The warlock named Beve ignored the lack of powerful light and focused on the cramped, spider-like lettering of the forbidden book The Codex of Xerrath. She was desperate to absorb the book's contents, which would allow her to replace the fires of her spells with magical green Felfire.
A typical fire burned flesh. Felfire burned the flesh and soul.
Beve Perenolde |
Her golden blond hair was loose and cascaded down over her shoulders. She preferred her hair down but rarely let other people see her that way; she inculcated the stiff formality of her position as the eldest child of Aiden Perenolde and his deceased wife, Isolde.
She was prized by the Syndicate not only because of her bloodline but also because she had studied magic use in Lordaeron City. She had joined her father in exile and was the leader of the magical operatives and the Argus Wake in the Syndicate.
She scowled deeply when a knock at her study door.
"What?" snarled Beve when she opened the door. One of her senior mages spoke respectfully to his mistress.
"Karvela has been found dead, Mistress," he informed.
"Elaborate." Beve was displeased; Karvela had been a personal protege, showing great talent and ambition.
"She was leading a team guarding a ransom prisoner. It appears that the team was killed by a Ravenholdt strike team."
"And the prisoner?" Beve asked.
"Gone."
She stood there, and the senior mage would have sworn he could hear a cold, impersonal clockwork mechanism grinding within her cranium.
"Find her. If we can't find her, we'll... ask.. her ransomer." Beve smiled, and the cold emanating would have made the harshest Alteraci winter seem like a Kaldorei spring. "Meanwhile, ask our sources inside Ravenholdt if they'd been hired for a retrieval."
"Karvela was quite an asset and has been taken from me. I need to know where to send the bill for payment."
* * * * *
Vlados pulled out the only unoccupied chair at the inn table. "Mind if I join you? he said to the seated woman.
Veranda |
"You did indeed. You are looking well." She was - her glossy long black hair reached past her shoulders, and Vlados could see that the bruises festooning her face from beatings given to her by her captors had all healed. Her bright brown eyes were the color of goblin chocoltes, and as sweet. Her smile indicated that her spirit had recovered as well.
"Thank you. Your healing potion did s remarkable job."
"I am glad you didn't need it for a more serious reason." Vlados signaled for their server. "Something to drink?"
"Thank you. Do you know if their wine is any good?" she asked.
"They have some Dalaran, Red which is quite acceptable," Vlados said.
She nodded, and Vlados ordered a bottle for the ands some fruit and cheese.
"So... what brings you here?" Vlados asked.
"You do." Veranda looked dow, and then back up to meet his eyes. "I asked my father who you were - he didn't know. All he could tell me was that when certain merchant circles heard the Syndicate was holding me for ransom, you were recommended as someone who could help. That you could resolve thi, and do what needs to be done. That you have before. My father... my father was beyond worrie,d but he hired you." She hesitated. "Is it true you refused to take money for this?"
Vlados slowly nodded. "It is."
"May I know the reason why?"
It was Vlados' turn to hesitate. He nodded to himself, making a decision. "My family was Alteraci, a minor noble House. The same people who formed the Syndicate killed my family and despoiled our hotheybefore the burned it to the ground." As he spoke, his Alteraci accent became thicker with emotion. "The Syndicate is an Alteraci problem, born of their treason against the Alliance. It is the duty of those of us who remain to stand against them when we can."
"One does not charge for doing one's duty," he added.
They both sat in silence, sipping their wine.
After a time. she spoke. "May I show my appreciation in another way, Vlados?" He nodded, finishing his wine. She completed her own, and stood.
She stretched out her hand to him.
He took it, and allowed himself to be guided to the stair which led up to the inn sleeping rooms.
* * * * *
The third noise from the inn’s hallway had Vlados swing his legs out of the warm bed and begin to shrug into his leathers. An inn hallway often made noise, but usually it was a boisterous, drunken noise, the result of a patron having spent too much time swilling his alcohol of choice for far too long.
These noises were the sound of someone trying so very hard not to make noise, and a third noise meant probably several someones.
Vlados shook Veranda awake. “Under the bed, swiftly. Don’t make a sound.” Veranda wasted no time in questions but slid out of bed and under it.
It was not more than seconds before the door to the room burst in, shattered with eldritch force. Two Syndicate rogues leaped forward, standing guard while the woman - presumably their superior - strode arrogantly into the room. She looked around, and seeing only Vlados standing ready, said “Fools! You’ve lost her and led us into a trap - take him.” she smiled nastily. “We’ll ask his corpse where she has gone.”
Vlados pulled a potion bottle from his bandolier, and confirmed via the coded etched sigils around the neck that he had selected the correct one; he had once tossed a healing potion to a Defias bandit he’d been fighting to the confusion of both parties.
The cork came off and the potion splashed all over its target. The other attacked as his compatriot began to scream as the acid splashed across his face began to sear itself painfully into his face and eyes. The screams distracted his partner long enough for Vlados to step back and draw his matching set of pearl-hilted daggers.
Vlados caught the thrust of the Syndicate assassin on one knife and stabbed the wrist holding the sword, spinning inside his opponent’s reachand stabbing him in the throat. Blood pulsed through the assassin’s orange mask, staining the mask a dark shade of purple. The body crumpled to the floor.
The supervisor finished casting her spell and Vlados watched, frozen, as the woman transformed into an undead creature; after the defeat of the Burning Legion, the Argus Wake had been forced to re-focus on necromancy rather than demonology, aided by their allies in Scholomance in Caer Darrow.
Vlados had known, but the fear emanating from the transformed horror in front of him had caught him off-guard. The hesitation cost him as the claws shredded the cuir boli chest armor and the flesh beneath.
Fortunately, Vlados had already prepared; another potion bottle shattered on the beast, and the liquid smoked as the necrotic flesh boiled away. The creature turned and took three steps before collapsing, the wounds continuing to putrefy after it’s unholy animation ceased.
Veranda came out from under the bed. “Are you alright?”
“Nothing I cant endure,” Vlados said. The four talon-marks burned with infection; the claws had been filthy but it was nothing his healing alchemy wouldn’t repair. “Get dressed. They were looking for you. That,” he said, kicking the body of the creature. “She was looking for you, and not particular as to whether or not you were dead or alive before they questioned you.” Vlados knelt and put the acid-burned assailant out of his misery.
“What do we do now?” Veranda asked.
“Pack. I’m going to head downstairs and apologize to the innkeeper for the mess, and file a report with the guards.” Vlados would announce to all within earshot that the Syndicate had fallen into the trap set by Ravenholdt, and that their agent posing as Veranda would have to find a new assignment.
Vlados was sure that the Syndicate would get the report, via bribery or some other chicanery of their spy network. Veranda could go back to her life. The Syndicate would think that this was a Ravenholdt trap, and keep their distance rather than waste more of their resources.
Ravenholdt was a school who taught only the finest thieves and assassin. They had been in a shadow-war with the Syndicate since the Syndicate had begun their operations; framing them for the Syndicate’s deaths and defeat was jsut another mark in in their ledger.
“Shame I won’t be able to see her again,” Vlados thought. Syndicate eyes were everywhere, and to keep Veranda off their awareness Vlados would have to stay well away.
* * * * *
"I had such hopes for her, too.." Beve sighed. "She showed a genuine flair for necromancy." She paused, considering. "Let us see if we can devise a way to balance the debt we owe Ravenholdt."