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Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Sixth Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the mountains of the Spine. The wind was not the beginning. There are neither beginnings nor endings to the turning of the Wheel of Time. But it was a beginning.
Onward the wind swept, moving to the east. The still waters of Lake Leonia turned muddy at its banks; the mountain Helgrind began to shriek and howl, and the priests in their bedchambers wept at its anger. They knew the portents that the wind carried.
Further west the wind, and against the stone walls of Meilan it crashed, setting banners aflutter and the minds of troops ill at ease. The Varden army was nervous, now in the start of its campaign. Outside the city, where once crops grew to feed the city, the fields stank of blood and fear and battle. The next year’s harvest lay in the soil, and fed on corpses.
From his vantage point atop the city walls, Eragon gazed at the army before him. They stood with rapt attention at the man who they called Shadeslayer, for he symbolized their hope for an idealized past, symbolized the world as it should be, symbolized everything good and right and true. Men need heroes, in war. Raising his sword into the sky, the Rider spoke a word and the blade burst into flame, a pure streak of light as the sun set around them. And the world changed.
For as the blade ignited and burned, so too did the great Tree Syrclle, thousands of leagues to the north. The Elves did not notice, for the importance Tree had been forgotten thousands of years ago. Back when the drow ruled below and the elves above, until the drow were sealed away. Back when the Tree was created.
As the sword Brisingir slowly descended from its heights, a cut was made. No man or woman alive would ever see the small hole that it made, but it was there. And through it came one who was yet to be born. In the caverns of the mountain Helgrind, the Dark One’s Will gathered, and was woven once more into the pattern, free of the prison that Rand Al’Thor had placed.
The Aelfinn and Eelfinn looked upon the world, and saw the chaos that the Rider had wrought, and smile, for the bargain made would be kept, and their debt repaid. Old deals were voided, and a small group from a world they had created was returned. A young man’s belt unraveled as its buckle sizzled and melted as they wove their will. The Aelfinn and Eelfinn nodded, their bargain fulfilled, and withdrew once more to their Tower of Ghenji, where they waited for one to approach once more…
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie Riggs
A large man lies in the on the peak of the mountain of the Hadrac Desert. He sleeps dreaming of metal and fire. Well that is until one of his short soldiers wanders over to him and taps his shoulder.
"Ugh Eddie?" the short man asks.
"Five more minutes Mom." The man replies rolling over.
"No more minutes Eddie. Bladehedge is gone." The deformed little man states before slamming his head down into Eddie Riggs's stomach. Since that head had been hardened by years of being forced to mine by bashing his skull against rock that really hurts. Eddie wakes up with a scream of pain.
"Dude. Not cool." Eddie says as he looks around. The headbanger was correct Bladehedge was gone or they were somewhere else. "Oh crap when did this happen?"
A older man leaning on a large mechanical bike takes a cigarette out of his coat pockect and lights it up before turning to address Eddie. "Dunno. We woke up and here we are."
"Okay let's just get our bearings here before we go crazy. Who's with us Killmaster?" Eddie asks as he reaches for his guitar that was lain carelessly beside him.
"Not many. You, a bouncer, some barons, a bouncer, few of Ophelia's Razor Girls, some headbangers, Magnus and myself." The Killmaster explains. "This isn't your time is it?"
"I don't think so. Let me check." Eddie takes the guitar and plays a few chords and several nearby rocks violently explode. "Nope not my age."
"Well it sure as Hell ain't home." A medium height man, slender as a post says. "We'll be able to go back right?"
"I don't know Magnus. First I'd like to get a feeling of where we are. Get the Headbangers and Razor Girls on the bus. Wait for us at the bottom of the mountain, Riders you're with me." Eddie says playing a few more notes on his guitar that summons a large machine. Big enough to hold two people and able to mow down dozens with it's powerful projectiles. The machine Eddie called "The Druid Plow". "Let's ride boys."
With that Eddie Riggs the fabled Roadie of the Age of Metal, lead his convoy of three Fire Barons and the Killmaster down the mountain and into the larger Desert.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Quenthel Baenre meditated in her chambers within the Dark Elf city of Menzoberanzzan. She let her mind drift and listen to the hollowness of the caverns around her, the dripping of water from stalactites, the skittering of vermin across stone. And like all priestesses, she listened for anything that approached her chambers, ready to strike it down in an instant.
A song called her across the astral plane, a black and red weaving that tugged at her soul and body. Quenthel followed it, and let out a scream of pain. A dozen orange suns burst over a charred landscape of black sand and sunken pits. Running, feeling her vision blur, the priestess dove into the pit that called to her. It was not much of an improvement; the jagged landscape was torn and dusty, filled with high mountains and a sky of spider web. Beneath her, Quenthel felt an ocean of arachnids clawing up at her, but something was painfully piercing her spine and keeping her aloft. The spikes turned Quenthel around to reveal a bloated spider's body with the eight-eyed face of a painfully beautiful drow smiling down at her.
The spiders did not disperse, but they stopped their ravenous clicking as Quenthel was lowered into them. A mixture of hatred, fear, and love burned in the Baenre as she closed her eyes, bound her head, and formed her hands into the high praise of drow sign language. Spiders crawled all around Quenthel, and she could already feel them beginning to enweb her boots and legs as she growled, "What is thy bidding, Mistress?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Fifth Age
The Samurai known as Jack had traveled across the land for well over three years. Always looking for a way to go home. Always searching, always tracking down rumors and legends. And now he was here.
In a forest clearing lies a strange, tall grey pillar, covered in thousands of strange symbols. And standing on the pillar was a man.
The fellow was tall, taller than the Scotsman, and sinewy, but with shoulders too wide for his narrow waist, and skin as white as the finest paper. Pale leather straps studded with silver crisscrossed his arms and bare chest, and a black kilt hung to his knees. His eyes were too big and almost colorless, set deep in a narrow jawed face. His short cut, palely reddish hair stood up like a brush, and his ears, lying flat against his head, had a hint of a point at the top. He leaned towards Jack, inhaling, opening his mouth to pull in more air, flashing sharp teeth. The impression he gave was of a fox about to leap on a cornered chicken.
