Fantasy Fiction Vignettes

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Scenes from Illiara

  • 134th of Nemulum, 313 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    “Lady abbess!” Leça called out across the warbling din in lashed-together hope. “Lady abbess! Please, we must speak!”

    The faces in their immediate vicinity turned to show only withering irritation. The liturgy which they had wormed their way into had only just let out, filtering from the worship-hall onto the deck of a level on Peyr’s ziggurat that Leça had never before tread. Those around were draped in fine robes, and many carried with them axes of rarified iron. Leça, by grimy contrast, felt fully disarmed. In this moment they were still among the people of Peyr, as they always had been, but at this great height they felt themselves a grating force.

    They could not afford to let that feeling keep them from their intent, though, and so they pushed through it as they pushed through the throng itself. Their quarry passed into view only momentarily, the high abbess ascending a staircase to her chambers as she waved behind to the onlooking devotees in vacant pleasantry.

    “Highness!” Leça’s cries continued well after it was clear that they would not be heard. “Lady Abbess!

    The hand to stop Leça’s advance was precise, delicate and clad in a ring of sharpened iron. It pressed into their sternum with a nauseating force. “What business have you with the high abbess?”

    “I-” Leça felt themselves crumbling as their momentum fell out from under them. “There are things that I know, things that the abbess must know.”

    The figure that Leça spoke to was highborn, undoubtably, her angular features blooming from the pressed garb of a conservator priestess. “There are few things the high abbess of reclamation is not abreast of.”

    Leça found themselves stuttering, as though the air had suddenly gone rotten. “I’m sure that’s true, but even still. I must speak to her. I must.”

    “You are not of a class to approach her eminence. You draw attention by your mere presence here.” The conservator lead Leça over to a secluded corner, ringed in potted trees. “But perhaps there is another way to get your message to her. I have the ear of the High Abbess, on occasion.”

    Leça wavered a moment, untrusting, “If I were to share with you what I have seen, you would pass it along to her?”

    “Yes.” The conservator’s words dripped out, “My faith demands that I would, if it truly is a matter deserving of the high abbesses attention.”

    Leça drew in long breath, sighing out in staccato exhalation. “I am Leça Skhadova, I live in the third ward of the base. When this story has been told, from me to you and from you to the Abbess, please come and find me. My heart will not rest until I know that the wrong I am to share with you has been rectified.”

    “Leça, my name is Niolett Glarka.” The conservator placed a cloying hand on Leça’s. “You have my word, I will come to find you at your home.”

    Leça nodded, though the certainty they had hoped for moldered away, as they launched into the tale of their people’s abandonment and Marek’s loss for the priestess Niolett.

  • 157th of Nemulum, 313 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    The conservator was an unassuming man, and not one that Leça recognized from the understreets. He was square-jawed, with hair that would have been described as shaggy if it had been allowed to grow without cropping. His robes were kept well, free of mud, though there was a fraying near the boots. Leça was of a height against this man, and yet could not help but feel the elevation of his station against theirs.

    “I’m sorry, I don’t understand. Can you please explain what is going on?” Leça spoke from a disconcerted position at the doorway of their home, their sister fuming behind.

    “The whole affair is really quite clear.” The conservator spoke in flat, dripping tones. “It has been determined that your faith would benefit from time spent in penance. I am here to escort you to the the…”

    “You won’t!” Alisja burst out, pushing past Leça and stumbling the conservator back onto the shaded street, “You can’t take them, I won’t let you!”

    Eyes from all around shifted to the scene as Leça hurried out to join them.

    The conservator, still yet to have given his name, placed two fingers in his mouth to give a short whistle. At his call, a sudden number of figures made themselves known from around corners.

    “You’d do best to come quickly and quietly.” The conservator motioned back to the doorway, where Leo and Kasha had snuck up and now stood paralyzed. “There is no need for your whole family to be dragged out all for your consortion with open blasphemers.”

    “Alisja,” Leça spoke calmly against their sister’s roiling fury. “Back off. Go to the kids, to father. I’ll handle this. It will be okay.”

    Alisja tore back and forth, between the home they had shared as a family and them now stepping away.

    The growing crowd of conservators enveloped Leça, hands reaching out to grasp their arm roughly. They were legion, indeterminable from one another, and Leça was swept up by the force of their misbelonging in the district as it pushed them all out wordlessly.

  • 29th of Gnielm, 334 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    The intervening hours were lost to Mepka. She saw nothing. She felt only swaying, an intense pressure on her joints, and spite. At moments she knew she was struggling, but it was as though she was occupying someone else’s body going through those motions. Her indigence only landed her retributive blows from unseen hands.

