Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago
Zeroth Post
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Zeroth

â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…
𝔓𝔯𝔬𝔩𝔬𝔤𝔲𝔢
 𝔓𝔯𝔬𝔩𝔬𝔤𝔲𝔢

/////✦ The Living Funeral

â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…â–…
𝔗𝔥𝔢 𝔊𝔞𝔱𝔢
 𝔗𝔥𝔢 𝔊𝔞𝔱𝔢

/////✦ The Beginning
/////✦ - - - - -
/////✦ - - - - -
Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by psych0pomp
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psych0pomp DOUBT EVERYTHING / except me... i'm cool

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The Living Funeral, thus named for the deceased who were alive and breathing alongside their mourners. They weren’t buried in a coffin of wood or stone, but in the minds of those they left behind. Only to be remembered with the other dead. Different cultures and peoples had different rites for this. Some danced, some drank, some prayed, some laughed, some cried, and some just left in the middle of the night. Everyone mourns in their own way.


It was the Spring of 100005 TK, or novannum 5, and the fruit trees were in full bloom, flowers dotted the green landscape, and a warm wind found its way through even the coldest of places. The nights were alighted with stars and the three moons glistened with joyous coronas. As if they were blessing the evening. Shatter bugs flickered in the darkness between the trees, glittering and shimmering every time they caught the lights. Naenia watched them almost as if they were hypnotizing her. Yet, while she seemed enraptured with them, her mind was buzzing with other thoughts. There was no joyous celebration around her. Her folks had passed in Frontier Town, and her sister was lost in the depths of Ordai’el. The only people that would have seen her off with her fellow brothers and sisters of Death. They’d already held their vigil a month before when the moons were nowhere in sight. So the pitch of the night made their candles sparkle even more. This night was hers to do with what she willed, and what she willed was to sit in the forest outside of Ordai’el.

The city rivaled the mountains and was capable of holding the entirety of Goan within it. It had glistening white towers that could be seen across the other Holy Isles. Around it was a circular white wall that then led to a crystal blue river that ran the length around it, and it culminated in one gate before that spilled out into lengthy stairs that swiveled downwards to the plains below. Leading up to the Holy City were lustrous green forests, lakes, and streams, and they contained many shrines to the gods. If someone wasn’t deemed holy enough to enter the Holy City, they could pray at those and look at the sparkling white towers. Now if they did that, all they could see was a wall of shimmering gray that blocked out the sky, the sun, and even the moons. It poured upwards into the atmosphere itself—impenetrable and cylindrical as a stone pillar. Naenia could even see it in the darkness. The pattering of stars blacked out into a light-consuming void before continuing on the other side.

She looked away from the shatter bugs and back to the fire that burned before her. A stone brazier circled around it, built into the ground centuries before. Around her was a marble monument that had once been pristine but now was overgrown. Behind the flames was a monument to a god. It wasn’t to Dhorbris, though, but instead Ikphine. She’d been carved into the stone wall. Her face was painted alabaster white, and one hand was adorned with copper while the other was adorned in lapis. Her eyes were sightless baubles that felt like they stared directly into Naenia’s soul. She uncrossed her legs at the ankles underneath her long dress. While she was not in her armor, her travel gear was sturdy and protective. If she needed to protect herself, she easily could. Her deep brown hair was braided up, only allowing for a few strands to fall into her pale face. Her eyes reflected the hues of red and orange from the fire. She prodded it with a stick before throwing it in.

“Xanthe loved you, revered you, and even went in to free you,” Naenia spoke to the shrine of the Walking Goddess, knowing that she was only talking to herself. “She had to hold onto the belief that you judged wisely in the killing of our parents, our friends, our town, and that your judgment was the key to the lock of her life. And sure, I suppose we’re all allowed to interpret our god as we wish. But why did it mean so much that she abandon me—and Ozul, I suppose—to save you? You’re a goddess. You’re supposed to do the saving. You killed the High King of Dragons, and you can’t fight some fucking fog.” Naenia spat onto the monument. “You’re a liar is what you are, and I’m willing to prove it.”

She stood from the carved, stone bench that she’d been perched on. It’d probably held scores of worshippers before, but now it was just her. The fire painted her clothing in red and gold and deepened the shadows around her eyes. She leaned over and pulled up the large hammer she’d dragged up all the stairs. Having finally caught her breath, she hefted it above her head, holding it for a beat before slamming it down on the monument. It released a blistering crack, as the monument splintered under the force. Ikphine’s eyes drooped as her head caved in. Naenia pulled the hammer back, lifted it above her head, and slammed it back down again. More of the monument sloughed off, but it was far from broken. So, she did it again. And again. And again. And again. Each swing ruined the stonework more and more until it’d been reduced to an uneven pile of white stone. The copper and lapis hands had fallen off and into the fire. They crackled and spit fumes into the air as Naenia sank to her knees. The hammer had splintered in her hand and lay in two pieces. She pressed her damaged palms against her eyes. Tears mixed with the blood and poured down her face, dripping onto her dress. The hammering had silenced the animals around her, and the only thing that could be made out in that darkness was her sobbing. It was a deep and guttural thing. There would be no more tears after this. She’d have to harden herself before she entered Ordai’el.

Yet, underneath the quaking silver of the stars, she cried. “You killed her.” A deep breath punctuated her sentence. “You killed her.” Another breath. “You killed her.” A quivering sob came after that. “And you’re going to kill me.”

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Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by Timemaster
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Timemaster Ashevelendar

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Run! RUN! RUUUUN! They’re coming, they’re coming. THEY are coming. Close, close…close. Too…CLOSE. Thralls, liches, the dead. Oh…the dead. Friends, family. All surrounding the dreamer. TH. Approaching her from all the sides. EY. Left, right, the underground. The bloodcurdling screams. ARE. The dark smell of death. Rotting bodies, blank stares in their eyes. COM. A fireball passing above the dreamer’s head. Explosion. Fire. ING! wake up wake up wake up wake please wake up wake WAKE UP DO IT. W…ake…up. No more no more no more pleeasssee no mo…re! WAKE UP! I AM SORRY! WAKE UUUUPPP

With a jolt, Ashevelen stood up from the bed. Her face all sweaty, ears still ringing from the fireball thrown by Kara, a desperate effort that proved useless at the time. Strong shivers crossed her body as she grabbed her staff ready to defend herself against the dead. Still not recognizing where she was. Unfamiliar room, different smells. MASK. A single thought going through her mind. Hand trembling, Ashevelen reached for the pillow where her mask laid on. Why is it off? What have I done? Where am I? Questions shooting back and forth. Where was she? Why was her mask off?

