Age of Dread

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Consolidation An Ascension Beyond the Veil ( T.H.E. TvM Upgrade )

TheThird

Storyteller
Staff member
Galactic Credits
ᖬ1,676
Silver
€7,559
Location: Western Borderlands of the Four Summits

The wind here did not howl. It groaned, long, low, and ceaseless. As though the mountains themselves resented the gash torn open in their western flank.

The wasteland beyond was a plain of silent ash, littered with slag-bones of creatures long dead, the life of this province had been sucked away, what remained was a husk of its former self. A wasteland of death and horror. It stretched endlessly, a grey wound under a choked grey sky, with no sun to mark time, only a faint orange glow that never shifted, as if cast by a fire too distant to warm.

At the threshold of this gap, where stone gave way to ash, a convoy waited.

A modest assembly by Eshkin standards: a spiked iron carriage, wrapped in rusted chains, its wheels half-buried in the dried-out dirt below. Flanking it, a cluster of Clan Metus infantry faces veiled, armour pitted from past campaigns.

A Warmaster of Clan Metus, hunched over and uneasy beneath a windless sky, stood watch beside a warded carriage. His armour was crude, bone-plated and bo, its joints stitched with chain cords made of scavenged loot of the last raid. A lantern hung from his back, dimly pulsing with the flaming light of a doomstone-powered lantern. He stood like a forgotten soldier left to weather in the elements, watching the horizon where the ash met the sky.

He was waiting for the outsiders.

Around him, a handful of Metus soldiery held their ground, silent, veiled, weapons unsheathed but still. They knew better than to speak too often here. The wastes had ears, and sometimes the things that listened remembered.


The Warmaster’s gaze held to the far edge of the breach, waiting. Two were meant to arrive, outsiders, not Eshkin, not known, not trusted. One of the soldiers shifted. “They should have reached-arrived us by now-now, yes-yes”, he muttered. The Warmaster did not reply. His gaze remained fixed westward.

In these lands, time was a suggestion, and death, a certainty.

@Seraphina Ivory @Naexi
 
Last edited:
She’d seen bad lands before. Burnt villages, razed cities, pest-ridden border towns. But this?

This was worse.

The wind here didn’t scream—it groaned, like something ancient mourning beneath the surface. A dying breath that never quite left the throat of the world.

Seraphina stood near the edge of the breach, boots planted firm where stone ended and the wasteland began. Her cloak whipped in the hollow gusts, ash clinging to the scales of her neck and cheek like it had a claim on her. Her scythe rested over her back, gleaming faintly despite the sky’s refusal to shed proper light.

Everything was wrong here.

The air tasted like rust.

The sky looked like an open wound.

And the land beyond was as lifeless as memory.

Behind her, the Eshkin convoy loomed—a rusting procession of cruelty and superstition. The central carriage squatted like a beast in pain, all hooked iron and war chains, each link etched with wards she didn’t recognize and didn’t want to.

She glanced toward the Warmaster.

Big for a rat, but still hunched like all of them were—like they knew some greater weight pressed forever on their shoulders. His armor was a patchwork of bone and metal, stitched together from past sins. The doomstone lantern hanging from his back pulsed dimly with orange hate, the glow flickering like a heartbeat in its death throes.

They’d hired her for security. Not for goblins, not for beasts.

No, the Eshkin didn’t fear what lived in the wasteland.

They feared what remembered it.

She turned her eyes westward again, across the ashen plains. The breach yawned like a split in the world’s skull. A rift, they called it—something ancient, maybe sacred, maybe cursed. And beyond it, things waited.

Things she didn’t believe in.

Not yet.

But she’d be the first to put a blade in whatever dared try to change her mind.

A chittering voice to her left snapped the silence.

“You—scythe-mercenary—quiet-lurker, yes-yes. You watch the breach, mm? You keep-kept us from death-stalkers, yes?”

Seraphina didn’t turn. Didn’t blink.

I was paid to watch your backs,” she said coldly. “Not wipe them.”

The Eshkin hissed softly, but retreated. Smart.

She shifted her weight slightly, fingers brushing the artifact beneath her coat—a charm of grounding, her only ward against the warp of the lantern-light. The rat-kin didn’t trust her, and she returned the favor with interest.

Still, she had a job.

Keep the Warmaster alive.

Keep the convoy whole.

Get them to the other side.

Whatever that meant.

She let out a slow breath, steam hissing between her sharp teeth.

Whatever’s on the other side better bleed,” she murmured, eyes narrowing.

Because Seraphina Ivory didn’t trust portals.

And she never walked into one without her blade drawn.

Tag; @TheThird
 
Back
Top