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Limsa Lominsa– Fisherman’s Bottom
Late Evening
Two silhouettes populated the endrun of the port, huddled beneath cowl or tricorne as the rains continued to hammer the port for the third consecutive night. All eyes were turned to a brigantine ship that had been badly damaged, albeit it remained afloat whilst the porthands moored and divested her of unnecessary articles.
“Sahagin raid,oi? Wha’s th’damage?†asked Qaeli. “Can see a few ballistae an’ ball breaches fore an’ port,†the silver-haired woman commented as she paced to the side, noting the outwardly obvious inflictions. Her tongue clicked with disapproval at the ruins of the figurehead; once a depiction of a courtly-appareled woman bearing a dagger in one hand and flagon in the other. Only the skirt remained.
“Bola snapped Her Ladyship in half, through the bow and through the first stanchion. Would’ve held but for the falconet rolling just above. The footing buckled, taking Bergonier with it,†recounted Voliant, Qaeli’s provisions officer, who happened to be particularly brawny for a Duskwight.
The news of Bergonier’s passing had struck harshly. A knifemaster,  the Wildwood had been implicit to the young woman’s growth from boisterous waif into lethal bladedoxy. Yet for the sorrow it bore her, it was a pale vesper to the abyss that it would lay upon Bergonier’s wife. Still, she never allowed herself to become moored by loss, and thus kept her mind to the details.
“S’o’er a tonne’s half a’ three yalms. But ribbin’ held up, I see. Duskiron beltin’ kept true, aye?â€
Voliant glanced to the young woman. Even now, nearly seventeen years after her—a mere child at the time—surprise induction into the crew of the Needle, her maritime knowledge was surprising. “Correct, though several bolts and rivets cracked as a result. They’ll need replacing.â€
“Th’fuck’re scalebacks doin’ wiv such artillery, anyroad?†the silver-haired woman asked without direction, arms folded in her consternation. “Ye said they emerged from th’shoals an’ opened fire?â€
“Correct. Never seen the like. Seawater should’ve rendered powder useless. Not countin’ the difficulty of moving ‘em in the water. We know now they’re not so primitive, and yet…â€
“Well, naught fer I’ a’ th’momen’,†said Qaeli as she turned to face the muscled Elezen. “See t’th’repairs. When she’s ready, ferry ‘er t’Moraby fer th’final preparations.â€
“Of course,†he answered as the comparatively diminutive woman turned to take her leave. A question toward her plans stirred on his tongue, but there it remained. One look at the steely calm of her despairing profile told him all he needed to know. “You needn’t always carry this burden yourself. I could accompany—“ he began.
“Sod off,†she said as she started down the gangway, “Nae a lil’ lass anymore. Ye frighten ‘er, anyroad.†She waved a hand dismissively over her shoulder, throwing back her hood in the same motion, suddenly needing the sting of the torrent that hammered the seaboard. “I’ll meet ye in Moraby.â€Â
Mist Residential District – Predawn
Nearly a bell had passed since Qaeli settled upon the rooftop across from Bergonier’s home; a stone and mahogany-wrought bungalow that he had labored four years to build. Though smaller than its neighbours, it was all the home he and his wife needed—and the ceilings were vaulted to account for his respectable height. She had been so proud of him for etching a worthy livelihood in the wake of the company’s disbanding after Carteneau.
She had watched the column of smoke rousing from the chimney top dwindle into a thin thread. Comprised of checkered black and sandy brick, it was the centrepiece of Bergonier’s home. For years, he had obsessed over having a fireplace and chimney, like a ‘proper gent’.
Beyond the array of houses and manses alike, the first splinters of the morning began to thread the sky. Soon Nischa would wake, and be off for the smithy. By the time her feet hit the well-kempt grass that waited beneath her two-story-high perch, her stomach was churning with unmitigated nausea.Â
The young woman had never been a proponent of love beyond the familial, regarding it as illusory and fickle. Nischa was the advocate that gave pause to such a stance. Through many nights of binge-drinking, infidelity and memory-induced panic she had stayed at Bergonier’s side, wholly devoted without thought to condition.
