The peace that formerly reigned in Terra Nova has eroded, now little more than a memory. War ravages the continent. Disputes divide kingdoms; ideals divide families. The quest for power consumes absolutely and indiscriminately. None are immune to its allure.
Who will rise and who will fall? Only time—and ambition—will tell.
UPDATES
05.26.2023
2 month character creation hold for all existing members begins 6/5/2023. Ended 8/5/2023.
10.29.2023
Change in how times flows. Was 4 IC seasons, now only 2 IC seasons per 1 OOC year.
Our dearest and lovely admin welcomed her new baby boy, Jet, on Sept 7th! We're so happy for her and her family! Congratulations Mama!! Your boys are all so lucky to have such an incredible mom to love them! God bless!
Warren stepped into his darkened office, lit all of the torches, closed the door, and sighed.
Early morning wake up. Prepping soldiers. Putting on all the armor. Marching among the Skian civilians. Being on high alert throughout the entirety of the parade. Watching Othello's performance. The promotion ceremony. The aftermath. Sunrise to sundown. He was only just now getting away.
It wasn't that he hadn't enjoyed it. Seeing his soldiers applauded and complimented made him proud. Seeing the result of years of their hard work made him proud. And he was grateful for the promotion to Captain. Grateful to stand in front of the King and the Commander and receive their endorsements, even if he wasn't sure he had quite earned them.
He leaned his hips against his desk and looked around the somewhat small office, hoping no one would insist he move because of his promotion. He didn't need more space. Everything fit into this one just fine. Then he walked around to his chair and removed his jacket, the chest-plate armor that had been beneath it, and the chain-mail that had been beneath that, and lastly the graves that had been strapped to his calves. He laid them all neatly in the chair and pulled free the thin tunic that had been beneath, tucked into his trousers.
Then he walked back around the desk and over to the couch that sat against the wall. It sunk a little when he sat down, which made him grumble to himself. He needed a new one. For a few minutes he leaned back and closed his eyes, but the threat of falling asleep was very real, so he sat back up and went about unlacing his boots.
Post by Regan Lassiter on Feb 10, 2023 9:26:23 GMT -5
The parade and the subsequent festivities had set Skia alight with joy. It was unlike anything Regan had ever seen and had she been a young footsoldier like Ber or Zarha, she would have allowed herself to be caught up in it. She’d be at the taverns, drinking and singing and carrying on throughout the night.
But the calculus had changed since then. Regan had recently reclaimed her title as the King’s Huntsman. She was a wolf, close to the full moon, ready to break out of her skin given the right—or wrong—set of circumstances. Drinking at a tavern was the last place she needed to be. One little brawl might be enough to put her over the edge (and given her history, Regan always seemed to find them).
So instead, Regan had decided to go reclaim a little dignity. Or at least, that’s what she told herself as she mozied down the hall toward Warren’s office with a tin of polish and a rag in one hand and a bottle of fine whiskey in the other. A deal was a deal, and Regan intended to make good on it. She also intended to prove she was capable of being a normal person, capable of normal human interaction. That she wasn’t always stripping down and trying to jump men in the woods.
This is what she intended to prove, anyway.
Regan, who had also shed her armor down to her tunic and leggings, wrapped on the door with her knuckles. This is where she’d been told Warren would be. Seemed the younger recruits had gotten pretty good at tracking his whereabouts—surely so that they could avoid punishment for any of thier mischevious exploits, lest he discover them.
The knock at his door left him sighing. His dropped back for a moment, eyes closing as he worked up the patience to deal with whatever soldier was standing on the other side. He hadn't even gotten his boots off yet. The laces were loose as he pushed himself up from the couch and walked over to pull the door open.
"Whatever it is, it can wa--" he was already speaking as he pulled the door open, but trailed off when he saw the woman standing before him. His eyes ran over her and the items in hand. It took him a few moments to put it together, because he had totally forgotten about the bet they'd made. "Ms. Lass--" he stopped himself again. "Regan, come in," he said, stepping aside so she could enter before he closed the door behind her.
Once she was inside, he turned toward her, one hand resting on his hip as he gestured around the office. "As you can see, I have enough lanterns, so your help, while appreciated, is not necessary." He said with the slightest chuckle as he walked past her to his desk and began to clear away a space for her to sit down the things she'd brought along with her. "I apologize. That was another bad joke. I'm not sure why I keep doing that."
