by The Kingpin » Fri Jan 27, 2017 2:33 am
The man sat, kneeling before a small shrine in a bedroom, in a cottage shared by none. It was one of dozens in this village, but few of them were occupied by only one person.
They would have stayed in their tents, travelling the land, had the weather not grown too harsh for this. It was a convenient happenstance that they were able to claim a village as their own. It wasn't difficult to earn their way in. Scary creatures and conjuring rituals were all well and good when they worked, but in times like these, they were forced to keep a low profile.
So they found a village in the woods. A disease had ravaged their population some months prior, and now, despite the fact the survivors had recovered and the dead had been buried, none had any intention of coming to them. The village was slowly dying. Homes lay abandoned, and leaders were losing their ability to keep the faith of their village folk. For them, the arrival of this wandering community and their exotic customs and beliefs were a godsend. Virtually overnight, the village was once more bustling and vibrant. In time, even the people of the village joined their ranks in their worship, and the leaders submitted their rank to the leaders of the congregation. Their 'god of change' and his glorious wisdom, his will and his influence, was taken as fact. He was the reason for the village's dying, as much as he was the reason for its resurrection. He was the reason that they, after nearly starving from the loss of trade with others, now had food on their tables. For he was a merciful god, and his realm was that of eternal change.
Fitting that now, they were on the precipice of a change no one, not even his most loyal disciples, could have foreseen.
This particular acolyte was a man who seemed, at least in his face and body, to be in his late twenties. His hair told a different tale. Straight fiery red locks hung around his face, fading in vibrancy closer to the roots and disappearing entirely further back to ashen grey. It was not, as many thought, the trickery of some dye. It was instead the effect of his craft, that had done this.
He sat before the shrine, devoid of clothing, as he always was in the worship of his master. Scars adorned his back, jagged gashes that looked as though he had been savaged by some animal, and yet uniform enough that they bore more than a passing resemblance to symbols. The stood out almost as much as the symbols branded on either side of every one of the pronounced spinal bones running down his back, and collectively gave him a look which was almost inhuman while laying prostrate as he did in quiet worship.
The shrine was a suspiciously inconspicuous thing, a finely crafted table atop which sat a silver chalice. The contents were not so inconspicuous, the liquid dark and viscous, swirling slowly as if it was being stirred, even though no spoon existed to do so.
The contents of the chalice would have easily been mistaken for blood. But it was nothing so simple as that. Blood was a powerful substance in the realm of magic. But even that did not give one the ability to talk to beings such as this. No. This was more than just blood.
"Your guidance, your guidance, o' Watcher of Worlds, that I may follow your will. Your wisdom, your wisdom, o' Lord of Change, that I may use it in your service. Your might, your might, o' Instigator of Strife, that I may spread your dominion."
The dark fluid started to hiss, blotches of red and gold visible beneath the surface as though it contained burning coals and white hot lumps of iron. The hissing ceased soon after, but the glow within remained. "You've done well, Kristov. Your diligence has earned you a gift. Your 'grandmaster' has grown complacent in his power. Foolish, spoiled, content. He has drifted from his duty. He must be reminded of his place; that he is neither a master, nor grand. You are to slake the earth with his blood. Show the others the error of his ways, and show them the path. None is a master. Your duty forbids it. Your congregation is one of unity. A leader among you is a guide for the others." The voice was gravelly, wet, like the voice of one who was sick, though the sheer power that seemed to drip from every syllable made it abundantly clear that nothing could be further from the truth.
"Of course, o' lord. I will guide them true in your will. We will prepare this world for your coming. Your reign will be absolute. Blissful irresistible disorder will bring low your foes, and they will find their way anew in your light. You, the true master of this world," said Kristov.
"Drink, Kristov. Drink your gift, and embrace that which I have bestowed you. And then, show that gluttonous pretender what it is to be a disciple of Necros."
Kristov did not hesitate, so strong was his faith in the Instigator. In one smooth motion, he lifted the chalice to his lips, and tilted it back. It flowed smoothly, the dark red fluid spilling into his mouth even as it hissed and burned. In moments, he was drinking liquid fire, embers and flames spilling around the edges of his mouth as a sharp hiss rose from his flesh. Diligently, he continued to drink, swallowing until the chalice was empty, before letting it drop with a clatter onto the wooden floor. He blinked, his hands touching the corners of his mouth, his lips, his chest. Unscathed.
A sudden sharp, hair raising gasp tore from his throat, long and deep, as though his lungs were starved of air he desperately tried to provide. His eyes were wide, his back arched, and a gout of smoke spilled forth from his lips, before he finally slumped onto the floor.
For several moments, he lay there, curled on the floor and unable, or perhaps, unwilling to move. Then he rolled back onto his knees, brought a foot forward, and rose to his feet. He could not feel the cold. The chill that bit at his flesh despite the walls of the house mere minutes ago was gone. He felt warm. He turned towards a mirror on the wall, examining himself. His face was gaunt, his high cheek bones pressing against the skin, his cheeks themselves sunken by comparison, as though he had been starved. Brilliant orange eyes stared back at him, reptilian slits in their centres observing with a predatory inquisitiveness. He walked towards the mirror, examining himself closer. The ashen grey hair that extended beyond the fiery forefront had become streaked with white, as if it had been bleached. Running his fingers through it, he saw that indeed, it had not been any trick of the light. It had been bleached.
