Miriam Chapter 27: No-where
Walter quirked a furry brow and smiled thinly, his head tilted to peer at the mute huntress and he blinked.
"Miriam?" He asked, leaning in to observe her deadpan expression.
She snapped out of it and looked at the wizard alertly. Then she blinked forcefully and looked around.
"Where am I?" She asked. A valid question, considering last she could recall she was standing inside the cabin of her wrongly presumed father on the side of the Halvfors mountain, and she had now found herself inside a stone building of a design she could not recollect. It was a dark room and she couldn't make out any furnishing inside. Neither could she locate her dog.
"What did you do?!" She pointed a finger in Walter's direction accusingly and made to rise, having just noticed that she was sitting down on the stone floor. Miriam stopped and refocused her gaze away from the wizard to the finger she'd just pointed with. Now glowing a faint shimmering white. She jumped half a step back and rapidly shook her hand out.
"Walter! what the actual-...!"
The wizard didn't chuckle but his amused expression spoke more of his enjoyment than any laugh, the whiskers on his elderly face curling into a smug smile.
"Where? I honestly couldn't tell you the location, I am afraid its true name is lost to the likes of us." Walter began, speaking calmly but with a certain authority and smug knowing. "What I did? I took us here, don't you remember?"
She didn't. The last thing that she could remember was Walter entering the cabin with a swoop of snowy wind. Miriam was inspecting her glowing hand, getting used to the shine of it.
"No-... Why am I glowing?" She replied and then asked begrudgingly.
"I'd gladly explain the details of it, dear but I'm afraid we don't have that time. For now you may consider it a... aura. A distinguished part of your soul. So to speak." Walter nodded and stroked his beard, Miriam now took notice to the wizard, who didn't have a glow of his own, appearing just like he would normally.
"I've taken you here, dear. Because I have a certain need for your help. Now that you have been made aware of things."
"What? No!" Miriam argued. "Where are we and how do I get back?!"
Walter sighed tiredly and brushed off his large brown coat some.
"Oh dear."
"Take me back!" Miriam demanded. Now that she'd realized she had some hand in what was at play. He needed her help. So she had the power to make some demands.
"I'm afraid I can't do that."
"Why not?!"
"I need you to do something."
"Well I'm not doing anything until you tell me what's going on!" Miriam folded her glowing arms up and scowled.
Walter sighed again, shaking his head.
"Let me show you something." Walter nodded his head back, pointing toward a window at the far end of the empty stone room they were contained in. Miriam followed his gestures and went up to the window while glaring at the wizard.
"I need your help, Miriam dear. Because if we do not act this is what will happen to our world."
Miriam tip-toed and peered through the sooty window. She saw the sky first but quickly came to realize it wasn't a sky at all, there was no horizon to it and even though it was pitch black without a light there were no stars that dotted its length. The black sheet that lay over their location was distinguishable only because of the red, pointed fire that licked and danced around the edges of where the horizon would have been, but rather than looking like some faded sunset it was as if the darkness itself was on fire. A marvel beyond true description. Miriam stared at the impossibilities of space and logic with an expression of disbelief. The wizard must be playing some mind trick on her, she couldn't believe this was real. She turned to look at him next to her. And he only nodded back outside, a grave countenance and harrowed look. Miriam looked outside again. There were other stone buildings beneath the impossible sky. Just outside of the window was a city street with faded gray houses and the ruins of houses just like it that crowded the cobbled ground thickly. Many of the houses seemed built on top of each other or built into another. Standing askew and disproportionate to the neighboring estates. Miriam had to slit her eyes to make out the formations of these strange buildings and the longer that she looked the more they seemed to merge into a single gray mesh of stone with tiled roofs sticking out as corners. She had to look away and with a breath and a sudden headache stepped away from the window. Walter left her to the silence but she could feel him rearing up to speak. She beat him to it despite the growing sick she felt in her throat.
"What is all this?"
The wizard sighed out of his nose and scratched faintly through his beard.
"A cautionary tale. A testament to the cruelty of Fate. And an end you can spare our own home. If you're willing to help me?"
"I never wanted any of this..." Miriam complained quietly and shook her head in disbelief. Walter frowned, looking out through the window again.
"I'm sorry." He said, and nothing more. Guilt-stricken and saddened.
Miriam allowed the silence to pass by them as she looked down at the white glow that surrounded her body. After a moment of it she shook her shoulders out and grunted. Turning around to face the man.
"What do you need?"
