Hi guys. This is a fanfic I've been working on for a while. I supposed you can call it an AU, but it's that only in the broadest definition of the term. This is the story of an aging Knight, the last surviving member of his group, on his way to fight an enemy he can't hope to defeat. Knowing he is unlikely to survive, he writes the chronicles of his session and his fallen friends, so that future players might learn from their mistakes.
Today the world will burn,
As fiery death from heavens rained
Upon once mighty stronghold down
From earth all trace of Breath is drained.
Today the world will drown
Its Void is filed with endless dread
Its Hope is snuffed and gone
Its Heart replaced with Lifeless lead.
Today the world is dead,
Its endless Space consumed by hate
The fury of its Rage, now ash
Oblivion will be its fate.
Today the world is dark,
Its very Mind by tyrant crushed
And nothing here reminds,
But Sands and Stars and rust.
Prologue:
Last Journey of the Knight of Sands
This is the last will and testament of Edris Hull, Shield Sage of the third circle, protector of Lyr, sky breaker and survivor of the three battles. Knight of Sands.
I write this on my way to take on an enemy I can’t possibly defeat, trying to save someone most likely long gone, hoping against all hope to actually make a difference in the end. In short, I’m trying to extinguish a sun by spitting into it.
I’m not doing this simply to quiet my conscience. Hopefully whoever reads this will gain something from my experiences, if only in learning how not to fail where I did.
I am the last of my team. From ten, one reminds. I can’t help but wonder what I did to deserve this. Why am I alive now when men and women far better than me rot? I was never the strongest, the smartest, the kindest or most ambitious. Yet I still live, and all that’s left of them are mementos and fading memories. Eight mementos for nine past companions. The ninth I threw away. He doesn’t deserve to be with them, not even in memory.
But, as usual, I’m getting ahead of myself. If you are reading this, this mean you reached the Distant Shore. If you managed that, you must be fairly powerful. Traveling beyond the Furthest Ring is not a undertaking taken lightly or accomplished easily. Hell, I only managed because I had outside help. My point is, this journal is for you. If I fail here, and I most likely will, my only hope is that someone more powerful than I will someday come to finish the job. If you are that someone, I urge you to read this carefully. Knowledge is power, and you will need every drop you can get against an adversary like the Dey.
As with all things, better to start from the beginning, and don’t believe any Heroes of Time that tell you different…
Chapter 1
Chapter one- The Skybreakers
Before I begin getting into the details of my current predicament, it’s important to understand just how I got here. To understand that, I’ll need to go over the details of my session. It was an unusual one, to say the least.
From all the sessions I’ve seen, and I saw quite a few, my session was the only one in which the players had preexisting knowledge of the prize. Not just the prize though, most of the game mechanics. And not just the players, our entire society was aware of the exact time the game would start over a century before it did.
So when the meteors bearing me and my teammates fell, our guardians were prepared. An unforeseen delay, however, meant that we didn’t all fall a few months from each other. From the time the first of us fell, to the time the last did, four years passed. The large age gap in our group did nothing to ease the already stressed atmosphere between us, the other causes of which I’ll get to later.
We were called the Skybreakers, and our coming was treated with both elation and dread. The White Vizier, who came to Lyr a century and a half before the Fall, was the one to prepare the ground for our arrival. He appeared before the High Judge of Lyr in a flash of blinding green energy, claiming to bear tidings of a coming apocalypse. Despite his impressive entrance, the High Judge, paranoid from years of assassination attempts, immediately called for the guards. As they attempted to grab the Vizier and lead him away, he taped his whitewood cane on the floor of the audience chamber. With a second flash, the guards disappeared, and were never heard from again. After that, the High Judge became far more agreeable.
The Vizier spoke of a great calamity set to happen in a hundred and fifty years. He showed the Judge and the Council of Ten dire visions of the event, of Lyr bombarded with great orbs of fire. He showed them the aftermath of this attack, the empty sand plains left where our great city once stood.
The Council was terrified. They pleaded, begged him to deliver them from their doom. He looked at them with those empty white eyes I’ve grown to despise, and said that sadly, there was nothing he could do to stop the Fall. But all was not lost, he calmed the panicked members of the Council, for before Fall shatters the earth, the children who could stop it will shatter the sky. Each will arrive some thirteen years before the Fall riding one of its instruments. These children, if each trained by member of the Council in his or her field, would save Lyr from the Fall, and make it greater than ever before. They would make an entire universe shaped in Lyr’s image.
