Seydon of Arda
Raquor'daan

[SIZE=10pt]“Deep in the heart of Summer, sweet is life to me still,
But my heart is a lonely hunter[/SIZE] that hunts on a lonely hill.[SIZE=10pt]”[/SIZE]
But my heart is a lonely hunter[/SIZE] that hunts on a lonely hill.[SIZE=10pt]”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]R A W N B L A D E[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Or ‘The Falling Riders’[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]~Then, sometime before the Troubles of Alderaan…[/SIZE][SIZE=10pt]She laid upon the wide, sunken bed, draped in a nightgown of licking sweat, lights from distant tidal pools rippling through porthole onto the ceramic ceiling and upon her gently quivering belly. Lithe, beautiful, illumination drew finely lined curls of leg, hip, rib, and breast, sloped shoulders kept under curtains of darkening, rowdy hair. Lilac petals were in her eyes, half-closed by appreciative exhaustion. Breaths were counted in time to the rhythmic beat in her ear. The woman kept still preferring to let her profile indent onto the mattress, still waiting to hear any tell-tale action coming from the bedchamber bathroom. But her eyes knew all lights were killed off, the bathroom auto-door cued open, and if she were not concentrating into the Force then she wouldn’t tell her partner’s coming and going. Sleep still refused her beckons. With effort, she pushed up off her backbone onto her side, curling the coverlets around herself. It was a late hour and though her abode was a taxingly sealed, air-conditioned liner-cruiser, somehow cold winds off the easterly dunes and tide made the bulkheads bleed with chilly perspiration. She snatched a towel off a black-wroshyr nightstand, dabbing moisture off her throat. Such was the quiet, she allowed herself a moment’s thought.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Lonesomeness. There was no complimenting body heat beside her skin in the close quilts and comforters. The woman rose, shadow following faithfully on the rosy bulkhead, propped up by her palm and long arm. Long dressers bordered where the curled interior walling allowed, pieces of heavily refashioned driftwood glued together by a substance, she’d been told, suckled from the jowls of an oceanic trench predator. Atop them were a great deal of keepsakes, new and old, like faint holo-portraits, pict frames, alizarin pearls, black scallops, a pair of dusty saber-hilts. She got out from the bed and strolled by the footboard, pausing to dress up in her housecoat. It was another gift; fur taken from the hides of the great killer seals roaming the north currents but lined with further insulate. Now tall and silken like twilight shadow, she padded out from her bedding room.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Crossing by a pair of darkened passage intersections, on a way to an upper deck gallery lounge resting beneath the pilot’s nest, she paused at something aromatic wafting down the corridor. Thickly salted moisture, warmly lulling, blew up over her lips and nose, leaving a taste of aged dunes on her wet tongue. Not unlike grain beer, she thought, a local intoxicant ground up from red coconut flesh and laced with century old salt pinches. She hadn’t much to sip on, however, just a cup poured from bottled water, a stamina invigorator hours later, and odess-kelp tablets. Midwives proscribed the very latter to her as a failsafe contraceptive. Three months after their unanimous recommendation, she had to lend agreement: they operated like a spell~[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]She followed the windy scent, trailing down a built-in staircase spiral in lieu of a short turbolift drop. It led through the kitchenette bays, through pantry, larder, along a squeezed hallway bisecting the belly holds. Standing in the primary debarkation chamber, moonlight filtered up from sucking waves onto the interior gun-grey bulkheads and railed machinery lining the ceiling. The landing ramp was lowered down into beach sand, she discovered. Besides the oceanic breeze, voices calmly floated along from where the prow was nosed up over drift-rocks. One voice was coarse and rapt by gravel. The second warbled, fluting out consonants, pitching up adjective and noun words with odd, clacking pronunciation. The woman gathered up her long robe, secured the waist sash, venturing out from her starship.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]An ebon-washed sea spanned out from their tiny atoll over every natural direction, beached wood struck up over the dune lips like craggy, rotten tooth pegs. Moonlight from three brother-moons was meandering gracefully over the northerly fern-palm trees cresting on an earthen gnoll not yet devoured by tidal sand-moors. Her ship, the Golden Rose, a forty meter cruise-liner cast in subtle resemblance of an Eldorai halberd, jutted over an equally sizeable shard of risen, salt-dried reef. A hull like electrum, moonbeams made it shimmer bronze and copper. A league out into the open waters and away from spiking shoals, a school of breaching iron-whales tossed and cavorted in play. Resounding throat-calls tremored up the shore.