If Jareth noticed the frustration his arrival brought, it didn’t show in his face. He remained as cool, collected, and professional as ever, greeting those he knew and getting right to the heart of why he was there. Serilda gave some pushback, keeping herself polite if only because she thus far had a modicum of respect for Jareth himself, but at the demon’s insistence and explanation of why Ozorith was calling an emergency meeting, it became clear very quickly that they had little choice in the matter. Serilda stood when Mythal did, her fiance grumbling about the ill timing of the matter before apologizing about needing to take off.
But apologies apparently weren’t necessary, as Vandrad insisted that he was going with them. Serilda raised a brow in surprise, even as Jareth fixed the king with an unreadable look. When Mythal expressed his confusion, reminding his brother that the ceremony they were at was for Vandrad, the king merely insisted that he had a responsibility to protect his people. Shepard was a threat to them, as much as to Serilda and Mythal, and he didn’t plan on sitting idly back on the matter. Neither did Cedric, it seemed, the former Dread Master pushing to his own feet and explaining that Vandrad may want back up, which Mercury was currently unable to provide him. A sour look crossed the queen apparent’s face at the reminder; she was still getting used to having to remind herself there were things she couldn’t participate in now that she was pregnant.
By the time Vandrad turned to look at Mercury, placing his hand on her shoulders, she was giving him a wry smirk. “Well, aren’t you the luckiest son of a gun in existence?” she teased, knowing that this was the perfect opportunity for him to have to skip all the rest of the night’s festivities. The moment was short lived, however. Mercury was more than well aware of the importance of finding Shepard. If anything, she was just upset that she couldn’t be there to help, if only because she wanted some retribution for Gren and Vriko’s near deaths at the Trumpet’s hands.
Mercury kissed Vandrad back as softly. “Please be careful… And if you find him, give him an extra kick in the ass for me.”
Saffron, meanwhile, just rolled her eyes at Cedric’s confident look as he insisted they’d be back sooner over later. “I’ll be here celebrating not having to deal with your ugly mug for a bit,” was her playful remark. She slugged him lightly on the arm and, with more care in her eyes than her words, gently added, “Try not to die.”
With that all out of the way, Serilda turned to the Omen. “We are ready.”
“You and Mythal were the only ones requested,” Jareth began, opening his mouth in protest of the new additions, his tone firm with finality, but not necessarily with the normal disrespect or arrogance one might expect from a demon. Ruzatz and Agatha were one thing; afterall Ruzatz was a Prime Sin, and Agatha his Hand. They had been involved in these proceedings up until this point anyway, so Ozorith would expect that to continue. However, these two mortals were unknown and uninvited, and Jareth was not interested in drawing Ozorith’s ire.
Where he may have said more, however, he allowed himself to be stayed by Serilda, who gently raised her hand to interject. “It’s fine, Jareth. I’ll vouch for them. If Ozorith has an issue, he can take it up with me.” The Voidwalker certainly had no qualms about confronting the Prime of Wrath, nor upsetting him.
Jareth considered her for a moment, his gaze flicking back to Vandrad and Cedric briefly, before he nodded. “Very well. Then let us depart. I do not wish to keep my lord waiting. ” He lifted his arm out to wordlessly invite them to place a hand upon him. Once everyone that would be making the trip had done so, Jareth would activate his magic and in the blink of an eye they’d find themselves within the lavish halls of Ozorith’s palace of ice. “This way, please.”
The Omen lead them down a short series of hallways before approaching a room with modestly sized double doors. Pulling one of the doors open, he held it aside and gestured for the others to proceed within, following them and closing the door behind when all had entered. Like the rest of the castle, the war room they found themselves in was crafted primarily from ice and had a gothic feel to its architecture. Despite the ice, the room was chilly but not uncomfortably so. Large windows spanning almost the entire height of the wall to one side lent a view of the mountainous and snowy lands of the Frostbane kingdom beyond. It was an appropriately sized war room, with a table at its center that currently bore a map of Fiore.
Ozorith was standing over one side of the table, studying it with a frown. He was dressed in a somewhat modernized kimono style outfit that was all white, with black trim and a red obi. Standing in a row at the back of the room behind him were Cain, Eden, Brione, and Shiloh. The first two Omens observed the approaching group of mortals with a shared smirk of arrogance and contempt, while the second two appeared more indifferent. The Prime of Wrath looked up, straightening to greet the group when his gaze fell upon Vandrad and Cedric. He narrowed his eyes, studying them with open scrutiny. “Jareth, would you care to explain to me why the company you escorted is larger than what I instructed?”
