by C S » Fri Nov 18, 2016 2:28 am
Syria got onto her staff and took off thereafter. Compared to Septimus, the disturbance she created when mana rushed around her was but a sneeze, one that distorted light and pushed some dust away. Syria flew behind Beshayir, an encouraging presence, ready to catch her should she be at risk of falling. This was the highest Beshayir had flown, going past the mudbrick houses and soon reaching a height where the palace itself appeared to ascend over the cityscape of Thimeyra. It was as thrilling as it was daunting, purposely putting distance between one's feet and the ground.
"Find your rhythm and stay true to it. There's no rush."
Far away at the end of the travel to land outside of royal elvish territory, there laid a crater. The region was in the transition of landscapes that would become the empty quarter of mobile dunes and cliffs of sand. Far from what one would call a true desert, the environment was wide and open. Intimidatingly so. Mountains that were so nearby and a staple of the skyline in Niyera were small ripples of earth that one's thumb could blot out when held close to the eye. To the north, the Razors were even less impressive, how far away they were. With those exceptions, the surrounding land was an extensive plains with very few trees and rocks. It was the kind of the place that forced one to appreciate the magnitude of the sky above. Sky and earth. There were rivers as well, snaking across the snowy surface, out of sight. The group of soldiers did not encounter any on their road, however. The water they saw was the water at the bottom of the rocky bowl.
Where the earth fell away, water reigned. A huge pale lake with hints of cyan and navy swirling in the waves. The water roiled without any breeze, and for this it seemed like no matter how cold it got, the surface never froze. At the center of the lake was a speck of stone, which would have gone unnoticed if not for the walkway that extended out to it. Out of sight at the lip of the crater, but not unheard, was the bustling that would be more in line with a city setting.
The soldiers walked down one of the many sets of steps that led down into the depths of the crater. The spectacle of this place put any colosseum and stadium to shame. Where there would be benches in a constructed ring, there were entire shops. Stalls and depots, carved into the rim of the crater and staggered along the angle of descent. Whole roads of stone ran around the crater, concentric and also inclined to the depths of the crater.
They had heard the place before they saw it, walking along that lonely road underneath the massive sky.
And then, when they had worked their way through the bustle on each level of the descent, they were finally able to walk down the pathway over the water's surface. One could not see more than a few feet into the lake, but there was a veritable harbor built at the shore. Small fishing boats trawled the water in motion for bounties to trade and cook.
At the end of the walk, there was a contingent of dwarves wearing small suits of distinction. Around them were clusters of waterwheels and winches. Their shoulders were capped off in gold and burgundy, fringed tassels danced when they parted formation to let the visitors through. The two divisions hauled on the chains connected to the wooden trapdoor inlaid in the floor of the rocky terminal. The door opened, and the group were beckoned into it.
In entering, they had stepped beneath the lake. Sunlight and wide blue skies gave way to the tones of gray of stone and the range of reds and orange of torchlight. The crackling flames were accompanied by a downright industrial ambience of gears and cranks. The group went down the spiraling stairway in the inverted tower, followed by the guards until they came to a level where they could see several caged lifts arranged in a circle. Some of the lifts were already underway, unable to be seen. Others were waiting for passengers.
The soldiers were put into one, and the helpful bunch of short assistants waved goodbye after everyone was guided into a car. It was the most innocent way to torture the faint of heart. The assistants then pulled a lever, causing a chain event of mechanisms sliding in and out, turning and finally releasing the braking blocks of a waterwheel at the surface. The wheel turned in the perpetually churning waters, and the motion put the system of chains and rope into motion.
The caged lift lurched and then began its gradual descent down the rest of the way through the inverted tower. Torches lit the way. Then, without any warning, the containing walls of the towers ended, and the soldiers were privileged to a sight seen by few. A massive chasm beneath the crater lake. Gargantuan metal struts formed a mind boggling scaffolding at the very edges of the chamber. Enormous chains hung all around them in the open descent, lit by the thousands of little lights of the fortress below. A steady stream of water and mist poured down from an opening hidden away in the shadows above.
The waterfall drew the eye to something that could have been taken for a dwarven sculpture. It was anything but.
The figure, humanoid, had many legs, more than a spider. It would have had that many arms, however several of the limbs were missing or incomplete. It was a goliath made out of wood in addition to rock. Petrified with age, and impervious to rot. Sets of arms were splayed out as though the being was reeling from something. More than a few of them were broken off at the elbows and a length of the forearms. The other sets, however, were poised in a more offensive manner. Clawed digits were clasping at the air, as if they were being driven into something.
At various places in the body of wood and stone there were great breaks and cracks where ages of erosion were ravaging the remains of this being. For the safety of the fortress, the worst places of erosion were reinforced with beams of metal and supported by the hanging chains. Inside each huge crack, the glowing eyes of bat-like creatures could be seen, each pair more numerous than the points of light at the bottom of the chasm.
Baaz looked upon the being frozen in and being preyed upon by time. It was something like this that had attacked Crestvale. Immanis' Black Beast would have been lost in its scale.
This was some degrees of terrifying.