And now she was going to learn that her great love was gone. Forever.
Qaeli had earned many monikers in her short years, many unsavory and unflattering, but ‘coward’ rarely visited her reputation; yet as she began to cross the cobbled street, reticence struck her to a halt.
A sleeve of dryness coated her tongue and throat, though she felt they would soon be revisited by eft steak and greens. Â She leaned forward, bracing her palms upon her thighs for balance, preparing for the inevitable.
“Miss? Are you unwell?†came a man’s voice as silky as her favourite pair of skivvies.Â
Fists formed against her thighs as the acrid impulse dissipated, and she straightened her posture as she turned to face the host of that smooth tone. Ten paces away stood a man dressed in finery fit for a sultana’s gala: decidedly froofy-ruffled poof-neck-thing, cufflinks, slicked black hair and finely trimmed beard, manifold-buckled boots and all. Though of greatest interest was the ornamented handguard of the extremely thin sword he carried; not unlike a sabre, but still half the girth of blade, straight as a needle.
“Might ask th’same o’ye,†she said with a long draw of breath, stabilising her insides, “Lookin’ like a choco’ struck by lightnin’. Or a rainbow.â€Â
The man was unmoved by the dry insult beyond a bare smirk. “Forgive my presumption, m’lady. It simply pains me to witness such a lovely woman in the throes of tra—“
“F’ink I’ma propah heave now,†she interjected, her attendance to this man’s flowery prose already spent. “I be fine, luv. There’s a’ leas’ two pillowhouses in th’distric’, tha’ way,†she continued with a glance and jab of her finger down the road. She stilled then, noting a pair of silhouettes approaching, and at least one person courting the roof of Nischa’s neighbour’s house.
Lips pursed sideward, she exhaled through her nostrils and turned a look back to the yet smirking, stately gentleman.Â
“Miss Varily, I fear your meeting with the Widow Cintaux must needs wait. I formally and humbly request that you follow me. Calmly, if it please you.â€
By now the silhouettes had come into focus, two Elezen men, one bearing a gladius, the other a steel-studded club lowered to the side, but clearly presented. The one on the roof was gone from view.
“Righ’ informed ye be, fresh as tha’ news be.†A scoff bubbled from the young woman’s lips while a hand raked through her damp mane, tucking what she could behind her ears. “’ow ‘bout this,†she began again, looking left to right, “Ye sod off an’ ne’er come near this ‘ouse ‘gain, an’ I’ll nae feed ye yer froofypoof neck f’ing.†A vague hand gesture about her neck suggested the man’s ascot.
“Unsurprising,†he said with sighing resignation. “Very well. Superfluous violence it is, then. Gentlemen?â€
From above, a click sounded, follow by a shrill whistle. Knowing full well what it meant, Qaeli tucked into a crouch in time for a crossbow’s bolt to fly past her shoulder, ricocheting harmlessly off of the cobblestones.
Steel and limbs followed promptly afterward as the pair of Elezen came at her from opposed angles, swinging and kicking at her crouched form. The sole of the first boot was intercepted by the punch of a throwing blade produced from beneath the girl’s sleeve, the top-leather of his boot raising from the knife’s tip. With her other hand she snatched his ankle before he reeled out of reach, and with a sweep of her leg to turn her weight, she jerked his leg into the path of the gladius’ downward chop.
She felt the metal sever bone at the shin as blood splashed her temple. Abandoning her grip on the ankle, she took advantage of the swordsman’s surprise by delivering a snapping uppercut square between his legs. He slumped just enough to bring his collar within reach, which she gripped in time to jerk his body into the path of the next bolt meant for her skull. The dull thump of metal tip to flesh followed by gurgling gasp ended his threat.
Shoving him off, she rolled toward the now nearly one-legged Elezen, ripping free the gladius—and sending up a spurting geyser of blood—as she sprang to her feet in a full dash for cover.
