Inside the Temple... When amidst any form of celebration you don't completely agree to the reasons behind, it's best to just try to do what the rest are doing. That is what he'd been doing this last season and a half. Moving slowly was the key to the cautious, and would allow one to be lower then the notice of those you did not wish to be too nosey into one's own affairs. That was the importance of him being here today, screaming, yelling, and singing like it was the best thing he ever experienced even if he internally viewed it as a waste. When trying to keep one's purposes for being in a city of your own, there was only one real choice to blend into the screaming crowd. Scream back, go loud, go strong, go proud , go hard; go harder, or go home. Yell like being here was everything you wanted in life. If the sychophants wanted you to scream for their Voice, then let them hear you scream. But under no circumstances would one in his position ever rock the boat, not unless something provoked him. The uplifted faces of the crowd gazing on the Voice , responding to her proselytizing, to her word given to her peoples was not enough to provoke him. All Antar did was smile, and if he even came upon the unfortunate circumstances to meet her then he would still be as graceful and polite as could be. He didn't necessarily hate Rhysol or his Voice. It was just that long ago he realized in his birth city that they didn't always seem to be on the up and up. Call it skepticism, but even so, that skepticism would not wake him up to become even triflely annoyed. He had already sat here like a member of the city in piety, waiting for the longest time amongst the thralls before being calmly ushered into a small alcove near the back of the circular chambers. The place, rebuilt as it was was very impressive to him. All garnered with a carpenter's eye for detail, and the altar at the Shard was most impressive, seeming as if to flow from the very stone itself. All in all, he was content. He was acting a part today. That was all he was doing. Why should there be any reason for deviating from his plans? Even the turbulent war cries outside were not that impetus to make him stand up and begin. He couldn't hear it from inside the walls of the central worship chamber, hear the reverberating splendor of the Voice's lilting tune. Sure, Antar even agreed with what Ulric had said, that the Voice, the black sun, and Rhysol were good for this city, even if it was the greatest farce to be played upon the world to call it peaceful. For he knew, just how 'peaceful' this blood caked city was. It wasn't Sunberth, at least there it was open about bloodshed and bodies, no here in Ravok the blood was behind closed doors. In the midst of basements stretching below the rim of the lake, slowly drained into the city's canals. The odor of the city of his youth was everpresent to his mind, cloying to his nostrils. But on the surface, Rhysol's great city of the Ravok under the Voice was a most impressive edifice. This he wouldn't even deny. Even this would not gainsway him from simply being the observer, clad in his robes, his armaments hidden as in his hands a set of unmarked prayer beads ran through his fingers. Each time for a new bead an uttered whisper of penitence to Rhysol, and the voice accompanied a silent prayer to Akajia to keep his presence in the shadows, and to Tanroa for wishing him to be here at this time and place, asking both for guidance on what he was to do in the days to come. Out of the corner of his eye, the rogue took a glance towards some of the closest guards, many of them not seeming to notice his presence at all. Just looking at the crowd with a rabid intensity only true fervor for their god could bring. No... what really spurned him to act was the beginnings of what was sure to be a really bad day for him. It was something instinctive that he knew from the moment he began to see fire bound from glyphs upon the walls begin to pulse with energy before releasing their burning rage upon the crowds. He had fallen to the ground, pulling his waterskin from his belt to soak the top layer of his shadowsilk robes. Around him, people and furnishings began to burn and the cries of a child could be heard under its dying mother close by. The heat was cloying in the air, painfully making his skin seem heated under the soaked cloth as he began to crawl towards the nearest guard. Within his veins, a cold fury began to set itself in. Not that he cared particularly for the pain of others. Just that he hated the fact this would make his day ten times as difficult. A mage had done this, he recognized the hallmarks of glyphing, and in the barest moment his mind began to analyze the situation as he stayed close to the ground, wondering if above in the balconies people were already expiring from the smoke. The survivors began to rush the doors, probably seeking egress out into the courtyards, or perhaps down the great steps to the channel where the docks were. He immediately discounted following them, for such avenues of escape would lead to bottlenecks where panicked sheep trampled others in their path. Noth had to get out, that much was true. Anywhere but here was the best place to be, but he had a different idea of how to do things. Crawling towards the closest guards, he began to check if any of them were alive. It was foolish to believe there were only two ways out of the central chamber, perhaps if he found one injured he could aid he could move the man along to find another exit. Perhaps through a side door the guards used? Keeping his head down below the smoke, Noth was startled by a groaning man, a guard with burns on his back, and a scorched body. The signs of melted armor from an apparent direct blast of reimantical fire. The man would probably not live the week, for such burns were likely to become infected. But he would live today if he was moved, no matter how painful such a thing was. Perfect, it always gave him some small measure of hope to find someone useful. Especially when planning to flee through some of the Temple areas that the populace was normally barred from. Hoisting the injured man to his feet, Antar hauled the man's arm around his neck and began shouting into his ear, relishing the answer of a single pointed arm as the injured guard motioned to another way out... |