Day 24, Spring of 416 AV
Early Evening
Ruins of Nial, The Wildlands of the Sylira Region
Early Evening
Ruins of Nial, The Wildlands of the Sylira Region
Eridanus reached the dilapidated ruins without much hassle. It was just simple travelling, and no incidents occurred on the way. No bandits, no mercenaries out for him, no strange creatures, no animal attacks. It was completely boring and uneventful, and he could have sworn that providence was totally on his side. Even the horse he was on gave him little trouble despite his general ineptness in riding and handling horse. Heck, even the weather was perfect, neither too warm nor too cold. With all these little miracles happening together coincidentally, it was little wonder the ethaefal thought luck to be on his side. If there was a God of Traveling or Smooth Journeys, that god was most definitely watching over Eridanus.
By the time he stopped his horse nearby when the run-down buildings were in sight, he dismounted and carefully led his horse behind him slowly as he approached the ruins. The moon had just rose and the full celestial glory of the ethaefal was in display for all and sunder, except that there was no one. Thousands of years ago there would most probably be a village, possibly an entire civilization living here, but the apocalypse had destroyed everything, leaving only random buildings and dusty whispers in its wake.
Though there was no one, the ethaefal could hardly allow the low possibility that a thief might somehow appear and steal his horse, and he would most probably be screwed without a proper medium of transport this far away from civilization. It was with this cautious thought in mind that the leth-born began his exploratory search into the ruins, keeping on the main paths while navigating his way through the twisting streets with the reins firmly gripped in his off-hand.
Half a bell passed without incident, and Eridanus was still halfway through the main streets of the city. Though merely ruins, the remaining buildings still spanned a considerable distance, and the mercenary decided to first scour through the larger areas before going into the smaller spaces that his horse could not squeeze through. His main goal was finding a landmark described by his employer that would lead him to the object he needed to secure. No running, no hiding, no fighting, just a simple retrieval job with a generous time limit. It was a walk in the park.
As he covered almost two-thirds of the bigger areas of the city, he spotted a crumbling obelisk at short distance away. It was not in the central areas, which meant that he would have to navigate his way through the winding alleys of the ruins in order to reach it. If this was indeed the correct obelisk the object should be dropped somewhere inside of it. It should be anyway, there were no other obelisks of this height and shape as described by his employer.
By the time he stopped his horse nearby when the run-down buildings were in sight, he dismounted and carefully led his horse behind him slowly as he approached the ruins. The moon had just rose and the full celestial glory of the ethaefal was in display for all and sunder, except that there was no one. Thousands of years ago there would most probably be a village, possibly an entire civilization living here, but the apocalypse had destroyed everything, leaving only random buildings and dusty whispers in its wake.
Though there was no one, the ethaefal could hardly allow the low possibility that a thief might somehow appear and steal his horse, and he would most probably be screwed without a proper medium of transport this far away from civilization. It was with this cautious thought in mind that the leth-born began his exploratory search into the ruins, keeping on the main paths while navigating his way through the twisting streets with the reins firmly gripped in his off-hand.
Half a bell passed without incident, and Eridanus was still halfway through the main streets of the city. Though merely ruins, the remaining buildings still spanned a considerable distance, and the mercenary decided to first scour through the larger areas before going into the smaller spaces that his horse could not squeeze through. His main goal was finding a landmark described by his employer that would lead him to the object he needed to secure. No running, no hiding, no fighting, just a simple retrieval job with a generous time limit. It was a walk in the park.
As he covered almost two-thirds of the bigger areas of the city, he spotted a crumbling obelisk at short distance away. It was not in the central areas, which meant that he would have to navigate his way through the winding alleys of the ruins in order to reach it. If this was indeed the correct obelisk the object should be dropped somewhere inside of it. It should be anyway, there were no other obelisks of this height and shape as described by his employer.