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He’d wanted to spend some time familiarizing himself with the city. That’s what he’d told his companions earlier that very morning, when he’d left Kanaria and the little one back at Cloud Nine and set Painted Moon to watch over them. He’d not missed the looks that the large Roegadyn woman had thrown Spriggan’s way. He wasn’t sure whether he cared for anything to come out of that – ruffians were forever ruffians, after all - but for now, this far from home in a strange new place, he thought it best that his wife and child were looked after.
Osric shivered and clutched at his arms as he walked the worst of the streets. The Brume wasn’t, truth be told, all that different from Pearl Lane back in Ul’dah. The squabble was arguably worse in some regards, but what came as a shock was that such poverty even existed here at all. For as long as he could remember, Ishgard had always been discussed in hushed tones and reverential whispers that spoke to a standard of living such as would color any noble of the thalassocracy red with envy. Those rumors, it seemed to him now, were exaggerated. Quality, he was beginning to learn, was not by any means the norm here. The Brume was far removed from the Four Great Houses from which all wealth in Ishgard was said to flow. All things considered, at least here he could appreciate how the well-off could ignore the plight of the commoners. Within Ul’dah, it had made no sense at all, what with Pearl jutting up right against the very palace itself.
Just’ one more reason t’ascribe madness to the Jewel.
The downtrodden were everywhere, here. Cold, starving, and miserable, they slept on the stones, took shelter beneath the scaffoldings… one rotten lad even chucked a snowball at him. He spent a good few moments trading insults with the little pissant, then scowled as he dusted off his shoulder. Clearly, the “rags†he’d borrowed from the goodly establishment known as the Forgotten Knight were not, in fact, sufficient enough to allow him to blend in. He made a mental note to rip some new tears into the fabric upon his return to their rooms, then turned a corner.
At first, he thought he must still have been asleep in his bed. Man-shaped clouds of black smoke don’t make a habit of lingering at ground level just around the corner, particularly not in the absence of a smithy.
He was slow to process, to respond, to react, and for that he blamed the time of sun. Too early. Too early to be up and about after last night’s long journey. He ought to have known better… but that didn’t change the fact that he was caught completely unprepared for the sight, and so when the cloud shifted and changed and resolved into the dirtiest, mangiest, ugliest Keeper he’d ever seen, he was caught completely unprepared for the boot that took him hard and fast in the gut. His breath left him as he staggered back into the waiting arms of two brutes. They seized him by the wrists and the shoulders and took him barreling into an alcove that must have once housed market stalls and through a large iron-studded door before he could so much as cry out.
The door slammed as they passed into a large chamber and slammed him up against the far wall. He grunted, and there was a struggle, and soon enough he had his right arm free. He pulled it back and bellowed as he struck out with his elbow and put his shoulder, his full weight, and his fear into it; the first of his assailants went skidding back across the cobblestones, thrown by the force of the blow. The midlander sucked in a deep breath - he could hear the rasp of drawn steel from a far corner and a deep voice commanding â€No steel! - and reached deep for the first chakra, the seat of his strength, as he turned and threw a vicious hook at the other brute…
…only for the hulking highlander that awaited him to catch his fist in one large, meaty glove of a hand and clamp down hard.
Oh, shite.
When he came to - headbutt, must have thrown a headbutt - someone had wrapped their arms over and around his before locking their grip behind his back. His feet were off the floor and similarly pinned by some bastard’s legs… his captor must’ve been seated, then, and by the size likely Sea Wolf, Hellsguard perhaps… and the highlander thug was looming over him. Past the Ala Mhigan and off to the right stood a blond Elezen dressed in a templar’s uniform, with one hand on the pommel of the man’s sword. The Wildwood’s eyes scanned the ceiling, and from one of those organs billowed wisps of smoke.
“Best not tarry, captain,†spoke the Elezen. “Too many of these blasted adventurers here. At least a handful of conjurers, to be sure.â€
“Thank you, Pierre,†came that deep voice. Rich, melodic, with an indisputable air of authority… and utterly foreign to Osric’s ears. From off to his left. He frowned and tried to look, only for his head to be seized by the hair and wrenched painfully backward.
What he saw was a demon.
