'Children of The Shroud' - A Dark Fantasy RP (Interest/Recruitment - CLOSED AND STARTED)

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Dogmatic99

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"I might not tell 'er the details though."

Maggy wasn't even sure she had all the details herself. True she'd shown willingness to join up with the bunch of shadow huggers. She'd accepted that. There was nothing for her to go back to and the trade was one that Maggy (for now anyway) was willing to make. Any straw to clutch at and all that.

'Course the stupidness that had gotten her here wasn't lost on her. Maggy had run from plenty of other nasty trades that people would call much lesser evils. So she wouldn't give up her body for a few hours but she'd give these people her soul? What kind of fish-brained dunce did that?

Well I aint usin' my soul am I! 'Sides if it lets me do what I've seen them do then why shouldn' I? I coul' get a life where I'm strong and go to a place where I belong when I die, or get fucked over in the gutter an' get thrown out into the cold where the dead tha' no god wants.

Yeah... yeah the paths were looking pretty damn clear now.

"One thin' I still don't get though." Maggy chimed in, absentmindedly helping herself to some more bread and butter. "Why'd you pick us anyway? cus... some of 'em I get." Like the solider lookin' one or the dandy. Say what you want about them they had some skills under their belts. "But like me... I mean I can't even work a blade or such." Like as not, Maggy hadn't managed herself in a fight in years or more.
 

NinjaDeathSlap

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"I mean I can't even work a blade or such."

"It was not I who chose you," The Old Man said, a little mischievously. "and I cannot speak for the one who did. However..." he strode over to the opposite side of the room, and held open a different door. "Perhaps you'd like to ask him yourself."
 

Dogmatic99

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"Perhaps you'd like to ask him yourself."

"You wot?" Maggy almost coughed up the hot chunk of bread as she gawped at the old codger.

He'd talked like he knew his dark god for real, not like the other preachers did but like he actually heard his god. Was that possible? Maybe, given all the other stuff they could do and going by the deal he talked about then why couldn't he talk to Mylaviss.

And now he was offering Maggy the same chance? She HAD to take it! How often did a person get this kind of chance, to talk to a bloody god? If ever there was a way to see what she was getting into it was this one. That wasn't to say the girl was totally jumping to go. This could easily be a trick made to make her look the fool, well that wouldn't matter, Maggy had left her shame behind her a long time ago. So it could be dangerous... what if Mylaviss was there and hearing his voice made Maggy's ears bleed out and explode? But what if they didn't? This could be amazing, this could be something good.

The argument was over quickly as Maggy realised that she'd been slowly edging towards the open door that whole time, totally unable to resist. She gave one last nervous look to the old man and those still in the room before cautiously making her way though the open door into the chamber beyond.
 
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"Perhaps you'd like to ask him yourself."

"Eh?" Sparrow tilted her head curiously. "You don', mean..." She hopped off her chair, her eyes followed after the sewer rat as she made her way to the room the old man had beckoned them to.

'I don't know about this.'

Wiping her greasy hands on her tunic, she bit her bottom lip. Talking to a god, was that even possible? She had the read the books, read that certain acolytes could commune with the gods, but she doubted their credibility, how else to gain power but to claim you've spoken to a god? Regardless of the factualness of the whole thing.

Crossing her arms across her chest, she felt a shiver run down her spine. Either this was all an elaborate trick, which seemed unlikely, considering they could have been killed at any point in the last hour, or this was the real deal.

Sparrow would be damned if she missed an opportunity like this. Quickening her pace, she followed after the other woman.
 

Rufio's Ghost

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"You are not prisoners here, I will not keep you. All those who wish to leave at this point, may simply follow me."

There was a slight bite to his words. He was polite enough, kind even, but Langston could still sense the man's veiled displeasure. He had disappointed him, and they both knew it. They had reached a silent understanding, leaving nothing more to be said.

Langston quietly rose from the table and began to follow the group down the dark corridors. He lingered in the passage, taking a moment to marvel at this strange and mysterious place. He would never be able to describe the deep black color of the room that was seemingly cut from one stone, or the scintillating patterns that reflected across its surfaces... not in a way that would do it any justice at least. How was he going to explain any of this? He couldn't recount the trials in a way that would perfectly encapsulate all that happened... but he would have to try. His parents would want to know how he came to find his way home, and they had always been sticklers for details.

Langston took note of all of the doors as they passed through the halls. He couldn't help but wonder what was behind each of them and what someone would even do with so many rooms. Were there really that many Shroud members? Did each get their own room? Or were each of these filled with magical contraptions beyond imagining. Things that defied reason, defied the laws he thought- no knew- to be true before today.

The old man stopped. They hit a dead end, a blackened gate to nowhere.