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Seydon of Arda looked up from his small campfire at Rosa Gunn striding down the landing tongue onto the ground. He sat crossed on a rush-mat, dressed in his trousers and fading tunic, powerfully framed despite the slouchy posture and bowed head. Where Rosa wore her beauty in dark colours, flushed skin, and enviable proportions, he’d lost considerable pigmentation, hair shocked into silver-white that was kept tied back by a thin leather headband. Fearsome musculature was pitted and striped by scarring. Lit eyes watched her approach, walking barefoot, smiling as she smiled with those many tide-grains tickling up into her soles. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Sleepless?” She asked.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Something like that.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“You disappointed me.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Seydon narrowed wolven, slit-eyes up at his wife. “I’m sorry. How did that come about?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“I came awake and you weren’t there to keep me dressed from the night,” She said, settling onto a spare portion of his mat.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Dressed?” He had to question, feeling her arms link about his shoulder.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“You make for a very warm blanket,” Came her croon, taking the sharp of her thumbnail to scrape it up his spine. His skin woke up pricked and he sought out her hip with a worn palm, chuckling. Neither resisted pulling close, beach fire warming up their brows and surfing zephyrs blowing over their shoulder and nape.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“…You brought those out again.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Seydon peered along the line of her pointing arm, through silken ash and smoke hazing the mid-summer’s night air. Past the firepit arraigned roughly in a wide, forum semi-circle were half a dozen equipment chests, stamped from worn sheeting duranium, pocked with bowled indents, striating cuts, and the backs of old, ripped-away customs approval stickers. She’d seen them when midnight shade provided by awning fern-palms shifted with a wind-gust, shining the brother-moons over their trapped lids. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Mmmn.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Taking inventory?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“…Suppose that’s the best way to put it,” He said and drew out a ragged, leather-hide bound field journal wrapped in a string catch. Faded on the curling spine was a name writ out in splotched ink: ‘SHEV RAYNER’.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Rosa left off from leaning on his ribs and waist, taking the tiny book when Seydon proffered, briefly leafing through a scant handful of pages. The handwriting inside was reedy, jumping with spidery flourishes, tabled with roughly sketched objects: archaic weaponry, constellations, ruined impressions of sizeably old architecture, fetid beast-things. Stuffed in besides were unattached stick-it notes extrapolating further points, corrections, and observation. It was hodge-podge, the result of a hurried man trying to keep up with a greatly pressed journey, the leafing spattered with grayed mud stains. Holding it close by her lips, Rosa smelled faint aftershave and cleaning oils.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“This is the account he wrote adventuring with Ajax?” She asked.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Seydon nodded and took it back into his hand. “Have you read it through yet?” …Her husband shook his head after a beat and laid the journal against the sand by his lying feet.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Why not?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“It’s the way to Ys,” He said. “How he and Ajax found their way to its gates but turned away. Most could not give a care or damn whether or not that place is real, but… I can’t trust that I wouldn’t be tempted to go and see it for myself. That I wouldn’t be followed, too. There was another ambush.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Rosa’s nails seized into his hand sharply. “Where? When?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]-[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Fields the color of Drundland-gold, rustic ochre, and pigments of motley, spinach green clinched a long horizon, spun by waves of gliding wind. After nine days tracked over the long gnolls, the crop-plague loosed a narrow groan and fell into a narrow flint depression between a set of grassy hills. It was dying while the hunter crested the last gnoll in a hard sprint, taking meters at a time. Seydon then found it completely expired and leaking ichor-blood from an opened, flat-toothed gob. The crop-plague once had been a sub-species of mulch-boar; it’d run squat to the ground on wide-set legs, feet cloven in three-point shears of hardened black keratin. He ran a hand over the hide: hairs like folded steel, pleated atop each other for almost an inch thickness from skull to rump. The Alwari facing it were stamped under meter-long tusk protrudes, unnaturally sharpened, and two metric tons of boar-weight.