    She came back to clarity in a cell. It was a small space, still and cold save for the pulsing of her pain. Wooden walls around her bowed, and behind their cracks the swamp threatened with the weight of pressure-packed clay. Her hands were hitched behind her in a binding tie, holding her to a slumped seat on the ground. She pulled against the cord, fruitless and indeterminate.

    A panic welled up in her, a beating of her heart that she thought could only be quelled by calling her word. When she tried, she found that the gag lodged in her mouth prevented her from forming it, the syllables garbled out of coherence. Still, she could not help but rage against her binds. 

    She thought she must be at the very center of Peyr, so deeply set that her wounds formed a heart for the place. Before this time it had not occurred to her that there were cells to be found in Peyr, where the surrounding muck slavered at the step of exiles. She had never once in her life longed for the swamp, not like she did now. The swamp she could fight, could silence. This place, though, this was silence.

    Sounds of scraping and shuffling behind the walls transmuted Mepka’s fury into a wrenching dread of the unknown horrors that awaited her. The door could only groan at the entrance of her father.

    “Mepka,” Irec started, lingering in the doorframe, “Oh…”

    In her unconsciousness she had been stripped, the comforting wrap of her work clothes replaced by an oversized jute shift. It left her feeling unsettlingly bare, helpless against the elements of her surroundings. The pitiful sight of her had drained some nerve that Irec had collected prior to his arrival.

    “They, they say you are not yourself.” He spoke to her, not registering that she could not speak back. “I just don’t understand why you would do the things they say. I’ve told them, we are a happy family. I just don’t understand how it could all go this wrong.”

    Mepka’s eyes went to incredulity, that after so long this would be his tack. She tried to yell, but again it was stifled by the hemp tie filling her mouth. Irec winced in reaction to the gurgled cry, and he stepped across the threshold to approach his daughter. For all the animosity she felt towards him, his closeness drew equal shades of comfort and shame to her.

    “Your mother is safe.” Irec filled the silence as he reached around her head to work out the knot in the gag. “She prays day and night for you.”

    Mepka felt hot tears welling up at the thought of her mother, water pouring from her lips in the last moments that they had been together, and for her crying she was glad that her father was leaned over her and would not see. 

    Irec removed the gag with the great care of a healer’s hands. Mepka wanted to pour out her anger, but instead she felt a sudden and sickening desire of care overtake her.

    “Father,” The word grated on the stiffness from her jaw, “Please help me. Please, take me back to the cabin. I can’t be here, don’t let the abbots get to me.”

    Irec spoke quietly, as though to himself, “The abbots- you have to understand dear- things can’t be as simple as they should be right now.”

    Mepka felt that dread begin to percolate again in the back of her stomach, some of that acridity bubbling up into her throat. “What does that mean?”

    “Well, and this isn’t to say I-” Irec stumbled rigidly over his thoughts, “It’s just, sometime, when an illness strikes-”

    “I’m not sick.” Mepka’s voice trembled, “I’m not sick. You need to help me, I need your help. Please, untie me. Please.”

    “I can’t- I can’t do that.” Irec put a hand on his daughter’s cheek. “The abbots will be in soon. You need to comply with them.”

    “I- What? No, you can’t leave me with them.” The thought of it all was too much to bear once more.

    Irec descended deeper into a hard coolness that he kept on hand, the same look he took on at temple. “Answer their questions. Being honest will only help to cure you, to set your spirit back to right. And, when this is all over, you’ll have a place back home in Peyr. Anzaw has sworn that to me himself.”

    “You’d leave me with them? You’d leave me to this place that I hate?” Mepka felt a deep outpouring from within herself, “I hate you!”

    She began to struggle against the binds once more, yelling heartfelt loathings at her father. Irec, for his own part, deflated back into a seated position on the ground out of her reach.

    Mepka felt her heart tug out for him, for her family, for understanding, like a singular cord on her soul.

    “They say that you have allowed some demon into your heart. I could not believe that my daughter would do such a thing.” Irec’s mask of stoicism had fully fallen away. “I don’t know what to believe anymore.”

    “So that’s it? You would take their superstition as enough to see me hurt like this? To let them force mother and I away from you?” Mepka’s voice strung so tense that she feared it might shatter.

    “I don’t know. I just don’t know.” Irec shook his head violently, “This break inside you, I just don’t know how it could have come on so suddenly.”

    Mepka felt the pressure inside her well up at his words, at his impossible lack of awareness, at his misunderstanding of who she was and the life she had lived, and she felt that last cord snap.

    “I don’t care,” The words fell out of her mouth in a mumble, realization striking a stunning blow to her core. “I don’t care for you.”

    With its passing across her lips, her acknowledgment of that truth, she felt her anger slip away. Even it had been care, in it’s own perverted way. The disassociation sent her adrift, blank and floating through what was left to come.

