49th of Frost, Year 4622
"He found Himself there, winnowed from the pain He had known, and the things He had seen, and the man He had endeavored to save. He was born not in Grace, so this landscape was familiar more to Him than any of his sisters, brothers and kin. As He looked out across the great golden fields of Adena in flames, He felt great reservedness like the withholding of a breath, and then finally He decreed.
'We will rebuild here,' He said. 'We will be born again under His light. We will know.'
And so Saren came to make His vow, even as the Gods above spited Him and spoke damnation upon His name, and as the Gods across that very golden field — those Corrupted like Him — wept and winced, desperately attempting to flee their own forsaken skins. He, in that moment, exhibited bravery untarnished, and unknown to any but those like Him: born of rot, of filth and mewling, willing to observe any Sin in order to lay claim to another breath of life."
Corruption, 1:9. The Book of Bel.
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Dreams were harrowing things, sometimes. Powerlessness belied them: one could not escape them of their own will, and they could manifest anything within their domain, wanted or unwanted. The paradox, then, was that they emerged from the dreamer's own mind, plucked from their very brain to imprison them in a cage of their own making. This paradox was a strange, confusing thing, a question for philosophers to answer on the nature of mortal consciousness and will. Sometimes, dreams weren't originated from one's mind, though. Sometimes they were a doorway, a gateway through which the psychological body left behind the physiological one, traveling through a space too infinitesimally small for it to fit. Reverie was like a selectively permeable membrane, disallowing the body, but allowing the ebb of consciousness instilled into it by Kyrikain, or perhaps by reality, or perhaps by the natures of law and this world. The query of what consciousness was was not something even the Gods had an answer to, many imagined, because they had never given a satisfactory one.
"It is our creation," they would say, and never: "Here are its physiological roots, explained in detail traversable through magic and science." Perhaps there was no order they understood, or no answer worth giving. Perhaps it simply was a creation of will, even as everything else seemed to fit within their perfect cosmic order, layered on brick-by-brick by reason and truth.
All of the dreamers, an hour after midnight on the very morning they were meant to leave for Bel, had passed this selective membrane. They had tunneled to and beyond Reverie, though, and stood now in what looked like a city... with tall buildings, broken and besmirched with rot, surrounded by a landscape more foul, dark and empty than anything any soul present had ever witnessed, yet also unmistakably more advanced. The buildings were build of an architectural standard at least a hundred years beyond contemporary capabilities, with strangely illuminated signs at their anterior face, emanating a hue unseen by all present: they was lucent in a way that was brimming and warm, striking color into the atmosphere with a sort of pure radiance, imbued within the very frame of the sign itself. Despite the lights, the buildings were crumbling and hunched over, many of them already fallen into those adjacent to them, and the streets were empty of nothing but husk-like shells, dormant, withered meat in the shape of frail women and men. All of them wore bright clothing, but when touched they would simply crumble to ash.
A bell began to ring, so misplaced... a church-bell within a great, even endless city too far gone, tolling and tolling in the far distance as the five dreamers awoke from their slumber. As the bell tolled, the brightly-dressed husks began to awaken, only to quickly skitter with all of the perceptiveness and alacrity of roaches, disappearing or cowering behind walls, crawling along the edges of buildings and fleeing from that world-consuming sound.
Taelian gasped as if he had just awoken from a nightmare, holding his chest and shaking his head, low, his eyes averting towards the ground.
"No... no..." he murmured beneath his breath. "This is a nightmare... a nightmare." That bell, he recognized, was His call.