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Loque
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Re: The Door of Souls


The sudden burst of flame cause Loque to all but shout in surprise, nearly falling back against the table they'd pressed to the door. Was it magic? Did this man just die-- so suddenly, because of magic? Why? Now there were three creatures and two people in the room, and still seemingly more questions than answers. A door? The mistress? Ghosts!? A blink, a single mundane motion as Sybil acknowledge them and give out orders. She'd been fidgety but otherwise pleasant thus far, so they had felt no reason not to comply. Their only good eye darting between the door and the flames.

Seeing through the mud-like being's eyes as well as their own was a surreal experience to say the least. "Old lady. Has scones, not seem angry but..." Loque trail off, recalling an old crone that used to take a strange joy in whacking the poor ithecal across the nose when teaching them how to be a proper slave. "Friend, thank you. Come back." Loque tap a hand lightly to where the 'mud' still kept tethered, not wanting them to risk the woman's wrath if she were to notice it. Perhaps when things were less rock-and-hard-place Loque would ask a name of it, it was a very nice being, after all, letting them see through its eyes.

The flames in the room cause more and more unease, yet Sybil seemed to want to let it burn? To make a new way out of the room. Her addressing of the lady and announcing their situation set the lizard askew. Was it wise to tell such things to something that should likely more-so be feared? H's words come to mind; about how the ghosts outside were without their own will-- controlled by the mistress. Would they face the same fate if that woman were to enter the room? To face her, potentially the 'empty' that H mentioned prior in response to someone screaming within the home and risk becoming a new additive to the collection pressed to the window-- or blindly hope that a hole would burn through the floor long before burning them, and possibly leading to some escape.

Loque didn't get much more chance to think on such things before Sybil spoke again, addressing the creatures at first before turning her words to the ithecal. "Loque." they reply simply when asked for a name. "Master would know what to do..." they grumble softly, knowing that the powerful mage likely would've just turned into some monster in kind and charged headlong through the door, unafraid of ghost or beast in his wake. Loque was not the master, though, and held no such power. "I would like to see him again, should we survive." They offer a timid smile, trying to remember that their kind had the face of monsters rather than men, and could be seen as just as scary to some as the harvester. The only hope now was that Sybil was better at planning things out than a simple lizard.
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Aegis
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Re: The Door of Souls

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H took over the answers to the questions that Sybil had given to the group, if only because he seemed to be the most ready to answer. He sighed, rolling his eyes, "We all came from wherever we were moments prior to this. I personally was chasing a pretty young Echo through the mountains to the west. She got away, thanks to this. As for who sent us, it seems as though it is the great spirits that we answer to."

H huffed off toward the window, tapping against it. "These would be a nice snack if it weren't for the Mistress."

The toy soldier on Sybil's shoulder spoke, "I can turn it back, in small parts. I can stop it. Maybe other things. I usually just help to keep time flowing forward."

The woman who had been waiting patiently to give scones and tea heard Sybil's words. "Oh dear. My Mistress won't like that one bit. You must enjoy the scones, and be happy here in Her home. I know not what these lands are called these trials. We don't get so many new visitors. If you let me in, I will clean it right up. We can't have your clothes getting all sooty before you meet the Mistress." She tut-tutted, "Old Maisey Ray will help. Though, are you sure your friend is dead? The dead don't get to leave here. They should still be there with you!" This last bit was said fairly cheerfully.

The mud spirit returned to Loque, staying latched upon his back, oozing his warmth over the lizard. At Loque's suggestion that they might survive, H snorted derisively. "Wishful thinking there, Gecko. Although... Maybe if you both died, and that other fellow too, wherever he wandered off to, I'd be free of this annoyance."

He floated toward Sybil now, glowing eyes staring at the growing hole of flame, "Well would you look at that." As the hole widened, as pieces fell away, the next room below became visible. It looked to be a nursery of sorts. There were toys, cribs, and other colorful niceties. And roughly ten ghostly children, ranging in age from crying newborns to wandering toddlers, all of whom were looking up at the whole.

"Never seen a ghost baby before."

H turned to Sybil, "You're the boss love. Let's get this ball rollin'. Or just die already so I can go. I'll even promise not to eat your ghostliness if you do. I'm a nice guy like that."
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Sybil Malach
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Re: The Door of Souls

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"We all came from wherever we were moments prior to this. I personally was chasing a pretty young Echo through the mountains to the west. She got away, thanks to this. As for who sent us, it seems as though it is the great spirits that we answer to." The Harvester named H had said. "These would be a nice snack if it weren't for the Mistress."

Something struck Sybil, in that very moment. There was no reason to make these comments. The Harvester was beginning to put on a show, something that Sybil slowly began to pick up on. The tone of its voice, paired with the repetition of some phrases, it was slowly beginning to meld into place what what going on, there. As the flames billowed up, burning a further large hole into the ground, Sybil had to think quickly, "Why don't you tell me more, of this Mistress? You seem to know much, if you can discern that she's stopping you." The student offers, as an approach to the desk is made.

The Ithecal had said their name, to Sybil. A glance is given to the side, consideringly of them, before giving a quick upnod, "Loque, is it? Then we need to work together, here. Seeing your Master again is something that we both need to work towards." The student affirmed, as both hands planted on the edge of the desk. The student wasn't someone capable of large feats of strength, and with a weakened leg, it was clear that moving the desk alone would be a slow, arduous task, "Help me with this desk... The flames will open up an escape for us both, if my instincts are... Wrong, here." Sybil admits, with a light cough, grunting, as the waifish student tries to push the desk blocking the door back.

