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The Legend of Aesthene's Close |
[[The Legend of Aesthene's Close (book)]] |
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- Lorethew Brevanish Cander, Chronicler<br> |
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A small underground puzzle area which can be stumbled into by accident in a warehouse in Crossing. |
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<br><br> |
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When the ruins atop the Siergelde were not yet ruined, and the land |
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[[Sewer Rat]]s infest part of the area. |
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surrounding The Crossing was yet fertile and abundant, an outlawed |
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alchemist by the name of Aesthene came to settle within the new town |
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which had sprung along the delta of the river Segoltha. |
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[[Category:Puzzle Area]] |
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<br><br> |
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Rich, eccentric, and acutely asthmatic, Aesthene found the mild |
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climate of The Crossing to his liking. His arrival in the fledgling |
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town was announced by a massive caravan numbering 1,000 beasts of |
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burden, 50 trackers and guides, 276 indentured servants (though |
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where he found so many toothless laborers is still a mystery), |
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16 chickens, 26 musk hogs, 134 oxen and a puma named Al. |
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<br><br> |
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His first official 'residence' was Gaethrend's Court, where he |
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took for himself an entire suite of rooms. As he settled in for |
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the smooth Segolthan winter, his servants proceeded to build for |
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him a magnificent mansion of grand halls, ornate cubiculums and |
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snaking tunnels. One room, referred to by Aesthene as his |
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'travel' room, would run the entire length of the upper story of |
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this magnificent residence, but to the builders' dismay, was |
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required to have no windows and no exits. Aesthene would, he |
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promised them, richly reward those workers who would hole them- |
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selves up within this room and complete it, without any contact |
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whatsoever with any of the other workers involved in the building |
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process. |
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<br><br> |
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Though it took roughly sixteen months longer than planned, Aesthene's |
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Close was finally ready for residence. Aesthene and his flock of |
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followers arrived at the mansion's doors early one morning, and |
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huddled around the gigantic archway which led from the dusty street |
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to the incredibly lush gardens surrounding the mansion. There, |
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Aesthene placed his blessing upon the home, put up a magical |
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barrier to seal it from prying eyes, and announced he was to embark |
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on a journey of epic proportions. Immediately. Everyone pack. |
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<br><br> |
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Befuddled, to say the least, his team of trackers and guides and |
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his indentured servants hastily prepared to travel yet again into |
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the wilds of the Northern Territory. As they packed and boxed, |
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crated and sealed, Aesthene presented his gracious host Gaethrend |
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with two very special potions, which for as long as were potent, |
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would afford Gaethrend tremendous financial success. Aesthene, |
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however, was an outlawed alchemist, and therefore, did things just |
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a wee shy of perfection. As Gaethrend's Court flourished, |
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his personal life fell to pieces -- but that is yet another story. |
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Suffice it to say that once the gift of the potions was made, the |
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bevy of travelers was on their way out the western gate of The |
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Crossing. |
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<br><br> |
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No record of Aesthene's travels in that time have been documented, |
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except for certain town records illustrating a massive search for |
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several workers reported missing shortly after his departure. |
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The next entry in the town journal thereafter was of Aesthene's |
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return, nearly twenty years later, and described a tremendous |
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haggling over land taxes due on his property. 'We know he built |
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a massive residence,' the tax seer wrote, 'but we have yet to |
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find it.' Beneath this is another entry: 'Aesthene Allevew paid |
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12 chickens and 4 oxen in past due land tax.' |
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<br><br> |
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Aesthene locked himself away in a far chamber on the second floor |
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of his mansion, working feverishly through an entire summer on |
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a project no other eyes would behold. Residents of the town, |
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from time to time, reported strange glowing lights flashing from |
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windows near the room, but other than this, nothing out of the |
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ordinary seemed to occur -- until the night when, under cover of |
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a moonless dark sky, Aesthene's servants hauled a massive iron |
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crate into the front yard. |
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<br><br> |
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That same evening, so the story goes, residents in the surrounding |
