Star Wars Roleplay: Chaos

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Riders on the Storm

Daedel

Guest
[member="Valrein Gudrun"]

The Mobquet medium transport dropped from hyperspace over the unsuspecting world. The silence of the void outside the ship was echoed by the silence within. Cold hard black eyes of the she-rancor watched ad the man slaves of her clan guided the ship toward what was rumored to be a place where she may find slaves for her people.

The ship began scans noting the low space traffic and lack of port officials. She stood quietly, a statuesque figure, with paint marking her face and waited for the ship to finish scans.

"Mistress, there are several small villages dotting the main continent." one of the men, an elder slave, reported.

"Bring us in." She said coldly, "Await my orders."

"Of course Mistress."
 
Location: Nenet, Tundra Biome

Lack of port officials was an understatement. The small world of Nenet had no space ports, and none of the living resident had ever seen a spaceship, or anything near one. This was a world on the very fringes of the known galaxy that had lost any technology it might once have had. The people who roamed it's surface depended upon their own sweat and blood, and those of the animals they worked beside. They did not even smelt metal, working with stone and bone instead. Even the villages the scans picked up were impermanent. Great yurts and tents that could be disassembled and packed in pieces on mighty sleds when the people and their herds continued their great cyclical migration.

The one currently on the screen which the ship approached was considered massive by its inhabitants, though it had at most 200 people. It had no real name, and was refferred to informally as Grandmothers Tribe. After the strange night when roughly half the population had disappeared, the spiritual tribes were spooked. Some of the smaller ones, particularly in the harsher tundra or desert biomes had been wiped out, having lost necessary skills and manpower needed for basic survival. Many of the rest had drawn together for comfort and safety. In the Tundra, this meant that many moved to the tribe of the eldest Shaman. A wizened old woman, who might well be the oldest person alive on the planet, and claimed to be into her ninth decade.

For Valrein, it was a homecoming. Everyone knew the old woman had raised her, unusual as it was. When the Night of the Spirits, as it had come to be called, came and she could not understand or even feel the Spirits responsible, Valrein had turned her small reindeer herd and headed to the lands of her childhood.

"Aaaah."

The old woman crooned from within her almost coccoon of blankets, though for one of the hardy Tundra people it was a warm summer day, there was even grass on the ground instead of snow. She brought the mug of tea Valrein handed her to her lips and sucked in a mouthful noisily and with obvious enjoyment.

"Tell me child, how fare the people?"

"Getting better Grandmother. They still feel their losses, but they are beginning to share tents, instead of looking at the empty bedrolls and living alone with their sorrow."

"Good, good. I do not understand the Spirits will in this, but blood is lost, death happens, this is the nature of things. Better when there is a body to bury that people may move on. The doe who loses her stag does not go barren, she finds another. This is the natural order."

The old woman looked slyly over the rim of her mug at Valrein, who sighed, half exasperated and half amused.

"Every person in this camp calls you Grandmother, do you truly need me to bear you more?"

"Does one not breed the best bloodlines? Quality over quantity in the herd when it can be afforded."

Valrein rolled her eyes in response, likely the only one who could get away with such impudence.

"Ah, young people these days, no respect."

The old woman sighed mournfully.

"You hope for another pretty grasslander boy to woo you yes? Or perhaps you plan to fight the wife of your last one like a stag in heat."

"Grandmother!"

Valrein gasped, shocked, hands rising to her mouth as a giggle escaped her.

"He was a fine stag, a fine stag, I'll grant you that. Except that he was a hawk."

"It makes no difference now Grandmother. I am here and he is there, and not of my herd. I'll not poach anyone else's stag."

The two settled into a comfortable silence, sipping their tea, each lost in their own thoughts. Outside, the great reindeer herds milled together, some of the finer stock penned separately by their respective owners. Dogs ran underfoot, and people got on with life. As they always had, as they always would.

It was a hard life, but it was peaceful, it its way.

[member="Daedel"]
 

Daedel

Guest
[member="Valrein Gudrun"]

"Put us down two miles out and open the hold." She said imitating the sky people that had lost the ship to them to begin with, "We will take the camp on foot."

"Yes, mistress."

The ship broke the clouds and in the distance she could see strange herd animals start and tighten ranks. A up turn of the corner of her mouth was the only amusement she showed. She spoke not a word more as she turned and stalked back to her rancor mount, it's near black hide painted with blu and white runes already. She ran two fingers through the paint and marked her own face as the ship shuddered from setting down.

The hatch opened and she lead the band of hunters, seven mounted women and 10 unmounted men from the back of the ship. She squinted against the bright light before her eyes adjusted then turned them toward the village. The people would either come to meet them, flee or fight. In any of those cases slaves for breeding and labor would be found and perhaps a few sisters may be found.
 
A sudden cry from outside, the continued babble of raised voices, and more importantly the sound of the herds wheeling and shifting brought the two immediatly out of their reverie. Valrein sprang to her feet, the old Shaman took longer to struggle upright. Valrein restrained the urge to run out on swift young legs and instead bent to help the old woman, as she should have originally.

"I suppose we should see what the fuss is."

The old woman commented.

"People today, always getting so worked up."

"Yes Grandmother, but do you not hear the herds?"

"Ha, what do they know? The scent a predator and panic long after it has run from our men and dogs."

"As you say Grandmother."

Valrein agreed, though secretly she wasn't so sure. The reindeer herds of the Tundra people had spent centuries with their human counterparts, and when they were in such large numbers it took much to scare them. Perhaps one of the giant Tundra Worms had been sighted. They were very rare, much more so than their desert kin, but they could send a herd and camp into a panic. She'd seen one only once, and that had been one time too many.

As they exited the tent, people began to flock to the familiar blue clad, wizened form of the eldest shaman.

"What does it mean?"
"Is it the Spirits?"
"Have the Spirits come to take us too?"
"What's going on?"

"Hmph, if you lot stopped lowing like a gaggle of calves perhaps I could find out."

The old woman huffed, shaming them with her own calm.

"A great thing flew through the sky! Look! You can see where it cut the sky!"
"That is no cut, it burned through the sky, that is smoke like from a hearthfire."

As people argued over what they'd seen the old woman sighed.

"Send out the scouts! See what came from the sky!"

"But.. what if it is Spirits Grandmother?"

One of the scouts asked nervously.

"Valrein, go with them."

Valrein nodded once, and let out a piercing whistle. A great reindeer stag, taller than all but his own progeny galloped over, his unusually dark coat shot through with the silver of old age.

"Hrmm, should you not take one of the younger ones? Father is getting a bit old to gallop about with you on his back isn't he?"

He was uncommonly old for a stag, at around 14 years, he'd outlived the average male. Valrein gave him an affectionate stroke on the neck before vaulting onto his back.

"He is spry enough for this. It is not far or long. Besides, not even the Spirits would frighten Father."

"As you will, you know your own herd best child."

Valrein waited impatiently as the other four men fetched their own mounts. Father, picking up on her disquiet pawed at the ground and tossed his great rack of antlers around.

"Hush you old fool, I'd as rather not loose an eye."

She whispered fondly to him.

Soon enough the others were ready and the sped off across the Tundra.

[member="Daedel"]
 

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