Starting Date and Time: Jadeyan 13th, 300 DM, Mid-Morning
Starting Location: Pyresia, The City of Dragons
CS URLs: Drachiathoryx and GM
Pyresia only had two seasons. Hot, and rainy. The hot season was long, the bright sweltering monotony broken only by the occasional typhoon that lashed ineffectually against the volcanic mountain. The rainy season was humid and often overcast, and the beach on either side of the deep harbour grew swampy. But no matter what the season, Pyresia was a city of fantastic natural scenery. The frequent rains brought steam out of the lava pits to bring glistening dew to the bright veins of gemstone that sprawled all over. In the depths of the city the lava flows ran through a course of dwarf-made aqueducts, the orange glow reflecting on the underside of stone bridges and the fronts of shops as it oozed down the center of some of the larger boulevards. In addition to the lava itself, huge crystal geodes sprouted everywhere, mixed in with the dazzling and often phosphorescent jungle greenery that clung tenaciously to the elegant stonework. In some places, the coloured gemstone was underfoot, and pedestrians could look down through the street at the level below.
The upper half of the city, clustered around the steepest part of the peak, were the Balconies. Huge platforms clustered around the nearly vertical slope that served as the launch-pads for the dragons who lived there. Tunnels in the black basalt, some natural, some dwarf-craft, lead from those private homes deeper into the subterranean portion of the city, and were the only means of visiting by non-flighted people. At any time, day or night, colourful dragons patrolled the skies or strolled through the streets, many of them with simple markings painted on their wings.
Drachiathoryx lived in one such Balcony. It was a lofty residence for a half-dragon, but it didn't belong to her. Perhaps one day she would save up enough to afford a lavish home of her own, but for now she settled on being a continual thorn in Mojavico's side. But that was only when she was actually home, and right now she was not. The red-scaled half-breed was perched on the top of a large orange geode, legs and tail dangling as she watched people walking back and forth on the street below. Many of the streets were split-leveled, one half running over the roofs of the stone shops while the other was level with the doorways. This helped keep draconic feet from crushing human-sized citizens. The further away from the mountain itself, the less the architecture was designed to fit over-sized creatures.
It had rained the night before, so everything was damp with steam even though the clouds had cleared. As the day progressed, the sun would emerge from behind the peak and shine down on the western side of the city and the harbour beyond, but for now the foggy tendrils lingered. There was a play going on in one of the fancy amphitheaters nearby, and Drache could hear the uproar of the crowd as they laughed at the antics of the actors on stage. The Art District was enormous, the ornate roofs of museums and playhouses and the Artisan's Guild each trying to outdo the rest. But the budding Elementalist was focused on something much closer at claw. One of the elegant lava-flow channels coursed nearby. The air above it shimmered with the deadly heat, but Drache enjoyed it. Close to the smoldering stream was dryer than the rest of the tropical city. Perhaps one day she should visit a desert. There were supposedly all sorts of things to find in the mysterious wastes. Lots of fun ruins to explore!
Every now and then the glowing morass produced a tongue of flame, which was why the trenches were deep and there were few wooden structures in the city. Drache found that when these little sprites appeared she could capture them, mold them, hold them in her claws and bend them into all sorts of shapes. It was tiresome to do so, especially for very long, but if she was willing to endure the exhaustion afterwards she could form the most fantastic fireballs that either roared hotly or sparked with white zaps, depending on what she wanted. Or she could make the flames dance in long gleaming tendrils. It hadn't taken long to figure it out, though she didn't dare practice inside near her priceless books for fear of mishaps.
But even as she made a fiery pegasus the size of her hand flap around and prance along the cracking surface of the lava, she couldn't manipulate the ooze itself short of plunging her own hand into it. It was terribly frustrating and after an hour of trying to bend it to her will, she simply snorted contemptuously, smoke puffing from her nostrils, and slipped from the orange geode, landing lightly on her bare talons.
"Something to think about on the road ahead," she supposed, settling her loaded backpack against the small of her back where it wouldn't interfere with her wings.