    “This place,” She felt herself smile, a hazy manic smile, “I am not of this place, it’s over here for me.”

    “What?” Irec was set off guard by her altered demeanor, “What does that mean Mepka? Of course you are of Peyr, it is your home.”

    “Did you really not see it?” Mepka asked in dispassionate tone, as though she were speaking about someone else. “Are you happy, father?”

    “I-” Irec ran tense fingers back through a thick bramble of hair, “I have lived well. I have done what was expected of me.”

    Mepka’s smile turned sad, not to the hate that had left her but to pity. “You’re blind. You don’t care either, but you can’t admit it.”

    Irec drew in breath as though to speak, but could not find the words before Mepka’s drone continued. 

    “You put me into this world, at the mercy of the abbots and their conservators.” She stared ahead blankly, putting a fine point on her newfound relinquishment with a catharsis that had eluded her, “They’ll kill me, for what I have. Or else, they’ll see me waste away. They’ve already broken me, it will not be difficult for them. And then, when I have faded fully and there is nothing left of me, I will be free.”

    Irec bit back tears that fell from his face like stone. “That’s not true. I know you can’t see it, but it’s not. The abbots- They’ll get you the help you need. They will.”

    Mepka signed in high resignation. “You should go. Mother will need you.”

    Irec was unpracticed in weeping, and so his face screwed up in a particularly ugly way as he sniffed away the tears and nodded. He thumbed the gag he had removed so that they could speak, his hands moving apart from his mind.

    “Goodbye.” She said simply, believing with every part of herself that these to be the last words she would speak to him in her life.

    She could see the layers building back up around Irec as he lifted himself up to standing once more, dusting himself off from the grime of the dungeon. He leaned forwards and she loosened her jaw, preparing to take the gag once again. Instead, her father kissed her forehead for a long moment.

    Mepka watched him walk out, shutting the door behind him. He was gone, and she knew in that moment that he would not return to her.

    Her wrists chafed against the hempen rope that held them. She opened her mouth tentatively, as though she were not sure she was as alone as she was. She wondered an intrusive wonder, if this had been intentional or if it was another of Irec’s many oversights. No answer would come to her.

    She moored her focus back onto her body, her lashed wrists. She spoke next in quiet plea, not to any yielding ear nor even to the origin of her power itself, so far away as it was at the edge of the plane, but rather to the wellspring within herself. “Ahtr’ul

    Ahtr’ul Ahtr’ul Ahtr’ul” She incanted, feeling her emptiness crystallize into intangible magic. Her wrists passed through their binds as though they were no longer a part of the same world. She fell forwards, catching herself on hands and knees. Her heart suddenly began to pound, and she prepared herself to run.

  • 157th of Nemulum, 313 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    Leça was drawn through the swamp, under shamed sunset light.

    “The temple isn’t so bad.” The conservator set to escort them to their penance had introduced himself as Irec. His robes were well cared for, though they fit a bit too snugly, and he wore his axe over his back rather than gripping it in his hand. He was a clean-cut man, and in his voice he carried a stone steadiness. “It’s a place to reflect, to stay close to what conservatorship is meant to protect.”

    “I’m sure it is,” Leça replied with an unpracticed disingenuity.

    Looking back over their shoulder, they could see Peyr in the middle distance.

    It had been so long since they had left the city they had almost forgotten the shape of it. Square corners, rising up irrefutably high from the ground below. Ziggurat layers stacked on layers, each pressing down on those below. A peak, gilded by sunlight, which was kept a great distance out of reach from the base that they had known so intimately.

    Leça had spent much time watching from Peyr, but it was only now that they had been forced to it’s exterior that they could recognize the daunting form of it’s fullness.

    And yet, when they looked at the whole they could not help but recognize something else as well. There was movement, mass movement, along the ground and on the platforms of the lowest level of the city. They saw the people of the understreets, their people, as they gathered and conversed and cared for one another. Last of all, they saw watchers on towers that they themselves had tread, shouldering responsibility for the protection of their family from the dangers that they were now exposed to.

    “The people at the temple, what are they like?” They asked suddenly, after a long beat of silence.

    Irec seemed surprised by the question. “Most are from the understreets. They seem to stick together, to get through their time there. They’re much like you, I’d expect.”

    “These people are the last of all peoples.” Leça remembered, as the sunset expired behind them and they made their way through cool night towards this new community of penitents, “And to endure this life, one must hold on to a love for one’s own.”

  • 46th of Nemulum, 257 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    “There was a god here, once.” Adysl recited, feeling out across the wallstones of the crumbling and emptied temple, the last of Myarsa, “I know this to be true.”

    “You have such faith, conservator.” Kadius basked in an awe that radiated disquietingly towards his precious charge. His axe was still heavy in hand from their escortment across the swamp. He had brandished it at the penitents that usually flooded the temple, picking away at its intruding roots, and had not seemed to have had compunctions about using it if they had disobeyed his command to leave.

