Message in the Mist
Fourteenth Day of the Second Month 293 AC
Stonehelm upon the Slayne was one of the oldest and most respected keeps in the Stormlands. Though not quite to the legendary stature of Storm's End, many were the tales of the marches soaked with the blood of heroes, villains, great lords and smallfolk alike. The tumultuous waters of the river had swallowed many a host and once it was even said that they had been dammed with the bodies of slain Dornishmen. But for all that it was also a trading town with many traders taking their chances with the rushing current over the slow and unreliable roads, made even more so these days when an unlucky traveler could meet far worse things than bandits on a moonlit road.
So it was hardly any wonder that the town beneath the keep's ancient walls prospered even in the uneasy peace of a world turned strange, and of course when the town prospered so did too its lords. The Swanns were rightly counted among the most powerful lords to pledge their loyalty to Storm's End, a stout shield in times of trouble, but a sharp sword to those who would give them less than their due or play them for fools.
All the reasons one could ask for to grumble over the recent upheaval among their overlords, thought the woman who might have been counted nine-and-ten or a few months old depending on how one counted it.
The perfect cover for far darker dealings yet. She looked out the small dirty window of the attic room, half-tempted to slip on a glamour and fly out to clear her head.
"I did not say we should kill the bastard, just make the attempt to have him show his hand," her fiendish companion's voice slid through the air like honey and venom. "You do not even have to do anything, just coincidentally have men ready to arrest him once he grows horns or however else the mark of hell upon his soul will show."
A lesser man than Davos Seaworth might have at least been tempted, for alu demons were skilled in that art and not just, as some would suppose, only the temptations of the flesh. But Aradia had come to realize in the almost three weeks the three of them had traveled together that the Onion Knight was in his own way great. Oh, he would deny it to his dying breath and believe it too, but he had the will and cleverness many of his supposed betters lacked.
"What if you kill him anyway because he's not expecting that sort of blow?" The knight had long since stopped trying to make any arguments hinging entirely upon upholding the law of the land to Azema. In truth he seemed oddly adept in finding the right words to at least make her consider caution. "I've not noticed that dealing with hell sharpens a man's wits, the opposite to tell the truth," he finished, drawing a grudging nod. Mayhap smuggler crews and demon-kin were not that different, Aradia reasoned.
"I think I've a way of approaching Lord Gulian's younger son that won't tip our hand if we are wrong in our judgement and he
is mixed up in this madness..." Aradia began, dreams of flight coalescing into something else altogether, as they oft did.
***
Ser Balon Swann slept uneasily that night, tossing and turning in the sheets as he had for many nights before, black and formless portents haunting the edges of his dreams but never remembered with the dawn. A hesitant knock resounded from his chamber door, then another more urgent and louder, drawing the young knight from slumber.
He reached for the dagger he had not used to carry with him to bed within the bounds of Stonehelm until recently before rising from his bed and traversing the room in three quick steps.
His nighttime visitor proved to be his sister. The youngest child and only daughter of the family, Lenore counted three years less than Balon's own eight-and-ten, a sweet girl though made painfully shy by inheriting more their father's heavy frame over their mother's willowy build.
"There's someone... something..."
"Yes?" the knight tried to shift his gravely voice into something reassuring.
"There is something whispering in my room, saying I should come fetch you," Lenore blurted out, speaking quickly lest her courage fail. "It looks like a woman made of mist or smoke. She said that it was of greatest urgency and the fate of our House hangs upon it."
"Did anyone else see you come here?" Balon asked, anxious, though he could not quite decide if it was over the fact that others may whisper that she was mad... or the possibility that she was not. He had heard many a strange tale of late and seen with his own eyes the night-black stag crowned in hell-fire that had been blighting his father's woods, the blight he had rightly taken for an omen that Stannis Baratheon had enchanted and usurped his brother somehow.
"No... I thought of going to a septon, but Septon Jorg is a young man and it just would not be right for me to knock on his doors at night, holy vows or not." From the way she looked at her feet Balon could guess that it was more than that.
Maybe the new septon gave her the strange oily feeling too...
"Alright then, I'll come see," Balon knew he was not the most sharp-witted nor smoothed tongued of knights, but he had taken to heart a lesson his father had given him as a boy. 'When there's talking to be done first it costs little to do so and might gain you a great deal.' He probably had not meant to include strange nightly visitations in that, but the warning recalled too well the tightening of his gut of late.
"There is no need," a cool voice called out from behind them.
Balon whirled around, moving instinctively to keep his sister as well shielded with his body as he could.
A woman robed and cowled in dark blue, with little seen of her eyes save the gaze bright and golden like a hawk's, stood there seemingly utterly unconcerned by the brandished dagger. She tossed a hideous bat-winged night-black corpse at his feet. "That was watching you, but I killed it before it could report back to its masters."
"Well, why were you skulking, too?!" the knight called. Part of him winced at taking such a tone with a noblewoman, for the stranger certainly looked and spoke the part, if in a strange manner.
"Because I wanted to be sure of your allegiance before showing myself," she replied gravely. "There is a rot and an evil, not in the woods, nor even at Storm's End where Stannis Baratheon rules, but in this very keep."
Balon wanted to call her a liar but in his heart the seeds of nebulous fear took root and bloomed. "What do you mean?" he asked in spite of himself.
OOC: Sorry for anyone who expected combat. I thought I'd do a bit of a more political interlude for a change to allow for more character and world building over just showing the direct clash of fiends and those who oppose them (even if one of them is technically a fiend herself).