He brought his fingers to his face, rubbing across his skin briefly, before looking at his fingertips. Nothing out of the ordinary. Nothing physical, at least. The same could not be said for what he felt within. Like a raging inferno had been lit inside him, he felt no cold. He felt as though the strength of the gods themselves had been bestowed upon him, like everything within his reach was a mere triviality in the face of his newfound might. This was the Instigator's gift.
He would use it well...
"Atrox!" called the man in his worn grey cloak. He stood in a square outside what served as a town hall, in truth little more than an inn with the grandmaster as a permanent resident.
The village grew still almost the moment he spoke. To this point, none within the Brotherhood had called the grandmaster by name. Even the grandmaster himself had introduced himself by title first, and name after. It was by that, Grandmaster Atrox, that everyone knew it. For those new to the fold, it was a curious occurrence that gave them pause. To those more deeply ingrained, it was something that chilled the blood in their veins, for none in the years since their formation, had spoken with such irreverence to their leader, their worldly avatar of Necros, and lived. It was a crime that often led to the disappearance of the one who had encroached on that sacred position's sanctity. None knew for certain but the grandmaster himself, but whispers floated behind walls and in shadows of terrible torturous deaths, a just penitence by Necros's infernal acolytes, by imps and banshees and wraiths.
It was little surprise then that, as the door of the balcony overhanging the entrance swung open, those who milled about the streets began to disappear, slipping into alleys and doorways, to their homes and shops, wherever shelter existed.
Grandmaster Atrox was a tall and imposing man. Thin in his form, but no less frightening than the most muscular guard captain or general. His trimmed beard was grey and streaked with white. His hair was long and tied back into a ponytail. In his hand, a staff as black as tar, adorned with a head of crystalline stone, formed in the shape of tendrils that spiralled around a central green orb. Or at least, that was the colour it glowed now. Normally, it was colourless and translucent.
"Something the matter, Kristov?" questioned the tall mage as a surprisingly brawny hand closed around the banister.
"Yes, Atrox. You. You have strayed," said Kristov, head lowered, his face cast in shadow by his hood. He could feel them. Atrox's hounds. His typical means of dragging away the unruly to the shadows where they wouldn't be heard nor seen. He used to be terrified of them.
But that was before he became the Instigator's Chosen.
Screeches came up on either side of him, stopping dead almost as quickly as the started. Kristov's arms had swung outwards, revealing hands that seemed to drip with blood. Two horribly deformed creatures stood just behind him, as though poised to tear his arms off. They were huge and horrific, far too monstrous to be anything natural, looking like massive, bipedal hounds, if not for the fact they also looked burned and blistered, covered in jagged spikes and fangs that grew in ways that defied the natural order.
Their sudden silence was unexpected enough that even Atrox was given pause. Crumpling to the floor, it was revealed that their heads had split down the middle, a sudden, spontaneous growth of barbs having split their skulls and torn all the way down their throats and spines. The ribs had been forcefully broken outwards from the spine, spreading out like wings that left their corrupted innards on display from behind.
"I was hoping you would do this. He had...very specific words regarding your punishment," said Kristov as his head lifted, orange eyes staring up from under the shadow of his hood. His hands dropped, still dripping with blood that could not be his own, nor that of his first victims. The 'hounds', however, remained frozen in place, like morbid monuments to the Disciple's power.
It was a sight that disturbed the grandmaster. Not that he could let that be seen. "Who is this 'he' you speak of?" he asked, trying to shrug off his embarrassing failure to intercept the younger necromancer.
"See? That is your problem, Atrox. The power's gone to your head. You don't even realise it. Who do you think 'he' is? It should be abundantly clear. Do you not worship him as I do?" asked Kristov as he held his hands out expressively.
Atrox vaulted over the banister and hit the ground in front of the inn with a thump, rising from a kneel to tower over the Disciple with his slender frame. "You speak of things you don't know, boy. You've dabbled in matters that were not yours to dabble in. You corrupt the sanctity of our faith. For that, you must be punished."
"If I am to be punished, it will be our Lord's hand that does so, for I have communed with him. And he has chosen me to strike you down," said Kristov, stepping back behind the two standing corpses, before thrusting his fists into their gaping backs.
Almost immediately, the sickening squelching snaps of rearranging bone and flesh filled the air. A moment later, he pulled his hands back, the warped spines of the hounds in his hands as he twisted them in his grip like a pair of combat staves. The ends of the spines warped into razor sharp spikes, serrated edges beginning to form along their length as the blood that soaked them set ablaze.
"Bring it, old man. The Lord of Strife thirsts for your reckoning."
Atrox gritted his teeth as he thrust a hand forward, the orb of his staff glimmering brightly as he imposed his will on the Disciple. Or tried.