Suddenly a loud knock on the door startled her even more. “Who’s there?” shouted Ashe with a tremble in her voice.

“Ashe? It’s me. Can I come in? Please. Let. Me. In. ” came from beyond the door. A familiar voice. A very familiar one. Who was that? Who’s voice came from the door?

“Who is it?! Make yourself known or feel my power! ” she shouted back, as she tried to reach deep into the wells of her magic…only to find it empty. Tired. Restless. Surely there must be a reasonable explanation.

Knock. Knock. KNOCK three loud knocks came again. This time though, more desperate. Louder. Stronger.

“Asheeeeeyyyy! Leeeet meeeee iiiiinnnn! PLEASE! PLEASE! PLEASE! PLEASE! Let me in! They’re coming! THEY ARE COMING! PLEEEEAAAASSSEEEE!” shouted the familiar voice, their voice desperate.

Ashevelen sprang to action, her hands going for the door. A lock appeared where there was none before. Not that she would remember but surely she would’ve seen it. With a quick move of her wrist, the lock opened and Ashe peeked through the door. Not fully opening it. Her staff…her staff was missing. It was right next to her. Just let it go for a second. Where?

And that’s when she saw the half-eaten face of someone she knew. Someone…that died. Pushing at the door, throwing her away over to the other side of the room. It approached her. Step by step. Singing an old elven song.

“NOOOOOOOO! Go back! Please, I’m sorry. I’m sorry! ”

“If you were…I wouldn’t be dead now! But don’t worry, I’ll let you join me. It’s peaceful on the other side. Come…you'llloveitttt…” the same voice. That oh’ so familiar voice. The voice that once put her to sleep. The voice that used to sooth her to sleep and protect her from the made-up monsters of childhood.

The screaming started again. Her companions' screams. Monsters everywhere. Their faces appeared on every surface. Their mouths whispered the same question “Why did you kill us? Why did you let us down?”

“I’m…I’m sorry. Please, brother. Everyone! I’m sorry! ” said Ashevelen as she fell on her knees, sobbing, hands over her eyes to avoid the horror that was about to befall her. Only that…it never came. The screaming stopped. Everything seemed to be frozen in time. The sound of her crying and her breathing was the only thing she could hear or feel. Taking her hands away from her face, the room was empty. As if nothing happened. The door was closed as it was.

A loud creaking noise from above shook her out of her reprieve and with trepidation in her hearth, she looked up and…

“Hi! Ready to… DIE?!” the voice of her brother said as it jumped from the ceiling on top of Ashevelen and started biting down on her. Only thing she could do was to scream, only that no sound came out.

That’s when she woke up

A sudden jolt startled the half-sleeping form of Ashevelen. Her mask secured properly on her face, staff close at hand. An old habit she learned from the Fingers. Be always ready for foul play, even in times of peace…especially in times of peace.

Last night’s nightmare was just one of the many she experienced. The same dream over and over again. Occasionally, it would change up details, different monsters attacking or they would be in a city instead of the cave but it would always end the same. Wilham knocking on the door, half dead half not. Begging for mercy before coming after her. Every single time.

A part of Ashevelen took a strange comfort in that. At least she was able to see Wilham. At least she was able to hear his voice once again. The only silver lining about the details changing was that it kept things interesting. At least she wouldn’t get bored while also being scared shitless every night.

Looking around the room where she slept, Ashevelen took a deep breath and centred herself. Her nerves were still on edge from the nightmare but it wasn’t anything new. Over the course of the years she learned how to deal with it or better said, learned how to ignore it. For how long? It was a question she didn’t know how to answer. One day, soon, it’ll all end. Maybe by her own hand.

Putting a hand within her armor, she took out a piece of paper and gave it another read. Looking for something, anything that might prove what she read was wrong but she couldn’t find anything out of the ordinary but after a few more tries, she couldn’t see anything and the sun creeped slowly through the glass window of the room. Illuminating it with a golden light.

It was a simple room where she chose to sleep before meeting her companions that would join in the Delve. An inn with an already forgotten name. She arrived late last night and her almost sleeping mind didn’t remember much. Some money given to the master of the house, a key given for the door and that’s about it. Irrelevant memories overall. She knew she’ll probably die in the next few days.

Before leaving, Ashevelen washed her face and dispelling the last bits of sleep from her face using a small bowl of water left on the table of the room. With a practised hand she grabbed a piece of cloth and started cleaning the staff. It had to be shiny. It had to be perfect. A staff is what made a mage, a mage or so her mother always said. It shows the others that she’s a respectable mage and certainly not a loser who killed her team.

Morning preparations done, her staff looked pristine and everything in her inventory was nicely sorted out in her bag. Going for the door, Ashevelen took another look at the room before stepping outside. It was time. The last time she’ll see this room. Probably the last time she’ll see the light and if she somehow survived, it would still be months until she’d see it again.

Ashevelen ate some quick meal or what passed as one done by the innkeeper before paying him a few pecks. He tried making some light conversation with her, mostly due to her mask which even in the early hour still had the few patrons looking at her in curiosity. The mask fully covered her face, nothing could be seen. Hair, eyes, mouth, anything distinguishing even the race was hidden from view. In other ways, she was a curiosity for most.

Waving him off after eating her meal, careful to not reveal anything about her appearance. Ashevelen stood up and started walking. Her adventure, quest and ultimate death awaited and she was ready, happily embracing it.
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Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by Theyra
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Theyra

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Vel Arrianus


You do not have to do this. There are other ways of proving yourself. Why must you do this, brother? This and more questions made by his family that echoed and repeated in his head. As Vel sat in his room alone at the family estate. Sitting on his bed while looking down at the floor with his eyes closed and his hands on his head. Is this an easy choice to make no, are there other ways of achieving his goals maybe, and does he have to do this? The answer to that question he already knows and an answer that his family does not treat lightly.

True, he did manage to convince his family to get their blessing for this, but he can clearly tell that it was not an easy one to do despite being the youngest of his family and the least likely to achieve anything of value. Vel was still loved by his family, and they were not keen to see one of their members go off to Ordai'el and perhaps never come back. However, chances are that he will never come back from Ordai'el. Like the others that have been sent before them.

Still, that dream he had, that dream from just nights ago. It was so vivid, and he could just see Ordai'el just how he remembered it. The sights, the sounds, and the hospital where he spent two years at. Full of patients and doctors of the highest quality. Where he learned how to mend basic wounds as he recovered from his own illness. Was it chance or luck that spared him being trapped in that city as the fog devoured it. He may never know, but one thing he is sure about is that he has to try.

