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=WPC 2025= Field of Sun and Moon

 
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1/19/2025 12:22:04   
  Chewy905

Chromatic ArchKnight of RP


Nothing stirs in the world between worlds. Not a single sound graces its air, not a single step disturbs its streets. This stagnant realm waits, ready for those who seek it, and those who stumble upon it without intent. Only once they arrive will the City support life.

Only once they arrive will the City prepare them for what is to come.




The Chequered City has changed. Chaos has breached the walls of Order and bloomed throughout the streets. Mappable white streets are disturbed by twisting black vines. Clean doors open to walls of obsidian hedge. Even the cracks between the tiles of white and black have been invaded by creeping vines and twisting roots as the wilds reclaim their part of the city. Once more is the City one of two Powers. No more is Chaos confined to a garden beyond its walls. The City of black and white is whole, and awaits its guests.

So the faceless automatons march on. They roam through street and garden both, seeking the lost and forlorn, the dutiful and certain. They will serve drink, provide rest, and tend to whatever the hopefuls may need to prepare for the tide of War.

For none can stay in garden or city. All must find their door, their passage, their gateway. Whatever they find will herald them to the next step, to the first stage, to the hands of the Powers.

For Pawns belong in one place alone.

The Battlefield.





Crashes of steel and thuds of flesh break the silence. Flashes of blue and red break with them, scattering in the world between worlds and swirling into an endless loop. Color and sound encircle the void, consuming the pawns in a cycle of flashing light and traded blows.

Sound and color yield to a single sharp flash; a bolt of scarlet lightning that pierces the space and drowns out all else in its wake, growing in vibrance and intensity until there is nothing else. Simply a burnt out life, a form triumphant even in death.

And then, a new world, an entire realm birthed from the death of a man that lived in a never ending cycle of life and loss.

The two colors encircle one another, folding outwards to create an elaborate spiral floor, its center raised every so slightly above the rest. The twinned spirals arc within one another, one of twinkling blue stars and the other vivid scarlet veins. Overhead, the sun bursts into life, lighting the sky a brilliant orange with its heat. The scarlet veins erupt, a circling flame leaping high into air across and around the field. The center of the floor slides into place, and swiftly the sun winks out, replaced ever-so-quickly with a luminescent, watching moon upon a navy sky. The stars in the floor crackle and dance as the flames go out, arcs of lightning stretching from the ground to the darkened sky in their place. At the edges of the spiral, lingering sparks herald a more dangerous fate.

Above each Pawn, a symbol flashes. A five-spoked circle. For some, the black of the night sky, etchings curled inwards in an overturning spiral. For others, a bright white that rivals the grand sun, straight and pristine lines shooting outwards. The runes hover above for a single moment, their presence known to all, before they quickly wink away.

An echoing crack puts out the moon, leaving the sky black and silent. The center of the spiral once more rises, awaiting a weight to call the cosmic forces to their place. A myriad of voices erupt in the empty space, filling the spiral field with their call.

“Welcome to the Field of Sun and Moon. No Good can warm your soul, no Evil can chill your spirit. Prove yourselves worthy, Pawns, or perish in eternity.”



< Message edited by Chewy905 -- 1/19/2025 12:54:34 >
Post #: 1
1/23/2025 0:23:57   
  Starflame13
Moderator


I need no spear.


“It’s not going to take, it’s not going to - I told you she wasn’t ready, I TOLD Y-”

“Stand down and follow orders, Captain Veirna.”

I need no sword.


“I have half a dozen recruits you’ve lined up to take the ritual, and if you’ve killed even one of them -”

“Shut up before I have you arrested and court-martialed!”

I need no bow.


“How many. HOW MANY?!?”

“If this one doesn’t take? All of them.”

I am the Shield.





A ragged scream cuts off into a choked cough. Muscles convulse, deep aches throbbing against the cool stone. An empty hand flies out, grabbing for another’s arm - and instead closes on nothingness. On stillness. On silence. Silence?

Her sisters.

Sïul’s eyes burst open, and she gasps, forcing the inert air back into stagnant lungs. Brilliant white meets her gaze. She scrambles, thrashes, finally manages to slam her palms against the ground and shove herself upright. It’s stone. She hears no iron humming against her palms, nor in the walls where the ritual took place, nor in the arms and armor of her sisters who stood by her side -

Her sisters.

She’s alone. Something went wrong.

Sïul forces her breaths to steady; keeps her eyes fixed on the ground beneath her. No other sound reaches her. Her veins thrum - a tune deeper than her soul, stronger and surer than ever before - but nothing calls back. The ritual succeeded, then. But she’s alone.

The enemy must have breached their sacred temple. That means she’s captured - in hostile territory.

She wasn’t trained for this.

The woman slowly sits back, flexes her fingers, then her toes. The ache from the ritual fades quickly - as her Captain said it would - and Sïul finds no other injuries. She’s dressed in her new uniform, still pristine and freshly stitched. She can’t have been taken for too long, then, else it would be soiled. Her waist itches, three capsules that she recognizes as rationed iron dust fixed to her belt. That’s… new. She swallows, mentally steps backwards to retrace her past steps. She was in the chamber, she was taking the draught, she… remembers nothing else. Sïul raises one hand, carefully presses it against her temples. No new bumps, no tender bruises. No familiar pinch between her brows for a concussion. She doesn’t think she’s missing memories - but she must be. No trainee would be alone or abandoned in the field.

She begins to look up, then freezes, gaze caught on a shield laying next to her. The exact shape and dimensions of her training shield - but unmarred by years of use. It sings, the true resonance of iron, a melody that cascades and crashes as Sïul reaches forth with trembling hands to graze its edge, drawing a drop of blood from her fingertips. An Ironborn’s shield.

The ritual succeeded. She’s recognized.

Ironborn.

Sïul flicks her eyes away from the shield, slowly turns her head left and right. A broadly tiled street of white and black stretches before her, neat and tidy and walled high on either side - and torn through with a thorned, pitch-black vine as thick as her torso. Soaring ivory towers stretch beyond - the first few pristine, the next several covered in growing amounts of ebon ivy, and the last crumbling with a great canopy of foliage stretching forth, trunk and leaves the same deepest black. This is not Ik’Varia - not the fortified walls of the castle nor the ravaged towns at the kingdom’s boundary. This is not her home.

She inhales, standing slowly, and draws in a deep breath across her tongue - but there’s no scent save her own blood and iron. Bazra’s famed crimson streets are built of sandstone, the desert constantly scoring its mark. Khuris’ are stained with salt, with the ever crashing waves the kingdom draws its power from. She is not amongst her enemies - nor any other kingdom she knows, confirmed as she slowly turns in a circle, searching amongst the black and white for any flag or sigil that she can recognize. She is… elsewhere.

I'm... alone.

The Ironborn flinches at the thought. At any thought. I am the Shield. A shield, part of the wall, part of the sisterhood. She needs to find her sisters and her Captain. Needs to be given her next orders -

Something clicks softly.

Sïul spins, shield settling against her arms as she braces - but no attacks come. She gives it one inhale, then two, then shifts, just enough to peer past the shield. At the street’s end stands a statue, humanoid limbs frozen and blank visage tilted as if watching her. It does not move.

I am the Shield. A Shield defends. A Shield waits. But as seconds creep to minutes, and minutes creep by further, Sïul… fidgets. Fingers clench at the involuntary motion, at the failure of the wall - but her Captain is not here. Her sisters are not here. She has no orders… and she needs to find them. She takes another breath, steadies herself, and steps forward - and immediately slams back to brace behind her shield as the statue’s head tilts the other way with another soft, echoing click.

She waits. There is only more silence. She peaks back out. The statue does not move again.

But it glints, in this flat light of an unfamiliar kingdom. Not stone, not clay, not porcelain. Metal.

Sïul takes a step forward, then another, each footstep accompanied by the harsh grate of iron against stone. She steps over the webbed cracks branching outwards from the seeking, protruding vine. Steps closer until she can hear the faint hum - soft and alien against her own frequency. A metal, yes - but not one she was taught to recognize. Not one that is of her world.

Where… am I?

Unthinking, unbidden, a hand stretches out to touch the strange metal - and yanks back as the statue vanishes in the next breath. Sïul clenches her hands into fists. She shouldn’t be curious, she shouldn’t be - she whirls about as there’s another click, the sound more muffled than its earlier echoes from stone. Her gaze rakes along an opening that wasn’t there before, and falls upon the same statue on the other side of a crack in a thick, black hedge. Watching. Waiting.

She’s supposed to follow orders. She… doesn’t have any. The only instructions she has to follow are those implied by the statue that is leading her.

And so she follows.

Sïul follows the metal statue down several streets, weaving between vines and stone. The statue disappears and reappears whenever she draws close, its soft clicks coming faster and faster as she picks up speed. Her chest heaves as she pants with the effort to keep up, to keep moving, to get more than just a flicker of resonance in that half-a-breath between reaching the statue and having it vanish. She’s sprinting by the time she turns yet another corner into a wide square, a black, cracked fountain rising up from its center - and slams her heels into the ground, reversing the resonance of her shield to give herself the weight to stop at a tile’s edge.

A crowd of statues stand before the fountain, heads tilted. Then as one, their forms blur, unfamiliar figures melting into a series of identical shields, separate for only a moment before merging together to form a single wall. A single unit. Just like the Ironborn Elite.

...the Elite?

Her sisters! Sïul drops to one knee immediately, shield falling to parade rest at its side. Her voice is rough, ragged, but steady all the same. “Sïul A’Rune, Fledged Ironborn reporting for duty -”

She does not have time to finish.

A loud, resoundant crash shakes the foundation of the city - steel on steel, the notes a slight discordant clash against the iron in her veins. Sparks of crimson and azure rent the sky, plummeting down in a flash faster than Sïul can reequip her shield. She must be falling, but she cannot tell where, so surrounded is she by swirling flames of red and blue, by lightning burning into her eyes and thunder screaming against her ears. Pain alights along veins - freezing and burning and shock in a singular titular wave - and it is only the training against years of suffering told in the story of her scars that keeps her teeth clenched, grinding against each other in lieu of screaming.

She is a shield. Pain is to be expected.

Scarlet lightning tears straight through the Ironborn, crackling energy conducting through her skin. Blood fills her eyes; the scent of charred, dying flesh fills her nose. Her shield is ripped from her arms, and Sïul’s stoic demeanor vanishes as she makes a blind grab for it. No - ! If she loses her shield, then she’s failed. Failed to protect her kingdom or to keep her vows. Failed to keep her promise to her sisters, that they made to her in turn -

Failed.

Stone shrieks against iron cleats; clear, unblemished skin sings against her iron shield. Unstained eyes raise upwards to see a sea of red and blue swirling before her, spiraling outwards in vivid lines that weave and intertwine - then separate. The sun bursts forth in her next breath, crimson flames bearing a heat that warms her shield, iron almost blistering against her skin in a heartbeat. In the next breath, heat and sun vanish - subsumed by a glowing moon, indigo lightning alighting from the twinkling starts to spark against the floor.

Sïul's eyes narrow, shield raised and ready, as a presence weighs down upon her - heavier than any shield she has ever carried. Symbols flash, and her silver gaze turns upward, drawn to an etched, ebon-black spiral hovering over her head - and over the heads of two others now visible from across the curtains of lightning. Two people, formed out of nothingness: a gleaming golden-horned figure clad in the brown of leather armor, and a lithe figure with a dancing cape nearly the same red as the spiral of fire. Three others appear with an ivory white wheel, spoked and straight: a tall, pale woman with a veil fluttering between spiralling horns and heavily armored figure caped in black to her left; and a slight, hooded rogue of sorts to her right.