They were walking across the ruined streets of the city, Miriam skipped from one cobblestone to the next as the stairwell has long since fallen into ruin. She looked up at Walter who was expecting her at the top of the stairs. Past him were the large gray ruins that stood in their huddled mesh against an outline of burning black. The sight had a certain beauty, one that was difficult to look away from but she couldn't spare staring at it. The void dark wasn't a sky, it was a veil over the city that lay flat and unmoving. Its edges aflame in the far distance and the longer you stared at it, the greater your headache became. Miriam found it difficult to focus on actual things on the ground, like rocks or old ruined debris after she'd looked at it too much. She reached up and took the hand of the wizard who helped her the last jump of the ruined stairwell. He had explained their task about as well as he could and Miriam knew that she didn't have much choice in doing it. They would travel through the city and acquire some magical artifact that Walter needed to "Save the world." As he had put it.
"But why do you need me?" Miriam had asked.
"The artifact belongs to a spirit you have a certain... connection with." Walter had said before they had left the house. Miriam now brought the subject to light again as the road stretched easily before them.
"This spirit." She said.
"Hmh?" Hummed the old man.
"I think I did magic a few weeks ago..." Miriam pondered. "Does it connect?"
Walter nodded, then stopped to think. Then he shook his head.
"A bit of both. Magic isn't necessarily inherited but in our cases bloodline does matter profoundly. The spirit we are pursuing now once made a deal of cooperation with your ancestors, as such; You can claim its belonging. As for your own magical attunement... It's only natural." He made an airy gesture with his hand, as if making light of his own analysis.
"So you knew about it." Miriam also considered asking how he had located her but figured that asking the man who could bring you to an entirely different world how he had found your location was a bit pointless.
"Not really. I could only assume after our first meeting. And hope, I suppose." Walter shrugged where he walked ahead of her. He was very nonchalant about traversing the ruined city while Miriam still expected some monster akin to the troll she and Freda had met to crash through some building's pillars, despite Walter's assurance of their safety. Miriam grunted a sigh and looked down the long path that winded down into the thick of the city. Any thoughts about her parentage, abilities or why any of this was going on had to wait. For now it was just her, Walter, and the task. One that she could at least feel some familiarity to: Traverse an empty town. Find the valuables. And leave. This. She could do.
Meanwhile...
Lars stooped down to a squat and inspected the spot where Miriam had just now stood. Scratching his cheek he pondered, then rose and went to shut the door that had been flung open mysteriously.
"Miriam?" He called out, but to no avail. Leia circled around the spot he had just been inspecting, the dog whimpering a whine with her bushy tail drooped. Lars went up to the dog, placed his hand upon her head and ruffled the shaggy dog's mane
"This is why I live alone, y' know." Said the grizzled mountain-man. Leia breathed a response with a lolling tongue and a quizzical look.
Walter quirked a furry brow and smiled thinly, his head tilted to peer at the mute huntress and he blinked.
"Miriam?" He asked, leaning in to observe her deadpan expression.
She snapped out of it and looked at the wizard alertly. Then she blinked forcefully and looked around.
"Where am I?" She asked. A valid question, considering last she could recall she was standing inside the cabin of her wrongly presumed father on the side of the Halvfors mountain, and she had now found herself inside a stone building of a design she could not recollect. It was a dark room and she couldn't make out any furnishing inside. Neither could she locate her dog.
"What did you do?!" She pointed a finger in Walter's direction accusingly and made to rise, having just noticed that she was sitting down on the stone floor. Miriam stopped and refocused her gaze away from the wizard to the finger she'd just pointed with. Now glowing a faint shimmering white. She jumped half a step back and rapidly shook her hand out.
"Walter! what the actual-...!"
The wizard didn't chuckle but his amused expression spoke more of his enjoyment than any laugh, the whiskers on his elderly face curling into a smug smile.
"Where? I honestly couldn't tell you the location, I am afraid its true name is lost to the likes of us." Walter began, speaking calmly but with a certain authority and smug knowing. "What I did? I took us here, don't you remember?"
She didn't. The last thing that she could remember was Walter entering the cabin with a swoop of snowy wind. Miriam was inspecting her glowing hand, getting used to the shine of it.
"No-... Why am I glowing?" She replied and then asked begrudgingly.
"I'd gladly explain the details of it, dear but I'm afraid we don't have that time. For now you may consider it a... aura. A distinguished part of your soul. So to speak." Walter nodded and stroked his beard, Miriam now took notice to the wizard, who didn't have a glow of his own, appearing just like he would normally.
"I've taken you here, dear. Because I have a certain need for your help. Now that you have been made aware of things."
"What? No!" Miriam argued. "Where are we and how do I get back?!"
Walter sighed tiredly and brushed off his large brown coat some.
"Oh dear."
"Take me back!" Miriam demanded. Now that she'd realized she had some hand in what was at play. He needed her help. So she had the power to make some demands.
"I'm afraid I can't do that."
"Why not?!"
"I need you to do something."
"Well I'm not doing anything until you tell me what's going on!" Miriam folded her glowing arms up and scowled.
Walter sighed again, shaking his head.
