yesternight?" Alanna teased. "Or yester-yesternight? Or yester-yester-yester-"
"Ah!" Tanya yelled, expelling another cloud of vapor from her palm towards Alanna. Alanna diverted it simply with a raised hand, then willed her mare to gallop away.
"Tanya, no! I've appearances to keep!" the enchantress cried as she rode away.
"And I didn't?!" Tanya squeaked in reply, kicking the flanks of her stallion. "Get back here! I'm sure you'll look
great
with a crooked nose!"
"Noo!" Alanna giggled, leaning over to shoot another spurt of water at the sorceress chasing her. Tanya warded it with an iridescent bubble then conjured a dozen black roses, their stems covered in thorns, and flung them at the enchantress.
And so the swift battle of irrelevant magics continued. Alanna soon raced past Talos, who had a hand to his face to hide his smile, as she cried for mercy and warded away the simple illusions. Tanya's black stallion flashed past him a moment later charging at full tilt, but was soon driven away from Alanna by a stream of water and a helpful enchant.
"Traitorous steed!" Tanya loudly declared as her horse turned about and slowed to a halt. Talos, keeping his same pace, rode past the drenched sorceress and her unwilling stallion at a trot.
"It's probably for the better; I like her nose how it is," he softly said, silently telling his enchantress to return the horse's self-determination in the same breath. Tanya huffed and wiped her face again, then rode up beside him.
"I would've returned it come nightfall," she muttered with a smile, reaching out for her levitating spell tome. She looked it over in her hands and wiped the cover clean of water, chuckling. "Oh.
That's
why she told me to shut the book. How thoughtful."
"Gracious, even," Talos dryly replied.
"Let's not be hasty here," Tanya smirked.
"I think she may even like you," he continued.
"Yes, well... tell her to come back," she sighed, giving the distant enchantress a friendly wave. "I won't give her a crooked nose. Today."
"Mm. Sounds like the feeling may even go both ways."
"Now
that's
very hasty, Talos," she warmly replied. "But probably true. It's difficult not to like her."
"Told ya," he shrugged.
"Not to mention we... well, you know..." Tanya shook her head in an attempt to will her blush and smile away, but failed in the endeavor as she looked on the approaching enchantress. She cast her gaze skyward instead. "Why are we following the sun, Talos? Where in the world are you taking us?"
He cleared his throat. "Old man Barnabas' place," he answered.
"Old man who?" Tanya smiled. Talos reached for his saddlebags, producing his map of the easterlands a moment later. He unfurled it, then leaned in towards Tanya to share it.
He pointed at a small 'x' on the map. "Here. The only company we'll likely find out in these parts."
Tanya took the scroll from him, squinting at it. "Old Man Barnabas... the Greatest Hooch-Maker in Solais?" she asked, reciting the marking's label.
"Mhm. I'm hoping it's drink," Talos replied, taking the map back. "And I'm hoping it's good. Though, judging from Mattias' strange taste in women... who knows?" he chuckled.
"Oh? Are you telling me you
wouldn't
sleep with a succubus, Talos?"
"Sleep with? Sure, I'd try anything once, even the goat-woman. Live with, though?" he replied, shaking his head. Alanna spoke when she soon completed her fifty-yard return to them giggling, smiling, and being that ray of sunshine she was.
"Don't be greedy, my love. We've Tanya to dream of now," she gently chided him, turning her horse about to trot alongside.
"I dunno, Alanna. Mattias professed that the goat-woman could ride for hours on end, whereas we know Tanya tires after only a quar... ter...
sorry
," Talos coughed out, backpedaling from his jest at the sight of one displeased sorceress.