    “I only hope that I will live up to that faith that we share.” Adysl gave a tense smile as he knelt and hung his head in preparation. His prayers began in consecuted ease, a practiced measure of reaching past his heart with his mind and out into the world. He felt the weight of the stones, weathering of feet long past along the floor. He felt others, worshiping ancestors, of a caliber so different from any that were alive now. He felt what it was like for the temple to have been whole.

    It was a space of half memory, those that built it present only in echoes. To the solid space where they had been, a murky depth flowed in from without. Muddy water blotted out the faces forming at the back of Adysl’s thoughts, and each time their prayers would mirror his own to clarify into the name of the god that was their salvation there was instead only a choked gurgling.

    Before Adysl knew what was happening, he knew that these people were drowned and their deity with them, and in that moment he himself was retching up swampwater. The heaves were deeply rooted in his body, acutely shattering him back into himself.

    Kadius was at his side in an instant, hammering his back to get him to cough the stuff out. The positions they took placed his axe to hang over the nape of Adysl’s neck, and he could not help but look up at it’s hallowed iron edge with a subconscious moment of fear.

    “Blast,” he spat, the last of the fetid liquid dribbling down his chin, “I saw them, I almost had it’s name.”

    “You saw the Myarsans?” The concern Kadius showed suddenly broke way for a returned reverence and a strange sense of relief. He moved the axe away from the now-proven priest, as though it’s placement had not been intentional, as he helped him back up to stand at a full height. “The high abbots will rejoice, this is a breakthrough!”

    “Aye. A breakthrough, certainly.” Adysl assented, doing his best to keep looking pleased with himself despite the newfound knowledge that that name and all the salvation it would bring was just out of his sight, beyond the veil of drowning.

  • 151st of Gnielm, 336 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    Thousands on thousands of raindrops rocketed into the swamp, the sounds of their stormed impacts overlaid in Gavril’s ears by the fatal creaking of the wood undergirding of Peyr.

    “There!” Mellema screamed down the sluiceway, pointing to water pilling on acute water as they were nearly swept away by the rush, “Clog!”

    Gavril wiped away the soaked and matted hair that had turned against him in obscuring his vision, to see that the massive drainage had seen a tumble of lodged wood and leaves, mud and muck and moss.

    Mellema set their wide form as a rock against the spray, a wake forming around them as they held to the ridge of the gutter with all their might. They struggled to reach a hand in, to pull at the edges of the mass, but any bit they were able to move by manual force was inconsequential to the pressure of the whole. “There’s too much! It’s gonna burst, we have to turn back!”

    Gavril’s eyes turned down to see the silhouette of the sloped city below, and in the rain-hazed tableau he swore he could see the shapes of it’s people flowing across it’s platforms to ward against the storm. “We can’t let it!”

    In that moment of desperation, Gavril reached outside of himself to a place he had not dared to acknowledge in the many years since he had ingratiated himself into Peyr. He felt the swamp, and he felt it’s monarch in their sick satisfaction, and finally he felt himself facing down this threat.

    The skin of his arm began to slough away as it turned to wet clay under the rain, reforming and reforming itself as he pointed to the tangle of unnatural nature blocking the sluiceway.

    P’iur R’ud” He spoke these words of power only to the rain, and at his command the dam burst outwards in shards of spiteful wood.

    The water roared down it’s intended flow, a great wave gathered just to the point before it could devastate.

    Gavril breathed heavy, suddenly feeling the weight of his body as earth reformed into flesh.

    Mellema looked to him with eyes held wide and punctuated by rain or disbelieving tears, he could not tell which.

    And by his swamp-birthed hand, the city was saved from flood.

  • 29th of Gnielm, 334 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    All that Mepka had left in this world was the sound of the door coming unbarred. Leaping from her crouched position, she thrust through with a crack and a crunch.

    Niolette cried out in high pitch as Mepka knocked her to the side. Not waiting for the shock to wear off from her captor’s reedy features, she dashed up the ladder through the hatch and into a display room of intricate stonework and relics recovered from the ruins of Myarsa. She pushed past a dividing pillar into a hall. Her vision caught a dead-end right into a sitting room, fire crackling menacingly from lit braziers. She started left towards a dinner table crammed by food and around a blind corner into an adjacent hallway.

    “Wretch!” Screams pitched back off Mepka’s tail as Niolette crested from the buried cell. “You insolent bitch!”