Post by Regan Lassiter on Feb 10, 2023 15:51:26 GMT -5
Regan stood there, equally stunned by Warren in the flesh. She swallowed, managing with some difficulty to keep her eyes on his face and keep her cheeks from turning red. Just a perfectly normal social call. That’s all this was going to be. Regan, so help her goddess, was going to keep her little hellfire hands to herself.
Regan stepped inside and looked around. It was spartan but neat, as she would have expected from a man like Warren. His joke pulled her attention back to him and solicited a single bark of laughter. “Practice makes perfect, isn’t that what they say?” Regan followed him and, when the desk was clear, plunked the tin down on the desk before turning and offering Warren the bottle with a smirk.
That she laughed at all eased him, pushed the breath caught in his chest and allowed him to relax some. "I am a firm believer in it myself, and yet..." he couldn't exactly say that he'd made practice of it. He rarely had anyone to tell jokes to. He didn't think the soldiers would find them particularly funny, and they got their laughs out of him with their little nicknames, anyway.
He reached out and took the bottle, looking at her and then back down to it. It was good stuff, as far as he could tell. He was no connoisseur but usually if the makers put effort in the bottle, they put effort in the alcohol. He sat the bottle next to the polish on the desk and looked down at his feet, laces and tongues of the boots flopping around as he walked. "They were shined this morning and I haven't scuffed them up too badly. I appreciate that you're a woman of your word, but it's really not necessary for you to fulfill this part of the deal. The bottle is more than enough. Will you have a glass with me?"
Post by Regan Lassiter on Feb 11, 2023 11:19:15 GMT -5
It was expensive, which is about all that Regan knew when it came to whiskey. She assumed that meant it was good. All Regan really cared about was that it did its job.
She followed Warren’s gaze to his boots. Yes, with the parade, Regan should have known that a man like Warren would have the leather glistening. But still, it had slipped Regan’s mind. Because it wasn’t about the boots, was it? It was about something else entirely. Something that made Regan sad to have the task stolen from her.
At least there was whiskey.
“As you wish,” Regan responded with a small sigh. With a dearth of setting in the room, after a moment’s hesitation, she went to the sofa which she sank into as if to be swallowed.
"I suppose congratulations are in order, Captain." She grinned, waiting for her whiskey.
As she agreed, he nodded and walked behind his desk, pulling out one of the drawers and grabbing the two glasses from inside. The bottle that went along with them was long gone, and he couldn't remember the last time he'd actually used the glasses, but they would do.
He sat them on top of the desk and popped the bottle open, pouring each of them about half full before he shoved the cork back in. The whiskey was a beautiful, deep brown - really, not unlike the color of Regan's eyes - and gave off a good smell. He looked up just in time to see her settle down on the couch, and a smile formed from a mixture of humor and embarrassment as she sank. He walked over, handed her the glass, and pulled out the chair sitting beside his assistant's desk, moving it to face the couch. "I apologize for the couch. I sleep on it often and it's seen better days. You can sit here, if you prefer?" He said, gesturing to the chair. If she chose the chair, he'd sit on the couch, and vice versa.
"Thank you," he answered, resting his glass on his knee. He didn't know what else to say, and didn't feel like the 'I'm truly honored' spiel would be something Regan cared to hear. "And to you as well. Othello was impressive in front of the King. I'm not sure why you doubted yourself, but I'm proud of what you accomplished. I hope you've allowed yourself to be proud as well."
Post by Regan Lassiter on Feb 14, 2023 16:52:22 GMT -5
“No, it’s…cozy,” Regan said, searching momentarily for a word that wasn’t a synonym for dilapidated. Besides, she was going to have trouble getting out of it, and wanted to delay the struggle as long as possible. Warren sat and Regan relaxed back, crossing her legs in an unladylike fashion.
She chuckled at the mention of Othello, taking a long sip from her glass. It was good stuff. Smoky with a hint of sweetness. Appropriate somehow.
“He did his training justice, that’s for sure. A true Nevermeran soldier, despite all evidence to the contrary. I’ve taken him as far as I can. Now, on to the next thing,” Regan sighed, “For both of us, I guess.” Her dark eyes flickered up to Warren from where they’d been staring into her glass.
