The eightieth day of spring, 515 AV
He stood at the mouth of the ravine, staff in hand, a small speck against an expansive backdrop of cold, dark stone. The winds were quiet, as if his own somber soul had infected them, pulling them from their lofty heights to lay bound by invisible chains at his feet. The Wardens had left him to his own devices, having departed bells before. The light was slowly beginning to wan into the darkness of night, and Keene started once more into the breach of earth that rose like obsidian gates, welcoming him with a forlorn silence as a grave might receive the bones of the damned. Wilhelmina remained silent, tucked away in his pocket as a reminder of what he had failed to do that day. He made no effort to speak to her, the seething ice of her hatred pressing against where the doll met his leather clad skin. Everything had gone wrong, twisted down a path that continued out before him, writhing its way into the depths of some unknown depravity.
The crunch of his boots against the stone echoed throughout the massive walls as he moved, the ghostly echo of an unseen host following each step, the illusion of company only further reminding him of his self-imposed isolation. Many thoughts flitted through his weary mind, but the loudest of them were those of survival. Whether alone or with comrades, it did not change the fact that the ravine hardly boasted a hospitable environment. As far as he could tell, eyes scanning the surroundings he passed with quick, critical movements, there were no natural shelters. Though the path was warped, the walls of stone rose straight and rigid, faces pocked with crags sheer and foreboding. Vegetation was sparse, and what little there was was grey and sickly, as if it were more a disease upon the stone than life fighting for purchase. There was nothing welcoming about his new domain, and while Keene did not consciously find the setting fitting for his dampened moods, the subconscious link with the environment's bleak state helped to alleviate what otherwise should have been a feeling of anxious trepidation in the face of the ravine's eerie aura.
With each chime, the light grew weaker. The shadows cast by the cliffs grew larger, and though there was still a half bell's worth of sunlight in the failing evening left, Keene had to call upon his reimantic flames to serve as a guide prematurely due to the ever increasing blanket of darkness that the ravine seemed so intent upon casting over him. The pale blue flames flickered, their source of fuel kept under careful control so that they remained little more than a sputtering candle's worth of light casting his own shadow to combat those of the walls around him. Onward he trekked, the slight drain of res negligible and necessary to allow him the time he needed to decide on what he would do for the night. Remaining awake, res burning, until the morning was certainly an option, but not one that Keene favored. The alternatives were to create or find a camp of sorts, but without knowing anything about the terrain he had been left in - flora and fauna especially - he did not feel it wise to simply lie down and sleep where any passing creature might find him.
In quiet, contemplative turmoil, Keene found that his journey had taken him deep into the recesses of the ravine. Had there ever been the chance to move in any direction but forward, there was no doubt he most certainly would have become lost with darkness on either side of him, the stone absorbing the frail light that floated just east of his head. Parts of the cliff's face, however, seemed to absorb more light than they should. While the rocks did not possess the sheen of the obsidian in the caverns of Mt. Merlus, they did not share the inky blackness that parts of the walls seemed to possess. Drawing nearer to the closer rise of stone, Keene inspected the darker areas, finding them hollow breaches in the integrity of the rock face. There was more, a skittering motion just out of the light's influence as he approached, a clicking echo muffled by the unseen depths into which the holes wormed towards destinations unknown.
Drawing back from the pockmarked walls, Keene continued on, his focus placed on the rise of stone beside him, noting that the tunnels varied in size, from about the width of his thumb to recesses reminiscent of caves. After passing by the tenth of the larger entryways, Keene decided it was better to traverse the caverns than to risk stumbling into the Heartlands, one of the only things the female Warden had forbade him from doing. Though the skittering click that echoed off of the walls that eagerly swallowed him as he ducked into a reasonable spacious tunnel sent a reflexive shiver of apprehension down his spine, Keene pressed on. His pace was far more reserved than before, the little magical light floating several steps ahead of him tethered by the thin bluish line of res that kept it lit. Shadows shifted before him, and while he kept his gaze in front of him, the hairs on the back of his neck suggested that the scurrying figures inhabited the shadows behind him as well.