    A worry darted across Mepka’s mind that Anzaw, infernal man that he was, would surely know that something was amiss now, but she had to put that thought out as she clattered down the long and labyrinthine halls. She passed a commode, a bedroom with windows showing an impossibly high view over the swamp and the city below. She hung left and quickly right, moving over a cabinet with a clatter. Niolette was still out of sight behind Mepka, but her fuming chase could be heard through her shrieks and snarls.

    An oncoming draft broke the choking stagnation of the air, and a pang of hope washed over Mepka as she knew the exit must be close. She found it at the end of the next corner-turn, a three way intersection of a foyer, and with it the dark and waiting silhouette of Anzaw. She had only ever seen him in the imposing figure of his armor, and now in draping robes he looked somehow skeletal. In his hands was a ceremonial axe, the swing of which she barely managed to dodge with the thought that it looked almost identical to the one her father used to carry.

    “Fuck,” she let slip, stumbling back into the untreaded hallway as Anzaw bared a grimace towards her.

    “Ah, there you are, husband.” Niolette caught up from the path Mepka had previously escaped along.

    Mepka’s eyes darted between the two of them, and then to the open entryway behind Anzaw as the three squared off.

    “Ah-ah-ah,” Niolette’s tongue clucked across the roof of her mouth, tracing her fingers together in a sickening gesture before releasing them to point at the exit, “Pel’h Q’ot”.

    A shimmering wall of billows light apparated to cover the way out. Mepka felt in her bones that to pass through it would spell death.

    “We have further answers to pull from you.” Anzaw grunted, lunging forwards with the axe in an upwards swipe that slashed across Mepka’s breast and shoulder in searing pain. He pivoted quickly to come down for a heavy blow, but Mepka managed to lunge sideways and the momentum of the swing lodged the axe in the wood of the floor between them.

    Sprinting back and away in the moment that the weapon was indisposed, Mepka burst through a set of double doors into an armory, heavy weapons presented in honored fashion all around. She snatched the nearest sword, but its unfamiliar weight gave her no comfort. Anzaw rounded the corner behind her, Niolette in tow, and with him came an aura of malice so potent that it was almost physical. 

    “You’ve nowhere to go. Submit, child.” Anzaw gloomed, his presence a testament to dread that Mepka’s wits could only barely hold together under.

    “Drop that silly little lizard-sticker and we’ll handle this as civilized peoples should,” Nicolette added from behind, her face creeping into a smile while retaining all its sickening fury.

    Mepka looked behind her, into a dark corner and another interior door. She looked to the figures closing in. She looked to her side, and saw through the thick foggy glass of the window the vastness of the Aether with only open air and miles of swamp between. In a flash she had dropped the sword and gone diving for the window. She felt the slam against her head and shoulder, the cutting of the Abbot’s home as the glass shattered, and the freefall that sent her out of reach of the Abbot’s choked cries.

    Ahtr’ul” she plead between her corporality and the impending impact as she sailed from the highest point in the city. She felt her entire body fade for the barest moment as she impacted and tumbled down a stairway of wooden planks. Bruised, but alive, she scrambled back to her feet. From above, a sudden wash of green nearly struck her, instead causing the solid staircase that she had tumbled down to fall to horrid decay in an instant.

    “Return at once!” Anzaw bellowed, overtoned by Niolette’s incoherent cries of vexation. For a moment Mepka felt her limbs go rigid, compelled by some unheard word of Anzaw’s demanding prowess, to stay put, before breaking free and stumbling down the stairs as fast she could.

    From this high perspective, the squared levels of the ziggurat city of Peyr laid themselves out in front of Mepka. Wide, ramped walkways below buzzed with the press of the populace, though here amongst the peak the streets had a more open feel to them. Mepka sliced down through the district, feet slapping against the muggworn wood. 

    Conservators from the highest noble families stood agape as she blew past, their rotten peace broken by the sight of her so ragged and frantic. She muscled around them, their judgement a repulsion.

    “Stop her!” Niolette’s cry rang out from some distance behind, “Stop that demon, in the name of all that is holy!”

    The hands around her turned forceful, but before they could restrain her she hand shoved through. Another crowd loomed up from the ramp ahead, this one more alert to her predicament and their role as her adversaries. Darting right, Mepka hooked over the platform’s railing and slid across the roof of a building sticking out from a lower layer.

    The city here was more familiar to her, below the uppermost reaches. She dropped down the side of what appeared to be a small home, the dull throb of her injuries flaring with her landing.

    Two deputized citizens appeared in the street ahead of her, and from the first moment she met their eyes Mepka knew they were foul in intention. Backing up and turning on her heels to sprint, Mepka launched herself down the alleyway behind her and underneath the weighty overhang of the level above. The dark opened up to her, embracing her as she ran between shadowed market stalls and folk of mundane business.