"Let me show you something." Walter nodded his head back, pointing toward a window at the far end of the empty stone room they were contained in. Miriam followed his gestures and went up to the window while glaring at the wizard.
"I need your help, Miriam dear. Because if we do not act this is what will happen to our world."
Miriam tip-toed and peered through the sooty window. She saw the sky first but quickly came to realize it wasn't a sky at all, there was no horizon to it and even though it was pitch black without a light there were no stars that dotted its length. The black sheet that lay over their location was distinguishable only because of the red, pointed fire that licked and danced around the edges of where the horizon would have been, but rather than looking like some faded sunset it was as if the darkness itself was on fire. A marvel beyond true description. Miriam stared at the impossibilities of space and logic with an expression of disbelief. The wizard must be playing some mind trick on her, she couldn't believe this was real. She turned to look at him next to her. And he only nodded back outside, a grave countenance and harrowed look. Miriam looked outside again. There were other stone buildings beneath the impossible sky. Just outside of the window was a city street with faded gray houses and the ruins of houses just like it that crowded the cobbled ground thickly. Many of the houses seemed built on top of each other or built into another. Standing askew and disproportionate to the neighboring estates. Miriam had to slit her eyes to make out the formations of these strange buildings and the longer that she looked the more they seemed to merge into a single gray mesh of stone with tiled roofs sticking out as corners. She had to look away and with a breath and a sudden headache stepped away from the window. Walter left her to the silence but she could feel him rearing up to speak. She beat him to it despite the growing sick she felt in her throat.
"What is all this?"
The wizard sighed out of his nose and scratched faintly through his beard.
"A cautionary tale. A testament to the cruelty of Fate. And an end you can spare our own home. If you're willing to help me?"
"I never wanted any of this..." Miriam complained quietly and shook her head in disbelief. Walter frowned, looking out through the window again.
"I'm sorry." He said, and nothing more. Guilt-stricken and saddened.
Miriam allowed the silence to pass by them as she looked down at the white glow that surrounded her body. After a moment of it she shook her shoulders out and grunted. Turning around to face the man.
"What do you need?"
They were walking across the ruined streets of the city, Miriam skipped from one cobblestone to the next as the stairwell has long since fallen into ruin. She looked up at Walter who was expecting her at the top of the stairs. Past him were the large gray ruins that stood in their huddled mesh against an outline of burning black. The sight had a certain beauty, one that was difficult to look away from but she couldn't spare staring at it. The void dark wasn't a sky, it was a veil over the city that lay flat and unmoving. Its edges aflame in the far distance and the longer you stared at it, the greater your headache became. Miriam found it difficult to focus on actual things on the ground, like rocks or old ruined debris after she'd looked at it too much. She reached up and took the hand of the wizard who helped her the last jump of the ruined stairwell. He had explained their task about as well as he could and Miriam knew that she didn't have much choice in doing it. They would travel through the city and acquire some magical artifact that Walter needed to "Save the world." As he had put it.
"But why do you need me?" Miriam had asked.
"The artifact belongs to a spirit you have a certain... connection with." Walter had said before they had left the house. Miriam now brought the subject to light again as the road stretched easily before them.
"This spirit." She said.
"Hmh?" Hummed the old man.
"I think I did magic a few weeks ago..." Miriam pondered. "Does it connect?"
Walter nodded, then stopped to think. Then he shook his head.
"A bit of both. Magic isn't necessarily inherited but in our cases bloodline does matter profoundly. The spirit we are pursuing now once made a deal of cooperation with your ancestors, as such; You can claim its belonging. As for your own magical attunement... It's only natural." He made an airy gesture with his hand, as if making light of his own analysis.
"So you knew about it." Miriam also considered asking how he had located her but figured that asking the man who could bring you to an entirely different world how he had found your location was a bit pointless.
"Not really. I could only assume after our first meeting. And hope, I suppose." Walter shrugged where he walked ahead of her. He was very nonchalant about traversing the ruined city while Miriam still expected some monster akin to the troll she and Freda had met to crash through some building's pillars, despite Walter's assurance of their safety. Miriam grunted a sigh and looked down the long path that winded down into the thick of the city. Any thoughts about her parentage, abilities or why any of this was going on had to wait. For now it was just her, Walter, and the task. One that she could at least feel some familiarity to: Traverse an empty town. Find the valuables. And leave. This. She could do.
Meanwhile...
Lars stooped down to a squat and inspected the spot where Miriam had just now stood. Scratching his cheek he pondered, then rose and went to shut the door that had been flung open mysteriously.
"Miriam?" He called out, but to no avail. Leia circled around the spot he had just been inspecting, the dog whimpering a whine with her bushy tail drooped. Lars went up to the dog, placed his hand upon her head and ruffled the shaggy dog's mane
"This is why I live alone, y' know." Said the grizzled mountain-man. Leia breathed a response with a lolling tongue and a quizzical look.