Ebon-black spiral and ivory wheel. Those are not of symbols Ik’Varia. Not of Bazra or Khuris or the lands even further beyond them. Not of any noble house or standard that Sïul has seen, that she was ever taught. Tension creeps into her stance, shoulders narrow and jaw clenched. Her shield hums softly, lightening against her arms as she raises it aloft. What do… I do?

The thought barely has time to form before the sigils wink out - the moon vanishing scarcely a heartbeat later with a last echoing crack. Voices flow out, following the track of reverberations across the dark, unmarked sky; across the barely-lit battlefield. The hair at the back of Sïul’s neck and along her arms stands on end, and she snaps to attention, the habit long drilled into her at the first bark of a captain bellowing orders.

“Welcome to the Field of Sun and Moon. No Good can warm your soul, no Evil can chill your spirit. Prove yourselves worthy, Pawns, or perish in eternity.”

She is Ironborn. Isn’t she already worthy? Unless…This is part of the ritual. Some trial that those recognized are bound not to speak of. Her grip on her shield tightens, and she swallows against the sudden dryness in her throat. If she is not yet worthy, then she must prove herself again. Prove her dedication to her sisters; prove the strength of her shield. Neither of those who share her mark are Ironborn, are not among the ranks of her sisters - she knows that from the lack of resonance alone - but perhaps she must protect them all the same.

It is the closest to orders she can follow.

Sïul pushes off hard, cutting a line across the battlefield to drive herself towards her allies, her not-sisters. Shield spins to a single-arm as she angles to the left of the trigger plate, braced and ready to defend against any attack the two nearer enemies throw.

I am the Shield.
AQ DF MQ AQW  Post #: 2
1/23/2025 18:45:25   
GrimmJester
Member

The mud squelched beneath his boots with every step. The city streets covered in… Well, it was best to not think of what exactly was underfoot on the damp and claustrophobic narrow passageways that people called streets within the city walls. On the odd occasion, one would need to dodge the emptying of a chamber pot from some ill-mannered lout tossing it out their window above. It took great effort to maintain one’s attire in conditions such as this, and God forbid one was careless enough to trip or slip. Despite all this, despite the stench after heavy autumnal rain, despite the cramped conditions, Giles had always had some adoration for the cities. After all, in some rural hamlet, sure, some hot-headed buffoon might get themselves thrown out of the odd establishment for ill manners, but in small communities such as that, that was all that there was to it. In the cities… In the chaos of the streets, one inciting event would lead to a cascade of pieces tumbling down into a brawl that could encompass entire blocks, especially if it was on the border between the various social strata of the people. Some perceived line in the sand crossed simply by having a bad day on the wrong street corner.
These were the times that Giles actually felt… Well, something, anything! For with a quick remark, a witty insult thrown at the right time, and a dozen mud-bathed layabouts would turn on him and actually provide some entertainment!
Giles was a great many things… But most of all, he was bored. The rush of battle seemed long distant now; how many years had it been since his true skill had gone untested? Probably not since…

He was pulled away from his contemplation, having been so lost in reminiscence that he had failed to keep track of where his idle stroll to find some excitement for the day had carried him. It was strange… He didn’t recall there ever being a garden here. He raised his head, idly rested his hand upon the pommel of his sword, and took in his surroundings. Hedges and rows upon rows of twisting black vines in front and also behind. He could not possibly have walked here without knowing, without at least having a sense of the path that had led him here, changing from the cloying streets that he had occupied mere moments ago. There had been no fanfare, no great moment of translocation that one might expect from this sort of dimensional jaunt. Granted, not that Giles would know; he tended to be single-dimensional at the best of times.
What the devil…?”
The words came unbidden to his lips as his right hand moved up to gently curl the edge of his moustache, a familiar action to counter the unfamiliar circumstance. As he looked around, he saw no straight, clear path one might take to move through; the garden was eerily silent, the scent of untamed wilderness rather than the one of unwashed city life surrounding him. Looking higher, one could see traces of buildings in the distance, though no hint of how one might reach them. His mind reeling from the jarring change of scenery, and yet his feet decided they would keep on their path. As he walked, his hand reached out, brushing along the walls of twisting vines and unkempt hedgerows.
“Now… This is highly irregular. Suppose I should find out what gives…” he muttered aloud to the unspeaking foliage.

He lost track of how long he followed whatever path that his feet took him; night or day seemed to have little meaning in the labyrinthine maze of black greenery. But soon there was something different. A grandiose wall of white stone, like marble, broken down by the encroaching chaotic wilderness. Beyond lay a city, with streets of checkered black and white stone. His eye caught movement, just a flash, a glint of metal in the lamplight. The only way out is through, no? He vaulted the rubble as quick as a viper, his hand still comfortingly on the pommel of his blade; it had not left his side in many a year, and he was thankful it hadn't decided to just now.
“Hey!” He shouted in the vain hope that someone, anyone would answer him. Following the movement he'd seen before, turning a street corner into an alleyway. There it was…

His brow furrowed; he'd never seen anything like it, a human? Or a vaguely humanoid creature, at the very least, made up of some intricate clockwork he couldn't even begin to understand.
“Now, what the blazes are you supposed to be?” He asked, taking a half step backwards. It did not answer him; it had no mouth with which to do so, of course it didn't. A blank faceplate, and yet it seemed to stare at him, judge him. Whatever that non-look was, Giles decided he didn't care for it. Drawing steel with a swift, fluid motion and pointing its tip towards the creature.
“I do suggest you stop gawking, old boy, lest I might take insult!” Again, it did not answer him. It only cocked its head with a mechanical whirr and click. “Right! Have it your way, en garde!” A quick step, a flash of steel, and his blade lodged into the mechanical connection between head and neck, and with a creaking whine of mechanical parts, the cur fell backwards onto the ground, landing with a clamoring clang.

He pulled his blade back, sighing and wiping the back of his hand across his forehead. Perhaps that was a bit much, but the thing had frightened him. Just as the thought had crossed his mind, he heard a noise behind him. Turning with a flourish of his cape, the point of his rapier towards the noise… Before him was a wispish waif of a person, with blonde hair and a black coat full of patchwork. Accompanied by beasts of the same make as the clockwork man he had just… killed? Destroyed? It probably wasn't important. What was important was that this was the first living soul he'd seen in… Days? Weeks? Minutes? Time seemed somewhat fluid in this place, and it was hard to keep track without the sun overhead making its inexorable march across the sky.
“Ah, my pardons good sir, if that…” He gestured with his hand towards the fallen automaton. “Was yours; it gave me quite the fright. Pray tell, could you tell me where we are by chance? Ah! But where are my manners!” He took off his hat and gave a courteous bow. “The name is Giles, pleasure.” The greeting somewhat less courteous by the fact that the point of his blade didn't lower from being directed at the person’s chin.

The person before him seemed startled, stumbling back away from the blade, probably a wise choice, the swordmaster thought.

“Ah— I—- Lucien. It is a pleasure, sir. I—I’m sorry, I’m afraid I don’t know much more than you do. I… kind of just woke up here? These two have been following me around since.” They responded.
“Hm, suppose that makes for you and me both, two strangers lost in a city that by all accounts is stranger still.” He contemplated before gesturing with the tip of his blade towards the strange mechanical beasts that seemed to follow Lucien. One a black thing resembling a dragonfly, if perhaps a bit out of scale. The other a black-and-white deerlike thing with… Much concerningly too large and sharp teeth. Teeth that it bared at the swordsman in retaliation for his hostile posture. Lucien reached out to rest their hand upon its snout to calm it, which seemed rather effective. Still… Worth keeping an eye on that thing.

“I wouldn’t dare say they are ‘mine,’ but if it helps anyhow, they aren’t hostile. Neither am I.” There was a flash of curiosity in the stranger’s expression, eyes examining the weapon Giles still held outstretched towards them in defense.
“Giles, sir, if you don’t mind? Is that a rapier? I’ve never, um… seen one before.” Their tone was trepidatious, as if worried that the swordmaster was poor-tempered and might lash out at the least perceived slight.
He gently lowered his guard, the tip of the blade slipping to gently point towards the ground, free hand gently shifting his cape to the side to idly twirl his moustache.
“Never seen… A rapier before? What a peculiar thing to say.” He mused aloud, to himself as much as to the person in front of him.
“So you are not a fighter then, I assume?” He asked
Lucien seemed to pause, as if considering.
“No, not a fighter…” There was a slight uncertainty to their voice. “It’s certainly not something I’ve been taught. I’m… a researcher. I think that’s a way to say it. This place is quite fascinating when you, um... aren’t thinking too hard about being lost and all alone in there?”

This gave the swordsman pause, if only for a moment. There was a sense of wonderment in the… boy? Person’s tone. A sparkle that had been woefully absent from Giles’s own existence for some time. Then tinged with the melancholy of loneliness. He sheathed his blade, then, as he hardly saw much need for it any longer.
“Hmm. I suppose I might have been much too occupied trying to figure out where this is and how I got here to really worry about the fascination of this place.” He considered for a moment or two. “And it is best to not try to think too hard about one's loneliness at the best of times. It will do one even fewer favors to fall into that mire when in dire straits.” His mind wandered for a moment. Thinking back… How long had he been alone, now? How long had it been since he’d felt there was someone he could consider a peer? An equal? He’d spent his entire life searching for strength, for perfection. Only once he had achieved it had he truly felt the weight of what he had sacrificed to get there. To be at the summit, to look down upon everyone beneath and feel the chill wind of the chasm that separated him from the rest…

He was snapped out of his reverie by the sound of whirring gears and metal clanging began to sound behind him, a quick glance over his shoulder confirming his suspicion that the automaton he had struck down was recovering. How curious…
“…I do fight. But that’s by necessity.” Lucien spoke, their hand moving towards… Was that a net on their bag? It seemed sturdy enough, but it was an impractical weapon in the best of circumstances, and this certainly wasn’t one of them. Their stance was amateurish, like a kid with a stick just trying their hand at whacking branches. Giles turned then, imposing himself between the youngster and the automaton with a furrowed brow.
“Wait, Giles. It... it might not strike back?” Lucien noted, hand outstretched as if to tell Giles to stop. Not that the swordsman seemed too concerned.
“Safe guess to say you are correct; so far they have not done much of anything…” Giles muttered as they stood there for a while, just watching, waiting… Before the automaton lifted its mechanical hand with a whir and made a gesture towards itself.
“I think it wants us to follow it?” He noted, rubbing his chin with thumb and forefinger.

The next few hours seemed strange, well... Not that the ones that had preceded them hadn’t been strange, but this was different. He found himself lured into conversation and simply marveling at the excitement and spark of life that Lucien seemed to possess. Down winding streets taking strange turns into obscure alleyways, passing ivory towers and obsidian hovels through this odd, lifeless city, it was some of the more lively he’d felt in some time. It came as a somewhat saddening realization, then, when finally the automaton seemed to deem they had reached their destination, gesturing for the Master at Arms to pass through one door, and Lucien another. He glanced at the excitable youngster with a lopsided smirk.
“Well. End of the line, it seems, or perhaps the start of a new one.” He reached out and offered his hand to Lucien. “I know not what is on the other side, but I have this feeling in my gut that it is something grand. So, regardless of what transpires beyond, let us meet on the other side. What do you say, old chap?”
“It’s already been grand,” Lucien responded with a slight chuckle. They seemed much more at ease now than they had before, but there still seemed to be a nervousness to them, quite a lot of it. But they did reach to grab Giles’s’ hand to return a handshake. It was purposeful but lacked strength. Something one could be trained in, if given the chance.
“I’ll hold you to that. Just—okay, other side only as in behind that door, alright? Not that other side. Neither of us.” Lucien seemed to play it off as a joke, but something about it sounded surprisingly genuine.
“I wouldn’t worry too much about me; nothing has managed to kill me yet; this will not be my end. We will meet again, in this life.” Giles returned a dazzling smile, the confidence of the older warrior unmatched. Lucien giving a nod at the assertion
“Best of luck wherever this goes, Giles. Maybe— maybe don’t stab the next thing that startles you right away, though? Give it a good second look first. Could be a bear. You never know.”
“Well… In my defense, bears tend to stay down when stabbed.”
Giles muttered in retort to the playful jab, before shaking his head with a chuckle. “But, the advice has been noted.”
“I’d love to hear more about your adventures, alright? You have to stay in one piece for that!” Lucien chimed as they parted.
Giles’s hand reached out to the door, giving a final glance towards the youngster from beneath the brim of his hat.
“Who knows, maybe this one will be the adventure with a satisfying ending.” Were the words he chose to leave his newfound companion with as he passed through the door, finding himself not in a room… But rather...