"Oh dear. My Mistress won't like that one bit. You must enjoy the scones, and be happy here in Her home. I know not what these lands are called these trials. We don't get so many new visitors. If you let me in, I will clean it right up. We can't have your clothes getting all sooty before you meet the Mistress." The voice on the other side rang out. "Old Maisey Ray will help. Though, are you sure your friend is dead? The dead don't get to leave here. They should still be there with you!" Her tone was the most genuine. It's uncertain if she was even more human than the things shambling outside, but Sybil didn't question it that far. Things were worsening by the trill, and an action had to be taken, regardless of consequence.

A breath is taken, as Sybil struggles with the desk, "He burst into flames. Some spirit spoke to him-- I don't know of many that could survive being engulfed the way he did." Sybil's eyes go sidelong, towards the Ithecal. Sybil felt, instinctively, that the old woman was being more honest than the spirits currently in the room. There was less... Information being held back, less intentions of misgivings. Something that the student couldn't make obvious, just yet. Which more than likely only served to confused the Ithecal in the room, "I don't know what that means. If he's not among the... Others, outside, then something must be hunting us. I know not what is even happening." Comes the admission-- Better to be truthful, than tell a barely believable lie.
word count: 589
"No mass graves."

-Vri 720, scolding Sybil for disposing of necromancers.

NPCs: Karlsson, Margaret
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Loque
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Re: The Door of Souls


Loque's eye was locked on the Harvester as it move, listening to its words but rather than see it as a 'cheery guide' it simply looked like a skulking hunter... Toying with its prey as it circle, flourishing its claws and teeth in a... 'crocodile' manor as to possibly make itself seem harmless, when in fact could very well be the most dangerous thing in the room at that moment. The return of the mud creature, however, restore Loque's own unique sort of smile, happy that it did not get or risk getting hurt for nothing. After all, it very much reminded Loque of home, and as such was, beyond the girl, the most comforting thing in the room at that moment.

Loque near stumble back on glancing through the hole and flames and seeing smaller figures below-- children? Ghost children?? They could feel their stomach twisting as they shake the thought from their head, now was definitely not the time to think of such things. Life, death, they were inevitable, and indiscriminate. H seemed to glean some fascination-- amusement, even- from such. Loque wanted nothing more than to keep that beast beyond tail's length, regardless of whatever information it gave. A beast with too many teeth talking so much, surely it had some other plan... I'm a nice guy like that so shortly after bidding the pair simply die in favor of his release, certainly put a foul taste in Loque's maw.

Her approach to the desk was met with a wary glance, still, Sibyl seemed to be confident in her choices. In truth, such a potentially reckless gamble seemed not unlike something the Master would do, which only further edge the ithecal to trust her. A simple nod and they move to help with the desk, bracing against it and leaning their weight in to push it out of the way of the door. "Ah, please mind the door, ma'am, it should be free in a moment." It always sounded odd, even to Loque, when they spoke proper common. Simple phrases, even broken, to get one's point across always seemed better, but still they understood that it was often best to address those unfamiliar, or in higher standing, in a more formal way.

With no choice but to trust the girl who was possibly as 'crazy' as the Master, and constantly trying to keep H out of their blind spot, Loque held a looming sense of dread that this.... strange fever dream of a nightmare would not end any time soon. Still they were left with far too many questions than answers, but no mind nor means to ask. "You not animal, but I trust your instincts." Loque nod to her, offering some sense of a smile. After all, their only instinct was to keep everything away, while she seemed to be working out a far better plan.
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Re: The Door of Souls

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H looked at Sybil, and in a particularly mocking imitation of the good doctor's voice, "Why don't you tell me more of this Mistress?" Then he looked at Sybil while rolling his eyes, "Because I'm not a library. I don't know as much as you seem to think. I'm just clever. And observant. And dashingly handsome. You should try it sometime."

H huffed, growing impatient, peering back through the hole in the floor at the baby ghosts. He licked his lips and floated down through the hole toward them. In a mutter, "Snack time."

Soon, a bell began to ring through the entire house. This was not the loud dingdonging of church bells, but rather the clinking of a small set of bells. Yet, it was heard in every inch of the property. Old Maisey Rae perked up, "I'm sorry to leave you, but the Mistress is calling everyone to dinner. And it seems there's a new guest! What an exciting day, so many new people. Do wash up and come join us. I cooked it all myself. And put out the fire please, it will take me so long to get the smoke smell out of the curtains."

Old Maisey Rae left the cart of tea and scones there by the door, and disappeared down the hall.

Meanwhile, in the long dining room, Luther would find himself plopped down in an incredibly ornate chair, sitting before a spread of food that was truly the epitome of the Empire's cuisine. Every meat, vegetable, bread, fruit and the like that was known to the Empire's elite, much of which Raskalarn and her generals ate was upon this table. It was hot and steaming and delicious smelling. For the living. But Luther was a ghost once more, and thus, he couldn't smell it.

At the head of the table, sat the curly haired ghost with eyes growing crimson, but a polite smile was on her face. "You were my first kiss. It was... nice. I.. thought it might be another, but perhaps it was meant to be you all along." Luther would be able to feel the ghostly power absolutely emanating from the woman. He'd know that every ghost here, except for himself, answered to her. "What is the name of the prince who awoke this sleeping beauty? What about me so enamored you to kiss me while I slept?"

The woman leaned forward and rang the dinner bell. The table was long, impossibly long. Hundreds of meters away in a room that moments before didn't seem so long. The ghosts that had been milling around outside, attempting to get in, were now filing in and taking their seats along the table. Luther was on the woman's immediate left, with two seats left empty to his left. There were three empty seats across the table from him as well.

