Private Vintergard Storytime

Ishtar

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Auger and Dan ran through the twisted trees, their heavy breaths leaving clouds behind them. It was already cold, making every movement even more difficult. Auger hopped over a fallen log and reached to grab onto Dan, pulling him up and over before they broke out into a run again. He pulled up his menu and winced, the dark cracks on his UI blocking the log out button. He clicked his tongue, pushing panic down and focusing on the situation. They had to get away from this place. They had to run. How had this place become so fucked up so quickly?

The sound of children laughing sent a chill up his spine, they were still close. How were they so close? When was the aggro going to break off? Sweat dripped off his face as they passed an upturned tree, a hollow beneath it forming a safe space. He quickly grabbed onto Dan's wrist and dove, his friend gasping in surprise as they hurtled into darkness. Dan was quick on the up-take though and quickly weaved an illusion around them, protecting the entrance of the hollow so they could hide better.

"What the fuck, what the fuck, what the fuck Auger?!" Dan wheezed, holding his head as he trembled in the rear of the hollow. He reached out and seemed to be working his menu. "What the fuck? Why won't it let me log out?"

Auger's chest rose and fell as he tried to open his inventory. No dice, still. He ran his fingers through his hair. "Those things weren't faerin."

"No shit!" Dan snapped, "They were like piranha with wings! Ellen... why'd she have to die like that? Oh god..." He gagged, burying his head between his knees.

Auger slapped his friend's arm, "Breathe! That thing can't find us in here."

Dan gasped and coughed, running his fingers through his head, he was too panicked to think straight. It was no wonder. What the hell had they seen? They'd been traveling from Vintergard and had decided to hit the forests just at the edge of the territory hoping to do a little hunting as a party when suddenly the trees had become... wrong. The leaves were glowing and the bark had turned a dark blue. There was bad magic in the air no matter where they turned and it was beginning to set Ellen on edge. She'd tried to use divine magic to purify it but the corruption just came back right away. That attempt had been their first mistake.

The Faerin that found them had offered to take them through the forest after they paid respects to their leader. It didn't seem like a bad deal, they could even get a quest. Stupid in retrospect. Of course it was a trap. Then they saw her in the middle of a small lake amidst the twisted trees. It was a tiny island with a large curved tree looming over it. Beneath the tree was a woman that glowed in a pale light, drifting about like mist. When she'd come closer, crossing the water, it was the most ethereal experience he'd ever had. Beautiful. He'd used his UI to check her name and it had come up that she was a Starcalled. But the Faerin seemed to treat her like a lander. UI-locked? He wasn't sure.

He'd started to question her, and that's when things went horribly wrong. What he saw in her eyes when he looked into them. Those pink, glowing eyes, it was like looking into an endless sea of nightmares where twisted, horrible, and unknowable things reached out towards his mind. Terror. This thing wasn't a player. Not a normal one. He'd tried to use his messenger to tell the others they needed to get out of there and had noticed that his UI was covered in strange black cracks. They tried to run. Ellen died first when the faerin jumped on her. They'd been running ever since.

"The cracks are fading, I think we're almost out of her area of effect," Auger said hesitantly.

"What kind of fucking mastery messes up a UI? I thought we were done with this after that bitch Szofrit!" Dan whined.

"There's gotta be a drawback," Auger said firmly, "It probably affects her too."

Footsteps. Heavy footfalls. Not like faerin. The woman didn't walk on the ground either. They both looked up and then at eachother before peering through the illusion. It was a Lander! He looked a bit tired and was carrying a woodsman's hatchet. Maybe he could guide them out.

"Hello?" The man called.

Auger was the first to move, he crawled out of the hole and waved. "H-hey! Don't go any further sir Lander! There's a dangerous creature in the forest beyond this point!"

The lander froze and looked around warily. "Who are you?"

"I'm Auger, a starcalled, my friend and I are a bit lost. Could you lead us out of the forest? I'll pay you in coin," Auger insisted as Dan scuttled out of the hole, desperation in his eyes.

The lander scratched his head and shrugged, "Sure, I could go for some coin. Name's Jacques."



Ishtar watched Jacques murder the two players through her crystal ball, lounging beneath the curved tree. A small smile stretching across her lips as the corruption strengthened the lander to the point where he could overpower the two harried starcalled. It was a good test and Jacques would get his first taste of the gift she'd offered. He'd never be satisfied with that level of vengance, though, his hate for the starcalled having consumed his mind a long time ago. She stretched languidly in the air as the corrupted faerin approached, the tiny beings floating around her and giggling at the horrendous sights within the ball.

"Is my guest here yet?" She asked softly, dismissing the ball as she rolled over in mid air, kicking up a leg. The amulet hanging around her ankle jingled.

"The Starcalled known as Rael entered the forest a short time ago, mistress," One of the starcalled chirped, its rabid gaze twinkling.

"Be polite to her and guide her to the lake, she's a very special guest and I want no harm coming to her, understood?" Ishtar said, holding up a dainty finger. The creatures quickly nodded and flit away in the direction of the incoming guest, preparing to offer her a royal welcome under the starlight. Ishtar glanced back at the spot where the starcalled girl had died, already cleansed of the blood and death. Good. No need for an awkward reception. Her lip twitched, that fellow had figured out the drawback of her UI Corruption pretty quickly. She couldn't use her menus when interfering with others. He'd spread word about her existence and she'd probably have to move. She wasn't strong enough to deal with a raiding party, but she could keep an eye on message boards to know when the time to escape was.

