82nd Summer 512 A.V.
Sunset.
Sunset.
What is life, if not a beautiful lie?
Golden eyes glowed as a child’s arms were spread wide, and mystery and mayhem dwelt in an adolescent smile. “Welcome to the Shrine to Those Who Have Passed,” Erio declared as the door swung open and shut.
It was near nighttime, and the candles had burned low as Leth rose slowly in the east. A haze filled the air, obscuring the twinkling gems and jewels that crowded their maker’s graves and made a queer sort of twilight within the chamber. In this half-light spirits danced; cavorting and twirling, whirling and whistling, and though their bodies were long gone their voices were not. And by Dira did they talk. The whispers came from nowhere, punctuated by staccato appearances of faded forms, and the sight was enough to frighten even the bravest of souls. And the Shine had indeed sent more than one soul fleeing in its time, and it was due to such queer events as this.
Erio, however, was sitting in the middle of this symphony of the dead, and he was content.
He sat alone. Where the keeper of the Shrine had gone, well, Erio couldn’t say. He was the only one keeping the ghosts company at the present.
They had appeared intermittently throughout the day. It seemed to Erio as that most of those who did were only curious to see who their new keeper, as temporary as he may be, was; they hadn’t been so free the last couple of times he had appeared. They donned physical form like forms, though whether they were real or not was a question Erio wasn’t willing to broach. The first had been an inarta like himself, older, yet with hair that shone like fire despite the dull fade that time and death had made upon his form.
“You’re not Whisper.” he had said, frowning.
“That is correct,” Erio had replied, “I’m not nearly pretty enough. But let’s talk about you, not me. What happened?”
“I fell,” the man sighed, “Was pushed, in fact. The man who did it – he fancied the same girl I did, or so I hear. Didn’t fancy competition, though. In any case – it don’t matter. I’ll get my revenge even if it turns out he just bumped me.”
The next had been a foreigner - human, and with maturity’s first stubble still on his lips. “All my life I heard about the wonders of Wind Reach,” the man had quipped, “And on the first day I wandered away during the winter and ended up freezing to death. Well, I’ll be petched if that stops me from living in the city of my dreams.”
The third and last was a woman, young and pretty and sad. “Death comes for all of us, my child.” she had murmured, ignoring Erio’s question altogether. “It came for me when I was but a girl, and it will come for you soon enough. Everyone believes themselves to be immortal, but the truth is that they are decidedly less so. Promise me you will remember this, child.” She had looked so sorrowful Erio was unable to do anything then nod and make this promise as well.
After this last visitor no more ghosts had appeared to him, and Erio had been left alone...until now.
“Welcome to the home of all things dead and decaying,” Erio quipped as a person, form yet unknown, slipped inside the Shrine. The words of the dead woman still rattled around inside his skull, and yet he managed to force a smile to his face. “How may I help you?”