"Sleeping still? My poor boy this will not do, as a rolling stone gathers no moss neither will a sleeping rogue make any coin."
The calm, soothing voice of the priest was always fresh in his mind from the morning so long ago. Every time he allowed himself the reprieve of sleep the memory was like a flood. The smell of the ocean and the morning sunlight piercing the dirty windows of the shack the trio had called home, with its creaky floor boards and rotting support beams. Havoc always waited in that same corner, witling away at a piece of drift wood in the attempt to make something beautiful. Their adoptive father of sorts would bring him tea as he awoke, eager to get the boys into the city and someday off of the docks.
Two rogues and a priest. The younger boys selling the imported goods while one would make his way through the crowd and into peoples pockets as the other held their attentions. When bids were made and payment unavailable it was the old man who’d make the arrangements, handle the guards and look after the boys if one was caught sifting through a crate that wasn’t meant for them.
Two rogues and an old priest, it always sounded funny to him. The more he reflected on the old man during his life without him the more Lyrax found it lacking. No guidance, no caring and most of all no hope. Old Zeraxis was never that old, maybe only in his late forties if anything but still sturdy and sharp with his wits. Old Zeraxis who taught them to fight and to read, to sing and laugh after they hid in the sewers for so long, rather than going on and being great himself he entrusted everything he had learned to two small children.
Then the box came. From a crate it was that damned box, with it’s jade and emerald encrusted exterior and the soft inner lining that protected the treasure within. The mask, Zeraxis had called it his prized treasure. Never to be sold and only to be kept as their own, an heirloom. It looked good sitting on the make shift mantle on the far end of the one room shack. No one questioned it or delved to deeply but always it loomed in the back of the two boy’s minds. Until Havoc wanted to try it on.It was always here that Lyrax saw as his life's defining moment. Not in the fresh unsuspecting morning but in the events that later took from him a father and a brother.
Havoc, youngest of the two had tried the mask on and fell prey to the curse of the Whisper. The ivory and steel creation forced him to wear it in the night and to kill, at first he was able to sate the curse with animals but then he started killing people. Dock workers and crew members of ships, people whom would not be easily missed or at least noticed for some time. Then he made the mistake. When Zeraxis had found out it was to be “Fate” that wore the mask, but he was never the speaker. Lyrax knew the words and had the tounge, not poor Havoc.
The calm, soothing voice of the priest was always fresh in his mind from the morning so long ago. Every time he allowed himself the reprieve of sleep the memory was like a flood. The smell of the ocean and the morning sunlight piercing the dirty windows of the shack the trio had called home, with its creaky floor boards and rotting support beams. Havoc always waited in that same corner, witling away at a piece of drift wood in the attempt to make something beautiful. Their adoptive father of sorts would bring him tea as he awoke, eager to get the boys into the city and someday off of the docks.
Two rogues and a priest. The younger boys selling the imported goods while one would make his way through the crowd and into peoples pockets as the other held their attentions. When bids were made and payment unavailable it was the old man who’d make the arrangements, handle the guards and look after the boys if one was caught sifting through a crate that wasn’t meant for them.
Two rogues and an old priest, it always sounded funny to him. The more he reflected on the old man during his life without him the more Lyrax found it lacking. No guidance, no caring and most of all no hope. Old Zeraxis was never that old, maybe only in his late forties if anything but still sturdy and sharp with his wits. Old Zeraxis who taught them to fight and to read, to sing and laugh after they hid in the sewers for so long, rather than going on and being great himself he entrusted everything he had learned to two small children.
Then the box came. From a crate it was that damned box, with it’s jade and emerald encrusted exterior and the soft inner lining that protected the treasure within. The mask, Zeraxis had called it his prized treasure. Never to be sold and only to be kept as their own, an heirloom. It looked good sitting on the make shift mantle on the far end of the one room shack. No one questioned it or delved to deeply but always it loomed in the back of the two boy’s minds. Until Havoc wanted to try it on.It was always here that Lyrax saw as his life's defining moment. Not in the fresh unsuspecting morning but in the events that later took from him a father and a brother.
Havoc, youngest of the two had tried the mask on and fell prey to the curse of the Whisper. The ivory and steel creation forced him to wear it in the night and to kill, at first he was able to sate the curse with animals but then he started killing people. Dock workers and crew members of ships, people whom would not be easily missed or at least noticed for some time. Then he made the mistake. When Zeraxis had found out it was to be “Fate” that wore the mask, but he was never the speaker. Lyrax knew the words and had the tounge, not poor Havoc.