The Gentleman looked on silently, looking yet devoid of surprise. Even so, her speed!Â
“I have heard tales of your prowess, Miss Varily,†he said as he watched the sniper search below for the girl. “The Silver Siren, fast and strong as the crushing tide.â€Â
Several seconds passed as he watched the crossbowman scanning the alleys and yards below. Then steel flashed from over his shoulder, and the crossbow fell from his grip, clattering to the ground below. Dark particles sprayed into the dawning sky, and he fell heavily to the ground below, leaving Qaeli’s silhouette in his place.
“Now ye’ll become part o’one o’those tales.†She leapt down from her victory perch, parts of her slick and sheening with the blood of her attackers as she stepped back onto the street.Â
“I fear my story does not end here, Miss Varily.†Releasing a briefly-held breath, the last man standing gave each of his white gloves a tightening tug before he slowly drew his sword free of its scabbard, and assumed a curious one-handed stance; one leg tipped forward, the rear leg bent, sword pointed straight ahead, free hand raised in the air behind him.
For a moment, the young woman gawked. His stance was as flowery as the rest of him, and too loose, besides. Yet there was a steel in his gaze that she knew very well. Shrugging, she absently wiped at the blood on her cheek, the slowly trickling fluid beginning to tickle her skin.Â
Without another word she rushed forward, angling low in preparation to dip past the length of that sword. Yet no sooner had she come into range, he danced back in tandem with a waving jab from his blade, forcing her to halt her pursuit in time to snap back and knock the stab aside with the much shorter gladius.
His smirk returned, his pose unchanged, the Gentleman waited.Â
She came forward again, this time sweeping aside to circumvent the obvious lateral stopping power of his weapon. Again he danced back with whiplash speed, a flurry of motion from his sword preceding two rapid jabs for her shoulder and abdomen. Dipping below the first, she managed to slap the second to the side with a downward parry. It did not afford her the opening she had hoped, however, as the marginal weight of the sword allowed him to rebound the blade into a quick, downward cut that bit into her shoulder, breaking her focus long enough to regain his distance.
Wincing, she shrugged at the pain, which would soon spread like fire through her shoulder.Â
This time it was she who waited, though not for long. He came forward with a blindingly swift lunge, though he kept his feet light, proven by the rapid and graceful footwork that followed her parry. Each attack came with surgical precision, forcing the young woman into a backpedal as she fought to keep up with her weightier, shorter weapon. Another two jabs broke through her defenses, one glancing off her side, the other punching into her sword arm.
Bleeding and running low on breath, it suddenly occurred to Qaeli that she was going about this the wrong way. Continuing on her backward trend, she took a short leap back to widen the gap. As hoped, he lunged forward to recover the distance.
Then she countered. With minimal motion she skirted to the side of the forward lunge while stepping forward, snapping a vise grip onto his wrist, pulling it with her as she committed to a quick spin, stopping the Gentleman’s onslaught with a crushing elbow to the face.
He fell to the ground straightway, eyes wide with surprise.
Qaeli peeled the sword from his grip, taking a moment to examine it before she brought the tip to the man’s throat. Drawing in much-needed breath, as much as it now pained her, the tip pressed ever-so-gently to his adam’s apple. “Wha’s all this ‘bout?†she asked, her voice husky with anger and burning pain.
With a slow blink, the Gentleman looked up to the girl. For several seconds he stared, marveling at the strength of that blow she delivered. “That is a tale for another time,†he said as his left hand twitched.
Qaeli, having had her fill of this lot, was prepared to open a hole in the man’s throat, but found herself unable to move. Or rather, she was moving with a slug’s sense of urgency.
Her enemy seemed unaffected, carefully sliding out from beneath the blade before standing up to clasp the dust from his no-longer-pristine attire.Â
She tried, willed herself to move faster, to cut him down where he stood, to no avail. Time had slowed to a crawl for her alone.Â
She could only watch as the sword was pried from her hand, gripped tight in the Gentleman’s, and suddenly disappeared somewhere behind her.
An exploding pain rocked the back of her skull, turning the world to white, then to absolute black as unconsciousness embraced her.