“It won’t work, Atrox. I am not your puppet anymore. The Watcher of Worlds saw fit to strip me of that blasphemous affront to his will.” Kristov was smiling as he spoke, his orange eyes shining menacingly as he spun the polearms in his grasp in preparation. “Try again.”
Swinging his staff at the Disciple, the Grandmaster sent a pulse of pale green energy at the elf, viridian flames caressing the Disciple’s clothing and causing them to flutter on a non-existent breeze. “Heathen…I will destroy you outright!”
Horrible snarls rang out around the two as bushes and doorways alike were blown aside by monstrous beasts, each one more revolting and horrific than the previous.
Kristov leapt into action with shocking speed, his left hand swinging out as the polearm bent and stretched like a whip, the bladed tip cleaving the head of a bloodfiend clean off its shoulders before a second swing plunged the blade into its torso, splitting its ribcage halfway down the middle as it was frozen in place. He swung his weapon around, the creature’s corpse crumpling a second later, though not before surrendering some of its corrupted flesh to the bony, segmented flail. The weapon swung around and slashed out the leg of one other before it hit the ground, Kristov dropping to the floor on his side to evade an incoming beast, the terror’s jaws slamming shut where his head was a moment prior. In the next instant, his leg had kicked up into its flank, knocking it upwards and off to the side, winding it in the same motion. His right hand’s weapon plunged through its back while it was staggered, tearing out of its chest and ripping violently upwards until its upper body was split down the middle. Leaping back into a roll, he avoided another incoming bloodfiend and rose to his feet, a crack of the whip sending it whizzing back and pulling together as the short polearm it once was.
A fireball shot forth into the fray at the Disciple, the Grandmaster exploiting the distraction to gain an advantage, but Kristov was not quite as distracted as he appeared. In the last instant, he impaled one of the slain bloodfiends, tugging the corpse up and into the path of the fire, before hurling it at the Grandmaster, who had to sidestep to avoid it. In an instant, Kristov was upon him, his weapons coming down together, failing by a hair in their task of cleaving the older necromancer apart, the Grandmaster’s staff held dangerously close to his face.
Kristov smiled. “Goodbye, old man. Thank you for your training.”
“What?”
It was the last thing Atrox ever said. In that instant, the straight edge of the blade that made up the end of the spinal polearm split and recurved, forming several serrations each as far apart as the width of the staff. In the next moment, Kristov’s arms moved in opposing directions, one sliding a polearm inwards and downwards, as the other arm moved upwards and sideways, slashing the serrated blade of the free polearm across the Grandmaster’s mouth one way, and then throat the next. His jaw hung open, flesh rent in an instant all the way to the hinge of his lower jaw, and his tongue wriggled helplessly in a mouth that could no longer be closed.
He barely even had a chance to scream. It cut off to gurgling a split second later.
From there, Kristov kicked the older mage backwards into the dirt, the bloodfiends freezing now that their master was no longer guiding them. Kristov drove both his blades into Atrox’s chest, plunging through his lungs and out of his back before hefting him up. Walking towards the inn wall, he shouted, “This! This is what happens to the prideful! The arrogant! The greedy! This is the fate of those who believe themselves to be gods! This is the duty asked of the loyal, the worthy, by the Lord of Change!”
The thud of splintering wood was, for a split second, loud enough to drown out the gurgling cries of the dying Grandmaster, Atrox looking down in terror at his former pupil as he was pinned by his lungs to the wall of the inn. The polearms shifted inside him, serrations turning into massive spikes, firmly rooting him in place. The Disciple stepped back, admiring his handiwork.
“O' Instigator of Strife…I have done as you wished. The heretic is dead, and your people freed once more…We are yours, in your service, at your command. Your guidance, your guidance, o’ Watcher of Worlds, that we may follow your will,” he murmured lowly, head held low, hands cupped before him, surprisingly clean of the apparent blood of moments past.
"You have done well, Kristov. This traitor has been misleading my people for too long. Now he sees the error of his ways, at the end of his life. Claim me his soul, that I may see him in the nether. His reckoning has only just begun."
The voice was deep, gravelly, wet. It rumbled not only from Kristov's throat, but from Atrox, the 'hounds' and indeed, every corpse that littered the road before the inn. It was as if the flesh of the dead had warped and changed until each body was another mouth, each contributing a voice to the Instigator's command.
"Of course, my Lord. It shall be done," responded Kristov as he began to murmur lowly, a hand held forward. The barely conscious Atrox blinked as his head lolled from side to side, tongue hanging out of the slashed open mouth as he looked around at the incendiary runes that began burning first into the wall of the inn, then into his flesh, flowing ever inwards towards his chest at the centre. When the final rune carved itself into his skin and robes, a violent crunch sounded out, a fleshy spike tearing out of his chest on the rune before splitting at the tip, the sound of snapping bones filling the air as what was once a barb became taloned fingers, reaching out over his shoulders and groin. In one fluid motion, the barb-limb retracted, tearing into the flesh of the man's crotch and shoulders and pulling back inwards, the screaming, drowning Grandmaster pulled into what appeared to be a portal, a deluge of blood spilling out around it as he disappeared within, the portal sealing itself once more. Kristov, sighing, fell to his knees.
"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