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]And then it met the Dunaan, on the long, seldom walked road from Kander to the Valley of the Borokii. It charged him with little recourse, restraint. He had not yet tracked the monster’s initial crossing over Ansion’s southern reaches, where it’d been first seen and had first slayed. But its bloodwrath was foreign to the otherwise mellow mulch-boar attitude. It came for him and bellowed squealing yells. Seydon held his ground but drew his longsword Winterfang, Bane of Monsters, feeling time slow while reflex sharpened preternaturally. At the final half-second, he hopped long but twisted with his waist and let the core muscles dictate the force in his arms. The cut took off its left flank razor-tusks but it arrested its trembling momentum, hurling back over the road and ditch to charge again. Seydon kept to its left and forced the creature to continually compensate, trying to rack its right-tusks into a line with his torso.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]It leapt the tuber-rotted ditch and flew, torpedoing into a falling column of tusk and fur. There were no compulsions against hurling itself face first through packed earth and rock if it smashed this assaulter in the same motion. Seydon braced his shoulders and forearms, before stroking his sword upwards. Winterfang slid in through the crop-plagueists teeth, cheek, and throat, opening up the felling wound deep into its shoulder, ribs, and spine. Even dying, it managed nine days fleeing, night and day, putting as many leagues it could manage between it and the implacable hunter.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“What changed you?” He asked presently, looking over its splayed hind-legs. Ansion wasn’t home to many spiritual anomalies. Certainly the ancestors of the Alwari kept up their roam-invisible but such was natural. Seydon was close to putting torch to the cavernous remains, when an odour struck him…[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]…Jagged, metallic, whetted with foulness, a scent like the rot of a soul. Worse, it was not unfamiliar. Seydon knew it. So he in one motion, he spun on hip and feet, drew Razorlight, Bane of Men, and cut a twirling slice through empty air. A beat. Just stillness answered his faster-than-lightning aggression. But… impossibly, empty air opened up a ragged, bleeding cut dripping torridly. The assassin’s dark side obfuscation fell away. It stood roughly six feet, lean with haggard muscle clinging to long arms and legs, dressed in a supple leather-suit body running chain-mail beneath. For a face, it wore a silver-forged doll-mask. Killed, surprise betrayed, it shivered and toppled back, chest separating in two. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Five other cloaked shades emerged out of the grasses. Blades flickered and spun under an eton-blue sky.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]-[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“On Ansion two weeks ago, I was trailing a crop-plagueist that’d killed a few outlier Alwari tribes. It was heading deeper inland over the plains. I’d just caught up, put pay to it, and was burning the remains when the long-grasses suddenly parted open.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Cloaked?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Her husband nodded lightly. “Half a dozen fighters all sporting new alchemy-grafts and poisoned weaponry.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“You destroyed them?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]-[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]The manling caught its hands round a groove inside their silver face-plate and wrenched the mask free, sporting a flesh-smoothed face wrinkled terribly round black eyes. Their mouth yawned wide, wider, sutures on the cheeks popping while throat-sacks undulated wildly. Seydon stepped forward, darting in and then aside, ruining its bile-spray. Viscous acid hosed over his shoulder and landed hissing and smoking onto a line of wheat grasses. It was turning hard to its flank, speed unbelievable, clutching at bi-form double-ended dirks in either of its long hands. The Dunaan crossed a snapping guard and paused five blows under a second, flicking his sword-tip up through a minute gap in the assassin’s retreating arms. It gouged up through its jaw, swung down and back to return behind Seydon’s hip, whilst opening a hot wound from their throat to navel. Razorlight peeled air for a curt, sucking horizontal hack.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Its head came free. Blood hosed whilst pallid limbs jiggled, Seydon cutting twice again, the midriff and knees, collapsing the corpse in on itself. The other five shade-killers laid smote where they likewise fell, torn apart at torso and appendage. He cleaned smouldering blood off his longsword on its armoured tunic before spinning alight a gust of pyromantic fire out of his thrust palm and onto the bodies…[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]-[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“I left no trace but ash.