by The Kingpin » Fri Dec 16, 2016 2:29 am
It was when the group reached the wall of the dome that the guards stopped. Over the blaring of the alarm horn in the distance, a rumbling bellow rang out as a leviathan shot past overhead. The long, bulky beast propelled itself forward with four vast flippers, its long, crocodilian jaws lancing through the water with an efficiency that was scarcely matched by any other marine creature.
"Is that the cause of the disturba-" started the Scholar, cut off mid-sentence as he, and just about everyone else present felt it. A terrible, gut-wrenching, bone-chilling feeling of pure and overpowering dread. It was as if any emotion anyone present could possibly have had had been rent from their hearts and replaced with fear so overwhelming it all but consumed them, in a way even the Sylvari couldn't have ever dreamed of rivalling.
Looking towards where the Leviathan went, Septimus saw what was coming before most; the gargantuan aura of something vast and terrible. He realised then why Sheemaka had said it was not something that could be fought. Nothing he knew of in this city could fight this. Nothing even came close.
Ceridwen was less able to see the thing that had alarmed the Scholar so, though she was easily as terrified by the horrible aura it exuded. Within the satchel, Beshayir was huddled up on the bed, biting her lip to fight the urge to whimper. She had vowed never to let herself be so weak, but there were not many things that could be strong in the face of this.
"Clashlesmasha dat, bumbaderp. Uba deffo derpahur iffin uba tickheader uba stronkamor dat," said the leader of the contingent of guards, putting on a brave face despite the break in his voice.
Fight that, *******. You're an absolute moron if you think you're stronger than that.
The Scholar's eyes were fixed on the aura, until the snapping of fingers drew his attention.
"Outy outy asahaulo, noobyfrens. Tickerticka runfasta."
Leave swiftly, friends. Time is short.
The Scholar nodded thankfully, but said nothing as he rushed for the dome wall. Passing through it much as he had when he entered, he found himself immediately drawn in an unseen current, the ocean pulling and pushing against him in ways that were not present when he arrived. He saw creatures of every shape and size scattering, some burying themselves in the silt below, others swimming off into the shadows, into reefs, underwater caves and deeper into the ocean.
Time seemed to pass like sap down a tree trunk, slow and sticky, every second clinging on for five more in the perceptions of the Scholar and his company as they put City of the Conch behind them, heading for the surface. They were within viewing distance just long enough to see just what it was that had caused the alarm.
The fading light of a setting sun above cast a glow across the hide of the bellowing leviathan as it circled below. A massive, spiked, serpentine limb, so colossal as to dwarf the leviathan entirely, darted out of the darkness of the deeper depths and swung down upon it. The barbs running the length of the visible parts of the tendril impaled the animal and dragged it into the darkness, and the bellowing ceased. The dome's glimmering surface faded, and a moment later, the entire city seemed to disappear against the backdrop of the ocean floor; the culmination of their emergency response. The leviathan had served its purpose, and bought them the time they needed to hide.
The Scholar bore witness to fear incarnate in those following seconds as out of the depths came a huge mass of what, at first glance, seemed to be a school of deep sea fish, something leading the real threat, or fleeing it. That was until he saw how evenly the luminescent speckles moved, acting as one figure. The light struck them, and he realised it was not a gargantuan school of fish, but a single creature; a beast so huge as to rival the dome itself in size. Six terrible red eyes, all slitted horizontally, glared out from the darkness created by the blood of the leviathan, slowly emerging from within the sanguine cloud and proving to be as deep a red in their own right. Each crimson orb seemed nearly as large as the Hueilin himself. The monstrosity soon emerged entirely as it swam past beneath them, its proportionately tiny eyes making the dragon feel very small and inconsequential. It was little wonder why it had ignored him. He wasn’t even worth the effort to snatch up into its colossal maw. He realised around that time that he wasn't worth noticing by this abysmal terror. Rows upon rows of armoured plates covered its back, and a vast, shark like dorsal fin drifted past mere feet to the Scholar's right, covered in scars and harpoons. Its massive, diamond-shaped tail fin passed moments later, the Scholar having to fight the downward current as it pulled away from him and towards the sea floor, tossed about in the ensuing vortex as it drifted away into the black in search of food that was not far off.
Moments later, a school of leviathans bolted from a cave a few hundred yards away, barely visible as specks in the aquatic fog, the hapless sea-dwellers seeking shelter that did not exist, from a foe that would show no mercy. Over a half dozen tendrils reached out, each swinging down and impaling a leviathan before dragging it back to a maw Septimus saw for a split second, wide, shark like and lined with rows upon rows of hooked triangular teeth.
Sparing no more time to linger in the vicinity of this tyrant of the sea, the Scholar drove himself towards the surface with all the power his wings and tail could muster, finding Ceridwen far ahead of him, having bolted the moment the first leviathan died. Water gave way to air, and his tail gave way for his wings as powerful strokes launched him far into the sky, the Son of Storms not ceasing until he was amidst the clouds. He knew in that moment what he had just seen.
A Kraken.
"Ah yes, organised chaos. the sign of a clever but ever-busy mind. To the perpetrator, a carefully woven web of belongings and intrigue, but to the bystander? Madness!"
–William Beckett, Lore of Leyuna RPG