Starting Location: Pyresia, The City of Dragons
CS URLs: Drachiathoryx and GM
Pyresia only had two seasons. Hot, and rainy. The hot season was long, the bright sweltering monotony broken only by the occasional typhoon that lashed ineffectually against the volcanic mountain. The rainy season was humid and often overcast, and the beach on either side of the deep harbour grew swampy. But no matter what the season, Pyresia was a city of fantastic natural scenery. The frequent rains brought steam out of the lava pits to bring glistening dew to the bright veins of gemstone that sprawled all over. In the depths of the city the lava flows ran through a course of dwarf-made aqueducts, the orange glow reflecting on the underside of stone bridges and the fronts of shops as it oozed down the center of some of the larger boulevards. In addition to the lava itself, huge crystal geodes sprouted everywhere, mixed in with the dazzling and often phosphorescent jungle greenery that clung tenaciously to the elegant stonework. In some places, the coloured gemstone was underfoot, and pedestrians could look down through the street at the level below.
The upper half of the city, clustered around the steepest part of the peak, were the Balconies. Huge platforms clustered around the nearly vertical slope that served as the launch-pads for the dragons who lived there. Tunnels in the black basalt, some natural, some dwarf-craft, lead from those private homes deeper into the subterranean portion of the city, and were the only means of visiting by non-flighted people. At any time, day or night, colourful dragons patrolled the skies or strolled through the streets, many of them with simple markings painted on their wings.
Drachiathoryx lived in one such Balcony. It was a lofty residence for a half-dragon, but it didn't belong to her. Perhaps one day she would save up enough to afford a lavish home of her own, but for now she settled on being a continual thorn in Mojavico's side. But that was only when she was actually home, and right now she was not. The red-scaled half-breed was perched on the top of a large orange geode, legs and tail dangling as she watched people walking back and forth on the street below. Many of the streets were split-leveled, one half running over the roofs of the stone shops while the other was level with the doorways. This helped keep draconic feet from crushing human-sized citizens. The further away from the mountain itself, the less the architecture was designed to fit over-sized creatures.
It had rained the night before, so everything was damp with steam even though the clouds had cleared. As the day progressed, the sun would emerge from behind the peak and shine down on the western side of the city and the harbour beyond, but for now the foggy tendrils lingered. There was a play going on in one of the fancy amphitheaters nearby, and Drache could hear the uproar of the crowd as they laughed at the antics of the actors on stage. The Art District was enormous, the ornate roofs of museums and playhouses and the Artisan's Guild each trying to outdo the rest. But the budding Elementalist was focused on something much closer at claw. One of the elegant lava-flow channels coursed nearby. The air above it shimmered with the deadly heat, but Drache enjoyed it. Close to the smoldering stream was dryer than the rest of the tropical city. Perhaps one day she should visit a desert. There were supposedly all sorts of things to find in the mysterious wastes. Lots of fun ruins to explore!
Every now and then the glowing morass produced a tongue of flame, which was why the trenches were deep and there were few wooden structures in the city. Drache found that when these little sprites appeared she could capture them, mold them, hold them in her claws and bend them into all sorts of shapes. It was tiresome to do so, especially for very long, but if she was willing to endure the exhaustion afterwards she could form the most fantastic fireballs that either roared hotly or sparked with white zaps, depending on what she wanted. Or she could make the flames dance in long gleaming tendrils. It hadn't taken long to figure it out, though she didn't dare practice inside near her priceless books for fear of mishaps.
But even as she made a fiery pegasus the size of her hand flap around and prance along the cracking surface of the lava, she couldn't manipulate the ooze itself short of plunging her own hand into it. It was terribly frustrating and after an hour of trying to bend it to her will, she simply snorted contemptuously, smoke puffing from her nostrils, and slipped from the orange geode, landing lightly on her bare talons.
"Something to think about on the road ahead," she supposed, settling her loaded backpack against the small of her back where it wouldn't interfere with her wings.