"This gate can take you anywhere you've ever been before. Simply keep walking forward, and keep a picture in your mind's eye of your destination, and that is where you will end up."

'Seems simple enough...'

"I bid you farewell, and should you decide after your day in the sun that you wish to return here, do not worry
about finding your way back."


Langtson began to put out his hand, hoping to shake hands with the man that saved him from a slow death in the Drowned District, but quickly drew back, shoving his hand deep with in his pocket and silently berating himself.

'Idiot! What are you doing!?! He's- he is blind! You want to offend him even more than you already have?'

"We shall come to you."

With that the man in gray walked off, the scrappy girl scrambling in tow. Langston called after them as they disappeared around a corner, "Sir, Thank you!"

Turning back to the gate and the other initiates Langston mused under his breath, "I hope he heard me."

'Don't be stupid. He's blind, not deaf.'

'No need to dwell on it, many apologies and thanks to offer before walking through this gate... so I guess I should get on with it.'

He quickly broke off the silver fastenings from his suspenders as he formulated a proper apology. He had four clamps made out of pure silver and engraved with his initials, surely these would be sufficient payments to the three who had helped him.

By the time he had gotten everything together Andra and Will had already left, leaving only Selena... and she seemed to have her gaze fixed on the gate. It was a shame, he really would have liked to thank them... or at least say goodbye. He walked towards Selena, "Mrs.Selena... Madam?"
 

Ruedyn

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Giles spent all of two seconds listening to what the Old Bastard was actually saying. The rest was spent trying to stuff his face with everything around, moderation be damned. The familiar rumbling of his skeleton wouldn't be heard tonight, that was for damned sure. He ate so much he thought he could shit enough bricks to make a fucking house. He ate so much food he could almost feel his pants start to not fit. He ate so much he'd have to goddamn roll out of this creepy ass cult hideout.

He spared a few thoughts to what kind of rewards the police would offer him for selling this place out. They openly admitted to their business, when he did start paying attention again he heard of some god that was forbidden. The only hard part would be getting past the doom lizard, but he figured if anyone could, it'd be the police force. If not, hey, they signed up to see some bullshit, they earned an acidic death from the fuck off Acid-Dragon-Thing.

The other cultists seemed to sell out immediately, which was worrying. Probably thinking in a longer term, like they couldn't die at any goddamn second because the universe is cruel and unfeeling. He smirked at them, asking their stupid questions, trying to figure out how to tie their pointless lives from before into this new and exciting, and thoroughly illegal enterprise. The little girl might make it, the sailor looked tough too. If the burned wench and the whore made it more than a week he'd eat his fucking hat. Jury was out on the wordy bastard who tried to... sell them out? Lied or something? He did something and people wanted to kill him, he seemed like a smart enough guy.

He finally started paying attention when he got sick looking at the food. He'd managed to put away a fucking lot, even though he remembered something his buddy told him. Eat less, stomach shrinks or some shit and makes you eat less. Giles remembered that fuckin nerd got killed some time back, never knew if what he was saying was bullshit. Reminded him of this old man, though this guy seemed a lot less shifty. Just creepy. And an odd sort of... charisma? Was that the word? Regardless, some seemed to wander off to some other room. Without him. Now he opened some other door,

"Perhaps you'd like to ask him yourself."

He staggered to his feet, one part food, one part a sleeping foot, the rest his injuries. Hurt like a fucking ***** to walk on, but he could manage. Did he suggest they could talk to their deity? Was this going to be one of those things where it was just a man with some slight of hand? Giles shook his head, following the two girls.

"Know what? Why not. Talking to a 'god' should be a good way to finish off the evening. To think, I get to do this without a needle in my arm or a whore on her knees, this is a time to be alive, friends!"
 

Fappy

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Selena watched in silence as Andra and Will disappeared into the gate.

Go anywhere she wanted?

Was it really possible?

Naturally, many of those who showed interest in leaving had suggested returning home. What about Selena? Could she really return home?

Don't kid yourself, sweetheart.

No, her mother had already risked everything to help her run away. Despite her efforts, she'd have understood that nothing short of a miracle would have kept Selena alive in the Drowned District.

But you HAVE survived this long!

Her mother was better off thinking Selena was dead. Coming to her now, even if it was just to see her for a brief moment, would only complicate things.

Unlike some of the others, she had no home to return to.

Not anymore.

Her fists clenched, Selena had been staring blankly at the gate when Langston approached her.

"Mrs.Selena... Madam?"

Selena blinked stupidly, "Oh, uh," She muttered as she realized she was being spoken to. "Hey... are you going home now?"
 