"And tell me, my sweet prince. Do you dance?"
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Luther
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Re: The Door of Souls

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Dying wasn't so hard the second time around.

He was surprised has quickly it had come, and how easy it was to embrace. One second he was syphoning an Anchor to save his companions, and the next he was being dragged down, soul-first, into the body of an Immortal who was not quite dead as they imagined her to be. This type of death was more like slipping off a well-worn jacket and less like clawing to any shred of life one could get a hand on. Perhaps that was because it wasn't a true form of life either. Just a body borrowed from a spirit he didn't know was bound to him.

Whatever fleeting blessing had granted him breath again was now passed, and Luther now appeared fully like the ghost he was. His skin flickered with cinders, smoke coiled neatly around him form, and smooth, happy grey of his once living gaze was stained sorrowful by ashes all-to-familiar to Luther. Where life once was, undeath took its place. Much like the room that the ghost now found himself in.

Where the Palace of Lions was decadence slowly being eaten by rot, the dining room which Luther sat in was rot masquerading as decadence. The ghost was sat in what could easily be mistaken for a throne, and before him stretched every possible variation of Imperial cuisine. Food for the elite that the poor farm boy had never even contemplated, but it wasn't as it mattered now anyway. He was dead again, and this food was very clearly for the living.

A voice like silk running over sharpened steel shook Luther from his wonder, drawing his attention to a woman that looked so very familiar to him. She should, after all the vision of her death still plagued his mind. Daia. Or rather, an Empty that looked very much like the divine being.

Oh by damnation, he had kissed the soul of an Immortal and now he had to answer for it. A beauty even in death, Luther was embarrassed, terrified, and awestruck all at once by the goddess. He could feel the waves of power rolling off the specter like heat from a flame, and Luther became acutely aware of how much a wrong answer could cost him.

"Well, I'm glad you enjoyed it," he began with an awkward if charming smile. The Echo was unsure how talk to living women, much less undead divinity. "Perhaps. Personally I don't put too much stock in fate, but events like these and people like you do tempt me to change my mind." He cast a cursory glance to the room around him, quietly searching for the forms of his companions that he was with a moment ago. Could this Empty have also dragged others down with him into this anchor?

"My name is Luther, son of Caedro, ma'am. Er-My lady. Apologies, my breeding didn't lend to learning much in the way of manners. What would be proper for me to address you by?"

“You may address me as Mistress Noila.”

Something clicked together in his head. The woman that Arlo had mentioned back in the palace, the one that drove a man mad with her beauty, she was said to be in a mansion filled with the undead. Much like the one he was in now. The first woman to commit adultery, if Arlo was to be believed. The Mistress, and she dragged him down into her mansion.

Oh, this was very bad indeed.

In a twisted way, it made a certain sense. After all, what does one become when you walk through Death's door? A soul. And what lay in this decrepit domicile. The Door of Souls. If he played his cards right, maybe he could find that door too and discover a way to regain his freedom.

"As you wish, Mistress Noila. Regarding why I kissed you, well, death is as beautiful as it is lonely. I know that better than most," his voice broke slightly, the image of his slain family briefly flashing in his mind. No. Without whatever had bound him to life, it was getting easier to let his mind wander into despair and irrationality. He had to stay focused. Figure a way out of here. Find the door. "I thought that by sharing that moment with you, we might both find some comfort in this afterlife."

He wasn't lying, strictly speaking.

She moved to ring the dinner bell, ushering in waves and waves of ghosts. For a moment, his eyes narrowed as he saw their connection to the Mistress grow. These souls were slaves to the Empty, ignorant of the chains that weighed down their very being. This was a fate worse than the specter's in the Palace of Lions faced, for at least they had some knowledge of their devotion to Daia. These ghosts, however, had that choice ripped away from them. Whatever anchors they had to the living world, what ever obsession drove them forward, it was now replaced by the tyranny of the Mistress. Their minds were not their owns, their choices not of their own making, and it disgusted him.

“You’re quite kind Luther, son of Caedro.”

He smiled, shy and unsure of himself. "Not so sure about kind, but I am honest. Truth is, souls like us require a reminder of our humanity every once in a while. Seeing you made me remember life. How it felt to have purpose, and how it feels to have that again," he paused, a question heavy on his lips that he knew could be dangerous to inquire. "May I ask, Mistress Noila, do you also know that feeling?"

“Purpose? Why would I need that? I have my family and friends here, with me, forever. What more do I need? They make me happy. Fill my heart. What purpose do you have?”

"Truth," he replied, so quick he surprised himself. "Well, I thought it was truth for awhile. I've been lied to by family and faith alike, I thought honesty was the one thing that would fill my heart. But, like I said, you reminded me of what true purpose felt like. Now I see that truth was simply the path to my purpose, not the end of the road. Now I see I am like a lantern, and my purpose is to light the way so that others may find their salvation."

Her eyes narrowed, “And you wish to lead me away from here? To this salvation of yours?” Her face grew stern and every other ghost in the room stiffened, all now staring at Luther with the same face the mistress wore. The room began to grow cold. So cold. A cold that even Luther could feel creeping into him.

Luther could see frost hang in the air, but despite the cold and the fear that he felt fill his body, he kept on his gentle smile. If anything, the cinders that clung to his skin began to burn brighter.

"No. Not my salvation. Yours." He gestured out to the souls lining the table, all staring him down with that harsh glare their master wore. "These aren't your family, and they're not your friends. They're your slaves. You're better than this, and they deserve their freedom. If you cared about them at all in life, you would let them have a choice in undeath. Noila, let them go free. Let them choose to stay with you if they want. Please, I can help you find purpose. You helped me find mine."