"Do you abide by the treaties and agreements? Do you carry iron, or instruments of music, or devices for making light?" His voice is low, rough. Like a growl.
The Void
There is nothing. Not even blackness. Just nothing. Then nothing becomes something, becomes a doorway in the dark.
The Hadrac
The crew find themselves in the midst of a vast desert, one where even the largest, most epic concert ever devised could not fill. The sand goes to the horizon, and the heat of the day beats upon you relentlessly. But wait. In the distance is a dark shape; a man, lying upon the ground, exhausted and waiting for death.
The Underdark
Lolth deems to not take note of your plight. The Spider Queen is furious, a cold fury that years of experience had taught the High Priestess was never good. Yet there was triumph as well; a sense of satisfaction that far exceeded any raid or house cleansing.
"How long has it been since we last spoke, Quenthel Baenre?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Malus Darkblade
All around, the great trees brooded, ominous presences who's branches met over the trail, intertwined like a giant at prayer, filtering all but a few solitary shafts of light grudgingly illuminated the way forward. Moss covered the branches and the scaly bark of the trunks resembled nothing so much as the scaly hide of dead serpents, with hints of gnarled faces in the twisting bark. A stillness as old as the vast primeval forest, broken only by occasional stirrings in the undergrowth. Here, no birds dared sing.
This was no enchanted forest. This was an ancient place beyond the realm of the elves, the seasons, forgotten by all but the oldest beings, a place where even the passings of the ages did not touch.
Their was an indescribable sound that smote the air like a thunderclap, blowing leaves of nearby trees, and a lean, black armored figure appeared to fall a few feet with a muffled curse. A few meters away, an enormous, reptile landed in the same way with a rumbling, dangerous growl.
Malus pulled himself to his feet, shaking. Damned Scorcery!
Well, little Druchii, here you are. The end of the rope, so to speak. Hopeless. Helpless. Useless. Your dreams dust behind you, everything you’ve cared about destroyed, and now even your bloody-mindedness won’t do you any good. All you have suffered, all the blood you have shed, for nothing…
“Like you’re any better off.” Malus growled under his breath. “You’re as lost as me.”
T’zarken chuckled, and Malus winced as the demon moved, like a nest of vipers coiling around his heart, leaving freezing trails behind. What was worse was he had grown use to the sensation, familiar with it. He hated that almost as much as he hated the daemon and the pain of it.
You are a fool, Malus. I told you once, I do not suffer in my prison. I will be free, the only question is when. And what is time to me? While your hope just failed. You have nothing, Malus. Nothing at all. He chuckled again, a sound that beat Malus like a hammer from the inside of his skull. Slither, slither little worm. Run and hide and cry and beg, you will not escape me.
“I’m not dead yet!” He shouted, suddenly not caring. He wanted to be found, wanted someone to see him so he could kill them, but even that wouldn’t relieve the terrible, thwarted anger he felt. He was so close… so very close...
It wouldn’t end this way. He wouldn’t let it. He had killed his father, burned down the city he’d hoped to one day rule, killed his closest retainers and the majority of his family, betrayed everything that mattered and everything that didn’t. He had suffered up and down the length of the old world, sacrificed all he had and more. It couldn’t be for nothing. It couldn’t end like this.
He stared down at the enormous ruby on his hand, from which black veins thick with corruption pulsed in time with something that was not his heartbeat. To thin he considered himself strong. If he had been, he would have cut off his finger rather when he couldn’t remove it, regardless of how little good he suspected it would have one.
No, you’re not. T’zarken said. You still have five weeks at last count. And here you are, nowhere near the wastes.
Malus looked up. “Where am I then?”
T’zarken replied. Not a good sign. The first age. Aenerion has not yet been born, Not for uncountable generations. The warpgate has not failed, and the old one, remains sealed beyond the bore, wrapped in darkness dreaming dreams of power, waiting to awaken.
“How do you know all this?”
The same way I know everything. I have seen this happen again and again. For a being outside time, it’s almost amusing. My prison is in Shayol Ghul, coiled in the lake of fire. The blight does not exist, nor do the wastes that came next.
“Where is that? How do I get there?” Malus asked, pushing his luck, but T’zarken only chuckled coiling tighter. Malus winced again, as some of the ichor that occupied his veins where his blood should be dripped between his clenched teeth.
“Figures you wouldn’t be useful.” He grumbled, then patted Spite. Mounting unsteadily, he patted it again on the flank. “Up Spite, up. Up great beast of the dark earth. Ride for ruin, and the worlds ending. Lets end this, one way or another.”
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Samurai Jack
Jack places his hand on his sword and stares up at the man. He doesn't know what treaties this man is talking about but he knew this was his way back to his home time.
"Who are you? I simply seak to return to my own time."
***
Eddie Riggs
"Nothing out here but sand mate." On of the fire barons states after they had rode about for a while.
"So I noticed. Okay we got to get out of this desert before we dehydrate. Like under the stage lights." Eddie thinks out loud. "Any of you happen to have experience with deserts?"
"Sorry Mate, we lived up North in the snow." the fire baron replies dreeily.
"Okay so we go back to the bus and make our way west. Hopefully we'll find an Oasis or something along the way." Eddie shifts the gears of the Druid Plow and heads back to the bus to lead his crew out of the desert.
It is the job of the roadie to keep the crew together even in the worst of gigs after all.
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The Void, an endless plane that connects to all worlds and times. It's nothingness is only interrupted by things that had been engulfed by it, including castles, towns, continents, and sometimes worlds; all merely tiny islands in the endless sea. Strange demons called this place home, as did any unlucky enough to be banished here, for there is rarely any chance of escape. But now for a certain swordsman, there was.
