Winter 56, 511 AV
Tick
Tock
Above him, the gears of some unimaginably massive clock churned. Wrenmae stood on a wheel, moving in incremental but measured paces along the bronze pole it hung from. Every piece necessary, every gear in place. Personally, Wrenmae couldn't tell anyone about the inner mechanism of a clock. His expertise extended only to sundials and the passage of the sun over the earth. All of this was new to him, the stuttering gears of automation loud and clanking, abominable and discordant.
He was alone, at least at first, here in this strange nightmare of gears and metal. He wore the simple white tunic he'd fallen asleep in, billowing with air he didn't feel. Below him, the abyss yawned lazily, open like a silent maw, awaiting its food rather than proactively seeking it. The storyteller edged away from that drop, one hand on the cold comfort of the pole. This was a dream, it had to be. Nothing so conceivably maniacal could possibly exist.
Seizing, grinding.
The entirety of the inner mechanisms came to rest. With the sound of metal tearing, pieces of the nightmarish world spun into the abyss, hurled suddenly from their axis by some unseen inner explosion. No longer did the insides keep time, only screeched in the absence of purpose, the lament of the forgotten.
Shadows made themselves known, figures that crouched on different precipices of the ruined gears. One, a child, clung to the toothed edge of a gear hanging precariously. His face was grave, weak as always and gaunt. Above him, gargoyleish and perfectly balanced on a diagonal pole, Weaver crouched and watched the events unfold, mirth drifting along his shadowed face, the wide brimmed had hiding all but the smile.
Above them all, on a throne of twisted metal, Shroud propped up his head on a gentle fist. The cloak of shadows around him licked across the seat and drifted out behind it, roiling, alive. His pale face watched Wrenmae with inscrutably dispassion...no one else held his attention.
The four were gathered, the shards of Wrenmae now in free floating war for control of his actions.
Shroud appeared to be winning.
"Here we are again," Shroud spoke, his voice filling the void where the ticking once was.
"Always such a pleasure," Weaver quickly quipped, grinning.
"Do you remember..." The child started, his voice scarcely more than a whisper,
"No," Wrenmae interrupted, "What do you want?"
"We are not alone," Shroud revealed, closing his eyes and sitting back on the throne, "Our discussions can wait."
"I do so love company," Weaver asserted, scuttling along the pole like some garishly dressed monkey, "I ponder the wonder of if they brought a story."
"We should be so lucky," the child muttered, "Anything to drowned out your voice."
But Wrenmae didn't respond to them, his eyes were to the twisted landscape around him. Who else could come? Who else would? What manner of intruder trespassed on this council with himself?