Silvermoon City Inn
It was a typical scene for Sardonix as he sat alone at a table in the dimly lit tavern along Murder Row. An old, dusty book in front of him, his eyes poured over the page as the text completely absorbed him. A single glass of Dalaran red sat half full within his reach, however he was too focused on his research to indulge in his drink just yet.
Sabrielle stalked into the inn with a sour expression on her face, which only accented the faint bruise that promised to blossom more fully over her right cheek within the next day or so.
"Punk." She muttered to herself as she made a cursory survey of the inn, her thoughts on the fight she'd just lost. Nobody of great interest caught her eye, and she crossed the room to pluck a bottle of ale from the ice bucket by the keepers' feet before tossing a coin at his chest. She took a long swig and turned, pausing as she made a secondary inspection of the patrons. The figure in the corner bore more than a passing resemblance to the curious man she'd met in Hammerfall as many nights ago. Tilting her head to one side, she walked towards him and leant on a nearby pole, silent as she took another drink.
"You know, if I believed in fate or coincidence, I'd be less likely to think you were following me." She licked her lips and quirked an eyebrow at him.
Sardonix quirked an eyebrow as he managed to pry his gaze from the book to glance up to Sabrielle. He chuckled softly, motioning to the chair across from him. "This time I am afraid I do not have a spare glass for you. Though," he nodded to the bottle in her hand before continuing. "Seems you might not need one."
She shrugged a shoulder, but accepted his invitation to join him. "I don't tend to rely on charity." She replied as she deposited herself into the opposite chair, having to resist the urge to prop her feet up on the table. "Appreciate the offer all the same."
Taking another drink, she wiped her mouth on the cloth bound around her wrist before speaking. "So. Obviously you've had enough of the 'hospitalities' of Hammerfall. Why Silvermoon?"
He tilted his head as he glanced to her with a quizzical gaze. "Because Silvermoon is my home? Truth be told, Dalaran is my real home. Though with the current state that it is in, I find myself wandering to Silvermoon more often than not." Shrugging slightly, he reached for his glass of wine, taking a small sip.
Sabrielle absently brought the bottle up to press the cool glass against her aching cheek. "Oh? Wasn't aware that there are issues in Dalaran. Though I guess it'd be arrogant to assume that all this shit with Hellscream wasn't spilling over to Northrend." She shrugged again. "Don't know much about it, don't really care."
She sighed, leaning back in her chair and removing the bottle to take another drink. "Hopefully you find at least a little of the comfort in Silvermoon that you'd find there. Not terribly well acquainted with Dalaran."
He shook his head. "With your distaste of... what did you call them? 'Magic slingers'?" He chuckled dryly as he grinned to her. "I would not imagine you would care too much about the happenings in Dalaran."
Waving a hand dismissively, he shook his head once more. "And you, Miss Dawnsong? What brings you to Murder Row?"
A smirk peered across her lips in spite of her mood.
"Mmm." She mused, licking her lips again. "A few drinks and a night of people watching, I suppose. I can't stand the simpering giggles and fluttering lashes in Wayfarers."
Sardonix chuckled softly, raising his glass once more, this time in a toast. "I will most certainly drink to that." He grinned to the woman before taking a longer drink. Placing his wine glass back against the table, Sardonix offered Sabrielle a smile.
He motioned to the condensation beading from her cheek. "Are you alright?"
Sabrielle quirked an eyebrow as he lifted his glass, mimicking the motion with her bottle. She shrugged mid-drink in response to his question, drawing her upper lip under her lower to free it of ale.
"Eh, I'm fine." She replied, shifting slightly in her seat. "Just a lucky shot and a bruise to show for it, no big deal. I'm rusty without blades, I guess."
He grinned to the woman, nodding. "Fair enough. As long as you are alright." Sardonix turned his attention from the woman's cheek to gaze down at his book. Placing a cloth marker between the pages, he closed the book to slide it off to the side. Reaching for the stem of his wine glass, his fingers trailed lightly against the cold glass before he lifted the wine to his lips.
The smirk returned quickly to her lips, and she crossed one leg over the other. "And if I weren't? Surely you're not concerned for my welfare so quickly."
Sardonix laughed, shaking his head. He smirked, shrugging his shoulders. "I believe you and I to hold some key commonalities. It would be in my best interest to ensure your well being. For the moment, at any rate. Though it appears you are more than capable of taking care of yourself."
Sabrielle snickered and wagged a finger at him knowingly. "Of course. That makes much more sense. Not the welfare of myself, per se, but the welfare of what I bring to the table, so to speak. The enemy of my enemy is my friend, and all that."
She paused with the bottle halfway to her mouth again, quirking an eyebrow at him. "Or was I supposed to act all girlish and fall all over myself because you expressed an interest to protect me?" She snorted in amusement at her own joke before draining the rest of the bottle and setting it on the table.
He chuckled, shaking his head. "Of course not. Though I find it more curious that you are not offended by my statement." Shrugging once more, he quirked an eyebrow as he looked back to her. "But you are correct. And I find myself greatly interested in the concept that you may regard Miss Shadowsong as an 'enemy.'"
"It would be somewhat hypocritical of me to be offended, don't you think?" Without elaborating, she folded her arms and slumped back in the chair so that her head rested against the back of it.
"Though you seem to be still splitting hairs on my choice of words. Simply an old adage to agree that we have something in common, nothing more. Yet you've still not alluded to what it is about her that intrigues you so." She quirked an eyebrow. 'Not that I expect him to be forthcoming with his motives,' she mused. "I can hardly imagine that you desire the title of Visionary for yourself."
