Kloudy
The Lore Savant
The Cardinal Rekindled
(Unknown Cave - Flamekin Tribe)
(Unknown Cave - Flamekin Tribe)
The crowd stirred with discontent and fear, cries of dissent and panic echoing through the low light. Ifrit could feel that something was amiss as the deep voice boomed past them. That was no normal fleshwalker's tone, that was an incantation of inhuman inflection, a deafening reverb of alien origins. The cardinal could not guess as to what the origin of this mysterious voice was, but he did know what he had to do. The fear was taking root in his people, and as one of their leaders it was up to him to avert their terror. Raising his right hand upwards, open palm facing the ceiling, a bright glare shone onto the tribe as a whole. A flare of fire emanated from Ifrit's hand, washing the entire nearby vicinity in a warm glow as waves of calming heat washed upon the fearful faces of his Flamekin. The flare would distract them of their worries and remind them of their true faith.
"Fear not... Kindled. The Fiery One... protects all... if you carry... his token."
With his stoic words of wisdom ringing pure in the ears of his brethren, Ifrit solidified his statement by offering them a solution to protecting themselves through god's willing. He took an unlit torch from a nearby tribesman and lit it from his palm. Brandishing the lit torch as a symbol, it was clear that the cardinal meant for everyone to light their own torches by means of creating protective talismans from danger. In the name of their faith, the tribe would find solace in this simple act. By wielding the power of their god, one was impervious to the enemy. Ifrit only hoped that no true danger would chance upon their group in its precariously fragile state.
|Spent 2 Guts [4/6] to calm the tribe|
The Taskmaster
(Unknown Cave - Flamekin Tribe)
(Unknown Cave - Flamekin Tribe)
Khaoul tried not to move too suddenly upon coming face to giant-face with the being in the wall. It was something entirely beyond his comprehension, and thus his composure could no longer hold steady. Khaoul did have enough guts to trust when he could out-think a situation. But when his intellect could not explain the problem, Khaoul found his mind racing for solutions to a problem he did not understand. His heartbeat increased noticeably and he was sure that this Fleshscape creature could sense his fear. While his usual cool demeanor began to slowly crumble, Khaoul did the only thing he knew how to.
He relied on what little logical sense remained in this scenario.
He could only guess as to what this thing was. A god of the Fleshscape? A beckoning wall-trap that lured travellers to their deaths. The main advantage for predators in the Fleshscape was their uncanny ability to mask their hunting methods and strike when one was least aware of the danger. Khaoul had no pretenses of lowering his guard, yet he was smart enough to realise when acting rashly against this creature would sum up his demise. It wasn't a gut feeling; it was a deduction.
Carefully placing his Deep Piercer onto the fleshy ground, noticing that the cavern surfaces around the face were very much healthy and unleeched, Khaoul took a few tentative steps towards the kneeling scout. He had to see the damage before he tried to reason with whatever this being was. If what he saw defied reason, Khaoul wasn't sure he could handle what came next. But what he saw was disturbing, yes, but not entirely unexplainable. He placed a hand on the man's shoulder and pulled back to get a look at his face. The scout's eyes seemed unfocused, his expression blank. As if the man almost wasn't entirely there. Khaoul had seen this look before. One of the hunters had come back one night many moons ago with the same symptoms, a husk of what he had been previously. Examination had revealed a parasite in his back, which had connected to the spine and sent tendrils to the brain, effectively mind controlling the hunter. Khaoul could not seen any obvious entry wounds, and deduced that this mysterious face had somehow influenced the man's think-flesh. A psychic. Khaoul had heard stories, but this was all too fantastical for someone as logical as he.
Attempting to muster all the confidence he could, Khaoul took a step back from the scout and gazed back at the face with attempted cool. The other leaders had arrived behind him, but there was no time to confer the best course of action with them. This required immediate attention. A few gears turned in his head until Khaoul reached the question of reason he needed answered. He glanced back down the way they had came, recalling the desperate corpses they had seen along the way.
"Did you offer them salvation..."
He turned back to the face in the wall, a steely expression donning his features.
"... or demand sacrifice?"
ThaDruid
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