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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 - Game Master Dark - Oct 25 2019 The sandworm struck air, so close that its bristles brushed the goose--and then it crashed down in a spray of sand, briefly thrashing on the desert floor.
Blackberry gained ground. She fled, cramped leg and all; and the sandworm whipped forward, onto the surface of the dunes... before curving to dive back down beneath. It was an ambush predator, and it had lost its element of surprise, but that didn't mean it wouldn't chase. Blackberry was nearing the Crucible, now... she had almost made it to safety. The sandworm dove, intent on making a second, and final, attempt on the goose--vanishing beneath the sands. The ground beneath her feet once again trembled. @Blackberry RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 25 2019
She was running, trying to remember what the Collector had told her. Maybe he'd said something about this when he was instructing her on where to go. Maybe he'd told her how to beat these things! Or at least evade them. As the giant sandworm dove back into the ground behind her, it came to her. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Game Master Dark - Oct 25 2019 This was a trial.
A punishment. And the next three hours would possibly be the hardest stretch of time that Blackberry had had to face in a very long time... if she had ever faced anything so gruelling, so terrible. There, exposed on all sides and without shelter beneath the baking light, she had to hold deathly still. She could lay down, perhaps, in that burning-hot sand and spare her cramped leg--but the sand around her churned as the sandworm sought its target. For long periods it would fall still, but a twitch, a rustle of tawny grains, would give it away. It waited, lurking, for the goose to expose herself, to give away her position. So long as she did not move--so long as she outlasted it--she would be safe. But that meant remaining in Hydra's bright and brutal heat, alone with the sandworm: alone with lurking death. Alone with herself; alone with her thoughts. With her fears, and with her regrets. Alone with the agony of cramping muscle, of red-hot pain and dying flesh where the scorpion had stung her. Would it ever leave..? Would she die, there, in the heat and on these sands? Did she scrabble only this far into Hydra before falling prey? Perhaps the sandworm could wait forever. The bird would have no way of knowing. But should she outlast it--should she survive those three hours and twenty minutes--she would find out. @Blackberry RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 25 2019
She stood still, so perfectly still, terrified to move even a muscle. The sand churned around her, searching, waiting for her to move but she was absolutely determined to outlast the sandworm. She could do this. She'd suffered pains before, horrible, brutal, terrifying pain, even if the memories were disjointed and disconnected. She always remembered the pain. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Game Master Dark - Oct 25 2019 At long last, the sand again shifted. There was a churning, a sliding, as the dune rearranged itself: as a serpentine figure slipped away beneath the surface.
Blackberry, it seemed, was left alone, for now: alone to traverse the last of the searing dunes, with the labyrinthine Crucible looming in the haze ahead. It would probably be wise to tread softly. @Blackberry RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 25 2019
At long last, the sands went still, but Blackberry continued to wait. It could be trying to fool her, trying to get her to lower her guard before attacking once again, but after another 10 minutes had passed and there was no more movement, she realized that she was free. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Game Master Dark - Oct 25 2019 The closer she drew, the larger the Crucible seemed to be.
Massive, windswept plateaus towered over canyons carved deep into the rock. Outcrops, lit in blinding, scorching light, stood guard over gulleys that lay in deep and ominous shadow. Finding a single quillmouse would be exceedingly difficult; a needle in a haystack would be far, far easier. It seemed, now, to be a task that might take weeks, and the Crucible was not, by all appearances, a hospitable location. The simplest decisions might prove to mean the difference between life and death. How was a goose to enter the Crucible? Should she aim for the bright places, or the dark; the high, or the low? Was it wise to seek cover, or stay out in the open..? It seemed that death lurked there, waiting for the slightest misstep, ready to sweep away the unwary--or the unlucky. @Blackberry RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 25 2019
As Blackberry approached the base of the Crucible, she finally breathed out a sigh of relief as she left the desert behind. It was like a weight was releasing from her chest - she was safe from the sandworm, hopefully. Now it was time for the next challenge to begin. She looked up at the ceiling, squinting against the harsh light. There were distant shapes hovering around the top of the mesas, most likely some kind of bird of prey making their nests at the top of the mesas. She very much doubted any kind of mouse would be making its home where there were so many predators with a bird's eye view. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Nameless - Oct 25 2019
Once the spell had run its course, Blackberry stepped forward, quickly scuttling against the walls, trying to keep herself under cover, taking her steps a lot slower then they had been before. If it was intelligent enough, she doubted the quillmouse would stay in darkness if it was always glowing - it was much easier to see glow in darkness then in the harsh light. But instinct would probably tell it to seek shelter. This would be difficult. RE: Blackberry's Gambit - Game Master Dark - Oct 25 2019 Hours would pass.
Hours of heat, of parched light. Hours of the blistering light giving way to a gradual darker, cooler evening. Things scuttled in the shadows, in the underbrush, threatening to emerge with nightfall. There was so much land to cover, so many ravines, and hills, to search... She might very well be here for days. @Blackberry |