The battlefield.
His ears picked up the clash of steel; he'd met blade against blade enough times in his life for it to be unmistakable. A flash across his vision, first blue, then red. Then again, faster, strobing, hurting his eyes. He squinted them shut, refused to see, to understand. A bolt of sharp crimson lightning across the back of his eyelids bid him open them again. His world was spinning... Or rather, the world was spinning, whirling spirals of red and blue before settling down, their only trace left in the pattern upon the floor. Above, a blazing sun whose radiance seemed to flow in ripples along the pattern of red. He felt the heat from the rising gouts of flame warm his skin. Just as suddenly as it had appeared, it winked out, replaced by the moon.
“By God, even the sky is confused by this place!” He exclaimed as the ripple of lightning along the floor made the hair on his arms stand on end, before that too had passed into nothing.


“Welcome to the Field of Sun and Moon. No Good can warm your soul, no Evil can chill your spirit. Prove yourselves worthy, Pawns, or perish in eternity.”

A chorus, or rather a cacophony of voices, called out. He still didn't know what any of this meant, what the reason for it all was for, but “Prove yourself or perish” could only mean one thing, especially corralled into an arena-like structure.
“I am not so sure I like your tone, ominous presence! The master at arms is no pawn! Still, one thing is clear…” Giles let his voice fade to not state the obvious: whoever controls the center controls the battlefield. At a glance it was clear that whatever had brought them here had divided them into ally and enemy. Symbols matching his own were supposedly on his side, and the others likely not.
He didn't wait, didn't hesitate; hand on the pommel of his sword, he dashed, head low, feather plume fluttering as he made a sprint for the central platform.

Post #: 3
1/23/2025 22:07:40   
roseleaf320
Creative!


I am dying.

My body tells me as much, at least, and my body has rarely lied. In the thundering of my ears, in the swaying of my vision, it tells me that it is failing. Without my say so, my hands claw at my chest, and their warmth tells me I am bleeding. They wrap around a shaft to tell me of my killer, and I have trained them well; they know better than to pull it out. Unfortunate. If they pulled, perhaps this would be quicker. But I cannot tell them as much. My legs let go, easing me to the ground, telling me their job is done. I assume they must be tired. They have held me for far longer than I expected.

How queer it feels, dying. I have imagined my death many times, but it has never been like this. When my family told me of my birth, I imagined what it would have been like, had I met their expectations. A single heartbeat, a shattering pulse that would burst into my world like a thunderclap before falling silent as quickly as it had begun. As a hopeful youth, I imagined the soft caress of sleep in old age, my heart full, the warm embrace of a lost lover waiting for me.

I always imagined death on the battlefield to be agonizing. Sharp fangs, fueled by hatred, digging into my skin and sending spiked rivers through my bloodstream. Or a deep, empty pit, inescapable, welling up in lungs, made of all the moments I would never get to experience. When Typhe died, I was nearly swallowed by those visions; by the agony they both must have gone through, and the dark tendrils that gripped me fiercely and refused to let me follow. I suppose I would have found some solace in the knowledge I have gained. That if I did not have my arms and legs, moving on their own, to tell me I am dying, I would not know.

That death feels like… nothing.




My comrades retrieve me after the sun’s warmth has faded alongside the last of mine. I am among the lucky ones, to be retrievable, to have died in an area where occasional safety can be found with the moon. I listen as they remove the spear from my chest, my glaive from the scarlet-stained grass. Usable, they say. This is how things went, weapons traded back and forth. That spear had likely killed Laorins and Nessians twice over before making its way to me. One of the two men, his voice like an elf’s, hoists my body onto his shoulders. I assume as much, from the grunt of effort and the clatter of stones. I cannot feel his grip. My body tells me nothing, now.

I do not feel when the burial cloth is placed over my body. I know it, inherently, as if it is an immovable fact in my soul. I do, however, smell the bitterly familiar smoke. It pours into my lungs, chasing every breath my body has left behind, suffocating my soul in a last goodbye.



My chest speaks first, convulsing, yanking my torso upright as a hacking cough rips from my lungs. My eyes flash open in time to watch sour-black smoke burst from my lips and a thin cloth fall to my lap. I place a hand on my chest and let the cough rage through me until my throat is harsh and my lungs tired. I glance down at my lap again; at the sheer, black shroud that drapes across my legs like a river. A burial shroud.

I freeze.

I tell my hand to move, and it responds, flexing scaled claws that shimmer in the light. I tell my eyes to blink, and they do, taking in the black curl of vines near my feet.

I…

I am alive.

I expect the realization to come with the lightning of panic, or the swirling ocean of relief. I know that this is not the afterlife; though not planted by me, the fact sits deep within my chest, as certain as my heartbeat. But as I breathe, searching each muscle movement for the fullness that accompanies life, I find nothing. It is as if I am a mere construction of a mortal, empty save for the parts needed to move my limbs.

The river stones across my torso clatter against each other as I stand. My comrades must have left the armor on my body-- too damaged to use, or too difficult to remove. I am in a garden, black vines curling in every direction across blackened dirt. I see buildings a short distance away, black mixed with white that reflects light from an unseeable sun. I make my way to them quickly; I cross the threshold where night-black vines subside under bone-white tiles. With each step, the claws of my feet scrape marks onto their cold, pristine surface.

I return to the garden quickly. The bleached tiles feel too much like the battlefield.

Ashen blue blades of hair flicker in front of my eyes as I sit, nestling my body within a nest of vines. The Commander’s whispered comments rise in my memory. I was never meant to hear them, of course, but my Vartai hearing was always underestimated. She said my neglect was unprofessional and childish. She marveled at how impressive a feat it was to make a half-lizard look like a wet dog. That she didn’t say it to my face meant she understood, in the end. When your world is a constant dizzying swirl, even caring for your hair is an insurmountable cliff. Everyone in that army tasted that whirlpool at least once.

Now, the motions come as easy as breathing. Gently, I thread my claws through my hair, untying knots thicker than mouse dens. It takes hours, but I have no need to stand; I am struck with no hunger, nor thirst, nor need to relieve myself. Each knot unthreaded is a breath freed.

Fen used to braid my hair for me, as the dawn’s light shone into our tent. It took several months of practice; it was difficult for her hands to move properly underneath my horns.

The memory brings no surge of love nor depths of mourning. It is simply a memory.

I do not need her help. My claws remember the path, twining patiently, until the two braids are tight to my skull. Now I will be ready.

My burial shroud drapes across my scaled legs. Perhaps it could be useful. Experimentally, I stab a claw through an edge, and it pierces easily. I pull my hand towards my body’s center, and the shroud tears cleanly. My hands continue their work without me, and soon the shroud is divided into three sections, two thinner, one large. I wrap each thin section around a forearm, watching idly as death-black cloth obscures the lavender-cerulean shape of my scales. I tie each tightly at my wrists, right against my bracelets. The rings of bright river stones, made smooth by water’s erosion. Brown thread binds them tight together, flowing above and below each stone like the river’s curve. How thoughtful of my comrades, to leave them with me. Not that it matters. The river left me long ago.

I pause for a moment to stare at the remaining piece. This is the shroud that covered my body on the pyre.

My heart does naught but beat as I tie it around my waist. It might be useful.

It is time to go.

It is not a thought nor a whisper; just another seed of knowledge planted deep behind my heart. I do not wonder where I should go to. I stand and turn away from the city’s bleached tiles, further into the garden that must never end. I tell my feet to walk. They do.

I do not acknowledge the whisper telling me I am still dead.





I die on one battlefield, only to fight on another.

The realization is cold on my skin, the first breaths of frost on the shores of an unmoving lake. I reach my fingers towards it, testing, then draw back, lest the chill spread. Twenty-seven years I fought on the fields of Paran, blood staining my scales while screams of friends and foes stained my ears. It is the only thing I’m skilled in, now. Silly of me; to expect death would change anything. For beneath my feet are tiles of blood and sky, tiles that exploded in lightning and fire only moments ago. Above my head, a swirling symbol flickers, a war flag designating my affiliation. Two others bear my sigil; three bear another. Two sides.

The moon above us blinks out, leaving us in emptiness as the platform in the center of our field rises upwards. Almost as quickly as it was emptied, the air fills with booming voices. They beckon us forward with grandiose words of good and evil, of proving ourselves. In my memory, they are matched with the echoed voices of soldiers and commanders, waltzing through peaceful towns, recruiting fresh blood with tales of grandeur. Fresh blood always ended up on the pyre.

My second realization starts within my fingers, a growing itch that kicks in alongside familiar instincts. My glaive was taken for reuse in the war, and I did not search the tiled city for another. I am without a weapon.

Not entirely, a bright voice whispers in my mind. An incorrect voice. The river left me a few moons after Typhe did. I could not say when, or how long it may have gone before I even noticed its absence. I didn’t even have a reason for calling it; I might have been thirsty, or simply curious. But I called, and it did not answer. That was the last time I tried.

I imagine it now, perhaps out of habit. I close my eyes alongside the Vartai of my memory. I imagine the river flowing from me with my breath, cascading over each twined loop in my bracelets. I imagine it gathering in a single, large orb before me, everflowing, as it has so many times before. In my mind, I reach out a claw, slowly, as if it is hollow glass and I am a knife that might shatter it. I touch it, barely, gently, and a single, tiny droplet slides down my claw. It trickles down my hand and disappears underneath a scale on my wrist. Within my chest, a single droplet falls into a parched well.

My sun-bleached eyes shoot open, and before me flows the river. It hovers in the air, oscillating as if uncertain of its form. I blink once, twice. The river remains.

The river… remains.

There… there is no time to consider. I break from my stun and lock my gaze onto the first signs of movement. A short woman, armored, holding a shield up against two of our foes as she approaches. She bore the same sigil as I: she is an ally. It is as if a helmet slips over my face as I let myself become soldier once more, stepping towards her and scanning for danger. The river sloshes unsteadily as it follows me. I beckon it to me, imagining the familiar grip of my glaive, the weapon I held for the past couple years in the Harvest War. It does not move.

I furrow my brow; the movement echoes within my gut. The river obeys. Its current pulses into my curved hands, elongating and thinning until it forms a glaive identical to the one taken by my comrades. It hovers, barely an inch from either hand. I test its movement as I call out to my ally; it sloshes again, as if barely held in shape. It’ll do.

“Keep that shield up, child. I’ll cover the third.”

Post #: 4
1/23/2025 23:00:50   
Dragonknight315
Member

Fourteen years.

The fledgling’s life flashes before her amber eyes as she lays at the mountain’s base. Black rock and white ice rise like vertical roads to form the sheer cliffs above her. Were her neck not frozen stiff, Tyrril could look up and see Bael’s Throne stretching for miles into the horizon.

“Don’t go, Tyrril! We beg of you,” her mother’s shadow implores her. Her face is hazy, her onyx horns blending into her silhouette. Even her voice is distant, empty. All that is left of her mother is her tears. “We can find another way, just please...”