Vel opened his eyes and moved his right hand down from his head to gaze at the ring he had. It was not a unique or luxurious one as one that a noble like him would wear. A simple one, it is, but it bears the symbol of Dhorbris, and it was a gift from one of the doctors that he met while he was at the hospital in Ordai'el. That ring means more to him than others would think, and his value of it is something he does not really talk about. But it gives him strength and it reminds him of the duty he must do.

In the end, he knows one thing about going to Ordai'el. Vel knows that he must try, and even if he dies in the attempt, then it will be fine with him. As long as he honors his duty and go back to that hospital to see if this vision of his is still possible to achieve or if he has already failed.

So Vel got stood up and kneed before his bed and prayed to Sedmis in a hushed tone. "Lord Sedmis, may you grant me strength to honor my duty and to see it done." Then the sound of his door cracking open and the familiar voice of his sister, Naevia. Vel can feel the sadness in her voice, "Vel, it is time."

Silently he got up and turned around to face Naevia, "I am ready, Naevia, and let's never forget this night for as long as we live."

"Sure, Vel," the sadness still in her voice, and the two walked down to the dining room where a party was about to start. This was his party, a farewell party that his parents had organized to honor his decision to go to Ordai'el. One last time to honor his life before going to Ordai'el, maybe never to return. He has some optimism in him despite the odds. Small, but it is there and for the whole night. Vel, his family and his friends, and some nobles from the city partied. There was song, dance, games of skill, and merriment. A night that the people in it would never forget, and it felt to Vel like he was already dead. Gone to some afterlife where there was nothing but this. But this, alas, this was life, and when it was over. There was one last toast for Vel, and then people retired to their rooms as the servants cleaned up the mess.

As Vel retired to his room and prepared to sleep. He made one last prayer to Wether that she watch over his family while he is gone. Then gazing at his ring once again before uttering a single phrase in a hopeful tone, "I will see you again in one way or the other." So now he went to sleep, and tomorrow there will be one last sendoff before leaving for Ordai'el. Vel knows that he may never see his home again, but he is at peace now. He is ready, and all he needs to do now is honor his duty and maybe save Ordai'el. That is all he can do now, is to try.
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Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Fetzen
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Fetzen

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Varandas


Sleep. The great unknown everybody embraces at the end of a long, hard day, yet at the same time many people fear for it seems to take away a third of our already short time on this world for an unclear purpose. Rest and regeneration for our bodies, they say. Couldn't the gods, nature or whatever root cause for our existence you believe in have designed us in a way that we don't need such things though ? The sun doesn't tire and neither do the growing trees, so why do we have to ?

Luckily, research and basic thinking have made significant progress over the last few centuries.

The conclusion, to cut it short, is that you, my friend, under no circumstances should be tempted to think that your new body would allow you to just get away without sleep. You might no longer have warm blood flowing in your veins, no longer experience the primordial fear of death the very moment you can't breathe freely anymore, but you still have your mind. It working properly and being able to provide you with thoughts and memories in an ordered, understandable manner actually is a positive result of sleep, too. You will suffer the same mental deterioration as a drunkard or anybody else who is deprived of sleep, so don't even try.

You also shouldn't try to stray too far away from the sleeping customs you might have learned in your earlier life. A bed might be far less mandatory for you than before, but still it will save your bones and tendons some unecessary and hard-to-fix wear and tear if you don't spend your restful nights standing upright instead of on a pile of pillows. Also the people around you, probably already hard pressed by your mere appearance, might feel just a tad more comfortable in your presence if you don't burden them with too many weird, unfamiliar new habits.
- Enthrallment in a nutshell. A pratical guide for newcomers. Madawc, 99852


A small cloud of dust burst out of the old, sturdy pieces of parchment as Varandas closed the heavy tome and put it down on the small table besides him. Would he ever have imagined to be given a manual for his body one day ? Probably not. And despite this, he had to admit internally that he had not even read through the massive book entirely yet. Too ugly some of the detailed drawings, too profound the fear of reading something he really didn't like because it didn't meet his hopes and expectations and way too great the urge to just try out everything like a small child who's been given a new toy to play with.

The most depressing fact however was that the text was one and a half centuries old and still many parts of it felt so far ahead of time. The world really must have turned into quite a shittier place over the last couple of decades. Or Madawc was just a madman who had taken his out-of-the-box existence and transferred it all too happily onto his thinking. Both, perhaps.

Anyway. It was time to get up!

The idea of obfuscating any weird, rotting smell with cheap perfume had been a very good one. Okay, Madawc had mentioned something like this in his book as well, but he hadn't mentioned a lot of the tricks Varandas had figured out himself to make it last longer! That stuff was not exactly super cheap, which probably was the reason why Varandas could merely bathe in the glory of nothingness coming out of the bottle today. Empty... Great. How was he supposed to get over with this ceremony without olfactory assistance ? People would start thinking he was overdoing things and already trying to exhibit post-mortem behavior even before having truly been sent into that dungeon of theirs!

Or wait... Maybe they had some fancy smelly stuff there for him to use ? One should never give up one's hopes prematurely!

So, step two: Getting into daytime clothes. Varandas could outright skip that -- even just trying to carefully maneuver his shirt over that glowing crystal in his chest at least twice a day had proven to be an unbearable and costly nuisance almost from day one. He had transitioned to just replacing the shirt when it was too worn out long ago.

So where was all his other stuff left then ? This rented tavern room was as tiny as it was dirt cheap, but still it seemed possible to lose track of things in here. Okay, he had just dumped all of his gear onto two large piles on the floor, too. Shame on himself! The brief period of searching also gave him the opportunity to ask himself another question though: Was appearing in full gear even allowed at this ceremony or would that be too disrespectful ? And should he ask the innkeeper for an empty barrel before he left ? There was the saying that a rich man's wine barrel bottom was a poor man's shield and maybe he could use that sooner than he would have liked, but on the other hand it would be more of a burden -- and a humiliating one on top of that. Hell why did he even think about anything like 'humiliation' at this point anymore now that he had embarked onto this journey of almost certain no-return ?

Even for something like this one first had to get to the starting point, however. When given the choice, people always preferred to give directions to a living person and not the walking corpse. Today however he could make people laugh by telling them it was for attending a living funeral! An ironic joke it was somehow in his case, really...
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Hidden 2 yrs ago 2 yrs ago Post by Fading Memory
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Fading Memory The Final Flame of a Fiery Bird

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"My son is dead."

