Fable - Ask Bond Breaker

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Nathaira

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“Wake up, we here.”

A rough three bangs on her door and Nathaira’s amber eyes snapped open. It was dark in her room, the only light coming from the tiny porthole in the wall that let a meager beam on sunlight in. She pulled back the thin, rough blanket a set a flurry of dust into air, swinging her legs around to stand in the tiny room. It was damp and dark, and her bed had been just a few crates pushed together, but it was more than she needed. Passage was all she wanted.

She squinted against the light as she climbed above deck, rustling up her thick, dreadlocked hair with her fingers and tasting the salty air with a flicker of her forked tongue. The deckhands, as always, looked on her with disgust and fear. Nathaira didn’t notice, she was too awestruck from what she saw ahead of her: the great pyramids of Samskaya, golden in the morning light.

It was grand, and it was terrible. The shapes cut intimidating silhouettes, perhaps because she knew the beings that lived among them. Naga were not known for their art, nor their architecture. They were known for savagery, hostility, and mercilessness. Even bearing an invitation from the so-called “scaled king,” Nathaira found herself feeling uneasy.

Not many ships were permitted passage to Nagai. Few even sought it, but for the brave there were a few avenues to wealth. The Naga, while primitive, dealt in valuable things. Slaves, gold, and the odd trinket or novelty that some noble in Alliria would find amusing on their dining table.

The dock was tense. Giant serpentine guards with polearms slithered aboard the moment the gangway was lowered. Crates and goods were delivered to the dock, which was similarly lined with guards, and the crew went no further. At first it seemed inhospitable, but Nathaira soon realized, peering past the shining blades and into the snakes beyond, that the guards were there to protect the crew from the citizens, and not the other way around.

“Stay close. Don’t speak unless spoken to.” The captain spoke from her side, guiding her down the walkway. She had explained her purpose to him, as much as he’d needed to know, and paid him well for privacy.

Nathaira felt naked. The eyes of the guards lingered on her questioningly. She was not human, but she was far from a true naga. Her skin was lightly scaled and her blood ran cold, but her eyes were far softer than the vipers who looked back at her, and she suspected her fangs would similarly pale in comparison.

The captain brought her to a large blue naga. He was not carrying a polearm like the others, but there was a massive curved sword at his side, and each one of his arms looked like it could squeeze the life from a man with barely a thought.

“Sinschal, my deepest gratitude for receiving my humble vessel once again,” the captain bowed deep, and pushed Nathaira hard on the back so that she would do the same. She stared at the naga’s tail from beneath her messy hair.

The naga did not answer, but continued to stare at the two of them, mostly at Nathaira. She was disappointed to note that the naga seemed to view her with the same confused revulsion as humans did. Always a monster.

The captain continued after it was clear he would get no reply. “This is a passenger. She…” He seemed uncertain how to continue beneath the glare that Sinschal gave him.

”I wass invited,” Nathaira continued for him, meeting the venomous gaze of the dockmaster.

He sighed, and that sigh turned into a hiss and the hiss into a cold rasping sound of… laughter. The guards at his sides curled their lips and whispered chuckles of their own. ”Invited?” his voice was the sound of scales rushing on reeds. ”By whom?” he moved forwards like water and circled Nathaira and the captain, his tail so long that by the time he reached the front of them again they were completely surrounded. ”Who would invite you?” his eyes surveyed her, ”What are you?” Contempt had entered his voice.

Ixcuiname,” Nathaira blurted out, ”And the Scaled King. They… spoke to me in a dream.”

At this Sinschal reared back, elevating himself higher on his tail and looking both incredulous and incensed. ”How do you know thiss name?” he demanded. ”How does a… a slansharr speak of dreamss with kingss?”

Nathaira did not know what a slansharr was, but she understood its meaning from the way it was said. The guards nearest them had begun to move inwards, and Sinschal had rested a hand on his sword. The captain took a step back, but found himself trapped against the coiling blue tail. ”You lie, outsssider.”

