Alric ran past the carnage and ruins without paying heed to the smells of burnt hair and flesh, neither did he pause to help those who'd fallen in the panic. Alric was by no stretch, evil, but it would be hard to call him good either. He was interested in only himself, and his own salvation right now. He had started this foray into madness on a selfless motive, that much was true. However, he had abandoned that motive rather quickly. He had yet to encounter anyone who could tell him what was going on, and in no time at all, his curiosity got the better of him. He was interested in two things now. The first and most important was staying alive. He wasn't about to have his life cut short just yet. Next, and of course the most predictable, was learning about this catastrophe. When it had first started, Alric was far to emotionally distraught to properly think, and had gone off to make sure Miro was okay. A few chimes into his mad dashing and he realized how foolish that was. Miro was a combatant, a fighter! Alric wasn't going to help him any more than a mouse could help a lion. In fact, it was probably a good thing he wasn't wherever Miro was, so Miro could focus on himself. However, after abandoning his reckless mission, he came to the realization that all around him was a mystery of the most obvious sort. And he, the man who declared to all his desire for knowledge was not going to seek out the answers to it? Preposterous. He was going to get to the bottom of this, starting with its beginning. He had been following the shifting billow of smoke ever since he had come to his senses, and for the most part, it allowed Alric to come steadily closer to it. As he approached his destination, he had to fight back a great deal of tears, and even then, many came through. It appeared that this horrendous assault began at Ionu's Temple, a sacred place that Alric foolishly thought incapable of destruction. however, that was hardly the worst of it. Although he had smelled the vomit inducing odor of death as he ran through the streets, it became nearly palpable as he approached the decimated ruins of his god's temple. It was quite obvious that many of Ionu's followers did not escape the bloodbath. The temple was ravaged. Fire had blackened the walls within, smoke billowing from it still. Alric's suspicions proved true as he walked through what were once familiar halls, as he laid his eyes upon piles of bodies charred from the explosion. The vast majority of them were not whole bodies, but rather bits and pieces. Alric, never being so close to death before so as to see it, smell it, and (to his dismay) touch it, attempted to vomit. He was greeted with failure as he hadn’t had breakfast that morning and so instead had a painful bout of dry heaves. It was as though he were participating in a walking nightmare. People lay strewn about, unmoving. The worst of it was the stench that filled the air, the putrid smell of burning flesh. The smoke that hovered in the room made his eyes water, though he fought past it well enough. He had severely started to consider leaving and just finding a good place to hide. But he wasn’t going to find out what had caused this destruction by cowardice. True, cowardice had its merits, but in this instance, bravery proved more valuable. As he tipped toed along the wreckage of the former glory that was the Temple, he heard the whizzing of mechanical men. Golems, would be his guess. As he approached the end of the ruined corridor, he confirmed his suspicions as he peeked around the corner. Alric almost thought they might be some sort of relief. That is, until he observed them finishing off the very few remaining survivors. However, just as Alric was reevaluating cowardice’s virtues, Shale, master of the arena, stepped forth to do battle against the mechanized menaces. And he was doing spectacular. Alric could hardly believe his battle prowess. He had never actually visited the Arena, believing it barbaric. However he now decided that even barbarism had its place. Shale was joined by a white haired human that Alric had never seen before. Regardless of familiarity, it seemed this person too was a seasoned fighter. Alric looked on, unmotivated to relinquish his hiding spot. The hope of waiting out the battle, however, was dashed rather quickly. Shale opened up portal into the void. Alric was quickly yanked off his feet at its creation, and only dumb luck would have him grab onto the wall fast enough. The pull was dreadful in its force, and pulled in several of the corpses and pieces of corpses. Alric’ strength failed not two seconds in, but he managed to use the bodies strewn across the floor as foot holds and momentum gainers. Using them to scramble across the floor, he was able to escape death. And while that was all well and good, he was extremely saddened to note that both his mask and hat had been sucked into the void, never to be seen again. Those had been gifts from a very close friend; he would have to hold a funeral for their deaths. As the void closed, he stood on wobbly knees, visibly shaken and exhausted from the strenuous activity. Alric was no fighter, and it showed in his heavy panting and clutched stomach. His outfit was bloody from the bodies he had used to escape the void, and it was very unlikely he’d ever be able to get the stains out. Alric nearly cried. All of his favored possessions were being murdered in this Ionu-forsaken place! But no, he withheld the tears. He had learned a long time ago that others did not consider their clothing to be living. They were wrong of course, but he would keep his thoughts to himself this time. There were more important things to worry about. As Alric wiped away the water from his eyes that would become tears, he saw the white haired man grab a small handheld mirror. His observations were cut short by a quaking. Alric’s eyes left the man and focused on a new terror far worse than a dozen golems. A giant golem. Alric did not know the size of the beast, but he’d wager it was over two stories, probably over three. Though Alric was not evil, he was most certainly selfish. And in this instance he sincerely hoped that the monstrosity attack one of the other two men. He had come here wanting knowledge, he did not come to wager his life against impossible odds. Unfortunately, it seemed as though impossible odds were the only thing he was going to get. He was far more confused now than he had been at the start. Alric, deciding the risk too great, turned to leave. However, something stopped him. He didn’t know what exactly. But even his own inherent disinterest of others was not so extreme as to leave two men in harm’s way when he could be of some help. He wasn’t completely selfish after all. Just mostly. The Colossus was too close to Shale for Alric to do much, but the other man, the one with white hair might be just close enough. The Golem increased its speed, and both men remained stationary. Alric, realizing it was now or never, dashed as quickly as he could to the white-haired man’s side, intending to carry him away. He whispered a strained prayer. "My Lord, Ionu, if you truly care about your followers and your city, I pray you help us now. I pray that this entire nightmare is just one awful trick, and that you would be the one to reveal it for the falsity it is." |