Horned, dark skin, darker hair with a touch of color… black, his old man had said… had said black meant Xaela… not like Seitsuda at all, more like the other one… the eyes were mismatched, one green and one white, both far too small. Unsettling, that’s what it was. The beast favored him with a wicked grin full of teeth, and then spoke once more.
“Sergeant, sergeant, sergeant. Tsk, tsk, tsk. How dreadful of you, to give such a poor showing. I expected better of the man who once bested me… but then, I had the advantage of foresight and planning. Forgehands here is one of my best. I recruited him specifically to handle you. Ortolf? How does he fare?â€
“Nocht but a bairn, ser, a nickum playin’ with fire. Power he dinna ken.â€
The Auri male pouted, clearly disappointed. “Unfortunate, truly. You must improve, Sergeant. We cannot make use of you in such a state.â€
Osric squinted. “Who in the seven hells are…?â€
And then it clicked. The dark cloud that had resolved into a foe, the exceptional resilience of the men who’d taken him by surprise, the wisps that had drifted from the Elezen’s eye, this demon’s familiarity with him…
“Crows,†he muttered, and he slipped every onze of loathing he could into that one word.
“Ah! At least your perceptions and your reason are in good, working order. Excellent. That shall make a wonderful foundation on which to build, will it not, Pierre?†The Xaela glanced over his shoulder, and the Elezen nodded.
“Wonderful, captain.â€
“Which one are you,†hissed their captive. “Carrion? Oubliette?â€
“You are not this stupid!†barked the demon, and that was when he knew.
“Adonis. Adin piss-in-m’soup-‘n’-shite-in-m’stew Adonis.â€
The demon turned his white eye on him, and Osric could feel the heat of the soul that had once looked at him through a baleful red orb. The hatred had not faded; if anything, it had intensified with time.
“Sergeant Melkire. Once, I tasked you to settle a debt, and you turned in my hand, a most treacherous tool. I know better now than to threaten and coerce without proper incentive. We must share a common foe if I am ever to expect results from you, and Fortune has delivered us one.â€
Up came the knave’s free hand. Grasped between two fingers were strands of white and blond hair. Long. Effeminate. Osric’s breath hitched and caught.
“Jin’li Epinoch yet walks the earth,†hissed the demon, eyes wide and intent, “and I mean to wield you as the instrument of his demise.â€
Osric shivered and clutched at his arms as he walked the worst of the streets. The Brume wasn’t, truth be told, all that different from Pearl Lane back in Ul’dah. The squabble was arguably worse in some regards, but what came as a shock was that such poverty even existed here at all. For as long as he could remember, Ishgard had always been discussed in hushed tones and reverential whispers that spoke to a standard of living such as would color any noble of the thalassocracy red with envy. Those rumors, it seemed to him now, were exaggerated. Quality, he was beginning to learn, was not by any means the norm here. The Brume was far removed from the Four Great Houses from which all wealth in Ishgard was said to flow. All things considered, at least here he could appreciate how the well-off could ignore the plight of the commoners. Within Ul’dah, it had made no sense at all, what with Pearl jutting up right against the very palace itself.
Just’ one more reason t’ascribe madness to the Jewel.
The downtrodden were everywhere, here. Cold, starving, and miserable, they slept on the stones, took shelter beneath the scaffoldings… one rotten lad even chucked a snowball at him. He spent a good few moments trading insults with the little pissant, then scowled as he dusted off his shoulder. Clearly, the “rags†he’d borrowed from the goodly establishment known as the Forgotten Knight were not, in fact, sufficient enough to allow him to blend in. He made a mental note to rip some new tears into the fabric upon his return to their rooms, then turned a corner.
At first, he thought he must still have been asleep in his bed. Man-shaped clouds of black smoke don’t make a habit of lingering at ground level just around the corner, particularly not in the absence of a smithy.
He was slow to process, to respond, to react, and for that he blamed the time of sun. Too early. Too early to be up and about after last night’s long journey. He ought to have known better… but that didn’t change the fact that he was caught completely unprepared for the sight, and so when the cloud shifted and changed and resolved into the dirtiest, mangiest, ugliest Keeper he’d ever seen, he was caught completely unprepared for the boot that took him hard and fast in the gut. His breath left him as he staggered back into the waiting arms of two brutes. They seized him by the wrists and the shoulders and took him barreling into an alcove that must have once housed market stalls and through a large iron-studded door before he could so much as cry out.