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Rosa strayed her eyes to Rayner’s journal, little better than a field-abused notepad, still wearing discolourations painted by drawn gore and sap. “Still prowling for this, I imagine. Under orders from that man calling himself Inquisitor.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Borja.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Have you gotten any word of him in the last while?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]The witcher shook his head, a cinder-coal sparking off the fire to bounce against his knee. Borja Sennex, self-styled as a ‘High Lord Inquisitor’, once upon a time ersatz mercenary and beast stalker, transitioning from lowly operator to an empowered Sith Lord over a period of two heavily occluded decades. A vicious telepath and flourish duelist. Seydon and shared little in fond memories, Sennex himself responsible for sealing a rift between his mother and father, ensuring the murder of the latter, the destruction of their ancestral hunting clan, his mother’s permanent corruption. They found one another again on Dromund Kaas in a long, black episode. The Dunaan had been ‘Seroth’ then, and Sennex had left him to die in the pits of the Dark Temple’s forgotten ward: Jurgoran Prison. He had only survived by accepting an indelible transformation and, in thanks to his now-roaming compatriot Ajax, embraced his heritage and purpose. He was Seydon now, by his birthname, and one of perhaps a scant dozen witchers calling themselves Dunaan at work in the galaxy. All for the purpose of hunting darkspawn for coin, and ensuring the secrets of their mythologized homeland remained undefiled.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Ys. That world with castles in the sky…[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“How come you’re outside then?” Rosa took her hand up to his cheek and guided him out of his reminisce. “It’s not so hard to sleep at my side, is it?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Never.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]She looked again at the displayed keepsake chests, drawing her stare from their stamped locks, to the small beachside fire, to Shev Rayner’s written accounting hide-bound in her husband’s fingers. Indigo eyes narrowed. Belying speed helped her reach propel forward and snatch the journal back to her own grasp, hugging it tightly over her sternum. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“…Rosa…” Seydon cautioned softly, trying to retrieve the book. Her fingers pinched on his wrist, slapping down his knuckles while she leaned forward, scolding.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Don’t. Don’t think of it, even,” She said.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“…A thousand people were kidnapped, slain, and then devoured by monsters Sennex unleashed just so he could have that thing,” He argued back. “There’s no secret worth keeping that costs that much.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Aye, and you avenged them until you were nearly broke yourself, love. An effort you’ll waste if you just toss this away.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“It’s not worth it, Rosa.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Says you,” She shook her head. “Where is the point of keeping an oath to ensure little treasures like this are never lost? Or at least not lost to the wrong hands? Have you even read it?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“No. I don’t want to. Rosa, please, give it here – “[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“You’re a liar.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Seydon blinked before his eyes turned arch and cross. “…What?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“When you say that: you can’t read this. Yes, you can. If you could not, you would have long thrown it into the fire, the ocean, a black hole or what have you. But I know my husband,” Rosa said. She sidled back to their shared sand-mat, putting a hand to his cheek while she mirrored the gesture instinctively. “And he doesn’t recklessly trash things that have import to him.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]His head bowed, until it rested below her curled throat and arms enveloped his wearied shoulders. “…You’re right.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“You will have to be a little more specific, love,” Came her chide mixed with singing chuckles.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“I did read it,” Seydon glanced up between her folded arms. “Just some. I… don’t like secrets. I don’t favour the addiction that begins germinating in your heart, when you get to know something you shouldn’t or wasn’t meant for you. …But I’ve been dreaming. Wondering… So I read. A few pages.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Can’t imagine Rayner’s pidgin basic was much fun translating.