Her face shifted to that of a feline's as the room bristled with her anger. Loud roars of a wild cat echoed from every other ghost in the room. Her face returned back to normal, albeit still enraged, "This is my family. I don't know you. You're not part of the pack. I've NEVER helped you. You're not who I thought you were! He would never say such horrible things to me!"

Eyes wide with surprise at the sight and sound of the shift, Luther forced himself to remain constant to his goal. She would see the truth.

"You're right, I'm not who you thought I was, but I am who you need. And I may not know you, but you don't know yourself anymore. You wear someone else's face as your own, and even that's not constant. I don't say this to be cruel, but because its the truth you need to accept. I know how scary death is, I know how lonely it is and how we want to cling to what was in life. Before today I was losing myself down the same path that you're walking right now. I was so damned angry, so damned scared, that I couldn't see the truth of how much I was hurting people around me. Noila, you're hurting your pack. Your family. You're not letting them choose, and you're keeping them slaved to your will. You know that's wrong, and it's okay to accept that,"

Luther rose from his seat, cinders now sparking into flames as single-minded purpose filled him. Spectral fire desperately clawing against the cold, the echo stared kindly down at the empty still seated at the table. He offered a hand, eyes soft and pleading. "You say you haven't helped me, but you have in more ways than you'll ever know. Noila, you saved my soul. Let me help you save yours. Let's walk a new path together,"

“Hurting them?” She laughed nasally, pointing at them as they all laughed just as she did. But as Luther’s fires flared up, a smile crept into her face. “Maybe you are him after all.” She reached out and took his hand.

She wasn't listening. She wouldn't listen. She was trapped here, in a prison of her own making waiting for an man in the mask of Faldrun to greet her. Well, Luther wouldn't play the part she had given him.

"No, I'm not. I'm no god of flame, I'm an inconvenient truth," he breathed, the sorrow in his voice matching the sadness in his gaze. She couldn't hear the truth from him, but there were others in the room she would listen too. "For what it's worth, I'm sorry Noila. You deserved better than him, and better than me for sure."

He would attempt to gently raise her from her seat. While doing so, he would snake a tendril around both her ankle and the nearest ghost that appeared unrelated to her. Once the spectral limb made contact, Luther would activate his Death Remnant ability to attempt to force both Noila and the nearest ghost to reject whatever authority bound their actions.

Dropping the hand and preparing for the worst that the Empty had to offer, Luther took a step back from the table. He would continue to attempt to free as many souls as he could from her influence, twin tendrils snapping out from him like spears from a shield wall.

"You wanna dance, sweetheart? That's fine. But I pick the tune, and I pick my partner," Luther growled out with a voice as dark as ash. Calling out to the Spirit that partnered with him in the Palace of Lions, Luther knew that this conflict would most likely claim his soul. That was fine. He made a promise to the ghosts in the Palace, and as far as he was concerned, that vow extended to these specters chained to their Empty. He intended to keep it.

After all, dying wouldn't be so hard the second time around.
OOC
This is the Death Remnant ability that Luther is attempting to use on the Empty, the ghost next to him, and on as many ghosts as he can before he gets wrecked.

Insurgent- In his family’s time of need, Luther believes the Immortals and the Eternal Empire abandoned them. They rejected his prayers for help, and now in undeath his soul rejects them. Whenever Luther touches another individual with a materialized tendril, he can force them to rebel against any order which binds them to authority. This ability could make a guard abandon his post, a priest refuse their religious duty, or a slave revolt against their master. However, there are limits to the strength of this rejection. Luther’s soul still respects family, and as such he could never force an individual to revolt against someone they consider as family. This ability cannot affect any Marked PC’s or NPC’s duty to their Immortal if they are ranked at Exalted or higher, and Insurgent can be resisted if an individuals levels of Discipline or Meditation exceeds Luther’s skill level of Materialization. If an individuals Meditation or Discipline skill matches Luther's skill in materialization, the affected time is cut in half. Insurgent scales with Luther’s level in Materialization: causing rebellion for 1 bit at Novice, 5 bits at Competent, 15 bits at Expert, 30 bits at Master, and for 1 break at grandmaster.
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Sybil Malach
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Re: The Door of Souls

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Something wasn't right about the spirits. They were too saccharine. And when they weren't saccharine, they were slowly nudging through misdirection. Sybil's mind had begun to pick up on this deception. Slowly, the student's eyes glance between the spirits present. Maisie had already left. It was strange, that she was the only one that seemed to be genuine. The total slough of strange demeanors and behaviors was starting to erode at the student's mind, the sheer amount of mistrust shared between the living and the dead. While the Ithecal was more accepting of the other spirits, Sybil cast a not so convinced glance towards the spirit of time, upon the shoulder. Ah. Sybil knew the right word to describe these findings. These creatures, they were behaving like parasites. Making themselves useful, in exchange for something that they wanted, or needed. But what is it that these things wanted? Why did they smell of fear?

"Trust in your instincts, as well. Be loose with your lips, Loque. We won't get out of this by relying solely on one or the other." Eyes turning to Loque, Sybil simply pauses, glancing at their feet. They were barefooted, and while scales would likely offer protection, it wouldn't be that good of a decision to make. A slow glance turns to Loque, before simply saying, "Can your... Companion, do anything about these flames? I doubt that my boots alone will be able to stop it, and I don't know if there's anything here that could smother it." Slowly, Sybil's lips knit to the side in thought. Eyes turning to the Spirit of time, an idea slowly churned behind the student's eyes. Something that was a shot in the dark, more than anything truly eventful. A sigh leaves Sybil's lips, it would likely end the way that the student thought it would, but if the question wasn't asked, it wouldn't be answered. This was one of the reasons why the student despised the paranormal. Nothing made sense. There was no distinct law to abide to, "... Can you... March the flames back in time, perchance?"