Before the Omen could get a chance to speak, Serilda stepped in. “I insisted,” she informed the prime, approaching the table without waiting for an invitation. Gesturing to each in turn, she introduced them briefly. “This is Mythal’s brother, King Vandrad du Wolff of the newly established nation of New Rhaegar, and Cedric Thane, our top black ops agent within the Rune Knights.” Cedric’s secret employment with the Rune Knights would likely be a shock to Vandrad, given that Serilda and Mythal had not informed anyone about it when it happened. And under normal circumstances, the field marshal would have continued to keep the information close to the chest. However, this was a special situation. She knew Ozorith would want more information as to the two men’s connection to Serilda and Mythal, and she wasn’t about to tip their hand about Cedric’s former affiliation with the Dread Masters.
“This is hardly the time or situation to test new and unproven players.”
“Then it’s a good thing they are neither new nor unproven. Both are more than aware of all known details involving Faera and Shepard, and their abilities are comparable to Mythal’s and my own. Vandrad even fought alongside Ruzatz in the battle against Faera when she attempted to take over Mythal’s body. If Shepard is as dangerous as you continue to imply, then prudence would demand we make use of all available and capable assets, would it not?”
Ozorith was quiet for a moment in contemplation, but it took only a second or two before he relented, waving a dismissive hand. “We can discuss your exercise of liberties later. If you say they are up to the task, then so be it.” If nothing else, he trusted that Serilda and Mythal wouldn’t involve anyone that couldn’t handle themselves in a matter such as this, and he cared more about getting to work than arguing with them over it.
The Prime gestured for everyone to gather around the table. There were three identical markers made of ice set upon the map, as well as a fourth one that was different in shape to the other three. “Less than an hour ago, Ryori – Oblivion – detected Shepard’s energy coming from these three areas: The Lycan Woods, the Forgotten Deserts, and the Silent Glaciers. The energy was faint at all three locations, so whatever he did it wasn’t anything large or disastrous. The problem is that the energy appeared simultaneously at each point and began to fade with the same degree of decay, meaning that she has no way to determine which trail to follow. With the speed at which the energy is fading, she will only have time to investigate one before the other two go cold.”
Agatha frowned at the table. “As powerful as Shepard is, he’s not capable of being in three places at once. Any concern that this could be a trap? Some kind of attempt to split our resources?”
“It’s possible,” Ozorith admitted. “His attempt to kill Mythal’s father and sister was thwarted, so by now he’s aware that we pegged his cover identity and are actively searching for him. This could be an attempt to lure us out and divide our forces, just as much as it could be that he did not intend for us to notice whatever he is doing. These locations are far enough apart that most people, even most immortals, would not be able to detect all three at once. There’s not enough information to be sure of anything.”
“If it is a trap, we simply may need to spring it if we’re going to have any hope of catching up to him.” Serilda studied the map carefully, even as Ozorith nodded his agreement with her stance. However, she wasted no time with a question of her own. “What I don’t understand is why you needed us. If time is of the essence, why waste it fetching us instead of sending them to look into it immediately?” She gestured toward the row of Omens behind them.
“Because we need every advantage when it comes to Shepard,” Ozorith explained. “My Omens are second almost to none, but Shepard is in a league of his own. Ryori is the only one who can stand up to him one on one; the rest he would ultimately kill. And he is crafty. He knows how to pick and choose his battles. Myself and Ruzatz could certainly handle him, but he’s far more likely to sense our approach than Ryori’s, and chances are he would flee rather than allow us to confront him.”
“But he won’t be expecting to have mortals tracking him. He’ll be keeping an eye out for demonic or angelic energies, and if he senses someone that he is sure he could beat, it’s possible he’d show himself.” He tapped on the map where the fourth token, representing Oblivion’s location, was beside one of the other markers. “Oblivion chose to investigate the southern desert area, which leaves the forest and the glaciers. I’d like to send a team to each location consisting of two of you as well as one of my Omens who should be able to draw enough of his attention without outright scaring him off if he’s nearby.”
He turned to look at Mythal. “Normally I would issue a kill-on-sight order here, but I assume you’d prefer he’s taken alive, if possible..?” | |