Nathaira could feel her daggers against her sides beneath the twists of cloth that hid them. She was ready to use them, but had hoped it would not come to violence, at least not this soon. If she could kill this snake, could she kill his guards, too? Could she kill the snakes on the ship and escape? Her trip would be wasted, but she need not die...

”Enough, Sinschal,” the dockmaster rose and turned, and the guards parted to show a smaller naga, this one the color of coral and wearing a loose silk robe of sorts over their shoulders. ”She is expected.”

Sinchal looked back at Nathaira, and she could almost feel the heat off his eyes. He hissed with a short flare of his tongue in her face, and moved back. ”Get the cargo and get this ship out of my harbor!” he barked to the naga, who began hurrying along the crewmen.

The robed naga approached Nathaira and the captain slowly. ”My apologies. Sinschal is ever-vigilant for smugglers and stowaways. We do not get many outside visitors in Samskaya.” Nathaira did not answer. She was relieved, but had no idea how this newcomer knew about her. Ixcuiname must have told them, or maybe the King himself? Adrenaline still filled her, and even with the dockmaster’s retreat she was overwhelmed. She had thought, hoped, she might feel at home here, but it was more alien to her than anywhere. The naga were not her family, they hated her just as much as the Anirians did so far.

”Thank you for delivering our guest safely, Captain,” he passed a silk bag that jangled heavily as the captain took it. After a hard stare from the naga, the captain realized that his job was over.

“Ah, thank you, sir. I’ll just… help with the unloading.” The naga nodded.

The pair stood in silence for a time, each one scrutinizing the other. Nathaira did not fear this one, but she remained wary.

”Do you have belongings to gather?” they asked suddenly.

”No.”

”Good.” They turned, and without another word began to slither away from the docks. Nathaira followed quickly, not wanting to spend another moment on that dock.

For a long time neither of them spoke. Nathaira had drawn her hood up, but found this did little to deter the stares. She was, after all, the only one around with legs.

The city itself was impressive.. They passed through meat markets, or what appeared to be, and more than a few ornate and decorated buildings. Nothing could compare to the looming pyramids on the horizon, though, and the more they moved, the more it became clear that the grand pyramid was in fact her destination.

They passed through the ornate doors, passed the leering guards, and entered a grand and terrifying throne room.

“The Scaled King comes and goes as he pleases,” her guide intoned. “But we will wait here so he may make an appearance, if he so wishes.”

Nathaira nodded, unsure of what to say. The images of great serpents and bloodshed on the walls were… intriguing.


Tir'Coatl
 
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Tir'Coatl had awaited this day.

The throne room hung in palpable silence, orange flames from within their gilded braziers casting great and terrible shadows on the carved walls. Serpents, writhing and bloodied, were depicted all across the walls. Deific beasts that laid waste to countless creatures shown to kneel and worship them, from weak-limbed Skinned Ones to the decrepit beastmen.

As one admired the walls, the twisting and churning serpents all seemed to direct the gaze to the throne. Even the largest of the carvings almost seemed to bow in reverence to the raised seat. Behind it, a golden sun tinged in blood, surrounded by a coiling snake.

It was unclear how long it had been when the great doors behind Nathaira swung open, but at that moment, it wouldn't have been wise to consider anything other than the Scaled King standing at the precipice.

The towering warlord stood tall, taller than her guide and far more imposing, and armored in the same gold and metal as that dream they had shared so long ago, by the grace of Ixcuiname.

Slit pupils quickly locked onto the half-blood awaiting his arrival in his throne room, analytical and cold, as he began to slither forth. The creature was a strange one—her flesh an odd mixture of softened scale and hardened skin. Whenever one made out her heritage and the supremacy it brought, the vile blood of Skinned One came to quickly scrape away such notions.

However, he would not extend an invitation if he thought her wholely tainted.

At last, as he made his way to the great gilded throne, his tail coiling down and around the many steps, the Scaled King spoke.

"Skinned One." The title escaped his fanged maw like a branding, harsh and derisive. In a singular moment, through whatever concoction of scathing tone and hanging scents came about the warlord, it felt one and the same with 'inferior.'

