Avatar of Mammon
  • Last Seen: 4 yrs ago
  • Old Guild Username: Mammon
  • Joined: 11 yrs ago
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    1. Mammon 11 yrs ago

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A life half-lived.

Discord Mammon#6954

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Just reporting in. Glad to see things are still moving forward!
You know I'm following you around. I'm interested.
I'll have a character sheet up soon.


Sign me up for ❤'s Wild. I am bringing a friend as well though. Maybe we can add one more person, but I am fine with three.
Finally to the third page. Let's pick up the pace.
When a Void-tunnel opened or closed, it sent forth a nigh-imperceptible pulse. This pulse wormed through all things within the tunnel's radius; metal, stone and bone alike. Such was the way of Void Magic. Now that silent seraph's mournful aria touched gently with the tapestry of corporeal Aedrasil; delivering Lloyle Waraz and Verrod into the Vaaldian Palace. Materializing in the blink of an eye, no one bore witness to their arrival; though it seemed that chaos reigned nearby.

The high ceilings, traced by sloping archways and pillared sections, rumbled with an impact that the Black Adder leader could only assume was an explosion. If he were to wager a guess, it would have had something to do with the malignant lingerings of the Undead; given how their scent, their aura lingered lightly in the air, mixed with the acrid taste of magical exertion. The corridor, itself seemed to be unoccupied; thanks to the aforementioned event, or perhaps the Lunar Festival. A perfect entry point. The Crystalline Chamber was sequestered, but no so far as most would suspect. He would first find the false door and speak to it a simple Word, revealing it for what it truly was.

His feet, covered only by the strange leggings he wore, sliding easily across the smooth stone; his passage silent and swift. The hallway was long, as many were within the Palace; and sparsely decorated. That was true for most of the stronghold, save for the Councilor's chambers and the Resplendent Court itself. This time of year, with winter's teeth beginning to gnaw at autumn's soft flesh, banners were strung throughout the streets...yet little changed within the Palace. That, moreso than the tension in the air, pleased him greatly. Subtle was the art of leading from afar. Subtle was the knife that cut, but left no laceration.

Lloyle Waraz salivated. There would be no subtlety in what awaited the Unsung. It would be a plain message, to those who would behold it. A red reminder that there were those who had not forgotten when Strife had come to claim his world. His sundering had not ended his influence. Nor would the actions of mortals ever truly stop his machinations. Even now, much as the Void-melody that lingered on the edge of his mind, he could feel Strife's approval...his guidance...and perhaps, his greed.

Despite his thoughts, Lloyle was still fully focused on his immediate surroundings. A man was approaching, though not yet in view. Armored and of an even gait. The Black Adder tasted the air...and paused; holding up his hand to Verrod. Avoiding the stranger would have been easier and put them more hastily on their way, but curiosity was perhaps the greatest vice Lloyle Waraz possessed. He leaned against the wall, nearby the corner where the man would be making his rounds.

"Hail, guardsman. A word, if you would."

The Royal Vaaldian Palace Guard stiffened. Though he was familiar with the leader of the Black Adders, the sight of Lloyle Warraz and his abomination of a nephew, Verrod, was enough to make any man’s senses prickle with deep-seated unease. The name Warraz was enough to conjure notions of ruthlessness in battle and in politics. Wherever the pair were found, discord was sure to follow.

Oh, Patrician Warraz,” he exclaimed, “You gave me quite the fright.” The guard looked with apprehension upon the hideous body that the Black Adder called ‘nephew.’ Verrod’s mouth twitched chagrin as he watched repulsion spread across the guardsman’s face. Perhaps it was cruelty that lead his father to bestow upon Verrod such a loveless visage, or perhaps it pertained more to his function, but the cohort thirsted for more noble--or even palatable--features. He had no need to disguise himself as beggar, and instead wore clothes better suited to a man of his courtly birth-rank; he had no need to feign sickness or injury, disease or disability, but still others saw him as a lesser being than the charismatic and chilling enigma of his Uncle Lloyle.

I heard about the success of your organization. Did you come to speak to the Council about that special permit again? What was it?” The palace sentry asked. With a callous self-consciousness, he pulled a silk scarf up over his mouth and nose, veiling the lunar scar, the discoloration of his patchy complexion, and his putrescent teeth, which tarnished his face. “I suppose that’s not really my business, but today is the Lunar Festival, m’lord. The Council isn’t issuing charters or anything such.

