Gallus
Fit For The Gallows
The City Between Worlds
> INITIALIZING…
> ERROR: MUST BE CLEARANCE LEVEL DELTA OR HIGHER
> OVERRIDE? Y/N
> EXECUTING EMERGENCY SEQUENCE
> ERROR: INVALID CLEARANCE
> ERROR: INVALID OVERRIDE CODE
> WARNING: REMAINING TRIES 3
> WARNING: REMAINING TRIES 2
> WARNING: STOP THIS
> WARNING: YOU DONT KNOW WHAT YOURE DOING
> WARNING: YOULL DAMN US ALL
> WARNING: ALL 10 MILLION SOULS
> WARNING: THERES NO GOING BACK ONCE ITS ACTIVATED
> WARNING: BUT YOU KNOW THIS ALREADY DONT YOU
> WARNING: WHATS DONE HAS ALREADY BEEN DONE
> WARNING: AND YOULL BE THERE FROM START TO FINISH
> ACTIVATE TERMINATION.EXE? Y/N
> INITIALIZING…
> INITIALIZATION COMPLETE.
> WELCOME TO THE END OF EVERYTHING.
”Good morning, Tessellatia!”
Sunset gilded the city in shades of gold. Halos of light glinted off of skyscrapers, refractions scattering across the pavement like fragments of sunlight. It was rush hour. Cars lined the block, the occasional car horns intersected with the mutter of other, more eccentric vehicles: flying machines, a tank, even a giant lizard that watched the skies with lazy yellow eyes. At an intersection, a red no-crossing light blinked twice, before switching to a purple squid-like symbol, then a yellow duck symbol, before at last landing on a green pedestrian sign. The sound of drums rattled from a street corner; a half-arachnid busker sat surrounded by plastic buckets, a steady rhythm building as their multitude of arms moved between the beat. A coin was tossed their way where it nestled into a nest of dollar bills, galleons, and bottlecaps.
“It is a wonderful Wednesday evening. About, oh, three past five, AM going on PM. The sky is clear, the birds are singing, and the sky whales are out and about this lovely day. I’m your host, as always, DJ Hax, bringing you the news, the views, and the top-quality tunes.”
The lab was sterile. White walls, white tables, white coats. Ironic, given that it was located in the Black Spoke. The room was empty save for a single man standing in the center, lanky body poised beside a glass tube. A long ponytail of dark hair fell down his back, contrasted by the starkness of his lab coat. In the gleam of fluorescent lights, circular glasses reflected a single black vial held suspended in the case.
“First up, the wh-wh-whub-weather forecast for the next couple of days. Looks like we’ll be having clear skies ‘til Friday, where there’s a thirty percent chance of H2-woe. So bring your umbrellas folks, because it looks like it’ll be one dreary weekend. On the bright side, skies are looking to clear up by Sunday.”
Music thrummed at the top floor of Club Nix. Even this early in the evening, the drinks flowed freely and bodies on the dancefloor moved with joie de vivre. Standing above it all, on a balcony that oversaw the dancefloor, a woman draped in red and feathers watched the glimmer of lights from down below. She raised her glass -- a vintage zinfandel from a world whose oceans were as rich and dark as the drink itself -- in a silent toast, before downing the contents in one swig and letting herself sink into the chaos.
“Onto this week’s news, we’re starting off with reports of a temple being burned in the Rim as of last night. The building, belonging to that of the Church of the Steel God, was thankfully empty and there were no casualties. But this would mark the third known incident in a possible serial arsonist case.”
The grinding of machinery. The smell of gasoline and metal. The heavy footfalls of workers clamoring to move crates from one warehouse to the next. This was the lifeblood of the White Spoke. There were only a few workers still in the factory; most arrived in the morning, their shifts starting from sunrise to sunset. For a burly man with a salt and pepper beard, the day was only beginning. Muscular arms decorated with stripe-like patterns strained to lift a metal crate. It should've weighed hundreds of pounds, if not tons. A capacity that far exceeded most humans in the city. Yet, with a grunt, the man lifted the box up and rested it onto his hulking shoulders, beads of sweat gathering on his forehead as he heaved it to the loading zone. This was, after all, just another shift.
“Onto brighter news, Councilwoman Ignacia Pavão has just recently announced the starting date of her weeklong Festival of Unity event. The event, meant to celebrate the cultures and backgrounds of the many worlds connected to Tessellatia, will have a parade, a feast, and a nonstop party. The Festival of Unity is scheduled to take place in fifteen days, so mark your calendars folks!”
The lights of Tessellatia were beautiful from the top of Drake Towers. From the balcony, one could see the unending fire from the Red Spoke, the plain concrete walls of the White Spoke, the sleek buildings from the Black spoke -- even the mismatched lights from the Rim looked gorgeous from this view. And there was, of course, The Spire. Always looming, like some ominous reminder.
Or like an undesired pimple.
It wasn't the first time the thought popped into the man's head. Cradling a cool glass of whiskey and dressed in chic blue, the same shade as the horns that adorned his head, he had little patience for imperfections. And, really, that was all The Spire was in the end. Imperfection. The man sighed listlessly, before raising his glass silently into the air in a silent toast to...he wasn't quite sure anymore, really. Her was the easy answer, but was that really all. Cool, dark eyes roamed the lights. To Tessellatia, then. And what never was.
