Corn Orc Vandal
New Member
Group 1 (
Goonfire
,
Aegis
,
Tool
,
Daylight Fantasy
). Artwork by Michael Reardon.
The Hesper’s long voyage was at an end. From Braethia they’d traveled the length of the coast, taking on cargo and passengers. Only now in the Tempest Sea did the sailors grow nervous. They were not fond of the Agonos Isles. They said the stars were wrong here. The winds changed at the Sea God’s mercy. There were darker things too, things the sailors knew, or thought they knew, but kept deep in themselves. As if to speak the thing aloud would give life to it and make it tangible.
The voyage had been a smooth one. Longer than anticipated, but that mattered little to the sailors. To the poor wretches who died before ever stepping foot on solid land, though, the delay must have meant a great deal. Their disease-ridden bodies were sewn up into canvas and given to the sea. The ship was emptier now than when they first departed.
Only the desperate came to the Agonos Isles, and they paid the Hesper’s captain with whatever they had to buy a spot on the ship’s crowded lower decks. Family heirlooms, foreign coins, weapons or fabrics. Some even offered to work to pay their passage, hoisting sails and swabbing floors. These desolate souls stood on deck, clutching the handrail as the ship came into port.
The passengers were a strange lot, the sick and the dying. There were lepers swaddled in soiled cloth, gloved hands concealing missing fingers. The blind clutched comrades and imagined the sight before them, feeling the warm breeze on their faces. The lame held themselves upright on the ship’s rigging or peered under the taffrail. Others had skin like cracked porcelain, early signs of Myrian’s Kurse, and these men and women already felt themselves drawn to the sea. Then there were those with invisible ailments, diseases of the mind. The melancholic. The cursed. The mad. Some of these were still below deck, unable to escape their tortuous phantoms even in this moment of hope and triumph.
The shores of Atychía. Calm, clear waters that lead to a pristine white sand beach. A sprawling city that climbed the cliffside like grasping vines of wood and rock. Above it all stood a tower of gleaming stone. The Agonos Conclave, their last hope in the world.
The Hesper dropped anchor in Atychía’s shallow bay, not daring to go any further. The captain, a weathered half-elf woman in a salt-stained red coat, knew from experience not to dock at the city’s crumbling stone moor. She addressed the crowd as sailors buzzed around the ship, making ready.
“We’re taking the skiffs ashore. If you’re too weak to climb down, ask my men for help.” She spoke in short, clipped sentences, as if she were barking orders over a howling gale. But there was a softness to her words. “Those of you who’ve changed your mind can stay on ‘till Safir Sehi. After that, you’re on your own.”
This was a lie, and the crew knew it. The captain would let them stay on as long as they liked. She had a soft heart for these wayward souls. For some, the ship had become home, and she could not cast them from their last place of refuge at the end of their lives.
The sailors lowered two skiffs on either side of the ship into the shimmering water and they climbed aboard. Many of them carried crude wooden clubs. They seemed restless and jumpy as they helped passengers onto the gently swaying skiffs, muttering prayers of protection under their breath. A far-off bell within the depths of the city tolled five times to signal their arrival. Even from this far the new arrivals could see figures, mere suggestions of people with the distance, stirring from their midday torpor by the ringing bell. They emerged from white-walled buildings and flooded to the beach in droves like ants.
As the last of the passengers boarded the skiffs, oars dipped into the water and began the last leg of their journey.