Welcome to the first writing block of my story which some of you may or may not have made characters of. If you have, you might be seeing them soon. If not, there's still a chance for their inclusion if you want them in. Please note, the rouge you will see in here is based off of no one's character as I didn't want to do what happens to him to any of your guys creations.....
Yet.
On a side note, 1,000 POST FOR ME! This my 1,000 post EXTRAVAGANZA!
Holy [censored] I spelled that right on my first try! So congrats me!
Chapter 1:
I woke with my head in a fog. My thoughts, addled and groggy, along with a headache that could have killed an adult elephant. In my half dream I muttered to myself, "You lived 140 years, died, became a horrible undead crime against nature, lasted for another millennial, and still, still you haven't made a spell to get rid of a saints damn hangover."
I opened my eyes expecting the usual flood of pain that came with the morning sunlight after a party and found myself surround by darkness. Confusion flowed through me as each spell I tired to cur through the dark failed, leaving me still blind.
Oh dammit I'm blind, I thought, Wait, can I be blind? Can an undead go blind? I groped at my eyes and found a cloth sitting on it. That made me feeling stupid. Removing it, I found myself still in darkness, but the lights I had conquered before showed me I was surrounded by a rectangle wood, with the bottom lined with a velvet.
A coffin. How charming. Remembrance dragged at my mind, this all seeming to make sense in a happening I had forgotten. I reached out and pushed the lid open and a stepped out to view the room around me. I found myself to be in the coffin within the room I kept in my tower for when a vampire count might visit, currently to my memory, the room of one of my associates, Nainda. To my right, a table with pleasantly burning cable sat surrounded by chairs that for their comfort and beauty seemed fit only for the mortal kings. There were four at that table alone. The book shelves sat on the wall to my left, tales of gloom and dread interspersed with magic tomes and the occasional fiction of heroes and overcoming evil. A dark lord has to laugh sometimes.
The door at the front of the room which I faced was open. Darkness beyond the wall. In the corner, oddly enough, the chains of metal and shadow that connected to the wall to keep a slave from the counts when they visited to feed on. The pretty little things that Nainda kept there was gone.
The stone walls looked decayed and mossy. That in itself was strange. My tower is a place of magic, the very walls are composed of living, thinking magic, that followed my will. I reached out my mind, my consciousness and felt my tower's soul, it's power. I frowned, as I came up disturbing finding. It was drained, decayed. It was like a frail old man, on it's death bed with barely the strength to stand.
What!?, my blurred mind finding clarity around the rage, the grogginess disappearing in the single moment of outrage.
My was once a place of power. True power. The kind of power you'd find if you crushed 5 churches to the saints into a fine powder and looked at that. The walls saw all in my empire. The tower was my creation, every night before sleep took me, I would put all excess power I had into it. In my wonder, I thought, This... this kind of atrophy would take decades!
I drew a tiny bit of the power that was left to steady myself. At the same time, I smelled it. A scent of sunflowers and sunlight. The smell of the magic of the saints. A whirled on my foot to stare at the coffin. Covering it were sigals of shining light, spells of containment, spells of sleep, all the spells necessary to keep something in forever, just now fading.
Blind rage, hate, flashed through me. I couldn't think. I couldn't breath. My fists clenched so hard I snapped the bones of my hand. 300 hundred miles away a village was battered on a cool, calm day by waves the sizes of houses, sweeping away homes, taking lives. 90 miles west, a house with a small fire, nearly contained by the courageous efforts of the townsfolk roared into flames, a horrid wind guiding the inferno from building to building, consuming all it touched. A light wind in a town 100 miles west suddenly and senselessly turned into a tornado that glided through the place, leaving destruction in its wake.
My power poured out of me in my senseless, mindless rage.
From that same room, I asked the spirits of the earth how long it had been since I had tread on the rough stone of their earth outside my tower. In voices of gravel and stone, they replied, "Forty of the apes years."
Forty years! Coherence had become a thing of the past, forgotten in the rage I felt. One thing drew my eye. A pack. A dagger resting on the table. Dishes as if a meal had been eaten there recently.
My rage cooled. It didn't disappear. It could never disappear until what was to be done was done. A smile crept across my face though. The rage turned cold. No longer did I blindly lash out. I knew what was to be done. I knew I was going to do it, nothing in the world would stop me. Nothing.
I felt that this room itself was as good a place as any to start. I closed the coffin lid and pulled the comfiest of chairs from the table and put it in a shadowed corner, the velvet brought memories of my empire. And I waited.
How long, I do not know. Why, I'm not sure, only I felt there was a reason to, and my years had taught me my instincts were wise enough to be trusted here.
I waited.
Time mattered not anymore. Three hours at most. Then he walked into the room.
