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Author Topic: Arena Tales #1: Crowning Achievements  (Read 7894 times)

baronzaltor

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Arena Tales #1: Crowning Achievements
« on: March 06, 2014, 02:54:15 PM »
This project and indulgence into the setting is something that Ive been wanting to put together when not doing other Mage Wars stuff.   So, heres the first part in an ongoing bit of writing.  Its pretty long form, so theres that.
Also, bringing it over to the board mixed up the formatting a little… so theres a few spacing and indention issues.  Otherwise, hope you dig it.


Arena Tales: #1 Crowning Achievements

   The roar of the crowd could be felt past the great wood and iron barred doors that lead from the underground tunnel into the area battleground.  The stomps and shouts of the masses were made palpable by a pulse in the stone walls.  Two armored figures waited quietly in the wings for the massive doors to open and usher them to a magnificent entrance.  The trembles in the passageway echoed the crowds’ demand to see the Arraxian Crown’s champion.

   “Tyrn! Tyrn! Tyrn!” came the muffled chant from above.
   
        A flamboyant display of smoke and lightning dazzled the arena quieting the rumble.  Winds whipped colorful mists away from the center of the stadium, revealing Xol Magnus, Grand Herald of The Arena.  He gestured dramatically with his hands, and another shout went up from the audience.  When he was satisfied that they had reached the height of anticipation, he began the processions.
   
   “Patrons of The Great Arena of Victoria!”  The magic of the arena carried the flashy grand-stander’s voice booming out over the din. 

     “You have witnessed four bouts tonight.  Honor has been claimed, shame and humiliation have been heaped upon the unworthy.  But now….”  Xol paused a moment tasting the silence, and smiled.  “For the main event!  It is my grim duty to announce… a battle... to the death!“ 

     Again the roar went out for their champion.  “Tyrn! Tyrn! Tyrn!”

     Slowly he raised his hands and gestured for the crowd to quiet once again, and only after they had complied did he continue.  “Not only is it this evening’s first death battle, but our honor is doubled as it is a team duel!”  Another cheer.       “It is my honor and privilege to first present to you, entering from the Eastern Gate, Representing Sortilege...”
   
     At Xol’s indication, the Sunrise gate swung open with a heavy thud.  Two figures strode forward; their facade and raiment marked them as elves of Sortilege.   The first to appear had harsh, wizened, features and wore robes decorated with a large array of arcane trinkets and totems.  Behind him followed a younger, but no less determined looking wizard, his adornments were fewer than his companion and his features less marked by age.  When the first stopped, the second stopped as well.

     “Coming to you all the way from Imun-An, the Eighth Tower, here for your judgement tonight stands a Master of the Voltaric order, Desir Arashad, Assayer of The Ardent Way! ...and accompanying him, his first and most exemplary student, Disciple of the Ardent Way, you’ve seen him before, Peragho Kacia!  Pay the respect due to them who ply the power of the forbidden!”

      The two Wizards stood without acknowledgement of the mixture of cheers and boos hurled toward them.  Arashad gripped his staff in one hand, the other gave his long beard a slow habitual stroke as he took mental stock of his agenda and equipment.  Peragho slightly behind and to his right, his mouth was pressed into a line and there was tightness in his eyes.  The younger elf had made numerous good shows in The Arena, but this was his first main event appearance and only his second death match.

     Arashad turned and nodded at rune inscribed medallion hanging from Peragho’s neck. 

     “Remember my instructions and guard that well, for it may mean your life, and mine if you do not.”  He said sternly, before turning to face the opposing gate.

     “And at the Western end of the Arena...”  Xol announced, with mixture of dread and awe in his voice, “He is the wielder of the mighty Sectarus, the might of Gar’zal, Undefeated in a hundred battles,  THE champion of the Arraxian Crown...”  The Sunset Gate was thrown open with his gesture and the crowd exploded into a cacophony as a heavily armored warlock, all in black, strode into view.  “The man known only as Tyrn!”
   
      The herald let the the crowd regale the stoic figure for a few moments, before continuing on.  Tyrn’s only response was a hard clank of his gauntlet into his chest, unleashing an eerie ring throughout the arena.  The other warlock paced up a few steps behind Tyrn and stopped. 

“At Tyrn’s side for this match, also fighting on behalf of the Arraxian Crown, Dane Azuregale!” 