The Vaaldian guardian and his uncle continued their conversation, but Verrod had no interest in the small talk of an armored insect. “To be honest, Patrician, the only exciting thing here lately has been the arrival of the Silver Glint. I apologize, m’lord, but if you want to see her, you’ll have to wait for the festival.” Words about the guild’s recent exploits, the mundane facade of daily life, boring, vacuous, banal drivel spilled from the man’s mouth. Instead, the mage inspected the architecture of the palace, waiting.

He listened to the man speak, giving a nod where appropriate, but said nothing in return; his mind elsewhere, a place where the sun was in his eyes and an enormous pit of tar roiled before him...his body did not flex, but flow into motion in that place of being-another-self. Yet here a different tension was obvious. Apprehension seemed to cling to those who observed his nephew's offensive countenance. Some would attribute it to Isg use, such whispers had already been bountiful among their lessers. The truth was something that only Atagh knew, fully. Lloyle had only suspicions as to the nature of what calculated abominations of form his brother had created. Verrod was among the less hideous, though, certainly, and utilized as a far more efficient right-hand.

Lloyle had always been cautious with his brother and nephew, interacting with them mostly from afar until there came true cause to convene. Lately, their gatherings had been few; but their interactions many. A new epoch was dawning, and they had long ago prepared for it. Too few knew of the shifting heavens and their disjointed cycles. The Black Adder leader had become intimate with those aspects of reality long before he had donned the mask he now wore. They were Strife's chosen...and were wont to be wary of one another. It was their nature to be suspicious, to scheme and usurp. He wondered how much of that nature had been imparted to Verrod.

Still, the man before him remained and spoke. Through Lloyle's observation, the man was not a fit meal. Used to the rigorous life of a Vaaldian Royal Guard. Too much muscle, too chewy, too sinewy. Seasoned with the spice of mediocrity. Hunger always lingered with Waraz, despite his routine indulgence in flesh. Still, not all in Vaald was fit to consume. He had been given ample opportunity to refine his palate.

"My deepest apologies," he spoke as though from far away, his posture lax and shoulders stooped, "I did not intend to frighten you." The strange magic he had sensed was not attached to this man, though a tiny thread of it had latched on in passing. "I have come here to walk the halls, before the Lunar Festival begins. I have not come for a charter or audience with the Council, but for a life." Lloyle seemed to straighten, his voice losing its previously ponderous tone. His middle finger slid across the pad of his thumb, the resulting snap breaking a momentary silence. As it echoed, the Black Adder closed the distance between himself and the guard.

Verrod had meandered behind the guard as the two conversed, analyzing the layout of the hallway. Based on what he knew of Deladish construction, it was simple enough to deduce where they needed to journey. The maze of corridors that composed the first floor of the Vaaldian Palace was built to be puzzle, but to a mind as sharp as Verrod’s, it was a map. Centuries of nobility had decorated the structure with ornate carving, paintings, marble, banners, and mirrors, but the lavish ornamentation was merely a distraction from fact: this was not simply a palace, but a fortress; like a painted geode, at the center of its stone fortifications was a crystal gem.

The snap roused him from his examination. He reached out for the guardsman, grasping his shoulder firmly. Steam hissed from the junction of flesh and armor. Immediately, the unsuspecting man doubled over in agony. His face contorted with the throes of perdition that now wracked his body. The stench of charred offal filled the air as smoke poured from his mouth and nose. The sentry retched, spewing the boiling remains of his liquefied organs onto the luxurious tiled floor. Skin bubbled as the subdermal fat blistered him from the inside out. The eyes popped with steamy pressure. Flames leapt from his mouth, charred hunks of flesh began to burn away and drop to the floor, and fire soon engulfed his body.

Verrod watched the guardsman die, unable to scream as the fire consumed all the oxygen in his lungs. He stared with a monotonous indifference as the blaze ate away at singed corpse until nothing was left but a blackened skeleton and ash. The mage closed his icy eyes, ending the spell, and heaved a sigh.

You know I have not the affection for killing.” He looked at his uncle with a worn but white-hot glim. “I do not savor such brutish displays of butchery as you and Father might… However… This is no mere butchery, no mere massacre.” A slight smile twisted his heinous countenance beneath the thin silk veil. “This is a love-letter, written in fire and blood, addressed to god and sealed with the death of a hero.” His smile turned into a wicked, zealous grin. “With font so large, all of Vaald can read.

Verrod dipped his head toward Llyole Warraz, and began to lead the way through the Palace to the Crystalline Chamber.