Rufio's Ghost

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"Oh, uh,"

Good, he had her attention. He cleared his throat preparing to deliver his well thought out apology.

"Hey... are you going home now?"

His thought interrupted, he started at her dumbfounded. After a moment passed he rattled off, "Oh- why yes, of course. If, uhh, this gate works as the elderly fellow claims then I will most certainly be heading home."

He smiled nervously, "Why do you ask miss? Do you plan to go home as well?"
 

Fappy

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"Why do you ask miss? Do you plan to go home as well?"

A nervous smile broke out across her face as she shook her head, "Oh, no, no, I'm..." Her eyes found her feet. "I don't have a home. Not outside the Drowned District, anyway." After taking a moment to wallow in self-pity, she met Langston's gaze once more. "Don't let me hold you up! I'm sure your family will be thrilled to see that you're safe."

Unless they're like mine.
 

Rufio's Ghost

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"I don't have a home. Not outside the Drowned District, anyway."

She looked off, reflecting on a past Langston would probably never come to know. He wished he knew what to say to make her feel better, but nothing came to mind. She snapped out of her day dream and met his gaze.

"Don't let me hold you up! I'm sure your family will be thrilled to see that you're safe."

He let their eyes lock, though he usually found such interactions uncomfortable there was something different about Selena. She had a certain sincerity about her, or perhaps she just had kind eyes. He'd always heard that eyes were a window to the soul, and if that were truly the case then Selena had a very gentle soul. She seemed as unlikely a candidate for the Shroud as he. He was lucky to have a home to return to... he wasn't desperate. He knew his answer already and wondered if she knew hers. He hoped she'd say no, that she would find something better.

Langston took her hand into his, allowing the silver pieces to fall into her open palm, "I wanted to thank you.... I am fairly certain you saved my life today"

He looked down as he dropped his hands, quickly adding, "and... uh, sorry for being so troublesome."

He kept his head down as stepped away from her and towards the gate,"I... I really hope you are able to find something better for yourself. Uh-Farewell!"

'Not quite what I rehearsed, not exactly eloquent, but I suppose it was adequate?'

He closed his eyes, not wanting to see his feet pass through the gate's threshold. Taking a deep breath he stepped beyond the portal. He kept his thoughts focused, recalling every last detail of his bedroom. At first there was only darkness, but as he continued forward he began to see his thoughts take form. Images wove in and out of his conscious, carefully almost meticulously, he constructed a perfectly accurate depiction of his destination. He was flooded by memories spent in his poorly lit attic. He pictured his workbench with its neatly arranged tools, he visualized his book shelf that was always overflowing with tomes and parchment, and he could practically smell the musky cedar planking that made up the walls and high arched roof. No- wait he could smell it, that stale stuffy smell of antiquity, the one that he had always been so fond of.

He opened his eyes to find himself back in his childhood home. He stifled an excited shout realizing it was late still late into the night and his parents were almost certainly asleep. After a moment the initial excitement passed, and was replaced with mild irritation. His room had been completely emptied aside from a heavy oaken dresser. While it may be true that he had taken many of his possessions when heading to the country he hadn't taken everything. Looking around he murmured under his breath, "That was fast..."

He quickly brushed aside his own comment, explaining to himself,

'I mean... can I blame them? They probably think I am dead.'

He moved over to one of the corners and took a seat, letting his weary body sprawl across the hardwood. He lazily removed his coat and draped it over his chest, reassuring himself

'I'll get everything back in here. I just need to sleep for now... everything will be put back where it was in the morning.'

He yawned, over come by drowsiness.

'Everything will be put back to normal, just have to wait for the morning.'
 

Fappy

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"I wanted to thank you.... I am fairly certain you saved my life today"

Money!? But why?

"and... uh, sorry for being so troublesome."

Selena smiled, "It was no trouble! Really!"

"I... I really hope you are able to find something better for yourself. Uh-Farewell!"

Wait, what?

Selena stood in silence as Langston disappeared through the gate. The silver made a lot more sense when she considered his parting words. He didn't want her to have to sell her body to get by.

"A few silver won't make a bit of difference, but thanks for the sentiment," She whispered to herself. Then again, it could be that he was referring to her becoming an assassin.

Too late to ask him now.

What would she do now? Return to the surface and continue her sad excuse for a life as a prostitute? Literally, a god-forsaken prostitute. Or... change things up. Leave it all behind and swear her allegiance to a god of darkness. Become a killer.

Did she have that within her?

Left alone in the darkness of the stone chamber, Selena let out a deep sigh before turning around and heading back up the stairs. She entered the room just as Sparrow was making her request to the blind man.

"No more whorin'. She deserves better than that, I don' care if I have to pay for it, she doesn' do that anymore."

