I thought I could organize freedom How [Denvali] of me You sussed it out, didn't you? You could smell it So you left me on my own To complete the mission Now I'm leaving it all behind - Bjork - Timestamp: 77th Winter 511 A.V. morning Daylight dripped from the windowsill in tune with the slow melt of frost from the glass and the fleeing echo of Siwa's footsteps beyond. A shawl of snow leached much of the color from the sea cliff overlooking Denval proper and the orchards sprawling behind the historic barracks starved. The front parlor of the Opal Clinic was unusually active, but it had the fortune of having been expanded to encompass the wealth of what had been two rooms before Cian Noc had a wall torn down some years back. "Hanno, honey," the healer called from where he knelt on the floor. The furniture in the room was in the process of being pushed back against the walls, leaving the majority of the floor cleared with even the rugs themselves being built up. "Bring me those sheets!" Those gathered had been summoned at the crack of dawn to report immediately to the Opal Clinic on order of Captain Astrid. A flush cheeked, bright eyed Jonas Marx, only child of the Academy Lieutenant, had played messenger. Before questions could be asked, he had flown off to the next house, the next contact, set on the mission entrusted in him. As the summoned had arrived alone and in pairs, they were set to tasks by the indomitable Cian Noc. They were moving the parlor furniture, fetching medical supplies from the clinic store rooms, building up a fire in the stone hearths occupying either end of the room. Their hands were kept busy so that their minds would not run out through their mouths and in many of them shards of past life memories burned brighter and brighter. Rising to his feet, Cian drew their attention. With the quiet strength of one who stood toe to toe with death, he told them. Others had gone hunting for Suwor, the old magus who had retired to his little hermitage after recovering -- or so it was thought -- from a magical experiment gone wrong. He had been all but forgotten over the past few years, his daughter occasionally taking things out to him that he could not make or catch for himself. But Denval kept moving under the urging hand of Captain Astrid, building a Road, inviting scholars from Zeltiva, attempting to live and not just survive. Young Mihai's murderer sussed out and the Sunsinger arrived, the hunt was on. Those here were needed to prepare for the hunters' return and what hell might come at their heels in the form of injuries. Yet when the back door of the clinic had slammed behind Suwor's daughter, the acolyte Siwa, mere minutes before, an equally as grave task was laid upon them. "Behold," Cian said and thrust out his hand, fingers unraveling to reveal what he had been given. It was a chunk of amber the size of walnut with a silver moth trapped inside. It glowed with a holy eclipse and suffered from a blackened crack down its center. "The Solduvan Stone." The artifact thieved from the Arsenal as learned by the Captain in the wake of the disastrous Feast for Rak'keli flickered in the memory of a holocaust flame. "Friends, Denval needs us now," Delano Marx rose from where he had been coaxing one of the fires. "That thing needs fixed or destroyed. It's our duty to figure out how." |