“But this is what I want,” the young fledgling counters, her voice calm and measured in contrast. She does not yell or plead. Tyrril merely reasons. “Both of you have done your Run. It is my turn to uphold our faith.”

“By joining hands with the empire and their cult?” Her father’s shadow interjects, his words sharpened to a point. “Madness. They have lost their way—”

Her unmarked father turns his gaze away, yet Tyrril remains adamant, unwilling to do the same. “I know,” she whispers, “but their waywardness is exactly why I must be there. Many will die out there, both Defiant and others, but so help me many will find new life. They need a gentle hand now more than ever; they need me.”

Bright eyed and naive, the fledgeling stands with a courage and determination that can only be found in youth. Her soft hands knew not a day of strife within her village, and she knows not of her beast that laid in wait within her veins. And yet, the Red Goddess hangs in the sky behind her. She is chosen; she will not be swayed—

“Mother, father, do not worry. The Red Moon guides me. Have faith, for I shall not be long. What is a few years when we have all of eternity? When my run is over, I will return.”

<It has been Fourteen years—>

A gust of arctic wind cuts through the Defiant’s coat like a knife. It tears her parents’ memories from Tyrril, the thought carried away in the breeze. It’s so cold. Her vitae shatters within her frozen veins as Tyrril tries to raise her arms to cover her eyes. Baelhiem’s winter has reduced her to a doll, paper for flesh, glass for limbs. Yet she persists, she must. She has her duty to uphold, one way or another.

The howling air screeches in the Defiant’s ears, but the sound is nothing compared to the heartbeats that drum in her ears. Badum-Badum. Badum-Badum. The sound of warm blood overlaps and echoes, their combined melody discordant but growing closer. There’s three of them up front.

Her veil long cast aside, Tyrril looks across the field before her— it’s so red. The land gives its testimony for in Baelheim nothing is lost. Years of Defiant and Lunastran lie broken over the battlefield, their blood and bodies staining the once white and innocent landscape like oil on a canvas. Life mixed with death. The scent alone would have sent the vampire into a frenzy were her nose not frozen shut. But the sight still haunts Tyrril, disgusted and enthralled in equal measure, her beast begging to be released. She sees them— draped in golden furs so thick their bodies sink into the snow like miniature suns or living lanterns amidst the freezing winds. Tubes like thick mycelium branches emerge from their garb and connect to a device at their waists. So bold of them to wear their heat generators where others can see them. They think they’ve won.

“Tyrril Morningstar,” the Lunastran officer calls her name as the trio steps across one of the corpses lodged in the sin-soaked snow. “By the holy authority of the Fatherlight, we have come for you.”

“... Is that so?” The fledgling answers their summons, her creaking voice barely within audible distance. “I don’t suppose you’re here to surrender?”

“Not quite,” one of the other Suntouched replies. “We bid you return with us. Though, you’ll be a prisoner rather than a guest of honor...”

The trio erupts into laughter at their own teasing, yet Tyrril holds her ground. “What? Did you get tired of killing? I’m no longer with the Fangguard, you know.”

“Irrelevant,” the last member retorts. “Your insight will prove valuable to our cause. And besides, you have much to atone for, you leech.”

The gloating turns to scorn as Tyrril feels their goggle-covered eyes bearing down upon her. Yet she cannot help but laugh.

“Fourteen years...” The fledgling lets out a pained gasp, her pearly fangs peering out beneath her smile. “I’ve had a good Run. So be it.” Tyrril holds her shaking hand up for the trio to see.

“I’ll go willingly. But first, a prayer...” Tyrril requests. “Surely you know it’s been some time since the last repose.” The Defiant beckons to her surroundings, to the countless remains around them. In Baelheim, nothing is lost, not even the soul. Come nightfall, the dead god dreams, his aurora sweeps across the continent. Come nightfall, he commands his hosts. Defiant or Lunastrean, their old allegiance sundered—

The leading officer grows still beneath their coat as they pick up on the implication. “Very well.” Then, the trio joins hands and begin to sing. The fledgling knows the words all too well; she’s heard their choral prayer so often Tyrril could sing it herself.

“Oh Bloody Mother, have mercy on our souls...” She whispers her own innovacation with her broken lips as she reaches beneath her coat. Soon it will all be over. Too absorbed in their own circle, the Lunastrans do not see her hands move. By the time they do, it is too late.

“... WAIT!—”

Tyrril takes a deep breath as she pulls out the detonator with shaking hands. But there’s no fear in her, no hesitation. She flips the latch and the mountain roars. An explosion rocks the earth as a cloud of fire erupts from on high. By most standards, a small ordinance, but its ripples echo out. Tyrril reels as the sound hits her ears, reducing the officer’s screams to metallic ringing. It is done.

The trio makes a run for it, their own beasts acting in vain instinct. Even if they took off their elaborate garbs, there is no escape. Not for any of them. A sea of snow and ice rush down to embrace the four of them like wistful lovers. And as the snow wraps around Tyrril with eager arms, she smiles.

<This is the least I can do...>

Then, darkness. Red snow and blue skies turn to white and then to blackness as the mountain reclaims the battlefield. Above the ice, the blood and bodies are gone, washed away in a sea of atonement. But beneath the ice, Tyrril finds herself buried alive.

Her lungs erupt in cold fire as the oxygen leaves her body as well as the rest of her heat. Her mind wanders to the trio— it is only a matter of time before they would cease to exist, their lives so much more fragile than hers. But what did that matter? Tyrril’s fate would be similar if only prolonged. The Defiant might claw her way through feet of snow. But it would not be her that reaches the surface, merely a blood-craving beast or a Baelthrall.

<... So this is how it ends, my journey. I’m so sorry...>


An eternity passes— at least, it seems to. Beneath the ice, all senses lose their meaning. Dead hands claw through the ice, unable to do or perceive anything else. Ripping, tearing, the blood calls to the fledgling. Time, space, consciousness, identity, all gone save for her hunger— that is until she breaks the surface.

Ice turns to dirt as the beast reaches above ground. Her hand grips a barbed vine, but she does not feel its stinging thorns pressing into her skin.

<Blood. I need Blood.>

The beast hisses as she pulls herself up, her eyes straining from the City’s everpresenting light. Though softer than the daylight sun, it drives into her all the same. Once on her feet, the predator scans her surroundings— a garden, festering and burgeoning within the courtyard’s restraints. Its welcome, its significance, is lost on Tyrril. Her eyes are trained on another.

A shadow shifts, its movement alerting the beast. Without hesitation, she leaps forward with fangs bared. But as she sinks into the shadow, the beast finds no vitae. Rubber for flesh, metal for bones. Her teeth strike against the automaton’s frame. The pain sends her recoiling back.

“... Useless!” Tyrril growls and kicks the doll over in frustration before reaching for her fangs. “Red hells, that HURT.” The fledgling rubs her face...

“Wait... Where am I?” By some miracle, the shock pulls her back to reality, her beast kept an arm’s length away. As Tyrril gathers herself, she finds the automaton twitching beneath the ground.

“Oh dear...” The fledgling brings hand to her lip as she examines the robotic figure beneath her. Though absent of life, a pang of guilt crosses her heart.

“... I... should go.”


Tyrril grips her rifle with knuckles strained white as she wanders the Chequered City. With each heartbeat, some small shred of lucidity returns. Earlier, the bloodsong had rendered her unable to perceive its presence, but now the City only seems more incomprehensible. Familiar, yet strange— The architecture reminds her of the capital, or at least some distilled imagining of it. Carved stone, metal fences, brutalistic yet refined. The overgrowth only adds to her confusion, inky flowers and paper-color vines invading every corner.

<... I need to get out of here.Now.>

The fledgling wanders and wonders, unsure of what she is looking for, unable to process the sheer totality of the City. It seems endless, each twist and turn along the streets revealing more and more and more— Like a living labyrinth with stone for flesh and vines for veins. For hours Tyrril makes her way across its expanse. Save for the automatons, the only company the fledgling can find are the flora that line the streets. If this goes on for much longer, then the beast might rear its head again; Tyrril has to do something.

Tyrril looks skyward, her eyes searching for her Lady’s avatar, yet the moon is not there. <Just... what is this place?>

Eventually, the fledgling stumbles upon a curious sight. A fountain, carved from a single piece of stone. Black and white streaks criss-cross its shape, the edges between the colors so clean as to have no crease nor clear division. As if it was simply willed into existence with these colors in mind. Some outgrowths cling to the fountain’s base, a few vines resting within the waters. It seems unaffected by their presence, the water flowing smoothly without interruption.

Though the beast knocks on her skull, the fledgling’s mind wanders to her youth, to a similar fountain in her hometown. Her hand moves beneath her coat out of instinct; when she pulls it back, Tyrril finds a red, square coin within her palm.

“Wish upon the coin and toss it into the waters,” her peers would tell her, so eager to have their desires fulfilled. So burdened with hopes and prayers they were that her town’s fountain could not handle it. Something compels Tyrril as she looks into the waters, her own reflection cast across its surface. Her hair frayed and unkempt, dried blood clinging to her cheeks— she looks so much older despite her body not aging a day.

“Fourteen years...”

The Defiant tosses the coin into the water, her wish clear as day.

<I want to go home.>

As the red metal hits the surface, it hisses within the water. The blue drink, clear and pure, turns sanguine before the vampire’s very eyes. It dyes the entire volume in seconds— Suddenly, it hits her. The parchedness of her throat, the singe of iron in her nostrils...

“... Is that?”

It’s unmistakable; the fountain turned to blood. Tyrril extends her hand to touch its surface, her curiosity consuming all caution. Just as she expected, it *is* blood. Cold, but not congealed somehow, as though it is in some kind of stasis. Not that it would have mattered; her hunger strips away what remaining propriety the fledgling has. She dunks her face beneath the red waters to drink from the source, gulp after gulp—

And something pulls her in—

<... What?!>

Beneath the surface, her scream finds no purchase. Suddenly, she finds herself pulled entirely in. From the outside, there’s no trace of struggle, nor any sign that the Defiant was ever there to begin with.


Order, Chaos, an internal battle within now drawn without— The fledgling gasps for air as she opens her eyes, the red drink staining her vision. The world turned sideways, Tyrril looks through the cloudy veil and finds herself against a tiled floor. As she rises, the blood that subsumed her falls away. From her clothes and her skin, it leaves not a single blemish as it flows down into the tiles and disappears beneath the cracks.

“Ack—” She coughs once, twice before fully gathering herself. “Am I... still in the city? Just what is going on?!” Tyrill speaks her thoughts out loud, and someone... something replies—

A thunderstorm.

It drives the fledgling to her knees, ears clutched in desperation as the sound turns her senses against her. So loud to be deafening, yet Tyrril is spared to mercy. She must hear this; it demands that she hears this. The floor shifts beneath Tyrril’s feet, twin spirals of blue and red snaking through and consuming the titles with ravenous hunger. One streak red as blood crosses in front of the fledgling while another one snakes behind her, its hue cold like ice. Before she can make sense of anything, the whole arena ignites into a brilliant light— a sun!— The searing glow pricks her eyes as Tyrrill hastily throws her veil back over her horns, but still the light of the conjured Fatherglow sears her eyes.

Old instincts once drilled into her soul rise to the surface. The medic-turned-soldier reaches for her rifle, but then a curtain erupts from the red-line.

<... Fire!>

The vampire reels as the warmth kisses her coat, stumbling to the ground and shuffling back. Light and fire, her two most primordial enemies. A hand shields her eyes in pure desperation.

“Bloody Mother above, save me...”

As the cry leaves her lips, the light dies, the curtain of flames vanishing as quickly as it appeared. When Tyrril lowers her arm, the sun is gone, replaced with a pristine white moon.