Selena furrowed her brow and sat down at the end of the table.

She no longer had an appetite.

It was true, wasn't it? She wouldn't have to whore anymore either if she joined up. She'd never have to do anything like that ever again. Was it so bad, though? Was it such a thing to be ashamed of?

Studying Sparrow for a moment, a thought occurred to her. Had her child been alive today, would she too resent Selena for her profession?

She rubbed her arm nervously as the conversation continued. Eventually, it seemed the small group of would-be assassins were to speak to Mylaviss himself.

Speak to... a god?

Selena watched as the others filed into the hallways and disappeared from view. Why not join them? It wasn't everyday that you could talk to a literal god!

Despite the novelty, Selena felt no desire to do such a thing. She simply sat at the end of the table and stared at the remains of the feast that had been laid out for them.

What would she do?
 

EnigmaticSevens

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Ezrah sat in silence for a long moment. The sailor's quips didn't bother him, they had nothing to add to the conversation and thus no value, not worth remembering. The slight edge that had crept its way into the old man's voice was worrisome, but also not of immediate concern, not if his words were to be believed. The accusation of power hungriness... well... Ezrah could do little else but shrug, it wasn't an entirely unwarranted rebuke. Ezrah did have lusts, clear and readily apparent, a horrible itch, a drive to know, and the knowing of a thing was a sort of power, true enough. Yet Ezrah had no grand ambitions, really. He didn't crave idiot riches, nor would he rely on some whim beholden god to deal with those who wronged him. Hell, while he wouldn't have stopped Kragenau's descent into oblivion, he felt not burning drive to hasten its coming. Oh he'd chip in, do his part when one of the Marked sent out the call, but he was not chest thumping preacher of the end times. The end would come, this was inevitable, he'd never thought it needed a champion. To know... would be enough, to understand the fragile hold he had on his life, to see some faint whisper of a greater totality, a greater whole... that would be enough. Knowledge for knowledge sake hardly tasted of nobility, but Ezrah never did have the vanity implicit necessary to think himself beholden to some greater, noble purpose.

One bit of the old man's words did worry him somewhat, though, digging into one of the soft places of his psyche and lingering there, festering. What was this talk of cosmic balance? Had such yammering come from any other source, Ezrah would've written them off as the ramblings of a fool or some poor philosopher, but if even a fraction of his claims were true, this old man's wisdom could not be logically denied. Natural balance was easy enough, the tight wire line between prey and predator, night and day, growth and decay. Such thinking was reasonable. But this talk of cosmic ramifications for misdeeds tasted of nonsense. The man who murdered thoughtlessly, drank thoughtlessly, whored thoughtlessly, did not meet his end because the murdering, drinking, and whoring were innately 'bad.' He died or suffered because he acted thoughtlessly. This was the end of it. To speak of vice and virtue as two halves of the same coin meant that somewhere out in the great inky blackness of infinity, someone or something was playing the judge, the arbiter. What god claimed such a right? Surely not this Mylaviss, slinking about in shadows and granting miracles in exchange for murder. No hypocrisy could be greater.

Now the old man spoke once more, offering one of the younger girls who'd rather linger in this place then travel back to some old home or another, an opportunity that most older men or women among the Marked would've sacrificed their first born children for, and opportunity that would've put armies on the march and seen the rise and fall of a dozen civilizations. The offer was a casual thing, an opportunity to speak with a god, this Mylaviss. Ezrah wanted to vomit. It was easy to look out at the world and scorn the pointlessness of man's so called 'vital' endeavors, but it was another thing entirely to see his own aspirations, the great search all of his education hinged upon, so utterly trivialized. The boy shuddered slightly in his chair, skin flushed with heat that almost spoke of... embarassment. Had it all been for nothing? The Marking, the pain, the memorization and recitation, the prayers to a personal god. Why fuck about with any of it if that grand prize was to be tossed about at random through the streets? Was it dumb luck, that a portion had fallen into his lap? Why not any of the others who'd come before him? Why not the Crone? He could... he could ask.... The old man's offer seemed open to everyone, a little tete a tete with a deity. Ezrah kept his seat. He was hardly the sort to play the fool adolescent and feign insouciant dismissal towards the offer, but at the moment, he wasn't sure his legs would hold him if he tried to stand. The miserable heat in his chest grew, felt like it would burst from him, felt it leaking out of him in the moisture that damped his eyes. The hand that rested on the table was trembling slightly, and nothing Ezrah could muster seemed likely to stop it.