For now, she'd enjoy this new lair until she found another. Contenting herself in the moment she floated into the air and drifted about, her bare, glowing body dancing beneath the moonlight until the faerin brought her very special guest. The storyteller @Rael.
 

Rael

❮ Lore Seeker ❯
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Harmonia
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Three individuals stood at the far edge of the unknown, and watched its reach extend far beyond what any of them could perceive.

Crowned by moonlight, the only witnesses that remained of their adventure thus far were the stars that shone ever bright overhead, their comforting, distant flicker obscured by verdant chaos that had long since been corrupted by a taint that had somehow escaped their notice until then.

"An ill omen," a black-haired man clad in heavy armor stated as his eyes carefully scoured the place for traces of something spared from the nascent corruption, the volume of his voice not carrying further than the two females who stood by him. He brought his hand up and around his back, feeling the heavy burden of a greatsword strapped to his back. "We should turn back now."


The rustle of fabric disturbed the veil of silence that befell the trio after such an ominous declaration, the blue-haired one of the two pressing a hand to her mouth to stifle the beginning of laughter. Her unwavering smile invited humor, even if she was capable of much more than kindness. She, too, spoke of warnings as she dared the step over the threshold that separated the untouched parts of the forest from its slowly decaying counterpart. "You should listen to him more, you know? He isn't entirely wrong, this place reeks of..."

Gloved fingertips barely grazed over a glowing crack pouring from the unnaturally-colored bark of a tree, a hissing noise passing through her lips as she recoiled, watching the magic that held her together begin to fray at the edges from contact alone.

"Disease. Of the magical sort, no less," said the Summoner to the constructs she kept for company, her hand falling to the Seamstress' own to reestablish the point of connection that allowed for their energies to intermingle.

The two summoned beings shared a look with one another as the elf looked to the path ahead, or lack thereof. Already within their heart of hearts they knew that no matter their attempts at persuading their master, reminding her that there were stories to be had elsewhere - and preferably in places that didn't involve haunted locations -, she would continue onwards with her self-given purpose to recount as many tales as she could find.

It's how they had been born, after all. They couldn't fault her for it.

Echoes of unfamiliar laughter rang out from somewhere beyond the trees and both constructs rushed to the Storyteller's defense at once, a small gasp given in response as she was lifted from the ground.

A trap that couldn't have been laid out more perfectly, its intended prey lured into the unholy grasp of a terrible creature Rael would in time learn the name of, her unquenchable thirst for knowledge of every secret to govern this world guiding her actions, and therefore, those of her creations.

The Faerin Warrior carried the Storyteller close to his chest, an arm tucked beneath her knees while he kept the other to her back, wings often obscured by his sacred mantle now unfurled, carrying the duo with increased speed. The Seamstress led the way forward through the dark, a pair of oversized sewing needles held in each of her hands as daggers, ready to strike at a moment's notice.

"Careful, then. It is not every day that a story wishing to be told extends an invitation..."

All together, they followed the voices deeper into the creature's domain.


 

Ishtar

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Trees of a royal-blue hue marked with pale-white glowing leaves whizzed past the trio as they made their way deeper and deeper into the corrupted forest. Around them, the childlike laughter grew more present, small shapes darting from between the trees as they were watched along their path. The Goblinoids and Wolves that were prevalent in this region were nowhere to be seen, as if they had simply been wiped off the map as far as this terrible place was concerned.

The Corrupted Faerin hid among the foliage, the glowing leaves disguising their luminescent bodies. Occasinally one would poke their head out to get a good look at the person that the mistress was so interested in. Ravenous hunger and hatred boiled beneath their skin, but they held back, the fear of the one who gave them a greater purpose was far stronger than any base instinct. Still, occasionally one would stick their hand out of the leaves and get swatted by a compatriot as their voices grew noisy.

"Owie!"

"The Lady said they are to be protected! No touchie!"

"But what are they?"

"They must be very special, just a bite, just one bite?"

"No no no! Mistress said, Mistress said! Be nice to her guests! Royal treatment for the guests!"

"Ooh! Royal treatment! Should we give them a rug?"

"A rug?"

"A rug! Yes! A long rug!"

"That's a carpet you idiot!"

"Owie!"

"I'll make them a carpet! A carpet of flowers! The Lady likes flowers!"

A moment later a rolling spread of glowing flowers began to grow ahead of the small group, forming a carpet that stretched into the trees, adjusting course occasionally to lead them to their destination where it would taper off just at the edge of the trees around the small lake. Ooh's and Aah's echoed out from all directions, followed by laughter and clapping. The faerin darted back into the foliage after that, satisfied with their work.

"Spread away! Spread away!"

"Is that a goblin? Kill it! Kill it!"

"Protect the guests!"


Ishtar stretched lazily in the air, swimming through the open sky as if it were a novelty. Her glowing-pink eyes gleaming dangerously in the night. How long were those idiots going to make her wait? Perhaps they were playing games again, if she found out those little cretins were luring her guest around in circles...

She dismissed the thought with a chuckle and dove back towards the surface of the water, alighting on the tip of her toe and letting out a sigh. Around her bare body, ribbons of silk wafted about in an unseen breeze, the pale-white glow of her skin making her look like a phantom lingering over the lake.

Movement caught her attention and she paused in her dance, turning her head towards the source. A smile curled on her lips. They were almost here...

@Rael
 
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