The mid-morning light spills across the black sand, casting long, wavering shadows across the miles-wide black sand tide zones. Overhead, the sky is a deep, fractured blue, heavy with streaks of white cloud that swirl in the high winds. Nivig looms above, a crescent of dim, purple light on the left side, its massive shape dominating the horizon even in daylight. The star shines brightly to Nivig's side, but its brightness does little to draw the eye away from the awe-inspiring gas giant.
Beyond the beach, the land rises into jagged white cliffs, their pale stone stark against the darkness of the shore. This contrast—black sand, white stone—defines Kralin’s rugged geography, a land shaped by time and forces beyond human reckoning. Inland, past the cliffs, the first signs of civilization can be seen: faint outlines of tents clinging to the rock face, banners snapping in the wind, and the distant murmur of a city waking beneath the watchful gaze of the Kralic tribes.
But here, on the shoreline, all is still—a graveyard of wreckage and bodies, scattered like offerings to an indifferent, alien sky.
The first thing Gwen felt was the weight.
It pressed down on her from all sides, a slow, suffocating pull, like she was still submerged beneath some vast, unknowable sea.
Then—air.
Her body lurched, choking on salt and breath, rolling onto her side as water poured from her lungs. She coughed until she was empty, until her ribs ached, until she could taste only iron and brine.
The distant sound of crashing waves and the bubbling sea echoed in her head. But she was on land now. She was alive.
She lay still, fingers digging into the wet black sand, waiting for the world to settle.
Then, slowly, she turned her head—
And saw that thing, again.
It filled the sky.
Memory stirred.
A floating sphere so vast, so impossible, it swallowed the horizon, a churning colossus of storm and color. The clouds roiled in shades of ochre and violet, of bruised crimson and gold, a sky within a sky, folding and unfolding in endless, ceaseless motion.
She was breathless. It was like nothing she'd ever seen.
Except...
She had seen it before. Hadn’t she?
The knowledge felt slippery, like trying to grasp the memory of a dream upon waking.
She squinted, vision swimming, and saw something else.
Something moved within the planet’s clouds.
A shadow, large enough to be seen from here, deeper than the storms that churned around it. It shifted, too fluid to be a mountain, too solid to be mist, something vast and slow, something that should not be alive.
Her breath hitched. She did not know why she was afraid, only that she was.
She forced herself to look away, and the world reasserted itself in broken fragments.
The tide. The wreckage of a dozen ancient ships, marking 1,000 years of civilization. The bodies.
She was not alone.
Figures lay strewn across the shore, caught in the grasp of driftwood and seaweed. Some stirred, rising with sluggish, disbelieving movements. Others did not.
Something pounded in her throat, but it did not feel like her heart. In fact, it was beginning to dawn on her that her pulse was...weak. Had to be, she couldn't feel it at all.
A man slumped face-down in the sand, arms bent at an unnatural angle. A woman gasped for breath beside him, her fingers twitching, as if she had only just remembered how to move. Further down, someone sobbed, clutching a lifeless body against their chest.
The ocean had cast them here. But from what?
Gwen shifted, trying to sit up, and the wrongness of her body hit her like a second wave.
Her leg was broken.
She could see it, could feel it—yet there was no pain.
Her breath caught as she pressed a trembling hand to the bone beneath her skin. She should be screaming, weeping, but all she felt was a hollow absence.
No pain. No heat.
She had survived something.
Something no one should have.
She swallowed, forcing down the swell of some unholy cousin of nausea. Answers could wait. The world was here. She was here.
And somewhere beyond the beach, past the rising cliffs and curling smoke, civilization waited.
For now, she had to move. She had to find a way.
Beyond the beach, the land rises into jagged white cliffs, their pale stone stark against the darkness of the shore. This contrast—black sand, white stone—defines Kralin’s rugged geography, a land shaped by time and forces beyond human reckoning. Inland, past the cliffs, the first signs of civilization can be seen: faint outlines of tents clinging to the rock face, banners snapping in the wind, and the distant murmur of a city waking beneath the watchful gaze of the Kralic tribes.
But here, on the shoreline, all is still—a graveyard of wreckage and bodies, scattered like offerings to an indifferent, alien sky.
-------------
The first thing Gwen felt was the weight.
It pressed down on her from all sides, a slow, suffocating pull, like she was still submerged beneath some vast, unknowable sea.
Then—air.
Her body lurched, choking on salt and breath, rolling onto her side as water poured from her lungs. She coughed until she was empty, until her ribs ached, until she could taste only iron and brine.
The distant sound of crashing waves and the bubbling sea echoed in her head. But she was on land now. She was alive.
She lay still, fingers digging into the wet black sand, waiting for the world to settle.
Then, slowly, she turned her head—
And saw that thing, again.
It filled the sky.
Memory stirred.
A floating sphere so vast, so impossible, it swallowed the horizon, a churning colossus of storm and color. The clouds roiled in shades of ochre and violet, of bruised crimson and gold, a sky within a sky, folding and unfolding in endless, ceaseless motion.
She was breathless. It was like nothing she'd ever seen.
Except...
She had seen it before. Hadn’t she?
The knowledge felt slippery, like trying to grasp the memory of a dream upon waking.
She squinted, vision swimming, and saw something else.
Something moved within the planet’s clouds.
A shadow, large enough to be seen from here, deeper than the storms that churned around it. It shifted, too fluid to be a mountain, too solid to be mist, something vast and slow, something that should not be alive.
Her breath hitched. She did not know why she was afraid, only that she was.
She forced herself to look away, and the world reasserted itself in broken fragments.
The tide. The wreckage of a dozen ancient ships, marking 1,000 years of civilization. The bodies.
She was not alone.
Figures lay strewn across the shore, caught in the grasp of driftwood and seaweed. Some stirred, rising with sluggish, disbelieving movements. Others did not.
Something pounded in her throat, but it did not feel like her heart. In fact, it was beginning to dawn on her that her pulse was...weak. Had to be, she couldn't feel it at all.
A man slumped face-down in the sand, arms bent at an unnatural angle. A woman gasped for breath beside him, her fingers twitching, as if she had only just remembered how to move. Further down, someone sobbed, clutching a lifeless body against their chest.
The ocean had cast them here. But from what?
Gwen shifted, trying to sit up, and the wrongness of her body hit her like a second wave.
Her leg was broken.
She could see it, could feel it—yet there was no pain.
Her breath caught as she pressed a trembling hand to the bone beneath her skin. She should be screaming, weeping, but all she felt was a hollow absence.
No pain. No heat.
She had survived something.
Something no one should have.
She swallowed, forcing down the swell of some unholy cousin of nausea. Answers could wait. The world was here. She was here.
And somewhere beyond the beach, past the rising cliffs and curling smoke, civilization waited.
For now, she had to move. She had to find a way.