The Grand Duke's voice quavered in the air. Not from any emotional extreme nor from the intensity of his words, but rather the natural bellowing cadence of his barrel chest producing words through prodigiously jowled chops. The fecund duke was bestrode the throne of his palanquin, tall and mighty in his rotundity, with an arm laden with jeweled rings and golden bracelets raised on high wielding a crystal orb in the palm of his hand. The sausage like fingers of the duke's hand grubbily clung to the orb, clutching it in a doughy grip as if the artefact were more precious than anything else. And why wouldn't it be? The Duke Zelbam was the owner of the Starshard Glass, and he would wield it ceremonially- or whenever he had excuse to, of course.

"Long hath Valmial rendered service unto this house. Two score and two years his wit and intellect were the sup of student and alumnus alike. The stars rendered their secrets bare to his gaze, which liken to mine own it has oft been said, and it is much agreed that though he be not the mightiest of my children- that honour be bestoweth upon Edsel, whomst is away upon his travels on this day- nor is he the most acclaimed- for that doth be Titus, heir apparent and benefactor of this funeral- here here, here here-" This call was met by the raising of many a tall wine glass in the crowd to the honour of Titus Hippokrates, who raised a hand gaily in response as he sat in a throne beside the Duke's palanquin. "-but it was well deserved the respect and status he hath earned as tutor, researcher, arcanist, and astrologer of this institution. Let it be writ upon the Annals of the Starspire Academy that ne'er again will the like of Valmial again walk these halls. Let it be writ!"

Bringing the orb down, his fat hands covetously caressed its sparkling surface as the spark of magic welled within. The Duke then brandished the glowing orb, and erupting from within the diminutive- in the Duke's hands, that is- orb was the splendor of the night sky, cascading into the highest reaches of the academy Great Hall's peaked ceiling. A shooting star rebounded around the rafters, weaving a comet's tail through the ancient stone supports, and in its wake the flowing of a nebula spread. The star brightened, flaring into nova, then evaporated into nothingness at the end of its trajectory. The Nebula continued to crawl, filling the air of the Great Hall with the dazzling dust of stars and cosmic dew. This cloud settled into semi-permanency and descended onto the room, casting it in a wondrous glow that dazzled from within a mystical fog as the wisps of starlight meandered gaily about the room.

Now obscured from the Duke's sight, a young man tirelessly scribed the speech upon the man-sized pages of a great tome, whose first pages were already threatening to crumble to dust if handled poorly, and whose most recent page was dedicated to the now-lost preceptor; Valmial the Ineffable, son of the Grand Duke and Lord Preceptor Zelbam Hippokrates. Few in the hall paid heed to the scribe. Few, indeed, looked towards him for Valmial himself was stood, leaned heavily upon his tall sceptre, and gazing at the pages as the scribe wrote. Few men had the chance to read their own obituary. Fewer, still, had the chance to declare their own epitaph. Valmial hummed low in his throat, then reached out with a clawed finger to tap upon the page.

"You may omit any mention of Titus in this obituary, young Toby."

"A-Are you sure, milord? It's the Duke's own words."

"My lord father will not be reading this. Of that, you may be certain. I will not have his name sullying my final representation in this institution." Valmial rose back onto his staff, satisfied with the scribe's subtle alteration to the passage. The din of the initial applause died away, and as the Duke was carried to the head of the long table on his Palnquin, the honored heir Titus rose to speak...

Valmial tuned him out. His heavy steps falling upon the flagstones of the great hall like the thunder of mail clad men storming the tower. His footsteps both highlighted and undercut Titus' flagrant speech of false words and bandied pleasantries. Valmial's insolence to his elder brother was noted by all, but what did it matter- Valmial was dead on this day. The only other being in the room who did not possess the same repressed servility and subservience to the Duke and Heir was a lithe framed woman, red of hair and pale of skin with eyes that shone a sapphire hue in the reflection of the stars. This woman held Valmial's attention, solely, even as the speeches flowed over him. His dreadful step limped him towards her, until at last he stood at her side, a head and shoulder taller than the she-elf even in his stooped state.

"This one bows to the Holy Order." Valmial says, stooping lower upon his scepter as he intones the words to the woman.

"The dead bow to no-one. They also, seemingly, do not respect their own funerals." Her lips twitched upwards in a smile. "Do you disrespect all good things, or just the ones that you find insulting?

"Just the things that mock the name Hippokrates." his words came as a low rumble, hinting towards the amused and giving the impression of a chuckle. "This funeral was not of my desire. It portends negativity, and I have hopes, my lady."

Her eyebrow rises, and she lifts her head to gaze up at him. She studies him quietly for a few moments, before making a gesture- more time had passed as their eyes met than Valmial had even noticed, and the heir Titus had finished his speech. The guests had risen and the feast was begun. A servant brings the she-elf a glass of wine, and Valmial receives a tankard appropriate to his bulk and physique. She raises her glass to him, he toasts it with his tankard, and both drink.

"I am no lady, dead man. I am census taker, administrator, and notary. Your hopes are misplaced, as well; your lord father appears to have succeeded in his rumored quest to do away with you. You will receive the Empress' blessing, of course, but what hope do you cling to in the dread city?" Her words are not cruel, but rather the subtlety of the coquette. Her tone is not lost on Valmial- but he is surprised by it. He decides to play along for the time, and see where this divergence upon expectations shall take him.

"I am not the greatest man to be sent on this quest. Nor the second greatest- it is far from my ideals to liken myself to the Empress' own brother, or to the great knights who were themselves citadel to Ordai'el. However, miss...?" he leads the question, asking multiple things at once with the question. The twitch of a smile grows, and she seems entertained by his playing back. She swirls her wine and sips from it, even as the dazzle of starshine falls upon her hair and gives it a radiance unto its natural fire.

"Laelia."

"Miss Laelia." He bows to her once more, and this time she curtsies demurely in return. "However, as is the foundation of this institution, all those who have gone before shall have laid the path for those who come after. It is my hope, indeed the very thing I pray for, that they have, with the strength of the legends who first ventured forth, paved a strong path."

"Ah, I see. The mythical Hippokrates house words; 'Upon the shoulders of Giants'. How much truth is to those words, I wonder?"

"There is much." Valmial rumbled again, that low, deep, laugh. "However, I am sure you are not truly interested in the deep histories of my house."

"Indeed not, dead man, indeed not." She laughed openly, shameless in this admission, before she sips from her glass again. "I see that you are a measure more astute than your peers, most of this academy would have loved nothing more than to lecture me, I imagine."

