((ever wonder what Malachite was like back in the Dark Ages? When he still worked for Victorrio? Well screw you I'm posting it anyway. :P
[b:e4ade800e4]Beloved[/b:e4ade800e4]
The air was pungent, filled with all the delicacies one might expect from the Italian countryside in early fall. The valley, warmly held between two gentle slopes, was silent. A gentle mist rolled across the green pasture that lined the flatland, sparse yet lush trees emerging from the natural blanket. With the onset of dusk, everything had taken it's natural setting with one unsettling exception.
Atop either hill, stretching like a pair of living walls, sat opposing lines of horsemen. The eastern most hill was occupied by the forces of Frodrick Ritter, a land baron from the far north. The armored soldiers were perched on top of their steeds, who moved uneasily about, the tension even clear to them. From the depths of the line various flags and banners protrudes, exclaiming their loyalty to their master.
The men, whose true desire was to be home, were feifs and servants dug up. The bitter land struggle between Frodrick Ritter and Victorrio Venetti had cost them many lives, and had spilled blood across most of the countryside. Despite their losses, they fought on, like animals locked in a feud to the death.
As the moon began it's arduous scaling of the night sky, a lone figure rode down the hill towards the opposing force. Glistening, yet damaged, armor clad his body. He bore the scars of many battles both won and lost across his face. As the trollop of his steed echoed across the silent valley, the commander of the opposite line looked on.
Gigantic in comparison were their enemies, who sat rigid and statuesque on the western-most hill. Their armor was blackened and thick, too thick to weilded by mortal warriors. Their horses, their eyes sunken and hollow, remained motionless, fulfilling their purpose with no regard to their own animalistic instincts.
High black and blue flags flapped in the twilight, the blades of pikes and broadswords accompanying them. The men's faces were pale and skeletal, the expression of lust and want strewn through their features. They were souless.
In the midst of them sat Malachite, his armor almost as black as his skin. What was once human had almost been completely erased, long ago lost to the glories and savagries of war. Even the whites of his eyes had disappeared, the blackness of his pupils and soul devouring them. And so he sat, motionless, breathless, lifeless.
"Ho! Malachite!" the commander sat within the field, alone and vulnerable, a sign of his faith. "Thou may tell thy master of thine victorious day, for Frodrick Ritter has surrendered, and requests thy master's mercy." the speech did not suit the knight, who was bred for conquest, not pleading.
Malachite was silent for a long while, and took in the orchestra of the crickets, who chirped merrily where men dare not speak. The caw of the birds in the trees, preparing to hunt once more. Throughout the valley, the cycle of life and death was about to start anew.
The black knight nudged his horse forward and began the descent down the slope of the hill, stopping only several yards from his opposing commander. He rested his hand on the hilt of his blade, and allowed his horse to wander back and forth and if sizing up his prey.
"HEAR ME!" he bellowed, his voice resonating through the pasture. "For thy humility we shall be mercifull, as is the will of my Lord, the great Victorrio Venetti! We shall kill thee quickly!" Ritter's commander stuttered and wavered in his saddle, utterly aghast at the reply, but a glance from Malachite demanded his silence. He moved closer, his black deserted eyes peering into the being of the knight. He whispered harshly and gutterly, "We shall kill thee quickly for thy humility.....but for thy cowardice, we shall kill thy families and burn thy village to the ground!"
With the last hiss, he wretched his sword from it's jeweled scabbard and thrust it deep into the belly of the war ravaged General. Doubling over, the fatally struck soldier fell from his saddle, one of his legs getting caught in the stirrups in the process. Malachite laughed uproaringly and slapped the horses hindside with the broad of his sword.
As the horse careened through the valley with it's lifeless rider in tow, Frodrick's men watched in horror.
"KILL THEM!!!" Malachite cried, raising his bloodied sowrd into the air, "KILL THEM ALL!!!!" his voice joined the cries of his men as they washed over the valley like a pestulent wave, rapidly overtaking the enemy force. Malachite, and the last shreds of his humanity, were lost in the tides of battle.
+++++++++++++++++
"My Leige...I implore your forgiveness." the words stung like hot coals in the warriors mouth, and he knelt before his master in the great hall. In the exansive depths of the hall, his words boomed out over the stonework, no matter how quiet he attempted to be.
The hall itself was a long room, carpetted with thick red fabric, hand crafted by foreign merchants. Tapestries fell from the ceilings, their embroidered scenes depicting the glories of Ancient Rome and the exploits of their owner. The moonlight toppled through high windows and fell across the floor like rivulets. That same moonlight accentuated the drying, somewhat encrusted blood on Malachite's ebony armor.
"Our forgiveness is not to be expected Malachite, nor is our leniancy." Victorrio sat atop a high backed chair, robes draping across his form. The moonlight did not, whether by chance or by sheer will, touch him. His long thick black hair served as a crown over his shoulders. Slowly he stood, the blood of centuries flowing through his body and reverberating in Malachite's head. "With each passing night, thy grows more and more boorish. Tis a wonder that thou has any soul to be considered."
"My Lord, I assure thee..." Victorrio turned, his eyes dancing with the flames that flickered from the candelbras.
"Thou assures us NOTHING...not even loyal service. We never ordered thee to turn down thine enemies surrender. But thou hast all the same."
Malachite nodded, his hatred growing within him like a storm.
"Thy anger is misplaced, and should be focused not on us, but on thineself. We shall consider thy punishment, leave us now." Malachite stood and walked out of the great hall, his breath still heavy with the blood of his enemies.
As he tore off his battered armor and cast it aside for his squires to collect, he muttered with suppressed rage.
"I am thy Childe...and am treated as so...." Fuming he approached the window of his sizeable bedroom and cast his gaze out over the landscape. The night was clear and the countryside was visable for miles, the stink of the dead carried on the night air.