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area felt the utter chaos of Aesthene's presence. Bolts of |
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lightning cut heatedly through an otherwise calm night, and a |
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vaporous cloud undulated eerily above the mansion. Multi-colored |
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streaks of essence crackled everywhere, darting around, through |
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and in between every home on the street. A sound like that of |
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rattling chains woke people in their beds, and the ground shook |
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as if jostled by a massive quake, yet nothing was found out of |
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place. |
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<br><br> |
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The next morning, curious onlookers found the massive iron crate |
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opened and abandoned at the side of the street, probably waiting |
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for the charity cart to roll by and remove it for recycling. |
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<br><br> |
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Nothing out of the ordinary occured again at Aesthene's Close, |
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at least not for many, many years. Visitors came and went, Aesthene |
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became well-known for his bizarre collection of striped pink |
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donkeys and mooing chickens, and on occasion a streak of multi- |
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colored lights could be seen pulsing about the street-facing |
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archway. The townsfolk came to grudgingly accept their most |
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eccentric neighbor, whose house never quite seemed to be where it |
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should, and whose absolute worst compulsion was to drop handfuls |
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of coins on the roads whenever he was angry. |
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<br><br> |
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Destiny, however, intervened in the quiet lifestyle of The |
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Crossing. At dawn on a sleepy spring day, a tremendous rumbling |
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quaked through its streets and upset its foundations, killing |
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dozens and turning nearly a half of the town into rubble. A |
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handful of crazed servants scrambled to vacate Aesthene's Close |
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as it sank in ruins into the ground. Together with surviving |
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victims of the quake, they watched the tortured remnant of the |
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Close disappear as if it had never been. |
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<br><br> |
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Many, many years later, upon his deathbed, one of these servants |
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finally confessed to the strange happenings of that sorry |
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morning. Calling for me as chronicler of The Crossing, he related |
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to me a succinct and bizarre tale, which I now set down for those |
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of you willing to understand. Perhaps someday, the mystery of that |
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morning will be solved, and all who remain alive will benefit from |
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Aesthene and his adventure. But it is not my place to judge, it |
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is only my place to relate to you what was told to me. Herewith, |
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then, is the story told me:<br> |
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My conscious will be clear,' he prayed, 'if I tell thee of |
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the events of that morn, which I have sworn upon my sword I would |
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not tell another living soul what I had seen. Yet I see the |
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goodness in those who have spent their lives in the rebuilding |
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of this town, and their progress overcomes my loyalty to my late |
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master Aesthene and all his works.<br> |
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It was I whom attended my master through that night with a |
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most curious experiment,' he continued, 'in the cubiculum of the |
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mirrors, and it involved a strange and wonderous crystal.<br> |
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Was Aesthene's habit to affect various experiments upon this |
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crystal, which involved some sort of time travel. I, of course, |
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cared little for such things, but Aesthene was obsessed with |
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the notion of traveling between time and space through a gateway |
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created by this object. |
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<br><br> |
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Its power was awesome, and I daresay, unharnessable. It |
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frightened me no end that Aesthene trusted only me to assist in |
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his experiments. Night after night I sat and attended to Aesthene |
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as he worked with that thing. He chanted, he cursed, he weaved |
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dark signs in the air...and all it did was hang suspended there, |
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glittering back at him in defiance.<br> |
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Until the night,' he said softly, 'that Aesthene called on |
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the dark power in frustration, to show him the power of the |
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crystal.<br> |
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That is when I first saw Aesthene disappear.<br> |
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I was frantic. I had no idea what to do. The cubiculum had |
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no exits or windows, and without Aesthene's conjuring, I was |
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trapped there. The crystal shook and hummed, feeding a dense |
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prismatic light to the air. My hair stood on end, my skin |
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crawled. And as I frantically clawed at the floor, it coughed |
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and sputtered, and Aesthene reappeared!<br> |
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His face was on fire and his hair was streaked with white, |
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but the look in his eyes was of burning coals and the smile on his |