A slight jolt of the table snapped the youth from his little reverie. Someone had sat back down at the table... Selena, still here, still here after his warnings, her own protests, and the free ticket home. A puzzle, and not one Ezrah was in any shape to work out. He spoke to her without turning, content to press his face into his hands, his fingers into his temples, as if the pressure might mark some point of reference, some sane, safe place in all of this," Is this... everything you hoped it would be, Selena...?"
 

Fappy

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" Is this... everything you hoped it would be, Selena...?"

Selena looked up, meeting the young man's gaze from between the mounds of food on the table. Her brow furrowed, she gave Ezrah a defeated frown, "'Hope' is something people like us have no use for, Ezrah. Returning home... returning to my loving mother," She clenched her jaw. "It had been a pleasant thought. But no, that is no longer my home. I don't have a home."

She looked down at her hands in her lap, "I will return to the surface in the morning. See if I can't make my situation there any better. If not, well, my soul's already damned in the eyes of the clergy. What have I to lose?" She looked at Ezrah once more. "Why are you still sitting there? I thought you were hungry for knowledge. Shouldn't you go pay your new god heed like the others?" The tone of her voice implied disgust, but her eyes told a different story. It was almost as if she felt bad for Ezrah.

For all of them.
 

EnigmaticSevens

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"Why are you still sitting there? I thought you were hungry for knowledge. Shouldn't you go pay your new god heed like the others?"

The young harlot's words weren't without a measure of venom. Ezrah felt the sting, felt the little pricks as they struck and vanished the next instinct, little biting night insects eaten up by a flame. He didn't really mind the scorn, the Marked had rather strong psychic muscles, if nothing else. Lying was easy when most expected you to be a liar. What did it matter if a monster spoke monstrous words? There was a strength to be had in the blackest reputation, a safe place where any of the Marked could live and mock the men who feared and despised them. What did a reputation matter so long as it served your ends and kept you alive. Ezrah had always found such armor a comfort, and now that armor had never felt more thin, more brittle. It was a bitter pill to swallow, thinking one lived on the wild, rugged frontier only to find out you were as tame as the rest you mocked as cattle. Selena had a point though, he should be at the trough, lapping up the grand sacred knowledge these people seemed to pour out without a care in the world. That would've made sense, but it didn't settle the nausea in his stomach or the burning beneath his skin.

"I don't know... if I should hate these people... or worship them," Ezrah's words came low and slow, deliberate and loaded. He dropped his hands from his face and fiddled with a chicken bone as he spoke. There was a musing tone in his voice, but it was married to a hollowness, a sort of defeat, "The woman who raised me, the Crone what used to peddle wares among the Drowned 'fore me, she learned me plenty. I remember a story a hers... a story about a dragon with a mighty horde a treasure. All men lusted after those riches, but only the greatest could snatch up a single coin and keep his life from twixt the beast's teeth. This is like that... ya know? Ain't no treasure kin to this what we've found... but there's no dragon, no journey, no great tale. Just a great, random sea a treasure... and it... it don't feel right."

Ezrah finally turned his gaze to Selena directly, dark eyes glistening and possessed of a look they'd never known before, a sense of terrible loss and lack of purpose, "I don't think you can leave this place behind, Selena, not really.... This Shroud and their dark god... their like blood rot, gets in ya and lingers, lingers in you and kills ya fast or kills ya slow. Say you think you've found some better life come the morrow, somethin' free of all this sorcery and secrecy, but free a Demeter too, would it ever really be enough? Somethin'd always be... hollow, less, knowin' that all this was goin' on with or without ya. And knowin' what it's really like in the End.... You really think there's some better life out there ya could run to that'd hide ya from the knowin' of all of... this?"
 

Fappy

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"... Say you think you've found some better life come the morrow, somethin' free of all this sorcery and secrecy, but free a Demeter too, would it ever really be enough? Somethin'd always be... hollow, less, knowin' that all this was goin' on with or without ya. And knowin' what it's really like in the End.... You really think there's some better life out there ya could run to that'd hide ya from the knowin' of all of... this?"

Selena shifted uncomfortably in her seat. He was right. Though she didn't want to admit it, she knew, "There's no reason I can't try though." She sighed. "I'm no killer, but then, you know me. We met a long time ago. The little spoiled brat that stumbled into the Drowned District that day all those years ago? She'd never think in a thousand years she'd resort to... what I do, to survive."

She shook her head, "I'm beginning to think there's no such thing as happiness in this world. You can't live life without getting your hands a little dirty." Her eyes found their way to the cultists conversing on the other side of the room. "I heard a little saying a long time ago, 'There are two kinds of people in this world: the hunters and the hunted'." She met Ezrah's gaze. "I'm tired of being the latter. I'm tired of being weak."
 

Terratina.

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May 24, 2012
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Skylar's trip was one of trepidation.