Sybil didn't bother moving from the position the student had been in for a while now. The pacing was getting tiring, and everything seemed like it was liable to kill the student given the chance. A hand rests at the top of Sybil's head, kneading into it, pushing the large braid of hair to the side, idly fiddling with it in thought. It was hard to think in this situation. But something had to be done.

However... There was something that lingered within the student's mind. The Harvester, that creature. His seeping attitude was writhing in the student's brain. Perhaps... Something to get him to trip up. Give a tell on what was truly going on beneath that ethereal form of his. "For a spirit as 'Handsome' and 'Clever' as yourself, your eyes do wander quite a bit..." Sybil's words hang in the air, eyes glancing at the entity, sidelong, "... If you're looking to impress me, I fear, I am not a prize to be won." The subtle weave of returning snark, and attempt at getting the thing to trip up was something a bit too vague, but Sybil wasn't going to be judging the creature's outward response. Its features, more interested Sybil. And eye contact wasn't broken. Sybil had calmed, mind shifting into gear, as the way forward was becoming more obvious, and more paved. It was almost as though something had taken Sybil's mind for a spin, going int autopilot.
word count: 614
"No mass graves."

-Vri 720, scolding Sybil for disposing of necromancers.

NPCs: Karlsson, Margaret
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Loque
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Re: The Door of Souls


With a nod Loque turn their head, offering their damaged, blind eye to Sybil while the other glance over their shoulder at the muddy blob clinging to their back. Yet before words could leave their maw, Sybil had already asked the smallest spirit for help. Curious as to how one could manipulate time, yet unsure it was at all possible, they return to their familiar; "Can you help with the fire? Not if it would hurt you, but if you could, thank you." Loque was trying their very best to be polite and formal, not falling back as much on their simplified Common as they normally would in the company of the master. Sybil differed greatly from him, so much so in fact that Loque felt completely out of place.

A room full of books, a scholarly figure planning move upon move as though it all were some complex strategic game for survival. Three spirits; one who spoke, one who clung, and one who was easy for Loque to overlook. The poor ithecal was no better than a half lame animal dropped in the middle of a city at this point, good for little more than the natural lean muscle their kind had. Still, to be of any use at all was better than being fodder... An idle touch at their ribs, mindless it would seem to any, like absently scratching an itch, but Loque was instead remembering the distinct faded glow of the rune Rhostus had drawn on their skin to heal bruised ribs. The master was a powerful Becomer, his mentor an equally skilled user of Hone... And Loque? Barely knew how to use a dagger.

Grumbling softly under their breath Loque turn, finishing the task of moving the hasty blockade from the door. Glancing about the room- surely there had to be something to help put out the fire? "Many books, but candles too, must be something to help here?" Speaking as they think, a fire like this wasn't something common in Quacia, or at least not as dire beyond damaging possessions. The homes there were almost exclusively made of clay and stone, meaning only one's belongings could really fuel a flame. All the while the lizard was quite clearly avoiding looking at H, his mention of 'snacks' at the sight of child ghosts still made Loque uneasy, but H had more teeth, and Loque was not about to snap his jaws at something that could easily snap back. How they wished they'd known even a fraction of the magic the two Lotharro tossed about so freely, to be somehow useful in this situation rather than ambling about like a lost whelp. Sybil seemed to know some sense of direction, though, so Loque didn't feel... completely useless.
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Last edited by Loque on Wed May 08, 2019 9:44 pm, edited 1 time in total. word count: 464
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Aegis
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Re: The Door of Souls

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The swamp spirit had begun to move toward the fire, but the toy soldier waved it off, nodding at it. The swamp spirit stopped, giving way to the other spirit. The toy soldier on Sybil's shoulder heard his request, "Yes.." then looked around not seeing H immediately, "Sir." The spirit wiggled its hands there, toward the flames. The flames began to shrink and repeat, and slowly, the hole in the floor began to stitch itself back together.

H came floating back up through the floor, the unmoving ghost baby in one of its long, clawed hands. His eyes were locked onto Sybil's. "Nor am I some child meant to be taught a lesson. I lived far beyond the arcs you've spent upon this cursed land. You know nothing about me. You know nothing at all." H's form began to wobble as his anger emanated from him in waves. His chest puffed, his eyes narrowed, until the point that the form broke.

And in it's place stood a man. Or rather, the ghost of a man. The ghost man looked panicked now, tossing aside the ghost baby, it landing in the corner. The baby began to cry loudly. Below them, the entire room of ghost babies began to cry. And soon, the door opened. Sweet Old Maisie Rae stepped in. "Oh wonderful, you've cleaned up the fire. I cannot thank you enough." She walked over to the baby, picking it up, cooing it. "It's okay, The Mistress is here now. Mama is here. You don't need to cry. You're safe now."

The ghost woman walked up to H and touched his cheek. The man's eyes rolled back in his head and he was in silent agony. But soon, he was back, and the three ghosts turned to look at Sybil, then to Loque. "Welcome to our home. Will you be staying long?"

Meanwhile, Noila rose from her seat, taking Luther's hand. She paused for a moment, as Luther's Death Remnant took effect. The other ghosts he attempted to free were unaffected, as it considered Noila family. But a chain manifested around Noila's neck and wrists and ankles, ghostly chains that were not there prior. Luther's Death Remnant began to burn at these chains. She walked with him, taking his offer to dance.

