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Thunders shook the muddy soil, as if the very earth refused to give in to the weight of rainwater pouring on her without ending. It had been three days of continuous storm, giving off the feeling that the Dark Gods truly willed to sink Eirelunn in a Second Cataclysm. For any a stranger who found himself in this desolate place, the weather barely added to the gloom that consumed the ancient forests. There were no colours to feed the eye, nor view to ease the anticipation of the soul. There was an endless sea of eonic trees stretching high over the sharp stone, forming a canopy that denied any light to pierce through as if it was an armour. Septic flora sinking to the muddy soil, deprived of light and plagued with many diseases and excess humidity. Tree trunks spiraling high from roots that resembled mountains in their own right, amalgamating between themselves into a chaotic landscape that denied view past twenty or so paces. That was Eirelunn. That was the despised lands of Dal Arad, Northern-most reaches of Talathair. Contested between warring Clans of the Northerners, Talathair had been a war-torn land for eons, ever since the Nordur descend from beyond the Eilean Sea.
The ring grew heavy, as if its very metal had a will of its own, choosing to torment its wearer by turning freezingly cold. Black tendrils extended from the Beyond, manifesting momentarily in the man's mind amidst the warring shadows cast from the lightning that shined above the canopy, vanishing by the time of the deafening screech of the thunderstruck. The ring grew heavy. To take it off was to taunt the wrath of forces beyond any comperhension restrained by the chains of sanity. It was a mockery. A reminder of the quest at hand, although so vaguely assigned.
As the canopy bent to the lashing of the wind blowing the relentless rain farther to the South, the silhuette of the castle finally appeared beyond the narrow path of mud and thorns. Few, if any, yellow flickering lights still illuminated it from behind windows on the towers, breaking its otherwise ghostly shadow. To wander in such a place during such a weather was suicidal for any a mortal. Hidden behind hearths and fireplaces, the Eirishfolk waited out the storm, while even the sentries of the gatehouses lacked the will to keep watch, and those who didn't, barely attended their posts, choosing in favour of rolling dice and drinking Uische. Not even the feral creatures of Dal Arad poped from their hiding holes, for the storm was too heavy and the risk to great to find oneself beneath a fallen tree trunk, or under a ditch, of which the roads had pleanty of, having lost chunks to the overflow of water and debris.
The Druids believed that during great thunderstorms, the very boundaries of the Beyond cracked open, the tear in reality so deep that one could hear the roaring of Tiarnadorch, the exiled God, as he reminded the world of Terra Firma of his imminent return for retribution. A thousand years had passed, and yet the wrath of the divine remained pure. For the Beast Druids, their patron, Tiarnadorch, sent signs of his will to Terra Firma, hidden behind the dark tidings of the weather, history and psyche, meant for the Druidic leaders, the Ubhagán, to decypher.
The path led to a small opening, at the edge of the sharp cliff crowned by sharp stones and hanging trees, barely withstanding the pushing of the wind. Another lightning graced the ground, carving a path through one of the ancient trees. The lightning's light blazed blindingly, cutting the whole tree trunk in two, adorning its insides with fiery tattoos. The thunderstruck shook the cliff, causing few of the balancing stones to drip down.
At the very edge of the cliff stood a ghostly figure, layered by black mist seemingly ignorant of the strong wind around her. A dress of black feathers completely covered her body, save for the pale face on which her long black hair had latched on, soaked by the rain. She remained standing still, her long pale talons brought before her abdomen, while her hollow eyes gazing far to the castle beyond the cliff, as if she could read each and every crack of the stone it was built, regardless of distance or darkness inbetween.
The ring grew lighter, the closer he got to the edge of the cliff, calming the closer he was to its master...
The ring grew heavy, as if its very metal had a will of its own, choosing to torment its wearer by turning freezingly cold. Black tendrils extended from the Beyond, manifesting momentarily in the man's mind amidst the warring shadows cast from the lightning that shined above the canopy, vanishing by the time of the deafening screech of the thunderstruck. The ring grew heavy. To take it off was to taunt the wrath of forces beyond any comperhension restrained by the chains of sanity. It was a mockery. A reminder of the quest at hand, although so vaguely assigned.
As the canopy bent to the lashing of the wind blowing the relentless rain farther to the South, the silhuette of the castle finally appeared beyond the narrow path of mud and thorns. Few, if any, yellow flickering lights still illuminated it from behind windows on the towers, breaking its otherwise ghostly shadow. To wander in such a place during such a weather was suicidal for any a mortal. Hidden behind hearths and fireplaces, the Eirishfolk waited out the storm, while even the sentries of the gatehouses lacked the will to keep watch, and those who didn't, barely attended their posts, choosing in favour of rolling dice and drinking Uische. Not even the feral creatures of Dal Arad poped from their hiding holes, for the storm was too heavy and the risk to great to find oneself beneath a fallen tree trunk, or under a ditch, of which the roads had pleanty of, having lost chunks to the overflow of water and debris.
The Druids believed that during great thunderstorms, the very boundaries of the Beyond cracked open, the tear in reality so deep that one could hear the roaring of Tiarnadorch, the exiled God, as he reminded the world of Terra Firma of his imminent return for retribution. A thousand years had passed, and yet the wrath of the divine remained pure. For the Beast Druids, their patron, Tiarnadorch, sent signs of his will to Terra Firma, hidden behind the dark tidings of the weather, history and psyche, meant for the Druidic leaders, the Ubhagán, to decypher.
The path led to a small opening, at the edge of the sharp cliff crowned by sharp stones and hanging trees, barely withstanding the pushing of the wind. Another lightning graced the ground, carving a path through one of the ancient trees. The lightning's light blazed blindingly, cutting the whole tree trunk in two, adorning its insides with fiery tattoos. The thunderstruck shook the cliff, causing few of the balancing stones to drip down.
At the very edge of the cliff stood a ghostly figure, layered by black mist seemingly ignorant of the strong wind around her. A dress of black feathers completely covered her body, save for the pale face on which her long black hair had latched on, soaked by the rain. She remained standing still, her long pale talons brought before her abdomen, while her hollow eyes gazing far to the castle beyond the cliff, as if she could read each and every crack of the stone it was built, regardless of distance or darkness inbetween.
The ring grew lighter, the closer he got to the edge of the cliff, calming the closer he was to its master...