leicesters: academy (006)
Claude von Riegan ([personal profile] leicesters) wrote in [community profile] aionchat2022-08-26 04:57 pm

PLEROMA - a few days after the raid

[Despite Claude's best efforts to shut his emotions out of this communion, it's impossible to fully avoid muted feelings of anger and bitterness leaking across the connection. Still, he addresses his thoughts in a calm, measured way, even if he's noticeably more downbeat than usual.]

Hiya. This is Claude, one of the new guys. I know most of us are still licking our wounds after what happened in Achamoth, but I wanted to discuss a few things.

What was the point of invading Achamoth, really? We attacked an enemy's stronghold, took back two of our own like we planned, sure-- but we lost two more in the process, and at least one smaller dragon lost its life trying to save us. And what else did we get out of it? A single prisoner? Some superficial damage to the city, which mostly would've just hurt civilians?

I don't want to act like war is just a game of numbers, when so many of you cared about the prisoners to go to these lengths for them, but strategically, the whole idea was insane. Personally, I was reassured a plan was being worked on, and that I just had to trust it was in hand. Sure, the big dragon that helped us was great, but it had to give its life for us. Both lives, even. And our escape route only came in the nick of time! If the forest dragons hadn't sympathised with our cause, we would have all been screwed.

If we mount any coordinated attacks in future, can we actually think about it at length? You know, plot it out from start to finish, try and account for as many variables as we can, not just talk about what enemies we might face and how they fight. And if we're going to walk into obvious traps, can we actually think about what the trap might be and how to mitigate it?

[He pauses. He's angry, if only because for a sect so supposedly dedicated to defending life, so many of them are too reckless about throwing lives away just to save a handful of others. Some casualties are inevitable in war, but these losses didn't have to be. That's what bothers him about all this more than anything.]

Anyway... I don't want to just gripe, so I also wanted to consider our long-term goals. I spoke to the dragon -- Estinien and the other thing? -- before the fighting started, and they made it sound like a direct assault on the Regent is nigh impossible. The Regent's corruption in that part of Horos is too powerful, the Citadel especially.

So, I think if we want to make them vulnerable at all, we have to figure out a way to purify the land. I don't know how yet, and the dragon wasn't sure either, but I want to believe it's possible. If you have any thoughts, I'd love to hear them.
locumstudentesquire: (pic#15862122)

[personal profile] locumstudentesquire 2022-09-04 06:43 pm (UTC)(link)
...It might have happened anyway, eventually. M killing Estinien, I mean. I don't know... [It feels like wherever he is, he must be furrowing his brow, frowning darkly, recalling a different memory.] I did have an opportunity to speak to M eventually, about his motivations... He had it out for Estinien. Felt he was owed some kind of revenge, I suppose. The Innocence's contagion may have just made it easier for him to pull that off, but. I think they would have clashed eventually, one way or another.

[...But he's getting off topic here.]

You're not wrong about her seeming unreasonable... She seemed to operate with the logic of a very young child, at times. Whether that excuses the harm she caused or not...

[He trails off. Ymmv, apparently.]

Before I explain her next appearance, you should know that we did look into the matter of the creature further, after we returned to the Greentruth. Answers weren't immediately forthcoming, but we did at least learn from Miss Tehri that the mark it had placed on several of us indicated a... A contract, or a promise of some sort, placed by Aion. It seemed like the Innocence had literally tasked us with proving to her that... That 'peace' could be reached voluntarily, rather than by force, which was her method of choice with her contagion.