    She strafed around a corner and for the barest of moments, she knew that she had broken her pursuer’s sightline. Focus daring around wildly for the next escape, she landed instead on a figure frozen in the middle of the way, a woman leaning heavy on a walking stick. Mepka strode to her quick through the flowing crowd, grabbing her gruffly by the upper arm and pulling her though the door of the closest building. The sound of boots thudding on wood passed, as Mepka and Estrid stood just inside of what was apparently a weaver’s shop, staring at each other.

    Estrid, for her part, hung bewildered in her daughter’s still-clutched grasp, mouth agape.

    “I’m leaving.” Mepka was blunt, motioning only to the spar of wood that Estrid had been using to hold herself up. “I’ll need my staff in the swamp. Give it to me.”

    “I- I don’t-” Estrid’s mind clearly raced behind her eyes, “You’re on the run from the Abbots. I should call them, I should take you back.”

    Mepka clamped a hand over her mother’s mouth. The way Estrid had spoke made the words limp, more automated response than real threat, but Mepka would not chance any further betrayal. There was a moment of surprised pushback from Estrid, jolting her to the present moment from some other space she had been occupying in her mind. That shift in awareness settled on a resignment that belied clear sight of her daughter’s intention.

    From her held position, Estrid proffered the quarterstaff. Mepka took it, releasing her mother into a pained slump. She remembered the twang that disappointing her mother would have brought on before, but did not feel it any longer.

    She slunk out the door and onto the street again without another word, now armed with her familiar weapon. Estrid mumbled something from inside as she went, some half-hearted goodbye, but it was not loud enough to be anything to Mepka’s ears.

    She slunk quickly away, keeping her her head lowered carefully so as not to attract attention. Moving as such through Peyr’s wheezing ebbs and flows, bound for the lowest levels of the city, she found a surprising lack of conservator guardians. As she approached the edge of the shadowed undercity, she looked a quite nook. She poked out a grime hole, with just enough of a rot across its boards to allow for sight out into the exposed streets.

    Surveying, she found a rank line of conservators out searching the docks. They had the numbers on her, by far, but they were spread well out. It was clear that the message of an escapee had gotten out, but that they did not know where she was exactly. Off to the right from where she crouched a link in the chain broke to go and hassle a small group of swamp-scrapers that had not been wise enough to evacuate from the now-contested area. A path to burst through opened ahead, and Mepka could not help but indulge herself a moment to envision her escape out into the swamp through it.

    She darted out from behind the line, feeling the distance out in the open. A dark-haired man was the first to spot her, his eyes going wide as he bellowed out, “Prisoner!”

    Mepka kept for the weak point in their line, seeking to dodge their grips but unable to evade their attention any longer.

    In her last steps towards escape, she felt a rocketing impact from a figure unseen. A wiry boy, a conservator younger than she was, had slipped her view and tripped her to the ground just steps past where the force had set their barrier. Enemies raced towards, their hands outstretched for her, and her wild wild eyes met the boy’s who had taken her to the ground.

    Ahtr’ul” The word was flung off her tongue with force, and with it a pulse that rocked back any who had dared approach. Swatted, the line cowered from her display of Aether magic just long enough for her to regain her footing. 

    She was past, though they were at her heels she was past the conservators. They were a scrabbling, rabbling mass of pursuers. Still, over their din it was impossible not to hear the howls of fury that Mepka knew in an instant meant the Abbots had hooked themselves back onto her trail. The ground slammed into Mepka’s heels, sending a vibrating malevolence into her body from their chase behind.

    Her head start afforded her her life, but also the refilling of a panic that she could not measure. She spared only a glance behind, seeing that the conservators chasing after her had been scared into organized effort by their leaders, now fanning out effectively to catch her should she let up. They drove her across the last of the docks, matching her for her sprint.

    Ahead, the city gave way off a steep platform to the fen that hungered for their presence. Mepka leapt into its clutch, needing for anything other than the structure of Peyr. She carried her rush from fallen branch to belched stone, tracking overtop of the swamp as she had been practicing all her life. From behind splashes and thuds into the ground were less graceful than hers, but still the people of Peyr kept on her. They lurched forwards, through muck and moss, frictioned against the natural and unnatural fen they lived to defy.

    It was not long before her outpace levied the sounds of her pursuers calls quieter and quieter. She was out of sight, but still they rang in her ears, and so for hours she refused to let up. She felt her lungs burning, her heart beating heavier that it had ever beaten before.

    It was her view out over the treeline that eventually slowed her, her final destination coming into view. She set her pace over the distance, and felt her feet sink further into the muck at each lingering step. She tried to extricate herself, and found panic return to her as pulling her leg up and free revealed legion hands of mire scratching her back down into the very center of the plane.

  • 34th of Gnielm, 328 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    There were no beds, outside of Peyr. Not as far as Jagos knew, at least. 