"I am not most." He says pointedly.

"And if you are inadequate to the task, hm? What if you can't even measure up to the shoulders of the giants you wish to stand upon?"

"I have never been found inadequate." his voice was low once more and despite the crowded nature of the room, his low tone and the fog of the nebula made it an intimate statement indeed. Laelia's eyebrow cocked upwards, and Valmial permitted himself the semblance of a smile his thick scales permitted. Their eyes met in the shadow'd hue of this room, and she clicked her tongue as she took a step forward.

"We shall see, dead man. I have seen enough to satisfy the census. Enjoy the afterlife, and may the Gods themselves see you to the end of your road."

Valmial watched her walk away, incapable of telling if the heat he felt beneath his scales was from the potent Hippokrates wine or the sway of her elfin hips.




Another hour passed, the funeral escalating into the political dissection of Valmial's powerbase. Victorine, he was pleased to hear from the whispers and chatter, was making considerable gains swaying his Academy allies to her court- but it wouldn't be enough to contest Heir Titus' iron grip over the port. Money flowed into Sunbow through the shipping lanes, and so long as his name signed every tariff form he would have ultimate authority over the city's politics.

His heavy footsteps went unheeded as he traversed the room. Voices carried words better left unheard to his prying ears. What did it matter, the Dragon would be gone come the next dawn! Let him hear, they must have thought, he can no longer manipulate the game! He could not keep his lips from drawing back in the wickedly-toothed smile he was known for. He thumped his staff upon the ground and calmed himself, bringing his arm up across his eyes in a feigned gesture of weariness; his eyes locked onto the icon of Mastrix chorded upon his scaled arm, taking solace and comfort in the icon of absolute order.

His steps hastened him along- until the bespectacled figure of Victorine was suddenly in his path.

"How did you do it?" She asked in a quiet voice, a hiss of a whisper.

"Do what?" He retorted swiftly, coming to a lurching halt as she had suddenly cut his path off.

"Edsel's loyalists. I know the guard heeded your counsel in his absence, and I know you were collecting information on the port authority. How did you do it? Old Groshnik never speaks a word to me unless I've got a dozen forms signed and I had a secretary double check the grammar, and yet you were able to find a crack in Edsel's monolith? Don't even get me started on the beggars. No matter the alms offered or the service rendered, the best my girls can get out of them is idle rumor and hearsay."

Valmial quieted the woman by placing his chorded hand atop her head; affectionately petting his older sister in her comparatively diminutive stature.

"Edsel likes me. That is all. You overthink things, Victorine, it will be your undoing." His words were low, but his tone was the gentle tone of the tutor despite their age difference. His eyes scanned Victorine, noting the streaks of silver appearing in her hair and the wrinkles of laughter upon her eyes. His tongue snaked between razor teeth and he sighed. "You've got a chance with my absence. Erme's exile-"

"Speak not her name." Victorine hissed. "Do you wish for father's wrath?"

"I am dead, let his wroth overflow until it drowns the whole damnable city. Erme's exile was my ill-gained boon, let mine be yours. The Academy and Port will be split with this, you are a bright woman and I know that you have withheld many secrets from me. Stay the path, keep your head, and Titus will have stern contest. You are the chief benefactor of my will, when it is to be read. Be calmed by knowing that my vote lies with you, sister."

Her eyes widened behind the thick rims of her glasses. He noted how the flecks of brown within her hazel eyes sparkled like garnets in the starlight of the hall. Behind those storm-grey eyes a devious cunning was gnawing on the pieces of puzzle he dangled before her, and he gently pushed her shoulder and released her as she stumbled back towards the center of the room. Valmial continued his trek, escaping Victorine's labyrinthine thoughts with his words of encouragement. If he had not interrupted her there, he would have been trapped bandying words and parleying niceties until time itself unwound from the firmament and slew them just so it could continue its immaterial journey.

He did not enjoy deceiving her, but in the grand scheme of things there must be a lamb and there must be a slaughter. No other way, could he conceive, to save the city from itself and from his father.




Valmial emerged from the Great Hall onto the balcony of the Tower; a great construction of black stone cunningly structured to stretch out from the tower three-quarters of the way up its immense height, with five equidistant pillars arching upwards and framing the ultimate crescent moon peak of the tower. In a phrase, Hippokrates grasping the stars made architecture. Very much so the proverbial Giant's Arm reaching for the heavens, upon which the origin of the house words was writ. Few believed the tales...

But Valmial had seen the bones. Deep below the tower, in the depths of the dungeon, where steel and stone fused with ancient bone. In the depths where he faced a sister in mortal peril, lost much- but gained more. The depths that few were permitted to see, save the highest echelons of the Academy's preceptors. Deep in those depths, where few even of the academy dared to tread, is where Valmial discovered a secret.

He stepped forward, his steps lighter now that he had escaped the oppressive atmosphere of the funeral party, and swiftly crossed to the north-facing side of the tower. He leaned his arm upon the battlement there and cast his gaze forth. The luminous moon, full on this night, cast its eye downwards and brought to light the wondrous white towers of Ordai'el. In the glow of the pale radiance of the moon, Valmial thought them reminiscent of the very bones beneath this tower.

Growing higher...And higher...and higher...

""Allo." A voice chimed from the shadows at his side. "I almost thought you weren't going to survive your funeral. Didja see how Titus got that vein on 'is forehead? Throbbing madly! Every time 'e tried to start a sentence, you just put your foot down- if my ears aren't failing me, I think you were stomping harder on purpose?"

Valmial chuckled in that deep rumble as The Darkling emerged from the shadows; his black suit blended nearly in with his natural skin tone, and his bloody-hued eyes flashed in the dark as he revealed himself. The Draconbreed made a slow gesture with his staff, as if weighing Winmar's words, before winking at him with his left set of eyes.

"Perhaps, perhaps not. Titus has always had father's temper. It could simply have been bad air, my brother."

"Bad air."

"Aye, the miasma about father seemed potent from where I stood."

"Pfff, you're bold in death." Winmar laughed and cast his blooded eyes towards the distant door. "Are there listeners?"

Valmial's grip tightened upon the scepter, and when next he struck the flagstones with it a pulse of magical energy emanated subtly outwards from the point struck. Ripples of quiet energy, laced with his draconic twist, that emanated through the metaphysical reality around him. Twice his ripples returned to him, as an echo in the dark, and twice his staff struck the ground and dispelled the clairvoyant gazes. He noted, with a begrudging approval, that both held the octarine signature of Victorine's sorcery. Attagirl- be skeptical, he thought to himself.

