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They didn't regard him with enough care. They saw the old coat, but not the broad shoulders they rested upon. They saw the weathered hands, but not the signs of use on the bastard sword over his shoulder. Mostly they saw the The wind whispered through the trees. The group murmured amongst themselves.
“Did you not hear me?” The bandit raised both eyebrows and turned an ear towards Raigryn expectantly.
He didn't need this. There were miles and miles left of road and his reserves were low. Raigryn would need everything he had left for his destination. The raiding party was naga was supposedly small, but he was still only one man.
“Please. Walk on.” It was worth a try.
“Your bags old man. Give them to us now or...in about two minutes when we’re done with you.”
The answer was the hiss of a long blade leaving its scabbard. There were no runes or inscriptions on the blade. No jewels set into the hilt. Perhaps something more impressive might have dissuaded them. Still, the sword was well balanced. Human steel of a quality only the smiths in the east could manage these days. They did not see that. They saw only his age. His age and his travel bags.
Should have used the old travellers trick of a false purse, he thought. Raigryn could have convinced them with just a little Empathy but he had set off in too much of a rush. Perhaps he had allowed his own emotions and nostalgia to rule his judgement. That was something he would have chastised any apprentice for. Preparation for a journey alone was always vital.
He knew these roads well. As a boy he had known them to be much safer, back when the Queen's men ventured this far from the walls. This has also become personal for him. The reward for bringing back the captives didn’t even matter. There were lives at stake, assuming the Naga hadn't executed their prisoners yet. Raigryn had been a friend of her family for three generations. He had even introduced her to the Baron's son who now formally courted her. He didn't do this for the Baron's reward. He would still take the coin; honest work was hard to come by for an Empath these days.
He dropped his weight a few inches. Raigryn tightened his grip on the hilt and watched them carefully. The sword would have felt half this weight thirty years ago. He appraised their weapons: basic but functional and used. They wore no armour but one of them carried a small buckler.
Four bandits. They didn't move with skill. That was apparent just from how they drew their weapons and moved to surround him. Four men was four men and out in the wilds there would be little chance to renew his strength. What little he even carried now. If he was careful he could draw a little from these men, but that took concentration and there wouldn’t be much of that to spare.
The first bandit gave a shrug and rushed him. They must have done this routine many times with lone travellers and probably never been given much of an issue; they weren’t the type to bother an armed group. The bandit raised both arms and chopped down clumsily with his heavy axe. Raigryn tapped into his stored Fury, stepped aside and swung his blade. The ache in his shoulders vanished, instead he felt heat radiate through his muscles.
The blade barely slowed as it cut through the man's side. It didn't quite carve him clean in two, but Raigryn hoped the feat of strength would bring an end to this. It didn't.
The mage drew from his Joy to weave away, parrying an attack and swinging again with far less venom in the strike just to give himself some space. The two now trying to bring him down were alone, their remaining friend cried out and fell to the ground, pawing at his own eyes. A simple parlour trick but small events could bring sweeping changes in the result. Raigryn had seen as much with his own eyes several times: from a change in conditions in a small magical experiments to a swing of luck in the smallest part of the greatest pitched battles of their time
“Did you not hear me?” The bandit raised both eyebrows and turned an ear towards Raigryn expectantly.
He didn't need this. There were miles and miles left of road and his reserves were low. Raigryn would need everything he had left for his destination. The raiding party was naga was supposedly small, but he was still only one man.
“Please. Walk on.” It was worth a try.
“Your bags old man. Give them to us now or...in about two minutes when we’re done with you.”
The answer was the hiss of a long blade leaving its scabbard. There were no runes or inscriptions on the blade. No jewels set into the hilt. Perhaps something more impressive might have dissuaded them. Still, the sword was well balanced. Human steel of a quality only the smiths in the east could manage these days. They did not see that. They saw only his age. His age and his travel bags.
Should have used the old travellers trick of a false purse, he thought. Raigryn could have convinced them with just a little Empathy but he had set off in too much of a rush. Perhaps he had allowed his own emotions and nostalgia to rule his judgement. That was something he would have chastised any apprentice for. Preparation for a journey alone was always vital.
He knew these roads well. As a boy he had known them to be much safer, back when the Queen's men ventured this far from the walls. This has also become personal for him. The reward for bringing back the captives didn’t even matter. There were lives at stake, assuming the Naga hadn't executed their prisoners yet. Raigryn had been a friend of her family for three generations. He had even introduced her to the Baron's son who now formally courted her. He didn't do this for the Baron's reward. He would still take the coin; honest work was hard to come by for an Empath these days.
He dropped his weight a few inches. Raigryn tightened his grip on the hilt and watched them carefully. The sword would have felt half this weight thirty years ago. He appraised their weapons: basic but functional and used. They wore no armour but one of them carried a small buckler.
Four bandits. They didn't move with skill. That was apparent just from how they drew their weapons and moved to surround him. Four men was four men and out in the wilds there would be little chance to renew his strength. What little he even carried now. If he was careful he could draw a little from these men, but that took concentration and there wouldn’t be much of that to spare.
The first bandit gave a shrug and rushed him. They must have done this routine many times with lone travellers and probably never been given much of an issue; they weren’t the type to bother an armed group. The bandit raised both arms and chopped down clumsily with his heavy axe. Raigryn tapped into his stored Fury, stepped aside and swung his blade. The ache in his shoulders vanished, instead he felt heat radiate through his muscles.
The blade barely slowed as it cut through the man's side. It didn't quite carve him clean in two, but Raigryn hoped the feat of strength would bring an end to this. It didn't.
The mage drew from his Joy to weave away, parrying an attack and swinging again with far less venom in the strike just to give himself some space. The two now trying to bring him down were alone, their remaining friend cried out and fell to the ground, pawing at his own eyes. A simple parlour trick but small events could bring sweeping changes in the result. Raigryn had seen as much with his own eyes several times: from a change in conditions in a small magical experiments to a swing of luck in the smallest part of the greatest pitched battles of their time