The cheers dropped sharply to more of a token rumble.  Dane raised a gauntlet in a half hearted wave to meet the half hearted response.  He was used to not being a celebrity attraction, be he had never had to share the arena with someone who eclipsed his presence so profoundly.

   “Fantastic.”  He murmured to himself.
 
   Tyrn turned to Dane, his face was obscured by an ornately masked helmet and his voice seemed to echo from all around with each commanding word.  ”Dispatch the apprentice.  This fight is between me, and that Wizard!”   

     He unsheathed Sectarus and brandished the twisted chaotically shaped black blade and pointed its edge directly at Arashad without turning to face him.  The crowd chanted his name again.

     “I am here to send a message to Sortilege.”  With that Tyrn turned on his heel away from the lower ranked Warlock and faced his opponent.

   Xol gave a look to each corner.  “Do all the gladiators understand the terms and stakes of this battle?”
 
   All four mages shouted in unison, “Aye!”

   “Then under the Mage Wars Accord, this battle is hereby commenced!”  With that, the Grand Herald vanished in another flash of light and smoke.

   The battle began with a rage of lightning and fire.  Vollies of destructive spells sizzled in the air as the combatants moved to secure positions in the arena.  Tyrn was atop of Arashad faster than the Wizard had anticipated.  He narrowly managed to cast a shield about himself an instant before Sectarus was hammering him.  The old elf patiently absorbed it’s blows, letting Tyrn work himself into a frenzy.

     Peragho angled for Dane, but upon seeing the vicious assault unleashed by Tyrn, tried to turn aside to assist his mentor.  As he did so, the ground around his feet burst into flames.  The elf shielded his face as the flames quickly grew into an obscuring wall of heat and pain.  Dane vaulted though the fiery barrier and rained dark magics onto the apprentice Wizard.  Peragho retched at cold blades inside his belly as the spells coursed through him.  He collected himself and reached out extending his will and halting Dane’s leap with a clenching fist.  He slammed the Warlock into the ground with a yank of his outstretched hand.

     On the other side of the inferno, Arashad barely kept a step ahead of Tyrn, the murderous beast drove at him again and again with his savage blade and hellish magic.  The Arraxian champion pressed on relentlessly after each the Wizard’s tricks, brushing them aside with little effort.   Arashad would vanish out of the Warlocks reach, blast arcane bolts and lead Tyrn on again and again, biding his time and stirring Tyrn’s anger.  The Arraxian was performing right on cue, and exactly as he knew he would; all the research was paying off.   When the Wizard slipped away once again, Tyrn stopped and thrust Sectarus into the ground with a grunt.   Dark flames erupted from the blade spitting out of it and tracing a circle in the floor of the arena, culminating in a five pointed star in its middle; as the flames met at their center, there bellowed forth an unnatural howl.   With a wrenching motion, he heaved on invisible chains, and a purple and black hole opened where the pentagram once was and Demons of Infernia began to crawl out of the dark portal.   Tyrn incensed, leaped ahead of them, charging with a new fury as more of the hellish denizens clawed their way up and into the Arena.

     Another roar echoed the howls of hell, and Dane lept back through his own flaming barrier with the massive form of a Darkfenne Hydra snapping hungrily at his heels.  Peragho gasped and clutched his chest, the hydra would buy enough time for him to purge the dark magic tormenting his body.  Dane, regrouped,  braced himself and produced his sword and fire lash. 

     “Alright.  We’re doing this...”  He murmured with a resolute huff.

     The hydra’s middle head lunged and he swatted it back, cracking his burning lash.  The second maw grasped for him, but his blade met the stalwart bite and drove it aside.  Dane smiled as the beast started to cower away, but the smile melted into scowl as three demons leapt from behind him clawing and biting wildly at the great beast. 
     
     "Fair enough."  He shook off the annoyance and dashed away from the hydra to hunt the young Wizard.

     Nearby, ground from the area ripped up by magic tendrils rained down into the first wave of demons to make it out of Tyrn's portal, as the elder Wizard gestured with an unnatural grace, his eyes blazing blue with Voltaric energies.  Tyrn leapt over the wrecked and broken ground and landed in front of the old Wizard, growling with sword in hand.  The elf quickly moved his hands to begin another spell, but the savage Warlock like landed his blow.  Sectarus plunged into the Wizard’s body and  Arashad clenched his jaw and held back a scream.  He slammed his staff into the ground to finishing the spell with a flash of blue.   He slumped to the ground as a pair of small imps pounced onto his fallen form and began to tear at it.  Arashad struggled with them as Tyrn slashed deep into his thigh and a gout of blood spewed onto the area floor hot and wet.