A strange grey-skinned man in red Genji armor and outlandish pants, accompanied by a green wolf, had been sitting on a lonely chunck of rock, when he saw another chance of escape. He had been regurgitated out by the void numerous times, only to be pulled back in again. But then again, these excursions into actual worlds beat sitting on a floating rock for eternity, so he crossed into this doorway to see what awaited him this time.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Du Weldenvarden
As soon as Malus mounts his horse, he hears several bowstrings being pulled taunt. As he looks around, he sees a pair of light-skinned elves, dressed in armor far less ornate than his own. There was a certain degree of decoration and elegance to its design, perhaps, but it seemed almost strictly utilitarian. One of them speaks.
"We were warned about the approaching drow'" He says the word as if unfamiliar with it. "Surrender."
The Fifth Age
"We are the Eelfinn, Samurai. And for now, we alone know the secrets of the Portal Stone. Now answer, Samurai. Do you carry iron, or instruments of music, or devices for making light?" Jack's skin shudders in the being's continued presence, as if somehow filthy. A constant prickling at the edge of his awareness.
The Hadrac
As Eddie and his Crew return to the mountain, they come across a man, half starved and dressed in ragged clothing. "Help...me," he manages to gasp out.
The Void
Just as the man is about to cross the threshold, he is stopped by a man, tall and barefoot, arms and legs and body wound about in layers of yellow cloth, and Gilgamesh was suddenly not so sure if it was a man. Or human. It looked human, at first glance, though perhaps too graceful, but it seemed far too thin for its height, with a narrow, elongated face. Its skin, and even its straight black hair, caught the pale light in a way that reminded him of a snake’s scales. And those eyes, the pupils just black, vertical slits. No, not human.
"You have brought no lamps, no torches, as the agreement was, and is, and ever will be. You have no iron? No instruments of music?”
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Samurai Jack
"I carry only my Father's sword and the clothes on my back." Jack says but does not leave his defensive stance. Something seems truly off about these Eelfinn.
***
Eddie Riggs
Eddie stops driving as he comes across the man. "Guys hold on there's someone out here."
Eddie makes his was over to the dying man. "Are you alright man?"
"Eddie, of course he's not all right. The bloke's dying in the desert, get him on Killmaster's rack already." A fire baron shakes his head.
"Yeah, yeah." Eddie picks the man up and sets him on the speaker bed of the Killmaster's Thunderhog. A fine bike, with a bass made from the webs of the metal spiders. It extends an aura of healing around all who hear it's music no matter what it is that ails them. "Lay down some base, Killmaster."
"Ugh I hate being the field medic." Killmaster replies but plays the song as instructed hopefully help the man get back on his feet.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Fifth Age
"And where do you wish to travel, Samurai Jack? A return to your own time, a futile attempt to kill Aku after you failed first? Or do you wish to destroy him utterly?" That leather seems off somehow. Far too pale for one thing...oh. That sort of leather.
The Hadrac
The man jerks and twitches at the sound. While he is healing, his hands firmly cover his ears in vain attempt to shut out the music.
"What is that sound? That horrible sound?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Malus Darkblade
Malus dismounts. His pale skin is weathered, scarred and leathery, and he possesses little of the beauty elves are famous for. Just the same, no one could mistake him for a drow. He grimaces, gone so quickly its barely noticeable, then dismounts.
His gauntleted hand is nowhere near the pommel of his sword, and he keeps his moves slow and cautious, as though approaching a wild nauglir.
"Honored cousins, you are mistaken. I am no drow." He says, working hard and succeeding, just, in keeping the sarcasm out of his voice. If they knew the truth...
"I am Malus, highborn of Nagarythe, once of the house of Saphery." True enough. Improvising, he adds "I have come to your lands on a matter of honor, and family pride. To that end I am hunting a fugitive, and I have traveled many miles, crossing the great ocean on a matter of urgency. I must speak with your lord at once."
Spite growls, as he sniffs the air, and Malus keeps his back to the Cold One.
Myrddraal
A shadowy figure stirs in the recesses, an eyeless face drinking in the caverns. Shaidar Haran lives again.
With a snakelike movement he pulls himself upright, sighing in contentment as the dark energies balm his spirit. He feels revitalized.
Without seeming to move he is upright and making his way further from the tiny bore that is the Dark ones prison, a cold smirk on his face. At last he comes to a wall, and, at some unknowable command, they slide open.
He stretches.
Nothing yet. Well, so be it. Reality is twisted and malleable already. It takes him but a single step to cross the entire cavern.
Without so much as a word, Shaidar Haran went forth.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Samurai Jack
"What do you mean?" A great warrior Jack may be he lacks much of an undertsanding of magic and the true nature of the world.
***
Eddie Riggs
"Well I'll be damned if I'm healing someone who don't appeciate my technique." Killmaster grumbles as he stops playing.
"That my friend was metal and it was saving your ass dying in the sand." Eddie explains. "So you know you can thank us anytime you want."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Du Weldonvarden
The two turn to each other, nod once, and keep their bows at the ready. "Drow."
One of them, tall and reeking of arrogance, smirks. "Your first mistake was assuming that there were other, impure elven races remaining. Your second was mentioning a kingdom that nobody has ever heard of. Now, then. Will you surrender to us, and face the judgement of my Queen, or will you die here like the abomination that you are?"
Helgrind
Shaidar Haran, free and unbound, was loose upon the world. But none knew of the Fade, not of his kind nor name nor master. The Dark One had been sealed that his very name was lost to Time. And as memory fades into nothing, legend into myth, those that currently walk the earth know that they, and they alone, are superior to the heroes and villains of old.
A tall, thin creature stands before the Hand of the Dark. Human-looking, with red hair and pointed teeth. A sly tone, one that would have been fearsome had it not been addressed to the Lord of the Myrddraal issues forth from pale lips.
"You have disturbed the sanctity of the Helgrind. I am the Shade Raasshtlyanan. FEAR ME!"