He was lying of course. Nothing could save Lyr, or any of the other worlds the game took place on, and he knew this perfectly well. But, the Council was convinced. Since they knew they would not live to see the Fall and to train the Skybreakers themselves, they left instructions to their guilds to listen to the Vizier’s every word and to begin to prepare for the arrival. Thus Lyr fell under the Vizier’s control, and so it remained until the day Adrian’s meteor crashed into the High Judge’s palace.
Chapter 2
Chapter Two: Witch and Page
Since the day I landed on Lyr a little less than a year after Adrian, I’ve been training under the Shield Sages, the city’s guild of protectors. From them I learned the arts of defense, both martial and magical. My days consisted of training and little else, beside bi-weekly meetings with the other future players, which the Vizier deemed necessary for building “Team Spirit”, as he often called it.
I recall one particular meeting, The last one before the game began. The meetings took place in a different guild every week. That last meeting was in the Hall of Artificers, home to the Metal Makers and Sagacious Scholars. I made it a habit to arrive early-the Vizier didn’t take kindly to tardiness. The Hall was a plain round stone building, as utilitarian as the guilds inhabiting it. Halus stood at the entrance, waiting for me.
Halus Nost, Page of Space, was raised by the Metal Makers, responsible of manufacturing the weapons and armor for the more warlike guilds of Lyr, as well as other gadgetry. He and his sister Teni fell on the same day, about six months after me. Even though I was older, he towered over me as he approached me with the same easy smile he always wore. Putting a big, muscular hand on my shoulder, he started:
“Ah, Edris! How auspicious it is to meet you here! What brings you our humble abode?”
“Cut it out Hal. I get enough fruity talk from your sister, and you know damn well why I’m here.”
Hal grinned. “You are such a spoilsport, Ed, I swear.”
“Anyone else here yet?”
“Nah, just Teni and me. She’s busy working on some project of hers; she’ll be here any second”
This gave me pause. Nothing good ever came from Teni’s “projects”.
“Let’s get inside,” Halus said, rubbing his hands. “I’m freezing out here”
We made our way to the meeting room. Inside, Teni was waiting, busy fiddling with one of her infernal contraptions.
Teni Nost, Witch of Mind, was Halus’ antithesis. Short, dark and thin where he was tall, fair and broad-shouldered. She was raised by the Sagacious Scholars, the city’s leading scientist and academics. They weren’t truly brother and sister of course, but due to the fact they fell on the same day and that the heads of their guilds were married, they were raised as such.
“Salutations Edris. How pleasant it is to have you with us again.” She said, hammering on the machine with a large wrench. The thing began to pulse with bright colors.
“Um, is that supposed to glow like that?”
“I should not think so; it is only a debris removal module”
“She means a vacuum cleaner.” Halus supplied.
“Thank you Hal, I get it.”
“Do not let the glowing disquiet you, it is a perfectly within the acceptable pera-“
The device then proceeded to explode, showering the room with dust. Teni must have forgotten to empty it.
“Well this is just great Teni” Halus sighed. “Now who is going to clean this mess up? The Vizier will be livid!”
“I would be happy to do it, but it seemed I have misplaced my debris removal module.”
And so we went on arguing and bickering, falling into our old comfortable routine. Even though we only saw each other twice a week, we grew to know each other well over the years. As I sit here on an empty ship on its way to everywhere and nowhere, remembering that last meeting- Halus’ cheerful and loud, Teni quiet and serious, myself abrasive and confident- the weight of these lost times on my shoulders seems all the more heavy.
And so we went on arguing and bickering, falling into our old comfortable routine. Even though we only saw each other twice a week, we grew to know each other well over the years. As I sit here on an empty ship on its way to everywhere and nowhere, remembering that last meeting- Halus’ cheerful and loud, Teni quiet and serious, myself abrasive and confident- the weight of lost times and lost friends on my shoulders seems all the more heavy.
Chapter 3
Chapter Three- Preparations
Halus was bragging about some new weapon he forged as footsteps were heard from down the hall. As we turned to look Adrian walked in, shaking snow from his gray coat. He gave us a slight nod of acknowledgment and excused himself, proceeding to the Hall’s kitchen to try and find something warm to eat. Teni watched him go, a wistful look in her usually somber eyes.