      The demons stopped their clawing as the wizard faded into darkness.  Tyrn stood shaken for a moment, the crowd was wild, shouting his name again and again.  He dropped Sectarus to the ground and fell to his knees, he grabbed onto his helmet and seemed to struggle with himself..   The imps looked around confusedly.  Arashads eyes opened again. 

     “No!”  Gasped Arashad’s voice.  His pale face was locked in a show of panic and confusion.  “How is this...”  His bewildered question was cut short by a harsh cough of blood.

     “Tell me, great one....”  Spoke the armored figure as he lifted the broken, aged body by the neck. “Were you prepared for such a change in perspective?”  Blue eyes glowed in the dark beneath the Warlock’s visor. 

     The Wizard clung to life as long as he could, his struggles ceased, but his mouth formed a determined line, and he clenched his jaw again and again.  The now active amulets on his body were pulsing with blue light, preventing his spells and draining his mana.  His hands worked, but nothing happened.  Blood drained unceasingly from gaping wounds in his abdomen and thigh...he was going to die in the Arashad's trap.

     “Arraxian fool.”  Tyrn’s voice growled out of the mask.  “I’ve watched you in this arena time and time again.  So reckless with your essence, exposing yourself to Infernia for power, and now.. to me.”

   Tyrn’s spiteful soul burned inside the Wizard’s body.  He looked at the demons standing by and the pulsing pentagram.  Then a baleful smile crossed his lips.  Using the final breath in his dying form, Tyrn managed to gasp out his last words.

   “You have my body, but I wagered my soul.”  He looked to the demons.  “I forfeit my pacts.”

   The demons’ faces twisted into grins and their howls of demonic delight screeched and cackled from saw-toothed lips.  No longer bound by Tyrn’s will or pacts, they were free to ravage with reckless abandon.  For them, it was time to feast.  Arashad’s body fell limp as Tyrn’s soul was wrenched out by the dark gods to satisfy the forfeited debt.  The pentagram sealed with a burst of purple flame and faded away, with the sound of an ominous metal gate crashing shut as it vanished.
 
   Arashad found himself assailed by Tyrn’s allies gone mad, and did his best to fend off the imps and demons with his shield spells.  The dark armor suddenly felt heavier, the raw power in his body diminished as the portal closed.   He had not foreseen this outcome, a stupid arrogant error, but only a set back, his scheme was not finished yet.  So long as Peragho was keeping up, things would work out ideally.

     A scream across the arena grabbed his attention. 
   
     “Peragho!” 

     The audience unaware of what was transpiring, simply roared for Tyrn’s apparent kill and soon his victory.  Peragho and Dane were locked in mortal struggle and just as oblivious.

     Moments before Tyrn’s fall, on the other side of the raging wall of fire, the younger mages struggled on, both the worse for wear.  Dane’s greater experience, and aid from Tyrn’s demons had given him the edge however.  The Hydra lay dead, covered in charred bites and claw marks with one of its heads missing from the field of battle. 

     Peragho was cornered and his eyes frantically searched, thinking, calculating, he needed options.  He had spent himself too quickly with the Hydra, the mana drawn for a creature of that size was too great, but he had needed time and hadn’t accounted for the hellions.  The Warlock’s fire lash crashed into the his body again and again, he stumbled and leapt away trying to buy time.  The Warlock was too focused to realize that the demons had stopped participating and simply watched.  Peragho sprang aside trying to put himself behind the dead Hydra for cover, but the lash whipped his neck and flung him to the ground with a burning, choking yank.  In an instant the Warlock Azuregale leapt forward; dreamily he watched the smooth dark blade sink deep into his chest.  Peragho took one ragged gasping breath, and lay still. 

     Dane, sure that his enemy had expired, gave a nod of respect and saluted the young elf before he turned to the imps and hellions.

     “Not bad, boys.” He said with a wry smile, catching his breath. “Appreciate the help.” 

