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Blackberry's Gambit - Printable Version +- ORIGIN (https://origin.boreal-nights.space) +-- Forum: IC Archives (https://origin.boreal-nights.space/forumdisplay.php?fid=50) +--- Forum: Year 5 Archives (https://origin.boreal-nights.space/forumdisplay.php?fid=55) +--- Thread: Blackberry's Gambit (/showthread.php?tid=7158) |
RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 27 2019
She dropped the stick onto the ground and pulled the chain off of it, nudging her beak underneath and letting the chain slip down onto her neck. The change was sudden and unnerving, the anxiety that had been clouding in her head since the night before now blasting on full. She could feel danger all around her, above in the sky, probably vultures, and something just ahead. And she could see the glow beginning to spread around her. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Game Master Dark - Oct 27 2019 Her rest would at first be fitful.
Now and then she would wake, the magic warning her of something passing close--overhead, perhaps, or along the opposite riverbank. But nothing drew close. In fact, from midmorning onward, as the heat began to swell and the insects' sounds to fill the air along the riverways, and gnats to dance in the heat-shimmer above the water, the ravine became a surprising bastion of peace, in Hydra. Blackberry would, in the end, get several hours of much-needed, wholly-uninterrupted sleep. @Blackberry RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 27 2019
The rest wasn't as good as the ones she used to have, but she wasn't exactly a stranger to fitful sleep. Her time spent as a prisoner in Eridanus hadn't exactly been very peaceful for her mind - night terrors and anxieties woke her constantly so this was a relatively normal night's (or day's) rest. By the time she woke up, the lights were still bright, which was good for travelling with the damn glowing. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Game Master Dark - Oct 27 2019 The amulet guided her way, in a sense--through a constant, ever-present fear. The eye seemed to twist about and stare, and watch her, from time to time--but perhaps that was a trick of the light..?
The marsh underfoot was wet, to say the least, but now and again Blackberry would suddenly feel deep misgiving about some area of the swamp or other. A patch of mud ahead might fill her with incredible dread, or a little haze in the air with the certainty of danger. So long as she listened to the amulet, it would guide her away from the quicksand, from the toxic gases... The vultures, too, for now seemed to keep their distance, none of them braving a flight out over the Dead Marsh. Should she be spotted, in the end, it might prove deadly--but for now, she was safe from predators, at least. And the water of the marsh--so long as she listened to the amulet's warnings--was, in places, drinkable (if stagnant and disgusting in taste). There were even grasses that could be eaten, at a pinch, though they weren't particularly tasty--and the warning of horror at some of them would keep her away from those which might prove toxic. She could make it to the Salt Flats, then; and the final stretch of her journey, after only an hour or two of floundering in the Marsh. @Blackberry RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 27 2019
However uncomfortable the amulet made her and however terrified she was constantly with it around her neck, she couldn't help but admit that it was useful. She was travelling relatively peacefully through the edge of the marsh, listening to the amulet as it directed her to avoid traps of poisonous water, drifting toxins in the air, and even allowed her a few moments in which she could pull up some of the grasses, however foul they tasted. But she wasn't going to neglect opportunity for food and drink this time. The salt flats were going to be hard and she needed to be prepared. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Game Master Dark - Oct 27 2019 The salt flats themselves were, to say the least, punishing. They were hot, and incredibly dry, with an eye-stinging acridness to the air. Heat-shimmers formed mirages here and there, making it difficult to navigate without becoming lost. The heat at least began to dissipate as time wore on, as the light faded; and the shimmers, too began to fade.
Now and then Blackberry would come across a scorpion, and once a small and scurrying Sand Spider--but it was as if she knew where they'd be well in advance, before even coming in sight of them. The strange magic guided her well enough. @Blackberry RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 27 2019
She was taking the salt flats slower then the marsh, more out of exhaustion then anything. She may have gotten a pretty good rest, but she'd pushed herself way past her limits the day before and it was catching up with her. Her foot was dragging again, she was hunched forward, panting. Everything ached, everything burned. Her skin had blistered in the heat on the sands and some of her feathers were falling out. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Game Master Dark - Oct 27 2019 The glow was what drew them--that, and the magicka that caused it. The enchant, with its faint glittering. The amulet warned her--but with her exhaustion, and her injury, they were faster than she was.
There were two of them--one very small, barely fist-sized, but a sparkle of blue on the flickering flat. It kept well away from the other: an absolutely enormous monstrosity larger even than the last Blackberry had encountered. Now that night was falling, the Spire Spider was lurching through the dim haze after Blackberry, doggedly pursuing her magicka and her glow. It drew closer, and closer, the amulet screaming terror into the goose's mind--the clicking rapidly approaching. Bristling black and blue swept up behind her, its fangs glinting in the half-light. "Not very sporting, is it?" crooned a voice from somewhere close. As if out of nowhere the Collector appeared, his towering black-clad form stepping neatly between Blackberry and the spider. A hand raised, and there was a brief shimmer--and, for whatever reason, both Spire Spiders turned and fled. The Collector turned and knelt, reaching down for the chain, moving to slip it from the goose into his own hands. "Well, well, well, someone has been through a great deal--I thought you hadn't made it. Come," he added, pushing up and, with a rustle of his cloak, sweeping for Hydra's exit. "We have a reward to give you." @Blackberry RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 27 2019
There was a sudden spike of fear and her stomach dropped. Something was coming. Danger was approaching. She sped up her pace and looked behind, eyes widening with horror at the sight of the monstrous spider chasing after her. She looked away quickly, just in case, and tried to think fast. She couldn't outrun it, not with her injury and considering its size. But, perhaps, she could distract it. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Game Master Dark - Oct 27 2019 The amulet was slipped somewhere out of sight, the golden glow flickering over the Collector before abruptly fading. He led her into the mouth of the tunnel--and here, he paused.
"You've done well; and as promised, your rewards." He didn't ask if she was ready, no; he only gave her a moment to gather herself--to reflect and say goodbye to who she'd been--before he opened out his palms toward her, a flood of brief and savage light filling the space, her mind, the tunnel. It was hot, suddenly--too hot, sweltering, burning--and Blackberry would rapidly lose consciousness in the throes of sudden pain. Her gemstone would spread, flaring out to encase her, to regrow the damage that the powerful but strange magic was inflicting. And there she would rest, in her chrysalis, for the next two weeks. When she woke again, when next she emerged, Blackberry would be... changed. A plain white goose would be all that emerged: the same species, certainly, but void of all pigment. Red eyes and a pink bill and feet would mark it as albino. All of her scars would be gone. No talons, no strange ridges, no spines--but her wings would be reborn, long and graceful. She would remember very little about herself, forgetting her name, the events of her past life, and most of those she had known. Only faint, flickering memories would linger: the briefest glances, confusing and without context, of the things that she had done and seen. It would all like a half-forgotten nightmare, with glimpses now and then--but whatever impact had been left, she would always, now, abhor the idea of violence. The benevolence instilled in her would be commanding. The Collector watched, and then he knelt: and, after covering the chrysalis with a shrouding layer of sand, he nestled the apatite in beside it. Then he stood, and turned, and drew out his Amulet of Many Eyes: looking it over, and grinning beneath the hood. "Ahh, but you have no idea the gift you've given me," he murmured; "What a small price to pay for such a prize." @Blackberry |