3.65 - Blood and Stone
Fenian, with too much elegance, twirled his fork in Zee pasta before slurping it down with grace. Life is better when you have a private section at a tavern.
Theo, Tresk, Alex, Fenian, and Salire sat in the private booth at Xams tavern. While the day wasnt as busy as it had been in recent memory, the alchemist enjoyed the slow pace. The food was great, even if he declined the imported mead. While he felt no aversion to the drink, he simply enjoyed water with his meal. When something was produced as the fruit of Broken Tusk labor, it tasted sweeter than any mead could.
No progress had been made on finding the strange people lurking outside the walls. Theo received reports that Zizs team, working on the road, hadnt been accosted. Patrols around the dungeon had tripled, even through the night, and the alchemist dedicated a small team of golems to roaming the area.
Fenian and Salire chatted, although Theo couldnt tell if it was with more than friendly interest. The Elf often sought to flatter those around him, so it likely meant he was interested in her in a mercantile capacity. Perhaps she was his next project, like Azrug was. No matter his intentions, it was nice to have more company at the dinner table.
I wanna tour the road tomorrow, Tresk said. Ziz made some progress. Theyre well beyond the bridge.
Theo picked at his foot, considering the importance of the road. Maintenance on the road will be a problem. Can we incorporate it into the town, somehow?
I think so, Fenian said.
But he left it at that. The Elf normally had far more to say on these matters, so it was disheartening. Running the town was hard enough without having to guess at how things worked. If they couldnt bring elements like the road into the town, Broken Tusk would simply need to establish a permanent group that maintained buildings without seed cores. Ziz would sort that out. He had already proved himself worthy of the position. Expanded projects, such as the highway and tunnel, would fall under their umbrella. Once again, Theo thought too far ahead. It was better to focus on what was right in front of him.
Yeah, we should see the road, Theo said.
Assuming its safe enough, Salire said.
Fenian puffed his chest out, grinning. Its always safe enough with Uncle Fenian around.
Maybe this was a chance to get that mysterious band to reveal themselves. Theo had enough tricks up his sleeve to stay safe, even if he was attacked. It would take the force of a god to stop him in his tracks. But there was something in Fenians eyes that revealed he knew something. A glimmer of knowledge he wasnt sharing. It was as though the Elf was expecting something to happen without revealing what that was. The alchemists intuition told him it was a good thing, even if it didnt tell him directly. So much of dealing with superior intuition was about trust. His Drogramathi cores whispered their approval. No matter what happened, it would end well.
The conversation around the table didnt stray far from Broken Tusks situation. Fenian was confident theyd have boats soon, and promised to put them in contact with traders from far-off lands. Theos disappointment rested with Khahars departure. While it was nice to see an old friend, he left nothing to give them a head-start on trading with the Khahari. When they came to collect their leader, they left no instructions on initiating trade. Perhaps that was Yuris way of keeping his promise to not cheat, but it stung more than he expected.
There arent trade routes from here to the Khahari Desert, Fenian said. Well need to map those out ourselves.
Khahar said trade ships would arrive. Although, I dont know how long that will take, Theo said.
Or how many of them will be left, Fenian said. Why dont you make the journey to the holy desert? Scared of sailing?
If the monsters on land are anything to go by, the ones in the sea would be worse. Theo drummed his fingers on the table. He might have been afraid of the monsters at sea, but the killer would be boredom on the open ocean. Weeks or months confined in a ships cabin. It didnt appeal to him.
Its been an age since I sailed, Fenian said. When I first arrived on the continent.
Yeah, screw that, Tresk said.
Fenian paused his elegant consumption of the noodles. Dont you have an affinity for the water? As a Bantari?
Maybe fresh water. Shallow pools, Tresk said, leaking back with a contented sigh.
So what happens after Khahar ascends? Theo asked. It was nice to have a calm evening, but those questions lingered like smoldering coals in his mind.
Chaos in the heavens. They dont want him to ascend, you know. Most of them, anyway, Fenian said. I have theories, but nothing more. The process of becoming a god isnt documented.
Theo picked at his food, pushing the noodles around and slurping up the strays when he wanted. There was a lot to consider with Khahars ascension. Followers of other gods might come to cause trouble in Broken Tusk, but theres no way the leader could have stayed here forever. The road ahead was uncertain, but that was nothing new. A wave of calm flowed from both Alex and Tresk, the Marshlings confidence overwhelming. Whatever happened, theyd sort it out.
Their conversation diminished again, shifting to smaller topics. Fenian was evasive about his current trade deals, and Theo let him have that. When the Elf departed, hed take with him either Alise or Gwyn to form a contract in Gronro. That led to talks about wider trade, something Broken Tusk needed desperately.
How about a bath? Theo asked, finally having his fill of the food. He left his plate mostly full, a knot in his stomach. Tresk didnt seem to notice.The debut release of this chapter happened at Ñøv€l-B1n.
Fenian explained it to me. Something about isolating a target. Synergizes with my other cores.