"I do love to dance. It has been... too long."

Using her touch with him, she found a dance he would know from the old empire days. The Invader's Waltz, a powerful and lithe dance. It was considered to be one of the easiest ones to learn but the hardest to master. It took true discipline and trust in the partners involved, beyond that of the normal. She was prepared to start, when the chains finally burnt through, freeing Noila from the Mistress' hold over her.

The woman paused, looking up into Luther's eyes. "My name is Daia. Will you dance with me?" Every ghost in the dining room stood up and partnered up, creating a wide berth for Daia and Luther, as the room shifted into a ballroom around them. The woman pressed her head against Luther's chest, waiting for him to take the lead.

And the spirit that had helped Luther, that he called, answered. The Spirit of Life appeared next to Luther, and took a guess at his intentions. And so, the spirit slid into Daia's ghostly form. And the woman changed. She was not completely solid or with body, but she was colorful now, looking almost alive. And while Luther held her, he too, was returned to near life. He could feel again, he had color in his cheeks.

And whatever song Luther had in his head, would begin playing in the ballroom.

With that song, a door opened, right along the back wall. And through that door, Hart, Vega, and Arlo could be seen. The song that was in Luther's head for his and Daia's dance now could be heard in the Palace of Lions. The hidden orchestra there heard it, and began to play it too, and all of the ghosts changed their dance to match that of Daia and Luther's.

Hart's wish took effect and Daia and Luther's dance carried them both through the doorway into this room that was once hers. A doorway that shut once she was through it.

Old Maisie Rae was fuming now, screaming as only a distraught banshee could. She stepped forward and into Sybil, and the battle of wills between Sybil and the Mistress had begun. This would take several long moments for anyone looking, with the doorway open behind Loque.
 ! Message from: Aegis
Sybil, you may construct the mental battle of wills with the mistress. This is up to your own discretion. Run with it.

Luther has been exited, returned to the Door of Death.

Questions are always welcome. I will post again on May 15th.

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Sybil Malach
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Re: The Door of Souls

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The risk that Sybil took was calculated. But the Mistress was more cunning at the mathematics than an undergraduate.

Within moments of entry, Sybil's body had lost all senses. It simply went black, and the student crumpled onto the floor. Lips drooling saliva, there wasn't anything that would be obvious that there was any glimmer of intelligence left behind those eyes. With a glassy stare, Sybil's body simply looked towards the ceiling, the braids upon the hair sprawling out upon the floor. All it took was a trill, and Sybil was entered, and within another trill, it was like being wrenched from a carriage, unable to move, senses going inward at the sensation of something entering the body on a primordial level that the student had never once experienced. All the student could feel, through the thick fog that was covering the senses, was the coolness of the wooden floors. How comfortable it was to just lie down, and rest warm flesh against it. Almost beckoning to just...

Sleep. The tension behind Sybil's joints remained, as though seizing.


The Mistress's reckless entry was like dragging an arm through a field of barbed wire and broken glass. The mind was not consumed by fear, nor was it caught unprepared for an event such as this. Her form struggled to wriggle its way out, like a wire against a fleshy orifice, scraping within, pain searing throughout her body, as she entered the primordial soup of Sybil's mind. Her formless figure was clawed at by unseen obstacles. Each step forward into the Student's mindscape was as though she was volunteering to rip out her fingernails, one at a time, with nothing but her own fingers. The throbbing of the heart was deafening. The warm flesh surrounded her, as though she was back in the genesis of his own life, in a womb. She could lurch forward, but hands were scraping against her, in this sea of flesh and blood, pinking red staining the corners of her vision.

She could feel a presence hooking into her ghostly flesh. Something that felt as though an anchor was being forcibly burrowed into her heel, pulling her down by the Achilles tendon. The reddish, fleshy mindscape throbbed, as the temperature began to boil, as though trying to cook out a parasite from within. Sybil could only feel a searing pain, as the Mistress entered within. It was sheer, and utter, agony. It was like someone was failing to perform a lobotomy by means of icepick. Every inch she gained sending a thrum of stabbing pain into the student's skull, shifting deeper, and deeper, within the mind. The scream that left Sybil's psyche was one of a pained newborn, primal in nature, screaming in utter agony, as though its life was at an end. The throbbing, sharp pain pulsed through every nerve ending, every ounce of flesh that the Mistress attempted to control.

Synapses pulsing, the Mistress was close. She could see the memories. The strongest ones first, the ones that almost incurred more pain than what she was feeling. Sybil's inner eyes could see the memory play from behind the flesh. The two were conjoined, like some abominable creature that should have been miscarried. For a split moment, the Mistress could feel the outer layer of her eyelid connect with Sybil's socket, eyes meeting, as her tendon was severed through the very flesh itself. Her eyes widened, her lips opened to scream, joining in the sickening cacophony that she had created by her intrusion. Unable to breathe inwards, her wailing was cut short, her body merging with the flesh that she so desired, burning hot, and searing into her ethereal form. She could feel teeth against her flesh, she could feel fire against her lungs, and the eyelids.

The pain writhed within her, with every ounce of control.

It was stultifying. Every single centimeter of flesh, every single nano angstrom of synapse, it was exhausting to attempt to exert control like this. Over and over again, she would have to regain lost ground. Cement herself deep within the ocean of electrical pulses and searingly hot flesh. The screaming of Sybil's psyche was slowly becoming her own, but it was not the way she wanted. Her screaming was mimicking it, it was not controlled by her. The teeth that grind against her flesh seemed to curve inwards, hooking within her, like some sort of caught fish. Her influence was lessening, the more she had control of. She bit off more than she could chew. She went swimming far too close to when she had eaten. She had overindulged, after eons upon eons of suffering in malnutrition. She could feel her legs scraping apart, her bones cracking like broken glass.