The next word came out with venom, as though it still was worse than the previous. "Anirian." The Naga knew of the city Vel Anir, through tale of slave and war alike. Skinned that deemed themself supreme, like a sheep entrusting that they were the shepherd. The Naga deemed them fools.

Yet alongside the derision, there was almost sympathy mixed within the scent. Sympathy at her misfortune, the branding and enslavement Anirians brought her. It made one realize the venom dripping off the word was not aimed at the half-blood, but her captors as well.

"Half-blood, they call you."

If a word could ever be more divisive, more lauded with tone and subtleties and meanings, this was it. It was at once spoken with spite and with reverence, at once covered in the scent of scum and of gold. A duality was inherent to the word: a simultaneous reminder of the taint being Skinned-born brought her, and of the hidden superiority attached to her Naga heritage. A word he had no doubt Nathaira had heard many times before.

"Nathaira, born of Naga and Skinned One, I welcome you to the golden kingdom of Samskaya. I welcome you to your homeland. I have long awaited your arrival."

Nathaira
 
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As the Scaled King spoke, Nathaira experienced a flood of sensation and meaning like she had never encountered before. The scents and pheromones that Tir’Coatl released as he spoke, invisible yet all around, hit her hard. She felt dizzy, and took a step back to keep herself on her feet as some part of her mind was unlocked… or perhaps merely utilized for the first time.

She didn’t just hear the king’s words, she could taste them. Layers of subtle meaning were immediately understood, and her tongue flickered in and out of its own accord, reflexively listening with all of her available senses. Did he hate her? Had she made a mistake in coming here? No, he saw something in her. Hidden beneath something distasteful, but there all the same.

She felt a firm nudge on the back of her leg from her escort, and realized that she had let the silence linger for too long. ”I… thank you, your maj-.. Scaled King,” she didn’t know the proper titles, but veered away from anything that was also used by Anirians. ”Your kingdom iss wonderouss.”

It was difficult to think of what to say. Nathaira was no stranger to fear, but that wasn’t what she felt now. She had mastered fear. This was something else: apprehension. She had no idea what to expect. She had come here on her own, no orders and no mission. All possibility.

It was a little frightening.

“Your Ophidiousness,” her guide addressed the King, “Blood Master Na’Zann has been notified. With your permission, the unbinding ritual should be-”

”No!” Nathaira could not stop herself from loudly cutting off the pink serpent. Her hands had already been wrenched to her sides and gripped firmly around her dagger’s hilts. Her teeth were grit, and she struggled against the intense compulsion of the rune on her skin to kill the naga where he stood.

”Do not speak of it,” she hissed through tight lips, ”My masters’ control is strong. It… listenss.”

She looked at Tir’Coatl, hoping he would understand. She wasn’t sure how many words she would be able to force past her magical chains.

”I must resist all efforts to… to…” she could not say more, and her jaw locked firmly into place.
 
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So Nathaira had enough of their blood within her veins to interpret the scents that so deeply ran within the Naga's language. Good, Tir'Coatl was pleased with the sight of her reaction.

It was interesting, in a way, to see the first moments of a Naga tasting the scents. Within Samskaya and the tribes the great kingdom encompassed, all hatchlings quickly adjust and learn to utilize pheromones as an intrinsic part of their communication from the moment they emerge from the egg. In fact, it came more quickly to them than even sound. To enter the hatching chambers is to immerse one's self in an invisible miasma of scent and unkept emotion, and it was the duty of their caretakers to teach the young ones how to properly contain their scents and refine the messages they conveyed.

In a way, Nathaira was akin to one such hatchling. Blind and born anew into the world of her heritage, immersing herself in the miasma for the first time far beyond her hatching. The Scaled King supposed it was entirely possible she had conveyed the scents her entire life, unable to be sensed by the inferior beings she surrounded herself with all this time.

The warlord's gaze swept over to the half-blood's guide, nodding at the mention of Na'Zann. Before he had time to complete his elaboration, however, the half-blood cried out.

