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[X] Crake
Crake: Unruffle some feathers.[X] Speak with Lord Tarly, hoping he didn't take the spot of amusement ill. You very rarely get to enjoy yourself when the stakes are low, and whatever else you might say of this tourney no grand intrigues you have planned.
-[X] Invite him to come speak with Lord Ashford with us, subtly signaling we both would enjoy playing for him at the Keep later, and much more quietly a private conversation in his solar, in hopes of unruffling any feathers and ensuring beforehand that young Wenyld's safety and honor remains intact despite the slight indiscretion.
[X] Move on to the Joust, where Buttercup will act as Ser Geralt's "squire" fetching him lances and playing a Sour Apple Aparté during an intermission.
It's a pretty normal move from medieval swordmanship aimed towards doing damage through heavy armor.
It seems your humor is a quite sooty shade of black.Tarlly: "Your Grace, as pleases as I am to see you, I do not understand this elaborate mummery. What point is there in making mockery of fools that would otherwise fall below your notice?"
Viserys: "Good Ser, surely you are aware that roasting impertinent noblemen is a long-standing tradition of House Targaryen!"
Mess with the Bard you get the bludgeon.[X] Crake
Wow we're really doing our best to turn Fossoway's reputation into glue with all this bludgeoning aren't we?
It's a pretty normal move from medieval swordmanship aimed towards doing damage through heavy armor.
I said we didn't plan on any intrigue, not that we were going to stop Bard-ing.Crake: Unruffle some feathers.
Also Crake: Divert all energy to the Mockery Engine!
More edits, @DragonParadox.A Triumph of Steel
Twenty Fourth Day of the Twelfth Month 293 AC
Witnessing Ser Richard fight in the midst of the melee is certainly impressive enough to warrant the narrating as he fights. You had seen him face horrors from beyond the world, do battle in the depths of the sea, the ruins of an elder plane, under the fiery skies of Valyria and in scores of other places that would break other men, but at those times you had been rather busy with the monster in front of you to fully appreciate how the knight fought. There was not a hairsbreadth of wasted motion, not a step too far taken and not a single moment's hesitation in battle. In a word it is unfair.
As he fights his way towards the Lord of Horn Hill with yourself only a step behind you find yourself barely being able to keep up with naming the vanquished falling left and right, but then stag-horned Dregaire makes himself known with a charge that that pushes the knight a step back for the first time since the battle had begun. "I am not one to count upon magics and subtle feints good Ser, and I can see neither are you," he proclaims, silvered blade sparking against Oathkeeper's glamour shrouded edge. "Come, let us see by what prowess you have faced the Court of Night Eternal."
Meeting the challenge with a small nod, Ser Richard unleashes blow after blow until with impossible swiftness, until it almost seems as though he is welding half a dozen swords not one, but the fey lord, for surely no lesser spirit could fight thus, catches three blows on his shield and twists aside from three others such that his armor takes the brunt of it, bending but not breaking. That is when you discover that his horns are not just for show, but weapons in their own right to match the sword he bears, forcing Ser Richard on the back foot such that the silvered sword can just slice into his leg though the gap just above the knee.
Alas for him that Ser Richard is quite used to opponents who use horns in battle. Moving in a more deliberate stance than the one he had taken a moment before he catches the fey's horns on the next attempted strike and pulls his head painfully down before kicking out to send him tumbling. If this had been true battle to the death, the fey would have likely lost his head to Oathkeeper's next swing, but the strictures of the melee mean the fey knight has the chance to twist just fast enough to bring his shield smashing into the knight from below, seeking to toss him to the ground instead.
Ser Richard does not lose his footing and instead reverses Oathkeeper to smash the pommel into his surprised opponent's face. Blood brighter crimson than that of any mortal stains the grass, but the fey seems to find it all great fun, his laughter ringing over all the sounds of battle. "You carry your tale in you as few mortal men do, Ser. I would feel no shame losing to such as you... but I would still rather win."
That is when you notice that Randyl Tarly, having dispatched his last opponent decided that 'Ser Geralt' is the more dangerous foe and tries to strike him from the side, obvious enough not to be accused of being dishonorable, cunning enough to show the experience of the battlefield more than the tourney ground.
It is not quite cunning enough. Ser Richard manages to strike lord and fey both with a single sweeping attack. Tarly's armor is you suspect magical. It is not magical enough, as Oathkeeper cuts through it with a screech of tearing steel. As his opponents try to time their blows to get though his guard, your sworn sword feints and parries the fey lord's strike just so as to land upon the shoulder of the Lord of Horn Hill. He could have probably avoided Tarly's own blade if he had tried something less elaborate, but you appreciate the showmanship to sing songs of. He certainly seems to be enjoying himself.
Out of the corner of your eye you spy a pair of lesser knights moving to try an actual strike from behind on Ser Richard and promptly disarm one while Lord Ashford starts smashing the other as a particularly irate blacksmith would do to poor iron.
You return your gaze to Ser Richard just in time to see him smash Randyl Tarly's sword arm hard enough to force the sword from his hand as the fey lord bruised, but still cheerful, yields.
From there Ser Richard's victory is assured with Lord Owen Ashford himself being the last to fall after you had yielded with an elaborate bow.
As you are partaking of celebratory wine at the edge of the field while fey healers work their magic, Oathkeeper whispers unexpected news from Ser Richard in your thoughts: "Tarly suspects who we are."
What do you do?
[] Speak to Lord Ashford as planed
[] Speak to Lord Tarlly
-[] Write in
[] Write in
OOC: Old Randyl did see Ser Richard on the training field a few times when he was in Sorcerer's Deep. Not yet edited.
Tarlly: "Your Grace, as pleases as I am to see you, I do not understand this elaborate mummery. What point is there in making mockery of fools that would otherwise fall below your notice?"
Viserys: "Good Ser, surely you are aware that roasting impertinent noblemen is a long-standing tradition of House Targaryen!"
It's quite eye searing.
Nah. Tell them it was for shits and giggles, then savor the existential dread in their eyes.[X] Crake
You know, this whole thing could be seen as ourselves flexing our interpersonal and combat skills on the Westerosi lords, to intimidate and coerce them into following our side.
I mean, if we ever have to explain this in a more rational way than for shits and giggles.