     The infernals grinned back, then pounced him.  He gave a surprised scream as he stumbled to raise his defenses against them.  His weapons dropped to the arena as he fell back completely off guard.  Dane only had his heavy gauntlets to bash at his one time allies.  As Dane punched and clawed at a hellish beast, suddenly Arashad wearing Tyrn's form leapt through the flame wall, alerted by the lesser Warlock's scream.

     Arashad landed with booted feet crunching on the ground, and with a lament as he saw the body of Peragho dead by his lifeless hydra.  He let forth an arcane blast in rage, which hit the Warlock full force in the back and bowled him over.  Azuregale yowled with the pain of the assault, all the while trying to keep an imp from clawing his eyes out.
 
     “What are you doing?!”  Dane shouted with surprise, and creeping fear as he rolled and bashed at the imp..

     Before Tyrn could continue his attack, a demon leapt onto his back from behind and began tearing at him.  Dane used the opportunity to throw himself back through his flaming barrier again, kicking free of the sturdy imp harassing him and it’s companions.  He looked around for Xol, confounded as to why the match still had not ended.  They had won, but Tyrn hadn’t singled the victory incantation?
« Last Edit: January 09, 2015, 12:37:46 PM by baronzaltor »

baronzaltor

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Re: Arena Tales #1: Crowning Achievements
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2014, 02:54:28 PM »
     ‘What is happening?!’  His mind reeled as he tried to get distance, as a thought occurred to him, the only logical outcome.  ‘Why are the demons free of Tyrn’s control?...Tyrn must have lost control and gotten himself possessed by infernals...Who does that?!’

     Arashad found a moment between the imp’s attacks to investigate Peragho’s body.

     “Useless imbecile.”  He said spitefully in his stolen voice.  “I overestimated you.”
   
   He ripped the now bloody amulet from his pupil’s corpse. “You were my way out of this oafish form.” he said with frustration, mind searching for a way to salvage his plan.  Peragho’s death was a calculated loss, but not like this.  His pupil was to be the new vital body he would wear out of the arena. 

Before Arashad could mull over his plight any longer, the demons were once again biting and thrashing at him.   He took up the only weapon at hand, Dane’s discarded hellfire lash and fought his way up, and set after the other Warlock.

‘I need help...now!’  Dane thought.  He didn’t trust calling on more demons, he shuddered at the thought of what might happen given the circumstances.   He turned to his only other option and began the summoning incantations.
   
‘Today is not the day for you to let me down, lady.’  He thought as his eyes scanned for a weapon to wield.  ‘Hurry it up Elise!’

Tyrn strode through fire towards him, eyes blazing blue.  The demons were quickly behind him again, harassing his flank.  He stopped his march only long enough to destroy one with a word and a flash of lightning. 

   Dane let Tyrn close in, and then, unleashed a burst of magic force which launched them both in opposite directions.  Tyrn tumbled to the ground and into the imps chasing him, and from Dane’s vantage, skipping across the arena on his back, he was momentarily clear of the brute.  As this thought crossed his mind, the immense clawed hands of an enormous Demon, probably the largest Tyrn had summoned if he had to guess, grabbed Dane from behind, sinking its claws deep into his armor.  He could feel the metal bending as he struggled to break free.  Suddenly the demon gasped, making a wet and painful noise, convulsed, and spurted a gout of blood drenching Dane’s armor, which rained down trickling off of his visor.  He quickly twisted out of the demon’s fading grip to see the infernal beast slumping to the ground, with a pair of pale and bloody clawed hands through its chest.  The beast fell dead at his feet, only to reveal a smiling Necropian Vampiress. 

“You’re not looking so good, Hero.”  She taunted playfully.

   Dane shook his head, gasping and pointing as he cut her short.  “Not now. I need you to take care of the rest of those demons.”
   
   “Tell me you didn’t summon me all this way just to kill imps...”  She said dejectedly, then she stepped between him and another demon, slashing it with blinding speed.
   
“Trust me, it is of the utmost urgency.  I gotta figure out how to kill a possessed, undefeated, Warlock grand champion while you see to that...”

   “Give’em Hell.”  She said with a wink then vaulted into the air, only to land on another demon and twist it’s head with an audible crack.