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face was remarkable. He told me he had been to a most curious |
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locale, and kept chanting 'incredible, simply incredible!' without |
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benefit of further information. Though it feared me greatly to |
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stay with him I did so, for I had a family to support and, quite |
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frankly, no way to get out of that room without Aesthene's |
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permission.<br> |
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For many nights, he worked like this, disappearing and |
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reappearing from who knows where. He made copious notes in his |
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journal, in symbols and signs which made no sense to me. He |
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would mutter to himself and cackle occasionally, he would rub his |
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hands in a kind of sick glee. It was nearly too much to bear, |
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except that Al, his pet puma, kept me company and we became |
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friends.<br> |
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But come that awful, awful morning,' he shook his head |
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sadly, 'and our lives were forever changed, were they not?' The |
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servant sighed miserably as he recounted the events that led |
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to the quake.<br> |
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We were, as usual, locked away in the cubiculum, Aesthene |
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at his desk busily writing in his journal, Al resting |
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disinterestedly in a corner of the room, myself huddled near |
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Aesthene's chair awaiting his commands, and that awful, hateful |
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crystal whirring and humming and flashing like mad.<br> |
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Aesthene turned to me, and for the first time in a long time, |
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looked downright normal. 'Tonight I embark on my greatest |
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adventure,' he smiled. 'You shall leave me now, but I will give |
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you a vision of what happens here. Tell no one of what you see, |
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except myself upon my return.' |
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<br><br> |
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He placed me down upon the tiled floor of the room with the |
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magic portal. From there, I was safe from the crystal, but in |
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my mind I could see all that occured.<br> |
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From beneath his cloak, he pulled a blackened, twisted |
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staff crowned with a gleaming emerald. Holding this aloft, he |
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uttered a strange but impressive incantation. I cannot tell |
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you how it went, for about halfway through it, Aesthene's eyes |
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began to bulge, and I could see immediately he was in the midst |
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of a full-blown asthma attack.<br> |
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Whatever was left unfinished in that incantation must have |
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angered the power of the crystal, for it shuddered violently |
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and tilted a little, and a thick bolt of lightning struck at |
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Aesthene and swallowed him whole!<br> |
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The poor puma, Al, was the next to disappear. And quite |
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inexplicably, the crystal went dark. That was all I saw |
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before the visions died, and I was alone in the quiet darkness |
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of the tiled room.<br> |
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For agonizing moments I pondered what could have happened, |
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and hoped that wherever Aesthene went, someone could help him |
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with his wheezing. Only when the wall behind me suddenly |
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collapsed did I have any idea of what other things were happening |
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at the moment I saw Aesthene disappear. |
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<br><br> |
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When I had clawed my way from the safety of that magical |
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room, everything around me was in ruin. Whole passages were |
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blocked by rubble, rooms were gone, and people were screaming. |
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I scrambled with those I found for the front door of the Close, |
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and thankfully the gods spared us the fate of many of our fellow |
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servants. But out in the streets of The Crossing, that same |
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chaos continued to spread. Roads buckled and cracked, whole |
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houses were torn asunder. Trees were uprooted, oxcarts were |
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overturned, buildings were crumbling...it was absolute chaos.<br> |
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I have waited a lifetime for my master's return, and now, |
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as I see my own slipping away, I felt it was my duty to pass on |
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what I know. Perhaps someday, Aesthene will return. And he |
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will want to know what happened that morn.<br> |
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Tell him, for me. And when you do, tell him also that I |
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have heard reports of strange lights in the air surrounding the |
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warehouse where his mansion once stood, and I myself have heard the |
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strange, familiar hum of the crystal on clear summer nights. But |
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most of all, please tell him to remember to drink his water warm |
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to help the wheezing!' |
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<br><br> |
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Lorethew Brevanish Cander<br> |
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Chronicler <br> |
Revision as of 20:36, 6 January 2008
The Legend of Aesthene's Close (book)
A small underground puzzle area which can be stumbled into by accident in a warehouse in Crossing.
Sewer Rats infest part of the area.