Novus
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Novus closed 10/31/2022, after The Gentle Exodus

Private  - Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap

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Played by Offline Sea [PM] Posts: 39 — Threads: 12
Signos: 560
Inactive Character
#1

In her old testament, murder was not seen as a crime, it was a cleansing.  Here, in Novus, under a suffocating stoic title of emissary, Emersyn spends weeks trying to find the eyes that spied her just days ago killing a pair of rare falcon’s for their talons and their wings.  Even their eyes had been harvested by the gray who enucleated them in a matter of seconds before dropping all the catchings in a jar of green fluid.  











There had been no struggle here, the falcons flew into a sensitive aerial snare and were hung up quickly by the feet for their catcher to check the traps.  It all seemed to be a quick smash and grab until a bystander got in the way.  It was a unicorn, someone from the court and a real do-gooder at that.  It was city-folk like him that drove her to live in the woods, but she would never tell Po that.











The altercation between them was immediate, quick - which then - came to an abrupt end as he turned to leave the forest.  He wanted to report her operation to the Warden immediately - but she couldn’t have that - and so went after him, but quietly.  His path was easy, and he underestimated the Emissary whose sword had been readied as she crept like a jaguar in the shadows behind him.  Poised to hunt, to catch, to kill, and, like a jaguar, utterly dismantle and render him unrecognizable.











And then, Sarkan got in the way.











Emersyn would have lived a life never needing to know who the gray percheron was.  But now, her eye witness was bleeding to death because of him.  All she could do - for now - was hang back in the shadows and watch .. and wait .. and make sure that the horned crusader never rose from where he fell.  The stranger who killed him had already been busy with the same agenda as Emersyn; poaching.











Fuck.











She left quite disappointed, angry, and without the satisfaction of killing the unicorn herself.  She did return much later that night to take his eyes after kicking his forehead in out of rage.













It was a late night when Emersyn found herself at her table, incense and herbs burned on a hot stone over the fire where smoke crawled out in curling white tendrils, a quill moved over perfectly straightened parchment. The cursive untangled these words;















I know what you have done. 



I have seen it with my own two eyes.



I know you killed the unicorn.



The forest is watching.



And so am I.











Meet me in the woods where it happened.


















There was nothing poetic in the six neatly curled scrolls which contained this message exactly.  Around each scroll was a dark blue ribbon, and with those ribbons the scrolls were attached to six small black bunnies|rabbits.  Even though the poetry was missing, the message was meant to provoke a certain feeling:  Of dread, maybe terror, or possibly guilt.  Any of these insecurities would do.  In the event that Sarkan wanted to show his face in Viride again - Emersyn would meet him there, the message was clear about that.











What the message hid between its letters and all the spaces that went in between, was how Emersyn would meet him if he were to ever have such misfortune.  And, of course, nothing in the readings gave any clues away.  Sarkan had to be reasonable, if he was still out there, if the rabbits knew how to find him, then clearly his weight was worth something.  She had other plans that involved using him to escape a murder she really wanted to commit herself.

















@Sarkan  I'm so sorry for taking so long.  Work is my life. 










Played by [PM] Posts: N/A — Threads:
Sarkan
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#2

Sarkan


The moral of the tale is this: whoever allows himself to be whipped, deserves to be whipped.
 
They were cute, at first.

Night was coming on in a hurry, the way it did in winter. Sarkan lay on a soft carpet of red needles beneath a grove of shortleaf pines, idly carving a stick into a smaller, pointier stick. Despite the cold, there would be no fire; he knew better than to draw attention to himself. And this copse of trees made a wilderness shelter, anyway, and he listened to the music of the wind high above in the canopy and the steady scrape of his knife as it slivered off wood.

Then a shadow broke from the other shadows that crowded the undergrowth, moving toward him in uneven gait. His eye caught the motion first, and he fell still as a carving himself with the knife in his grip. Into the fading gray light hopped a rabbit, and the Percheron huffed a soft laugh. His smile was loose and lazy until he saw the pale scroll and the ribbon, and then it was replaced by a thin line and knit brow.

“Hullo,” he said to the rabbit, who was now sitting up before him, dark eyes glistening. It flicked an ear, but he couldn’t say whether that was a response. Still, it didn’t move until he tugged the scroll from it, and then it was gone at once into the night. Sarkan squinted down at the curling letters, now frowning. He had never been much for reading, and the gloom made it no easier.

The forest is watching.

Slowly he lowered the paper, and listened to the night. It was still silent, all the frogs and insects that made up the warm-weather chorus dead or sleeping, and he did not like the feeling of listening for footsteps that never sounded, or the way invisible eyes turned up the hairs along his back. The first true sound he heard was the rustling of dead leaves, and now he clambered to his feet, and saw another rabbit bound forward like a loose piece of the dark. It, too, had a message.

I know what you have done.

Now he was truly uneasy (and a bit confused), but lit like a glowering ember was an anger, too. This was not a game he would have chosen. Now two rabbits came forward, and would not leave until he accepted their messages. Then they scattered like birds. And neither were they the last.

In the end there were six messages, and it was full dark, and Sarkan, alone again, had a choice to make.



There had been no time suggested. Maybe there was supposed to be a seventh rabbit, but there was a fox with a full belly instead. Sarkan cared for none of what had happened, but most of all he didn’t care for hanging around a crime scene indefinitely, waiting for a stranger who sent creative threats. But by now he’d introduced himself to some of the other searchers, and it was easy enough to walk the area and call it looking for clues. In a way, that’s exactly what he was doing.

He knew there was a good chance the threat-maker would just kill him outright and unseen; why, then, should he come? Well, he was curious, and a little arrogant with his magical cloak around him and his magical knife at his side. It was a gray dawn, all the light the same color as him, his mottled cloak further camouflage against the uneven ground of the forest. Only a couple hundred yards away, the ground was still blood-stained under patches of fading snow. Sarkan wondered what had happened to the body. He wondered a lot of things, as he stood mostly hidden beside an old fallen tree furry with moss, and waited for a rabbit, or a voice, or an arrow out of the gloaming.

@Emersyn happy to be your back door man ;)










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