   As if on a timed cue with her her exit, Tyrn crashed into Dane, ramming a shoulder into his ribs and sending him to the ground. Tyrn whirled Dane’s Hellfire lash in scorching circles over his head before bringing it down with sizzling strike.   Dane did all he could to minimize the damage by blocking with his armored gauntlet and holding it out front for the next whip’s lash.   The burning whip entangled his forearm and jerked him up.
   
   Dane gritted his teeth, and stumbled to his feet, holding tight to the formed fire so that Tyrn couldn’t pull it back for another crack.   Both Warlocks were spent, burning mana as soon as they could call on it, in a constant scrape for their next trick.   Tyrn’s boot slammed into Dane, knocking him clear of the lash and sending him rolling once more.

   Everything was blurry from the ground.  Dane pulled himself forward on the sandy floor in a slow crawl away from Tyrn and towards what looked to be a discarded weapon in front of him.  He tossed his arm out in front of him and closed his fist around a hilt and felt it throb with power.   The Warlock called on the little strength he had left to stand up, taking up Tyrn’s dropped blade, Sectarus. 
   
   Arashad torched the air with Dane’s burning whip again, unwieldy as it was; he never understood why Warlocks would use such an inefficient weapon, but he could appreciate the ingenuity of using fire in such a way.  Azuregale sidestepped the clumsy swing as he charged, and the whip cracked close to his ear, an unfortunate miss.  The second swipe of the whip caught him across his chest, singeing his armor, but he only growled as he took the blow, closing to bring his own weapon to bear.  Arashad tried to backstep, but Dane caught him under the chin with the flat of the blade sending him stumbling backward.  Dane slashed forward and Sectarus melted through the Demonhide armor like cloth; Arashad cried out in pain as the sword deployed dark magics into the freshly opened gash.  Whether by his own will or the power of Sectarus, Azuregale put away hesitation and focused only on swinging the sword and landing his blows.  Arashad tried to parry the vicious strikes with scant success, he retracted the whip for another strike when the Warlock blade severed tendon and bone sending shrieking pain through his arm; the whip fell gracelessly into the dust.  Sectarus took bite after bite out of the Arraxian champion’s body, driving him back and down to one knee.  The final strike left the twisted blade buried into Tyrn’s breastplate and Arashad’s blue eyes dimmed.  He collapsed to his hand and knees, with blood pouring out of the the numerous ragged gashes in his armor.  He retched and cursed the pains of Sectarus’ venomous bite.

Dane stood dragging in harsh breaths, his armor heaved visibly up and down, and the world was a low hum and blur outside the narrow focus of his visor, which was trained on the bigger Warlock.

Elise gracefully touched ground next to him spreading her lips into a giddy grin.  She  discourteously kicked over Tyrn’s still dying body and giggled at the groan it emitted before she pulled Sectarus from his chest.  She slapped the hilt into Dane’s gauntleted hand, then raised it to the crowd in victory, kicking her leg back in an overly silly display of celebration.

“See!  They never had a chance, Hero.”

From the ground, Arashad’s fading vision caught sight of his former body, still wearing the cruel smile Tyrn left on its face. 

After a moment of stunned silence, a voice shouted praise, and the crowd erupted into cheers.  Dane used his free hand to signal the rite of victory, and once done Xol Magnus reappeared in the arena.  Elise paraded the weary Dane around the arena, and then guided him back out the Sunset Gate, making as much of a spectacle as possible while they made their exit.  The vampiress practically skipped from the arena until they were out of sight.

“You’re such a show off.”  Dane said to her weakly through half a smile, as Xol’s grand closing speeches echoed in the tunnels under the arena.  He was too exhausted to notice another sound ringing in stands.  “Azuregale! Azuregale! Azuregale!”
« Last Edit: January 09, 2015, 12:43:30 PM by baronzaltor »

baronzaltor

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Re: Arena Tales #1: Crowning Achievements
« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2014, 02:57:07 PM »
-One week later.