The Fifth Age
"You seek to travel backwards in time, back to when you rode against Aku and was defeated. But were you to come back the instant after you left, you would still lose. But there is a moment where your foe may be defeated. The Portal Stone may access many times and places. What shall our bargain be, Samurai Jack?"
Eddie Riggs
"It sounds as if a cat has been dragged screaming across a hot iron," the man wheezes out. He turns his head towards Eddie, and the roadie recoils in horror. The poor soul's eyes have been removed; not a trace of them remain in his head. "Who are you?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Malus
The dark elf clenched his teeth as he heard T'zarken laugh. Not doing so well, are you? You are usually so good at this. Malus fought the bloodlust. He was stranded, with no allies. The sword felt hot at his side, a burning heat that forced back the demon, until he was barely noticeable. Most of Malus wanted to draw it and keep killing until all of them were dead.
He had learned, at great cost, never to go along with such impulses.
So he would give them one more chance before he left their corpses for the crows.
"Great lord, you question my word." He said. "You question my honor, and with it, you pay me insult that can only be repaid in blood. More so, you both call my nobility into doubt, and the honor of my house and my family. In Aenerion's time, the only answer was to kill you, your family, and all your retainers and servants. Since, however, no elf would admit to parenting something like you, I will have to settle with you alone, unless you produce a swine." He stepped forward, suddenly confident. And again. And again, until he was barely two sword legnths away from the blustering elf.
"You don't seem to be drawing your sword. I can only assume you are as stupid as you look, and you spoke without thinking. As such, I will allow you to keep your life, if you get on your knees and swear an oath of service, and forfiet all rights, serving as my body slave until I deem your shame expunged. Unless of course, you are a craven, in which case I will indeed be shot, but your men will know you are a coward who hides behind insults and the swords of his betters, afraid to face one elf driven past the point of exhaustion." In case that wasn't enough, he spat the black ichor onto the ground.
T'zarken was laughing. Ah, Malus, you can always be replied on to respond to any threat with as much violence as possible.
"Shut up." Malus muttered, then looked up. "So, name your weapon, and your time, or start begging."
Shaidar Haran
The Myrddraal drinks him in. He sees many things. A small-minded, primitive creature, a craven bully. He also senses potential. He sniffs the air, then walks forward, using his height to tower over the thing. At last he laughs. He lets the sound fade then his hand snakes out, grabbing the shade around the neck. Without a modicum of effort, he lifts the shade a foot up until they are eye level and the being is dangling. A thoughtless twitch leaves the creature grasping for it's magic.
"You are nothing. Yet. Would you like to be something?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie Riggs
"Yeah well it was only the bass track. You should hear the full version some time." Eddie explains before seeing the man's face.
"By Ormagodden's fangs! What happened to you? No eyes and wandering around this hellish desert." Eddie seems quite repulsed before straightening up. "Thats freaking badass man! Anyways my name's Eddie we are um an advanced scouting party for an invading army-"
"What? No we just kinda woke up on that-" One of the Fire Barons begins to say before...
"Ixnay on the ruthtay, Baron." Eddie interupts "We kind of got lost in this desert. You wouldn't happen to know what the fastest way out is?"
***
Samurai Jack
"Take me to where Aku can be defeated." Jack says simply.
"He must be stopped."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Fifth Age
"You have not named your price, Samurai Jack." The Eelfinn grins, yellowed teeth revealed. "I will chose it."
The creature grabs hold of the Samurai's arm, and with it's long nails cuts the man's finger. A single drop of blood oozes to splatter onto the Portal Stone, onto a rune.
"Thus is our treaty written; thus is agreement made. Thought is the arrow of time; memory never fades. What was asked is given. The price is paid."
Blackness.
Du Weldenvarden
"My weapon is this, drow," the he-elf sneers, gesturing to a rather finely-crafted, and well-used sword. "And my time is..." Startled by a sudden noise in the treetops, he looks up and gapes in horror.
Where once was only the comforting boughs and branches of the trees, now too was a man in a white robe, a gray noose attached to his neck, suspended above the ground by one of the most perfect swords Malus had ever seen. The sword lay across two thick branches, and bore the weight of the man, yet it did not break.
The Hadrac
"I did not choose this!" the man moans, gesturing vaguely towards his eyes. "It was him! I was a mere butcher, who sought to protect the apple of his eye, his lovely daughter. But he came and caused all of this! Bound! I am bound to go where he wills it, such is my curse. Damn you, Eragon Shadeslayer!" Fevered hands, half-withered and shaking reach towards the ground, and the man crawls northward, unable to resist the compulsion.
Helgrind
The Shade's eyes widen. "What are you?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
"Almost five, if I recall correctly, mistress. Barely a span in the great weave." The spiders are starting to crawl up Quenthel's legs, and she realizes the test. Soon the spiders will cover her and begin biting. If she so much as swats at one, she will incur Lolth's wrath. The only thing to do now is throw herself on the Spider Queen's mercy.
She'd be better off dead.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Malus Darkblade
The dark elf doesn't flinch. He's gotten good at hiding his reactions over the years, and now had the self control to ignore most
Instead, he eyes the elf, and smiles a feral grin. "Well, as long as your brandishing that thing, you might as well use it. Cut him down, then we can satisfy honor."
With no further ceremony, he draws his sword. It's hilt felt hot to touch, and the eldritch blade seems to leap from it's scabbard with an ominous hiss. He felt T'zarken withdraw as hungry fire seared Malus from head to toe. It was agonizing.
With no ceremony, he cut The white robed man down, although he had to fight to keep the sword from shearing the samurai's neck as it wanted to. Later, he'd have questions for that man. For now, all that mattered was blood.
Khaine was hungry.
Myrddraal
Shaidar Haran smiled. "I am the chosen of The Dark One. My will is his will. His power flows in my veins." He draws him close until they were almost eye to eye. "Would you like to taste it?"
