Much to my confutation and consternation, I have been confronted with yet another vicissitude of the consanguine variety (:P) thus prolonging Qiams tale. I made some modifications to the previous chapter, so drastic they were that I thought to submit the renewed version seperately... This adds about 500 words as well.
The conversation with the dragon is turning out to be really fun to write...
Its a little choppy though
The Poet of Grey Watch-- Part 4 v 2.0
Qiam sinuously slid, by way of an elegant, anatomical compression, through the slender cavern opening. Anon he fumbled instinctively through the darkness, aware of naught but a fetid aroma emanating from below and the padding of his wet feet on the cold stone. He groped tentatively --like a blind man bereft of cane-- his innate night-eye ineffectual in a darkness of such concentration. Normally, he would have employed a light spell to assist him in navigating the cavern, but he had exhausted his daily magicka reservoir in an encounter with a rogue barbarian -- the self proclaimed "Emissary of Xzaegith", whose composite features presently bedecked the mountainside in grotesque ornamentation.
Suddenly, and without reservation, the cavern was ablaze with a blinding light, perpetually variable in color and tone. In this new luminescence, the details of his environment were plainly revealed. The walls were glazed with crystals of infinitesimal proportions, shaped, clustered, and fused so as to resemble polymerized origami. They were brittle, like the shed shells of loci, and grew in chaotic, inextricable patterns. They shifted restlessly --independently-- through various iridescent hues, spanning the whole of the electromagnetic spectrum. Qiam felt the combined visual effect comparable to being thrust amid an aurora. Each hue (and variant thereof) corresponded with a harmonious chime of inexplicable source, like a symphony of bells and gongs ringing in barely perceptible, celestial rhythm. Never before had Qiam witnessed such a wondrous panorama of synchronized light and sound. Though he was confused as to the nature of this display, he marveled at the kaleidoscopic exhibit like a child marvels at the sea, or the limitless expanse of the firmament.
From far back in the cavern came a score of tenuous tendrils, floundering in languid activity, like the arms of octopi. A boreal wind attended it, ruffling his robes, caressing his spine with chill, sensitive strokes. A voice followed, and it was of a patently familiar frequency and pitch.
It resonated deep as the rumbling preparatory to a volcanic eruption. "Come, Khajiit," it articulated. "We have much to discuss. Primarily: your explicit hostility toward my servitors, your multiform exploits, and your dashing good looks?which, verily, rival my own. Come, and we shall discuss these things amid my manifold treasures: my jewels and phylacteries, my armaments and appurtenances, my supple seducers with jet black hair and ivory white skin. Come, and I shall greet you warmly."
Both the auditory and visual pageantry abruptly faded, as if it they were but a product of the eldritch voice.
Qiam was suddenly cognizant of a fabulous fragrance, an aromatic odor, a regal cologne?as would appropriate the marble white wrists of a voluptuary. He bethought the scent pleasurable beyond adequate description, intoxicating in its density. And as he ventured further forth, the smell grew ever more pervasive.
To either side of that virtuous vagrant ignited a succession of flambeaux, illumining a seemingly immeasurable expanse of material prosperity. Never before had he beheld an affluence so haphazardly divided, so arbitrarily dispersed, so chaotic and disorderly. Here sprawled heaps of varicolored coinage dappled with alluring coruscations-- emerald, sapphire, jade, turquoise, onyx?wrought in multiplex geometric formations; there-- a medley of brooding, ritualistic impedimenta. Indecently postured Gargoyles leered at him as he traversed the corridor, countenances ominous and phantasmal, lecherous and perverse, portraying an insatiable rapine lust.
The walls were hung with tapestries of an exquisite make, depicting a variety of traditional mythological scenarios, rendered in vivid pigments. One such decorative item exhibited a paladin clad in black panoply engaging a ferocious basilisk, another?an elfin wizard affecting a motley array of mystic articles. The floor, a veritable wading pool of rarities, was punctuated at frequent intervals with human skulls?their eye-sockets inset with faceted rubies, radiant and baleful, like frozen blood. Iron-wrought reliquaries bedizened the hall, brimming with gold coins, silver ingots, and polished gemstones. On a low table, leg deep in sundry scintillations, stood an array of alchemic appliances-- alembics, retorts, a diverse assortment of flasks? sheathed in ethereal refractions and mercurial strands of light.
The stretch terminated in a vast rotunda lined with individuals of sinister aspect. In the center, occupying a major percentage of its capacity, Qiam spied that which he had sought since the beginning. The dragon lounged like a great, languorous lion atop a mound of gold coins, sifting them in sparkling rivulets through its paws like so much sand. It tilted its head in studious examination of Qiams figure. Hardly could Qiam return this scrutiny, however, for its bedding was as bright as the sun, reflecting the frenzied light of the flambeaux.
Silk laden women sprawled in sensuous abandon about the dragon's perimeter, lithe and seductive. How voluptuous and beautiful they were-- eyes like glistening moonstones; lips like ripe, sanguine blossoms; bosoms soft and pliant as dough! They affected the representative attire of odalisques?a variety at once opulently adorned and overtly revealing, provocative and negligible. To the dragon they proffered trays lain with an extensive selection of victuals?abundantly bundled graqes; hardened wedges of cheese; tenderized slabs of meat; freshly aromatic breads glistening gold with butter; opaque wines hued like deepening twilight?which, at intervals, he casually consumed.
