
Demogorgon Rising
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The enlightened state of Lucinia is a place of great knowledge and learning, though many believe that the truest wisdom there is to stay on the right side of the authorities, ask few questions, and trust no-one. As such, it is fertile ground for intrigue to flourish. Chandry Levik, a simple and uncurious peasant content with his lot, becomes an unwilling fugitive as he is caught up in the conflict between fanatical activists, the draconian powers that be, and the sinister forces that lie behind them both. His dearest wish is to clear his name and to return his life to normal, but that seems no more likely than preventing the apocalyptic war of his dreams from manifesting in reality... Demogorgon Rising is an alternate reality adventure set to a background of Norse mythology, Aztec demonology, and Steampunk science.
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Chapter 2
It was necessary for me to ride a fair distance that evening, as a result of which the sun had completely sunk by the time I was able to meet young Lance at the Maliksen field. The priestess and her apprentice had already arrived and my own poor assistant appeared more than a little confused and uncomfortable in their company. To my surprise, the priestess had brought along with her a young boy. Twelve or thirteen years old by my reckoning, he was not an Alvere, yet the glimpses of his ears which I occasionally caught behind his long, lank black hair showed them to be unusually shaped, though by no means as sharply pointed as those of the priestess. His complexion was of a sickly hue, his eyes narrow and reddish-brown, and his face gaunt and suspicious. His clothing was ridiculous: a set of black doublet and hose straight out of some old storybook romance, totally inadequate to the weather. He also wore a rough mantle of fur, unlikely to serve against the rain for long. Lance had thankfully provided oilskins for two. I offered one to the priestess, who refused with polite words and a thoroughly impatient voice. Preoccupied with gazing across the horizon in all directions for heaven knows what, she obviously had no time to worry about chills or damp. I ventured the same offer to her apprentice, but received only sullen looks for my pains.
"Johan does not speak modern Lucinian, I am afraid," declared the priestess, though never sparing us a glance. "His birth was in a much colder clime, in the far northern peninsula beyond the mountains and to the east of Albinor: a harsh land, so I do not think you need worry about his tolerance to your dismal autumn weather. He has lived with blizzards and winds that would kill your pheasants stone dead if they blew over that moor for half a minute, not to mention violent sea-storms. His parents' fishing boat washed ashore upon the northern strands of this continent. Salvagers found the pilot and his wife dead and cold, but they had poor Johan well protected below decks. That was almost two years ago. His health is quite recovered since, and I have taught him in the language of my people. Not yours, as yet. I suppose I must eventually, now that we are allegedly on diplomatic terms."
"You mean to bring him up yourself, as an Alvere?" I asked, concealing my involuntary distaste at the notion. She answered dispassionately:
"Not as a common warrior, I am resolved. I have trained him well, and perhaps when he comes of age my archmagister will accept him as a novice. I see the very notion of it disgusts you. So much for the vaunted tolerance of the new order... but if you would look at Johan, even you might accept that he has at least a trace of the fair folk in his heritage already. A 'changeling', as they used to say, though that is a poorly chosen term. Your clever Lyceum has found a better one: a 'recessive pangenetic characteristic', I believe. Both his parents must have had some weak, latent faery characteristics in their blood. Sadly, those born in such affairs have a tendency to face hostility, ignorance, and occasionally being burned as witches. He will be far safer among my kind, who have long learned to deal with such things."
Seeing as how she expressed such concern for his health, I again suggested that he wear the oilskin. She gave me a flash of impatience, before interpreting my offer to Johan in some very strange language. He answered me directly with what might have been curt politeness, in the same incomprehensible speech. His gestures were enough to inform me of his refusal, whereupon I let the matter drop and donned it myself, over clothes almost drenched already. A light hailstorm eventually mixed with the rain and I was most thankful for Johan's endurance.
Little passed in the succeeding hours, save that the priestess and myself exchanged names. To be precise, she already knew mine. I learnt that hers was Phoebe, and that more or less concluded the small talk. We kept a constant watch, ate what little food we had brought, sent Lance almost five miles and back to the Trap and Badger for more, but saw nothing and nobody for a good eight hours at least. I cannot be very accurate on that point: for though it is far from easy or advisable to fall asleep beneath a dripping tree, in damp clothes, in a hailstorm, I somehow succeeded for a couple of hours.