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"Another void demon? Bah! I serve ExDeath no longer, thus I am not bound to any deals or whatnot he made. Perhaps you have me mistaken for another who has made a deal with you, for I leave the Void as I wish."
Enkidu is in a position to strike at the man, braced to jump, and growling, evidently he does not like this man-thing.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Void
The serpentine being stares levelly at Gilgamesh. "You are a fool. You know nothing of the true nature of the world." He makes an offhand gesture.
...
There is nothing. Not even blackness. Just nothing. Then nothing becomes something, becomes a doorway in the dark.
Helgrind
There is something like rapture in the Shade's eyes. "Yes."
The Underdark
"Wrong." Around the High Priestess, the spiders burst, covering Quenthal with ichor. The Spider Queen's wrath is tangible; Quenthal feels long, shallow cuts opening across her body. "It has been far longer than that. For you it was only a moment, but I know now what they were planning. I have felt every moment of our imprisonment, every second of the past thousands of thousands of years. Go forth, and see our new world."
-
The swordsman Gilgamesh and his green wolf Enkidu see a chance of escape from the void. Thus he approaches the doorway that has formed, pondering as to where it will take him next...
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Jack
Jack gasps for air as he awakens hanging from the tree. He pulls himself up the rope towards his sword.
***
Eddie
"Man, we're really kind of new here so how about this? You tell us which way to civilization and we'll take care of this Eragon guy for you. How's that sound?" Eddie asks the eyeless man.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The pain stings Quenthel out of her reverie instantly. She takes a moment to examine her chambers and then moves quickly. Something has happened, and she needs to know what. A crystal ball rests at the other end of the room, adorned with a spider, of course. Desperate times call for desperate measures; it's time to call on her siblings.
By all accounts, the Baenre siblings are civil for a drow family. They all manage to stay far away enough from each other yet close enough for the good of the city. This is to say that none have found suitable puppets or replacements that would be worth the effort for a coup. Quenthel is the strongest priestess that Lolth has ever had on this world. Gromph is one of the most powerful arch-mages in the realms. And Triel has been a sly enough politician to prove herself a dependable third party and blessed by both. Still, if any one could get a leg up on the other, they would try, moving through enough secret channels to appear innocent in face of failure.
Quenthel touches the crystal ball and communicates through it, "Brother, Sister, I require an immediate audience with both of you. The Spider Queen has given me a revelation; we must act quickly."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Du Weldonvarden
A sword swipes through the air, and Jack is freed by a dark, ominous-looking fellow with dark skin and a hard face.
The Underdark
The orb illuminates to reveal Triel and Gromph's faces. Apparently, the pair had been meeting together before Quenthal's summons.
"Quenthal. We have news for you as well."
The Hadrac
"Civilization? This is the desert I am in, is it not? West and South of here, but it is a journey of dozen's of leagues." Moaning in agony, the man continues his journey Northward, bound by some unseen force into doing so.
The Void
The doorway is the same as before; the serpentine being still at its threshold.
"Do you begin to understand? Answer my question, and you shall receive three of your own. Thus was the bargain made at the Beginning."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
"I suppose that our messages are related. The Mistress was vague; speak your piece, unless you want me to be present for this meeting as well." Quenthel is concerned about the two of them meeting together; drow don't meet. They plot.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Underdark
Gromph speaks first. "It is my belief that we are no longer where we were half a cycle ago. Something has affected the magic; it seems...different. I discovered this fact at the beginning of an experiment; I immediately informed Triel, as this affects our civil society far more than the priesthood of our goddess." What is left unsaid, of course, is far more important. I told her, and not you. You might have never known.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Jack
Jack looks around his surroundings and at the man who freed him. "Thank you for freeing me, sir but I must be on my way."
Jack jumps up to his sword held on the branches and pulls it down.
***
Eddie
"Well you heard the bloke. Let's get the bus and get out of here." The Fire Baron says without much care.
"I'm not leaving someone to die in the desert. Let me try something." Eddie pulls out his guitar Clementie, infused with the energy of the Age of Metal the guitar was a powerful conduit for magic and Eddie knew just the spell.
The solo enscribed upon the ancesteral sword of Lars Halford, the song that broke the spells keeping the headbangers in Lord Lionwhyte's mines, the battle cry. Eddie invokes the magic of the powerful shredding solo to possibly lift the poor eyeless man from his curse.
-
"Oh I quite understand, thus I have just answered your question, and can now ask my three," spake Gilgamesh with a tone of wit; awaiting the inevitable backlash from snake-man.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Hadrac
The man stops at the sound of the music, hands covering ears. Angrily, he turns around and stomps back towards Eddie. "Will you stop that noise! That offends the senses and makes my duty even more wretc..." Then, realizing what had just happened, envelops the man in his arms. You can hear him sobbing, but his empty sockets produce no tears. "Thank you. Thank you."
The Void
The creature steps aside, and beckons. "Follow."
Beyond the doorway, there is not a straight line to be seen anywhere except for the floor itself, as he trails behind. Even the ceiling is always arched, and the walls bowed out. The halls are continuously curved, the doorways rounded, the windows perfect circles. Tilework made spirals and sinuous lines, and what seems to be bronze metalwork set in the ceiling at intervals was all complicated scrolls. There are no pictures of anything, no wall hangings or paintings. Only patterns, and always curves.
What he saw through those round windows was unnerving, to say the least. Tall wispy trees with only a drooping umbrella of branches at the top, and others like huge fans of lacy leaves, a tangle of growth equal to the heart of any briar-choked thicket, all under a dim, overcast light, though there did not seem to be a cloud in the sky. There were always windows, always along just one side of the curving corridor, but sometimes the side changed, and what surely should have been looking into courtyard or rooms instead gave out into that forest. He never caught as much as a glimpse of any other part of this palace, or whatever it was, through those windows, or any other building, except . . .