Late Evening
Two silhouettes populated the endrun of the port, huddled beneath cowl or tricorne as the rains continued to hammer the port for the third consecutive night. All eyes were turned to a brigantine ship that had been badly damaged, albeit it remained afloat whilst the porthands moored and divested her of unnecessary articles.
“Sahagin raid,oi? Wha’s th’damage?†asked Qaeli. “Can see a few ballistae an’ ball breaches fore an’ port,†the silver-haired woman commented as she paced to the side, noting the outwardly obvious inflictions. Her tongue clicked with disapproval at the ruins of the figurehead; once a depiction of a courtly-appareled woman bearing a dagger in one hand and flagon in the other. Only the skirt remained.
“Bola snapped Her Ladyship in half, through the bow and through the first stanchion. Would’ve held but for the falconet rolling just above. The footing buckled, taking Bergonier with it,†recounted Voliant, Qaeli’s provisions officer, who happened to be particularly brawny for a Duskwight.
The news of Bergonier’s passing had struck harshly. A knifemaster,  the Wildwood had been implicit to the young woman’s growth from boisterous waif into lethal bladedoxy. Yet for the sorrow it bore her, it was a pale vesper to the abyss that it would lay upon Bergonier’s wife. Still, she never allowed herself to become moored by loss, and thus kept her mind to the details.
“S’o’er a tonne’s half a’ three yalms. But ribbin’ held up, I see. Duskiron beltin’ kept true, aye?â€
Voliant glanced to the young woman. Even now, nearly seventeen years after her—a mere child at the time—surprise induction into the crew of the Needle, her maritime knowledge was surprising. “Correct, though several bolts and rivets cracked as a result. They’ll need replacing.â€
“Th’fuck’re scalebacks doin’ wiv such artillery, anyroad?†the silver-haired woman asked without direction, arms folded in her consternation. “Ye said they emerged from th’shoals an’ opened fire?â€
“Correct. Never seen the like. Seawater should’ve rendered powder useless. Not countin’ the difficulty of moving ‘em in the water. We know now they’re not so primitive, and yet…â€
“Well, naught fer I’ a’ th’momen’,†said Qaeli as she turned to face the muscled Elezen. “See t’th’repairs. When she’s ready, ferry ‘er t’Moraby fer th’final preparations.â€
“Of course,†he answered as the comparatively diminutive woman turned to take her leave. A question toward her plans stirred on his tongue, but there it remained. One look at the steely calm of her despairing profile told him all he needed to know. “You needn’t always carry this burden yourself. I could accompany—“ he began.
“Sod off,†she said as she started down the gangway, “Nae a lil’ lass anymore. Ye frighten ‘er, anyroad.†She waved a hand dismissively over her shoulder, throwing back her hood in the same motion, suddenly needing the sting of the torrent that hammered the seaboard. “I’ll meet ye in Moraby.â€Â
Mist Residential District – Predawn
Nearly a bell had passed since Qaeli settled upon the rooftop across from Bergonier’s home; a stone and mahogany-wrought bungalow that he had labored four years to build. Though smaller than its neighbours, it was all the home he and his wife needed—and the ceilings were vaulted to account for his respectable height. She had been so proud of him for etching a worthy livelihood in the wake of the company’s disbanding after Carteneau.
She had watched the column of smoke rousing from the chimney top dwindle into a thin thread. Comprised of checkered black and sandy brick, it was the centrepiece of Bergonier’s home. For years, he had obsessed over having a fireplace and chimney, like a ‘proper gent’.
Beyond the array of houses and manses alike, the first splinters of the morning began to thread the sky. Soon Nischa would wake, and be off for the smithy. By the time her feet hit the well-kempt grass that waited beneath her two-story-high perch, her stomach was churning with unmitigated nausea.Â
The young woman had never been a proponent of love beyond the familial, regarding it as illusory and fickle. Nischa was the advocate that gave pause to such a stance. Through many nights of binge-drinking, infidelity and memory-induced panic she had stayed at Bergonier’s side, wholly devoted without thought to condition.