In collaboration with @Crumbs
A low, distant rumble punctuated the conversation. Alyosha closed his eyes, contemplation distorting his features beneath his porcelain mask; the thrill of finally meeting Crosos Granz gave way to the weight of their condition. ”The Serene Pools have exploded. The situation… Does not require our immediate attention.” Sympathy welled in his gut for the golem. Even if he was an amalgamation of twisted metal, his soul was forged of the Unsung. Executing the Silver Glint was tantamount to matricide, and The Oracle of the Seven Swords did not envy his situation.

”You know of my powers for foresight. Of course I have come to guide you, to the best of my ability…” Grey glanced up and down the lengthy, vacant corridor, making certain that no one would overhear him. ”It is certain that the Silver Glint will die, and we will bear witness. However…” He paused, wary to admit that his clairvoyancy had such troubling limitations. If his gift was so easily thwarted by an unseen enemy, what benefit was he? ”I am blind to the exact circumstances of her death. As much as I wish to bestow comforting platitudes--’Her death will be swift and painless,’ ‘There is no one better suited for the task than one so noble, so close to her,’ ‘It will be an honorable end to a honorable life’--I cannot, in good conscious, speak what may or may not be.”

Discomfort gnawed at the back of his mind, but he pushed it aside, struggling to stay in the present. Crosos Granz was a friend to his father, his mother, a knight which most would daydream of calling a comrade. The Prophet was meant to help shoulder the burdens of heroes, to prepare them for the road ahead, and to do so with poise and tactfulness. Alyosha prayed silently that he might fill his father’s shoes. ”Ser Crosos Granz, not another soul--man or beast or construct--would be equipped as well as you are for this. My only fear, given the chaos unfolding throughout the town, is that you will not have the chance to see it to completion.”

Alyosha gripped tightly the stone around his neck. ”We have much to discuss, and little time to discuss it. Is there someplace private we can go?”

"Of course," the Golem Knight responded, lifting a hand and pointing down the corridor they currently inhabited, "my chamber is just ahead.” He, too, had felt the not-so-distant rumble and fought back the urge to investigate; if the Prophet's son had not deemed it necessary, Granz believed the information would soon present itself. That did little to ease his mood, but it meant, from his view, that the things at hand took precedence. "Might I say, Alyosha, you've a gift for oration. I'll not choose to argue with what you've said. It would be foolish...and all in Vaald know that Crosos Granz is only a fool when it suits him best."

The matter of Elise's uncertain death was a strange salve to him. Mayhaps he would not be the one to sever her head from its perch; but that was a small comfort, given the questions it brought to mind. Instead he continued his steps, subdued thunder echoing throughout their vicinity. A wooden door, chipped and worn with age, sat before them; situated in an alcove to their right. He pressed it open without pause and held it, motioning slightly for Alyosha to enter. "Apologies, you may find it to be a bit stark." A slight grin accompanied the words.

Inside his chambers was, indeed, bleak to most, but he had always found it to be more comfortable. A bed sat in the far corner, sunk in near the middle from his weight. Two tables, one small and one large made up most of the remaining decoration. Close to the window, where the smaller table sat, there was a prickly plant basking. Nef he had decided to call the cactus, after an old friend. One chair sat before Nef and two arranged opposite one another at the larger table. Granz made another motion, shutting the door behind him; his single eye resting on Alyosha.

"We may speak freely here."

Alyosha Grey nodded, inspecting the room. It was certainly utilitarian; bare with the exception of minimal furnishings and a small, spiked plant. He found it queer that the golem slept, but not so strange as to comment--it was common that constructs would imitate life. Admittedly, the foreign cactus was what drew from him the most interest. “You named it.” The Oracle took a few strides across the room, tapping the needles of the desert flora. ”Nef,” he commented. “How… Paternal of you.” Alyosha smiled dryly beneath his mask at the irony.

He turned back to face Ser Crosos Granz. “I am grateful for the privacy. Now then...” He surveyed the room again, selecting a open space on the floor, and sat down. “My powers of foresight are limited in this state.” He pulled out one of the Seven of Eight, inspecting it. The Oracle polished it free of any dust from his travels, scraping away a smear of dried blood embedded between the hilt and the blade. “I do, unfortunately, have… ‘Blind spots.’ Moments in time where the outcome still swings by a thread…” He sat the sword down and moved on to the next. “Or a powerful magic has been used to veil the truth…” The Son of the Prophet frowned slightly, buffing away grit until the sword’s blade reflected light like a brand new mirror. He unsheathed another and began his work. “Distractions will tempt us in the city, but we must not take our eyes away from the truth.”

