Patreon LogoYour support makes Blue Moon possible (Patreon)

My Sword (Morathor and Devious Intent)

Morathor

Supernova
Joined
Feb 19, 2012
Location
Midwestern USA
The sun beat down on the desert landscape, glistening off the ridges of the golden dunes. And standing stark against the cloudless blue sky, a vast structure loomed over the sand. It looked for all the world like a gnarled tree of black stone, its trunk twisting and weaving; entire wings hung off the building by the merest thread of a walkway, and the sparse knotholes that passed for windows let only thin shafts of sunlight in to illuminate the interior.

A short, slender figure hurried through the shadowy hallways, her strange silver eyes seeming to reflect light that wasn't there. In her hand, hanging casually as if she had forgotten she held it, was a sword of the same silver hue; the symbols etched along its blade shone glimmered and shone. Despite her haste, her bare, dirt-caked feet made no sound as she trod along the stone floor.

The same could not be said of the other residents of the building, whose hurried footsteps echoed through the halls. In time the woman's course took her to a large room, where the smell of burnt meat filled the air, a half-butchered boar lay abandoned on a table, and half a dozen people huddled together, muttering.

When they noticed the new arrival, one broke off from the group to approach her; she did not look at him, but with a whip-like swing of her arm, severed his head from his shoulders without breaking her stride. The rest scattered. Some didn't seem to notice, or perhaps didn't believe, what was happening, and were cut down before they could react. Some bolted for the exits, but were not fast enough. Some ran for the tools of their trade, their knives and cleavers, to mount a last, futile stand.

By the time the woman made her way to the top of the spire, where a broad plateau blossomed out. It was the brightest room in the entire structure; there were no walls, merely a ring of pillars holding up the roof, and one grand column in the center that seemed to grow out of the rock like a stalactite. It had been carved into a throne, in which sprawled a dessicated husk of a man. Heavy bands of gold hung around wrists and neck to withered to bear their weight, and his veins shone like silver, clearly visible beneath skin as thin and pale as paper. In front of him spralwed a banquet table, barren of food; at his feet knelt two women, each beautiful and clothed only in a smattering of silver jewelry. One was nearly as pale as the man, the other as dark as the stone tower, and each equally engrossed in servicing his flaccid member.

Another woman, this one standing behind the throne, dressed in layered silks that covered much of her face and body, rushed towards the new arrival. Concern and relief warred in her expression, but both gave way to dawning realization, then resigned fear--perhaps as she noticed the freshest blood spatters on the newcomer's hands and face, or perhaps she recalled some scream that had echoed from the floors below. Either way, she stood her ground as she was run through, and crumpled at her killer's feet.

The swordswoman walked around the table and approached the throne, silver eyes moving between the two women kneeling there. One was beginning to tremble, but neither had abandoned their duty. She looked up to the gaunt figure between them. "Shall I wait, Master?"

A weary groan emanated from somewhere in his chest, which heaved from the effort. "No," he wheezed. "I'm not much in the mood for this. Let's just be done with it."

Once the concubines were dispatched, and their bodies dragged to the side, the swordswoman knelt at her master's side.

"Is it done?" he asked.

"Of course," she breathed, her voice beginning to tremble.

A pale, spindly arm reached out for the kneeling woman, and her breath caught in her throat as the man cupped her filthy cheek. She leaned into his touch as he began to rub away layers of grime with his thumb, eyes fluttering closed.

"I wish I could reward you as you deserve. But I'm not--" His words dissolved into a fit of coughing that wracked his withered form. Eventually, the coughing died down, and he slumped back into his seat, his every rattling wheeze tinged with pain. "...not up for that sort of things these days."

"To serve is reward enough,"
she said, her voice trembling slightly.

"Ah... my Anya... I built you too well..." She did not reply, biting her lip as the meticulous work of his fingers peeled away the dried blood from her skin.

In time, his hand fell still. In time, it fell limp. In time, the lightning in his veins stopped flickering, and the rasping of his breath fell silent.
---
Wind howled across the frozen wastes, carrying a veil of thick flakes that darkened land and sky. The slim figure that trudged across the landscape was barely visible through the curtains of white, and the stark trail she cut in the knee-deep snow was buried almost as fast as it formed.

Barely visible against the horizon was a towering spire, like a gnarled tree of black stone. Even on the rare occasion that the sun found its way through the perpetual storm that clouded these skies, very little sunlight made its way through the knotholes that passed for windows. Not that there was anyone inside who might need the light; the woman made her way through winding hallways and narrow staircases, effortlessly stepping over the scattered bones that littered the floors.

