• Hail Guest!
    We're looking for Community Content Contribuitors to Stratics. If you would like to write articles, fan fiction, do guild or shard event recaps, it's simple. Find out how in this thread: Community Contributions
  • Greetings Guest, Having Login Issues? Check this thread!
  • Hail Guest!,
    Please take a moment to read this post reminding you all of the importance of Account Security.
  • Hail Guest!
    Please read the new announcement concerning the upcoming addition to Stratics. You can find the announcement Here!

Momentous Decision

McIan

Journeyman
“A great, noble, and majestically honorable deed you must do my love,” Virani had told him. “The Elder promised me. If you do this, as detestable as it may be for any of us, it will serve as the cost you must pay first to regain your flesh and blood again, as did he.”

Magnus vowed to do it. Already he was in the throes of despair and depression as his life unfolded before him, day after day, a half-man, half-spirit existence that satisfied neither form. The gods of light had told him of this – that he must undertake a quest, one of great consequence to the cause of light and virtue, to be freed from this living death. He had, at first, thought it might be the slaying of his tormentor, the Elder, now Damian Racsen, or even of his consort, Virani, both of which were impossible for him. Damian was too powerful for him in honorable combat, as he refused any underhanded means to slay him. His love for Virani would never allow him to harm her much less kill her even though she lived as a vampire. Besides, vendetta, revenge, killing was dishonorable to him and could not be the action any gods of light would approve. No, it must be something else.

He knew there was an operation going on in the Lost Lands. Virani had told him about it in casual conversation. The Elder’s right hand, an unnamed shade, wraith or some such, was overseeing a team of operatives who were capturing wild timber wolves to train and enhance their features with some kind of potion. It made them grow in size to enormity, quickly, hardening their skin and making them almost immune to pain that would ordinarily incapacitate any normal creature. They were trained and kept in a compound hidden away in the dark, forbidding, land mass between Papua and Delucia. The handlers used whistles to summon them back after releasing them for random attacks. This entire venture was designed with one purpose in mind: to sow the seeds of doubt in the Elder’s son’s mind, to torment him into believing he was the cause of it all. No one knew how well this was working or even if it would, but it was going on, and could go on indefinitely.

Magnus did his research well. He discovered the one who had invented the formula and forced her to duplicate it or die. He did so anonymously; without her ever knowing who he was. He told her that if she revealed she had given it to him, she would be slain by the Elder or Virani and so he was certain she would keep silent.

He found a suitable courier, having disguised himself, and paid him handsomely to deliver it to Sanctuary, where Scar resided… an anonymous missive containing only the recipe for the potion.

Scar would have to take it from there, using his own wits and the counsel of the wise.

He would do this good thing, and others as well, but he was not going to make it simple for them. All in all, it would be a great, magnanimous deed, sure to infuriate the Elder and perhaps Virani, but, in the end, the resumption of natural life, not the boredom of an undead existence, was his goal.
 

McIan

Journeyman
As he exited the main doorway of Sanctuary, Scar was met by an unknown man dressed in official-looking garb: a white, long-sleeved shirt underneath a red satin vest, black, knee-length pants and thigh boots; a red bonnet sporting a golden feather topping it off. He carried a small package underneath his right arm. The man smiled and asked if anyone named “Scar” was home.

“You have found me, sir,” Scar replied, smiling. “What can I do for you?”

The man bowed slightly and offered him the package. Scar took it, and as he did the man procured a leather-bound writing pad and stylus and asked him to sign for the delivery. After that, the man bowed again, offered a “good day sir” and walked back down the long path to the entrance of the estate, disappearing from sight.

Scar was too busy to notice his exit, tearing off the paper wrapping, curious to see what the item was. It was a small book having only three pages. Inside was written a formula for some kind of potion, with directions for the use or administration of it but to no one in particular.

As was his usual habit when contemplating anything, Scar stroked his goatee. “This must be for someone else,” he muttered, but then he noticed, in small writing on the front page, a message: ‘This will help you discover that which you seek” in flawless cursive script. He gazed again at the formula and, baffled by it all, considered who else might be able to help him determine what this might be for.

He sent two pigeons that day bearing messages. One to Phoebe Nox, the swamp witch, and one to Latifa, his ever-resourceful, lore-master, kinswoman in the Emerald Fist. Both messages requested a meeting with them at their convenience, separately or together.
 
Top