Seven swords were neatly laid out on the floor in a row, each scrubbed of imperfection, each buffed clean of the past. He stood and stretched. Alyosha raised his hands. The air grew cold, his breath came out in a puffy cloud of vapor from beneath his mask; the hair on the back of his neck rose; goosebumps spread down his arms and legs. A touch, a shiver, a whisper. The swords began to quiver. Metal clanged gently against the stone floor, scraping upward as each one started to float. “Ser Crosos Granz, come with me. Gaze at the truth.”

Paternal was not the word he would have chosen, but the Golem didn't feel it necessary to tell the Prophet's son exactly where that particular barb had been aimed; nor did he feel it proper to feign being startled by this unspoken bit of information. More pressing were concerns about what was going to transpire before his eye. Both in his desolate chamber and once he took up the mantle Serpera had offered to him. "Privacy is no trouble. I tend to favor it, if you couldn't tell by how ill-prepared I am to receive guests." Granz had moved while Alyosha spoke, departing from the door and taking up a spot near the window. "Your blind spots are no trouble either, fledgling Prophet. If one were to see the future fully, I daresay they would experience something short of a fulfilling life."

He had no true gauge for the validity of his statement, speaking mostly from a nervous agitation, but felt there was truth in the idea of it. Even the greatest diviners of fate were often limited in their access to concrete visions. So far as Crosos Granz was concerned, there was little in the way of solidity in clairvoyance; all results stemming from the actions of those involved. Some would argue the fact that those actions were taken at all to be fate, but the Golem often questioned the existence of such an implement. To him, understanding the future was simply seeing the choices and their consequences splayed-out; a more mundane form of foretelling, if one was accurate. Of course, what transpired before him was far from mundane.

The swords had begun to float. Chill settled in around him. Something filled the air that did not feel entirely like magic. An implacable, distant pressure settled in on the Golem; something at odds with his Core. Something that vibrated with a sense of driven and bitter agelessness. His eye lingered on the hovering swords, jaw-plate scraping quietly as he contemplated what exactly the truth was. He moved closer, lowering himself to sit; nodding a brief affirmation to the Prophet's son.

"Very well, Alyosha Grey. Let's see what these flying daggers can do."

The Son of the Prophet merely nodded in response, his focus needed instead for the ritual. The Seven of Eight continued to rise, now hovering above them with supernatural splendor. The silver and steel blades aligned themselves in a ring around Alyosha Grey, their points aimed straight down, and began to circle him. The Oracle of Seven Swords placed his hand on Crosos Granz’s shoulder--a gesture to both steady himself and to help channel his visions for the golem as well.

One… “I summon thee into this place,” A sword dropped onto the stone floor with a loud, stannic clatter. Two… ”To usher out the murk of night.” Three... “Lead these blades I use to fight,” Four… “And guide me about time and space.” Five… “Cast out the shadow with thou light,” Six... “To award me thou future sight.” Seven... “An act we make in grace.” The final glaive landed amongst the others, completing the invocation.

Smoke curled up from the blackened ground before me. Screams of terror punctuated the ashen evening air. Wraith-like winds and serpentine undulations of fire dispersed the hot ashes, a bittersweet melody lost in the rain. No... No, don’t leave… I wept, grasping at the cinders. It was futile; the embers slipped through my hands like water. Nothing remained.

Nothing but a cloaked figure. It had come to reap their spiritual energy; I could see the souls of my beloved swept into a quivering mass. What are you doing? You can’t take them. You can’t take them from me. A hot, malevolent gust of air swept back the creature’s cowl enough to reveal a mask; it shone, glossy and sinister, in the fading orange glow of the flames. As quickly as they had died, the souls were sundered. Their essence forever destroyed and their energies harvested. Was this truly my fate? Would my soul be forever annihilated? I won’t die without a fight. I won’t succumb without vengeance!

The cloaked figure sent an umbral sphere hurling toward me. I stood in shock. Before I could react, the shadow made contact with my gut. It ripped through me like a cannonball through a wet scarecrow. My body hit the ground with a dull thud.This is it, this is over. Ashes landed like snow on my cold skin.


Alyosha Grey awoke with a jolt. Pain seared in his chest as if he had suffered the fatal wound himself. His gloved hand tightened its grip on Granz’s shoulder. “By the dreams of Steig…” A bleak horror ruminated in his bust, spreading through him like a venom. A draft of cold air snuffed out the candles in the room. Frost formed on the thick glass of the window and curved edges of Crosos’s armor.

