1 Spring, 512 An expedition was to be made, the message said, to see what answers the Aperture held. All who would find a solution, or a salvation, were invited to add their strength to the team. The dangers would be many, the messengers warned, to which the people laughed and looked around. But nonetheless, the gossip of Nyka surpassed the odds and word got round well enough. If all the monsters were running around up here, the people reasoned, then what was left in there? Saera Sennac was waiting with a handful of monks at the center of the Cursed Bridge, while pairs of them guarded either side for the first time in decades. There was little use here, in this refuge from the destruction; even the monsters avoided this cursed and sacred place, though whether it was for the presence of the guards was hard to tell. Their brown robes were emblazoned with more than the Sword of Uphis, troops from every Quarter having warily set aside their differences for the good of the cause. Survivors trickled into their team, some who had heard the message and were eager to fight, others who had wandered through the wreckage and chosen to join the mission if only to escape the rest. The rope bridge that hung into the darkness was strong, though it was rarely changed or touched. Saera ran a finger over the tight hemp cords, then closed her fist when she realized she was shaking. The monk initiates did not use this one, but every monk around her knew the feeling of dread that came with facing the flimsy ladder and its inevitable end. It was not dread that moved her now, but insufferable anxiety, a sense of heart-wrenching panic that she could not shake. She wanted to look into the darkness, but could not bring herself to bend over the edge. One of their best aurists, and a dear friend, had gone mad trying to find some meaning to it all. Nyka, in her isolation, had learned little aside from the warning of the Konti healers. It was a war of the gods, or the peace of them—the latter was admittedly less probable, and therefore like to shake the world worse. The cause of it did not matter anymore, only the end. The people were restless, their movements frantic. One made a suggestion that stirred the high priestess more than she would have liked. “No magic,” she ordered, or repeated; she could not remember. Magic was the reason for this, the magic of the world, the Aperture, the gods. Magic meant ruin, today of all days. And yet here they were, ready to descend into the heart of it. |
OOC :