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The last time Henk had scrapped in this field, he'd been a child.
Many times in fact, he'd bled, sweat and cried on the earth beneath his feet, a place of pain and punishment underneath the sweltering sun. From the outside looking in, it was a sparring field. To anybody who had been an Initiate of the Dreadlord Academy before the Revolution, it was a pit of agony and despair. That he found himself grappling a younger Initiate to the ground now was due only to a series of sad, shocking, and sordid events that had twisted the fate of him and all his comrades.
Nevertheless, he was here, a hand pressed into the greasy, knotted hair of a younger boy as he ground the teenager's nose into the dirt, his leg twisted around the Light Mage's ankle from the takedown he'd been subject to. He felt bad for the Initiate beneath him, but he'd never been a match for Henk. That he faced this battle was only by the whims of the Academy; The once-exile had been accepted back into the fold at Noel Schwarz's insistence, but he was not yet a graduate. Instead, he had been sent back to his place of learning for a series of 'final tests', to deem him worthy of the title he sought.
So far, it had been a joke. Henk's skill had long surpassed any actively learning Initiate. The strength he'd gained since his first 'Graduation' had been swift and intense. It was as though a new well of power had unlocked inside of him, the depths of which he was only beginning to tap into.
"That's enough, break."
The man watching over Henk's work barked for him to separate from his unfortunate opponent, and he did so, releasing his grip on both the boys leg and head, before standing at attention, though not without an eye towards the one shouting the orders. Certainly, he wasn't going to provide even more of this fodder? It was beginning to feel like an insult, being so underestimated.
But, he supposed, he'd never shown much interest in fighting with the ferocity he now showed the last time they saw him.
The man stepped onto the field, taking a cursory look down at Henk's defeated foe before turning his wrinkled gaze, framed with long web-like hair that ran over his shoulders. "If you're trying to impress me, it isn't working, boy." His dry lips all but spat the words out. It was clear that although he'd been cleared of treason, not all those who knew of his actions agreed with that decision. "You can beat the pissants of this new class, maybe, but I've seen your scores. You're a straggler, no Banick, Shwarz, or Pembroke, that's for damned certain."
Henk tried to hide the tightening of his face. This stranger had some, nerve in throwing around the names of his friends to insult him, especially when all of them had been put at great risk by a government he worked for.
The student on the ground groaned, and the man's expression shifted for a moment before brushing the concern off of his features as though it were formality.
"But since they're all busy doing -real- work to help the city, they don't have time to waste with you, aside from begging for your life, apparently." He sneered, in a not-so-subtle jab at Noel.
It was all Henk could do not to swing for the rotten bastard's jaw. He clenched his teeth and stood his ground. Of course, this is what his accoster seemed to expect. The old man leaned in, his breath smelling of smoke and wood.
"Which means we'll just have to think up another means of testing whether or not you're really who you say you are, St. Preux. Lucky for us, there's a fine selection of missions that fall through the cracks, when we don't have anybody expendable enough to lend for them."
If the man's words weren't sign enough that the title of Dreadlord would not be handed to him without a bloody fight, the sight of the mainland vanishing into the horizon behind him as the creaking sails overhead turned with the wind would cement that his life being spared did not equate to him being seen as a valued commodity.
A rebellion like no other was being brewed by a former Archon, backed by dozens of disillusioned Dreadlords and Initiates that wished nothing more than to tear apart his home and his loved ones. His very way of life was being threatened, hanging on by mere threads, fraying more and more with each passing day. Every drop of blood in his viens yearned to be with them, fighting alongside them, protecting them.
Instead, he was being sent to the Bayou Garramarisma.
"We've very good reason to believe there's an organized group plotting against us in the Bayou. Perhaps they've allied themselves with Gilram, perhaps not, but they're learning backwater magic from radicals in the muck and mire, and if allowed to grow stronger, they could prove extremely dangerous. Go there, eliminate any and all traces of this group. Success will mean your graduation."
That had been the extent of his briefing, but even as Henk leaned against the starboard side of the ship to look out onto the open waters, he felt a sense of dread. It was not the first time he'd embarked on a mission with so little to go on, but last time he'd had Ralene with him. This time, they hadn't even seen fit to tell him who his partner was, and it was suggested he was given a companion less to help him and more to monitor him for any signs of disloyalty.
Whoever it was, they hadn't come above deck yet. Henk wasn't about to go look for them. It was a relatively short trip to the Bayou, and the salty scent in the air calmed his troubled mind.
The idea of a group of rouge mages hiding in the foggy bayou certainly wasn't appealing, and the chance they were affiliated with the rebellion did give him some additional motive to act on the issue, however unlikely that scenario was. Henk could only hope he would be able to squash the issue quickly and return to the side of his friends. To Noel's side, as he'd promised her.
