Seydon of Arda
Raquor'daan
In another life, if she’d taken the Trial of the Waters, Rosa Gunn would have made for the finest example of their guild, Seydon was certain. He shut down the holo-portrait, passed the emitter disc into Rosa’s hand and returned to the holo-table still tinkling with hard light. The matter was settled in totality. And they were committed, wholly. Seydon gauged Panatha slowly rotating on an exaggerated day-night axle, then shunted the power off. Panatha and all her unseen, myriad horrors, ghosted into photo-motes dissolving against the backdrop of high flagstone walls and depowered data-banks.
“We’ll need to scrounge out anyone we can call in favours for,” He said, as they took the lift up to their private dormitories. “I don’t expect they’ll offer much help outside of logistics. It will be you and I putting our boots down, Rose.”
The lift braked to a halt, jolting the carriage, waiting for a sigh of hydraulics to lock the carriage into place before they removed the caging gate and walked up the passage. Seydon was already taking inventories, stocking his meagre Dunaan instruments against Panathan PDF and probably countless local militia equally well-armed, well-stocked, and viciously indoctrinated to throw themselves under the feet of their ‘King’. He slapped the jamb lock-pad and stepped with Rosa into their rooms, locking up, setting a ‘Do Not Disturb’ general code to the Foundation staff still labouring in the arched vaults down below.
He gripped a pad and inkwell pen, settling on the edge of their bed. Something sharp and black took the light out of his eyes. Seydon shifted, filled with the Path of Embers, subsumed by the culture and methodology of the Absolute Hunt. The pad was drawn and quartered, rapidly jotting considerations for their journey, while Rosa hovered close.
“We’ll need camouflage: idents, permits, anything that will deflect local attentions, screen out anything passive. I’ve some funds we can convert to platinum or gold bars. If we try using our credit-chits, a data-traffic hound could flag us. Maybe Jorus has a safe house or two we could co-opt. ...We’ll need reliable local transportation, a stable network connection to their holo-webs, nav-maps, everything and anything that’ll help us stay mobile ahead of local powers. ...We’ll need someone or something ready to bolt us out of the system, as soon as we find the child or at least discover what’s happened. Portable rations, as much good, light kit as we can fit on ourselves without impeding speed or giving us away at a glance. ...And we’ll need a place to start.”
Seydon looked up, paused. “...And we cannot be merciful.”
[member="Rosa Gunn"]
“We’ll need to scrounge out anyone we can call in favours for,” He said, as they took the lift up to their private dormitories. “I don’t expect they’ll offer much help outside of logistics. It will be you and I putting our boots down, Rose.”
The lift braked to a halt, jolting the carriage, waiting for a sigh of hydraulics to lock the carriage into place before they removed the caging gate and walked up the passage. Seydon was already taking inventories, stocking his meagre Dunaan instruments against Panathan PDF and probably countless local militia equally well-armed, well-stocked, and viciously indoctrinated to throw themselves under the feet of their ‘King’. He slapped the jamb lock-pad and stepped with Rosa into their rooms, locking up, setting a ‘Do Not Disturb’ general code to the Foundation staff still labouring in the arched vaults down below.
He gripped a pad and inkwell pen, settling on the edge of their bed. Something sharp and black took the light out of his eyes. Seydon shifted, filled with the Path of Embers, subsumed by the culture and methodology of the Absolute Hunt. The pad was drawn and quartered, rapidly jotting considerations for their journey, while Rosa hovered close.
“We’ll need camouflage: idents, permits, anything that will deflect local attentions, screen out anything passive. I’ve some funds we can convert to platinum or gold bars. If we try using our credit-chits, a data-traffic hound could flag us. Maybe Jorus has a safe house or two we could co-opt. ...We’ll need reliable local transportation, a stable network connection to their holo-webs, nav-maps, everything and anything that’ll help us stay mobile ahead of local powers. ...We’ll need someone or something ready to bolt us out of the system, as soon as we find the child or at least discover what’s happened. Portable rations, as much good, light kit as we can fit on ourselves without impeding speed or giving us away at a glance. ...And we’ll need a place to start.”
Seydon looked up, paused. “...And we cannot be merciful.”
[member="Rosa Gunn"]