Sardonix laughed heartily, shaking his head. "Mm, no. Far from that. She can keep the title in all of its glory." He took another drink of his wine before smiling to her. "But I could ask the same about what you seek from her. Though I know full well that neither of us are going to divulge our secrets. Not yet."
She grinned at his amusement, resting her elbow on the chair arm and propping her head up on her hand. "This is true. Though I must say, it's refreshing to be able to do away with the foreplay of pretense, and simply be aware that we have our own motives."
Sabrielle inspected a fingernail on her free hand, scowling as she noted the broken nail. Picking at it with her thumbnail, she glanced to Sardonix again. "I have to say, for being a Magister.. You don't have that..." She gesticulated as though searching for the word. "Pretentiousness, about you. You know what you want, presumably how to get it, and you're more about being patient and waiting than making a song and dance about not having it already." That was about as close to a compliment as she was going to get.
He quirked an eyebrow as he smiled to her, nodding in approval. "I appreciate your candor as well, Miss Dawnsong. It seems we are both driven to achieve our goals. And for that I am thankful. Particularly that I am not required to feign interest like I must around Miss Shadowsong. The entire farce is tedious."
She laughed at that. "Well that I am heartened by. Nothing worse than working to achieve a common goal while feeling there would be more pleasure in pulling out your own teeth instead." She smirked, quirking an eyebrow. "Though I wonder which farce is more tedious - yours, or hers."
Snickering to herself, she motioned to the waitress to bring another drink. " And please. Sabrielle." She insisted. "Not one for formalities, I'm afraid. Though if you wish me to call you Magister Shadowflame.. I suppose I can oblige."
He laughed, shaking his head. "Sardonix works perfectly fine." He lifted the glass to his mouth, rolling the edge of the glass against his lower lip briefly before taking a drink. "A 'pretentious' magister would request to be addressed as such."
Lowering his glass to the table once more, he offered her a smile before bowing his head. "I do not seek fancy titles for my own feeling of self importance. Only knowledge. That is what I seek. After all, knowledge is power."
Sabrielle offered him a coy smirk in return. "Indeed it is. Don't think it's lost on me that you entertain my presence for the value of my company. It does beg the question, however, of just how powerful the knowledge I have would be to you... And what you'd do to get it. Because as I see it, if knowledge is power, and I have knowledge you don't... That makes me more powerful than you."
She leaned forward then, resting both forearms on the table. "And presumably, like you.. I'm not particularly fond of giving away power to just anyone, for any reason. Even if it sees my goals accomplished more hastily."
His gaze narrowed in on her face, an amused grin playing about his lips. "Mmm, that entirely depends on what sort of compensation you seek for your knowledge. Though I cannot say I am entirely sure that you possess the knowledge I require. Though I do find you in a more suitable position to acquire that knowledge. More suitable than myself, at any rate."
She shrugged her shoulders without moving her arms from the table. "Then I suppose we find ourselves at an impasse. Without knowing what you want, I can hardly name a price, can I? And I'm certainly not about to start listing things I think you might be interested in."
Pursing her lips slightly, she narrowed her eyes a fraction in return; though her expression remained on the amused side of neutral. "And the underlying suggestion of being used for your gains hasn't been lost on me, either."
He smirked in amusement. "Underlying? And here I thought I was being fairly blunt with that fact." Chuckling softly, he quirked an eyebrow as his eyes studied her face a while. Nodding slowly, he lowered his voice to a whisper before leaning across the table toward her.
"Alright then. I seek more information regarding the namesake of her beloved order."
"Sarcasm isn't your strong suit, is it." She made it a statement, not a question, shifting so her free hand could twirl her ponytail as he leaned in. She was naturally adept with her body language, able to make the serious discussion look innocuous to an onlooker.
"Lionsbane?" She murmured, covering the quirk of her brow with a demure flutter of her lashes as the waitress came to set down another bottle on the table. Sabrielle waited for her to depart before speaking again. "And what of it? Just a name, is it not? On the premise of being pro-Horde?" She feigned ignorance, curious to see what he would share.
He grinned in amusement as he watched her eyes. "And ignorance is not your strong suit, my dear." He chuckled, his hands reaching to clasp the wine glass. "Or am I to assume you are truly unaware of the history behind the name 'Lionsbane'?"
She shrugged a shoulder as she reached for the new bottle, taking a drink and passing a cursory glance over the inn as she did so. "We've all heard the stories, I'm sure." She said at length, sucking on her upper lip for a moment as she looked back to him.
"So what, you're looking for a thing of legend?" She rested the edge of the bottle bottom on the table, using the neck to roll it side to side. "What's that got to do with Jasolei, exactly?"
His gaze narrowed in on her, eyes reading her features as if she were one of his books. "Mmm," he muttered before leaning back in his chair. Feeling he had said too much already, he shook his head before taking a long drink of wine to finish the remainder of his glass. "A story for another day, perhaps?"
Her expression was neutral and her gaze steady as she watched him retract, packing himself away into a box of impassivity. "Uh huh." She sounded unconvinced and she looked away, her eyes falling on nothing in particular.
"I'm not sure what there's to be gained by being obscure or simply flirting around the answer." She shrugged a shoulder. "But if you wish to delay the discussion for another evening, by all means. I can wait. Impatiently patient, as I've been called before."














