74th of Fall, 511 AV
“Gruurg,” Ulric growled, jerking his fur cloak higher above his shoulders, and shook drips of gray water from his lank hair. Flung over the uneven rocks, it seemed as if every one in a dozen ruptured in bright spurts of indigo flame, sending clutches of tiny, speckled lizards scurrying for cover under sacks, tufts of weeds, and inside cracking plaster. That wasn’t very reassuring, but fortunately they weren’t of any harm. Ionu, were you ever teased as a child? Ulric scowled, not even bothering to glance at the stars choking the dark, ruddy sky. They were just more tricks. But more importantly, I hope I wasn’t among the culprits. Xhyvas had to be just as elder as Ionu.
Even so, the godling strode around a flaming puddle just to be safe, keeping a hand on the handle of his knife. He wasn’t pleased by the crimson, chimerical salamander clinging to the bridge of his nose, nor the reek of scorching flesh, but what could he do except hunch over and keep walking? That didn’t mean he wasn’t freezing off his arse, though. He was faintly hungry, but fabulously parched. And as ever, the shifting lanes kept him wandering around, encountering strangely disused, algae-coated fountains, a veritable forest of ferns, fungi growing under the ledge of a roof and a skinny, many-faced woman that he could’ve sworn was vending skewers of rat that she roasted in the embers of a brazier under her faded awning.
At least there weren’t any horses.
Eventually, his dismal journey brought him to the façade of an irregular structure, black varnish, faded as a pauper’s cloak, flaking away from the columns and beams, a hint of purple lichen on the gables. There was a scrawl on the door that meant only one thing. Booze. Ulric glanced at the grimy window, discerning only the vague contours of his face in the glass, and a towering shape behind him.
Desank was coated in scales today, lambent eyes narrowed, spikes covering the ridges of his back, and a pair of tusks protruding from his smirking maw. “You’re not a fish, you know,” growled Ulric, casting an edgy, sidelong glance at his Gasvik.
“Yain ibadfb oafe?”
“Yes, of course they can’t see you, but that doesn’t mean you can let yourself go entirely.” Desank just gave a shrug.
That was the end of the matter.
Ulric thrust past the door, tender nerves grating as the rusty hinges creaked, and found himself in a long, narrow chamber, chairs and tables arranged at peculiar angles, wisps of acrid smoke curling from the hearth. Then, of course, there was the sky over his head, though it wasn’t quite so angry as the one he’d left outside the room. Having finished his preliminary scrutiny, he scratched at his bearded chin. “Shouldn’t there be a skull mounted on the wall or something?”
OOCJust ignore the Gasvik, since your characters won’t even know he’s there.