She couldn't really call herself part of the family she was forced to leave; look at her, ragged clothes, skinny as a rake, dirty, shoeless... Nothing but a thing which had stumbled out of the Drowned District somehow, that's all they would see when they saw her. Not a person. But still, a day out in the proverbial sun was tempting, just to go back again. That, and the thought of seeing her family again won against the fear. Thus, the woman took a deep breath and thought of her home.

It had been many things besides a home: a prison, a palace, a playground, and so on. She tiptoed through the dark hallways, quiet as a mouse. If it was one thing Skylar had learned in her brief time in the damned Drowned District, it was how to be silent, how to be that little mouse that scurries away without anyone noticing it. However, there was the matter of the doors; old creaky things that would make a noise when opened. Hopefully, her parents, the baby brother and the maid were fast asleep, asleep enough ignore a little bit of noise. She took another deep breath and turned the door knob that belonged to her bedroom door.

There was one simple twist of her hand and Skylar bit her lip as the door knob's screech filled her ears.
*Kreeeeen*
Luckily, no one seemed to stir.

Skylar looked around and saw that her bedroom had became his bedroom. Her heart sunk. Regardless or not of the obvious truth that her parents had chosen to forget about their failure of a daughter, it still was a bitter pill to swallow. Still on tiptoes, she approached the cot in which was her baby brother. A year-or-so old baby brother. He had grown so much, at least, he had only been a tiny little thing when she last glanced at him. Here lay one of the reasons why she had to leave her family and had to dive in the Drowned District. Once he had been born, Mommy and Daddy Swyer had no qualms with getting rid of the old to make way for the new. Still, Skylar couldn't bring herself to completely hate him.

She had somewhere to go now, anyway, somewhere where she could feel wanted. Sure, it involved murder but she was tired of running from abandoned shack to abandoned shack. A warm place and warm food... Funny how that was all that was needed to sway a former member of the merchant class to murder people. Then again, what other choices did she have? Run and rot in the Drowned District until her death? No, that wasn't living, that was just surviving. Nevertheless, there was still the matter at hand: her parents. Asleep or not asleep she wanted to see them one last time, despite about what they felt about their daughter. She planted a kiss on the baby's forehead and sneaked up to her parents' bedroom. One peak through the keyhole was enough for her.

It was good to know that her father still snored.

That done, she hastily rushed into the tiny room that was the servants' quarters, found a place to hide and sleep and went about the business of actually falling asleep. Well, she left one eye open, just in case...
 

NinjaDeathSlap

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Feb 20, 2011
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The Old Man took those who had followed him through door after door, until eventually they came to the Hall of Communion. The room was perfectly spherical, steps cut into the floor that slopped down several feet towards the centre, with the door opening at the equator. At the top of the rooms axis, a passive face was carved out of the stone, while the bottom mirrored it with a leering skull. The eyes of both faces were glowing with a purplish blue light.

"Come in. You may stand or sit anywhere you like." The Old man told them, as he made his way around the top stair to the other side of the room. "Fair warning, I do not have the power to summon Mylaviss at will. I am his servant, after all, not the other way around. I can entreat him, but whether or not he answers my call, is entirely up to him."
 

Rufio's Ghost

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The text was becoming difficult to make out in the fading light. Langston cast a wayward glance at his lantern, there was enough oil to last the hour, but not much longer than that. He rubbed his eyes lazily and began squinting at the page, trying to bring the hastily scrawled characters into focus. A few more pages and then he'd leave. Just a few more.

He hadn't expected to be here so long, but then again, he hadn't expected to find this place at all. A library inside of the dining room wall? It appeared the East Wing was full of surprises.

The light wavered once more and flickered out. Langston pipped in a small voice, "heh- oops..." realizing he had lingered too long. His eyes readjusted to the eerie purple lighting, it was possible to see the general shape of objects in the room, but not much else. Tiptoeing carefully about the scattered tomes, Langston began making his way towards the bookshelf. He walked alongside it, letting his tiny fingers graze the spine of each book. Though he had only found them today, he had already developed a peculiar fondness for the volumes lining the walls. They were antiques. So old that turning a page could pull it straight from its binding, so worn that it was difficult, sometimes impossible, to read the script on each page, and each individual book was so unique, so alien that the scribbled images evoked feelings of both fear and wonder.

Langston stopped at the end of row, leaning forward on the most distal aspect of his toe. He stretched out a skinny short arm, reaching for the top shelf. Using the his other hand to propel him upward, he grabbed the bottom corner of the aged tome and pulled. He eased himself onto the balls of his feet, allowing the book to tumble into his arms. He didn't want to return upstairs without something to read before bed and he had grown tired of his current selection.