   Dane Azuregale sat at his desk taking long draws from a slender but fashionably made wooden pipe as long as his forearm. He poured over spellbooks and scrolls, occasionally taking the pipe from his mouth and inking something onto a parchment to the side, muttering and then going back to his study.  Lodgings were provided to him by the Arraxian Crown, well not just him, but all loyal gladiators of the crown were afforded this luxury for service.   By Westlock standards it was a modest dwelling, but comfortable and spacious enough for his needs.  The furnishings included a bed, large reading chair, desk, ample wall space for his shelves of books and tomes, a fireplace, and a cook stove in the corner.  It was common for the various factions represented in The Arena to keep houses in Victoria so their gladiators would always be on hand.  Usually this meant it was a gladiator loyal enough to live away from home to represent his patron, or a gladiator who was disposable enough to keep abroad and out of the greater affairs of their homeland.  To the Crown, Dane was the latter. 

   Dane rose from his studies and crossed through the living area to remove his tea from the small fire in the fireplace.  As he filled his chalice, his eye came to rest on the traditional Demonhide armor hanging on its stand across the room.  The runes and glyphs on it glowed faintly, and he looked down at his own bare chest, where the same glowing runes had marked his skin from years of constant use.  The runes were raised on his skin, not unlike ritual branding.  They stood out against a collection of scars and markings that adorned his body; some of which were battle wounds and others from the use of dark magic which required blood offerings, enchanted markings, and similar scarifying acts.

   He looked back to the rack, and his eyes were drawn to Sectarus resting nearby.  Dane sipped at his tea as he contemplated the blade.  He got the creepy feeling it was staring back at him.  Similar to his own form, Sectarus was covered in runes and markings of power.   In the past few days he wondered if it had been a good idea to keep the blade.  Whenever it was in his grasp, he remembered its last owner… overwhelmed, possessed, no control over his own ravaging demons.   Dane tried to shake the unnerving thoughts away. 

   “You wouldn’t let that happen to me would you?”  He chuckled to Sectarus before taking in another soothing gulp of tea.  “Still, you’re an improvement over my old sword.  Certainly bailed me out back there.” 
   
   “Do you often talk to your weapons?”  Echoed a familiar female voice from behind him as a cool scented breeze wafted into the room.  “Besides, Don’t I deserve a little credit for bailing you out too?”
   
 Dane smiled.  “Evening Elise.  I thought I sensed you nearby.”  He said as he returned to his desk and sat again amongst his tomes.  “Tea?”

The lithe vampiress stepped behind him and ran her clawed fingers through his long brown hair, mussing it playfully with one hand.  The other hand plucked his chalice and sipped it, which forced a wince from her.  “You should add some honey, Hero.” 

“I’m sweet enough.”  Dane quipped with a smirk.  “That’s an Ivarium blend, stout stuff.” 
   
   “I enjoy a tea-party as much as the next girl,” Elise’s hand gathered up his hair and moved it aside, exposing his neck and shoulder.  She traced her long finger over his skin, finding her mark.  “But, I’m here to collect.  A deal is a deal.”
   
   “I suppose it is.” Dane said, from the awkward position of his head.  “You’re all business tonight aren’t you?”

   A door slam rang through the room, interrupting the moment.  Dane and Elise turned to face a lone figure that strode into the room.

   “I trust this isn’t a bad time?”  Called the voice of a stern old Warlock.  He stepped into the light to reveal himself, garbed in the vestments of the Arraxian Crown’s highest ranks.

   Dane didn’t rise, still with tilted head. “Of course not, Archon Valda.  To what do I owe the honor?”

   The old Warlock’s eyes scanned the room.  “Dismiss your minion.”
   
   Elise gave an offended look and huffed.
   
   “She prefers consultant, your lordship.”  Dane interjected.  She crossed her arms and nodded.

   Valda stared coldly.  “Dismiss your consultant, Azuregale.”

   “Sorry lady, Warlock stuff.” Dane said with a shrug. “We will have to pick back up later.”

The Vampiress gave Valda a hard look, then smiled down at Dane.  “I know you’re good for it.  You two have fun.”  She gave a mock bow then slinked into the shadows and faded away.

Valda’s harsh gaze moved from the shadows back to Dane.  “How long have you been consorting with the Necropolis?”   

“Oh, her?”  Dane asked innocently.  “Something of an experimental arrangement, we had a run in a few weeks ago.”

Archon Valda nodded, locking Dane with a penetrating gaze.  “Interesting.  Mind who you ally with...  The Arraxian Crown is not in bed with The Necropolis.  In The Arena you represent us, and we win by our own power.”

“With all due respect, Archon.”  Dane interjected against the scolding. “She has proven to be quite a useful asset.  I assume you didn’t come all this way simply to discourage the summoning of vampires.”