Finally she made her way to the top, a vast plateau that had once overlooked sea of dunes. She approached the throne, where a skeletal figure still sprawled, heavy golden bands still weighing down its wrists and neck. She set down her bag and sword and picked up the platter that sat before him. The food was frozen solid, the meat beyond salvation; she took it to the edge of the plateau and dumped it over. She doubted even the scavengers would have much use for it. She took the platter back to the table, wiped it clean, and set it once more before the skeleton. Then she opened her bag and laid out food before the throne.

Only once her master was served did she circle around the table and lay out a second, slightly smaller portion for herself. Then she sat, waiting, as long as she could bear, until her stomach started to ache. And though every fiber of her being, the devotion etched into her very bones, screamed that she was not to eat before her Master, that same devotion demanded she survive for as long as she could.

Anya was under no delusion that her Master, as almighty a sorcerer as he had been, could ever return to her. But to appease that part of her that wanted to be ready, in case she was ever needed again, she forced herself to lift bread to her mouth, to part her lips, and chew.
 
Damon sighed as he looked at the settlement ahead. His packback weighed down heavily on his body, having carried the same gems and canned foods from town to town the fatigue and burning sun made it harder to withstand the need to sit down. Damon needed to sell his ware in order to afford the small crappy place to sleep in an old swimmingpool. Even though the world had seen the darkest time yet, humanity was still the same. If not worse!

People had started fighting over whatever they could lay claim on, and when they'd fought off all other competitors, they charged full price to even the poorest of souls.

Damon's travelling occupation didn't allow him to stay and defend his own shelter. Twice he'd attempted to build a little hide-out, but after sone exploring and travelling he'd come back and found new settlers had taken his place and supplies. At least his place in the pool was guarded, though he was pretty sure the scuffy landlord rummaged through his belongings occasionally. Luckily he always carried his valuables on him.

Or...

Usually that meant he was lucky, but today seemed to be yet another day in which humanity proofed it had better been taken out by the disasters that struck the planet. As Damon walked passed an old looking shag, two individuals jumped him. One had a blade that he swung and Damon narrowly avoided except from the deep gash it left on his cheek. The other had an object of blunt force, either a brick or other block of stone that hit Damon hard on the temple. Even as he staggered back, his head soaring from the pain and dancing on the edge of conciousness... the two vandals stole the gems from his packback. Upon further search they found the small bundle of gold, breaking two of Damon's fingers as he tried to hold onto it.

What happened next was a blur, the man hit him in the back of the head one more time. But there was no pain. Just a dull sensation as Damon felt his body being carried to a nearby ledge and thrown off of it. Had he fallen for miles or just foot? To Damon the sensation of his limb body descending had felt like hours. Only when the merciful impact knocked him out completly had his head stopped spinning and put him asleep

When he awoke it was pitch black. Night had settled in, the perps who'd left him for dead nowhere in sight. Damon cursed as he tried to push himself up on his broken hand. Despite the dizzy and numb sensation in his head, the tradesman seemed mostly unscafed. His clothes dirty but not torn, Damon looked across the sandy ravine for a way out. The closest point of exit seemingly the far distant hill that looked somewhat climable.

Upon inspection, Damon noted the slightest glimmer of an object laying underneath a nearby bush. Thinking it were some of his stolen gems, maybe some had rolled off of the edge back into his possession... Damon was surprised to find an old tome which cover was decorated with a set ruby.

Despite the dark surroundings, Damon was surprised by the red letters shimmering in an eligable language. Not his own, but an old ancient language his grand-father had shown him in old books.

The book felt warm, and his hands moved to open it by themselves. The warning on the front-page made Damon laugh as he read it aloud in amazment. "Thy worthy of reading these words will learn to control the living weapon. Thy blood shall be guarded by the protector of kings, the slayer of enemies and inmortal servant?" Damon laughed closing the book and placing it under his arm as he started his way down the long stretch of sand. "Inmortal servant, here I am. Stuck in a fucking canyon with a broken hand and this fairy-tale book. Come safe your master!" Damon joked aloud shaking his head. "Give me a fucking break."
 
Anya stood at the edge of the tower, her bare feet less than an inch away from a perilous drop, silver eyes sweeping over the frozen waste. A human would not have been able to see anything at all, save for the thick curtain of snow that fell outside. But her senses were not so limited. Even if she could not see the ground below, she could "see" the creatures that crawled across it. Every hare and fox and tern glowed faintly to her senses. But she didn't care about any of those. She was looking for the lights that were bright and twisted. For the monsters.