"No longer." He rumbled. "Be swift."

Winmar stepped closer, his voice dropping into the lowness of conspiracy. The tall, slender, man was the lithe frame of the scoundrel and rake- and yet he bore the cunning regality of the Hippokrates genetics, with the alien sophistication of the elfin blood. If it were not for his bastard status and the societal perception of the Elves, Winmar would be a handsome and desired man; as it stood, he was the runt of the litter of the Grand Duke's ambitions and bore little love from the powers that be. This meant he was, in truth, underestimated by his peers...

But not by Valmial. He relied upon the cunning and craft of the bastard-Orph.

"Everything's in place. My lads're ready." Winmar stepped close within the draconbreed's deceptively long reach as he spoke. His hand laid upon Valmial's shoulder in a tender affection. "This has been a long time coming. I wish there was... more. More I could do. Damn them all, cornerin' ya like this. You've been good to me, and I won't forget it."

Valmial shifted, putting his weight back onto his scepter and bringing his hand up. He clasps Winmar's hand in his, and pulls the waifish man into an embrace. He never releases the staff, but brings his arm around the half-Orph and clasps his closed hand high upon The Darkling's back.

"Be true, be straight, be bold. I'll return one day, and together we will throw off these chains. Goan has long been afraid of its past and of the dark, but we know too well the foolishness of that." Valmial pulled back and gazed at Winmar with a deep affection.

"Give father my regards when the time comes."




The night wore long, and ere dawn approached. A few hours left before all came crashing down into harsh reality and fact of death. The party- not an honor of his death, but a celebration of his passing- was crawling to a close as the wine gripped many and rendered any true politicking a moot issue of pleasantries and circulating Pecks.

Valmial had abandoned it some hours ago, spending the last of his waking vigour at the top of the Starspire Tower. Here, he performed final calculations, gauged the movements of the firmament above, attempted to divine some final sign of his path- but all was for naught. The telescope revealed the cold death of the void between the heavens. The astrolabe's positions held no answers, only the long-calculated trajectory of the sun and moon. The only portent to be had was the waxing of the crescent moon; his family's sigil, on high, gazing down at him as if an eye half-lidded.

He rose from his stoop, blinking eyes tired from searching deep and far. A yawn rose through his body, and as the fatigue washed over him he clutched at the scepter tighter. The hour was late. It was time to retire and await the coming of the dawn in repose. His private chambers were here in the tower, but shying away from further contact with family and guest alike he had pre-arranged for his lodgings to be made ready in the study of the observatory. Come the morn, he would descend at once from the pinnacle of his achievements into the gloom of death and begin his journey. Penniless, for his will was total and his gifts generous to all his hated and loved colleagues alike.

He stepped into the study, weary, and closed the door at his back as he allowed restfulness to finally wash over his min-

"Rather spartan for a noble scion, but perhaps you were aiming for your final resting place to be academic in nature?"

His eyes snapped open- and there, sitting upon the grand desk of wizened oak, as if to mock its imperial stature and age, was Laelia. Her red hair flowed free, and her sapphire eyes still shone bright even in the candlelight of this study. Valmial found his eyes drawn to the pale curve of her slender neck-

"What, speechless? After I praised all your perceptions and astuteness earlier tonight, I still surprised you?" She laughed and swiveled upon the desk, leaping forth from it and striding towards Valmial in long, confident, steps. She rose up and pressed her lips upon his bicep, before hooking her arm in his and gingerly easing the scepter from his grasp. Valmial leaned upon her in the stead of his tool, his eyes now gazing downwards at her in direct. Had her robe been quite so advantageous earlier this evening? He directed his thoughts elsewhere, back to her eyes- anywhere above her neck for sanity's sake.

"Speechless, perhaps, is a word." He managed at last as she guided him slowly, limping step by limping step, to the great chair behind the desk. Somewhere along the way she discarded his staff absentmindedly, casting it to the ground unceremoniously. She pushed, and he entertained her physical effort by sitting into it at her urging. He tilted his head, a sigh of relaxation coming from him as, for the first time since lunch the day before he finally sat down. "What further service can I offer the Holy Order on this day of my death?"

The woman laughed, sliding her hands into her hair and fluffing it out attractively. The red waves cascaded down over long ears, the tips of which protruded playfully from the fullness of her hair, and flowed over her shoulders and covered their bareness. He could have sworn she was wearing something more conservative earlier- this time he was sure of it, the haze of wine beginning to fade as heat filled his scales.

"Do I need to spell it out for you?" Her body twisted into a playful spin, all too aware of her own beauty, and she boldly made as if to climb into Valmial's lap, kneeling upon his lap in full to reach the height of his head and face. "Dead man, dead man..." She purred, caressing the scales of his face with a hand. Her fingers dancing along them, tracing them daintily until she found the thinner armor of his under-jaw. "If tonight is to be your last night, then it may as well be warm."

The words would have been very alluring indeed, if not for the flash of steel from within her robe. She swiftly drew a long dagger and drove it upwards into the scales below his jaw- and it bit deep, breaking through the first layer with ease- but catching against the layered shards of dragon's armor. It glanced against bone and rose into cheek rather than mouth, failing to drive forth to murder. Her eyes had one moment to widen in surprise before Valmial's arms wrapped about her. He roared in fury and pain, hefting the woman's slight frame high in his grip- and smiting her down upon the great desk with such force that it splintered the surface and cast her upon the stones of the floor.

He limped back a step, wrenching the dagger loose from his jaw and casting it aside. Even as his black blood spilled down his chest, wroth broiled within his four eyes and his voice gurgled forth, booming even as speaking with wetness, with an imperative beyond resistance. The air itself trembled with his rasping voice, the candles flickering as if to death, and the shutters trembled against the near windows. His voice seemed to rise from the air itself, rattling within the stunned woman's skull as if driven there by the smith's hammer.

"Speak your master's name!"


Black blood spat from his twisted lips, coating his razor-sharp teeth even as it flows over his lips. The wound would not kill him, but his moment of spoken words was nearing its end as the taste of his own ichor filled his mouth. Laelia's scream choked in her throat, and a single word was understood through the terror that ripped from her broken body.

"Zelbam! Zelbam!" She cried, all other words incoherent as his draconic visage overtook her. It was the last word that left her lips as Valmial lurched forward, grasping her throat tightly in a mighty hand, and with lumbering gait brought the would-be assassin to the window- and with a thundrous crash of broken glass, hurled her through it and into the open air. His leg gave way, and he caught himself upon the broken glass of the sill. His scaled hand crushing the harmful shards easily, as he leaned from the window and watched as Laelia experienced something he had learned all too well at the hands of Erme Hippokrates in the depths of the Starspire Dungeons...

