“I suppose so,” Lukas says as he balances himself with his lance. “Where are you going after this? If it’s in Zofia, I believe I can point you in the right direction.” The wyvern alone marks Zeiss as a foreigner, never mind the lack of knowledge of the war embroiling half of the continent. Maybe he’s here to seek Mila’s advice? He’s in for a nasty surprise, if that’s the case. “At least to guide you away from the worst of the fighting, so that you don’t get shot down by the Rigelians-”
The sound of horse hooves interrupts Lukas, and he quickly limps around Rubley towards the source, momentarily lifting his lance in case this newcomer isn’t an ally. A bow knight comes to a stop right beside the Deliverance’s archers. His massive horse dons the trappings of a (former) Knight of Zofia, stamping nervously at the sight of the wyvern. His rider is not nearly so perturbed, rather tightening his grip on his silver bow. Except for his lips pressing together in a tight thin line, Lukas’ expression is neutral. Years of etiquette lessons have taught him that he must bow his head to his social betters, but he ignores them today. “Sir Felix.”
“Sir Lukas,” the knight greets pleasantly, dark eyes cold like a stone. “I imagine you must have an excellent reason for being here, instead of with your group over at the catacombs. And with a…” Felix’s face twists in disgust as he regards the wyvern again, “a… dragon. Which- which is still alive- why is this monster still alive, again? Can any of you explain why a giant fucking lizard five feet in front of you is still alive?“ He’s addressing everyone as he asks that question, even Lukas, and something about that sparks anger in Lukas’ heart.
"Allow me,” Lukas says tersely. “I ordered them to stand down. Will that explanation suffice?”
Sir Felix splutters, face turning red in anger. “You- you have no right! As their captain-”
“As your lieutenant, my orders take precedence over yours,” Lukas snaps. “You may take your complaints to Clive if that is what you wish, but until then this wyvern and his rider are not to be harmed unless they prove themselves to be a threat.” He fixes the archers with a hard glare. “Do you understand me?”
The archers nod quickly, mumbling their “yes, sir”’s as they avoid Lukas’ eyes. Sir Felix does not answer as they do. He dismounts from his horse, approaches Lukas, and takes a deep breath before asking to speak with him in private away from the rest of the group. They speak quickly, the irritation and frustration clear in their voices only mounting over time, and the wyvern rider is brought up enough times that those in earshot of their conversation turn their heads over to him occasionally.
Lukas is frowning when he’s finished with his talk, exhaustion growing more obvious as he limps back over to the wyvern. “Zeiss,” Lukas calls as soon as he’s close enough, the sharpness in his voice from negotiating still present. He clears his throat, speaks more softly, more conscious of keeping his stewing frustration aside, “I’m sorry, but he- we cannot let you go just yet. We would like for you to come with us to our base, as another witness to what happened at the catacombs.“ And to make sure Lukas isn’t wrong in trusting him, as Felix had snidely put it. Lukas couldn’t convince him to allow Zeiss to go on his way, but this is surely better than getting feathered with arrows.
“The others would feel safer if you dismounted and kept a closer eye on Rubley,” Lukas adds. “With where we landed, the walk shouldn’t take too long.” Even Lukas could walk to this area of the forest with little trouble, and if Zeiss is as healthy as he looks he’ll be fine as well. As for himself… he’ll have to manage, unfortunately. Sir Felix and his horse are going ahead to inform Clive of their arrival, and in the shape that his hip is in right now he has no intention of getting back on the wyvern.
The scratches on his arms sting terribly as he offers a hand up to help Zeiss dismount, the other hand pushing the shaft of the lance down to get his "cane” back.
tell him where he's going? the alarm that had been suppressed by the easy comfort of the flight && then the lurching adrenaline of emergency now surges back full force, making his stomach tight as he stares down at lukas for what feels like a small eternity. he's gleaned enough of the situation he's gotten himself into to know that telling them he's on his way to rigel is not an option — they'd have no qualms about feathering him in a heart beat, then. he'll have to make something up, or maybe he can name a location in zofia further north, so at least he'll be on the right track.
fortunately ( or perhaps not so much so, in a moment ), the sound of hoof beats takes the attention off him, and all eyes turn to the bow knight riding in through the shadow of the trees. it takes only a look to read the startled hostility on his face when he looks at rubley for zeiss to guess that this situation's only going to go further downhill for him.
it takes all his self-control not to bark out in protest when the man spits out the word ' dragon ' — this isn't his place to interject, and anyway he guesses they wouldn't know the difference here, in this land where wyverns are foreign, strange beasts. but then he calls rubley a monster, and zeiss' hand tightens imperceptibly on the reins, jaw shifting. his returned stare at the bow knight has narrowed, taken on a steely glare. fine trappings, speech inflection and patterns that leave no contempt to the imagination — he's reminiscent of those etrurian bluebloods that look down their noses at the rest of elibe.
however, lukas is quick to jump to his defense, with a barely-concealed ire that catches zeiss off guard, as though the bow knight had somehow offended him too. stunned, he looks down at the bruised and battered knight, impressed to see the way he boldly holds his ground against a man who — as it becomes clearer and clearer by the moment — is determined to disregard him.
( it's frankly incredible to zeiss. unaware of the class difference, all
he sees is a subordinate officer antagonizing his superior, even
calling his orders into question. such a display would have him
immediately discharged — at least demoted — in bern. watching
lukas' retreating back as he steps away to speak with the archer,
he's baffled — why is he capitulating to this insolence? )
that stretch of small minutes is agonizing. lukas had told him he could leave, but it doesn't seem right to just take off again now when the six bowmen are still watching him warily and he hasn't even had a chance to thank the man and see how this all resolves. unsure, he sits quietly, keeping himself occupied with making sure rubley remains sedate; the thick, powerful body beneath him is tense with aggression, and a continuous, low rumble emanates from the wyvern's chest like subtle vibration. all his training and natural instincts are telling him to strike; zeiss is truthfully relieved he had managed to hold him back so well.
crunching footsteps through the grass return his attention to lukas, who looks even more worn than he had a moment ago. at his initially terse tone, zeiss instinctively straightens up in his saddle as though his own commander were addressing him. then it slowly sinks in, what he's telling him. go . . . with them, to their base? apprehension rises up, thick and solid, in his throat — he's already delayed his own travels his long. ( he's beginning to regret diverting himself to help with those terrors. ) rigel is expecting him to deliver the news, and if he gets waylaid too much, there may well be trouble.
but what other option does he have? refusing here would put him in treacherous position. with a firm ❝ yes, sir ❞ that masks his misgivings, he swings a leg around to dismount, stepping down on rubley's flank to stand now face to face with the armed soldiers around him. he slides his hand up the reins to clasp them at the base where they connect to rubley's breastplate so he can lead him firmly without any slack. with a stern glance to his mount that rubley knows means ' behave ', he turns to follow lukas deeper into the woods, choosing to keep quiet and as low and harmless a profile as one can with a war wyvern crunching through the underbrush beside him.