It was almost an insult to call them that; her Master had wrought real monsters, living war machines, to do battle against the creations of enemies nearly as inventive and ruthless as himself. Comparing the sad, twisted byproducts of the humans' apocalypse to such works of art was almost self-deprecating. But ego was not something Anya had much use for. What mattered was that the humans saw them as monsters. They were large, they were often aggressive, and the humans were glad to be rid of them. That meant more food to sustain her.

She could not sense any such foul creatures right now, but she could sense... something. Something wrong. Or perhaps, something disturbingly right? She wasn't sure, but it unnerved and excited her. It was faint, impossibly faint; she shouldn't have been able to feel it at all, and the fact that she somehow could meant that she couldn't ignore it. It might take her days, weeks, to reach it, but she had to. She had to go, and find out what this was.

She hurried back to the table where her empty plate lay and took up her sword. She stuffed her feet into thick, battered boots and pulled on a heavy fur coat. Frostbite took more of a toll on her than it should have; mere food could not nourish her the way her Master's mana once had. Pulling her hood down over her face, she turned and sprinted towards the edge of the platform, running off the side.

She reached out with her blade, locking its tip into a well-worn groove that she had carved over the centuries, letting the drag slow her fall. Eventually she turned and kicked off the stone wall, propelling herself towards the roof of a hanging wing and landing with a heavy thud. The shock that reverberated through her bones might have broken a human, but Anya needed only a moment to catch her breath and make the next jump.

She descended the tower in scarcely a minute, finally landing in knee-deep snow. She looked towards the horizon again. She could still sense it, whatever it was.

She began to run.
 
It had taken the full duration of the moon before Damon had managed to leave his cursed environment. Then most of the sun time was spend making his way back to the nearest settlement. His hand hurt like hell and he couldn't wait for one of the 'doctors' to have a look at it and likely wrap it up in some cloth. Luckily the doctor was around and available when Damon made it to the small town they'd named: 'Ceris'.

The doc patched him up and even helped travelling trader clean smaller wounds on his face caused by the fall. The sun was again settling when Damon sat down by the campfire. Silently the young man thanked whatever god there possibly was for making this unfortunate event not end with a fatal blow. After all, surviving was all one could hope for these days.

It was when other settlers sat and ate round the campfire that Damon took an interest in his acquired treasure. The forwarning still rang in his mind, the trip having peaked his interest of what further wisdom or fables the book covered.

As he read, Damon's earlier disbelief faded. The book was so detailed, told of a king and his creations. Immortal flesh... it didn't seem possible. To have someone so dedicated they'd do anything to serve their master... it sounded like old tales of knights dying for their king's reign. But those were all fiction right?

Why then were there detailed, clearly handwritten and personal instructions how to control the servant? The instructions seemed based on trial and error. Little notes to the side and some scribbled out. What remained seemed managable enough. The creature, whatever it was, seemed to respond both the magic as well as the ancient language. It turned out his grand-father didn't teach Damon some language previous settlers used to speak before they were wiped form existence, but a language civilisiaton hadn't heard since the dawn of time. It all seemed so odd, almost unbelievable how this string of unlikely events all let up to Damon finding this tome and being able to read it. But because of that, because of how impossible the scenario was, Damon believed what he read. He could feel it, the words resonating in his head like no other English text ever had. The words sounded, felt true. Maybe this was his birth-right? No, that couldn't be, he didn't know any 'kings' nor heard of tales from his ancestors being royal. Maybe it was destiny? Unlikely... then again, unlikely seemed to be the right word for what had happened to him the past 24 hours.
 
So close...

Anya had traveled for days, sprinting ceaselessly through knee-deep snow, never stopping for food or rest. She ran until the frozen wasteland gave way to stone and dust--though the landscape here was no less barren. And finally, finally, she was almost there.

She still didn't know where there was, what was waiting for her, calling her. But the answer, against all likelihood, seemed to lay in a little human settlement. She had been to this one once or twice before, but she didn't know how many years it had been. Would anyone there remember her? Had it been long enough for them to notice that she hadn't aged a day, or long enough for them all to die? Just in case, she pulled her hood down low over her face as she approached, and sheathed her sword at her back. It was usually more convenient to let humans think her one of them for as long as she could manage.

She walked into Ceris, towards the source of the strange sensation that hummed through her bones.
 
Back
Top Bottom