Blood dripped down the fuller of a long dagger. The sound of grinding, tearing flesh echoed in the chamber. A small gasp of pain. Heavy breathing. Gritted teeth. Shadows seemed to dance chaotically around the room. A grunt of abject terror escaped as I twisted the blade, pushing it deeper into her gut. Purple venom glinted from the razor in the waning light. Drip, drip, drip. Crimson vitae splattered the floor of the room. The smell of fear, the taste of death, the caress of revenge. I savored the twisted grimace of agony on her features. Sweet convulsions of pain wracked her body, sweat beaded on her brow and white hair caked to her skin. My mouth watered. Succulent, agonizing lacerations gushed.

I was already waiting for you, very far away from this setting where I now stand, in front of you. I was already waiting for this moment. Waiting for the final piece, waiting for the satisfaction, waiting for you. You have it. You think yourself so brave? The dagger returned to its sheath, blood bubbling forth from the wound, a macabre font of dissolution. Warmth of the wound surrounded my fingers, pulsing in vile suffering, hemorrhaging around my skin. Hero Jezebel, death is too kind a mercy.

Footsteps.

Are you coming?


In collaboration with @Crumbs
I walk on, once again, down these corridors, through these halls, these galleries, in this structure of another century, this enormous, luxurious, lugubrious palace, where corridors succeed endless corridors--silent deserted corridors overloaded with a dim, cold ornamentation of woodwork, stucco, moldings, marble, black mirrors, dark paintings, columns, heavy hangings, sculptured door frames, series of doorways, galleries, transverse corridors that open in turn on empty salons, rooms overloaded with an ornamentation from another century, silent halls...

Between these walls covered with woodwork, stucco, moldings, pictures, framed prints, among which I was walking--among which I was already waiting for you, very far away from this setting where I now stand, in front of you, still waiting for the one who will no longer come, who will no longer threaten to enter these halls. These halls, these galleries, in this structure of another century, this enormous, luxurious, lugubrious palace, where corridors succeed endless corridors…

Are you coming?


“The Prophet?!” A voice called to him, rousing him from his flurry of thoughts. “Ser Grey, by th’ gods! I ne’er thought I’d see th’ o’you here.” Alyosha Grey tore his focus away from the gloomy, centuries-old painting of an impossibly aged man; a painting of a notorious mage in his prime, before madness had consumed him. Alyosha hated being torn away from his musing. He turned to face the approaching guard. Before Alyosha could correct his mistaken identity, the man continued: “You must be here on important business, else you wouldn’t’ve come s’far!” The Son of the Prophet shook his head slightly, almost imperceptibly, the movement veiled by his mask and hood. The guard pressed on: “How’d you get in here, anyhow? Must’ve been in all th’ chaos, preparing for th’ festival.” Grey raised his hand with a gesture to silence the man, but he was ignored with enthusiasm. “That must be wh’ brought you here! Come, come! I’ll take you t’ one o’ the counsel.”

The guard indicated the direction of the Hall of Counsels with a gauntlet-clad digit before setting off in its direction. Finally, Alyosha was able to interject. “You are mistaken, Vem Kuniv, patrolman of the Thirteenth Regent Guard of the Vaaldian Palace.” The footfall stopped suddenly, and the guard cast him a weary glance. “I am the Son of the Prophet and the Faceless Mage, Alyosha Grey, Oracle of the Seven Swords and future-...”

“Son o’ th’ Prophet, eh? I haven’t heard o’ th’ Prophet having any sons…” A mixture of confusion and thoughtfulness contorted Vem Kuniv’s face. “But you do know my name, w’out me telling you about it… Unfortunately, son or not, I’m afraid I have t’ take you into custody. Tresspassing ‘n all.”

“I am here to see Crosos Granz, Golem and Knight of the-...”

“I know who he is, Son o’ th’ Prophet.” There was an hint of mockery in the guard’s voice, or perhaps disappointment. “Policy is policy. If it were up t’ me, you could waltz in ‘n out o’ th’ place ‘til your heart’s content but if th’ Captain found out, well…”

"Then it's a good thing the decision is out of your hands, Kuniv...as well as the Captain's," came the Golem's echoing rasp, from a short way down the hall, along with a few nigh-thunderous footsteps. His eye lingered over them each, for a bare moment, before he continued. "Resume your rounds. If the boy has business with me, I'll tend to it personally." Crosos Granz sent him along with a wave of his hand, meeting little resistance. If he had to wager on it, Kuniv would be running to inform the others of what just happened; regardless of how minute it was. Such was the way of the Vaaldian Palace. Such was the way of life.

