by GameMaster » February 23rd, 2008, 1:29 pm
Chaos.
The Heavenly Guards had gathered all of the higher priests into the Atrium of the Palace, where they were reinforced by the Royal Guard. Or at least, what was left of the Royal Guard. Many had fallen during the night when the Vampire Lord had shown himself, breaking-no, shattering the line that those loyal soldiers had held for two whole days now. It was high noon, but the usually bright sun was over-cast by a thick layer of clouds. Clouds that had not been there minutes before.
The air was tinged with the sharp smell of fear, and the muttering of prayers to Pellor melded together in Uther's ears to become a mindless babble, praying for the Sun-God to return to them, to drive away this darkness that the vampires had wrought. Uther closed his eyes.
The vampires had never shown themselves in sunlight, and years of experience told him that the bright rays of Pellor would burn the demons where they stood, but Uther was no longer so sure. During the fight last night, when dawn had arrived, the vampires had retreated. As the light broke onto them, they fled into the burnt-out houses of the city, fleeing from the light of the sun. They had run, but even has the Royal Guard put out a great cheer that had lifted Uther's heart, his eyes, sharp despite his age, picked out a figure, standing by the gate to the city. Darkness seemed to swirl out from him, sucking the very colour out of the city around him. As the light moved across the ground, it hit him, illuminating dark robes and a long, gnarled staff.
No fire, no holy death burst from the heavens. And Uther was worried. If a vampire could survive the direct rays of dawn, how strong would it be in this heavily under-cast sky?
His thoughts were interrupted by a young man whose pale features designated him as from the north of the kingdom. Barely more than a boy, he bowed, and told Uther that he was summoned by the king.
King Fallab III was not far, a make-shift throne-room having been constructed in one of the side rooms of the atrium. Surrounded by Royal Guard and the wizard Elsar at his left, his unbowed figure in itself made a statement; he was not afraid.
"Uther! It is good to see that you are well. Many friends have died this day."
Uther genuflected, and kissed his brother's hand. "How may I serve the Crown, Your Majesty?"
The king's face became serious. "You are right, there is little time. Very little time."
He turned from Uther, and looked out one of arrow-slits onto the abandoned city below. When he spoke, his voice was bleak, and weary.
"This war... is too much for us. We are a great nation, but this is beyond us. The Vampire Lord may not be a match for your faith, but he doesn't need to be; he can wreck everything around us, and then starve us to death. Even with our advantage during the day, we cannot hold him off at night. I fear that... soon, this city will be laid to waste, and that then he will turn his eyes north. Loruel will be able to hold them for a while, but even then... my people will be dead, or slaves to this demon." He sighed, and continued.
"There is only one way to defeat him. We cannot do it alone. We need help, but none of our neighbours are far-sighted enough to see that he will turn on them the moment he is done with us. This why I have summoned you here." The king turned, and his steady gaze met Uther's pale eyes.
"You must use the ninth passage, and get help from another world."
Uther started. "Your Majesty... why would a nation from another world seek to aid us?"
The king gave him a hard stare. "I do not seek armies. I need heroes. Men of great strength, of magic, of faith. An army could not defeat the Vampire Lord, as we saw at Nalvega, when the 6th Army was ...murdered by his power. We need heroes, men of great power. There is a world where magic is far stronger than here, where men are tested harder. You know it. It is my royal command that you go there, and bring heroes back here to combat this demon. I can only hope that you get back here in-"
The king was interrupted by a chorus of blood-curdling screams. Blood sprayed and the air was full of shouting. Smashing was heard, as if something enormous was beating the very walls of the palace down.
"Go!" The king ordered.
Uther began praying.
"And good luck, little brother." With those last words, the king and his royal guard walked into the atrium, into that cauldron of screams.
A single thought was remaining before Pellor would move him from this world, into the other, creating a portal of his faith. That thought, that prayer, on hold, Uther peeked into the Atrium to see what had happened.
Only six figures remained, and even has he watched, the crown-prince fell under the flaming blade of an enormous demon. The horned creature, hissing, bit into the chest of the prince, hot blood spilling out onto its face.
It whirled its blade again, but suddenly stopped as if held back by some superior force.
On the far side of the demon was another creature, equally horrible. With six metallic legs, it was enormous, and entirely indiscernible. It was as if some horrible alchemy experiment had gone wrong, leaving this wreckage behind. It was almost perfectly still, and if its bug-like head wasn't following the flaming demon's movements, Uther would have assumed it was destroyed.
In between them was the one who had stopped the demon. When his eye's fell onto the small figure between the two demonic giants, his heart almost stopped. Robed in black, its face hooded, it was the same figure Uther had seen before. The black staff was held directly in front of him, pointed slightly forwards and up, a seemingly innocuous gesture, but one that radiated danger and power.
"Give me the pendant." His voice was low and threatening.
The king and Elsar stood behind a magical shield whose force Uther could feel from his stand-point.
"Give me the pendant!"
"There is no pendant." The king's voice was still strong, with no sign of strain.
"Don't play stupid with me, Fallab. I can find it's location from your bones when I'm done with you."
"You will never control its power, and neither will your lord!"
"You mean Anghel." The dark figures voice seemed almost amused.
"Well... if you do not have the pendant, I'll at least have your soul." His voice drawled out the last word, and as he finished he gestured with his free hand, with launched a dark spiral of energy at the shield, shattering it in a single blow and plunging into the chest of Elsar, before tearing out, leaving a hole in his chest.
In the last moment, the king cried out "No!†his unbreakable calm broken for the first and last time.
The Spiral of darkness retreated into the dark mage's hand, and Uther finished his spell, tears streaming down his cheek.
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It was as if there was a shimmering pool of light in front of him. He stepped into it and was suddenly falling, falling through time, through swirling mixes of colour and stars; worlds. When he finally landed, he fell to the ground, barely able to breathe. He was just outside of a city, one dominated by an enormous palace that rivalled anything he had seen.
He did not know it, but that was Titan Palace, and he was just outside the gates.