“.. Y’sellia? Is that you?”

The likeness of her god does not answer. Instead, a hum fills the fledgling's ears as the blue spiral strikes beyond sight. A soft crackle gives way to roaring static, and Tyrril jumps forward in fright. She looks over her shoulder to find a living wall of electricity. Gods above, the very room is trying to kill her.

“Just what is going on!” Tyrril yells, her fangs bared in protest. Yet her scream falls on deaf ears as the moon cracks in twain. Her face shifts from rage to horror as the celestial body disappears.

“Welcome to the Field of Sun and Moon. No Good can warm your soul, no Evil can chill your spirit. Prove yourselves worthy, Pawns, or perish in eternity.”

Tyrril fruitlessly clutches her ears once again, the sound coming from both within and without. She is called; she is chosen. She must answer or else...

Still shaking, the fledgling spies the other souls, the first trace of life she’s seen since her burial. Weapons are brandished with cries of war— the fledgling feels the weight of revelation bearing down on her shoulders.

This is a battlefield, another one in her journey home.
AQ DF AQW  Post #: 5
1/23/2025 23:33:01   
TripleChaos
Member

The full moon shines upon a desert city. A cool breeze filters through narrow streets and open windows, as people carry on in the night. Upstanding citizens and unruly thugs alike, the setting sun is no deterrent for good business.

The same was true for the ruffians gathering on a quiet alley less than a minute ago. Presently, they're all sleeping on the paved ground, nursing a collection of wounds. One man is left standing, stowing his swords and fixing his coat by a thin column of moonlight.

With his equipment in order, he walks to each person and briefly inspects them. Finding nothing, he returns to the center of the alley. He blocks the mouth of the alley as his gaze leaves none unaccounted for. After standing still for nearly a minute, he turns to go elsewhere to continue his search. A cloud in the sky drifts in front of the moon, and darkness swells.

"Hiya, Killer."

A pale woman in a simple white dress stands in his way. Appearing without warning, face to face she stares at him with a too-smug grin. A grin that quickly fades as the man does not react, waiting for her to continue.

She clicks her tongue and steps back. "Would it kill ya to give me something to work with? I'm feeling worthless here."

"Please use my name to address me to avoid potential confusion, Lucillia."

"What, you don't like me calling you 'Killer?'" Lucillia's grin returns as she raises her arms to gesture toward herself. The moonlight illuminates the area once again as the cloud above carries on. The woman's complexion and clothes seem dimmer with the new light, only because the street behind her, or rather through her, becomes clearer. "I mean, the way I see it, I'm a ghost and it's your fault. So what else would you be?"

"Iridean," the man replies calmly. "This is the seventh time I've given my name to you. If you need a memory aid, I can write it for you."

"That's not—" Lucillia pinches the bridge of her nose, "You're real insufferable sometimes. All the time, actually."

"I don't understand. In what way am I insufferable?"

"You're a total killjoy, Killer. You don't flinch, you don't get annoyed. It's downright uncooperative. If I don't see you flapping your lips I'd mistake you for a statue. If this city needed emotions to thrive, you'd be a threat to society. That's what makes you insufferable."

"Your understanding of the word 'insufferable' strays outside the extent of reasonable interpretation," Iridean pauses. "Being a threat to society could fit within that definition however. If you need an example to aid your understanding, you can consider yourself."

Lucillia rests her chin on one arm as she leans on a table that isn't there. "Do tell me more."

"You are wanted in five cities spanning two different nations for at least sixty different crimes, and could face decades of imprisonment depending on the judge or judges you are tried by. It would be reasonable to deem you 'a threat to society' and therefore 'insufferable,' taking into consideration your collective infractions."

"Those," she stands and waves her hand, "were all just misunderstandings. And anyway, what are you gonna do? Turn me in?"

"That is a possibility that I ruled out earlier," Iridean says, shaking his head. "I have determined that you cannot attend trial in your current state."

"Oh how grateful I am for that!" Lucillia exclaims with mock joy. "I can stay a free woman, I just need to be stuck with nothing to do but talk with a brick wall in the shape of a person."

"I don't understand—"

"Just forget it, Killer." She turns away, feigning interest in the sandstone surrounding the alley as she begins twirling a strand of her short-cut hair with a finger.

"If you're feeling worthless, as you said before, I would be willing to accept your help in resolving your current situation." As Iridean finishes, he retrieves a strange looking object from a pocket inside his coat. A circular silver tablet fits in his palm, with only a pair of gemstones adorning each of its faces. A dim orange zircon and a crimson ruby faintly pulsing with light. "If you can tell me what you know about—"

Lucillia doesn't turn to face him as she waves her free hand. "Don't bother asking me."

"Artifacts such as this one are typically harder to use, given their lack of self-evident components," Iridean continues anyway. "Knowledge of their function is scarce, but crucial for utilizing them in any capacity. This artifact is the source of our problem, yet I know nothing about it. I lack the evidence to prove it, but considering your history—"

"Ha! 'Our problem?'" Lucillia turns to glare at him. "You don't seem too bothered by anything, Killer, least of all me. I'm a little irked by that." She takes a step forward and points at Iridean. "You definitely have the better end of all this. You can still move around, still talk to people, still do anything you want. It's terrible, having nothing to do but follow you around all the time."

"I cannot empathize with your present condition, I apologize. Although, I believe I have already proven the ways in which I am conversely impaired by this arrangement. I have not been able to resume my duties as an officer of this city for—"

"Yeah, I know it must give you so much trouble being stuck with me—"

"I will ask that you refrain from interrupting me so frequently." Iridean maintains a level gaze, his stern green eyes serious as he addresses Lucillia. "I will resolve this incident. Your help will expedite my progress."

Lucillia stands in front of Iridean for a long moment, neither standing even an inch over the other. She gives him a scowl before floating a few steps higher towards the thugs on the ground. "I already helped you, didn't I? You found these guys."

"You said they had information about the artifact, and that they would share that information with me in exchange for appropriate compensation. Instead, they drew their weapons at the sight of me. You must have made a mistake."

"Really? All I remember saying is that I knew there were a bunch of bastards here that owed me."

"I can repeat what you had said if your memory continues to be unreliable."

"'Unreliable,' huh." Lucillia furrows her brow as she shifts her gaze away. She thinks of how many times Iridean has already walked into a fight unwittingly at her suggestion, not thinking for a moment to doubt her even once. "Sure, that's it." Before Iridean starts repeating anything, she turns back and continues, "Anyway, you sure did a number on them. No mercy from you, Killer."

"I did not kill them. I inspected each of them, and none of their injuries require immediate medical attention."

"Real sweet of you, huh."

Iridean looks at the thugs on the ground without a hint of anger or pity. Most are still knocked out on the ground, but some of them begin to stir hearing their conversation. His half of it at least. He turns around and starts walking out of the alley toward the main street.

As he moves away, an invisible force swells in the back of Lucillia's mind, compelling her to stay close. A gentle nudge now; a thundering racket if she were to stray far enough to leave the city. She grumbles under her breath, "How the hell am I supposed to get out of this mess…?"

Iridean stops and turns to face her again, "Regardless of if you are willing to help or if you desire my assistance, I swore to serve the people of this city. Every citizen has a right to a trial, and being accused of any number of crimes does not negate that right. If there is no one else who can resolve your dilemma, then it is my duty to resolve it."

Lucillia ignores him, crossing her arms and directing her thoughts elsewhere. Iridean waits another moment. Hearing no other comments, he exits the alley and joins the crowd of people passing by. A cool breeze rushes by, and where Lucillia stood only a dim mist blows away.



Unnatural silence rules the Chequered City. A sparse few obedient automatons navigate its black and white twists and turns, not making a sound as they walk, tread, or roll around. A variety of gloom-colored roots, vines, and flowers have conquered an alley. Along with the rest of the city.

Iridean steps up and away from a nook in the wall, having carefully placed his travel pack inside. A passerby would never notice it. Even with careful attention, it blends in well.

"I hid the pack as you suggested. It confuses me how you could have known of a spot to conceal it when you said that you have never been to this city." Iridean turns, and cocks his head about the alley. His head turns to muffled sounds on the opposite wall.

"—ain't too strange," Lucillia replies, snaking outside of a similar nook that barely lets her pass through sideways. "You get a feel for finding this sort of spot when you spend enough time looking. Doesn't make a difference which city you're in. Even a bizarre one with a bunch of odd contraptions moving around on their own."

"I would not have been able to find a better hiding place on my own. Thank you, Lucillia."

"Don't waste your thanks, Killer. I'm doing this for myself. I'd have ditched you to scout this joint already if I could've."

"I recall you saying 'I'm done being an ass, so let's just work together,' if you have already forgotten."

Lucillia half-stumbles out of her hidden path and then raises her hands in defense, "Alright alright, don't go digging up the past. That's my job. And hearing you cuss just feels wrong too." Her gaze lingers on some of the straps and satchels Iridean wears: a set of vials, a vase, a knife. "Speaking of digging up, I told you about all the artifacts right? It wouldn't have been worth the trouble finding my stashes of 'em if you can't use 'em."

Lucillia waits for a response. She lifts her gaze to see Iridean had closed his eyes at some point. "Don't tell me I put you to sleep, Killer."

"I'm attempting to focus," Iridean replies, without opening his eyes. "I need to fully ignore you to participate in the upcoming competition. Pairs are not allowed to join."

"Am I a bother?" She puts a hand on her hip, "You could just ask, you know. I can quiet down a bit."

Iridean opens his eyes and looks at her again. "Please cease your communication with me until I exit the competition."

She smirks. "Don't want to."

"Then I will continue my meditation."

"Wait, wait, wait," Lucillia lets out a heavy sigh. "C'mon, you've got to learn how to take a joke eventually. I can be quiet. I'll even stay away from the place all together."

"Alright," Iridean nods. "I'll return when I finish the competition."

He walks out of the alley and faces the gnarled street, thick grey roots uprooting the pale white paving stones. The path ahead is arduous, but Iridean could feel a sort of gravity that leads him toward the Arena, calling out to him. It is a sensation he never would understand if he couldn't feel it as he does now. He takes another step into the street, towards what could invariably be called 'destiny.'

…Behind him, a voice shouts. "Hey, you piece of junk, what are you doing here? How did you find that? Stop! Don't you dare make a fool out of me!"

***

Iridean enters the dim arena. He is certain he walked here with purpose, but his memory of precisely how he arrived in this spot is clouded. He takes note of this experience, another example matching the rumors of how this strange city is not found, but instead finds those with strong desire.

Iridean does not have long to consider this before a cacophony of lights and sounds fills the Arena, punctuated by a single thunderclap. When his senses return, he sees the Arena has transformed.

He takes a step away from the raised floor under one of his feet, forming a single tendril of a vibrant blue and red pattern spanning the whole Arena. Above, celestial bodies emerge and vanish from nothing in time with dangerous flames and lightning from the raised tiles, the latter of which was conjured on the same red tile he had just avoided. His hand rests on the vials near his chest as a precaution against any further hazards.

Iridean notes how the sun and the moon seemed to correlate with the phenomena before turning his attention to the others who stand in the arena. A symbol flashes above each of their heads, including himself, either black or white. A stark contrast to match the city.

There are five others, a variety of people unlike any he has seen before. Only one of them seems traditionally armed, having an ornate longsword sheathed at their side. That one already dashes for the center of the arena, beneath the void that the celestial bodies vanished from. Iridean notes the rest, considering how his two swords may prove ineffective against unconventional attacks.

A racket of voices fill the air calling for battle, but Iridean pays them no heed. He is well aware of what this place demands of those who seek it. There are many stories of wish-granting artifacts from ages long past, and bloodshed is always born in their wake.

