Refuge
Posted: Wed Sep 07, 2022 10:38 pm
28th of Ash, Year 4622
Dear Vivian,
I write to you to inform you that I have made a grievous error, and for that reason, I must leave my home in Genteven until the barrel leaning over my head subsides. On the eleventh of Ash, I attended a gathering hosted by my friend, Vilhier, and met with a woman who claimed to work in the Arvant Luhre, the Palace of the Emperor. I thought -- perhaps -- she might help me meet with my cousin, Catherine, so I allowed her to come to my home to discuss my circumstances. The moment we arrived, she began to probe me for sex, and would not accept my resistance or my declination. Eventually, she became enraged, and began to wield Mentalism to choke me and influence my mind.
I ripped out her spine. I was so angry... so, furious, that all I could see a desire for was retribution. I have discovered since then that she was a Veir of the Entente, and now, her father is searching for me. Witnesses reported me as the one she went home with -- I cleansed her body and its remnants from my home, but she is still days missing. I have been staying in the Veravian Coven, here, in the city: they are going to help me to escape Genteven tonight. I can't return unless I manage to kill her father. Her brother is now first in line for inheritance after her death, so I believe I might be able to persuade him to leave me alone in exchange for his father's murder.
For now, I am going to use the information you gave me upon our departure to come find you. I want to see you again, and considering I have no reason not to now, I will make all haste to be there.
Yours,
Alistair Reid
- - -
The Risen found himself looking down a lot, all throughout his life. It was a consequence of being tall, and of living in the Upper City of Praetoria, elevated into the sky so that the fine Lords within it could sneer at the mundane men below. It had been a while, though, since he'd gotten a view like that -- not really since he left the Imperium. He'd wanted to stand atop one of Arlain's white spires, but had never been given the chance. Now, here he was, standing on the very edge of one of Boghadar's cobbled balconies, peering out towards farmlands in the valley below, watching serfs toil in the labor of their Lords. It was familiar, which made it equally as nostalgic as it was disgusting. He did not know whether he missed that feeling or not, and perhaps merely found it gross because of its association.
Alistair had searched for some time, looking for Vivian's estate. Boghadar was segmented in weird ways, parts of the city separated by bridges and stairwells, divided by the beautiful waterfalls that crashed below. The wealthy, of course, lived in higher elevation distal to the city core, beyond a waterfall and a retractable bridge. He'd tried to enter that district of the city, but apparently -- due to a violent encounter in the city center -- the Entente had seen fit to lift that bridge, and he was not allowed through. His timing was poor, but he imagined he would simply be able to stay in the tavern overnight and go to Vivian the next morning. It turned out it would remain lifted for another fortnight, and perhaps forever, considering a recent uptick in crime. The world had become more violent ever since that moment, in the sky, where looming cords of black met with the washing, golden rays of the Living Gods. They were living in madness -- in the end of an era, he liked to say. The end of their cycle of peace.
Ruminating, just like that, he peered over the edge of the balcony, the waterfall's rush moving through his ears as he continued to stare down, down, down. The man grew pensive, quiet. He sighed out, reaching forward and lifting water as it fell from the falls, arching it up so that it grazed along his fingertips, cool and suspended in an almost perfect stasis.
Alistair began to hum, old Griscian tunes. Songs he'd never find here -- save for, perhaps, in the phonographs the Entente occasionally managed to lift from Griscian merchant companies, generally with a steep uptick in cost. He wanted a phonograph: nothing sounded more pleasant than that, to him, as he loomed above the cascade.