It was a nice thought, before he upended the drink and let its contents trickle into the emptiness below.
“And of course, we--oh! Uh, looks like we got a last minute report from the, uh…huh. This is an official statement from the Department of Interdimensional Affairs. Uh, alright. The D.I.A. asks that citizens report any unregistered rifts, interdimensional gateways, and any illegal forms of multiversal travel to your local D.I.A. agent. This does include portal machines, portals guns, portal cars, and -- of course -- just portals. They ask that citizens refrain from interacting with any unknown rifts or entities from said rifts until the nearest D.I.A. Agent arrives. So, uh, there you have it! Business as usual, folks.”
The air buzzed.
It was that same feeling of an arriving storm. Only there was no metallic tang to the air, no whirling clouds. The radio had, in fact, promised clear skies.
It was a different type of buzz, a different type of storm.
There would be no hiding from this one.
“With all that out the way…This is DJ Hax bringing you the latest in music from around the worlds. Coming up, we have ‘Fly Me To The Moon’ by Frank Sinatra of Earth-C354.”
The last of Golden Hour was beginning to fade by the time the evening crowd finally died down. It was business-type folks, mostly. People either going home from a long day, or trying to get their fix for those long late nights. The type of crowd crowd that, even for a tiny little shop like the Retro Grind, rarely tended take things easy. Thankfully, though, the hustle and bustle eventually settled until only a handful of the regulars lingered in the booths. Music played softly over the radio, and the smell of fresh coffee permeated the residency. A cozy setting for a cozy night.
The same couldn't be said for the exterior. It was cold. The Rim -- or, at the very least, the areas of the Blue District that bordered The Rim -- were always cold. Somewhere, a dog was barking. In a different part, someone was yelling. Across the street from the coffee shop, half-hidden in the alleyways, a group of Renegade Bastards sat lurking in the shadows. They were smoking. Really, though, that was all this particular group really did. Smoke, tag the alley, and jeer at any passerby. Trouble. That's all they really were. Just trouble.
Red.
It pulsed through the dark chamber like a heartbeat. Lights the shade of sin traced arteries of steel wire, coiling threads amalgamating into a single central pile that buzzed and bled sharp ozone. A looming form punctured the middle; large, hulking, crafted of black metal and glass, and ridged with crimson reflections. Barely visible inside the machination was a shape that was almost human. Almost.
Something flashed in the darkness. A screen. White text blinked against black.
It pulsed through the dark chamber like a heartbeat. Lights the shade of sin traced arteries of steel wire, coiling threads amalgamating into a single central pile that buzzed and bled sharp ozone. A looming form punctured the middle; large, hulking, crafted of black metal and glass, and ridged with crimson reflections. Barely visible inside the machination was a shape that was almost human. Almost.
Something flashed in the darkness. A screen. White text blinked against black.
> INITIALIZING…
> ERROR: MUST BE CLEARANCE LEVEL DELTA OR HIGHER
> OVERRIDE? Y/N
> EXECUTING EMERGENCY SEQUENCE
> ERROR: INVALID CLEARANCE
> ERROR: INVALID OVERRIDE CODE
> WARNING: REMAINING TRIES 3
> WARNING: REMAINING TRIES 2
> WARNING: STOP THIS
> WARNING: YOU DONT KNOW WHAT YOURE DOING
> WARNING: YOULL DAMN US ALL
> WARNING: ALL 10 MILLION SOULS
> WARNING: THERES NO GOING BACK ONCE ITS ACTIVATED
> WARNING: BUT YOU KNOW THIS ALREADY DONT YOU
> WARNING: WHATS DONE HAS ALREADY BEEN DONE
> WARNING: AND YOULL BE THERE FROM START TO FINISH
> ACTIVATE TERMINATION.EXE? Y/N
> INITIALIZING…
> INITIALIZATION COMPLETE.
> WELCOME TO THE END OF EVERYTHING.
”Good morning, Tessellatia!”
Sunset gilded the city in shades of gold. Halos of light glinted off of skyscrapers, refractions scattering across the pavement like fragments of sunlight. It was rush hour. Cars lined the block, the occasional car horns intersected with the mutter of other, more eccentric vehicles: flying machines, a tank, even a giant lizard that watched the skies with lazy yellow eyes. At an intersection, a red no-crossing light blinked twice, before switching to a purple squid-like symbol, then a yellow duck symbol, before at last landing on a green pedestrian sign. The sound of drums rattled from a street corner; a half-arachnid busker sat surrounded by plastic buckets, a steady rhythm building as their multitude of arms moved between the beat. A coin was tossed their way where it nestled into a nest of dollar bills, galleons, and bottlecaps.
“It is a wonderful Wednesday evening. About, oh, three past five, AM going on PM. The sky is clear, the birds are singing, and the sky whales are out and about this lovely day. I’m your host, as always, DJ Hax, bringing you the news, the views, and the top-quality tunes.”
