Through the darkness of the night, a four foot tall hulk of metal and clanking plates hurried forward. She needed to clear her head while her mind raced to ruin. Her axe twirled through the air, cutting through the gentle wind as it swung. The relative silence was painful as the city slept. Her ears focused on the clunking of her armour to drown out the nagging accusations that dug into the back of her head. Suddenly, she was snapped back to the world as a new noise broke through the black.
"Tal, wait up!" Another hulk shouted after her, jogging to catch up. "You move fast for a half-pint."
The man was a giant of steel and fury, his face the first thing to emerge from the shadow as both their eyes adjusted to meet the others. The Dwarf glanced back and slowed her pace, still swinging the axe in her hands through the empty street. He knew the walk she was doing all too well. Ever since they met all those years ago in Rezan's cages, Talia had always resolved to keep her stress separate from those around her. This was her 'trying to cool off' walk. He slowed down in kind but still followed for a good five minutes. He maintained his current distance, waiting until she decided to speak.
Talia stopped completely. She turned around to face him properly in a side alley. She dropped her axe to signal that she would go no further. The flames of a nearby lantern settled into a steady dance as the wind died down. The light tinted her pale white hair a hue of blazing red and orange. Her pauldrons reflected the dim light onto the wall beside her and the red cloth sash around her waist brightened in the flames. It caught the fabric just right to reveal intricate patterns loomed into the fabric in a slightly off colour, almost hidden to the naked eye.
"I slowed down so you could catch up, short-tusk." She offered him a weak laugh.
He gave her a smile and jabbed her shoulder with his thumb as he got close. The green of his skin shifted as he approached the light, giving them a shared complexion on at least one half of their face.
"There's my Blood-Kin. You alright?"
"Nearly killed a framed man... No, no I'm not." She hung her head dejectedly. "That's... never happened before. But... It makes me think... Did I fuck up like that before? Have I condemned an innocent before?"
"Don't do that. Stop, or I'll hit you." He let out a sigh and dropped to the ground to sit with his legs crossed.
The Orc slowly pulled the greatsword from his back, sheath and all, and set it to the side. He patted the paved street to invite her down.
"Don't beat yourself up. Maybe you did, I hope you didn't but in the end you're here now and all we can do is you can work to be better. We'll figure this out. We'll find whoever wrote that letter and the Azure bastards who went after Kroll."
Despite being on the floor, he still rivalled her height, a point he never let her forget and a fact she was still bitter about to this day. Right now wasn't the time for their playful back and forth, however.
"I hope so..." She sat down next to him. "I'm not gonna live this one down, will I?"
"Well that depends, do you remember what I was? Think I'll live that down?"
Her shoulders fell at his words, eyes cast to the floor. Though the two could contend with each other often enough both physically and mentally, this was one of the few times one defeated the other with a single sentence. A look of uncertainty showed on her face as bright as day. Hypocrisy hurts. Worse still that it took Gorgoth spelling out the similarities between his tale and the very reasons she had believed Cyrak irredeemable.
"That's something I can't answer. You know that..." She shifted a bit closer and rested her head on his paldron.
"Then, you probably know the answer to your one." He raised his powerful arm to rest it around her shoulder.
As he did, his eyes watched the internal reprimanding the Dwarf was giving herself. He reached up and patted the top of her head before leaning down to plan a soft kiss atop it.
"Don't you worry, they'll get theirs. And we'll get ours."
"I meant that you'd keep making fun of me for it, short-tusk... I wasn't intending for things to get this... heavy." She smiled softly up at him and placed her hand on his, gently setting the plate on plate. "We're fuck ups but... we're the best they got. Ain't that fuckin' terrifying?"
"I guess that means we're not entirely failures, hm? We built all this. You and me… And the others." The Orc muttered the last caveat under his breath. "You got one thing right, though. We are the best.Yeah, its scary but… just gotta stick it out with who matters."
She fell silent for a moment, summoning up some of her trademark arrogance that she always kept bottled up inside for emergencies.
"Ain't nothin' scarier than us.... Except Vy… I'm still scared of her." Talia chuckled for a moment but it faded as quick as it came. "We'll get everyone through this time... I promise."
She closed her hand around his, intertwining their fingers. He gripped her hand in his, softer than it seemed he was capable of, given his size. He watched the connection for a moment, a question playing on his mind, brought to the surface by a comfort only they could know. Such a small gesture as this, the steel and leather separating their skin but the heat still coming through; it made the world feel a little less dangerous. The two of them were able to feel a little less alone.
