by Zach Kaiser on Mon Jan 26, 2009 10:26 pm
The list of things Valerie Durandal wanted was a mighty long list even during the best times, and in cases right now it grew even longer. She wanted a bath, she wanted something to eat, she wanted a nice, soft bed. She wanted to know where she was. She wanted beat Emil over the head a few times for screwing up the spell. But there was one thing she wanted above else.
I wish those things would stop chasing me! was the phrase that most often went through her head as she ran through the woods as fast as she could. They were black and icky looking, but more importantly she knew that they were violent, savage little beasts that probably saw her as a tasty (if small) meal.
Without any idea where she was--not even what country--she had no idea if there was any shelter nearby or not. But she did know that fighting them was useless, that there were far more than she could handle by herself, so she had no choice but to keep moving.
A break in the scenery ahead of her told her she was nearly out of the forest, or at least hitting a clearing. Please be a town, please please please...one with lots of big, burly guards with lots of weapons and spells. But as she emerged from the canopy her run slowed to a walk, until finally she stopped.
Ruins. Nothing but ruins. Not even recent looking, destroyed-when-the-world-went-to-hell ruins, but old ruins. The kind that were ruins before everything changed, before she'd been alive, before anyone who was alive or anyone remembered by anyone who was alive was alive.
Her heart sank at the sight, and now more than ever she was aware of just how exhausted she was. But before she could dwell too much on her depression she glanced over her shoulder and saw the beady little red eyes approaching, so with a wordless whine she pressed forward.
Perhaps at some point there was more than one building around, but now there was just a single one--well, what was left of one. Maybe it was a castle, or maybe a garrison of some kind, but it definitely wasn't the kind of place she'd consider entering if there weren't monstrous creatures out to eat her at her back. Lots of obstructions like half-collapsed walls lay around, and to her it looked like they'd finish keeling over any second. She gave them a wide berth.
It was as she was climbing through these that an idea stuck her--she might not have enough power to take them out, but a judicious use of it would surely slow the little menaces down! Pausing for a moment to gather her strength, she turned back towards her pursuers, who were not being as careful as she was in avoiding the fragile looking scenery.
"Oh dragon's breath of flame, burn my wrath into the souls of my foes..." She raised her arms to point ahead of her, palms out, as a red glow gathered before them, the gathering power ruffling her red robes. "Fireball!"
A ball of fire appeared before her and shot out immediately, aimed not at her foes as the verse suggested but at the base of a wall the creatures were currently moving around. On impact it exploded violently, engulfing the shades nearby in flames. The wall, however, remained standing.
Val bit her lip in a pout and stamped her foot. Of course, if it was really as close to crumbling as it looked it wouldn't have remained standing this long. While others might have decided it wasn't worth it and ran, she decided that she wasn't going anywhere until she paid her foes back at least a little for the trouble they'd caused her.
"Fireball! Fireball! Fireball! Fireball!" she yelled over and over again, rocking the ruins with explosion upon explosion until there was so much dust in the air that she could no longer see the wall or any of her enemies.
Doubling over, resting her hands on her knees, she panted from exertion. Maybe I scared them off? she wondered to herself. A groan emanated from all around her, the groan of straining rock. She grinned triumphantly and cheered silently. Not only did it seem like she'd scared off those nasty creatures, but she got her revenge on the rebellious spirit of the ruins as well!
It was then that the ground underneath her collapsed.
******
"Ohhh...owwwww....."
She awoke to the sun, blaring down on her from the afternoon sky. She felt like her body was one big, ugly bruise--a bruise that could definitely do for some food, a bath, and something softer to sleep on.
As her mind returned to her along with the last of her memories, she sat up with a jolt, suddenly on the lookout for approaching, ant-like menaces with little red eyes.
Nothing came. There was just the sun, shining down through the hole in the ceiling. The hole in the ceiling that was a good dozen feet off the ground. Where she'd come in through.
She groaned. Give me a break...ugh, I should have studied a levitation spell or two. There was no way she was going to be able to get back up there, not without either a very tall ladder or the power of flight.
Well, someone made this place, so they certainly must have made a way to get inside--and get out. Or so she hoped.
Reality, however, was not so pleasant. Many of the passages were collapsed, and those that were left only led further underground. Lacking any other option, she had no choice but to follow those that were open, backtracking when she reached dead ends, and ultimately traveling several stories below where she'd started.
Ugh, I'm supposed to be going up, not down, she complained to herself as she arrived at the bottom of another set of stairs. It was getting more and more unlikely that she'd find a passage that led back up the surface; maybe she should return, see if she could yell and get someone's attention. As though there would be someone around.
It was only a cursory glance over her shoulder back up the stairs as she considered going back, but it both likely saved her life and simultaneously filled her with dread.
The shades were back. Had they only just found her? Or were they following her for some reason? She didn't know, but what frightened her even more than that was the lone figure towering over them. He couldn't see the details, not by the lone magic light floating by her, but it was definitely the silhouette of a person.
Except his eyes glowed red.
"No...no no no!" She ran--she had no other choice. To use any magic here was to risk the entire place coming down on her. Adrenaline let her weary body keep moving faster than she'd been able to before, down hallways, more stairs, praying for an exit, knowing a single dead end would be her doom.
And then her luck ran out. The hallway ended abruptly, not even in rubble, but an empty room. "No!" She sank to her knees and looked up--there was a hole in the ceiling, but just like that first room, she had no way of reaching it. Desperately she looked around for something, anything, willing an exit to appear and save her.
There was something. A handle, sticking out of a smile pile of rubble in the corner, with a small chain dangling from it. A secret door! She ran to it, grabbed it desperately, pulling on it and pulling on it until it moved.
She tumbled over, the handle seeming to come with her, and she stood up again she panicked, fearing she broke it. She wasn't even that lucky--the handle wasn't a lever at all, but the handle of a weapon. A large dusty scythe. What good would that do her?
Slumping to the ground, clinging to the handle, tears began to blaze trails through the dirt covering her cheeks. Her last ray of hope was shattered--there was nothing to save her now. Some mage she'd turned out to be.
Nothing more stood between her and the shades she was sure were following her. She sat and cried, and waited for the end...