Spring 25th, 505 AV – The Mirror of Tanroa
The city of Nyka was a strangely comforting place, a trap for wanderers in the remote wilderness. She considered it to be the true Venus fly trap of Mizahar, the other cities merely pretenders to the title. Nyka was truly oxy-moronic, tranquility in violence and democracy within a dictatorship all rolled into the fact that it was built upon a much old city, from an older time. Or, at least, that was what rumor and hearsay had whispered to her. Drunken revelers were more than happy to regale her with tales that were supposed to prove Nyka’s supremacy in a world where a place without animal dung was considered the height of luxury. There was an allure to the streets she could admit, their layout and composition both elegant and logical. However, each time she passed a grouping of runes, symbols and protective charms she couldn’t help but ponder how superstition was a dangerous form of zealotry.
Sunberth had blood upon its stones aplenty, but at least it didn’t pretend it was a protective addition. No, violence was not as integrated and regimental than it is here. Here, it is a part of live that is allowed – not just tolerated she mused as she made her way towards the Celestial Square.
“Let us see if drunken words are worth any merit at all” she muttered to herself as she stalked towards one of the stockier, unobtrusive buildings in the square. Of course, that merely meant it was less gaudy to her sight, more graceful in its construction.
She had done her research of course, her single eye and ears good enough still to pick up on the more important facets of necessity. Her purse had been lightened a little, the bought alcohol making her words far more charming to her informants mind than they could ever have been through actual effort – ease of drunkenness had been far more profitable. She had found she required permission to enter for an audience with the famed Mirror. It was whispered of, eyes averted and heads cast downwards temporarily, as if it were a cursed object beyond mentioning. Yet, others she had asked seemed to hold high regard for the artifact – or she assumed it was an artifact from bygone times. It had intrigued her and she needed to see it for herself, her heart fluttering with the very thought of touching it, adrenaline spurting through her veins slightly.
Permission was easy enough to barter, though we went through a lot of parchment before his sluggish hand had managed a proper sentence or two she recalled as she approached the large, ornate doors in front of her.
She could see now, closer as she was, that the building was under guard by members of all four monk factions. This surprised her and gave her a little more regard for that which she sought. The monks rarely allied so intensely over trivialities – that much she had learnt observing the various brawls and insult bouts in the Nykan darkness. She paused briefly and took a deep breath, her gaze flicking from guard to guard, monk to monk, with some worry. She forged onwards until she was stopped by an outstretched arm and a seriously dark scowl.
“Permission?” the guard asked her, the tone of their word promising retribution for anything not on the level.
She pulled the slightly crumpled piece of parchment that supposedly gave her free entrance to the building from inside her jacket and passed it to the warden in silence.