    He and Mirdel slept on planks hoisted up into low marshland trees, for as long as the boughs would hold them. When they were intimate it was standing calf-deep in mud more often than not. They’d lean against their slobsled, the one that Mirdel had stolen and piled everything they owned onto, and they’d take each other rough.

    That’s what made this such a treat, rolling around in feather-filled luxury. It wasn’t even a particularly nice mattress, frayed and clumpy, but the overbearing layers of blankets reminded Jagos of what few memories he had of his childhood before the exile. It was nice for him to lay Mirdel’s lithe body down onto a soft surface, to see the way that the disguise of a conservator’s robes draped across his partner.

    “We can’t do this,” Mirdel let out in a giggling hush, “What if someone comes home?”

    “That’s not gonna happen.” Jagos mumbled into Mirdel’s neck as he kissed.

    Mirdel’s back arched. “They could be back sooner than you think though, and what then?”

    “Relax, they’re not going to come back,” Jagos continued nonchalantly, “They’re dead.”

    “What?” Mirdel sat himself up, pushing out from underneath Jagos. “What do you mean they’re dead?”

    “They’re dead, so they aren’t gonna come back,” Jagos furrowed an exasperated brow  “I don’t know any other way to say it.”

    “Did you kill them?” Mirdel’s eyes darted around the foreign bedroom.

    “No, fucking- no, I didn’t kill them, why do you think that’s something I’d do? I was scouting out, trying to find an easy mark, and I saw them fall off the ledge of the city.” Jagos pushed themselves up to standing, off of the bed.

    “You were going to fuck me in a dead mans bed?” Mirdel didn’t let off, “That’s revolting.”

    “It’s a bed. It’s not like he died in it, what’s the difference.” Jagos started around on irritated pacing. “Besides, we’re here to fucking rob the guy. We broke the fucking seal on respectability the moment we walked in the door.”

    Mirdel gave a scrunched look like he had smelled something foul. “Whatever. Let’s just get this over with.”

    So the two of them began to swipe what they needed. Food out of cabinets, medicines out of a small chest. A blanket that would roll up tight enough to fit in their bag.

    For a second, when he shifted quietly past the door of the home, Jagos considered walking out. Just opening that door, and walking away. He didn’t, because he knew he’d be caught. Without Mirdel he wouldn’t be able to make it back down to the swamp and even if he did he wouldn’t be able to pull the slobsled out fast enough on his own.

    He made the disguises, Mirdel picked the locks. Mirdel lit fires in the wet, he cooked. He slept, Mirdel watched, and then they switched. They needed each other, and in that need they worked to find some way to want.

  • 115th of Nemulum, 315 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    “Listen, and listen close now, Matij,” Ruzica spoke in warmth from wisdom, and felt the unequivocal attention of their grandson levied onto her words. “We are conservators, that is our role in this world, and it is quite the precious thing that we are meant to conserve.”

    “Wha is it?” Matij pushed themselves up from from sitting to a bend using both of their hands, and then straightened their back up to a wobbled standing.

    “What a very good question!” Ruzica leaned down to Matij’s level, giving her hands for the boy to grab and steady himself. She smiled and he smiled back, encouraged. “You’re lucky that your old ma-ma has seen so much, that she can tell you about these things. We conserve Old Myarsa.”

    “Wassit?” Matij’s eyes were wide, wider than Ruzica could remember ever having seen on a child.

    “Well, There is not much left of it within our reach, not much at all. Most of it has fallen below the swamp. But, before all that, before Peyr and before it really even needed to be conserved, Old Myarsa was a glorious city. Every inch of land was a part of it, the whole of the swamp. So powerful was it, it even managed to creep into the shallow edges of the aether, if you can believe such a thing!” Tales such as these flowed through Ruzica, her pitch modulating from the hush of sharing a secret to a finely crafted reverence. “It was a place made of stone, large and steady, and of iron without rust. Iron is important, quite important young one. The iron of Old Myarsa graces our conservator’s axes, to help us beat back the swamp demons!”

    Ruzica lunged forward theatrically, stomping around in mockery of the monsters outside the city as Matij squealed in delight and terror. 

    “Mother!” Khordan’s voice came from behind, startling the two of them out of their play. “Don’t tell such awful stories. We’ll never get to bed if you fill his thoughts with axes and demons.”

    Ruzica’s brow furrowed as Matij grew quiet and toddled over to his father. “It is no thing to shirk from, don’t you think the boy should know why we keep the iron?”

    “I just think there’s a softer way to explain it for him.” Khordan lifted Matij up onto his hip.

    “It’s the way of the world, son!” Ruzica was speaking more ramblingly now. “We do what we must to reach the holy temples unharmed. And one day, when Old Myarsa has been dredged up and the muck is no more, we will lay down those axes and return their iron to it’s proper place.”