Iridean draws a single bound sword and clutches a glowing vial as he cautiously approaches the center of the arena.
Post #: 6
1/24/2025 11:30:23   
Kooroo
Member

The rumble of crumbling stone and protesting metal filled the night as Gorr felled the wrought iron gates. Whilst the sound of the metal impacting the cobblestone driveway, although loud, it was nothing compared to the immense roar the massive reptile let loose moments after.

Zophia squinted at Gorr; the behavioural algorithms that she’d just installed should’ve put a stop to that, but the issue must’ve been even more deeply rooted. More adjustments were needed it seemed. Maybe a different, more powerful processing unit was needed, or perhaps it was time to dig around and modify the beast’s brain again.

After they were finished here, of course.

If the sound of the gate falling hadn’t been enough to sound the alarm, Gorr’s little declaration would certainly have gotten the estate guards running towards them.

Luckily, being the genius that she was, Zophia had planned for this and brought help.

Said help took the forms of Alces and Pholus, whose eyes lit up and began to move at her gestured command. The rhythmic clack of metal hooves and skittering legs on stone grew as they trudged past her, their weight causing slight tremors through the road. The shaking abruptly stopped as the titanic stag and spider stepped off and into the hedges bordering the driveway.

Exactly three minutes later, the shouts and screams of alarm started, just as expected. She listened for anything unusual within the racket caused by her subjects, then nodded, satisfied that everything was proceeding as expected.

The sounds of metal striking metal and metal striking flesh echoed through the estate as Zophia stalked up the lantern-lit road, towards the manor on the hill. Her boots clanked and her armour rattled with each step, intertwined with the tap of the cane on the road. Gorr stomped after her, his programming preventing him from vocally acknowledging the sound. From her Oculus she could see that the apprentice she’d brought was uneasy; the young lady’s head twisted and turned to every sound—of which there were many—an expression of unease warping what remained of her face.

It seemed that Gorr was not the only thing that would require adjustments once this night was over.

Whoever had furnished the estate grounds must have had an obsession with boxwoods and camelias, she mused, as those made up the vast majority of plants lining the driveway. It would take an inordinate amount of time to keep these maintained, or a small army of gardeners.

As they neared the main residence, she could see that even the doorway too was decorated with the same type of shrubs—two colourful, flowering specimens that Gorr knocked over as he sent the doorsmen flying with a lash of his tail.

Zophia stepped around a very expensive automobile that her reptilian companion was converting into a doormat, then rapped on one of the manor’s doors twice with her cane. She examined them closely while she waited for someone to answer. Two large, thick pieces of burgundy-painted wood, each inset into bronze frames. Solid, very heavy and almost certainly extremely expensive. A good door. Quality.

After waiting precisely one minute for a response, the magus set her cane to the side, then placed a palm on each handle—curved levers shaped to look pleasant to the eye, but rather difficult to grip—and twisted to no avail.

Still locked.

The scientist began to raise her hand to give Gorr the signal to break down the door, then paused. Whilst the doors did seem rather sturdy, the mechanised lizard would probably exert excessive force and destroy everything on the other side by accident. Just because they had already caused a whole lot of property damage already didn’t mean that they had to cause even more. Plus, such excessive force might risk the wellbeing of the residents inside, which may make them less willing to cooperate.

Best to handle this personally, with an intelligent and calculated approach.

A single pulse should be sufficient to fling them open, yet keep the doors on their hinges. The lock—or locks, plural—may break and the wood might be slightly scuffed, but the costs of repairs should be inconsequential to the residents.

Zophia raised her gauntlet to chest height and placed the palm right in the centre of the entry, where the bronze frames met. There was a hum, then a crackle followed by a fwoom and a reverberating bang as both doors blew off their hinges and into the room beyond.

Immediately, there was screaming and shouting, mixed in with the sound of smashing wood, breaking glass and a cacophony of other noises.

Beneath her mask, Zophia made an expression that would have raised an eyebrow if she still had eyebrows. That definitely hadn't gone right.

She stepped inside to survey the damage and one of the doors—now scratched, dented and stained in a dark liquid—came gliding across the marble floor towards her. It bumped off her foot almost weightlessly and immediately slid back in the other direction, as though on magical skates.

Magic. Once again, magic had made the situation all too messy and unpredictable.

Some mage had probably enchanted the doors with gravity-altering spells to be far lighter than they had any right to be. Perhaps someone had hired an enchanter before The Purge to make life easier or more convenient. Which was a stupid decision; if the doors were too heavy then you had made a poor decision when constructing your abode. The solution was to replace them with lighter doors, not use magic.
Alternatively, there was every chance that the magi responsible was the one Zophia had come for tonight, further reinforcing her point—magic was too dangerous to be allowed in the hands of common, ordinary folk.

Magic had to be suppressed and controlled; via steel and technology.

Whilst one of the doors had come to a rest at her feet, its partner had managed to lodge itself in what must have once been a display cabinet across the room. Porcelain and glass littered the hallway, most of it covering the rectangular granite table in the middle of the room—the only object that seemed to have survived unscathed. The rest was scattered all over the velvety red floor, patches of which were becoming rapidly darker from the dozen or so broken guards scattered around the chamber.

A wine bottle came flying towards her from across the room, only to fall drastically short and smash into the floor instead of her, adding yet another patch of darkening carpet and broken glass to the already abused chamber.

Zophia strode forward, stepping up onto the vulgar table and towards the bottle thrower—a man; pudgy, balding, and as weak of chin as he was in his arms—making it halfway across the room before he half-shouted, half-shrieked…

Something.

She didn’t know what exactly. Zophia didn’t speak… whatever archaic language this man spoke. But as usual, she’d already taken measures to account for this.

“Helga.” Zophia called, her Oculus swiveling back to the building’s entrance and her assistant. “Translate.”

Helga shuffled forward meekly from her position by the door, making poor use of the long, elegant prosthetics she’d been granted. Previously Zophia had warned the girl that if she continued to use her legs incorrectly, then she’d have to make do without. Such perfectly shaped and constructed machinery could be reused in a much more practical way. If the apprentice didn’t want to walk in a more correct manner, then she could use her arms instead. Less materials would be required as well.

Eventually, the young woman made it across the room and stood next to Zophia, albeit on the floor instead of the table. The mechanised aid paused for a moment, then made a crackling noise. Moments later, a recording of the man’s voice played out from within her chest, causing the original owner of the voice to shriek once more, eyes almost bulging out of his sockets.

A health risk, for sure. Once this was done, she’d have to offer to fix that, along with the strength and precision of his arm.

“You fiend, you monster,” Helga stated in a flat monotone, systematically filtering out the emotion from the man’s outburst. “You have killed all of my guards, and for what purpose?”

The Oculus swiveled behind her once more and Zophia did another cursory examination of bodies spread about the room. Whilst a few of them didn't seem to be moving, most of the downed figures were still breathing.

An incorrect statement. Perhaps some intellectual improvements were necessary as well.

As for the purpose of her visit, Zophia would have liked to explain that she was here for a reported magic user living at this residence. Unfortunately, the translation feature was one-way only, so she’d hoped that her show of technological might would be enough for them to cooperate.

The Iron Magus turned her full attention back towards the man, only to notice a woman and a child huddling on the floor behind him, mostly obscured by his portly figure. One of them—the woman, judging by the pitch and tone—mumbled something.

Within moments, Helga was translating once again. “Please don’t kill us.”

Of course, fatalities and such destruction had never been the plan; she had only ordered Alces and Pholus to incapacitate the guards after all. Murder, whilst a potential solution to many a problem, was also usually out of the question, unless her hand was forced.

At the very most, all Zophia intended to do here was subdue their resident sorcerer and suppress their magic. The other humans were also welcome to bodily enhancements once she’d acquired her goal. The rotund man could certainly do with a few such improvements—not to mention fixes, she thought, eyeing his quivering knees.

Finally, the child spoke up. From the sounds of it, they were crying. “I’m scared.”

Beneath her mask, Zophia smiled. She could fix that too. With enough steel, she could—

There was a violent bang as a door flung open from behind the three people. A young, dark-haired woman strode out, fury crossing her delicate features and flames dancing in her outstretched palms.

This was probably the mage, Zophia guessed, as the Oculus began to shimmer and hum.

Her target’s attacks leapt forth, the first stream missing completely and the second striking Helga, right in the chest. In accordance with the properties of the material, the apprentice’s steel breastplate failed to catch on fire, the flame fizzling out as soon as it struck. Nevertheless, Helga screamed and fell over backwards, just as Zophia herself returned fire.

A thin ray of crimson light lanced from the Oculus, sweeping vertically up from the floor and claiming Zophia’s attacker’s arm at the bicep. The mage woman gasped and collapsed, joining her forcibly discarded appendage.

Their own plight forgotten, the other three ran back to attend to her.

Satisfied, the Mage of Iron loosed a single laugh, then stepped off the table and walked towards them. This had been even simpler than she’d thought—she hadn’t even had to reach for her Nails.

“Zophia. Daughter.”

Perhaps the nails were going to be needed after all.

Zophia turned at her name, keeping the Oculus trained on the defeated mage and her attendants.

The voice had come from the manor’s entrance, at which stood a tall, slim and masked humanoid, dressed in the gaudiest hat, vest and trousers she had ever seen. Hovering just above their outstretched hand stood a small distorted projection of a person, their features and finer details shrouded by static.

“What a pleasant surprise, father. Have you perhaps come to help?” Zophia inquired, grabbing and forcibly hauling Helga onto her feet. The apprentice yelped and struggled, not helping the mage’s efforts in the least. Once she was up, however, Zophia kept ahold of the apprentice’s tunic. “Well not to worry, I’ve already fini—”

“Again, what are you doing, daughter?” her father interjected, his metallic voice even more warped than her own by the projector’s insubstantial connection. “How did you find this place and this family?”

Family? Well, that made sense. Honestly, though, her father was proving long-held her point that family was a very restrictive and outdated concept. They did occasionally have their uses, however; even if such uses were largely irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. “Let’s just say your staff are competent in information gathering, but not much else. Certainly not in matters of security, for example.”

He cursed, though the projection’s interference masked what his words were. When he next spoke, his words were tinged with anger. There was a good chance that might have just been more interference, however, as her father tended to be as emotional as a laser-etched teaspoon. “You’ve gone too far this time, Zophia. Return to the laboratory at once, and without the civilians.”

“I—”

“Not another word,” her father warned, this time with finality,“or I will have your limbs severed and your mind loaded into an attendant drone.”

“You cannot prevent th—”

“That was three. Take her down and bring her to me.” he growled, before vanishing from his hireling’s hand as he killed the connection.

Before Zophia could even think about calling for Gorr, the hatted figure sprinted towards her, moving much faster than the magus had expected.

Much too fast—they were almost a blur. Her father’s work, most likely.

One moment they were by the entrance. Nary a heartbeat later, they were three quarters of the way across the room, an alabaster gun raised, aimed squarely at Zophia’s chest.

It was a good thing she literally had help on hand, she thought, hauling Helga in front of her. There was a loud bang and something gleaming penetrated the roboticised assistant, causing her to shriek and stop moving.

Zophia discarded the broken apprentice, then flexed her fingers and clenched her gauntleted fist, broadcasting a command to her augmented beasts.

Gorr roared, and somewhere in the distance both Alces and Pholus followed suit as their restraints were unleashed. The front of the mansion started crumbling, then split and broke completely apart as the giant reptile forced his way in.

But it would still take another couple of seconds for the creature to reach Zophia; seconds she didn’t have.

The gaudy gunfighter spun and pivoted on their heel as they reached her, drawing yet another gun from somewhere on their body. They lifted the weapon up, pointing it straight at Zophia’s chestplate, just as the magus raised her gauntlet to block.