Through one circular window he saw three tall silvery spires, curving in toward each other so their points all aimed at the same spot. They were not visible from the next window, three paces away, but a few minutes later, after he and his guide had rounded enough curves that he had to be looking in another direction, he saw them again. He tried telling himself these were three different spires, but between them and him was one of those fan-shaped trees with a dangling broken branch, a tree that had been in the same spot the first time. After his third sight of the spires and the strange tree with the broken branch, this time ten paces farther on but on the other side of the hallway, he tried to stop looking at what lay outside at all.
“Here,” the peculiar, yellow-wrapped fellow said, gesturing with one of those thin hands to a rounded doorway twice as large as any Gilgamesh had seen before. His strange eyes studied Gilgamesh intently. His mouth gaped open, and he inhaled, long and slow. The stranger gave a writhing hitch of his shoulders. “Here your answers may be found. Enter. Enter and ask.”
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"But of course I have no questions to ask. I am content with the knowledge I have, secrets of the universe are irrelevant to a swordsman. Besides Enkidu does not seem like you void demon, and if a silly wolf such as he does not like a person, then I should be quite wary of them. Besides, being that you are a void demon, this could all likely be a trap."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie Riggs
"No problem man. I couldn't just leave you to die out here." Eddie says "Even with your questionable taste in music."
"We got to get a move on Eddie." The Killmaster mutters, "Knowing Magnus there will be no water left on the bus if we don't hurry back."
"Yeah, we're going." Eddie says before turning back to the eyeless man. "We'll give you a ride into the closest town Mr. uh I don't think I got your name."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie
"It's Sloan. Thank you." The not-sobbing continues, and the man needs to be guided back to to the bus. The advance company meets with the rest of the army, awaiting Eddie's instructions.
Tower of Ghenji
"You know nothing; you are ours. The world that you came from is ours, created from nothing. You are nothing. Your hound is nothing. We are the Aelfinn. And you exist because we willed it." All this is said in a cold and dispassionate hiss.
The Forth Age
The dreams came once more. As the king slept, guarded by retainers and bodyguards, his body twitched as the dream overtook him. Once more was he on his throne. Once more was he on the headman's block. Once more was Tommen wielding the axe. Then as his head turned towards the sky, his spirit fled. Fled through the palace. Fled to a forgotten sub-basement. Fled to hover before a twisted stone archway. Fled to find the power in death that he did not have in life. Too late.
The king lay sleepless in his bed, a prisoner of his dreams.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Quenthel sneers, "That is for me to decide, not you, Gromph. You would do well to remember that we lie in Her web by Her grace, from now on. Regardless, what is this news? How has the flow of magic changed?"
There's nothing unusual in neither of Quenthel's siblings distrusting her. She was always strange, even as a child. When Drizzt killed her and she was resurrected, she came back stranger. And her latest foray into the Demonweb Pits has left her even more off. Neither Triel nor Gromph would be surprised if tomorrow Quenthel said that every slave in the city must be killed for Lolth. As such, many of the deals made by the two siblings have been made out of a cautious fear that Quenthel is a loose cannon ready to burst at any moment. The concern lies in whether or not Quenthel really has the power that she believes she does.
-
"Well then I thank you for allowing me to exist, and since it appears I don't have much of an alternate choice, I shall comply. Come Enkidu, let us go and see what lies beyond this door."
With that he enters the doorway to see what lies beyond.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Underdark
"Where before magic has been ordered and contained, now it is...more wild. Primal. And-it is tiring. Far more so than normal. I believe that it is a trick by the surface elves." Face twisting in hatred at the mention of their aboveground cousins, the archmage speaks no more.
Triel continues smoothly where he left off. "I think a raid is in order. And that because we failed to tell you of the problem earlier, you should have the honor of discovering the cause-and the solution of this problem."
nano:Spoiler
Show
Sorry if I'm being harsh about it. The 'Finn aren't renowned for their patience/hospitality. Insulting them is leads to torture and getting worn as harnesses.
Tower of Ghenji
It was another round room, with spiraling floor tiles in red and white under a domed ceiling. It had no columns, or furnishings of any kind, except for three thick, coiled pedestals around the heart of the floor’s spirals. There was no way to reach the top of them except by climbing the twists, yet a man like his guide sat cross-legged atop each, only wrapped in layers of red. Not all men; two of those long faces with the odd eyes had a definite feminine cast. They stared at him, intense penetrating stares, and breathed deeply, almost panting. He wondered if he made them nervous in some way.
“It has been long,” the woman on the right said.
“Very long,” the woman on the left added.
The man nodded. “Yet they come again.”
All three had the breathy voice of the guide — almost indistinguishable from it, in fact — and the harsh way of pronouncing words. They spoke in unison, and the words might as well have come from one mouth. “Enter and ask, according to the agreement of old.”
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie Riggs
"Okay Sloan. Just to be sure this doesn't happen to you again which direction would be safer from Eragon? We'll leave you there." Eddie explains.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
What's the motivation here? Are they trying to throw her off? Are they trying get her killed? Or do they honestly count on Quenthel to solve this problem? Either way, it does not matter. Quenthel must begrudgingly admit that their goals convene. Cautiously, the high priestess nods, "Agreed, on the condition that I choose the members of the squad myself. I have no use for a nest of mewling pup soldiers and half-witted apprentices that you want out of your hair."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Hadrac
"There's nowhere he will not go. He goes wherever he wishes, atop the back of his Dragon." He's starting to sound panicked again.
The Underdark
A moment's pause. A slight amount of irritation. "Agreed."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie Riggs
"Okay then, we'll have to take dragon boy down fast." Eddie guides Sloan into the passenger seat of the Druid Plow.
"Alright guys. We are going to ride west until we find civilization. By the time we get that far I'll have a plan on how to find and take down Eragon." Eddie explains to his troops.
"Uh Eddie? Shouldn't we focus on getting back home?" Magnus always the voice of reason asks.
"Taking down Eragon is part of that. He has the kind of magic to do that to Sloan he has magic that can send us home." Eddie adds.
With that they all get ready to roll.