The door slammed as they passed into a large chamber and slammed him up against the far wall. He grunted, and there was a struggle, and soon enough he had his right arm free. He pulled it back and bellowed as he struck out with his elbow and put his shoulder, his full weight, and his fear into it; the first of his assailants went skidding back across the cobblestones, thrown by the force of the blow. The midlander sucked in a deep breath - he could hear the rasp of drawn steel from a far corner and a deep voice commanding â€No steel! - and reached deep for the first chakra, the seat of his strength, as he turned and threw a vicious hook at the other brute…
…only for the hulking highlander that awaited him to catch his fist in one large, meaty glove of a hand and clamp down hard.
Oh, shite.
When he came to - headbutt, must have thrown a headbutt - someone had wrapped their arms over and around his before locking their grip behind his back. His feet were off the floor and similarly pinned by some bastard’s legs… his captor must’ve been seated, then, and by the size likely Sea Wolf, Hellsguard perhaps… and the highlander thug was looming over him. Past the Ala Mhigan and off to the right stood a blond Elezen dressed in a templar’s uniform, with one hand on the pommel of the man’s sword. The Wildwood’s eyes scanned the ceiling, and from one of those organs billowed wisps of smoke.
“Best not tarry, captain,†spoke the Elezen. “Too many of these blasted adventurers here. At least a handful of conjurers, to be sure.â€
“Thank you, Pierre,†came that deep voice. Rich, melodic, with an indisputable air of authority… and utterly foreign to Osric’s ears. From off to his left. He frowned and tried to look, only for his head to be seized by the hair and wrenched painfully backward.
What he saw was a demon.
Horned, dark skin, darker hair with a touch of color… black, his old man had said… had said black meant Xaela… not like Seitsuda at all, more like the other one… the eyes were mismatched, one green and one white, both far too small. Unsettling, that’s what it was. The beast favored him with a wicked grin full of teeth, and then spoke once more.
“Sergeant, sergeant, sergeant. Tsk, tsk, tsk. How dreadful of you, to give such a poor showing. I expected better of the man who once bested me… but then, I had the advantage of foresight and planning. Forgehands here is one of my best. I recruited him specifically to handle you. Ortolf? How does he fare?â€
“Nocht but a bairn, ser, a nickum playin’ with fire. Power he dinna ken.â€
The Auri male pouted, clearly disappointed. “Unfortunate, truly. You must improve, Sergeant. We cannot make use of you in such a state.â€
Osric squinted. “Who in the seven hells are…?â€
And then it clicked. The dark cloud that had resolved into a foe, the exceptional resilience of the men who’d taken him by surprise, the wisps that had drifted from the Elezen’s eye, this demon’s familiarity with him…
“Crows,†he muttered, and he slipped every onze of loathing he could into that one word.
“Ah! At least your perceptions and your reason are in good, working order. Excellent. That shall make a wonderful foundation on which to build, will it not, Pierre?†The Xaela glanced over his shoulder, and the Elezen nodded.
“Wonderful, captain.â€
“Which one are you,†hissed their captive. “Carrion? Oubliette?â€
“You are not this stupid!†barked the demon, and that was when he knew.
“Adonis. Adin piss-in-m’soup-‘n’-shite-in-m’stew Adonis.â€
The demon turned his white eye on him, and Osric could feel the heat of the soul that had once looked at him through a baleful red orb. The hatred had not faded; if anything, it had intensified with time.
“Sergeant Melkire. Once, I tasked you to settle a debt, and you turned in my hand, a most treacherous tool. I know better now than to threaten and coerce without proper incentive. We must share a common foe if I am ever to expect results from you, and Fortune has delivered us one.â€
Up came the knave’s free hand. Grasped between two fingers were strands of white and blond hair. Long. Effeminate. Osric’s breath hitched and caught.
“Jin’li Epinoch yet walks the earth,†hissed the demon, eyes wide and intent, “and I mean to wield you as the instrument of his demise.â€
![[Image: 1qVSsTp.png]](http://i.imgur.com/1qVSsTp.png)