D
Duresh
Duresh had allowed Nina that small moment to time to scrutinize the surroundings for that suspected spot of magic. The general area, the necklace itself, perhaps the sword the necklace dangled off of, any of these things.
What he did not suspect, or even consider, was that the spot had already taken root in him.
But this did not seem to be so. A tightening of her hand on his shoulder, a closing of her free fist, and a brief trance of concentration allowed Nina to examine him for this potential spot of magic. This examination did not require her to look at him, but magic did not necessarily need the aid of the physical senses to function.
It feels too…elegant for wild magic.
At this, what Nina was saying made far more sense. Her examination had seen something in his eyes, and at the aforementioned noting of elegance, Duresh knew with a high degree of certainty of what she was referring to: his nightvision enchantment. That which stained his eyes yellow. That which he definitely did not acquire here.
And there’s something even deeper inside you, but…Evasive.
Also made sense, and he knew of what she was referring to here as well: his Invisibility. It was good to know that he'd not fallen victim to some form of--as Nina called it--wild magic, that what she detected were magical qualities of which he was already aware.
"It does not," he said, confirming that such was no surprise. A brief wondering, if Nina's examination allowed for her to gain some sense of what his magical gifts were used for. Well. Mundane intuition could be used to make accurate assumptions in that regard.
The necklace isn't magical.
No, it wasn't. Just an heirloom, given to Loakina from her mother.
He asked Nina his question, and as she took a moment to answer, he crouched down and picked up the necklace from the hilt of the old sword and lifted it up by a finger and gazed at it.
Doubt. That same doubt crept back into his thoughts once more, when first his mother brought up the idea of fighting against the fire giants of Molthal. The doubt which had prompted her to leave in the night, to start toward Molthal by herself, knowing full well that Duresh would follow and thus be drawn in to the fight.
He understood the tenets of the old way that Loakina had taught him; those of the warrior's spirit especially. But his doubt, his reluctance to adhere completely to these tenets: of what good would they be if they led him inevitably to death? Was there a chance for victory, for the liberation of his fellow orcs from the fire giants and the avenging of Loakina's fallen tribe? Yes. Was this chance extremely narrow? Yes. A single warrior on his own did not win his war.
The duality which plagued Duresh: He knew his warrior's spirit would languish in avoiding this fight, but he also knew that he yearned to live life, to perform honest work, to raise a family of his own.
Was he going to Molthal to battle the fire giants? Or to simply extract his mother and escape with her? He was torn, feeling as if he were doing both, one goal at times overpowering the other. It was as if he stood at a fork in a road, with one foot planting on each branching path.
But it’s not about me, is it?
Duresh stood. Clutched the necklace in his palm. Said, "Your own experience may yet provide me with guidance that I have not considered."
A look over to her, and a gesture of his head which conveyed: Yes, let's head further in.
Duresh walked carefully into the field, stepping over rough patches of ground and protrusions of ancient battle relics, those bits of bone and metal of weapons and armor.
"This work that you do for the fire giant," Duresh said. "It isn't what you truly want to do, is it."
What he did not suspect, or even consider, was that the spot had already taken root in him.
But this did not seem to be so. A tightening of her hand on his shoulder, a closing of her free fist, and a brief trance of concentration allowed Nina to examine him for this potential spot of magic. This examination did not require her to look at him, but magic did not necessarily need the aid of the physical senses to function.
It feels too…elegant for wild magic.
At this, what Nina was saying made far more sense. Her examination had seen something in his eyes, and at the aforementioned noting of elegance, Duresh knew with a high degree of certainty of what she was referring to: his nightvision enchantment. That which stained his eyes yellow. That which he definitely did not acquire here.
And there’s something even deeper inside you, but…Evasive.
Also made sense, and he knew of what she was referring to here as well: his Invisibility. It was good to know that he'd not fallen victim to some form of--as Nina called it--wild magic, that what she detected were magical qualities of which he was already aware.
"It does not," he said, confirming that such was no surprise. A brief wondering, if Nina's examination allowed for her to gain some sense of what his magical gifts were used for. Well. Mundane intuition could be used to make accurate assumptions in that regard.
The necklace isn't magical.
No, it wasn't. Just an heirloom, given to Loakina from her mother.
He asked Nina his question, and as she took a moment to answer, he crouched down and picked up the necklace from the hilt of the old sword and lifted it up by a finger and gazed at it.
Doubt. That same doubt crept back into his thoughts once more, when first his mother brought up the idea of fighting against the fire giants of Molthal. The doubt which had prompted her to leave in the night, to start toward Molthal by herself, knowing full well that Duresh would follow and thus be drawn in to the fight.
He understood the tenets of the old way that Loakina had taught him; those of the warrior's spirit especially. But his doubt, his reluctance to adhere completely to these tenets: of what good would they be if they led him inevitably to death? Was there a chance for victory, for the liberation of his fellow orcs from the fire giants and the avenging of Loakina's fallen tribe? Yes. Was this chance extremely narrow? Yes. A single warrior on his own did not win his war.
The duality which plagued Duresh: He knew his warrior's spirit would languish in avoiding this fight, but he also knew that he yearned to live life, to perform honest work, to raise a family of his own.
Was he going to Molthal to battle the fire giants? Or to simply extract his mother and escape with her? He was torn, feeling as if he were doing both, one goal at times overpowering the other. It was as if he stood at a fork in a road, with one foot planting on each branching path.
But it’s not about me, is it?
Duresh stood. Clutched the necklace in his palm. Said, "Your own experience may yet provide me with guidance that I have not considered."
A look over to her, and a gesture of his head which conveyed: Yes, let's head further in.
Duresh walked carefully into the field, stepping over rough patches of ground and protrusions of ancient battle relics, those bits of bone and metal of weapons and armor.
"This work that you do for the fire giant," Duresh said. "It isn't what you truly want to do, is it."