Sari frowned as she turned her gaze from the temple complex to Charlotte and Sir Seldon. The two of them were looking just as grave as she felt, while the soldiers and sailors from the boat were exchanging looks. "We still need to get the Ninth Dragon's reliquary," Charlotte said, her voice growing determined. "But it seems that our diplomacy is going to need to be a bit more..." She paused. "Hurmph."
"Well, not everyone's following this new King of theirs," Sari said, nodding, as Rana ambled off, whistling, towards the temple complex where the dissidents had been executed by the followers of the orcish King Trjokar. The crowd had already dispersed, while the bodies had been left where they had fallen, headless and still twitching. The stink of fear seemed to have settled over the entire area. Rana vanished into the wall of one of the ziggurats that made up the complex. Sari shook her head slightly, then looked back as Sir Seldon sighed.
"I say we cut our way through this temple complex. The maps say that if we go along the eastern edge, we can reach the main building at the end of the cliffs. There, we can infiltrate their lower levels and begin to work our way to the center of the Chanti ruins. All we have to do is get the crystal to that ruin and we'll be able to open the puzzle box in the center of it. The less we run into orcs, the better. We're not here to settle their succession crisis."
"True, but..." Sari shook her head. "Trjokar's ascension over Queen Araktesh seems incredibly well timed."
"I have no idea how the Corpse Lord would have managed that," Charlotte said. "But Tanner's plan is a good one. And...well, if we can make contact with any loyalists along the way, then we'll have a hope."
Rana emerged from the ziggurat that she had entered, stretching her arms behind her. Her smiled was wry.
"Loyalists like the scared family in there?" She asked, jerking her thumb over her shoulder. "I heard them talking about it."
Sari rubbed her hand against her cheek. "Let me scout ahead," she said, figuring that was the best way to get the information across without sounding like a crazy person. "I'm pretty stealthy, and better I find out how safe it is than all of us getting captured. Just promise to come rescuing me if a big shout starts." She smiled at Charlotte, who smiled back. Sir Seldon put his hand on Sari's shoulder, gripping her with a companionable squeeze that made Sari's belly tighten with nervous guilt.
"Stay safe, Sari," he said, quietly.
"Right," Sari said, then started to move forward. Her feet crunched softly on the sand that filled this part of the valley until she came to some low growing scrub that had colonized the region right beneath the cliff - vines and creepers shooting up to drink in the sunlight that shone down on the side of the cliff while the rough roots worked their ways into the sand itself. From there, she was able to steal along the narrow passage between ziggurat and cliff-face, coming to a fissure in the wall of the ancient structure, some long passed cataclysm having let in the air and the sun both. Looking in, she saw a trio of orcs working on the daily tasks of civilization - in this case, weaving. They were sitting in the sun, working at a steady pace, and muttering to one another.
"What happened to the Queen is a crime, and what happened to Gezelle was worse," the first of them - a youngish woman, her skin a bright orange-red in contrast to the darker greens and blacks of her companions - said. Her long, curly hair bounced as she shook her head. "This is wrong!" She shoved the wicker she was working on weaving together down between her legs, then stood. "We're sitting here like nothing has happened!"
"Be quiet, Zarua!" The dark green woman of the trio spoke up. She was clearly older than Zarua, with wrinkles on her features, yellowing on her tusks, and streaks of gray in her hair. "They say that the King has eyes everywhere."
"Futter his eyes!" Zarua hissed.
Sari, who had been trying to figure out the best way to step out and introduce herself -
hello, I'm a human adventurer here to depose your king
seemed like a bad way to start things off, started in surprise as Rana stuck her head through the far wall of the ziggurat, shouting to her: "Someone's coming!"
Sari drew her staff from her belt as Zarua threw up her arms. "What's he going to do? Execute everyone who looks down on his bloody handed madness?"
The proper entrance to the ziggurat - a simple wicker door - burst inwards. A pair of orcish guards swaggered in, clad in heavy iron that had been beaten into a rough shape to suit them, with the same brutal cleavers that had been used in the executions. They smirked as Zarua turned to face them. The weavers stood - trying to reach for Zarua, but they were too late.
"Well," one said. "Told you she wouldn't even try."
"Gonna enjoy this," the first said, leering at Zarua.
"You two pigs!" Zarua stepped backwards.
"Zaura!" The older weaver said, grabbing her arm. Zaura shook her off, then thrust her finger at the two orcish guards. She was in a full fury now.
"Bayzik! Jonk! You two
leaped
to join the Iron Guard What a
stupid
name for an organization. What are you gonna do? Kill the best weaver in the whole valley? When your king needs us working?" She spat at them, clearly showing absolutely no sense of...what it meant to spit at men heavy armor, with heavier weapons. The two men leered at her, and Sari could see long promised and long hoped for fantasies flickering in their eyes. Well.
Time to act.
Sari stepped from the shadows and slammed her staff down on the ground. "If you touch her," she said. "Then I will make sure you never touch anything ever again."
The entire room froze.
"Oh, so you think I need your help dealing with these two-" Zarua shouted, sounding offended.
The first of the two orc guards backhanded her. He either forgot or didn't care that he was wearing an iron gauntlet - and Zarua dropped, blood spurting from a broken nose. The other orc hefted up his cleaver and sprinted straight for Sari while the weavers scrambled out of the way. A half finished basket was crushed underfoot as Sari gripped her staff, then thrust the tip into the orc's throat, hitting the seam between helmet and cuirass. He was so shocked at the impact that he stopped, choking and clutching at his chest with his gauntleted hand. Sari swept his legs out from under him with a thrust of her own legs, sending him sprawling, and then she pointed at the other orc - a blast of flames shooting from her fingertip. He lifted a burly arm and the flames washed over his dark red skin, scorching him lightly, but doing little damage.
"Orc will crush humans this time!" he bellowed, rushing at Sari. Sari rolled to the side as the cleaver smashed into the sandy floor she had been standing in, shattering stone and sending up a spray of gritty chips. She came to her feet and, holding her staff in two hands, thrust one tip, then the other tip towards him in an alternating pattern. From each burst a flame bolt, but the orc, despite weathering the blows with shocking ease, didn't seem to go down. He didn't seem to even feel the fire very much at all.
"Orcs are fused with demon blood, Sari," Rana said as the orc walked through the hail of firebolts. Sari used her staff to block a glancing sweep with his cleaver, the impact sending her skidding backwards and flinging her guard wide.
The orc grabbed her throat.
The wicker door exploded into splinters as Sari was thrown through it, skidded along the sand covered pathway, and fetched up against a plinth of ceremonial statues. One of them was large enough to loom almost six feet tall above her - a carved humanoid figure, head bent in contemplation, the face worn away by time and wind.
"They're pretty hard to
burn