One ticket for the rabbit, as an apology for 1) shooting her in the boob during their spar, and 2) for not having a bottle of strong bourbon handy (as was her normal method of apologizing).
One ticket for the rabbit's bumbling meatsack puppy dog (who absolutely and hilariously whiffed an admission of love, mind) who just wouldn't stop trailing behind her.
One ticket for the very nice, very tall elf who saved her ass when she could have slapped a layer of ice around anyone else. A kindness quickly repaid; as the raven never liked being in debt.
Finally, one ticket for her. A promise, and a contract.
The four of them, battered, broken, bloodied, but somehow still alive, stood in a circle near the edge of the expedition camp. Madison gripped the four thick strips of paper tightly in her hands, and looked at each of them in turn. "Gonna' be honest with you all--this is my first time trying this. Soooooo, I have no fuckin' idea what's gonna' happen."
And then, she tore the edges away in one fell swoop.
It wasn't at all like she figured. There was no sundering of space and time, no eldritch beings or skeletal arms reaching through to pull them into a different realm. Their bodies weren't spaghettified; their flesh not torn from their meat and their meat torn from their bone and their bones ground to microscopic dust in order to be funneled to the near-afterlife. There were no screams--of the undead, of demonic fiends, of the travelers themselves.
Reality melted away as if their world was naught but wax; and all around them, a dessert landscape emerged. Wrong; but relaxingly so.
A pitch-black, starless sky above. Towering sandstone buttes rising in the distance, looming ageless shadows outlined in stark blues. The gentle snaking riverbeds, the fluorescent line of their waters barely a trickle. All around them. Scribbles of color, where drying bush grasped onto the cracked earth for dear life or the trunks of trees stood, leafless and lifeless, their limbs bleached onyx by the nonexistent sun.
And below their boots, the wooden platform of the stagecoach station.
It took Madison a moment to catch her breath, caught up as she was in the desolate, muted splendor of it all. "Well, here we are! We're all in one piece, right?" She glanced over at the others, giving them each a once-over. Strangely enough, she could see them perfectly. They weren't obscured by the lack of light; nor did they have any funky blue outlines. As cool as that would've been.
"The stagecoach should be here any minute. The driver told me I'll never have to wait long for a ride."
@Toko @Brutus Dahlgren @Magdalyn
One ticket for the rabbit's bumbling meatsack puppy dog (who absolutely and hilariously whiffed an admission of love, mind) who just wouldn't stop trailing behind her.
One ticket for the very nice, very tall elf who saved her ass when she could have slapped a layer of ice around anyone else. A kindness quickly repaid; as the raven never liked being in debt.
Finally, one ticket for her. A promise, and a contract.
The four of them, battered, broken, bloodied, but somehow still alive, stood in a circle near the edge of the expedition camp. Madison gripped the four thick strips of paper tightly in her hands, and looked at each of them in turn. "Gonna' be honest with you all--this is my first time trying this. Soooooo, I have no fuckin' idea what's gonna' happen."
And then, she tore the edges away in one fell swoop.
It wasn't at all like she figured. There was no sundering of space and time, no eldritch beings or skeletal arms reaching through to pull them into a different realm. Their bodies weren't spaghettified; their flesh not torn from their meat and their meat torn from their bone and their bones ground to microscopic dust in order to be funneled to the near-afterlife. There were no screams--of the undead, of demonic fiends, of the travelers themselves.
Reality melted away as if their world was naught but wax; and all around them, a dessert landscape emerged. Wrong; but relaxingly so.
A pitch-black, starless sky above. Towering sandstone buttes rising in the distance, looming ageless shadows outlined in stark blues. The gentle snaking riverbeds, the fluorescent line of their waters barely a trickle. All around them. Scribbles of color, where drying bush grasped onto the cracked earth for dear life or the trunks of trees stood, leafless and lifeless, their limbs bleached onyx by the nonexistent sun.
And below their boots, the wooden platform of the stagecoach station.
It took Madison a moment to catch her breath, caught up as she was in the desolate, muted splendor of it all. "Well, here we are! We're all in one piece, right?" She glanced over at the others, giving them each a once-over. Strangely enough, she could see them perfectly. They weren't obscured by the lack of light; nor did they have any funky blue outlines. As cool as that would've been.
"The stagecoach should be here any minute. The driver told me I'll never have to wait long for a ride."
@Toko @Brutus Dahlgren @Magdalyn