The old Warlock’s face maintained a dark calm.  “True enough.  After last week’s battle, The Crown has taken a special interest in your career.”

Dane laughed, hoping to conceal his nervousness.  He quickly took up his pipe from the desk and lit it to occupy his hands. 

“Is that so?  For years The Arraxian Crown has been content to let me rot here in obscurity, fighting week in and week out until I die.  Servants are sent to collect your tributes from my winnings and to issue new schedules, and now... after all this time, the Crown sends you, an Archon no less, to personally show up and express its interest?  Forgive my skepticism, but I’m surprised anyone at the Bastion even remembered where this place is.”

“You killed Tyrn.”

Dane choked on his pipe.  “No, Tyrn killed himself.  He lost control...our great champion broke the most basic rule of demon-craft.  He bargained for power he could not wield.”

“Perhaps,”  Valda replied doubtfully,  “but I have trouble believing that Tyrn would make such a novice error.”

Dane looked quizzically at the old Archon.  “You think he was just trying to kill me?  His infernals were completely out of control.”

“We are investigating it,  but I do not trust the Wizards of Sortilege and especially not Arashad.”

   “And why did I have no battles lined up for the weeks following that match?  Its as if I was not expected to survive.”

   “Did you expect to survive?” Valda asked without irony.

   “I had hoped to-”

   “We do not maintain our strength, political or otherwise, by basing our decisions on hope.”

   Dane remained silent.

“But expected or not, you survived. Tyrn is dead, and the public eye is on you.”  Valda paced around the room, inspecting the quarters as he spoke.  “It will take time for us to name a new champion.   There are battles in the immediate future which were meant for Tyrn and now others must fill his place.  Needless to say, you will have battles, as will many other Warlocks.”

“I’m sure there were plenty of warriors chomping at the bit to take Tyrn’s mantle.” Dane remarked.

“Indeed, and they will be put to the test.  Although, you now have a distinction that they do not.  The audiences are already demanding to see you again, Dane.  You have a special value, and when we put you in the arena, we put the eyes of Westlock upon you.  By developing that, we make your enemies everyone’s enemies.  We can wield the people’s support for you as a weapon, just as we did with Tyrn.”

   Valda’s inspection stopped when he came to Sectarus.  “So, you claimed him.”

   Dane arose and walked to the rack with a tinge of compulsion.  “It was my right, under both the Edict of Arraxia and the Mage Wars Accords.  Besides I thought it would make a nice souvenir.”

   Valda nodded slowly, as he gripped the hilt and lifted the sword.  “That was certainly your right, but take care in wielding him.  Sectarus is not simply an enchanted sword.  There is a wrath and a will within this blade.  He will not be tamed lightly.”  Valda twisted the blade around, offering the hilt to Dane.  Dane grasped the sword and gave a small sigh of relief. 

“To business, however.  I’ve been prattling on.”  Valda said with a smile.  The slim Warlock pulled a scroll from his belt pouch and handed it to Dane.  “Your grand return to The Arena will see you face The Anvil Throne.”

Dane read the parchment as he listened.  “Arch-Captain Belorin Terrafox.  I’ve heard of him, Dwarven Warlord.  He’s good.”

Valda nodded.  “He is cousin to their King.  We want you to kill him.”

“This match is set as a standard bout to surrender, not a death match.” Dane said.

   “Correct.” Valda confirmed.  “As you well know, the Accord does not prevent killing a combatant who fails to surrender.”

   Dane rested Sectarus across his shoulders and tossed the parchment onto his table.  “I also know its bad form to do so.  Why am I killing this dwarf?”

   Archon Valda tightened his gaze.  “If you wish to use this opportunity to elevate yourself within the Crown, you must understand it is not your place to question the business of the Bastion of Chaos.”  He followed the chiding with an irritated sigh.  “But, I’ll indulge your curiosity.  The Anvil Throne has been resisting us in negotiations over a new discovery.  You are going to demonstrate the severity of our intent to their council before we send our emissaries back to re-negotiate the proposal.”

   Dane was unsatisfied with the murky details in Valda’s answer, but thought it best not to press further.  “Of course, Archon.  It will be done”

   “Good.”  Valda turned, striding towards the door.  He called over his shoulder.  “There is great potential for you Dane.  Do not ruin it for yourself.”