"Alyosha Grey, eh?" The name Grey was not uncommon in Deladish borders, when one considered things, but there were only a couple who bore it with the same air of mystery and aloofness as the Prophet. The Golem could see where the patrolman could have made his mistake; but the height difference between the two was immediately apparent, the difference in their voices, their stance. Granz had met with the Prophet, Savian Grey, more than a couple of times and had come to marvel at the things he had been told. "Seems to me like a son of the Prophet would do well to avoid being caught in places like this," a lopsided grin accompanied the words, "but you carry the air of your bloodline about you, that much I can see."

The Lunar Festival was fast approaching, but Granz could not bring himself to turn aside the Prophet's son; he had, after all, been warned that such an encounter would be inevitable. "Come, I've preparations to make and a fiendishly hungry god to appease," the lopsided grin scraped against itself as the Golem let his face settle back into normality, "souls to send and a show to put on. I get the feeling that's why you're here." He led the way slowly, heading towards the quarters he had been granted long ago.

Alyosha dipped his head in gratitude, folding his hands neatly in front of him, smiling underneath his mask. “Your presumption is mostly correct… As for being caught, well… You’re here exactly now, are you not?” His father had sent him here to honor the Lunar Festival, to bear witness to the Silver Glint; however this was also the beginning of a new chapter in his life. He longed to meet and guide heroes toward their Fate, to follow in the footsteps of his parents--both of them. It troubled him that their journeys began with the death of a hero: an ill omen to be certain. “I have come to experience the unveiling of the tapestry here, to bear final witness to Elise, the Silver Glint, and…” Despite the amount of stoicism his mask entitled, he sounded distantly forlorn. “To bid farewell to my former mentor.”

He narrowed his eyes toward Granz thoughtfully, noting the golem’s lengthy, metallic stride and wide sauntering gait. Alyosha allowed them to walk in silence for a few moments; the air seemed to vibrate with information unsaid. Voices mumbled in the back of his mind, their voices just loud enough to hear but not understand. Inky secrets swirled at the corners of his vision. Blood pumped through his ears, tension swelled in his temples. A touch, a shiver, a whisper. ...enormous, luxurious, lugubrious palace, where corridors succeed endless corridors--silent deserted corridors... Alyosha closed his eyes. ...pictures, framed prints, among which I was walking--among which I was already waiting for you…

A hypnopompic jerk jolted him back into the present, chasing away visions that scrambled like spiders from a flame. Grey realized he had stopped, and took a few hurried steps to catch up. “Ser Crosos Granz, were you aware that we are the same age? Forty-nine summers we’ve shared.” He offered up the fact, hoping the golem might offer a hand in conversation.

Crosos did not turn at the cessation of following footsteps, that much he had distantly expected. Clairvoyants were always a bit off when it came to their social dealings, but the Golem would not fault him for it. Granz himself was something of an oddity in conversation, after all. "You owe her that much," he turned a looming eye to the Oracle of Seven Swords as he started catching up, "as do the others." The last held true to the tone of the first, but the melancholy of day approaching night had metamorphosed into a muted dread. He was to swing the blade. To swing the blade and run.

He let silence linger after Alyosha's question, "We're all saying goodbye, in our ways," the Golem folded his arms and kept his stride even, "She taught you to swing a sword, yes? I imagine that would be quite a feat." More probably mostly true presumptions. It mattered little, any conversation was light compared to the churning thoughts of Elise's final moments. "I've heard it said you wield them differently. That I'm curious to see." He smiled, albeit with wan effort, having an idea already of what that display would be like; and decided to quickly move on. Thankfully, the nigh-endless corridors of the Vaaldian Palace were fairly sparse with guard or passerby.

"You know enough to come here, to seek me out. You know what awaits The Silver Glint. You already know that I am the one to be her executioner. In all my forty-nine years, I have never had to kill someone who is a part of me. Maybe the impact of death is meaningless for a creature made of metal. Perhaps it is by the grace of all the damned faces that I stand here. " The Golem had not raised his voice, but there was a pain that coursed through the words. "I do know that you intend to help, at least in what capacity you deem fit. You're here to guide-" he considered his choice carefully, "us," it was an uncertainty, but one that felt it appropriate, "on the path that lies ahead."

in collaboration with @Crumbs
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