Though he was keenly aware of the dagger she know gripped tightly at her side, Tir'Coatl made no defensive gesture—merely a face of curiosity. "Intriguing." Such magic was vaguely reminiscent of the ones employed on slaves by the Tiskuani, his tribe of birth, though theirs was far more focused on submission through projected pain rather than any mystical compulsion. A brand that listened and controls... Oh, it was very intriguing.

However, it would do no such good for them if she was still held under its influence. The Scaled King let loose a variety of scent markers, weaving it into the complex sentences that Nathaira could interpret and, he hoped, return. He doubted the Skinned Ones of Vel Anir were well-versed in such styles of communication, stuck in their inferiority as they were.

A Naga yields to no branding, no Skinned One master. If you wish to prove yourself a Naga, then you will break these chains. You will break them and ensure that your 'masters' regret whatever foolish notions of power they once held over you, or you will forever submit to them—just like the slave they think you are.

Rising once more to his full, towering height, the Scaled King looked down at Nathaira and waited. She would either prove herself worthy of his rulership and guidance, or she would prove herself the slave she always was.
 
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Nathaira found herself stilled by the airy message. It was interpreted by something deep and primal, its meaning more clear and absolute than any spoken word. She understood, but it seemed the rune did not. At least, not until she thought on the message and even then it merely pressed a hot finger to her spine.

She had not known Naga could communicate in this way... surely her masters had not known either. Or, if they did, did not consider it a thing worth addressing. To do so would be to give it value, and Nathaira could almost see the Anirians squirming at the mere mention of such an animalistic trait. Perhaps this would allow her to speak more freely.

Unfortunately she did not know how to produce those scents herself. "I will," she answered out loud as her body relaxed, and she stood taller. Subverting the rune even this much had filled her with confidence and a dauntless determination. So long as her thoughts remained vague on the matter, she might just get away with it.

Her escort did not seem quite so reassured. Clearly unsure of whether or not his words would set her off again, he simply gestured to her to follow, and bowed to his king.

Nathaira was lead to an underground chamber. At least, she assumed it was underground given how far they descending spiraling ramps and stairways. The chamber they emerged into was different than the throne room. Gold still adorned a few features but it was much sparser. Bone and leather predominated here, with abstract images smeared in suspiciously red paint.

They were met by another naga, this one in a flowing red robe. Her escort, who's name she realized she did not know, approached ahead of her. He spoke in his native tongue which Nathaira could not understand, but the soft aroma that accompanied it was clear:
Speak not of purpose, the binding magic listens.

The old naga nodded before slithering forwards slowly. His scales were a pleasant green-gold, and she saw that his eyes were clouded blue. His body did not shimmer in the torchlight like the escort or the King, and she could see the peaks of his vertebrae running down his long back.

He bowed deeply to Tir'Coatl, and Nathaira it seemed. "Welcome, Nathaira Scaleborn. We have been expecting you."
 
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So the half-blood was unable to produce the scents as of yet. Such a thing was disappointing, though in truth it was to be expected. The Skinned Ones deemed the tongue of Naga to be an enigma; to think that they would even be aware of the secrecies and intricacies of it would be laughable, particularly in the case of Anirians.

At Nathaira's response, the Scaled King merely nodded. Serpentine eyes darted to the escort that had brought her here, silently directing the naga to continue with what they had planned. Quickly, they set for the Crimson Chambers—the home of the Tiskuani shamans and the site of their occult rituals, and the room where Nathaira shall be unbound and begun anew.

The longer they took, he surmised, the more likely the magic that bound her as a slave would understand their goals. Should such a thing occur, it would not end well for Nathaira or her hopes of escape.

As they entered the Crimson Chambers, the familiar scent of blood filled the warlord's senses. It was a refreshing aroma, one he relished in as one of the Tiskuani. Though more simplistic than the throne-room, as opulence was more of an obstacle than an aide when it comes to precise ritual, the air still hung over them with a sense of grandeur and power.