He was a slightly tall man, especially for an elf. His blond hair coming disheveled to his ears. He wore an open jacket of green silk over a deep read shirt, it's collar like one of a dressed shirt. A harness slung across his chest contained daggers that by their shape and position were meant for throwing his pants were the same color as his jacket, though made of leather. Slung along one shoulder was a case that bore the emblem of the nearest kingdom that clinked and jingled with riches.
A smile crept across my face as I recognized Tanarus. He worked for the group of adventures against me.
As the door slammed suddenly behind him. and I leaned forward, my face barely visible in the flickering shadows, he rudely did not return the smile.
"Hey, Tary, how's it been." The flowed through the sentence like poison through a stream, dangerous and warm.
The man's reply came in the sound of a series of noises akin to a cat being gutted using another cat that happened to be on fire. He fell to the ground and backed up against the door, his eyes damn near glazed over in the kind of terror a deer feels when cornered by about 15 cougars. At the edge of a cliff. On fire.
I stood from my chair, scooped up the man by the front of his shirt, and promptly, with the help of some charming little spells I made to hurt that whole, "Mages are weak" stereotype, slammed him against the door so hard that the 6 inches of wood cracked, or perhaps just some of his vertebra, and he began bleeding from a nasty little bump on his head.
"Now Tar Tar, I understand I've been asleep for awhile, but do you mind telling me just exactly what has become of my kingdom in my absences? My armies? The thousands of people bending to my every whim? My devote followers?" I said, my voice damn near sweet, slamming hum against the wall again. The door was starting to break, "You can either do that your mind and this wall are going to be sharing a very personal and intricate link. And believe me, young Tary, I really would love either or."
The man gasped for breath as he spoke. I tell ya, the fear is nice and all, but damn sometimes does it make it hard to get things done. "They are go go gone... Disbanded, fled, I dunno. They s-sent me here to watch in case.. case you.. case you." He was crying now, the tears flowing down his face and dripping on the arm that held me.
I almost felt pity. He was doing what he thought was right, was just, and yet, he was going to die for trying to help others. Besides almost making me have pity, it also cheered me up immensely. It was like a nice ray of sunshine on a cold cloudy day, or a murder in a happy town. Whichever simile you may prefer.
I slammed him against the wall again, his collar bone snapped. "You should feel lucky, Tanarus. You see, you and all your friends are going to find out what happens to people who go against me so. Against the code. I don't have time to plan your demise, so I won't kill you." My face was inches away from his, and I was staring into those eyes.
He nearly fainted from relief. "So.. you're letting me go?" His voice cracking, his breathing fast.
"No......." My eyes joined the smile on my lips, "I'm going to show you how what you did to me feels." The coffin cracked open, and I grabbed the man's coat with one hand and shoved his broken back with the other and with a throw, I tossed him in. I walked up, slammed the coffin shut. A whisper of will and a ruin drawn in the air bound it shot.
His voice came through as in echoed cry. "What, what are you doing?!" it was nearly a whimper.
"You're learning what it's like in there, sitting, waiting, for 40 years. After that I'll let you out." I laughed all the way as I left my ruined tower, into the raining dark night, into my broken empire, to find my reckoning within the kingdoms of light.
Alright, that's it for the day, but for the next 3 days I will be writing one block such as this.
Lore:
The Races of the Realm Part 1
Humans: The classic human, lives about 70 years. Colors range through the spectrum from black as night to paler than the moon. They make up the predominant number of people, and in many nations not touched by the code, and the evil nations, they are the bottom caste of people.
Elves:
A race that can live up to 700 hundred years based on their slow metabolism. They are nearly unnoticeable shorter than humans, have pointed ears, take longer to develop, speak their own tongue and common, and are one tier up from them. They are generally fairer, with pale skin and blond and sometimes even white hair. As they age, their pupils eventually disappear. They always look young and this is one of the only ways to ascertian their ages.
Aestier:
Creatures of magic. They're humanoid, commonly a foot taller than the average human, with gray skin, ranging from near white to near black, black hair, sharp features, and an intense aptitude for magic. Their average life span is a millennial, and their aging can be seen by the outward signs of magic they generate based on the personal magic used by the Aestier. They are the nobility, and speak an old old tongue, often confused with the mutters and chants of magic speak, likely due to the fact that it is derived from it. They are very rare, as to conceive is an argous task, especially to the fluttering wills and whims of the Aestier people. They are often arrogant in their power. The lead character, Kenadri, is one of this race.
Alright, for all the people asking what the hell is with the lore seciton, this is kind of a way for me to inform you about the story. And, as people who might have read my conversation with Fasty, give me a chance to figure out stuff about my world. Races isn't done, this is just part 1.
Expect to see this with every story post.
Now please, for the love of...
Wait, lemme get the attention of the people who stopped reading.
Then SHE LICKED THE WHIPPED CREAM OFF WHILE THE GUYS MADE OUT IN THE OTHER ROOM!
Alright, now that you're all here, please for the love of god post a reply, if you loved it, hated it, it was ok, whatever. Seriously, I live off replies. It's what keeps me writing from day to day.
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