ELMARIN-
Never before has it been as difficult to find a piece of paper as it was this time. I think, similarly to everything else I've seen lately, it's decaying. I wouldn't be surprised at all if this ends up ripping and molding before you ever find it; still I will leave it on the counter of the tavern you used to enjoy visiting. Either you'll find it and respond, or you will not. As you have not responded to anything for... it has to be several months now, I think. I will not attempt to contact you again after this and I have started to realize that the only reason I have continued to write you in the first place is so I don't forget how.
Unless you have been destroyed at this point, I strongly suspect that you've lost your way and have gone mad. It would be a damn shame if I'm right on either account, but my suspicions strongly favor the latter. And if I am not wrong, if we ever meet again, I will be the one to expunge you; just as I have Liselle and will Zaya, once I find him. It's a pity, but you might be curious to know that, save for the three of you, I have never met anyone else like us. I know that does not matter one way or the other and the likelihood of ever doing so is extremely slim, but it is interesting to think about, despite how pointless it is to do so.
I do not know if you are coherent enough to remember, or to understand much of anything any longer. Still, once before, I told you things were not always this way. I still remember solis, the sun. I have no way of knowing how long it has been since -the calendar I found a while back did not predate edax tenebris- still, yes, the sun did rise at dawn every morning and illuminated all. Before the Dark came, we valued beauty; hope and curiosity had been ours. People did not stagnate, nor did they fade; they created, learned and progressed. Scholars had made remarkable discoveries and extensively documented their findings. Even back then, there were monumental troubles and nothing had ever been perfect, but they understood the value and importance of the little things, knew joy and had not turned their backs on anything. When the light died, we learned, remembered and fought back against the coming of the Dark.
Our casualties had been innumerable and the war had been immense, but... we fought. And we had damn near succeeded in destroying it, I think. At the very least, we had managed to push it back far enough that it had no longer been an immediate danger. At that time, we still did not fear it at all- we fucking hated it. We rejected its arrival and stood against it. Something happened. I do not know the details, but it had managed to redouble its onslaught and it surged. The humans I've met during my travels cannot be called people, not if you stop to think about it. They do not remember, or maybe they simply do not know, what it means to carry hope or joy. They no longer create anything meaningful, do not hold beauty in any regard and have become faded, stagnant facimilies of what they used to be. It is truly lamentable and things did not have to be this way, not really. I would welcome any kind of change, honestly.
I find it interesting enough to remark upon: the entities that haunt the Dark still have made no move against me. They watch and wait, but unless I have reason to hunt and kill them, they continue to do their best to avoid me as much as they can. They observe and follow me relentlessly, but unless I confront them, they do nothing else. As much as I think they have some semblance of sapience, I do not think they desire to communicate. I do not know if they can, to begin with. I have reasons to believe that this will end up changing very soon; nothing can remain the same for an extended period, after all.
As I continue to hunt Zaya, I have come to realize something. I am going to do it. I have decided I am going to learn about and understand the Dark. If I can understand it, I think I should be able to use its secrets against it I believe there should still be a way to push it back again. If the night has not grown too long and it's still possible to fight the Dark, I hope we will stop losing our purposes and the threat of lunacy will cease to exist. I refuse to tell you where I am heading at this time; it does not concern you in any way. Still, it's curious enough to be worrisome: I have not seen anyone in... I think it has been close to a year, now. I know not for certain, but the night continues to grow and there is now a very real probability that I will not encounter anyone during the remainder of my trek- At this time, I could be all that remains. It is of no consequence, however; I remain unbothered by the prospect of being solitary and silence suits me well. In fact, the world might just benefit if silence ends up stealing my voice entirely!
I have not forgotten my duty: I continue searching for every remaining living being and I will not refrain from dispatching the ones that must be eliminated. I will not rest, not until I have fulfilled both of my purposes in their entirety. If the night lengthens to the extent that there are no longer living beings, or the Dark's influence and power becomes insurmountable, I will close all remaining open doors and show this world of the damned where the end truly begins: I will welcome and serve as the guide for oblivion.
As cruel as it might sound, old friend, you had better hope that our paths never cross again.
.||: V :||.
