by Paroxysm on Thu Apr 05, 2012 9:15 pm
Pendaran absorbed everything Trydian had to say in complete silence with only the occasional nod serving as indication that he was listening. Unfortunately, the information Trydian provided concerning the sword and its sister-blade was not what the king had wanted to hear; he had wanted to know of its strengths or augmentative properties, or its powers, if it had them. Pendaran knew only of what he could gleam from Jack. Still, it was understandable that Trydian did not want to share too much of what his former weapon was been capable of... and, at least, what he did share was somewhat useful. He had claimed his father tricked a Goddess - most likely a child of one of the Lesser Gods, or perhaps a survivor of Death’s war - into creating the swords and that they could influence their wielders.
That was very interesting indeed.
“She came to see me about the gift I had offered,” Pendaran replied as he stopped just in front of a large, wooden door, “She asked for what I could not give, but I helped her none-the-less. Mastering her ability is her responsibility, however.”
Pendaran raised his hand and gestured for silence, and then whispered something under his breath. The response was immediate: A cold, dank flood of energy momentarily wafted from the door and then dispersed, and the door slowly swung open to allow entrance for Pendaran and Trydian.
From outside the now accessible room, Trydian would be able to see countless treasures, gold and silver and jewels cast about like garbage, and many things magical, artifacts and relics piled atop one another with no sense of order. With a motion of his hand, Pendaran directed Trydian to follow and then entered the apparent treasury.
“A vault,” Pendaran pointed out, “and an armory, too,” he turned a corner, continued straight, and then turned again; he did this several more times before he stopped at yet another door. Unlike the vault’s entrance, this one had two guards identical to the ones outside his study. They, too, were impassive, though that was most likely due to the king’s presence.
The king opened the door and entered unceremoniously. This new room looked the better part of a museum; it was also a testament to the limitless architectural possibilities that the Unseelie possessed. To call it huge would have been a vast understatement as it was a building inside of a building. Weapons of all sizes and shapes lined its walls or were in specially made racks, and a scarce few, no more than a dozen, were underneath glass containers; it was one of these displays that Pendaran hurried over to.
“sub lunam vigil,” he stated in a tone of voice usually reserved for a person’s name and then removed the weapon and its sheath from the display.
In his hands, Pendaran held a chakram hilted sword - a weapon with a ring around its hilt - and dancing, dazzling runes were embedded down the length of its blade. With an idle flick of his wrist, the king slashed the sword through the air which caused the ambient temperature to suddenly drop.
It was obviously a weapon empowered by magic and the design of its hilt were hallmarks of Unseelie craftsmanship; its blade, however, was not of Fae make at all. It lacked any semblance of cunning in its shape, but there was a powerful presence behind it none-the-less.
“Years ago, I met a ... man ... who, by all rights, should have been dead,” he explained, “but that man taught me some of his people’s craft,” Pendran held the sword hilt out towards Trydian, respectfully, “Tell me what you think of my work.”
The sword would prove to be light and perfectly balanced, despite its awkward shape, and while the runes appeared identical to one another, in reality, each provided a different enchantment. With this sword in hand - sub lunam vigil, as Pendaran had called it - elemental air and ice would allow the wielder to dominate any foe or foes. It was, in essence, a fragment of King Pendaran's power forged into a weapon.
FATAL KERNEL ERROR_
Mind link to COMP disconnected_