His gaze drifted over to the elderly naga—Blood Master Na'Zann, one of the oldest and most trusted advisors among the Tiskuani, who had served him for many cycles. It was said he had lived far beyond the lifespan of a Naga, fuelled by the sacred magics of their clan.

"Na'Zann, a pleasure. I trust you are ready to begin as planned?"
 
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"Yes, my King. Nathaira, please sit." He indicated a sturdy chair at the center of the chamber. It was, as the other fixtures of the room, deeply disquieting. It appeared to be hewn from the bones of a great many creatures, or quite possibly people, and had been draped in thin leather painted with aggressive symbols. She did as she was told.

"How do you know m-"

The moment she sat down leather straps sprung to life from the chair, binding her arms, legs, and torso to it. She cried out in surprise and instinctively struggled against the bonds, hissing and snarling against it. After a few seconds Na'Zann held up a hand, and she looked at him panting.

"A necessary precaution, but we may speak freely now, I think?"

Nathaira, reluctantly, agreed. She looked from him, to the king, and back. "What are you going to do to me?"

She was suddenly acutely aware of how entirely at their mercy she was. They had promised to free her, but they could just as easily be enslaving her to their service given their love of laborers. The scents that the old naga had emitted did not speak of hostile intentions, but she hadn't been able to focus on them.

"First we must examine you. Learn the nature of your bonds." He lifted an examined an alarmingly large blade under the torchlight before offering it to Tir'Coatl. As King, it was his right direct the beginning steps, and to take the first collection.
 
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She was standing on a riverbank. She was barefoot, and the pink sand was warm. They sky was the deep red of late sunset, but the sun itself hung high above in full noon; a burning ember bearing down. Its light cast the water in crimson, and the only sound was that of the river.

How had she come here? Where was here? Remembering was difficult, everything was all tangled up in her head. She recalled pyramids, then a young girl. The face twisted into a frightening visage of a snake, and then a round face with a mustache that frightened her even more. A red man with horns, then a sword… was he holding it? No, but it came closer and then…

She sucked in a ragged breath as the twisted threads suddenly snapped into place. She remembered, and she realized she hadn’t been breathing until now. This must be a part of the ritual. Ixcuiname had shown her dream magic, spoken to her through her sleeping hours. Surely, this must also be a dream.

The wind blew for the first time, and it was louder than it should have been when there were few leaves to rustle. As near as she could see she was along an oasis, with short tropical plants alongside the river and sprawling pink sands forever after.

She looked to where the wind blew and saw a boat. It was small and formed of tight-woven reeds, with a bow and stern that curved gently to give the appearance of a wide serpent. In keeping with this, a naga was coiled aft, leaning on a long pole and looking at her with lidless eyes. Eyes of clouded blue.

“Na’Zann,” she spoke, and despite the vastness of this illusion her voice sounded close and uncarried. The old serpent nodded.

“Your bonds are strong,” he spoke without moving his lips, and Nathaira wasn’t sure if she had heard the voice or felt it.

“I don’t remember what happened after…” she paused, hitting a dark cloud in her memory, like a plume of ink spread across the waters of her mind. “...after you gave the Scaled King the sword.”

The old naga moved very little, letting his tongue slide out to taste the air in a slow, elongated sweep. “The mark protects itself. I do not think it wants you to remember how you got here. This place is a threat to it.”

Nathaira noticed, for the first time, that her neck felt lighter. She reached up to touch it and felt the familiar shape.

“It is still there,” Na’Zann confirmed, “Only quieter.” Then he gestured to the boat. “Come.”

Nathaira could feel a trepidation about entering the craft. Was the fear her own, or implanted by the rune? Its hand around her throat had been loosened in this place, but it was also more difficult to tell its thoughts from her own.

She stepped into the boat and clumsily dropped to her knees as it wobbled dangerously. She steadied herself by grasping either side of the craft, and before she knew it Na’Zann had pushed off and was guiding them gently along with the current.

Neither of them spoke for some time.