I awoke in poor enough condition and worse humour, stimulated to consciousness by Phoebe shaking me. As soon as my vision had cleared enough to make out her excited countenance, I realised that our vigil had not proven such a hopeless exercise as I had feared. I saw it was near daybreak, from a narrow band of sickly sunlight on the horizon. Lance and Johan were both staring at the escarpment, and by following their mutual gazes I eventually discovered what had caught their attention. Though at first it was hard to distinguish from the fading stars, a moving point of light soon revealed itself to be no work of nature at all. All thoughts of a comet were dismissed when it relinquished its roughly western course across the horizon and seemed to approach the field. The light of the rising sun was soon sufficient to realise how close it actually was: surely less than a mile from where I lay and goodness knows how high. It also became apparent that the object gave out no light itself, but possessed a metal surface that simply reflected the weak sunlight.
It must have passed over the escarpment before I was able to distinguish its shape: a smooth silver "egg" or slightly flattened sphere, emitting a quiet but most irritating whine as it drew near. I cautioned the boys to keep low among the wheat, reasoning that Phoebe would have enough sagacity to make her own choices with regard to due caution. This curious missile eventually slowed to a halt in the air, perhaps some hundred feet or more above the field, where it held stationary. The "sky-ship" - for want of a better term - seemed to me no bigger than a small storehouse or cottage, though the view was far from clear. Quite apart from the rain and the dim light, the ship itself was most obscure, shimmering and wavering as though seen through a shallow layer of rippling water. Considering this, I first thought it to be a mirage, yet it held steady as a rock above the burned wheat for long enough to persuade me of its existence.
I suspect that much pain and exertion would have been avoided, had our small party kept to my advice to remain as low, sheltered and inconspicuous as the field and trees permitted, but apparently I had underestimated the force of my fellow investigator's curiosity. At all events, I was shocked when I realised that Phoebe had risen from the shadows of the boundary trees and had walked out into open ground at the edge of the field, where she had taken a new and thoroughly exposed station. "It is magnificent!" she exclaimed in deranged admiration, whilst gazing upon the apparition. "A chariot of the heavens!"
Ignorant in religious matters though I may be, I am confident that the next action of this celestial object was by no means angelic. The shimmering that surrounded it had now settled, allowing a much clearer view of its silver-plated hull. I could only regard this briefly: for my gaze was drawn by a violent flash of light as the air near the sky-ship seemed to ignite furiously, and a sudden rush of heat came as our final warning. I leapt from the shadows and drove Phoebe before me into the wheat, calling out to Lance and Johan to run for new cover. I did not look back to see how they fared, though I had little enough opportunity, for it was mere seconds later that the fireball exploded against the trees where we had sought protection, and a cruel blast of searing air threw both myself and my confused partner upon our faces among freshly-crushed stalks of wheat.
The following moments were sheer confusion. I recall looking back upon the trees and being thankful that the flames had failed to catch upon the dripping wood, though the leaves and thinner branches at least on the field side of the treetops had been reduced to fine grey ash. Many times I gazed up in a fearful search for the ship, once catching a glimpse of the appalling object as it skimmed across the fields, keeping at a constant height. I spent a brief period keeping low in the wheat, attending to the unlucky Phoebe. Barring dignity, she had not suffered from either her misjudgement or her fall, and upon her suggestion we crawled as rapidly as possible back to the edge of the field in a search of the two youths.
We soon discovered the wheat they had trampled in their rush and shortly after the area in which they had settled, relying as we had done upon the tall stalks to confuse the view of our attacker. Lance was exhausted and no better for the heat-wave, but essentially uninjured. Johan, unfortunately, had fainted outright at the explosion, perhaps from having been born in such a cold climate and being ill accustomed to strong heat. Our brief efforts failed to revive him and soon our attention returned to our more pressing problem: judging from the interminable whine and occasional glints of silver over the stalks, the ship was still sweeping over the field and presumably looking to finish the job of our incineration. All I could suggest was that we all run in separate directions and pray that we confused it long enough to make good our escape. Phoebe dismissed this with some contempt, pointing out that the ship would have little trouble pursuing any one of us if it so chose and we were not yet so desperate as to be making human sacrifices for the sake of the majority. She then asked whether I had been able to keep my powder and shot out of the rain. Thankfully, the oilskin had kept...
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