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HEAR ME, DEMONKIND

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Smilebone, the necromantic jester, goes through the list of evildoers and dissing made by the holy warrior. A sweat of fear crossed her masked forehead, and seeing naught her name on it. She released a loud sigh of relief. "SAFE AT LAST!" Then some of her undead began to question her fear. "I'M NOT AFRAID! SHUT UP, YOU INSOLENT UNDERLING! I'M NOT AS STUPID AS KRYNDOMERE. SIMPLE AS THAT." Said the evildoer before she vanished into the depths of her cave. She had nightmares of Villorik leading numerous rallies against her. Not yet. She is not yet ready to fight the mighty soldier of God.

 

"BLESSED BE IBLEES I AM NOT ON THAT LIST THOUGH! I AM NOT ON HIS SAME POWER LEVEL YET!!!"

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By then, Cordelia the Witch had long retreated into the forest, scrubbing defeat from her skin with moss and soil. She cast her gaze up to the pale moon, her ever-silent companion; "To compare me to those pitiful, rodent warlocks. What a shame."

She muttered, turning her attention to a lone fox that lingered nearby, as if it could understand her. "For all their flaws, at least the humans stand united. They’re not blinded by their own hubris. Let Villorik burn them all, I say. I'll deal with what's left of him afterwards."

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Abandoned by the All-Father in his time of greatest need, Albatross falls captive to overwhelming forces of the crusaders and the woman of flames that proved their strongest warrior, at least through his eyes, for elsewhere he did not bear witness to Villorik's triumphs. Brought to her temple and stripped of his power, he is left without purpose, guidance, or meaning. 

 

An old dog's never learned new tricks.

 

He walks out into the wastes, reborn a new man, a weak man, the man he had sought to leave behind many years before. There was a time, long ago, when he had helped tears down the banner of the Johannians, smash the Legions of Renatus, dine with the King of Haense, and save the people of Aegrothond from doom. Yet, for all the color in his life, it could not paint a picture of the unparalleled power he needed. No reputation, no skill at arms, could prevent the demise of the ones he cared for the most. 

 

As the day turns to evening, the desert winds heighten their speed. The way forward, the path to the unknown end, is obscured. Albatross Volaren, half a millennia old, plunges into its depths yet again, uncertain of the death, life, or life after that awaits him. Memories of his daughter, his dear Heron, give him comfort as he trudges on. 

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Vriza watched on with mischief twinkling in his four eyes beneath the mask, the pupils widening as the light exudes from his stony and statue-like countenance. All that was yet visible of the abomination to the naked eye of his devoted servants was his immense shape cloaked in darkness sat astride a throne of glittering gold. Like a hulking silhouette, a golem from hell cloaked in red skin littered with scars. The hall was greatly embellished and closely resembled a Canonist church, but it possessed Elven scripture of the elden days, and was gilded by pearlescent hewn marble and gorgeous silver. From the silver chair, the Twisted King proclaimed:

 

"The only loss is Ren. The rest can be easily replaced." He said to one of his cultists within the halls of his court. "Let the Canonists fight the flock of the Deceiver. Resume our business in Haense."

 

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"Villorik? Yes, I know him," the Waldenian tersely told the herald bringing news of the battle to Alba. "The man who sold the East so he might swing a wooden sword at fairytales." Conrad of Corwinsburg snorted, and resumed his back-breaking toil in the Pontifical States. The privilege to fight these so-called demons, he bitterly thought, was the privilege of the West who had dared not fight men.

 

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It hung there, that bloodstained cloak, sodden with rain, frayed by years of war, and yet it seemed to possess a gravity of its own. It had been there in Caius’s final hours, when he stood against the wickedness of the world. It had been there as he fell, and it had been there when the fires consumed him, outlasting even his mortal frame.

 

Now, it was theirs to carry. And so his name was theirs to bear.

 

One of the soldiers there, perhaps one of his tribesmen, or perhaps one that fought aside with him, beheld that frayed cloak. He paused, and his fingers brushing the ragged edge of the cloth. It was rough to the touch, stiff with ash and old blood, yet it felt alive, as though it held the heat of that long-ago fire. He drew his hand away quickly, almost afraid. Caius was not a man anymore. He was an idea, and ideas could not be touched—they could only be carried.

 

And so they carried him.

 

Dead men do not march, but somehow, Caius led them still.

 

 

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A white-clad weaver sighs in disappointment at not being mentioned. Clearly, he needs to step his game up.

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6 hours ago, LithiumSedai said:

"Villorik? Yes, I know him," the Waldenian tersely told the herald bringing news of the battle to Alba. "The man who sold the East so he might swing a wooden sword at fairytales." Conrad of Corwinsburg snorted, and resumed his back-breaking toil in the Pontifical States. The privilege to fight these so-called demons, he bitterly thought, was the privilege of the West who had dared not fight men.

 

 

The bitterness of the Aaunishmen was not something that crossed Villorik's mind often.

 

Even so, he prayed for them. He remembered well the Aaunishman who sold their land folly by folly, and he remembered which Patriarch had not. 

 

If only their idiocy had been the fairytale. 

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A weak figure shambled down a quiet road, garbed in robes that left no consideration to appearance. It sat in alleyways, it lay at the bottom of wells and rivers, and spoke words of soothsaying to those passing by. Sometimes, its exterior was shed lightly, to exact raging consequence upon the world, or to impart some knowledge of his art. But mostly it roamed the earth, sleepless, a shell, masterless, for he had earned his freedom long ago. But for what purpose? This was undeath.