She was becoming lost, within the fleshy pool that was Sybil's stalwart psyche. Slowly, being dragged back by her torn to shred ankles. Her ears began to bleed from the screaming, the symphony of complete terror beginning to overwhelm her. A melody that she herself started. Her fingernails desperately scraped at the flesh she was being dragged against, tearing out chunk after chunk. Eyes shaking, her teeth gritting, she pulled herself further and further within. The urge to survive, the urge to live, outweighing common sense. By the Empress! It hurt, it hurt! Her progress reversing, as her nails splintered, cracking down the center, and sinking within the Psyche's flesh. She was one more, eye to eye with Sybil, hung like some sort of cocoon within a mound of flesh. She couldn't breathe. Her broken fingers reaching up to her neck, fingers scraping against it.

Her eyes shift to the side, coming into contact with the marble greens of Sybil's. Her tear ducts were fused against the outer layer of Sybil's own eyes. Mere inches from touching, they blankly stared at her, reddened with strain. She couldn't breathe without smelling the stench of humanity surrounding her. The stench of the living. The sickeningly odorous, yet captivating ichor of the living. The carved flesh surrounds her like a liquid now, her body pressed against, and crushed. Bearing teeth of her own, she tears at the student's skin. The features shift, in pain, as she does this attempt at vengeance, but she falls short. Against the pliant, soft flesh, her teeth shatter, leaving behind only the broken fragments of once powerful jaws. Pearly white shards scatter beneath her chin, the bloody indent of her bite present against Sybil's Psyche. But it wasn't enough.

She could feel her body changing. Warped by the immense pressure put upon her by Sybil's Psyche. She had a moment, a singular moment, in which her screams were her own, ears throbbing in pain. The sounds of life surrounded her, but she could not feel it. She was given senses, expressly to feel the worst of all things. She was given the sense of touch to feel nothing but pain. She was given the gift of sight, but can only see the fleshy monstrosity before her. She was awarded the prize of smell, but could only smell the filth that lingered within the mind. Her movements were limited to a mere writhe. Energy leaving her body, she could feel her limbs shorten by the second, her ethereal form, once immaculate in its abilities, now defiled by the curse of the living.

She was being given what she wanted.

Her body warped into a thing. There was no other word for it. She was lesser than a man, lesser than a spirit. She could think, but the pain, by the Empress, the pain! She was molded into some sort of crippled, disgusting wretch within the mind. A creature whose hands where mere blunted instruments of flesh. Her legs stiffened and atrophied. Her body gaping with hives, her eyes dripping with cataracts. She was a tumor. Nothing more than a tumor that could think, that could breathe, that could live! But live in such a disgusting, distorted way. Every breath was never enough, her body pressed against by the sea of flesh. Every sensation devoid of pleasure, as she was slowly stripped of her energy, stripped of her willpower to keep going. Her disfigured body pressing against Sybil's cocoon, eyes staring down upon her, almost the same way she stared at all around her.

Disgust.

Unable to move outside of squirming, Sybil's form kept her in place. The fruits of her labor was before her. She had come so close to true possession. Come so close to being able to see through real eyes, taste through real lips, smell through a real nose! The dribbling of vomit began to escape her lips, as the reality began to sink in. If only she had just a bit more strength. If only Sybil was just a bit more weaker. She would have had it all. She would have had the genuine feeling of being alive once more. But she was hasty. She attacked too quickly. Her mark was far from accurate. Sybil was hanging onto life, by any means necessary. The cocoon was the harbinger to that end. Sybil's mind torturing itself into this hideous landscape to end the assault. As the Mistress's bile leaked from her lips, she found it harder, and harder to part the pillowy folds.

She could only look down in abject terror, as her lips began to sew shut through the means of her own flesh. The foggy field of view that she was allowed, granted her the privilege of seeing her decrepit form. The only sound leaving her throat was a stifled hiss, as she desperately attempted to scream, her mouth wiring itself shut, her teeth bending, folding into a muzzle. It was unending. So close to being able to taste freedom. Now she was being stripped of any freedom that she had as a spirit, before this. The ability to switch between bodies at a whim, to become whoever she so pleased at the moment, to become whatever she truly desired, minus living. But here...? She was forced to become this wretched, infernal thing. Forced into one shaped. Not even allowed to control what shape she was! By the Empress! She could only taste her own bile!

Her cloudy, sagging eyes plead to the side, as though there was an exit, rolling within the socket, trying to find an escape. She had been snared too tightly. She could see the memories of her Host-- Flickering through her eyes. It was painful to keep looking this way, but it was the only thing that didn't bring her such a visceral level of disgust that she had to taste her own vomit. She could feel the nerves on the very edges of her eyes straining. There was no avoiding the unrelenting pain that she was forced to endure. There was pain at all ends. It was merely a question of what kind of pain she would have to endure. She could see the viewpoint of a child, through the memories. She could see the outlines of a venerable figure, someone far older than Sybil. It was on repeat. She couldn't even see his full figure...

Sybil was as well, trapped in place. Within this hell of the student's own construction, the unrelenting agony that was self inflicted upon the mind was grand. It was something that was burrowing its way deeply into Sybil's own skull. But the student knew that this was the only way. Over and over, Sybil relived digging up their grandfather. It was a suppressed memory. It was something that the student had long forgotten. it was something that was denied as truth, something that had to be forgotten. Sybil could remember the mound of flesh that he had been reduced to. The memory of having to drop the shovel, not even able to scream. It was genuinely a helpless feeling. A deep pit of despair that opened itself for Sybil, like the gaping maw of a predator. The unrelenting urge to simply fall within the grave, and join the mass that was once the most beloved person in the student's life.