Theo nodded, watching her scamper off into the distance. Alex let out an excited chirping noise, diving into the safe waters of the harbor. His concern was still on her common [Trackers Core], something she didnt seem willing to part ways with. [Track Monster] worked with [Marked For Death] directly, allowing her to deal twice the normal damage on her first attack out of stealth on marked targets. Combined with her [Trackers Cores] [Lingering Poison], it made for a brutal build focused on quick strikes and the attrition of potions.
But thats the flaw, Alex, Theo sighed, tending to his stills. Both of us are useless after the first bout.
She chirped in response.
The night went by the way it normally did. Theo busied himself with sifting through Xolsas research as he tended both the stills and his gardens. Tresk summoned various monsters to test her techniques and was oddly measured about it. Normally shed summon a dragon first, then work her way down until she wasnt dying immediately. She learned a lot on how to use the rapier, but didnt seem convinced it was the best fit. But that was the weapon of Parantheir. Or so she claimed.
The next morning came, and it seemed more peaceful than most in recent memory. The group made their way to Xams tavern, finding their private booth and settling in for tea and leftovers. Excitement welled in all members of the Tarahek. Theyd purposefully kept away from the road, giving Ziz time to extend it over the river, then to the north. With the team working for days without harassment from either monsters or the bandits, it seemed safe enough. Regular patrols from the adventurers guild didnt hurt matters.
Theo felt energized after his moss tea. He spotted Ziz and his workers heading out for the day, crossing down the north-south road by the tavern and heading east. The alchemist ran up beside them, nudging the stoneworker.
Weve come to inspect your work, Theo said, grinning.
Hah! Well, prepare to be impressed, Ziz said, rubbing his calloused hands together. Weve got the technique down well enough. Thought wed burn through what few [Tunneling Potions] we had, but the trenches we need are so shallow they last a while.
Good to hear, Theo said, gesturing for the stoneworker to lead the way.
Miana waved as the group passed. She was tending to her animals, letting them out in the massive pasture to clean out the stables. Theo hoped her core building had something to help her with that. Although, now that he thought of it the droppings might have alchemical uses. He shook the thought from his mind, focusing on the literal road ahead. It stretched from the eastern gate, heading east towards the new stone bridge over the river. To the south was the harbors wall, and the portcullises situated over the rushing river.
So, you might know, but we have a solid technique, Ziz said, stomping his foot on the white stone road as he went. It seemed firm, and wide enough for two carts to travel side-by-side. We dig a trench, put fat gravel at the bottom, thinner at the top, then leveling sand if we need it. The new guys mostly need the sand, those with a few levels in our cores can handle it fine.
Its quite sturdy, Theo said, stepping onto the bridge. So is this.
The bridge was an all-stone construction, arching to span the river without support on the bottom. Another quirk of the free-standing things made by the stoneworkers. The road turned after the crossed the river, heading north and tracking a path along the water. It was a healthy distance away, and Ziz went into detail about how important the gravel was for drainage. The leader of the stoneworkers was excited to talk about his work, but so were his companions. The group had grown, but only the original team was walking the road this morning.
Theo looked to either side of the road, spotting the mountains north of Broken Tusk to his left, and more mountains in the distance on his right. It seemed safe enough, but he drank a [Potion of Limited Foresight] anyway. It was habitual by this point.
So, Im guessing you have an inventory now, Theo said, gesturing to the group.
Ziz laughed. Yeah, were not interested in hauling stone this far out. One of the boys took a [Traders Core] just for the inventory.
Yeah, I cant imagine living without it, Theo said.
Tresk paused on the road, cradling Alex in her arms. She cocked her head to the side, knit her brow, then let out a breath. Ah, shit.
It happened faster than Theo could respond. With a river to their left, clear fields to the right, this seemed like a place immune to ambushes. When 5 red-skinned, horned figures emerged from nowhere ahead, his blood ran cold. One Zagmon Dronon in the rear raised a staff high, filling the air with a keening that blasted out like an explosion. Red, thorny vines burst from the ground and seized Tresk, binding her where she stood. Ziz and his men had their makeshift weapons out, but another Dronon had already sprinted toward the group. Toward his target.
Theo.
Deft strikes that depleted the potion. Faster than anyone hed seen before. But Theo had already withdrawn his improvised explosive, although he was fearful of the results. Using it so close to his companions would cause one thing. But it didnt matter. The leather-clad Dronon was quicker than him, crouching and pivoting to place the sole of his boot on the potion. He kicked it away with enough force to send it sailing far into the distance.
Tresk shouted. Zizs men did a hopeless battle with the other Zagmon Dronon. And Theo struggled for his life.
But the assassin was toying with him. Theo withdrew a [Freezebomb], only to have it slapped away. Then a [Retreat Potion], finding a similar effect. The alchemists face twisted into a grimace. There was only one thing he could think of to escape. Something to buy even a moment of time. He focused on his [Dreampassage] skill.
Even as a dagger sliced through the front of his silken robe. Ripped through his undershirt. Pierced his skin and parted bones searching for his heart. A shout of pain rippled across the scene. Theo shared a look with Tresk before
Theo Spencer vanished from the mortal realm.