"It's gonna be a busy few months. Hunting the Azure Fang, dealing with that Dragon in the mountains.... Maybe we should go find my father, really load up our plate." He let out half of a laugh, but it was clearly forced.
She regarded him with her amber eyes, tinted with a soft red undertone by the burning lantern. She could see how anxious he was, and it worried her. Even alone together like this it was rare that either of them showed any sort of unease towards facing another.
"You joke but… you always brush me off when I ask about him." She blinked twice at him. "Why?"
"Fear mostly." He shrugged, dry as possible.
"How so...?" She lifted her head up from his shoulder to turn towards him.
"Well..." He exhaled, his grip on her hand tightening. "My father was a... brutal man. Not a surprise, Orcs aren't known for their nurturing attitudes, especially ones from Oakland like me. He treated us, my sister and me, real hard. We became hard. Tough. Warriors. He wasn't all bad, he was just...not loving. Then he became Ceann Finte, which kinda changed everything. Think of it like being a mix of a Court Noble and a Warchief. He was leading the tribe and representing us in Meeting Place. He got hungry, greedy. Everything I did back then I did for him. At the time I didn't really think about it, it was just life. It was what I knew. He aged, and was to choose his successor since nobody could best him in Comhrac." His face hardened as he spoke, flashes of memory playing behind his eyes. "And rumours said it was gonna be my sister. So, being an idiot who needed his father's approval, I set out to Levalia to do some great deed of honour. And during which, I ran into Knights. Crownguard Knights. They slaughtered me. And then... I woke up, with this massive wound in my chest and my sister dragging my corpse. I ran. Undeath is a sin in my tribe, what dies; dies and that's it. Even if the Gods had chosen to bring me back, as far as they and I were concerned, I was no better than a shambling skeleton. So, here we are..."
She lets out a soft sigh, pouting like a bitter child as she went to dispute his tale.
"You're nurturing... My husband was nurturing... It wasn't an 'Orc thing' or an 'Oakland thing' for your father, it was just him." She seemed almost sorry to say it but continued. "But... if it means anything, I'm glad you're around. I don't think I'd be here without you..."
She shifted her position to face her body towards him.
"I… need to confess something." She rubbed the back of her neck. "Something I never told anyone."
. "…Go on." He let her speak, stopping himself from laying on his charm after her previous concession.
She fidgeted with her sash with her free hand, suddenly unable to meet his eyes. The arm around her that brought comfort and warmth suddenly felt heavy and made her feel uneasy. Talia looked genuinely nervous around him for once and at this, his internal sweet moment melted away as he gained a cagey look about him that she'd encountered before. Normally, his suspicions could be brushed off like flies, but this only made her more anxious.
"You know Buri?"
"What about her?" He raised a brow.
"One night when it was just us… We got talking about necromancy. Hypotheticals, emergency situations, all that stuff. Turns out she knows a bit of it. Me and her made a… pact. I… if I looked like I was gonna go down in a fight we weren't winning…" She took a deep breath, knowing what was coming. "I made her promise to bring me back so I can give you all a chance to escape... And for a long time I... wanted... hoped, even... for that to be my end."
She leaned forward a bit, as if to rest her head on his chest but backed up immediately as his arm fell from her shoulders.
"It... I'm sorry..."
Gorgoth's face fell, any emotion sinking away, the only signal Talia needed. She winced, tensing up moments before the blow struck her; a punch straight to her cheek. The strike made her head reel back and threw her off balance. She steadied herself to stay sitting up, her preparations having done little to soften the sting.
"Don't be a fool! We don't do bullshit self-sacrifices. If you go down, I'll bring you back and berate you."
She covered her cheek with her hands, hunching over a bit with closed eyes as she tried to breathe through the pain.
"... Right." She took a deep breath once again, the exhale twice as slow. "... I..." She just fell silent, knowing the sentiment was lost in his mind.
"I've died once and a God brought me back. I'm not gonna get that lucky again. I don't think you're gonna share that fortune either. You don't get to chance it and die on me, got it?"
"I... wasn't intending to come back! At all!" She looked at him for a moment, convincing herself that it was a stance worth fighting for. "You... don't come back when you get turned into one of those things... You can't come back! That was the point!"
She shook her head softly, her spirit retreating once again.
"It would finally be out of my hands. It-... Never mind."
"You don't get to be one of those shambling things, Tal. I'd have cut it down myself for daring to wear your face. You're worth more than that…"
"I said never mind!" She rose to her feet.
Talia moved across the alley, sitting against the opposite wall to put as much distance between the two as possible without leaving.
"Forget it... please."
"No. Promise me you won't do something like that, ever."
"Stop." She raised a hand between them.