And now she was going to learn that her great love was gone. Forever.
Qaeli had earned many monikers in her short years, many unsavory and unflattering, but ‘coward’ rarely visited her reputation; yet as she began to cross the cobbled street, reticence struck her to a halt.
A sleeve of dryness coated her tongue and throat, though she felt they would soon be revisited by eft steak and greens. Â She leaned forward, bracing her palms upon her thighs for balance, preparing for the inevitable.
“Miss? Are you unwell?†came a man’s voice as silky as her favourite pair of skivvies.Â
Fists formed against her thighs as the acrid impulse dissipated, and she straightened her posture as she turned to face the host of that smooth tone. Ten paces away stood a man dressed in finery fit for a sultana’s gala: decidedly froofy-ruffled poof-neck-thing, cufflinks, slicked black hair and finely trimmed beard, manifold-buckled boots and all. Though of greatest interest was the ornamented handguard of the extremely thin sword he carried; not unlike a sabre, but still half the girth of blade, straight as a needle.
“Might ask th’same o’ye,†she said with a long draw of breath, stabilising her insides, “Lookin’ like a choco’ struck by lightnin’. Or a rainbow.â€Â
The man was unmoved by the dry insult beyond a bare smirk. “Forgive my presumption, m’lady. It simply pains me to witness such a lovely woman in the throes of tra—“
“F’ink I’ma propah heave now,†she interjected, her attendance to this man’s flowery prose already spent. “I be fine, luv. There’s a’ leas’ two pillowhouses in th’distric’, tha’ way,†she continued with a glance and jab of her finger down the road. She stilled then, noting a pair of silhouettes approaching, and at least one person courting the roof of Nischa’s neighbour’s house.
Lips pursed sideward, she exhaled through her nostrils and turned a look back to the yet smirking, stately gentleman.Â
“Miss Varily, I fear your meeting with the Widow Cintaux must needs wait. I formally and humbly request that you follow me. Calmly, if it please you.â€
By now the silhouettes had come into focus, two Elezen men, one bearing a gladius, the other a steel-studded club lowered to the side, but clearly presented. The one on the roof was gone from view.
“Righ’ informed ye be, fresh as tha’ news be.†A scoff bubbled from the young woman’s lips while a hand raked through her damp mane, tucking what she could behind her ears. “’ow ‘bout this,†she began again, looking left to right, “Ye sod off an’ ne’er come near this ‘ouse ‘gain, an’ I’ll nae feed ye yer froofypoof neck f’ing.†A vague hand gesture about her neck suggested the man’s ascot.
“Unsurprising,†he said with sighing resignation. “Very well. Superfluous violence it is, then. Gentlemen?â€
From above, a click sounded, follow by a shrill whistle. Knowing full well what it meant, Qaeli tucked into a crouch in time for a crossbow’s bolt to fly past her shoulder, ricocheting harmlessly off of the cobblestones.
Steel and limbs followed promptly afterward as the pair of Elezen came at her from opposed angles, swinging and kicking at her crouched form. The sole of the first boot was intercepted by the punch of a throwing blade produced from beneath the girl’s sleeve, the top-leather of his boot raising from the knife’s tip. With her other hand she snatched his ankle before he reeled out of reach, and with a sweep of her leg to turn her weight, she jerked his leg into the path of the gladius’ downward chop.
She felt the metal sever bone at the shin as blood splashed her temple. Abandoning her grip on the ankle, she took advantage of the swordsman’s surprise by delivering a snapping uppercut square between his legs. He slumped just enough to bring his collar within reach, which she gripped in time to jerk his body into the path of the next bolt meant for her skull. The dull thump of metal tip to flesh followed by gurgling gasp ended his threat.
Shoving him off, she rolled toward the now nearly one-legged Elezen, ripping free the gladius—and sending up a spurting geyser of blood—as she sprang to her feet in a full dash for cover.