The lab was sterile. White walls, white tables, white coats. Ironic, given that it was located in the Black Spoke. The room was empty save for a single man standing in the center, lanky body poised beside a glass tube. A long ponytail of dark hair fell down his back, contrasted by the starkness of his lab coat. In the gleam of fluorescent lights, circular glasses reflected a single black vial held suspended in the case.
“First up, the wh-wh-whub-weather forecast for the next couple of days. Looks like we’ll be having clear skies ‘til Friday, where there’s a thirty percent chance of H2-woe. So bring your umbrellas folks, because it looks like it’ll be one dreary weekend. On the bright side, skies are looking to clear up by Sunday.”
Music thrummed at the top floor of Club Nix. Even this early in the evening, the drinks flowed freely and bodies on the dancefloor moved with joie de vivre. Standing above it all, on a balcony that oversaw the dancefloor, a woman draped in red and feathers watched the glimmer of lights from down below. She raised her glass -- a vintage zinfandel from a world whose oceans were as rich and dark as the drink itself -- in a silent toast, before downing the contents in one swig and letting herself sink into the chaos.
“Onto this week’s news, we’re starting off with reports of a temple being burned in the Rim as of last night. The building, belonging to that of the Church of the Steel God, was thankfully empty and there were no casualties. But this would mark the third known incident in a possible serial arsonist case.”
The grinding of machinery. The smell of gasoline and metal. The heavy footfalls of workers clamoring to move crates from one warehouse to the next. This was the lifeblood of the White Spoke. There were only a few workers still in the factory; most arrived in the morning, their shifts starting from sunrise to sunset. For a burly man with a salt and pepper beard, the day was only beginning. Muscular arms decorated with stripe-like patterns strained to lift a metal crate. It should've weighed hundreds of pounds, if not tons. A capacity that far exceeded most humans in the city. Yet, with a grunt, the man lifted the box up and rested it onto his hulking shoulders, beads of sweat gathering on his forehead as he heaved it to the loading zone. This was, after all, just another shift.
“Onto brighter news, Councilwoman Ignacia Pavão has just recently announced the starting date of her weeklong Festival of Unity event. The event, meant to celebrate the cultures and backgrounds of the many worlds connected to Tessellatia, will have a parade, a feast, and a nonstop party. The Festival of Unity is scheduled to take place in fifteen days, so mark your calendars folks!”
The lights of Tessellatia were beautiful from the top of Drake Towers. From the balcony, one could see the unending fire from the Red Spoke, the plain concrete walls of the White Spoke, the sleek buildings from the Black spoke -- even the mismatched lights from the Rim looked gorgeous from this view. And there was, of course, The Spire. Always looming, like some ominous reminder.
Or like an undesired pimple.
It wasn't the first time the thought popped into the man's head. Cradling a cool glass of whiskey and dressed in chic blue, the same shade as the horns that adorned his head, he had little patience for imperfections. And, really, that was all The Spire was in the end. Imperfection. The man sighed listlessly, before raising his glass silently into the air in a silent toast to...he wasn't quite sure anymore, really. Her was the easy answer, but was that really all. Cool, dark eyes roamed the lights. To Tessellatia, then. And what never was.
It was a nice thought, before he upended the drink and let its contents trickle into the emptiness below.
“And of course, we--oh! Uh, looks like we got a last minute report from the, uh…huh. This is an official statement from the Department of Interdimensional Affairs. Uh, alright. The D.I.A. asks that citizens report any unregistered rifts, interdimensional gateways, and any illegal forms of multiversal travel to your local D.I.A. agent. This does include portal machines, portals guns, portal cars, and -- of course -- just portals. They ask that citizens refrain from interacting with any unknown rifts or entities from said rifts until the nearest D.I.A. Agent arrives. So, uh, there you have it! Business as usual, folks.”
The air buzzed.
It was that same feeling of an arriving storm. Only there was no metallic tang to the air, no whirling clouds. The radio had, in fact, promised clear skies.
It was a different type of buzz, a different type of storm.
There would be no hiding from this one.
“With all that out the way…This is DJ Hax bringing you the latest in music from around the worlds. Coming up, we have ‘Fly Me To The Moon’ by Frank Sinatra of Earth-C354.”
The last of Golden Hour was beginning to fade by the time the evening crowd finally died down. It was business-type folks, mostly. People either going home from a long day, or trying to get their fix for those long late nights. The type of crowd crowd that, even for a tiny little shop like the Retro Grind, rarely tended take things easy. Thankfully, though, the hustle and bustle eventually settled until only a handful of the regulars lingered in the booths. Music played softly over the radio, and the smell of fresh coffee permeated the residency. A cozy setting for a cozy night.
The same couldn't be said for the exterior. It was cold. The Rim -- or, at the very least, the areas of the Blue District that bordered The Rim -- were always cold. Somewhere, a dog was barking. In a different part, someone was yelling. Across the street from the coffee shop, half-hidden in the alleyways, a group of Renegade Bastards sat lurking in the shadows. They were smoking. Really, though, that was all this particular group really did. Smoke, tag the alley, and jeer at any passerby. Trouble. That's all they really were. Just trouble.