A prodigious pipe hung from his mouth, sustaining a copious cumulous mottled with shades of umber and black. He roused listlessly --in an opiate induced stupor-- displacing a minute percentage of his mound with an amplified tinkling. He lifted the pipe from his mouth, contracted the circumference of his lips, and projected a lengthy stream of smoke in Qiam's general direction, enveloping him in a dusky, leisurely revolving shroud. Qiam coughed and waved indignantly, producing several inarticulate protests. One of the concubines laughed resonantly, briasts heaving, headdress of peacock plumes bobbing.
By slow degrees, the dragon's laughter diminished in intensity. His lips parted in a sardonic grin, revealing a mouth lined with lustrous white teeth curved like scimitars. "Tell me, Qiam" Quoth he, "On what impulse have you come to Akavir?"
"More importantly," Qiam responded, coughing intermittently, "on what impulse did you see it fit to delay my impending appointment, render me the subject of yonder vixen's amusemant, and propel a cumulous of opium about my person? I hesitate to argue with a demigod (due to an instinctual concern for my immediate well being), but this type of behavior is not the proper etiquette for welcoming strangers into one's hall."
"Bah!" admonished the dragon, lifting an excited concubine in his paw like a delicate, ivory fetish. She was garbed in a diminutive skirt of gossamer silk that served to accentuate, rather than conceal, the appearance of her voluptuous contours. It hung like an opalescent waterfall from the jewel adorned girdle affixed loosely about her waist. Her fingers and toes were ornamented with silver circlets, brass rings, filigreed trinkets, each of a meticulously detailed configuration. Chief in seductive aspect amid her affectations were a pair of briast plates patterned with concurrent circles-- in the center of which protruded a pyramid of lapis lazuli. With a passionate adoration he stroked her black, silken tresses, fondled her emblazoned apparel, caressed her ample endowments. She yawned and stretched, flaunting her curvaceous attributes, the torchlight flitting in restless flares off her bejeweled apparel.
Anon the dragon elaborated upon his exclamation. "I am old, and in order to alleviate the tedium of quotidian life, I often subject others to embarrassing scenarios from which to obtain vicarious pleasure. For instance--" the dragon abruptly withdrew his hand from under the harlet. She plummeted with an undignified floundering of ivory limbs, a flaying of bright silks, to land square on her buttocks and yelp pathetically. She scrambled to her feet in an awkward, undignified manner, repositioning herself in the shade of her master. Her sable locks hung from her scalp in lank rills, partially concealing her shamed countenance.
Qiam chuckled involuntarily.
"Entertaining, yes? We might have fun, you and I" ruminated the dragon, discharging a diaphanous ribbon of smoke from either of his slender nostrils. "But first-- be frank with me. You came for my treasure, did you not? To plunder a proportion! To pinch a profit! To purloin a percentage!"
Qiam shook his head in rueful dismay. "I am afraid you are mistaken. My intentions are,in essence, wholly unobtrusive."
"Is that so?" the dragon inquired.
"It is indeed so," was his stolid reply. Just as soon as Qiam finished this sentence, however, his purse unfastened, the straps from which it hung suspended released, and the heretofore enclose articles spilled forth in a brilliant, tinkling cataract. With his assorted curios, trinkets, and implements spread before the dragon, Qiam felt like an addict confronted by his family members with an array of confiscated paraphernalia.
Of particular note among these subsidiary appurtenances was a leather bound tome shut with verdigris encrusted clasps. Such was Qiam's spell book-- terrible and malefic in aspect, etched with cryptic runes that blazed with the fervidity of witch fires, or seared at the touch, like a mordant acid. Herein, upon pages of soot-stained vellum, were inscribed all the summons, thaumaturgies, and mystic invocations of his arcane erudition. On the volume's cover, emitting a frigid blue radiance, was a sapphire of profound density, dark as the ocean deep, in which swam strange and indefinite grotesquerie.
The book, by means unseen, ascended to an altitude parallel with the dragon's face, opened, and lay there, gently bobbing, like a buoy at sea. An invisible hand began to cycle through its pages, like a vehement wind.
After an interval of sifting, studying, and cogitating upon the contents of Qiam's spell book, the dragon reprimanded him in tones of controlled aggravation. "I can't help but note several conspicuous insertions herein-- inscribed in fresh ink! This spell, listed as 'The 99th Lucrative Mysticism', infused with magick vitality but a fortnight ago, possesses a description of disconcertingly specific aspect: 'For the immobilization of a dragon.' That of an associated spell, 'The Ultimate Agony', is equally acute, and indubitably the work of a disturbed mind: 'For the introduction of a carnivorous Molester Worm into the cranium of an immobilized dragon by way of nasal incursion.' Indeed, in regard to the last, I am instantly curious as to what a Molester Worm is."
Qiam's countenance instantly brightened. "If you would --for but a moment-- distend the perimeter of your nostrils --"
"I would rather not."
Qiam shrugged indifferently, "A missed opportunity. Few are willing to experience the thrill. "
"I can only imagine."