"Cozy?" He smirked. "You're too kind." All the same, he took a seat in the chair he'd pulled from Jasper's desk. As she took a sip of her drink, he did as well. He'd hoped she hadn't spent too much money on the bottle, but he wasn't going to complain. It was good. The subtleties of flavor were probably lost on him, but he liked it. It felt like something his father would have enjoyed.
Nodding, he met her eyes. Curious. "Yes, I suppose so." What came next for him would be leaving home. He wasn't sure he was ready to leave his work here to someone else, but there was nothing to be done about it. "What will you be doing next, now that you've finished training him?"
Post by Regan Lassiter on Feb 18, 2023 11:24:51 GMT -5
Regan grinned—a broad, toothy, mischievous grin.
“If I told you,” she whispered dramatically, “I’d have to kill you.” She took a sip of her whiskey as she chuckled. The truth was she already knew where she was off to next: Cambria, to arrest whatever disgruntled native had started to brand her own kind. But that would be a brief mission—one that hopefully would lturn out better than her escapade in Coheed.
"Ah," he nodded, as if understanding completely. Not that he had any idea what it was, but she did work directly for the King. "Well, there are worse ways to die." He took another drink of the whisky, unsure of what else to say to fill the silence. It wasn't an uncomfortable one, but it made him all the more aware of his own shortcomings when dealing in social situations. During the camping trip, they had at least had the distraction of multiple other soldiers. Work made conversation easier.
"You caught him Coheed, did you not? Othello?" He leaned back and rested his right ankle across his left knee. "I'll be going there to see to Zulu Carr's rebuilding progress. I've never been across the mountains."
Post by Regan Lassiter on Feb 19, 2023 20:18:04 GMT -5
There are worse ways to die.
The wolf rustled beneath her skin. In the silence, Regan’s cheeks burned pink as her eyes involuntarily wandered across Warren with a hungry sort of longing. After a moment, she buried herself in her whiskey glass, trying to relieve the itch in her fingers to reach for what she shouldn’t.
It took her a moment to register what he was saying, but eventually, Regan blinked and responded. “Yeah, uh, Coheed. I’d been there before though, for whatever that, uh, fuckin’ fest—” Regan cleared her throat. Don’t swear. “The festival was. It’s a lawless place; I don’t envy you one bit.”
Both of Regan’s trips to Coheed had ended in disaster; first with the Eldouirs, the second with her own incompetence.
He took her pause, her distraction in answering, as boredom. That made more sense to him than anything else. She'd come to settle a bet, which he had insisted she not fulfill, and instead of allowing her to leave he'd asked her to stay. Maybe that had been selfish.
"I'm not sure they'll like the King building over their fallen. Perhaps between that and their lawlessness, my stay will be exciting." He was no carpenter, after all. Although he understood the need for a military presence to be there while the city was being built, he wasn't sure what to expect of the day to day.
After finishing off what was left in his glass, he walked back over to his desk to refill it. "I appreciate you coming here to satisfy our bet, and staying to have a drink with me, but you need not linger. I'm sure all of the taverns, noble manors, and half of the palace is in the midst of celebration. You should find a more lively party to enjoy."
Post by Regan Lassiter on Feb 21, 2023 17:37:35 GMT -5
Regan stared at him dumbly for a moment, not sure that she understood. Once Warren’s words finally broke through the fog around her brain, the witch’s face turned beet red. Her assumption was that Warren was trying to kick her out. Because of their last encounter, being alone with her was not a place he wanted to be. And what made things worse was that Regan couldn’t blame him.
“Oh, I—” Regan took another stiff toss of her drink before setting it with a hasty clink on the table, “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to, uh, intrude…” She pulled herself up off the sofa, struggling for a moment to free herself from its sunken clutches before managing to stand upright.
"Sorry?" He watched her quickly down the rest of her drink and push herself up off the couch with some effort. For a moment he thought to let her leave. It was probably for the best. But he couldn't bring himself to let her think she was the one intruding on his time when, in fact, he felt it was the opposite. So before she could move toward the door, he was sitting his glass down and reaching for her arm.
"I didn't want you to feel obligated to stay," he corrected himself, failing to think of a bad joke to accompany his admission. "But if you want to stay, I would enjoy your company."