The Gentleman looked on silently, looking yet devoid of surprise. Even so, her speed!Â
“I have heard tales of your prowess, Miss Varily,†he said as he watched the sniper search below for the girl. “The Silver Siren, fast and strong as the crushing tide.â€Â
Several seconds passed as he watched the crossbowman scanning the alleys and yards below. Then steel flashed from over his shoulder, and the crossbow fell from his grip, clattering to the ground below. Dark particles sprayed into the dawning sky, and he fell heavily to the ground below, leaving Qaeli’s silhouette in his place.
“Now ye’ll become part o’one o’those tales.†She leapt down from her victory perch, parts of her slick and sheening with the blood of her attackers as she stepped back onto the street.Â
“I fear my story does not end here, Miss Varily.†Releasing a briefly-held breath, the last man standing gave each of his white gloves a tightening tug before he slowly drew his sword free of its scabbard, and assumed a curious one-handed stance; one leg tipped forward, the rear leg bent, sword pointed straight ahead, free hand raised in the air behind him.
For a moment, the young woman gawked. His stance was as flowery as the rest of him, and too loose, besides. Yet there was a steel in his gaze that she knew very well. Shrugging, she absently wiped at the blood on her cheek, the slowly trickling fluid beginning to tickle her skin.Â
Without another word she rushed forward, angling low in preparation to dip past the length of that sword. Yet no sooner had she come into range, he danced back in tandem with a waving jab from his blade, forcing her to halt her pursuit in time to snap back and knock the stab aside with the much shorter gladius.
His smirk returned, his pose unchanged, the Gentleman waited.Â
She came forward again, this time sweeping aside to circumvent the obvious lateral stopping power of his weapon. Again he danced back with whiplash speed, a flurry of motion from his sword preceding two rapid jabs for her shoulder and abdomen. Dipping below the first, she managed to slap the second to the side with a downward parry. It did not afford her the opening she had hoped, however, as the marginal weight of the sword allowed him to rebound the blade into a quick, downward cut that bit into her shoulder, breaking her focus long enough to regain his distance.
Wincing, she shrugged at the pain, which would soon spread like fire through her shoulder.Â
This time it was she who waited, though not for long. He came forward with a blindingly swift lunge, though he kept his feet light, proven by the rapid and graceful footwork that followed her parry. Each attack came with surgical precision, forcing the young woman into a backpedal as she fought to keep up with her weightier, shorter weapon. Another two jabs broke through her defenses, one glancing off her side, the other punching into her sword arm.
Bleeding and running low on breath, it suddenly occurred to Qaeli that she was going about this the wrong way. Continuing on her backward trend, she took a short leap back to widen the gap. As hoped, he lunged forward to recover the distance.
Then she countered. With minimal motion she skirted to the side of the forward lunge while stepping forward, snapping a vise grip onto his wrist, pulling it with her as she committed to a quick spin, stopping the Gentleman’s onslaught with a crushing elbow to the face.
He fell to the ground straightway, eyes wide with surprise.
Qaeli peeled the sword from his grip, taking a moment to examine it before she brought the tip to the man’s throat. Drawing in much-needed breath, as much as it now pained her, the tip pressed ever-so-gently to his adam’s apple. “Wha’s all this ‘bout?†she asked, her voice husky with anger and burning pain.
With a slow blink, the Gentleman looked up to the girl. For several seconds he stared, marveling at the strength of that blow she delivered. “That is a tale for another time,†he said as his left hand twitched.
Qaeli, having had her fill of this lot, was prepared to open a hole in the man’s throat, but found herself unable to move. Or rather, she was moving with a slug’s sense of urgency.
Her enemy seemed unaffected, carefully sliding out from beneath the blade before standing up to clasp the dust from his no-longer-pristine attire.Â
She tried, willed herself to move faster, to cut him down where he stood, to no avail. Time had slowed to a crawl for her alone.Â
She could only watch as the sword was pried from her hand, gripped tight in the Gentleman’s, and suddenly disappeared somewhere behind her.
An exploding pain rocked the back of her skull, turning the world to white, then to absolute black as unconsciousness embraced her.