 

Rain slammed down onto loose tiles, and Lanre stood in the middle of the barren road. He spoke to no one, as often.

 

"Envy... This is often the source of my hatred."

 

His voice was detached.

 

"Perhaps I wish not to have been forsaken by the world to this state."

 

"But it is I who set this arrangement, who does not consider suicide."

 

There was silence for a while, but for the sound of cascading rain.

 

"Villorik, Caius, your styles infuriate me. Perhaps it is simply a difference in strength, that you are able to weather the pure misery of guardianship, then stoically pass on your duties and an uncertain future to another, while remaining uncorrupted by the trials and losses of life."

 

"I have always hated the idea of chance. Or more accurately, the idea of fate. As it was Caius, after you are gone, many those you would wish protected will suffer and die, some by my hand, but it will matter not. You have no control or ability towards those events, who rises, falls, suffers, and dies. Largely, this is the case even while you live."

 

"If not my hand, then another. Perhaps a great being that we could not fight against at all. This is the reality of a Descendant; we walk a razor-thin wire until fate easily snuffs us out. Greater creatures hold their own fates in the palm of their hands, but we do not."

 

"Wretched Villorik, wretched Caius, I will continue to weather this world. I will kill as many as it takes, exacting the toll of fate, and accrue whatever I must, go through whatever misery I must, bow to whomever I must, usurp whomever I must, until the collective might of Descendants is sufficient to govern their own fate. And then, on that day, it will be I called a savior, not you who fought for mere moments, dying and forfeiting the future, allowing yourselves to be subject to greater machinations even as you lived. This is my perseverance, the perseverance of the wretched creature Lanre Cerusil."

 

The undead wrung hands of bone as words of delusion were spoken to itself, as if a necessary reminder of the shambling undead's purpose. It continued walking on, a pathetic picture, but an enigmatic one, whose future and impact would remain uncertain as time continued.

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Malbeth, began to hide and wait. Wait, and wait, and wait. She would begin to plan. Revenge would come to Villorik--as time oft repays acts in kind. But it would not be today, or tomorrow, or the next day, or the next year. 

 

She wanted him to suffer, lose everything, wanted him to feel the jaws closing in, what it would feel like to see the light and "God" slowly abandon him. She wanted to be there to see his face when that day came. She wanted that man to feel safe, and secure for many moons before he began to feel the spear piercing his spine.

 

The Goat doesn't forget so easily the transgresses upon His flock. Likewise, neither did the woman. 

 

"I will make you remember Ren." 

 

Her voice rang out into a cold air.

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Raziel's gaze fell upon the missive. A wave of both relief and disappointment came above him, as he read it.

 

The self-styled canonist monastery lay destroyed. For 21 years he tried to be the one to burn it. Talked to to Cardinals who mistrusted his claim. Sooner, it would have happened, if Caius were still alive, he thought. He would have believed him, and struck what lurked inside. And when he was finally believed, he lacked the forces, and his government was preoccupied with things they - likely rightfully - saw as more pressing.

 

He was denied the revenge for his fallen kin. But instead of lamenting further, he popped open a bottle of wine and celebrated the defeat of his foes.

 

"Villorik," He said. "I should write this man a letter."

 

 

 

 

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Reinhard heard the whispers of Villorik's words in passing; minute, tempting snippets from the warpriest. A man he knew so little of, and yet the devil so despised. How people fell at his feet and sang his praises when he was but a snivelling, selfish creature at heart. He couldn't fathom it. But, then again, he could fathom few things of his human kin.

 

Eternally, did he feel like an outcast. Words were soft things, pleasing things. People spoke of their protections, they spoke of aid. And yet, it was not he they were ultimately moved for but his cousin. A Weiss, all the same. But not him.

 

Villorik was top-full of pride, not compassion. It is this distinction, then, that made the devil revile him so: that same demonkind he hunted were but creatures of pride, too. He was simply one of them, in human skin: a perfected guise.

 

The devil came to stifle a small laugh as he considered the reality he lived in. Every day was a struggle. Perhaps at one time, it had been easier - but not anymore. A hellish existence of running and running until he found meaning, and purpose, and a sense of safety. It was a failed deal that he paid the price for; and so too had he been the price for Villorik. Never, never would he forget the boy on that snowy mountain who had desperately sought an escape. And never, never would be forget how the priest gave him no mind except:

 

Your time will come.

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Malna Loa'chil looked at the paper. For all her blissful ignorance she knew no one was perfect... neither her nor Villorik. She wondered how she was.

 

"I should write... He better not have gotten himself hurt."

 

She murmured, not knowing of much, but knowing that she and him were kind, at least to Malna.

 

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During is surveys of the region, before the land had been settled by Reinmaren, Sir Stanton Stroheim felt an unease lingering from the monastery of Belvedere. What would have been fear stirred into hatred within the Templar, hatred that continued to fester with every year that monastery remained standing. As his people left the monastery victorious Stanton felt an overwhelming catharsis wash over him, a thorn prodding at the edges of his mind had finally been removed. 

"It took decades to see that placed purged of evil, Thank God I lived long enough to play my part and see it done."

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