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The rhythmical tap of long, avian talons and faint rattle of iron chains against the time-worn stone floor were muffled, yet managed to shatter the unhallowed silence of the tomb as easily as any shriek would have. It would have been difficult -if not downright impossible- to follow the passage of time while traveling through the serpentine passageways, had time not lost all meaning long ago. Meandering through those labyrinthine corridors was an uninvited guest: unperturbed and enveloped by the clinging shadows. The cowl-like hood of her tattered ivory shroud was pulled low, intentionally obscuring her face from view, the hem of her equally-tattered white robe whispering in her wake almost like an afterthought. Serene as she maneuvered past the cracked and crooked tombstones, she could have -should have- been nothing more than a forgotten ghost haunting its halls.
Nevertheless, her presence was not welcome here: there was no place for one like her.
Those who still tenaciously inhabited these lands like cockroaches were usually apprehensive when she approached their settlements- and their reasoning was both justified and understandable. They didn't exactly know -or remember- what happened when a Revenant drew near, or that none of her ilk had the same purpose, but they were at least aware that change of one kind or another was inevitable when a member of her kind drew near. Still, she was lucky enough to be one of those individuals in possession of a head that had only two eyes; fortunate to have the appropriate number of limbs, a torso held upright by the bones that supported it internally- and that she walked upright. Her short, albeit solid, figure was not inexplicably blurred at the edges; it did not fade into blighted mist and smoke, nor was it caged in perpetual motion. One clawed hand lifting to trace a particularly interesting design that had been engraved into the surface of one precariously-tilted tombstone.
Far more important than the false, hollow phantoms of beauty that were still visible in the forms of those intricate ingravings, in the cracked and ancient statues was her main purpose for being in the crypt. The two most recently-filled sarcogaphi -if they could have been called "most recent," it had been months at best, or decades at worst- remained undisturbed; for now, at least- which meant they could be left alone.
As the woman continued ever onward, she occasionally paused; though it was pointless to do so, she righted the smaller and less-damaged statues, so they once again stood on their stone bases, as they were intended to. Why did she even bother? That wasn't a question she could have answered, even if some phantom materialized and asked; perhaps she didn't have or need a reason.
It certainly wasn't to fight the twisted, warped amalgamations of nightmares that writhed and hissed from within the more static shadows. It was impossible to determine whether it was a single shadowy creature that shrunk in upon itself, or if it had been multiple drawing back, as the woman made her way out of one room, turned the corner and entered the next, not bothering to spare those... things even a passing glance. It was normal for them to retreat, recoil and simply observe when she drew near; innumerable eyes closing, twisted, gnarled hands releasing whatever they had been grasping, slithering serpentine tongues returning to the twisted, monstrous maws they had emerged from. Those incomprehensible creatures were vicious, ravenous and deadly hunters that relentlessly sought the living and were evidently drawn to things such as campfires.
However, the woman was not one of the living and unless she had reason to attack, they avoided her as well as they could. Unless she was horribly mistaken, she could have sworn she had seen a particularly malignant form of intelligence gleaming in the eyes of some of their larger specimens on occasion. Once, the Revenant had managed to capture one of those peculiar entities that served the Dark, intending to converse with or question it. She could neither understand or explain why -despite how it had appeared to at least understand part of what she had said- save for gibbering, hissing and growling, it had not responded; she did not know whether it had been incapable of speech, or if it simply had not been willing to communicate. She still did not know why they were here, what their actual purpose might have been. As far as she remembered, no one else knew, either- at least when she had been alive, no one knew. She was probably the only one interested in investigating the Dark, to understand and possibly eliminate it. The Revenant was certain that her endeavors were solitary; there couldn't possibly be anyone left who still thought it could be eliminated.
They did not comprehend death, which was something that the Revenant woman had come to understand over the endless years. Just as she had noticed something truly perplexing as she continued ambling through the halls. the entities of the Dark were becoming more restless and agitated; their slithering and climbing becoming frenzied as they screamed and babbled in that twisted, maddening quasi-language of theirs. Not only that, but one or two of the chambers she had not visited had apparently been entered beforehand; one of those doors with still-functioning hinges had been left slightly ajar and the other had been completely open. At some point -she could not say if it had been recently, or over the past few years- someone else had been down here. It was something worth being aware of, even if it did end up inconsequential.
