The sphere was made of blue tinted crystal, hazy with magic and refraction, at just the right size to fit snugly into the palm of a hand. It was also disconcertingly silent. The tattooed man held it at his ear for a moment longer, then tapped it lightly against a nearby crate. Still nothing. Damn. He knew what that meant--the master was either abandoning the mission or had achieved his true objective and no longer needed his men alive.
Well then. The others, put in this situation, might have frozen up, listening to the silent communication orb until the enraged blades of their former victims found their backs. Some of the recruits they were getting these days, they couldn't function without the master's voice whispering constantly in their ears. Useful for cannon fodder but not much else. The tattooed man liked to think of himself as more intelligent than that. Certainly he was more clever, which might be more useful than intelligence in a situation like this.
The tattooed man dropped the orb back into his pocket--it might come in handy later--and scanned the hold. The undead abomination and its assailant were still hidden in a cloud of red mist, gore splattering everything around them: nearby was the dwarf with the crossbow, peering into the dimness. The tattooed man would have to be careful of that one. Dwarves tended to have better night vision than most, and what's more the crossbow this one was using looked to be a custom-job marksman's weapon. There was bone-breaking power behind those shots, the reload time looked to be cut down quite a bit by some mechanism that he didn't recognize, the drop was almost negligible and the bastard knew how to use the thing. Not good odds there.
The wizard he could ignore now, he thought. He'd be surprised if the man had enough power left to light a candle. The boy, Keil, he was still unconscious, and the one-armed swordsman looked to be slipping away as well. Don't need to worry about them.
No escape routes sprang to mind, though...
The tattooed man looked up at a soft whinny from nearby, and a slow smile spread across his face.
_____________________________________________
He was sitting at a dark corner table, by the back door of the tavern, when Ticky's air elemental found him. The sylph fluttered around the table, whirling about the seated figure, singing,
It's him! He's here! The elemental's movements pulled at his cloak, and he had to snatch at the edge of the hood to keep it from slipping off his head.
Ticky and Derlan were a little behind the sylph, due to the elemental being able to slip through spaces where they didn't fit. They came through the door of the tavern warily: this was not a place either of them would normally frequent, at least not without heavy armament.
The man in the cloak stood suddenly when he saw them, shoving two crystal spheres in his pocket. They were only visible for a second: one was pale, misty blue, while the other was pitch black and dull as a dead eye. They couldn't see his eyes beneath the hood--most of his face was concealed, actually--but he still gave an impression of staring them down from across the room.
Such a thing tends to be noticed, in a tavern like this. The other patrons were surly, hard-drinking sailors, but they knew bad trouble when they saw it. Most of them cleared a path between the gnome and the elf and the cloaked man, except for a few who were too drunk to get the memo.
The bartender drew forth a club of lead-cored wood and set it down on the counter with all the casualness of a death threat, and started clearing the glasses off the counter.
_____________________________________________
"Come on, you stupid beast, let's be friends, eh?" The tone was soothing and calm, but the horse glared at the tattooed man all the same. It was a warhorse, well-kept and strong, sequestered in an old stall that looked like it had been recently swept out and cleaned. He had no idea who the horse belonged to, but he wasn't one to question opportunity when it came knocking. Or whinnying, in this case.
The horse tried to take a bite out of his face, teeth closing on air with a tombstone click, and the tattooed man decided to forget about the subtle route. The horse was trained to respond to its master's voice and to kill the hell out of everyone else: he wouldn't override that training with a few soothing words and an apple. He leapt, swinging around the neck and onto the horse's back before it knew what was happening. The beast tried to rear, found that it couldn't, and smashed the stall door open instead.
Heads turned at the sound, but whatever they expected to see, what appeared wasn't it. The tattooed man clung to the back of the warhorse, tight against its back, as it tried violently to shake him off. Alexis reflexively pulled the trigger of his crossbow, but he had been expecting to be shooting at a man on foot, and his bolt shot past the horse's neck with an angry whine.
The horse pounded through the hold, heading for the wide doorway where Marneus stood. It leapt over Keil's prone body, sped past the red cloud where the undead abomination was slowly being torn to pieces, and crashed straight through one of the flimsier crates. The tattooed man looked up and saw Marneus bearing down, the knight's glare making itself known even through his helmet. The tattooed man scrabbled for his knife for a moment, then gave up and rolled off the horse's back as Marneus' armored fist swept through the air where he had been moments before. The tattooed man hit the floor hard, and only luck brought him into a roll that took him behind Marneus and out the doorway. Unlike his comrade-in-tattoos in Keil's room he didn't waste time trying to kill the armored knight with only a dagger, opting instead to sprint down the corridor, moving towards the hatch with a staggering run.
He would have made it, too, if Reeko hadn't stepped out of the shadows and thrown a knife into his eye.
_____________________________________________
Boots pounded on the upper deck, sounding loud and urgent in the stillness. Captain Grummond glared at the ceiling, listening furiously at the sound of yet more intruders on his ship. The footsteps thudded to the hatch and came down fast: sounded like there were at least six people up there.
Grummond turned the corner, pistol at the ready. "Bastards trying to attack
my ship--" he began, before a truncheon swept his gun hand up above his head and planted a neat blow to his solar plexus. He stumbled backwards with a gust of expelled air, and looked up into the point of a sword.
"This is the Provost's Guard," said the armored man with the blade at the captain's throat, "and until we figure out what's happening, I'd suggest not moving a single muscle."