Gravity overcomes all.

It wasn't until she had disappeared from sight through a passing cloud that he coughed, sputtering his black blood against the windowframe, and brought a hand up to try and stifle the bleeding against his throat. He swayed forth, braced against the wall, until at last he could ring the serving bell.

His own attendants would arrive with haste, to find Valmial bloodied and wroth behind the splinters of his desk, clutching his staff irrevocably in his grasp. He would not sleep on this night. He knew not when peace would next come, but as his wound was seen to the dawn came...

Ordai'el beckoned.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by psych0pomp
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psych0pomp DOUBT EVERYTHING / except me... i'm cool

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Ordai’el consumed most of the island it sat upon, the only other landmarks there were the mountains, and the shrines that found their home in the forest leading up to it. The docks were massive, but beyond a few warehouses and gatehouses, there wasn’t anything one could call valuable architecture. On an island not too far away from Ordai’el, a new city had popped up in the wake of Ordai’el’s fall. It was dubbed Tornika. Most of it was off limits to anyone not within the Holy Order, but it did have numerous inns, eateries, and places of worship that anyone could attend. Yet, the crowning jewel of Tornika was a structure made entirely of crystal and starlight colored metal. No matter how the light hit it, even during a stormy day, it had an ethereal glow to it. And on a day like today, where the wind erupted from the sea and threw salt in the eyes of all that walked down those polished roads, it had an undulating glimmer to it. Like it was submerged into the deep well of water.

The structure was called the Radiant Gate, and most days it was dormant. Today it lit up, crackled, and hummed with intense magic. Many people gathered outside, looking at the volatile illumination that poured from the Radiant Gate. The conversations went from fevered and loud to hushed as the clouds themselves opened. A bolt of light shot upwards into the sky above and tore into the horizon like a festering wound—a virulent green bathing the crowd before everything calmed.

A priest of the Holy Order pushed open the heavy, metal doors. He spoke to his fellow mages and knights as they exited the dome shaped structure of the Radiant Gate. They all had a relaxed tone as if this entire situation was a part of their daily grind. The crowd looked onwards in anticipation. A knight came to the forefront of the group and waved them away. “It was successful. Another group was transported to Ordai’el. Not that it matters. Go back to wherever you’re staying. We’re done here.”

“Where’s the Empress?” Someone in the crowd called out.

The knight shrugged. “She don’t come to these send offs anymore. Her Holiness has much larger issues to attend to. She should be coming to Tornika here in a week or so—you can hear those words from the mouth of the divine herself. Now, like I—”

A blood curdling scream ruptured through the crowd. A woman pointed past the knight and to one of his colleagues. He turned in enough time to see his stomach distend and explode like a pustule. The liquid didn’t get on him, but it did a few of the other priests, and they started screaming in pain. One’s skin started sloughing off at a tremendous rate. The others began to scab over with flat gray skin until it consumed him in its entirety. Another found arachnid like appendages bursting from their eyes. They started to flee from the group. The knight pulled out his sword and summoned the roiling fire from within him. The blade caught ablaze before he charged at the ones before him.

Hours later… the knight stared at a pyre of nearly fifty bodies of all races. The flames roiled before them, and the black smoke touched the sky. He, along with a healer of Wether, were the only two that weren’t infected by the time it was over. She vomited so many times in the interim, though. It had almost become commonplace for her to heave out brackish, yellow bile every time she had to look at the corpses. “What do you think that was?” she asked. “I’ve participated in dozens of these. That’s… never happened before. Did we do something wrong?”

The knight frowned. He didn’t know. “I think the only thing wrong is that place—Ordai’el.”

The healer straightened herself. Her usually dark skin looked pale and clammy, and there was a tinge of nauseating green around her eyes. “I don’t imagine the Empress will want to open that connection again for a while.”

“If Her Holiness is smart, she’ll never open it again.”



One moment they’d been in the glistening dome of the Radiant Gate. The thrum of magic around them was thick and palpable. Then there’d been a sheer, blinding white and the whole scene dissolved around them. Naenia swore that she saw the entirety of Goan underneath them before her feet found purchase on the ground again. It went from flat, shiny slabs to reddish-gray dust. At their landing, a massive cloud of dirt rose around them. Naenia coughed wildly before the dust settled and their surroundings became evident.

They were in a gate yard of sorts. Behind them was an archway that led out and into the surrounding city of Ordai’el. The left and right of them was the curved inner yard that encircled the Holy Order’s tower, boxed in by a tall, white wall. The tower was where the order convened. Naenia had been there a few times. She hadn’t been allowed into the depths of it, but she’d seen the city from the top. It expanded out from the tower in rings of importance, each walled off, before the massive outer wall kept everything inside. A river ran around the periphery, pale blue and manmade. Usually, if the rings weren’t filled with white, gray, and pale blue houses there were large swaths of greenery. Around them, in the innermost ring, the ground was dead.

If Naenia remembered correctly, this was usually known as the market. There were stalls lining each side. Yet, they’d fallen into heavy disrepair. Their vibrant banners either faded or stained by some dark ichor. The polished stone walkways that ran between the stalls and fed into the tower, proper, were dull and crumbling. Still, one could make it out easily enough to tell where they needed to go. If Naenia squinted, she could see the grand entrance to the Holy Order’s tower. It was open. She turned the archway behind her, the portcullis fully risen and rusted into place. Yet, a shiver ran down her spine at the thought of walking through there. It didn’t help that written in Trade Speak were the words “DO NOT CROSS.”

She tried to see why, staring into the ring of houses after that. There didn’t seem to be much change, really. The ground was still dead. The buildings were crumbling and stained. Yet, there were a few figures standing amongst it all. Naenia thought twice about lifting her hand to wave, as she noticed they did not move. They didn’t even seem to be breathing. She took a few steps away from the entrance and moved towards the inside of the ring.

A grinding noise erupted into the eerie silence of the courtyard about that time. She turned and watched as a fountain, something that used to be quite splendid, pushed out a mucous brown substance from its jets. It fell into the brackish pools with a sickening “glurgh,” before the grinding stopped. It seemed so surreal that it was still on a timer after all these years.

Naenia ran a hand through her short brown hair before she turned to the group. Her eyes fell over each of the members. Right, they weren’t much to look at, but what did she expect? This venture was viewed as fruitless at this point. Many people would say that Ordai’el was a lost cause and that Goan would do well to forget it.