Adrian Veris, Heir of Hope, was raised by the Bright Blades, the city’s finest warriors and generals. A tall, stern young man, none of us took his responsibilities more seriously than him. His dedication at working with his wind-blades made him a terrifying fighter before we even entered the game. Almost seventeen years old, he was the oldest I’ve ever seen a player enter.
He soon returned with a steaming bowl of broth and sat with us.
“Halus, Edris, I hope your training is going well,” Adrian said, formal as ever. We nodded. “Teni, I trust you are well.”
Teni mumbled something unintelligible, nervously twisting a broken piece of vacuum cleaner in her hands. Halus and I exchanged a look. You didn’t need to be a Sagacious Scholar to figure the cause of her embarrassment. Adrian was completely oblivious, as usual. He never seemed to pay much attention to anything but the preparations for the game, and the closer to the beginning we got, the less consideration he gave for anything else.
“Did Zand arrive already?” Adrian asked, sipping his broth “I need to have a word with him.”
“Sunshine isn’t here yet,” Halus replied “Maybe we got lucky and he dropped a tower on himself.”
Halus didn’t care much for Zand. Quite frankly, neither did I.
Adrian frowned, but said nothing. He knew better than to get between an irresistible force and an immovable object. I tried to change the subject before things any more awkward.
“So Adrian, up for some sparring until the others get here?” I knew Adrian could never refuse a chance to test himself.
He finished his broth and stood up. “Sure, I’ve got a new technique I want to try”.
So did I, but he didn’t need to know that. Adrian was always too honest for his own good.
We went out to the courtyard. Curious, Halus and Teni followed. Snow fell around us as we took our positions, covering Lyr in a soft, white blanket. The last snow it would ever see.
As a Shield Sage, my skills are almost completely defensive in nature. I didn’t stand a chance in a 1v1 fight against a well-rounded fighter, not to mention a Bright Blade like Adrian. So we fought under our usual conditions. If I could block his attack for three minutes, I win. He lands a hit, I lose.
“Are you ready?” Adrian asked, falling into his relaxed Bright Blade fighting stance. He held no weapon in his hands.
Putting on my shield gauntlets, I replied: “Let’s see what you got, Shiny”
He attacked, or rather, his blades did. While Adrian reminded standing where he was, four semi-transparent blades of wind flew in my direction, lightning fast. I raised my hands, summoning my shields. Three of the four blades slammed against the white energy half-spheres covering my hands, but the fourth changed direction, attempting to strike at my feet. I leaped to the side, the blade missing my right foot by an inch. Adrian didn’t let up. The blades kept coming, striking my shields again and again, and draining my energy fast. Not only was Adrian fast, each blade struck like a sledgehammer. Shield Sage barriers were supposed to be able to withstand hours of punishment on the battlefield, and not two minutes after his first attack, I was already nearly spent. It was time to try my new technique. Barely dodging another attack, I slammed my shield gauntlets together. Focusing every last bit of energy I had, I created a full barrier sphere, covering my entire body. All four blades slammed against the front of my sphere, and I had to concentrate most of my power on the front to keep them at bay. Time was almost up.
“Looks like I finally got you!” I shouted, excited. I never managed to beat him before.
“Not quite.” He said quietly. As he did, I saw something flashing in the corner of my eye.
A fifth blade. While I focused on holding the four blades hitting the front of my shield, the fifth snuck behind, striking my underpowered back and easily piercing the barrier. The blade smacked my between the shoulder blades. I dropped face first to the snow.
The bastard. I never saw him use more than four before. Groaning, I rose to my knees.
And met the pale face of the Thief of Rage staring me dead in the eye.
Dramatis personae (The cast)
Edris Hull: Shield Sage and Knight of Sands.
Elin Fenn: Sky Searcher and Seer of Stars.
Halus Nost: Metal Maker and Page of Space.
Teni Nost: Sagacious Scholar and Witch of Mind.
Adrian Veris: Bright Blade and Heir of Hope .
Colm Tzel: Silent Shade and Thief of Rage .
Zand Koder: Flame Follower and Mage of Void.
Yun Ani: Healing Hand and Rogue of Life.
Shanna Leven: Stalwart Spear and Sylph of Heart.
Kyn Eren: Avid Alchemists and Maid of Breath.
The Dey: Adversary of unknown qualities.
The White Vizier: A figure in white and green, de facto ruler of Lyr.
The High Judge: Former ruler of Lyr. Died in a meteor crash.
The Council of Ten: Heads of the ten major guilds of Lyr.
Comments or questions are highly appreciated.


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