Eddie turns to Sloan as he gets into his car. "Okay dude. Time to get serious. What did you do to Eragon to make him curse you like that?"
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"Very well,since I don't seem to have much choice, I shall ask all at once:
Who are you?
What do you want from me?
How can I leave the void?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The ability to choose her own squad give Quenthel a modicum of control. Without losing resolve, Quenthel inquires, "Then I will be quick. Aside from the disruption of magic, is anything else known about this disruption?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Hadrac
"My village was besieged by soldiers; Eragon's brother was resisting their authority. They came to me, and promised that my daughter's life would be spared if I allowed them to enter. I...did as they asked. My daughter was thrown in the dungeons, and myself, with her. The Empire tore out my eyes. Eragon forced the compulsion on me. And he swore that I would never come into the presence of my daughter again."
Tower Of Ghenji
"We are the Aelfinn. And we want from you what we want of any who comes into our realm. Much of it is already ours. And you are not in the Void. Not anymore." The triad raises their hands, and Gilgamesh finds himself on the shores of a river. Behind him, a symbol of an equilateral triangle bisected by a curving line shimmers, and vanishes.
And at his feet lies a curled golden horn, with silver script round its rim.
"Tia mi aven Moridin isainde vadin"
ooc
Spoiler
Show
Location Change: Outskirts of Terim
The Underdark
"Nothing as of yet. We are depending on you, sister. Do not fail our people." The crystal ball turns opaque once more.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie
The veichles all move forward across the sun scortched desert. Eddie keeps grilling Sloan.
"Thats rough. Sounds like you got yourself a nasty little Civil War and neither side has a moral high ground. Do you know what happened to your daughter?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Hadrac
"She's wed to his brother now; Eragon told me that much. She's married, and I wasn't there. I don't care about morals, really. Don't cheat your customers, and don't suffer fools is all I ever really needed. But she...she was the light in my day. Her mother died giving birth, and I raised her from a babe. She made me feel better about myself. Made me feel as if there was something better."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Quenthel returns to her meditation. There is a rite to undertake before such an expedition. The priestess does not lapse into a deep trance, but merely prays; "Lolth, Mother of Spiders, Queen of the Demonweb Pits, Mother and Mistress of All, Bitch Queen of Demons, hear the plea of your servant. I step now into the barbarian wilds of the world, step once more into the cruel places where your touch does not reach. The unworthy, the sick, the corrupted; they plague me on all sides. But I ask of you, my Lady, my Mistress and my Queen; by what do you guide me? Do I go, bare save for my sacred vestments? Do I go rich or do I go poor? And most importantly, my beloved and all strengthening Queen, do I go with your blessing?"
Quenthel keeps her mind and ears open, vigilant for a sign from the Mother of Spiders.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Underdark
A fly buzzes on the wall opposite Quenthel. Over and over it rises, then lands, hopping from place to place on the smooth stone. It stops, caught in a finely woven net, and is devoured. From its hiding place in the shadows, a spider stares at Quenthel, eyes glimmering. Two eyes looking into the creature's eight, she can almost hear something. One. And then, there was silence.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie
Eddie and crew keep on driving hopefully reaching the end of the desert soon.
"Eragon's brother? Is he with his brother or the Empire?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
It comes to Quenthel, the message. She understands now. Weaklings were what was holding her back, what have always been holding her back. She dragged allies into the Spiderweb Pits and was met with failure time and again. No, no squad. No soldiers or mages whispering back to Gromph. This is her own duty.
Quenthel gets up and heads for the temple's chambers. The vast, spider-shaped cathedral is a labyrinth of halls and rooms. As Quenthel moves forward, set on the vault, a wake of fear precedes and proceeds her. Students eyes widen to see their mistress out, slaves cower into their shadows, and even senior priestesses stay out of the way and whisper to themselves. She's always seemed more insane than usual since the Demonweb Pits. No one really knows what happened; almost all of her companions died except for a lone mercenary, and he hides in the wilderness out of fear, or so they say. Rumor and gossip surround Quenthel's absence; some say that Lolth abandoned her, others that she abandoned Lolth. Some say that Quenthel was the single-handed cause for the entire Silence of Lolth. The events leading up to Quenthel's absence are well known; what isn't known is exactly what happened away, or on the High Priestess's arrival. Gossip-mongers whisper that she summoned an avatar of Lolth and keeps it under the school, feeding it weak priestesses and slaves. Others say that's she's on her way to demi-godhood, if not one already. Even more lurid tales say she came back heavy with a yolchol child by the Spider Queen herself. Regardless of the story, Quenthel is here now, and she's out for blood.
She enters the vault with ease, even the wards and guardians seeming to fear retribution from the voice of Lolth. Without even looking, she starts stuffing magic items and trinkets into her pack. She hardly pays attention to the contents, and only keeps an eye out for a few distinct items. A cloak of Arachnadia to match her already enchanted house crest. A ring of detect magic and another of prestidigitation for general use. Crucially, she tenderly gathers a scroll of planar binding. The only other requirements are several (6) healing potions. After that, Quenthel does not know or care what has gone into the bag. Cursed, blessed, holy, unholy; it matters little. There's no time. The Spider Queen has given her mission and she must fulfill it.
Quenthel makes one last trip to her chambers. She settles down and begins to chant, praying, reciting off the scroll of planar binding. She calls out to a presence beyond the void, a demon. She reaches out until finally, a presence arrives. A pillar of twisting flesh and mouths with a single red eye stares hatefully at Quenthel, stretching a waving its pseudopods to and fro. Quenthel does not flinch; she has seen, killed, and summoned far worse than a yolchol before. Now it is time to make her bargain with the creature. In a voice of authority, Quenthel orders the Handmaiden of Lolth, "Speak, demon, before I send you back to your black pits."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Underdark
By Lolth's decree, a yochlol must serve its summoner faithfully for one single deed. Appearance shimmering, this particular demon turns itself into an exact replica of Quenthal herself, mimicking form and pose exactly.
