1st day of Winter, 512 “Follow, follow. Follow, follow.” The moments during the TAR golem’s automated thought process had been a very pregnant pause; Orinei had found her eyes wandering back to the statues, the arches, still marveling at the sheer size of everything. It was bigger than she remembered, though she supposed that might have something to do with the faint twinges of apprehension fraying at her nerves. Outwardly, she merely looked very interested in the imposing stone structures around her; her mind (though she’d never admit it) was wandering into fearful daydreams of being rejected as useless by this golem. By the time she had snapped herself back to complete attention, the Follower golem was nearly circling her feet in its frenzy to get her to “follow, follow.” “Ah. Yes.” She spoke mostly to herself, mentally breathing a sigh of relief, extending a hand to wave the golem on (though she immediately felt foolish, realizing it needed no such instruction). Once it detected her footsteps behind it, the little mouse golem began to whir and click, wheeling itself at an unexpectedly fast pace toward a hall that led out of the Vestibule. The things—and that was really the only word she had for them—in the cells and rooms lining the corridors the golem led her through were more often than not making an ungodly racket in their chosen dialect. Here, a dead-eyed, rotting Nuit, skeletal hand rattling against cage bars, hoarsely yelling at her to leave while she had the chance. There, a group of spider-like golems of some sort, making a sinister whirring and clicking. Next, a piercing scream that seemed to come from nowhere and everywhere all at once, reverberating off the stone hallways until the golem raced through a doorway and Orinei followed, at what felt like breakneck speed. To keep up with the golem, Orinei had to break her normal very measured, small-stepped stride. The damn thing’s efficient if nothing else, she thought, attempting to keep it at least a few of its own body lengths in front of her. As they exited the Vestibule, it rounded a corner completely, effectively leaving her behind. “Ah, shyke,” she muttered, having to break into a jog for a few steps. Predictably, the golem was waiting for her when she rounded the corner. It did a little spin (all while continuing to repeat “follow, follow”) and continued as soon as it realized her presence. The déjà vu Orinei felt was beginning to feel crippling. Everywhere she turned, it felt as if her memories were being brought to life: memories that she never thought she’d see with her own eyes (or, she supposed, whoever’s eyes she happened to possess) again. The little golem was leading her through an immeasurably tall arched corridor, and she knew where she was—near the wizards’ quarters. The golem led Orinei past the quarters, and they entered another hallway. The air was a little colder for a moment; it seemed to be an enclosed walkway between the building housing the Vestibule and their eventual destination. Then, as suddenly as it had chilled, the air was warm and perhaps a touch damp. The golem wheeled to a stop. She vaguely realized that it was much, much quieter here than it had been in the rest of the corridors along their journey through the Citadel. The golem had led her to one last set of double doors. These doors, unlike many of their dark wood, iron, or stone brethren in the Citadel, positively sparkled, even in the dim light cast upon them by two beautifully ornamented candelabras attached to the walls beside each door. The doors were covered in tiny green and blue tiles, what looked like beads, and was that….was that gold? Orinei leaned closer to the door for a moment, but was quickly reminded by the golem that she was supposed to be “follow, follow”-ing as it bumped into her foot, and then the door. Obligingly, Orinei grasped one of the large handles—which seemed to be wrought in the shapes of ornate peacocks—and swung the door open. |