Safe.

There was another crack of thunder, the gun’s barrel shone green, and the next thing she knew, the mage was flying backwards through the air. Glass shattered as she struck, then went through one of the windows, then Zophia was bouncing, and then sliding along a tiled floor.

Clutching on to her cane, the Iron Mage pulled herself to her feet, then noticed that her surroundings were… different.

What should have been naught but crushed hedges, grass, and dirt was instead a somewhat dark, empty hallway made from white stone. There was some foliage, however; black vines that had broken through the alabaster walls and spread across its surface;from the ceiling down to the black and white tiles covering the floor.

Other than that, there was nothing else notable in the corridor. This included the lack of a window, such as the one she had been launched out of.

There was an exit, though—a single, black, wood-grained door at the end of the passage, much simpler in appearance than the twin doors she’d blasted earlier. Zophia swiveled the Oculus behind her, aiming it the direction she’d just flown from. Nope, nothing.

It didn’t really need stating, but something about this was very wrong.

Mouth twisting with distaste, the Mage of Iron strode to the door and pushed on it with her cane.

On the other side was what appeared to be a street or alleyway; the type you’d see in most cities or large towns. A few people walked up and down the lane, apparently going on about their daily business. It was a fairly standard sight, except where everything was completely different.

The buildings and ground—would that be a floor?—were checkered black-and-white, just as the hallway she’d come from had been. There were also blackened creepers climbing around the building walls and from the floor, just like before. And the people weren’t people in the conventional sense, no. Humanoid, definitely, but that was where the similarities ended.

Constructs. Not hers and not organic in the slightest, but still fascinating. Zophia had half a mind to pull one aside and disassemble the automaton, but she had more pressing matters to attend to.

The Iron Mage started down the street, intent on finding something that looked… different, at the very least. The buildings and various other alleyways seemed to have no rhyme or reason to them; so heading off the main street was most likely a sure way to get lost within this… monochromatic dimension, or whatever it was. Most likely just another realm where everything was black-and-white only for some yet-to-be-apparent reason.

After minutes of walking, however, she didn’t seem to be making any progress. The buildings off in the distance were not getting any closer, nor were the structures on either side of the street changing in appearance.

This could be a problem then. Zophia had considered attempting to signal Gorr or one of the other augmented creatures, hoping that they’d make enough of a ruckus that she’d be able to follow the source of the sound. The issue was that she’d already removed their restraints, so in theory, they were already making plenty of noise.

Besides just walking forward and waiting for the scenery to change, she didn’t seem to have any other options—she’d have to ask for help.

The magus walked up to one of the constructs as they passed her and grabbed what seemed to be a shoulder connector. It spun to face her in response, both its face and form constantly shifting and rippling as it gazed at her.

It spoke to her, its voice fluctuating and warbling as its features grew and shrunk, constantly changing. “How may I—”

Zophia cut it off. “I need to leave this city. Lead me to an exit, from which I can return to my original location. Take me there.”

“Of course.” It warbled, before abruptly turning and walking back the direction she’d come from.

Well, that had been simple.

She followed the automaton, eyes glued to its back whilst her Oculus gazed around, keeping an eye on her back, the sides, and even in the air. As strange as this city was, at least it didn’t seem particularly dangerous—the deadliest thing would be getting lost, but if the autonomous constructs were all as potentially helpful as the one she was following, then it might not be as treacherous as the scientist originally thought.

Before long, the android stopped by a door that was slightly ajar, then bowed and gestured. Zophia stared at the door, all too aware that this led to the hallway she’d arrived in.

Of course it wasn’t going to be that easy.

She sighed, then took aim with the Oculus and fired. A horizontal sweep this time, aiming to bisect the useless construct at the waist. The crackling ray of energy carved into the wall by the android, then swept to the side, sizzling and carving a deep rent into its surface, but nothing more.

That… also wasn’t right. That beam should’ve cut straight through the construct, cleaved it straight in two.

Both fist and cane crackling, Zophia waited for the very-intact automaton’s retaliation… only for nothing to come. The damned, still-moving construct just stayed in place next to the door in a deep bow, arms repeatedly motioning towards the door.

She glared at it, then walked to the door and pulled it fully open—

—only to be hit with a wall of sound. Multi-colored lights and smoke drifted out from the door, which now led to a…

A…

Party? She could see throngs of shadowy figures bobbing up and down in the gloom, whilst coloured rays and neon lights flashed and blinked down upon them. A loud, thrumming beat echoed out from within the room, pulsing out the door, through the tiled floor, up her boots and into her teeth, accompanied by other various ‘beeping’ and ‘booping’ sounds—synthesisers, keyboards and other electronic instruments, she surmised.

Zophia didn’t know what to say. She always knew what to think—that this was impossible and outrageous—but if called upon to speak, she was sure that her voice would have failed her.

Regardless of how impossible this was, though, it was the only lead she had. The only alternative was to maybe go and ask another automaton for a way out, but the scientist had a feeling that the result would be the same.

This was ridiculous, Zophia thought, as she stepped through the entrance. The lighting was barely adequate inside the room—no, the club. It was a nightclub, yes.

The figures she’d seen dancing from the doorway were on a large open space, split into many small tiles, lit up with the colours of the rainbow, a… a dance floor. That’s what it was. Made sense.

There seemed to be at least one more floor in the building as well, judging by the stairs immediately by her right.

Whilst the gloom and smoke made for a downright oppressive environment, the music was the only redeeming aspect. Techno; that was the genre. The only acceptable type of music in her opinion, which tended to be the only worthwhile point of view, from her experience.

Further along the corridor was a large desk with a tall, plastic security screen separating the staff side from the public. A tall, broad shouldered attendant manned the counter, his brow raising slightly as his eyes came to rest on her.

“Name?” he asked, his tone gruff and almost inaudible over the din coming from the dancefloor.

“Zophia.” she replied, the metallic echo of her voice projecting itself well over the thumping techno. She expected at least an additional question. “Last name?” perhaps or something about an entrance fee, or even denial based on her attire.

Instead, the man took out a thick bundle of papers and started flicking through the pages, checking the names. It was a wonder that he could read anything at all in the practically non-existent light, but he must have managed.

A moment later, the attendant placed the list back down and nodded. He stood up, then unlatched something behind the desk, and pulled a section of the benchtop away. With a wave, pointing his thumb at a corridor recessed in the wall behind him.

“Right this way, Ms. Zophia,” he droned. “Enjoy your dance.”

Zophia bristled as she walked through the gap in the counter. “It’s not ‘Ms. Zophia’. It’s just Zophia. Nothing more, nothing less.” She didn’t feel it was worth her time to correct the statement about the ‘dance’.

The attendant nodded dully as she strode down the corridor, urgency adding speed to her gait. The Metal Mage kept her third eye on him as she walked, inspecting his features as he walked. There was something familiar about him, as though she’d seen him at some point before.

As a matter of fact, there was something familiar about this entire establishment. Which shouldn’t have been possible, as she’d never been to a nightclub before. Definitely not. The very idea was just as preposterous as it was impossible. And what would she have done at a nightclub anyway. Dance? Ridiculous. What was more likely was she’d been there to learn the secrets and science behind Techno, she thought, letting a single laugh escape her lips.

At the end of the corridor was a battered looking door, its features barely visible by the dim glow of the fluorescent exit sign overhead. Wasting no further time, Zophia pushed open the door and stepped through it, only to find another… space that was somehow louder and more chaotic than the room she’d just left. Colours swirled down from the sky above, striking and flowing through the tiled floor as the sounds of battle crashed into her. Five other figures stood in the distance from her, obscured by the mixed kaleidoscope of sound and colour.

This was definitely not an exit, nor a ‘dance’.

Zophia turned on her foot and was about to step back into the passageway… only to find that there was no passageway.

The magus’ eyes narrowed and she felt a twinge of something flicker through her, only for the emotion to vanish again before she could analyse it. Which was just as well, as she had more pressing matters to deal with.

As she swept her eyes across her surroundings for an alternative escape, Zophia started to arc the Oculus behind her, intent on monitoring the five other constructs sharing the area with her.

Easier said than done, though—whatever entity that was controlling this place seemed intent on outdoing the sheer magnitude of the sound and lights back at the nightclub.

The shoulder mounted eye had barely activated and started moving when there was a brilliant flash, causing spots to flash across the third point of view that appeared in her mind.

She shut the Oculus off again almost immediately, as it hadn’t taken particularly long to finish perusing the space behind her—because there was nothing. A few blank tiles on the floor, which soon abruptly ended, dropping off into an empty void.

Whilst it might be hypothesised that jumping or falling into that emptiness would lead to a swift ejection back toa more familiar setting, Zophia was completely doubtful. It was far more likely that you’d end up falling for an inordinate amount of time or potentially forever, if this place wa—

Suddenly there was light and flame, the former shining down overhead, the latter filling the void and the air. The Iron Mage grunted as she felt a sudden warmth flare across the back of her head.

The brilliance brought by the sun vanished almost immediately as soon as it had come, replaced by a moon hovering overhead. Day turned to night, as what had been flame turned into arcs of crackling, spitting lightning. For what it was worth, electricity was something Zophia was far more familiar with handling, however falling into a solid wall of energy was not her idea of a respectable end.

Something flashed above, making her angle the Oculus upwards. It was a circle that hoovered there; white, with five spokes from the centre. Zophia could see that each of the figures around her also each had a circle of sorts—some were the same as hers, whilst the others were black, the spokes curled.

What were these then? Designations? Marks? Wheels? Why woul—

And then again, once more there was nothing. The circles winked out, the moon disappeared with a reverberating retort, and all was still.

Save the movement of a single, colourless tile, rising up from the floor ahead of her.

Zophia grunted, unimpressed. Opinions differed according to an individual’s values and by the mage’s genius point of view, that display had been unnecessarily pretentious. All for the purpose of wha—

A legion of voices cut her off mid-thought, as though in an answer to her question.

The Iron Magus listened to them, reverberating in the air around them, yet resonating within. The fleeting emotion she’d previously experienced slowly grew as they talked, stronger and more easily identified.

Irritation, she realised. Irritation and Anger.

Zophia gave what might have been a snort and quashed the feeling. It had been quite some time since she’d been on the field of battle; but from what she did remember, inconsequential things such as emotion had no place here.

This was fine—well no, it wasn’t really, but she had no choice. She would entertain their game for now, but only on her own terms.

Order, Chaos. Both were relevant forces out in the real world, however neither of them held true sway over the other; neither of the two was capable of enacting any real change that needed to happen.

So Zophia would force that change herself.

She strode forth, heading straight for the field’s centre. Whilst that would potentially impart the risk of her being at the literal centre of attention, the colourless tile seemed to manipulate the arena’s behaviour. That itself might have been advantageous, but the important factor was making sure that she was in control of it and not any of the other combatants.

A short, thickset figure from the right side ran forward towards her with their shield raised, but made no attempt to actually attack the scientist, nor impede her path.

Another figure approached her from the left, prompting Zophia to keep a watchful, ethereal eye trained on them. She noted that while this one was armed, they weren’t actually focused on her.

That could change at any moment, however, but she seemed to be in the clear. At least, for now.

Unfortunately, there were two others that were heading directly for the centre—the first and closest dressed garishly, hunched forward and dashing forth with no weapon in hand. The second one approached more slowly with a single blade out, more cautiously, his manner of dress suggesting that he lived off the streets.