The clicking of her talons against the stone floor became louder and more frequent as she was no longer leisurely meandering, but had begun jogging as she drew ever nearer to her current destination. Though she had been unable to verify or otherwise substantiate the rumors she was chasing, there was supposedly an immense bastion nearby. None larger in the entire country- and supposedly, this crypt's catacombs and tunnels would either lead to its entrance, or possibly to the road that would lead to it- she had forgotten the details, but recalled the supposed location. She knew little of what the bastion might have held, though she had reason to suspect that the individual she had been pursuing might have fled for that bastion as well. She did not know how long she had been traveling for -it could easily have been anywhere between months, or possibly even a year- hunting that bastard. Even if she happened to be wrong, there would be no backtracking: she could only continue ever onward.
Home was nowhere, the world had moved on and she was a relic that had been left behind.
As she raised her hands and placed them against the final double door, she braced her legs and shoved inward, forcing the door to open; barreling through immediately after. As she entered the final catacomb, its layered sarcophagi, unburied yellowing bones, toppled marble monuments, desecrated graves, coffins and tombs were revealed; along with the magnificent spiraling staircase that served as the catacomb's centerpiece. Had she drew breath, she would have sighed in relief about how those venerable rumors had been correct. As it was, she had slouched against one of the walls momentarily; a low, harsh, rattling sound that passed as laughter freeing itself from her throat when the entities near that wall began to shriek, wail and caterwaul as they recoiled. Had she not been in a decent mood and had even one of them moved to threaten or challenge her, she would have been more than willing to fight and kill them- but the pitiful things in the crypt had given her no reason to attack them; they were smaller and far more meek than the others she had seen before. Perhaps being underground made them far more cowardly than what she was accustomed to- she could not say.
The double doors that had swung closed behind her creaked and groaned as they parted once more.
The Revenant was not alone.
As -was that really light, or had she finally gone irrevocably and completely mad?- shone brilliantly into her eyes, causing her to squint beneath her hood and raise her left hand to try and shield them against the unanticipated and... incredibly strange, momentarily dazzling display, her wings bristled in apprehension, taloned toes spreading to provide better balance as she rose onto them; the pugilist began bouncing, sliding one foot behind the other, her right arm raising to waist-height and curling inward, hand curving into a fist. The avian rattling rumble that wanted to rise into a birdlike screech faltered, halted. I've got to be fucking wrong, it's not possible; I know someone was here sometime before- nothing more and nothing less. This place must be doing something to my head.
This intruder had no more limbs than she did, walked and stood upright. Seemed to be humanlike enough, despite being obscurred from head-to-toe. She wasn't sure if he was hiding far too many eyes beneath his mask, but at least he didn't have visible tentacles, nor did his form warp, writhe, or otherwise move like the entities did- at least not like the ones she'd ever seen. It would seem that, just as one mystery was likely going to be unraveled, another approached.
When he addressed her -extremely politely, pleasantly and... quite energetically- one of her eyebrows arched, a smirk just barely curved her lips upward and rather than anything resembling speech, the first thing that tore itself from her long-disued throat was somewhat akin to a grunt. "Yes." That was followed by a pregnant pause, as though that monosyllabic response should have answered his rather exuberant interview, though even by her standards, it neither clarified nor helped anything. "Yes, I do understand the language you're speaking. I have no reason to extirpate you and as long as I am not given a reason, that will remain unchanged. I..." She tilted her head when he voiced his fairly absurd question, not entirely certain how to answer it; no one had ever posed such an inquiry before. "I cannot promise anything. Lucentio, I have never met another Lightbringer, so I do not know what that is. I am Velu. An executioner." As they spoke, her defensive stance started to relax and her bouncing ceased. It might have been a horrible idea to tease someone she had just barely met, but she couldn't help herself; not with his hopeful remark. Her smirk relaxed as she attempted to mask her expression, her voice carefully controlled: "I have not said anything, as I cannot speak. I hope you aren't severely disappointed."
He might have seemed to be quite long-winded, but she didn't mind; in a peculiar way, his joviality reminded her of a puppy. Plus, it might have simply been because of how long it had been since she had heard anyone else speak, but his voice was pleasant to listen to. She was still wary, but encountering someone else that she could converse and interact with was... surprisingly welcome. It had been no less than a year and probably far longer since the last time she had done so- and had not anticipated meeting anyone else for years yet to come, with the way things were going now. Still, as her attention was briefly brought back to the staircase, she was curious about yet another matter: "What brought you here and where are you bound for?"
@Devils Temptation