The books in the attic were terribly dull. Fairy tales filled with dashing heroes, dastardly villains, benevolent gods, and... the same god damn plot. They were predictable, always ending in essentially the same way. Unimaginative and completely uninspired. Langston hugged the old book against his breast as he slowly made his way for the entrance. The stories within these books were unconventional. Some spoke of distant realms with strange gods and others told of magics unknown to mortal men. When there were characters, which was rare, they were never simply good or evil. All fell somewhere in between... or that was the general idea he had gotten from reading so far. The stories were fascinating, but reading them was a chore. The few books that were actually in common, or any language seen within the walls of Kragenau, were still a difficult read. Especially for a child.

Langston grunted, pulling down hard on the wall lever while balancing the heavy book on his hip. The hidden door retracted back into the floor revealing the adjacent dining room. Light illuminated the hidden library, temporarily blinding the boy. A frightened yelp sounded off from the other side of the entrance. Langston blinked furiously, but his vision remained unchanged. The large lumbering silhouette filled the entrance, and only exit, crying out in a mixture of primal fear and anger, "Juiniss' Silver Taint!" Langston gasped and let the tome slip from his grasp, allowing the pages to scatter around him. The voice exclaimed, "Wha- What is this place, and that awful noise? Langston?" The deep voice rumbled again, "Langston Thaddeus Devero!" The silhouette grabbed his collar, dragging him forcefully out of the room, "What are you doing in here? Huh?" The man slapped the startled boy across the face and boomed, "ANSWER ME"

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"ANSWER ME"

Langston woke with a start, covered head to toe in sweat. The sounds of conversation drifted from below,

"We have broached the subject on many occasions and we are demanding an answer. Stop. The nomination hinges on your abilities. Stop. So once again, I insist. Stop. ANSWER ME."

Langston sluggishly stood up and yawned. He slept for a few hours, but it still wasn't enough. He walked to the staircase and listened to his mother prattle on about the usual nonsense. She was always so loud when dictating,

'Good'

His mother would never send a telegram when entertaining guests so it was unlikely that there was anyone else in the house. Even so, Langston chose to proceed with caution. He slunk through the halls, taking a roundabout route to her office. It may be a longer trek, but few people used the halls in the North Wing of the manor, it was probably his safest bet for slipping by unnoticed.

When he arrived at her door he cracked it open and peered in. His mother was leaning against her desk with her back to the door, practically yelling at her transcriptonist and pounding her fist on the table's edge as she drove some point home. Langston went and stood on the opposite side of the desk, wincing as she let out a loud, strangely breathless laugh. Langston would normally never interrupt work, but he figured it would be okay this time. When her laughter finally died down to a faint wheeze Langston lightly tapped on the desk. She spun around immediately and came to sudden stop. She stood stupefied, hand on hip and her mouth agape.

"Sorry for interrupting mum. I just wanted to let you know that I'm back home."

She looked over at him, eyes glazed over, taking a few sharp breaths she managed to whisper his name before toppling over. Langston acted quickly, catching her under the arms to prevent her from hitting the floor. He held her awkwardly, trying to determine whether he should lower her to the ground or attempt to lift he... he instead settled for something in between.

Pounding feet could be heard from down the hall. The transcriptionist had screamed and bolted down the hall, so it wasn't too surprising that it caught someone's attention. His father threw open the door, bellowing his wife's name, stopping mid-word at the sight of his son. Langston tried to hoist her to her feet, but she was too heavy. Panicking he attempted to explain himself, "I- I don't know what's happened." He kept his eyes on her, "She just said my name and fell over, I didn't mean-" His father had moved and was now standing over him. Roughly he placed his hand under Langston's chin and tilted it upward, "Remember what I told you about eye contact? No one will ever hear you if you mumble at your feet, and not a soul will listen if you can't look them in the eye." He paused looking his son over. He moved his hand onto Langston's cheek and patted it fondly, "Now take a deep breath boy, everything is going to be alright."

He lifted his wife into his arms explaining, "Mum is going to be fine, I just have to get her to change out of this god forsaken dress. I swear she is squeezing the life out of herself. Damn corsets." After a brief pause he added, "I am going to tend to your mother in the sitting room, we can all talk after she wakes. I suggest you use the time to clean yourself up... we don't want that mug of yours to offset another fainting spell."

Langston nodded his head in agreement.

"Good. Well, get going. I'll have Natalie bring you a fresh set of clothes."
 

Dogmatic99

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Jun 24, 2012
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"Fair warning, I do not have the power to summon Mylaviss at will. I am his servant, after all, not the other way around. I can entreat him, but whether or not he answers my call, is entirely up to him."