"What is thy bidding, priestess of Lolth?" It was unnerving, to have her own voice repeated to her. Yet she knew that the demon only needed to grant one request; ordering it to change form would accomplish nothing.
The Hadrac
"He is with his brother. Or so I believe, at least."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Quenthel keeps an iron gaze on her own form, trying to remind herself that it's just a demon. Seeing herself... it's discomforting. She only keeps mirrors in her room if they're magic. But this is what the demon wants; weakness. And Quenthel will not yield as she orders, "My favor is a simple one. You've already accomplished half of it by stealing my shape. Finish the job and your rewards will be great. Fail, and your suffering immense, even for a demon. You are to take a squad of soldiers, priestesses, slaves, and even a mage if you so desire, and leave the city. What you do with them in the wilds is your choice. Devour them. Kill them. Torture them. Enslave them. Charm them. Do as you wish. All that is important is that you are seen in my shape leaving the city with the legion. You may very well depart for the Abyss and abandon them to the wilds if you so wish. But there are two important details; let no one know your true nature. Not Master Gromph, Matron Triel, or any other. And do not make my task any more difficult. Is this understood?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
"I hear and obey, priestess of Lolth." The doppelganger looks...excited at the prospect. "Shall I begin now, or shall I wait inside the circle until needed?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Quenthel is a little off-put by the demon's enthusiasm. But there is no time to waste; "Begin as quickly as possible. I will sneak out of the city under my own disguises."
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Underdark
"As you wish." Leaving the chamber, "Quenthal" begins heading for the barracks. The demon is an exact mimic of the priestess; or at least, nobody screams "Doppelganger" as it walks the streets of Menzoberranzan. The way is clear.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie
"Will Eragon know that his curse was broken and would he know where you are if he can?"
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
The Hadrac
Sloan's brow creases. "I...don't know. I don't know."
Spoiler
Show
Which direction are you going, again?
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Eddie
The motorized viechles continue to drive west.
"Okay, we're going to set you up in an inn in town and leave some guys to look out for you while the rest of us hunt down Eragon."
-
Gilgamesh picks up the horn and shrugs, thinking about the odd encounter with the snake-men-things. He motions Enkidu to follow him, and then begins to wander around looking for something exciting to happen, or a warrior he could challange.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
There is much to do. Quenthel does not know the exact location of the disturbance, but that is a moot point; Lolth will show her the way. Quenthel grabs one last item; her beloved viper whip. The vipers writhe and coil around her hand in joy and anticipation;
"That was so clever of the mistress!"
"Is she sure that it is wise to trust the demon?"
"We are the only ones the Mistress can trust!"
"And we will be repayed in blood!"
"Oh, so much blood!"
Quenthel listens to the bound imps' idle chatting and praise. There is little in this world that Quenthel has affection for, and her whip is one of those few things. It was given to her upon her graduation to senior priestess, and it had never left her side. She slowly added more serpents until they numbered five. With a telepathic flick, she ordered their silence, and they responded. She searched the bag of goods she had brought along until she found what she was looking for; a scroll of illusions. It was weak; it would only be able to disguise her for an hour, and even the lowest Apprentice would have little trouble seeing past the mask. But it was all she had.
Reading the scrap of paper, Quenthel felt a wave of arcane energy lapse over her. Looking at herself in the mirror, she saw the form of an entirely new drow; a petty noble from the clothing. But even the experienced priestess could see her vague outline behind the figure. It would have to do.
Quenthel stepped outside, and slipped between the rows and columns of Arach-Tinilith. It disgusted her to be crawling like a common thief in her own home, but it was necessary. Finally, Quenthel found what she had been looking for; a secret door that led out to the streets. The Baenre skulked through a dank tunnel that stank of mildew, still paranoid of pursuit. At last, the dim glow of magic lamps and fluorescent fungi seeped through a closed door. Quenthel slipped out of the tunnel. The priestess found herself in the garden of some abandoned minor house, even it's walls collapsed. She nudged through a crack and found herself on the streets of Menzoberanazzan. Making haste, Quenthel walked the streets, headed for the nearest exit out of the city.
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Re: Eragon the Lynching II: The First Age
Uru-Baen
The westward army eventually reaches the end of the desert, the dry sand turning swiftly to grassy plains. An unusual geography, to be sure. But Eddie and his army have little worry for such things at the moment. Of far greater importance is the detachment of horse-mounted troops galloping towards the caravan.
"Halt, in the name of the King!"
Sloan whimpers.
Teirm
The familiar rasp of steel sliding from its sheath comes from behind. Gilgamesh can feel the blade at his back, its tip resting at one of his armors seams.
"In the name of the King, all suspicious persons are to be arrested without bail, and held in custody until war's end. Place your hands on your head..." The voice is gravelly, and precise, speaking the words with the ease of routine. At least, until the man spots the horn Gilgamesh wears on his belt.
"Give the horn to me. Slowly." His words are spoken tersely, with the caution one would use when approaching a wild animal.
Ellesmera, Outskirts
The Underdark used to have many entrances and exits to the world above. Trying several of them, Quenthal finds that the land above has shifted in the Drow's absence; blocked off, she continues to search for a way out. Eventually, she finds one.
The hollowed-out tree deposited her into a forest glen, its canopy enough to keep the harsh light of the afternoon sun from blinding her. Crumbling stone walls indicate the place was once significant, but the floor is more grass and dirt than stone, and there are trees in what would have once been "inside." Looking around, she eventually sees why. Stubbing her toe on what had seemed to be an unusually warm stone, the priestess finds an old, rusted medallion, bearing the hated symbol of Eilistraee. As she picks it up, it crumbles into dust; there is no power here.
-
"Suspicious? So quick to judge, a shame really, when the world goes mad during war. Any man would be quick to be deemed suspicious. Honestly you should put that sword away, you could never defeat me in a fight with it. Enkidu, get him off me."
At that point the man is tackled by a large green wolf.