“I know we really didn’t have time for introductions, earlier. My name is Naenia Blackwell, a priest of Dhrobris. I’ve been here before but—” she trailed off as her vision finally rose to the sky above. Red clouds raced across a dark black sky. There were no stars or suns or moons in the sky. Just an empty, black void.
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Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Fading Memory
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Fading Memory The Final Flame of a Fiery Bird

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Valmial landed heavily upon his feet. The magic that had transported them to this place echoed around him, the blinding radiance gleaming in his eyes. He held the threads of the Radiant Gate within a clawed hand, unseen to all but those gifted with the sight of the arcane such as he, and slowly ran his claws over those chords of power. He trailed them, saw the dwindling gate in his mind's eye...

He severed the threads with the clenching of his fist. No turning back.

"Burn the boats." He murmured to himself, citing an ancient orcish war record. As the threads of magic snapped and his vision peered through to the reality around him, he clutched at his staff in a mighty grip. His other hand rose, as it often had in recent days, to caress at the scarred mass of repairing scales on the underside of his jaw where the assassin's dagger had failed to inflict an end to mortality upon him. He caresses his jaw and chin like a bearded sage might have.

Even before Naenia's trailing words, before he himself even gazed at his surroundings, Valmial was gazing at the sky. By the time Naenia's introduction trailed to its end, Valmial was knelt low upon one knee, his injured leg carefully curled whilst his dominant knee held his weight. The long Starspire sceptre in his hands had been twisted, revealing the long telescoping lens it concealed. His gaze swept across the sky, more concerned with the firmament than with the township around him.

This was his expertise. The others could attend to the architecture, horticulture, speculation, and cartography of this ordeal. The sweeping of the lens sent his gaze excrutiatingly far into that black void above them, as he sought out even a dwindled inkling of a star's light. He gazed heavensward to the instinctual places of the constellations, to the well calculated lunar shadow, to the deep nebulae known only to those of the Starspire.

"Valmial Hippokrates." his voice rumbled from his lips as a baritone cut with razor's teeth. "Ne'er have I had opportunity to come myself, fair lady Blackwell, and if you have any inclination of pathfinding I will follow. The heavenly guidance I would have relied upon for position and measurement will not be of any assistance."

Presuming a lack of interesting occurances in the inky void of the sky, Valmial twists the staff closed and rises back to his feet with a few lumbering steps and finally takes in his surroundings and companions with more than his prior cursory interest. If no other decisive action is taken, his attention is drawn to the Portcullis and he directs his initial surveilance to this path and its troublesome warning.
Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Fetzen
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To say that the Radiant Gate was an interesting asset would have been a gross understatement. If Ordai'el's current situation had been the primary incentive for developing and building this portal, then the capital's fate might have been really worth it. Varandas was miles away from saying that openly of course and had he known the the city's population and splendor better than what he had happened to read in a few shabby books somewhen in his life, he might have thought very differently about said Gate as well.

By all means available to Varandas' humble comprehension, this place was as dead as his body. The thrall would have really liked for it to go well beyond that threshold though the moment the fountain erupted into... whatever kind of wicked liquid that was. Things still moving were hardly an issue in a living environment, but here, everything that showed sudden activity was just bound to make everybody's spine become frozen in an instant. If one could only have the assertion that all mechanical things had become deprived of energy long ago and that everything that was already dead had also already rotten away completely. It would have made things quite a tad more comfortable he felt.

Speaking of comfort, the impenetrable sky above them did not hamper it nearly as much as the other things. The mining town he came from high up in the mountains had experienced conditions not so vastly different on a regular basis. Dense fog, clouds, winds and snowstorms had denied any star- or moonlight to reach the ground for days on end as well. The only major difference was that weather was explainable, this thing here was not.

"My name is Varandas and I have no previous profession worth mentioning I think. There is not much else to tell about me, at last I think you might invent enough facts about me yourself." Varandas spoke loud and clearly, but in a tone relatively close to sarcasm. He just waited for the first comments about his nature, his alleged stench, the crystal stuck in his chest or anything else about his appearance to come up. Yes, from a perfectly rational point of view there was hardly a more inappropriate place for this than right here and right now, but when had human prejudice ever failed him ? Incorrect assumptions were just way to precious to cede them to the truth.

Speaking of comfort again, Varandas found himself quite happy to just stop breathing for a few moments as the fountain's smell wafted towards them. Unfortunately however he also couldn't speak while doing this, and seeing how the portcullis and other things obviously suffered from corrosion and general decay he felt like having to say something: "I suggest we all watch our steps and don't hesitate to look at the ceilings above us here and there. The buildings might have become a tad unstable maybe, who knows for sure yet."
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Hidden 2 yrs ago Post by Theyra
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Theyra

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Vel Arrianus


A thing of marvel, the Radiant Gate, the only thing that can take someone to Ordai’el. The effort it must have been to make, but it was to be expected to save Ordai’el from its troubles. Vel had been to Ordai’el and lived there for a two years. He knows how important the city is and how important it was for him to come here.

Back again, Vel thought to himself as he arrived at the place as the light of the magic that brought him here waned. Light that, even while wearing one of his light-blocking goggles, blinded him for a time. But here he is, back in the holy city, and he can remember how lush with life the city was back then. But now, after a quick scan of his surroundings. It was clear that it looked abandoned and with no sight of life. If there are still living souls that linger in the city, they are not near him.

Looking up at the sky did little to scare him. Vel grew up underground. There was nothing but a black rocky ceiling above him. No light but ones from torches from outsiders that venture down to trade with the Orph cities. Since the light was of no use to an Orph with them being able to see in the dark. However, a thought did come to him that since there was no sun and yet there was light. Does that mean he could take off his goggles?

Vel took another look at the dark sky, and for a moment, he placed his hand on the side of his goggles before putting his hand away. No, he thought. He should not risk blinding himself if the light proved to be overwhelming for him. So the goggles remained, and Vel walked to the others.

"My name is Vel Arrianus, and I have also been here before, so I can help as a guide like lady Blackwell to an extent." Vel then took stock of his companions, and the one that stood out the most was Varandas. Mainly the crystal stuck in his chest and his appearance. Vel would have said something, but now is not the time for that. Like it or not, these people are his companions now as they ventured into the city and faced who knows what. Vel looked down at his ring, gazing upon the symbol of Dhorbris. "I am here now and I will see my duty done." Saying it under his breath so the others could not hear him. Now to see if he has failed his duty or not.
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