2
Making A Dress of Cotton and One of Hemp
"There are ruminations and guesses at what the Forgotten Lands used to look like before the God's War. From what few ruins can be found, vast cities of advanced technological construction seem to be a recurring theme, and while one can make certain logical assumptions about how these advances were achieved, no one can say for sure why they were sought out in the first place.
Until the end of the war there was no interest expressed or implied from the Great Engineer in the region, so it appears that these people had developed these things largely free of the gods' influence. You can find traces of that ingenuity in tribal decedents of the region who've somehow retained a way to shape and mold Sunless Steel without the use of a forge.
Just as before, however, the tribes guard their secrets with the same zeal and ferocity that the Plains do. It's a tragedy to think that when the last Plainswalker dies, so too will the secret of this amazing alloy.
The price paid by those who reject the gods is borne by the world at large, of this I am firmly convinced."
-Col. Engineer Myren Bristain
"Steel and Sanctimony: A Historical Guide to Modern Metallurgy"
~Felicia~
The forest was awash with the sounds of birds and wild life rising to the pulse of a new day, chirping and cooing with noisy abandon- as if these creatures were celebrating the arrival of the sun, heralds for a new age. The purple tint to the sky didn't loom as it did in Felicia's homeland, it settled like a thin veil over the land, free of the threat of lightening and wild magic, taunting her to let her guard slip.
Even having spent several years north of the Plains, she still kept a wary eye for danger. Much like the woman she was traveling with, Felicia knew that danger always lurked in stillness. Only a fool got comfortable under open skies. . .
As Lostariel lead the two of them through the ritualistic stretching routine, Felicia glanced upward briefly, wondering if she might catch sight of the falcons that she'd been told about. They were hunters this far north, in the same way Felicia and Lostariel were. Though the three of them would be after different prey; Felicia had been taught to hunt to feed her tribe and herself, the falcon would hunt to feed itself and its young and Lostariel would hunt humanoids for coin and reputation.
They were all hunters and they were all somehow opposed to one another. An odd contrast, really, not incompatible but somehow
different
and foreign to each other. Where Lostariel was short, Felicia stood tall, where she was pale, the Plains had tanned Felicia a rich caramel and where Felicia was rather generous in the chest, Lostariel was more modest but had the kind of hips that would've cradled many healthy children.
Lostariel had said it herself; they were two halves of 'the perfect woman'. Whatever the hell that was supposed to mean. To Felicia, it was the eyes that always caught her breath and made her think stupid things when she was around her mentor; those eyes that watched her intently as they both sunk down slowly into perfect splits. They were only a foot away from one another but the young Plainswalker couldn't read anything buried in those vibrant purple eyes. She was as much a mystery as she had been the evening they met.
There was pain there, of that she was sure. The elixir the dragon's agent had given her to seal up the fatal organ damage she'd suffered in the fight with the last assassin they crossed paths with had saved her life, but it worked slowly. It wasn't like the examples of divine magic that Felicia had seen-- these things took time.
Still, a week on and she was walking on her own and well enough to resume training. It was a testament to her professionalism and maybe her pride. Felicia had been fine playing nurse, even when it meant dealing with an unruly patient, if only to show her that there was more to life than taking it. That she could relax and they could forget this foolishness about killing Sarah Kettar and maybe, just maybe if the chips fell in a certain way, they
might
have even made one another happy.
In the same way only a fool sought to tame one of the eyeless coyotes that prowled her homelands, to bring it to heel and attempt to become friends with it, Felicia sought to change the nature of a different kind of predator. Somehow she knew the result would be the same regardless, but still she tried.
It was with that thought in mind she closed her eyes and stretched to touch her toes opposite Lostariel doing the same. Out of the corner of her eye she watched the short woman wince as she ran her hands down her impressively thick and powerful thighs to her knees and finally to hold her foot. Her breathing was shorter, shallower. She was pushing herself too hard.
Felicia swallowed. "I--"
"I'm fine." She hissed through clenched teeth. "Hold it." Lostariel clutched her foot tightly, with her fingers digging into the sole of her shoe Felicia noticed. "And release. . ."
They went through the remainder of their stretches before they locked eyes. The ritual complete, the real ritual was about to begin. Slowly, carefully, they rose in unison with Felicia trailing so she didn't give away today's strategy before she was ready. Her gaze swept the short woman once more head to toe so as to disguise her intentions.
But it was Lostariel who started-- she was inside Felicia's reach in a split second already dropping to her knee, hooking her leg around Felicia's with her shoulder jamming into her pelvis to throw her off balance. Before Lostariel could get her hands wrapped around, though, the Plainswalker grabbed them and turned them outward, pressing her knee into the woman's chest to reverse their leverage to favor her.
It was a short lived victory that Felicia
should
have known was offered so easily to trap her. Before she realized it, Lostariel had her hands around Felicia's wrists and she pulled the young woman down, outstretching her knees and rolling back so that as she rolled onto her back she'd take Felicia with her and eventually straddle her chest where she could be dealt with easier.
Not about to give in, Felicia shoved her knee up into the crook of her attacker's legs and used the extra leverage to free herself, springing into a backward roll and crouch as she'd been taught. Lostariel was already into the same crouch, they watched each other. . .
Lostariel surged forward. Felicia rose to meet her only for the assassin to drop back down and shoulder her into the tree at the edge of their camp site. The wind ripped from her lungs, Felicia grabbed the woman's shoulders, pushing her thumbs into the pressure points as she fought for breath and control of their weight.
But the battle was lost. Felicia felt the dull jab of a stick prodding her throat telling her she'd best let go. So she did. Slumping back against the tree, panting and wheezing, she muttered some incoherent crap about how it wasn't fair and that Lostariel cheated. It was the usual but neither of them were actually listening.