These two would have to be dealt with first, Zophia decided as she strode forward, flexing the fingers of her gauntlet.
AQW Epic  Post #: 7
1/26/2025 1:59:14   
  Starflame13
Moderator


Iron scrapes against stone, the metal shrieking its displeasure as Sïul’s cleats slam against the ground. Her allies move in the same moment, the red-caped man and golden-horned figure converging with her towards the center. The Ironborn’s grip relaxes slightly, and she exhales with more force than strictly necessary. Not sisters, and not ironborn, but these allies and their strange looks and garbs at least have the experience to know the unit is stronger than the individual. She’s… relieved. Overtones of steel sing to her from the red-caped fighter, clear chords large enough to match his shining armor paired with a lighter, overlying note to match his slim sword. A fencer, then. Someone hopefully fast enough to strike around her shield and retreat to safety. Good.

Good…?

No resonance reaches her from the golden-horned figure as they approach, leather armor patterned with dull stones instead of gleaming metal. Water springs from nothingness between their clawed hands, and Sïul coughs against her involuntary sharp inhale as the liquid twists upon itself to form a glaive. The strange, glowing scales and dragon-like features alone unnerve her; the obvious magery at their call even worse. Mages are not to be trusted, unreliable as water itself compared to the solidness of iron. Dangerous, faithless, scheming. But…

They move like a soldier. They’re armored like a soldier. What magic they’ve used has armed them as a soldier. And soldiers need - “Keep that shield up, child. I’ll cover the third.”

Soldiers need a Shield.

“Heard!” The response is sharp, automatic, pulled from Sïul’s throat in response to the authority in the dragon-soldier’s alien tone before she has a chance to fully process the words. She turns, cleats biting against the stone for purchase to halt her momentum, spinning her shield before her to keep the enemies in her sights. But… silver eyes flick rapidly between the two opponents. She isn’t sure which is the greater threat, the greater danger. She is not used to needing to judge her enemies - that’s the captain’s job, or a scout’s - not the shield’s.

There is no scout or captain here.

Sïul lowers her shield slightly, peers over the top edge. The leftmost foe, the pale woman, is unmoving, her features mostly human save for curled horns - one cracked - with a veil perched atop her head as black as the long coat and half-cape adorning her shoulders. The other, Sïul can make out no distinguishing features beyond dark, gleaming metal that covers every inch - an unfamiliar chorus drowning the steady thread of hum of steel that grows louder as they approach, gaining speed. A nearer threat poses the more imminent danger. Right? Sïul digs the spikes at her heels into the stone and braces herself for the charge, for a heavy gauntleted blow -

But the veiled woman strikes first, her arms blurring as she draws forth a weapon and raises it to her shoulder. The Ironborn pivots, reacting to the familiar motion of an enemy drawing a crossbow - and half flinches as instead a thunderous bang splits the air. What - !? She’d heard the stories of Bazra’s latest weapons, barrels that lit in smoke and fire and tore through leathers with ease. I am the Sh - something slams against her iron, several inches off its center and sending reverberations back through her arm like a struck gong. Not aiming for her originally, then - but for the dragon-soldier behind her.

Sïul rocks back on her heels, whipping her head to the side to shout a warning of the strange weapon - only for a stream of scarlet lightning to split the air between herself and her ally, blazing an unbroken line from the armored figure. Lightning originating from pure metal. Impossible. Mages don’t wear armor. Her throat closes, breath suddenly frozen. Old scars across her right thigh ache in recognition. Each recruit knew the danger, was taught the danger with lessons in blood and burns and screams, of carrying metal within a storm. That’s not… I can’t…

“Stop those shots!” A barely-familiar voice laced with something almost like static. An order, firm and calm, from the dragon-soldier. Sïul reacts at the tone, at its authority, trained instincts overriding her panic. She lunges forward towards the veiled shooter, head turning even as she catches her ally charging the lightning wielder, watery glaive first. But… you don’t have a shield. Sïul tucks herself behind her own iron, held tight to minimize the openings for a following shot. Soldiers need a shield. Cleats shriek as steps take her away from her allies, and the implications of the order finally catch up to her. We’re… separating?

She’s supposed to be the shield wall, unflinching and unmoving.

She’s… definitely moving.

She’ll just have to be unflinching.

Darkness billows out from all sides beyond her shield, blacker than the unlit sky. Sïul shifts her shield to her left arm, lightening it further as she glances past it. The shadows pool, a massive stormcloud that obscures the veiled woman and swallows the crimson of the tiles below. She slows immediately, pulling herself tightly behind her shield again as it breaches the black fog, as she steps forward and is immediately swallowed in darkness. The Ironborn suppresses a shiver. She needs to be unflinching. I… I am the Shield.

Her veins hum suddenly - and two overtones resonate back, twin echoes of slim metal chiming in recognition of nearly-smothered steel. Enchantments layered thick within the metal dull the clarity but do not hide their origin. The edges of her lips pull up into the hint of a satisfied grin.

Satisfied…?

Sïul pivots in the darkness, tracking where the waves of sound crescendo to their source. She sweeps her shield arm in a wide arc before her, reversing the resonance against her skin in the last moment to leaden the blow, a wall of iron smashing into the space behind the points of the humming song. Her steps carry her past the corner of the shroud, blinking as she emerges from the pitch black fog.

A click reverberates from somewhere behind her.

Burning warmth flares beside her as sunlight slams down from above, its rays finding her shield and reflecting back into silvery eyes.

Sunlight cascades down from overhead, its beams piercing through green leaves in dappled rays that warm the hard-packed earth of the unused training ground. She is laughing, the warmth of the sun against her cheek a bare flicker compared to the warmth of her hands tangled with her sisters’, their heads all piled together as they lay against the dirt.

The instructors are all off preparing for the ritual, and children are forbidden from entering even the outer grounds of the temple. It's the first day in months they’ve been able to slip away, that they’ve been able to laugh and talk so freely.

“You really want to be an Ironborn? They’re all so serious!”

“But they’re the strongest! That’s what Instructor Vierna is always saying, right?”

“Who cares? That’s, like, years and years and YEARS of training.”

“You should care! You’re the one that’s always getting in trouble!”

“Then you’re gonna have to protect us from everything. Right, Runa?”

“From everything.” Her hands squeeze tight. The laughter on either side quiets. “Always.”
AQ DF MQ AQW  Post #: 8
1/26/2025 16:22:30   
GrimmJester
Member

The entire arena burst into motion nearly as fast as he had. None quite as fast as he could, of course not; how could they? He watched them all from beneath the brim of his hat. There was one ally on his left side, a stocky woman who seemed to carry nothing but a shield. Seemed impractical in a duel, but in a melee like this one, having a defensive wall between himself and the opponents could be of use.
The opponent on that same side seemed hesitant to move, a woman that looked something akin to a mourning widow if not for the fact that she was huge and, like the other, seemed to have some form of horns sticking up from her head. Her not moving was good, though; keeping her away meant she didn’t need too much recognition.

To his right was… Well, he wasn’t quite sure what they were, to be honest. They looked human enough, but that’s just it, isn’t it, human enough. Not quite human. From their head sprouted horns, their skin a strange color and seemed to house some form of scales. Still, they moved and spoke like a soldier. Like him, they were making the deduction that having a shield wall between themselves and their opponents would be quite the helpful thing.
“Keep that shield up, child. I’ll cover the third.” they barked. Child? The shield woman didn’t look that young. Regardless… He didn’t need cover!

At least, that was the thought that crossed his mind just as he refocused his attention to the opponent dead ahead. A knight? Someone in full-plate armor, though seemingly not wielding any visible weapon save for a cane. They were striding confidently towards Giles as if the fact that his two allies were moving to enclose them in a pincer maneuver didn’t bother her at all. Still, it couldn't be that big of a threat considering that they were basically unarmed. At least so he thought until the person raised their hand just before Giles could reach the plate. From their splayed fingers leapt arcs of minuscule red lightning, surging from that gauntlet and impacting Giles’s breastplate. They leapt and danced across the metal covering his chest; he felt the heat burning his skin, the pain blooming throughout his chest and up along the gorget covering his neck.

“Ghhah! What the devil…?!” he screamed, he’d never seen, nor felt for that matter, anything like that in his life. How could such a small thing manage to contain the power of a lightning strike within it? And unleash it to such devastating effect?! Truly it boggles the mind. Thankfully, his behorned ally came to his aid, imposing their weapon between the lightning wielder and himself. Was that weapon made of… water? It certainly had some quite unusual-looking qualities to it, though he didn’t have the time to spend on considering just how that might be plausible. Suffice it to say, it seemed in this arena he was much out of his depth. While concerning, this realization was also exhilarating. Perhaps there would be someone here worthy of his attention.
”At the nick of time, dear fellow, lest this addle-plot cook me alive in my plate!”
He breathed a sigh of relief, not realizing he’d stopped moving momentarily from the sheer shock and surprise of the event, even dropping to one knee in the momentary lapse. A moment unguarded, unmoving, he wouldn’t be surprised like that a second tim-… Wait… One, two…

His body moved out of instinct before he’d ever realized exactly what had happened, his left arm raising to slide half his blade out of its sheath to block the swing of the third. He’d been a brazen fool. He’d failed to keep tabs on every opponent, and now the third had gotten the drop on him. Well, almost; still, it was better than most people had managed in several years. With a flourish, Giles rose and spun to face them, fully drawing the length of his espada.
At least this one looked normal enough. His clothes were unstylish, wrapped up in so many layers of loose-fitting fabric one might mistake him for a laundry basket if not for the wind-worn face and the tightly clenched jawline.
”Is everyone on your side such honorless vagabonds?” He asked the new assailant, as he righted his posture to step into a counterattack, swinging his blade towards the opponent’s arm. It was a test, of course, to get a feel for his opponent.
”Now far be it from me to tell another gentleman his business…” He said as the stranger’s sword came up to block his own. The person was fighting cautiously, reserved...
”But you seem to have forgotten your blade in its sheath!”
He tested a few more times, a thrust, a slash. Each one just a bit faster, just a bit closer. His opponent was on the back foot already. Though they had two blades, for now they had only drawn the one, and it was still in its sheath… Or whatever that impractical covering was. Each strike blocked with just a bit more of a delay. It was clear with his reach and the gulf in their skill this bout would be over before it could ever truly get interesting.

”If this is how you plan to fight, my dear caitiff, I suggest you study your Liberi! He’s got quite a few interesting thoughts on cudgels.” he mused, cape fluttering as he feinted low, only to redirect, using the advantage in length of his rapier to take aim at his opponent’s face.
”Still, I fear it would be no match for my Capo Ferro!” his blade struck true, but barely, grazing the cheek of the horribly dressed street-vagrant before him. He couldn’t help but smirk as the bead of red pooled at the lower edge of the cut and slowly ran a trickle down the man’s face. He danced back, the momentary hesitation in his opponent’s eye giving him the opening he needed. He put all of his weight into a lunge, the tip of his rapier aimed towards the man’s heart. He wasn’t wearing any armor, at least as far as Giles could see, so to quickly slip the tip of his blade between the mans ribs and run him through would be a fast ending to this farce.
”C’est fini!” He quipped, though at the same time the vagabond chose to reveal just why they had kept their left hand out of the fight until now. Giles’s eye caught the motion, thumb flicking open some sort of small container concealed in his left hand. Surely it wasn’t anything worthy of notice… At least, so he thought; however…
Just as the tip of his blade would meet the chest of his opponent, something coalesced as if from mist between steel and flesh, a small circular object like that of a shield. As the tip of his blade struck it with all of his might, he felt his momentum suddenly rebound, his arm tossed back just as firmly as he’d thrust it forward. This tossed his balance out of whack and sent him reeling backwards. His heels struck the edge of an ever-so-slightly raised plate, to keep himself from toppling over and falling flat on his back he was forced to step over it to plant his feet firmly back on the ground. Ground that sank just a fraction of an inch with a deep, ominous
‘Click’
Well… Seems he’d succeeded in his initial objective after all… Just not quite how he imagined it.

Post #: 9
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