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“He could show you nine different methods to collect fresh water, another nine on how to set fishing traps, or how to stop six foes with just a two-inch paring knife. If you asked him to try write anything down, he would blanche,” He managed a small grunt, tapping a finger over the journal’s spine. “But he was comprehensive, in his way.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“What did you learn?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Only beginning preparations, lots of preliminary gathering, devising. He keeps mentioning Ajax but that dipped in and out of his narration like a myth himself. But he was excited. I could tell.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Shev?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]Stealing the book back, he untied the string binding and scrolled a handful of pages aside until his fingernail stroked over a line in a wrist-smeared paragraph. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“’Gate of Crete’?” Rosa read.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“I don’t know what it is. Sounds like neither did Shev, not then at least. But that’s the third mention on the same page. It’s what he and Ajax went questing after…”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]She ran a thumb along the grit-smeared leafing, flicking months of recorded adventuring along until it ran to an emptied page reserved at the book-end. “Do you think they found it?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“…I don’t know,” Seydon shrugged wryly. “…I’d have to read.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Don’t burn it, Seroth,” Rosa turned to him and took care gliding the little field-journal onto his hands, before folding each finger over the cover. It was only very rarely those days that she called him by his older, borrowed cognomen. “At least promise that for my sake.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“For your sake? Rosa, that’s why I’d consign it all to flame in the first place. Your sake. We have enemies that will kill as many people as they think necessary to have anything once belonging to Shev. If it turns to ash – “[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Then you’ll have soot on your hands and no less responsibility. Love, destruction just begets destruction. If these foes are just that unbending, what’s it to them if they learn you’ve torched their treasures? Their wrath will be a hundred fold and there won’t be any placation. Not unless they get hands on both of us, anyone else who may know, and drag out every detail they can about Shev, this ‘Ys’, a ‘Gate of Crete’, before slitting our throats.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“…You really believe I should preserve all this,” Seydon nodded to both journal and fire-warmed footlockers idling behind the smoke in dancing shadows. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Shev Rayner intended for you to have it,” Rosa shrugged. “I never knew him. But you say he always had a decent purpose behind everything he did. If he thought it’d be a better idea to destroy anything to do with Ys or the Dunaan, he would have done as much. And you know what I think?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“No,” Her beau glanced over slyly. “That’s why you tell me.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Hush. Idgit,” She guffawed and raked his white-streaks of hair with none-too-gentle fingers. “What I mean is perhaps he had a thought you would follow after him. Maybe in a perfect world, you’d have inherited the Sayda, turned them about and reinvigorated their purpose, and then gone after this place with castles in the sky…”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“…Maybe,” Seydon whispered soberly. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“For what it’s worth? If he could see you now?” Rosa tipped his sunken chin up, sitting in close enough for her breath to tickle at his cheeks and eyelashes. “He would be so proud.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Of all this?” The witcher cast a glance over his mutant physicality. Rosa’s eyes followed, reading stanzas of muscle and scar-tissue with both her stare and hands. [/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“I know I am,” Her whisper skipped into his ear before her kiss dapped the lobe and she withdrew, standing in the snowy sand. Light from the three brother-moons, Priad, Andromak, and Xander, was passing through parts in the atoll’s hinterland palm forests, slashing her with ribbons of off-white and dust motes. Seydon watched Rosa tug on the tail of her robe-belt, in time letting a wash of warm sea-breeze run up her bare legs, belly, and ribs. She briefly shivered and drew up a flushed grin, winking at her husband.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Now if I can trust you not to go recklessly burning priceless directions, I –“ She waited for her him to face her on his knee and foot and bent low, painting a kiss onto his brow. Saltloons cooed in the rock shoals. “ – Am going back to bed. See you there?”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“In a little while,” Seydon promised. “I’ve the chests to put back and the journal will need storing too.”[/SIZE]
[SIZE=10pt]“Alright. But don’t take long…”[/SIZE]