'Do I make myself look nice? Is that what you do for this kind of thing? What the hell was someone supposed to do if they met a god? Well it couldn't matter anyway, there was nothing Maggy knew of these kinds of things and any chance of making herself remotely respectable looking had long since set sail. All she could hope for was that they didn't bleed her anymore.

'Maybe he'll really show up. Maggy'd be lying if she said she wasn't excited.
 

Rufio's Ghost

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Oct 2, 2012
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It was the low throbbing hum that caught his attention. Langston pressed his ear against the dining room wall and knocked. The wall reverberated, echoing back a hollow tune. It sorta sounded like a false wall, which was something his father would certainly want fixed. Leaning out into the hallway he called for him... but there was no reply.

He would just have to wait for him here. Langston sighed and hung his lantern from a nearby candelabra. He didn't want to wait around, he hated waiting... he was always waiting. Slowly, the added weight of the lantern began dragging the sconce further down the wall, revealing a room hidden behind the hollow wall.

He perked up immediately, jumping at any chance to break the monotony. Grabbing the lantern, Langston sped over to the opening in the wall and peeked his head in. The deep consistent thrum that emanated from within was louder now, and made his stomach start to churn- but he pressed on anyway, allowing his curiosity get the better of him. Lifting his lantern he began to reveal the shapes cloaked in the dim purple light. It appeared to be an old study, or a library perhaps?

He made his way towards the light and the source of the sickening sound. Winding between cramped bookshelves and displays cases, he eventually found himself in the center of the room. There sat a conical altar with a black spherical stone set on its apex. It spun sluggishly on the altar's tip, emitting both the peculiar light and unsettling sound.

It was strange, he- he didn't like it one bit. Curiosity had gotten him this far, but now his nerve was beginning to falter. His courage waning, he began to back away from the Orb.The altar out of sight, Langston turned to run, but instead caught his foot on an near by stack of books and was sent tumbling to the ground. Dust and parchment flew into the air as the tomes scattered across the floor. He scrambled, snatching pages as they fell and setting them in a neat stack- he wanted to leave, but he couldn't leave it a mess. His father had specifically said not to mess any thing up.

The scrolls stacked, he reached for the nearest tome to stow away the loose pages. A large leather bound book sat between him and his lantern. It had an ominous look to it, half illuminated by the fire light and half by the rooms aberrant glow. Completely disregarding its frightening appearance, he pulled the book towards him. As the book shifted between the light of the lantern and the room's unnatural glow, he paused, noticing a slight movement on the cover.

Using both of his small hands, he to dragged the heavy book in closer and promptly began examining it. A book with no author or title was strange, but one marked by only a skull was stranger. Still... aside from having a bizarre engraving it seemed pretty normal. He shrugged, it certainly wasn't moving or anything of the sort... but it couldn't hurt to get a better look.

The orb and his discomfort practically forgotten now, Langston became fascinated by the book. He scooted over towards the lantern and, once again, saw the brief movement. He brought his lantern in close, and found that the book was no longer marked with a skull but with the face of a man. His voice cracked as he mused to himself, "Well... that's.... curious."

His hands trembled from a mixture of fear and excitement, turning the page-

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The timid knock on the door startled him awake.

"Master Langston?"

Langston bolted up right, forcing water over the side of the tub and onto the tile. Still dazed he shouted, "Yes?! Oh wait- Don't come in! Oc-Occupied!!!"

Slightly agitated, the woman replied, "Obviously." After a brief pause she quickly added, "The lord and lady are waiting for you in the sitting room. I've left your clothes behind the screen... They ask that you make haste."

His face beat red, Langston sank back into the waters, the wrinkles on his toes tickled as they brushed against the bottom of the tub.

'Prunes? I must have dozed off awhile ago... Hah...whoops...'

If the circumstances were any different his parents would be furious that he made them wait, but luckily... or unluckily for him, they weren't. They would forgive his tardiness, because all that mattered, or should matter, was that he was finally home.

As he finished his bath, he started to remember bits and pieces of his dream. In hindsight a few symbols in the dream were pretty obvious and not at all mysterious. The symbol on the tome was Mylaviss's.... which wasn't the least bit surprising. Of course he was dreaming about the Shroud, their ideas were fresh in his mind, and they had just dragged him through the most emotional and physically intensive trial of his young life. Never before had he experienced so many powerful contrasting emotions, and all within a few hours. It was a day he would never- well, could never forget. He was certain that Mylaviss and his order would be a part of his dreams for many nights to come... he just hoped they wouldn't have a hand in creating them.

He shaved, changed clothes, and tried to dress up his busted nose. Once he gave up on making himself presentable, he headed downstairs to sitting room, ready to tell his parents about his time with the drowned.