    Khordan bounced Matij up and down as they spoke. “Yes, mother, I know the stories. I know that they’re important to you. I just think that it’s not a trouble worth giving him. 

    “He’s young!” Ruzica intoned with great force, “He needs to know why we do the things we do. The stories teach him. If not that, how will he live? How will he live well?”

    “Mother. Listen to me.” Khordan gave an exasperated breath, “We go to temple. We listen to the word of the high abbots. We work for the good of Peyr. We’re doing everything right. He’s being raised in a good family, he’s going to be devout. There’s no doubt about it in my mind, so all I can think when you share these things is, why burden him?”

    “Well, I don’t know about all of that.” Ruzica huffed, feeling as though she had suddenly been put quite in her dotage.

    “Just cool it with the demon talk, that’s all I ask.” Khordan turned to walk out from the room. As he did, Matij crawled up over his shoulder, keeping those wide wide eyes on his grandmother the whole time he was walked away.

  • 29th of Gnielm, 334 EA

    Peyr Myarsa

    The swamp held it’s grip on Mepka with all of it’s vast, baleful might. 

    Emerging from the heart of mire, a myriad of mephits began to hiss their way up and out all around. They scratched and clawed with finger bones of snapped boughs and ligaments of muck. Mepka swept at them in a wide arc with her staff, feeling a jagged squelching head splatter only to be replaced by a newly congealing body of dragging dread. 

    “Why are you doing this?” Mepka yanked a leg out forcibly, taking a single belabored step. “Let me go!”

    “You can not leave,” their voices called out in chittering swarm, voices layered on top of voices, “You have abandoned your home, human, and it has abandoned you. This we know. They will keep you from us no longer.”

    From behind, Mepka could hear sudden hoots and hollers, cries from her conservator pursuers underscored by the elated terror of the hunt.

    “You are ours, now as you have always been.” The voices continued to slop out as she felt a crust of earth dry and harden around her feet, her calves, her knees. “All comes to us, laid low in time.”

    Twisting in place, Mepka caught a glimpse of a stream of robed figures rushing forwards, and then suddenly stopping as they recognized the demons of their blasphemous nightmares embracing the quarry they sought.

    The wind rushed through the boughs of the trees, as though in an anticipatory snarl.

    “Herd, who follow this bait so easily.” The belching of the fen came through as a chorus of jeers. “Our heart thrums everlasting, at the center of our world. We are the name of your god. Now join it, as you so dearly wish.”

    The approach of the conservators in Mepka’s view stuttered in backpedaling fear. For one ominous moment the swamp receded, it’s water and sludge pulling down and away as the trees bent back with creaking wails. In the next, a drowning torrent raised up and rushed over them all. 

    Plunged under the spate Mepka could not see, could not come close to drawing breath. She heard the screams cut short by muffled choking, a horrid sound of flesh rent asunder by earth and water forced inside.

    She felt a sleight laxness to the earth holding her in place, the swamp legion’s focus now divided between her and the revelatory slaughter far behind her. She kicked panicked kicks, and her legs came free just in time to be tumbled through the repulsive tide as it drew out.

    The swamp’s grasp had slipped just enough for her to survive a breath longer, and under the power of her own body she began a wading sprint away. She could see the aetherline. She could see the aether, and she made for it with everything she had.

    She felt an injurious roar filter up from the ground, and knew that it was for her escape. She fled through rocks and water, evading vines reaching for her at every stride. She felt the pain of the whipping branches and knew that the others behind her felt that same pain tenfold.

    Every frantic leap and tumble drew her closer to the aether, closer to release from the horrors of this world.

    She sensed a presence behind her, on her tail. Swiveling to see it she found not a person but a hideous disembodied hand the size of a boulder, fingerflesh strewn together from clumps of moss and muck and rainwater. It reached for her, unwilling to let her go. It moved faster than it should have, the swamp shearing across itself at a greater clip than she could match in her fight forwards.

    She leapt just as it did, leapt past and into the aether, bellowing out every sheer desperate hope she had left to her in one great and instinctive word, “Ahtr’ul”!

    The hand of the swamp lunged after her, grasping for her leg, but where she slipped through the fog it collided against a misty wall of implacable conjured force. Recoiling back, the swamp pounded and beat and struggled to reach for her, but in the place she had reached with the spell she had cast the vast power of the malevolent world she had been held by all her life was rendered totally ineffectual.

    The eyes of hundreds of mephits swung to her. The forces of the Peyric conservators, dead and dying, paid her no more mind than they did in life.

    She was spent, having poured more than all of herself into the spell that saved her. She retained barely enough consciousness to crawl away, away from her life, away from her torment, as she levied her final retreat back into the depths of boundless and eternal nonexistence.