The sun was setting behind the city in the middle distance, Dalvastre, his destination. Framed by the evening’s crimson glow and with the mountains rising up behind her, she truly looked like a city with the world on her shoulders. Amid the sprawl, the spires of what he assumed were churches and basilicas carved a harsh and tattered skyline.
He drove his heels into the side of the gelding he sat atop and, as the creature drove forward, the trail dust was flung into nervous pirouettes around its hooves. Across the flat terrain, he could see the crowds from almost a league away, the refugees, the hopefuls, the masses in search of work, or shelter. The biggest city for almost fifty leagues in any direction, Dalvastre was a beacon if industry in an otherwise arid landscape, any farmer whose crops had failed or blacksmith worth their salt eventually ended up there. All too willing to become a cog in the monstrous, grey machine.
He pondered that notion for a while and realised that he oughtn’t pity or look down on the mass of humanity seething just outside the city walls. After all, he was soon to be one of them. The Imperial Writ he carried set him apart in a sense, but he was still drawn here, like every other moth, to the fires of the forge.
As he drew closer, he was beginning to feel the strain of his long ride. He ran his hand over the ridges and scars of his shaven head and let his palm settle against the back of his neck. Rolling his head from side to side, he began to hear the shouts of the soldiers at the city gates, corralling people into lines. As the sun set further behind the city, the air cooled and he felt the sweat on his face cool with it, gathering in the labyrinth of lines and scars that was his face. If faces told stories, his would not be one with a happy ending.
The soldiers had split the crowd into two lines and, as he approached, he dismounted and led his horse up through the middle of them. This would not go down well but he didn’t fancy waiting in line for hours only to be told that there would be no more entrants today and that he would have to wait until tomorrow. He did not want to spend another night with only his horse as company. Adjusting his sword belt, the wakizashi sitting at his left hip and the fencing eppe at his right bounced against his thighs as he walked.
As he made his way between the two rows of people he saw them at the front. The Ablated. Two of them, each with a handler. Poor bastards. He never thought much of mages or their arts but he had to concede that to have all that you were, all that you could do, taken away by an obsidian needle through the eye and into your brain…it wasn’t right. But to the empire, those poor handicapped souls still served a purpose. The previous emperor’s bigotry had proved to be hereditary and, with Gabriel Val M’ahr III on the throne, the persecution of all things magical was still strong. It turned out that an Ablated, although no longer capable of using magic, could still sense it. They were the first line of defence against the arcane arts entering Dalvastre.
As he reached the gates, a young soldier approached with two others flanking him.
“To the back of the line with everyone else!” He barked. The Shaven Headed man looked at the soldier and his two accomplices and something akin to a smile crept across his face. The young man was strong and energetic, he could tell by the soldier’s posture. A fire burned within him and the man couldn’t help but think he was bound for great things.“Did you hear what I said?”
“What’s your name, soldier?” The Shaven Headed Man asked.
“Matrius Shard…” His question clearly caught the young soldier off guard. “Why?”
He pulled the imperial writ from a fold in his tunic and held it out to the young man.
“If I wait in line with everyone else, you and I both know I won’t be getting through those gates today.” He began as the young man unfurled the scroll he had been handed. “If I don’t get through today, then I will be late for my meeting with the emperor, and I’m sure His Excellency would enjoy knowing the name of the man who made him wait for my arrival.”
Keeping as straight-faced as possible and not allowing the threat to affect him in front of his entourage, the young soldier returned the scroll. Without turning his back on the Shaven Headed Man, Shard called back for the gates to be opened. Bound for great things. As he made his way through the gates, the sun was truly setting and the buildings cast increasingly long shadows on Dalvastre’s cobbled streets. He swung by the stables and sold his horse. The creature had done well but their journey was over. Besides, the Shaven Headed Man knew where he was going. Like a siren’s song, it called to him. There was only one place a man like him would go with an evening to pass in Dalvastre.
The Stiltwalker’s Fall
He drove his heels into the side of the gelding he sat atop and, as the creature drove forward, the trail dust was flung into nervous pirouettes around its hooves. Across the flat terrain, he could see the crowds from almost a league away, the refugees, the hopefuls, the masses in search of work, or shelter. The biggest city for almost fifty leagues in any direction, Dalvastre was a beacon if industry in an otherwise arid landscape, any farmer whose crops had failed or blacksmith worth their salt eventually ended up there. All too willing to become a cog in the monstrous, grey machine.
He pondered that notion for a while and realised that he oughtn’t pity or look down on the mass of humanity seething just outside the city walls. After all, he was soon to be one of them. The Imperial Writ he carried set him apart in a sense, but he was still drawn here, like every other moth, to the fires of the forge.
As he drew closer, he was beginning to feel the strain of his long ride. He ran his hand over the ridges and scars of his shaven head and let his palm settle against the back of his neck. Rolling his head from side to side, he began to hear the shouts of the soldiers at the city gates, corralling people into lines. As the sun set further behind the city, the air cooled and he felt the sweat on his face cool with it, gathering in the labyrinth of lines and scars that was his face. If faces told stories, his would not be one with a happy ending.
The soldiers had split the crowd into two lines and, as he approached, he dismounted and led his horse up through the middle of them. This would not go down well but he didn’t fancy waiting in line for hours only to be told that there would be no more entrants today and that he would have to wait until tomorrow. He did not want to spend another night with only his horse as company. Adjusting his sword belt, the wakizashi sitting at his left hip and the fencing eppe at his right bounced against his thighs as he walked.
As he made his way between the two rows of people he saw them at the front. The Ablated. Two of them, each with a handler. Poor bastards. He never thought much of mages or their arts but he had to concede that to have all that you were, all that you could do, taken away by an obsidian needle through the eye and into your brain…it wasn’t right. But to the empire, those poor handicapped souls still served a purpose. The previous emperor’s bigotry had proved to be hereditary and, with Gabriel Val M’ahr III on the throne, the persecution of all things magical was still strong. It turned out that an Ablated, although no longer capable of using magic, could still sense it. They were the first line of defence against the arcane arts entering Dalvastre.
As he reached the gates, a young soldier approached with two others flanking him.
“To the back of the line with everyone else!” He barked. The Shaven Headed man looked at the soldier and his two accomplices and something akin to a smile crept across his face. The young man was strong and energetic, he could tell by the soldier’s posture. A fire burned within him and the man couldn’t help but think he was bound for great things.“Did you hear what I said?”
“What’s your name, soldier?” The Shaven Headed Man asked.
“Matrius Shard…” His question clearly caught the young soldier off guard. “Why?”
He pulled the imperial writ from a fold in his tunic and held it out to the young man.
“If I wait in line with everyone else, you and I both know I won’t be getting through those gates today.” He began as the young man unfurled the scroll he had been handed. “If I don’t get through today, then I will be late for my meeting with the emperor, and I’m sure His Excellency would enjoy knowing the name of the man who made him wait for my arrival.”
Keeping as straight-faced as possible and not allowing the threat to affect him in front of his entourage, the young soldier returned the scroll. Without turning his back on the Shaven Headed Man, Shard called back for the gates to be opened. Bound for great things. As he made his way through the gates, the sun was truly setting and the buildings cast increasingly long shadows on Dalvastre’s cobbled streets. He swung by the stables and sold his horse. The creature had done well but their journey was over. Besides, the Shaven Headed Man knew where he was going. Like a siren’s song, it called to him. There was only one place a man like him would go with an evening to pass in Dalvastre.
The Stiltwalker’s Fall