Then came the whispers.
He stood at the mouth of the ravine, staff in hand, a small speck against an expansive backdrop of cold, dark stone. The winds were quiet, as if his own somber soul had infected them, pulling them from their lofty heights to lay bound by invisible chains at his feet. The Wardens had left him to his own devices, having departed bells before. The light was slowly beginning to wan into the darkness of night, and Keene started once more into the breach of earth that rose like obsidian gates, welcoming him with a forlorn silence as a grave might receive the bones of the damned. Wilhelmina remained silent, tucked away in his pocket as a reminder of what he had failed to do that day. He made no effort to speak to her, the seething ice of her hatred pressing against where the doll met his leather clad skin. Everything had gone wrong, twisted down a path that continued out before him, writhing its way into the depths of some unknown depravity.
The crunch of his boots against the stone echoed throughout the massive walls as he moved, the ghostly echo of an unseen host following each step, the illusion of company only further reminding him of his self-imposed isolation. Many thoughts flitted through his weary mind, but the loudest of them were those of survival. Whether alone or with comrades, it did not change the fact that the ravine hardly boasted a hospitable environment. As far as he could tell, eyes scanning the surroundings he passed with quick, critical movements, there were no natural shelters. Though the path was warped, the walls of stone rose straight and rigid, faces pocked with crags sheer and foreboding. Vegetation was sparse, and what little there was was grey and sickly, as if it were more a disease upon the stone than life fighting for purchase. There was nothing welcoming about his new domain, and while Keene did not consciously find the setting fitting for his dampened moods, the subconscious link with the environment's bleak state helped to alleviate what otherwise should have been a feeling of anxious trepidation in the face of the ravine's eerie aura.
With each chime, the light grew weaker. The shadows cast by the cliffs grew larger, and though there was still a half bell's worth of sunlight in the failing evening left, Keene had to call upon his reimantic flames to serve as a guide prematurely due to the ever increasing blanket of darkness that the ravine seemed so intent upon casting over him. The pale blue flames flickered, their source of fuel kept under careful control so that they remained little more than a sputtering candle's worth of light casting his own shadow to combat those of the walls around him. Onward he trekked, the slight drain of res negligible and necessary to allow him the time he needed to decide on what he would do for the night. Remaining awake, res burning, until the morning was certainly an option, but not one that Keene favored. The alternatives were to create or find a camp of sorts, but without knowing anything about the terrain he had been left in - flora and fauna especially - he did not feel it wise to simply lie down and sleep where any passing creature might find him.
In quiet, contemplative turmoil, Keene found that his journey had taken him deep into the recesses of the ravine. Had there ever been the chance to move in any direction but forward, there was no doubt he most certainly would have become lost with darkness on either side of him, the stone absorbing the frail light that floated just east of his head. Parts of the cliff's face, however, seemed to absorb more light than they should. While the rocks did not possess the sheen of the obsidian in the caverns of Mt. Merlus, they did not share the inky blackness that parts of the walls seemed to possess. Drawing nearer to the closer rise of stone, Keene inspected the darker areas, finding them hollow breaches in the integrity of the rock face. There was more, a skittering motion just out of the light's influence as he approached, a clicking echo muffled by the unseen depths into which the holes wormed towards destinations unknown.
Drawing back from the pockmarked walls, Keene continued on, his focus placed on the rise of stone beside him, noting that the tunnels varied in size, from about the width of his thumb to recesses reminiscent of caves. After passing by the tenth of the larger entryways, Keene decided it was better to traverse the caverns than to risk stumbling into the Heartlands, one of the only things the female Warden had forbade him from doing. Though the skittering click that echoed off of the walls that eagerly swallowed him as he ducked into a reasonable spacious tunnel sent a reflexive shiver of apprehension down his spine, Keene pressed on. His pace was far more reserved than before, the little magical light floating several steps ahead of him tethered by the thin bluish line of res that kept it lit. Shadows shifted before him, and while he kept his gaze in front of him, the hairs on the back of his neck suggested that the scurrying figures inhabited the shadows behind him as well.
Then came the whispers.