Ensnared eyes were merged against the Mistress's. Seeing her fail, experiencing this sublime agony was something that was almost transcendental. Sybil had never wished harm upon another person, aside from the murderer that killed the student's grandfather. But this? This felt akin to catharsis. The way her eyes slacked downwards, the way she was slowly stripped of power, reduced to a futile grub that slammed itself against the walls of its prison. It had wanted to kill Sybil. It would have destroyed Sybil, given the chance. It wasn't even a woman anymore, not that it mattered in the first place. Its identity had been stripped clean, with every attempt at escape. The flytrap had finally snapped shut upon her. It was as though justice was prevailing. At the cost of distinct agony, a sublime, particular kind of pain that branded itself in Sybil's mind.

Eyes glancing back, the pain was too much. The Mistress couldn't handle seeing the glimpses of a reality that could've been hers. She could feel the bile rise, and lower within her throat, as the curtain of flesh covered her senses. She was reduced to nothing but a tumor, within the mind of another being. A creature of her own domain, reduced to this. She couldn't even call to her spirits for help, unable to do anything other than desperately attempt to keep her stomach calm enough to not spend the next break trying to stop. Her slack eyelids started to stutter, glancing to the side. The flesh was becoming too much. She could feel the beauty that was once her features slowly sand down to nothing more than a smooth surface. She was losing her face. There wasn't enough energy to cling to that anymore. She had blown all of her energy into her frontal assault.

The two had become kin in suffering. Sybil's mind was becoming harder to traverse. The Mistress's joints were beginning to lock up. Or was the flesh starting to calcify? It was hard to tell. The humid sensation of the air made her skin feel sticky. Her position was beyond uncomfortable. It was utterly, and absolutely, painful. The senses were beginning to overload her ability to even think at this rate. Sybil was pressing forward, forcing her to endure something utterly inhumane. Sybil remembers what had become of that corpse. Grandfather wouldn't have wanted to be remembered, or even accidentally found, like this. He would have demanded a death with dignity. A stabbing, or arrow through the torso. Sybil had no choice. The student's mind demanded that something be done with him. Something that rewarded his valiance in life, and not just rotting in some hole, not even looking like himself. How old was Sybil? It was... No. It was sixteen arcs. Dragging the corpse in a linen sack, with a lamp filled to the brim with oil.

A vignette of veins and blood surrounded the memory. It pulsed, as the flesh around it dried and cracked. Synapses fired, creating the image, as though burnt into the brain itself. Sybil remembers it clearly now. Past the suppression. Past the bitter pain, past the denial of it all. Sybil had called out to Zanik! Demanding to know why, why did the student not have the strength for this? Why life had been boiled down to the petulant desires of mages and the gods like some sort of smattering of children? The searing pain was wrought across flesh. The bubbling tears, Sybil's grandfather burning in the pyre! The smell of flesh pluming in the air, as though a Defier had been dragged into the very depths of a war! Why, Zanik?! Why must those that pursue a life of their own be foiled by idiots, and maniacs! Why must they die?! It made no sense, he was a good man! Cyril was a great man! Why should he die, and the Grafter that killed him escape without a scratch?!

Sybil's mindscape began to burn with the flames of rage. The screams leaving the cocoon that the student had formed in defense turned guttural. A silent suffering had finally been verbalized. The shriek was enough that, if it were in the real, waking world, it would have shredded Sybil's vocal cords into pieces, forced a mixture of spittle and blood out from the lips. But here? Sybil could finally do it. It was unleashed, after all these arcs of remaining silent and doing what was told. The mindscape began to rumble, as the yelling continued, not even pausing for breath. The cacophony was becoming too much to bear. Mouths began to form in the flesh, adding to the burning flames that coiled within the flesh, feeding it, rather than burning.


The Mistress was treated to a healthy dose of acid, within her own veins. The sheer vitriol of all these arcs of silence was being forced upon her, as though she were a punching bag, designed for no other purpose than to accept the punishment shifted her way. She could feel her eardrum's burst, bleeding profusely, as her throat vibrated. The Cancer started to rumble her through, trying to make any sort of noise. It was unable. It was only drowned out by the overwhelming sensation that had came about through this all. Her milky eyes wince, as she feels the barbed wire begin to coil around her, sinking within her flesh, and holding it tightly against the wall of broken glass. She was dragged across the fleshy rack, her malformed back stretched, the only thing she was able to hear, was a dull ringing.

She was given what she wanted.

Dominated, and viciously attacked while she was down, Sybil was not above fighting dirty against her. Rules for fighting served no purpose, here. She made an attempt on Sybil's life. She is forfeit. The body she wanted? She gets to remain. She gets to be a passive observer, seeing through cloudy eyes, for the price for what she had done to Sybil. What the student had seen of her, she could not be forgiven. And this rage, this unbridled, hellish rage was enough to keep the mind focused upon squeezing out every inch of pain she couldn't endure upon her. She was given control. But she should have known that some parts of humanity is far worse than death itself. Now that she is weakened, that tether remains. As though a car battery hooked up to a restrained man, she could writhe all she wants. But it would only hurt her more.


A twitch in the student's fingers could be seen, in the waking world.
word count: 3172
"No mass graves."

-Vri 720, scolding Sybil for disposing of necromancers.

NPCs: Karlsson, Margaret
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