"Promise."
"Gorgoth. This was a confession, not a debate. I knew it was a bad idea..." She stayed firm.
"I know, I ain't debating. I'm asking, as your Blood-Kin, for a promise." He was just as stubborn.
"I'm not making a promise I don't know if I can keep, Gorgoth... Especially not to you." She looked away from him, staring at the lantern. "I don't plan on dying any time soon... Not anymore."
"Then I just gotta make sure you don't do something dumb without me." A meek smile reached out to her, followed shortly by his bare hand. " 'till the end?"
She looked at his hand for a moment, taking a deep breath to let, or force, her emotions away. The Dwarf took off her gauntlet and clasped his hand. Her amber eyes met his, a radiant pale blue.
"To the end, you insensitive cock."
"Oh, like you're Miss Empathy all the time." He laughed as his smile turned into a smirk, pulling her closer and enveloping her in a headlock. "You are so fucking full of it, Cadash."
She flew forward like a ragdoll, getting caught off guard for once and suddenly finding herself trapped under his arm. Though she hated it, she couldn't help but laugh out of surprise,
"No, no! Don't you call me that. Cadash is reserved for bastards!" She struggled against the headlock. "Ugh, my father made me and everyone else call him that... figured it sounded tough." She chuckled softly as she forced space to breathe. "You're a piece of shit but... a shit that can always make me smile."
She lifted his arm off from around her neck before putting it back over her shoulder as she sat against him once again.
"Gorgoth... I got another question... a hard one."
"Just all out tonight, eh? C'mon then, give it to me."
"Well fuckin'... I missed you, alright? I thought I lost you... for months." She looked down at his arm as it softly coiled around her chest.
The Shieldmaiden let it go, surrendering to his embrace once more.
"Do you think... with our lifestyle... that you'd ever have kids?"
The blood rushed to his cheeks, tinting it a rare shade of red and green that was even harder to see than it was to cause. He took a long pause to formulate a response.
"I uh...I dunno. I feel I'd get it killed in the first week, and if not… I guess I'm afraid I'll mess it up some other way. I'd say maybe someday, when I'm out of this life. But I'll never be out of this life. You?"
"That's... kinda what I'm stuck on. I'm afraid that... having something like that to lose... would cause me to lose it." She shrank behind his arm, hiding the lower half of her face in it. "For the record... I think you'd be a great dad..."
She closed her eyes for a moment, enjoying the closeness.
"In peacetime, what is a warrior? I got asked that once back in Riverrest... I still don't got an answer... and I'm afraid to find out." Her eyes travelled up to him again. "Are we even capable of finding something in life beyond killing? Is... that all we're good for? What happens when we stop fighting?"
"It's all I'm good for. You though, Tal? You're more than you let on. When we get out there and deal with what we've to deal with, I'd like to see you settle somewhere. Find something or someone worth moving on for. Me? I can't even imagine it. Not right now at least. I so wanna be Uncle Gorgoth to a bunch of Dwarf kids one day. That'll be me sorted. I'd have been lucky if someone half like you was a parent to me."
She placed her hands on his arm again. Despite the cool winds and city grime that surrounded them, she felt warm from both his words and his heart. He felt it too, the cobblestone they sat on slowly shifting to soft cushion as the whole world seemed to get a little more comfortable just for them.
"You're smarter than you give yourself credit for... and worth a whole lot more to me and the world alive. I know I've chewed your ear off about the whole 'death in battle' thing plenty of times so I'll save you the trouble, but... just try to stick around long enough to stop and smell the roses with me... Just for a little while. I already gotta..." Her eyes seemed to water as she pressed her face against his arm. "I already gotta sit through three hundred years without you... I want as many memories of us to look back on as possible... and the fewer caked in blood and dirt, the better..."
"Alright cry baby, alright." He pulled her into a deep hug, his own eyes tearing up too, not that he'd ever admit it to her. "I'll do my best, half-pint. You do enough living for us both when that time comes, yeah? I'll be at peace knowing that. Love you Tal, always will."
"I love you too Gorgoth..." She lifted her face from his armour. "And... I'm glad you're okay... Is it ok if we just sit here for a while...?"
"'Course it is, I ain't going anywhere." He said softly.
The two sat on the cobblestone in their full armour, all the poking metal and chaffing leather not bothering them in the slightest. She rested her head on his chest, his big heart thumping away in her ear. The lantern slowly died out and left them in darkness once more but the warmth between them remained. They stayed there for who knows how long, two weapons finding comfort in their own purpose and lack thereof, next to a greatsword and an axe, nestled together in the same way they were.