Many times in fact, he'd bled, sweat and cried on the earth beneath his feet, a place of pain and punishment underneath the sweltering sun. From the outside looking in, it was a sparring field. To anybody who had been an Initiate of the Dreadlord Academy before the Revolution, it was a pit of agony and despair. That he found himself grappling a younger Initiate to the ground now was due only to a series of sad, shocking, and sordid events that had twisted the fate of him and all his comrades.
Nevertheless, he was here, a hand pressed into the greasy, knotted hair of a younger boy as he ground the teenager's nose into the dirt, his leg twisted around the Light Mage's ankle from the takedown he'd been subject to. He felt bad for the Initiate beneath him, but he'd never been a match for Henk. That he faced this battle was only by the whims of the Academy; The once-exile had been accepted back into the fold at Noel Schwarz's insistence, but he was not yet a graduate. Instead, he had been sent back to his place of learning for a series of 'final tests', to deem him worthy of the title he sought.
So far, it had been a joke. Henk's skill had long surpassed any actively learning Initiate. The strength he'd gained since his first 'Graduation' had been swift and intense. It was as though a new well of power had unlocked inside of him, the depths of which he was only beginning to tap into.
"That's enough, break."
The man watching over Henk's work barked for him to separate from his unfortunate opponent, and he did so, releasing his grip on both the boys leg and head, before standing at attention, though not without an eye towards the one shouting the orders. Certainly, he wasn't going to provide even more of this fodder? It was beginning to feel like an insult, being so underestimated.
But, he supposed, he'd never shown much interest in fighting with the ferocity he now showed the last time they saw him.
The man stepped onto the field, taking a cursory look down at Henk's defeated foe before turning his wrinkled gaze, framed with long web-like hair that ran over his shoulders. "If you're trying to impress me, it isn't working, boy." His dry lips all but spat the words out. It was clear that although he'd been cleared of treason, not all those who knew of his actions agreed with that decision. "You can beat the pissants of this new class, maybe, but I've seen your scores. You're a straggler, no Banick, Shwarz, or Pembroke, that's for damned certain."
Henk tried to hide the tightening of his face. This stranger had some, nerve in throwing around the names of his friends to insult him, especially when all of them had been put at great risk by a government he worked for.
The student on the ground groaned, and the man's expression shifted for a moment before brushing the concern off of his features as though it were formality.
"But since they're all busy doing -real- work to help the city, they don't have time to waste with you, aside from begging for your life, apparently." He sneered, in a not-so-subtle jab at Noel.
It was all Henk could do not to swing for the rotten bastard's jaw. He clenched his teeth and stood his ground. Of course, this is what his accoster seemed to expect. The old man leaned in, his breath smelling of smoke and wood.
"Which means we'll just have to think up another means of testing whether or not you're really who you say you are, St. Preux. Lucky for us, there's a fine selection of missions that fall through the cracks, when we don't have anybody expendable enough to lend for them."
If the man's words weren't sign enough that the title of Dreadlord would not be handed to him without a bloody fight, the sight of the mainland vanishing into the horizon behind him as the creaking sails overhead turned with the wind would cement that his life being spared did not equate to him being seen as a valued commodity.
A rebellion like no other was being brewed by a former Archon, backed by dozens of disillusioned Dreadlords and Initiates that wished nothing more than to tear apart his home and his loved ones. His very way of life was being threatened, hanging on by mere threads, fraying more and more with each passing day. Every drop of blood in his viens yearned to be with them, fighting alongside them, protecting them.
Instead, he was being sent to the Bayou Garramarisma.
"We've very good reason to believe there's an organized group plotting against us in the Bayou. Perhaps they've allied themselves with Gilram, perhaps not, but they're learning backwater magic from radicals in the muck and mire, and if allowed to grow stronger, they could prove extremely dangerous. Go there, eliminate any and all traces of this group. Success will mean your graduation."
That had been the extent of his briefing, but even as Henk leaned against the starboard side of the ship to look out onto the open waters, he felt a sense of dread. It was not the first time he'd embarked on a mission with so little to go on, but last time he'd had Ralene with him. This time, they hadn't even seen fit to tell him who his partner was, and it was suggested he was given a companion less to help him and more to monitor him for any signs of disloyalty.
Whoever it was, they hadn't come above deck yet. Henk wasn't about to go look for them. It was a relatively short trip to the Bayou, and the salty scent in the air calmed his troubled mind.
The idea of a group of rouge mages hiding in the foggy bayou certainly wasn't appealing, and the chance they were affiliated with the rebellion did give him some additional motive to act on the issue, however unlikely that scenario was. Henk could only hope he would be able to squash the issue quickly and return to the side of his friends. To Noel's side, as he'd promised her.
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