   Dane gestured with Sectarus to the bags of gold lying on the table.  “The Bastion’s tribute from the last match is still here...  Tyrn must have been living well if the purse for all his wins was this large.”

   The Archon paused but, did not turn to look at the bags.  “We will send a servant to collect.”  With that his boot-clicks echoed into the darkness, punctuated by the thud of his door shutting.

   “Right.”  Dane muttered.  He swiped Sectarus a few times, feeling the power pulsing.

   “You can come back out.”  Dane called out.  “You didn’t go far, did you?”

   Elise sashayed in and took his seat at the desk, propping her boots up.  “Don’t worry, I wasn’t listening in.”  She said with a smile.

   Dane chuckled.  “Doesn’t bother me if you did.  Just Arraxian politics and condescension.”

   “Oh.  Well, in that case, I heard all of it.”  She said with an impish shrug. “Your boss sounds like a fellow who’s fun at parties.”

   Dane continued to take slow swings with Sectarus, trying to make a connection with the twisted blade.  “Most Warlocks don’t have my sense of humor.  I assume spending all your social time around demons and other warlocks sours ones  personality.” 

   “So why are you fighting for them then?”  The vampiress asked tilting her head slightly.  “I don’t get the feeling that you like the Arraxians.”

   Dane took his eyes from the sword and looked at her, more serious than usual.  “Thats not a story for tonight.” 

   “Fair enough.”  She replied mildly, changing the subject.  “So what do you think the dwarves found that your bosses want so bad?”

   Dane shrugged.  “Who knows.  Has to be something powerful, the Bastion must be salivating for it though if they want to play ball like this.”
   
“Why dont you ask?”

   “They wouldn’t tell me unless they need to, and even then they would try to avoid it.”

   Elise smiled.  “I meant why don’t you ask the Dwarf?  Work something out, you’re supposed to kill him right? What does it matter?”

   Dane lowered his blade and considered her questions.  “Not bad, lady...  I don’t know how the Archons would feel about it though.”

   Elise furrowed her brow.  “Were you not listening to him?  He just finished telling you how much they need you.  If you keep winning hearts and minds, you can do whatever you want, hero.  Show those warlocks that they can’t have you both ways.  They don’t want to share this power, maybe you cause a little trouble.  Maybe you can find a way to get at it yourself...”

   Dane smiled.  “Elise, you are a terrible influence.”

   “Just like a Warlock to call thinking a bad influence.”  She winked.

   “Theres probably some truth to that.” Dane remarked as he turned his focus back to Sectarus.  “Valda was right about Sectarus though, he’s resistant.  He’s even harder to swing now than before.  Maybe he’s challenging me.”
   
   “Maybe he is she.”  Elise said simply as she watched him.

   Dane’s eyes widened with a slight drop of his jaw, the simplicity stunned him.  “You could be on to something.  Though, I don’t know if I can survive another woman in my life.”

   “Be that as it may” she laughed, “You still owe me dinner, hero.”  Her grin widened and her fangs glistened in the flickering light.”
« Last Edit: March 06, 2014, 05:50:47 PM by baronzaltor »

Lord0fWinter

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Re: Arena Tales #1: Crowning Achievements
« Reply #3 on: March 06, 2014, 05:08:02 PM »
Not sure if you wanted feedback, but here's my quick two cents. I really enjoyed this read. It became a little confusing when you started using Azuregale instead of Dane, but a quick scroll up to remind myself that they were the same person cleared up that issue.

Other than that, I thought it was very well written and exciting. It really captured what I imagine a duel in the arena would be like. Keep up the great writing. I'm curious what happens next.
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baronzaltor

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Re: Arena Tales #1: Crowning Achievements
« Reply #4 on: March 06, 2014, 05:40:22 PM »
Thanks for slugging through all that.  (was about 14 pages on the original document)

The name swap was occasionally because it felt repetitive to use "Dane" so much.  Occasionally it was to help show perspective changes.

Glad you like it though, as time permits Ive got a few directions to push this and interweave it with a few others.

baronzaltor

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Re: Arena Tales #1: Crowning Achievements
« Reply #5 on: March 06, 2014, 05:51:23 PM »
Also going to go back when I have a moment and clean up the indentions and stuff hopefully.