Slayer of the Rot
02-08-16, 04:33 PM
Not many would give the slouch-shouldered, tired looking man with the soot-black hair and cold white skin a second glance, even though he stood a head and a half taller than the monk he casually strolled beside. Tales of the Red Beast had become just that; tales, some taller than the highest, blood red boughs of the Lindequalmë. Stories of rage unbound, of a sword as tall and as wide as a man, of a backstabbing demon who would do anything to find his child, populated candle-lit children's bedrooms and bustling soldiers barracks. They painted him as a blood drenched monster. A towering, flesh eating horror. But to look upon him now, he was practically unrecognizable; not because he had altered the shape of his face, but because he looked so startlingly...human, old and disinterested. His feet barely lifted from the polished stone floor of the Citadel's hall, drawing annoyed glances from young adventurers in heavy, gleaming armor, graying rogues in dark cloaks and whispering leather, and wizards and mages bundled in embroidered robes.
"You have no...appointments," the monk at his shoulder began, eyeing the slayer, who continued on at the same uninterested, slow pace. The only thing that changed was a slight frown on his thin lips as he tucked his hands into the pockets of his black slacks. "It's unlikely for you to just stop in for some random bout."
Dan suddenly stopped before one of the many stained glass windows of the hall, late-season sunlight spilling through the stained glass, coloring him emerald, ruby, gold, and violet. It depicted an ancient knight of Scara Brae slaying a dragon; he could remember the names of neither beast nor hero. The monk stopped as well, the rich colors scattered across his shaved head, illuminating the many brands pressed into the flesh of his scalp and forehead. Tucking his hands into the sleeves of his colorless robes, he waited for Dan to speak, but no answer for his spontaneous visit was supplied.
"Do you miss the glory of the battle?" Still, the slayer didn't move. Other prospective combatants of the Citadel moved past them, aimlessly, their faces seeming to all be a copy of the one before and the one after, endless victims and killers and heroes and villains. They still cast the occasional quizzical look at the barefoot man blocking nearly a quarter of the hall, but none stopped with a challenge, and no sparks of recognition rose to life in their eyes.
"Or do you miss the purpose?" Finally, the slayer's eyes rose slightly, and the phantom of a smile came to the pinched lips of the monk.
"Perhaps then, someone can remind you. Or give you something new." He gestured to the closest door, one of a million million, all exactly alike in the halls of the Citadel, yet behind each one, lay entirely new, unbelievable worlds. Sneering slightly, Dan crossed the hallway, cutting in front of half a dozen people as he did so, and poked the uneven grain of the oaken door, bound with old, softly gleaming brass.
"Sure thing buckaroo...why the fuck not?"
_____
Dan didn't even look back as he shut the door behind him; he knew it had vanished into the ether. Everything was black at first - not simply an absence of light, but an absence of substance - and then, he was at once aware of a gentle motion beneath his feet. Not sudden and violent, like a rug pulled from beneath your feet, or erratic and sickening, like a ship on the waves, but almost constant, and soothing. Like the pendulum of a grandfather clock. With that realization, came light, and color; the dirty yellow glow of burning oil lamps, and the soft, sheen of unpolished, neglected gold. He realized then that he was standing on a massive, pain-stakingly carved chandelier that was worth more than entire small kingdoms. It was swinging languidly on long dark iron chains and whiskery, frayed ropes that reached up to a ceiling he couldn't make out. Its surface was flat, wide, and decorated with hundreds of thousands of Ai'brone brands, which he could feel, but not identify on his bare feet as he paced the perimeter slowly. He imagined he could sprint full speed from one side to the other for a solid three minutes before he'd meet the edge. It was ringed with hundreds of gently glowing glass lamps, though their tawny light illuminated nothing beyond the vast platform.
Rolling the sleeves of his white shirt up to his elbows, Dan briefly fidgeted with his vest before finally settling down to sit on the chandelier, folding his legs under him.
"You have no...appointments," the monk at his shoulder began, eyeing the slayer, who continued on at the same uninterested, slow pace. The only thing that changed was a slight frown on his thin lips as he tucked his hands into the pockets of his black slacks. "It's unlikely for you to just stop in for some random bout."
Dan suddenly stopped before one of the many stained glass windows of the hall, late-season sunlight spilling through the stained glass, coloring him emerald, ruby, gold, and violet. It depicted an ancient knight of Scara Brae slaying a dragon; he could remember the names of neither beast nor hero. The monk stopped as well, the rich colors scattered across his shaved head, illuminating the many brands pressed into the flesh of his scalp and forehead. Tucking his hands into the sleeves of his colorless robes, he waited for Dan to speak, but no answer for his spontaneous visit was supplied.
"Do you miss the glory of the battle?" Still, the slayer didn't move. Other prospective combatants of the Citadel moved past them, aimlessly, their faces seeming to all be a copy of the one before and the one after, endless victims and killers and heroes and villains. They still cast the occasional quizzical look at the barefoot man blocking nearly a quarter of the hall, but none stopped with a challenge, and no sparks of recognition rose to life in their eyes.
"Or do you miss the purpose?" Finally, the slayer's eyes rose slightly, and the phantom of a smile came to the pinched lips of the monk.
"Perhaps then, someone can remind you. Or give you something new." He gestured to the closest door, one of a million million, all exactly alike in the halls of the Citadel, yet behind each one, lay entirely new, unbelievable worlds. Sneering slightly, Dan crossed the hallway, cutting in front of half a dozen people as he did so, and poked the uneven grain of the oaken door, bound with old, softly gleaming brass.
"Sure thing buckaroo...why the fuck not?"
_____
Dan didn't even look back as he shut the door behind him; he knew it had vanished into the ether. Everything was black at first - not simply an absence of light, but an absence of substance - and then, he was at once aware of a gentle motion beneath his feet. Not sudden and violent, like a rug pulled from beneath your feet, or erratic and sickening, like a ship on the waves, but almost constant, and soothing. Like the pendulum of a grandfather clock. With that realization, came light, and color; the dirty yellow glow of burning oil lamps, and the soft, sheen of unpolished, neglected gold. He realized then that he was standing on a massive, pain-stakingly carved chandelier that was worth more than entire small kingdoms. It was swinging languidly on long dark iron chains and whiskery, frayed ropes that reached up to a ceiling he couldn't make out. Its surface was flat, wide, and decorated with hundreds of thousands of Ai'brone brands, which he could feel, but not identify on his bare feet as he paced the perimeter slowly. He imagined he could sprint full speed from one side to the other for a solid three minutes before he'd meet the edge. It was ringed with hundreds of gently glowing glass lamps, though their tawny light illuminated nothing beyond the vast platform.
Rolling the sleeves of his white shirt up to his elbows, Dan briefly fidgeted with his vest before finally settling down to sit on the chandelier, folding his legs under him.