Northcliff Pass (
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northclifflogs2020-01-13 08:31 am
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A HOWL IN THE NIGHT: UPDATE
A Howl in the Night
The bitter cold temperatures are here to stay, at least for the foreseeable future, but not even the cold can keep the buzz of excitement--or anxiety--out of the air. In the days following its arrival the beast on the mountaintop has been glimpsed two or three more times, riding the wind currents while surveying its new terrain like the new lord in residence. Thus far it has showed no interest in swooping down the slope of the mountain to take a closer look at the village of Northcliff Pass, but that fact does not prevent anyone from worrying about precisely that scenario. What happens if the mountain goats prove to be too difficult prey to hunt in these temperatures? What is the rest of the village to do?
Magistrate Ward calls a public meeting at the Town Hall to announce that he's offering up a reward from the city's coffers (modest though they may be) to anyone capable of either slaying the beast, or successfully driving it away from the village. "As the garrison commander and his contingent of soldiers refuses to spare any resources to this end," the magistrate states, "we have no choice but to look elsewhere for help first."

I. A Hero Arrives
A silvery fanfare of trumpets pierces the air, and the town gates are thrown open. A solitary figure stands silhouetted in its opening, the drape of a lush burgundy cloak offsetting the rare plume on an elaborately crafted golden helmet. The helmet as removed as the tall, well-muscled figure strides into Northcliff Pass, revealing a handsome face with perfect teeth, a cleft chin, sparkling blue eyes, and blond hair of such a gold to rival the metalwork of his armor.
"Fear not!" he bellows, his voice a pleasant, ringing tenor, "it is I, Sir Theobald of Haguenne, slayer of monsters and keeper of the peace, protector of virtue and the right of unwashed commoners to live a life free from senseless fear of the unknown!"
He unsheathes his sword and raises it, glinting, to the sky.
"Behold, your savior!"
Are you a witness to this display of dazzling bravado, or do you hear about it second-hand?
[part II to be revealed]
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Brickenden doesn't notice them (or doesn't care), but he does notice Fíadh's approach; she's rather hard to miss, furious and fired up as she is, and he gestures a massive hand at her with a bark of insincere laughter. "You ought to hang up your coat and hand the mantel over to this one, she's got fury enough in her to keep an entire company of rowdy lads in line. But you--" His lip curls at Lance again, disgusted, as he looks him over. "I'd not trust you to discipline my wee granddaughter, let alone a guardsman going off like a loose cannon." Pot, kettle, black, etc. But he is a commander, and carries himself like a man well accustomed to wielding authority... and reinforcing it with violence, when necessary.
"Now, I'm asking you nicely, Captain," he growls, "and I'm running out of patience: that bloody guardsman will pay with his hide for what he took from the duke's army--or I'll take it myself out of your winter stores, with the duke's blessing, and leave your entire village to scrounge for roughage until the spring thaw."
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"I saw your man," he says. "Fighting with another of your men. I don't know what it was about, but there were no guardsmen around."
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"Then I'll do it," he snaps to Brickenden, bristling like an angry dog, "come to the guardhouse at dawn and you'll have your justice." It's all he can do to keep from spitting on the man's feet as he steps away, leaving his uneaten stew on the counter. He's off to the guardhouse, or wherever he can find Lorne.
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So she explodes.
"Is this how you lead, you engorged sack of shite? You toss your weight around when it fecks with one of your men but how about us? What about your soldiers coming in looking for a fight? If I hadn't handed them back their own arses on silver fecking platters what would you have done? Anything? Of course not, you'd be too damn busy ballocks-deep in your own arsehole to care otherwise!"
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Well, he can always give the soldiers free baked goods. He'd just have liked that to be a negotiating point and not lawfully compelled.
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"Aye, you're right on top of discipline, aren't you," he says, and though his eyes are still boring two vengeful holes into Fíadh's skull, it's clear his words are intended for Lance. He turns away from Fíadh and points a finger in the guard captain's face. "I'll see you at dawn, Captain, bright and early."
He turns for the door and does not even pause when he glimpses Colin partly in his way; either he'll get out of the way, or wish he'd gotten out of the way, while Brickenden makes his departure from the tavern. He slams the door open hard enough to leave it creaking on its hinges, still hanging open to let in the cold air after he's gone.
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After Brickenden has taken his leave, Lance turns back to Fíadh and Colin with an icy glare.
"Stay here," he snaps, "or go home. I don't care. Don't get involved, or I will lock you up." This is punctuated by a glance into Fíadh's eyes; that's right, You.
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"You can't just-"
But she stops herself. The source of her bullheaded rage is gone and she's starting to think again. Lance, ultimately, can and will do whatever he wants. And for once she's in a town that she actually cares if she gets kicked out of. But it's wrong this whole situation is wrong and if he would just let her-
"Fine."
The word comes out almost like a low roar and she stomps her way past Lance, muttering some very rude words in another language he should know well before going out the door.
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