In the blackest night, hope lives with the stars.
-Anonymous
-Anonymous
Waves lapped at the sandy beaches of Eastwitch, the surf snarling as it struck the stones of Moldensbury, drowning out a wind from the eastern ocean carrying the whispers of a coming storm. The waves grew ever larger and darker as the days progressed, with foam at their tops like snow, forcing themselves in through the mouth of the harbour, as if violating the very bay. The dolphins, though they often gave onlookers one last dance before the winter snows, were nowhere to be seen this siamhan. It was but one more withdrawn blessing from almighty God. In this, the fourth year of the Protectorate, there were greater concerns. Let the astronomers watch for portents and the bodies of the celestial stars, drawn from the movements of the aether. The weather and natural phenonemon had not been a priority of much of the citizenry for some years.
With Sir Thomas Sewell's reforms, the great isle of Abelorn had seen ten summers of civil war, and though there was peace now, it still felt as if a keg of powder was just being lit. The Grand Army of The Realm patrolled the streets, and with them, the new law of the blessed isle. The great fire of two years passed had burned half of Galanburg, and with it much of the work and infrastructure, something the protectorate desperately grasped to remake. The old style of townhouses and apartments was still present. Symmetrical layouts and strapwork decorations, and as usual they were built as high as possible for there was little room on the ground. However, the real estate bought up by the aristocracy and merchant sultans had been remade to include a twist to the previous style, as if to make a new rosebud from the ashes of the old. With the similar designs of yesteryear, they now added much use of columns and pilasters, round-arch arcades, and flat roofs with openwork parapets. It would take some years before even half of the city's ruins were rebuilt, but what rich and well to-do there were could focus on the rebuilding to fill their time, but for the common man, food and sanitation was the worry of the day.
On the terrace of just such a structure, on Wyvern's Street, a portly bellman with the morning paper and a bell of brass rang at the mid-afternoon hour. He cried out so that all would hear his pronouncements before the supper hour. A cold wind lifted his voice in the forlorn overcast of the waning light.
"We give our thanks to Protector of the Realm Thomas Sewell, on this anniversary of the King's death! As you receive the harvest, stay with your loved ones and grow warm in their embrace, and in the embrace of the lord! On this day, the last theater of Galanburg has been shut down, to end the bedlam of vice! On this day a week prior, the Hodgepodge Boys and their band were hung by the neck, until dead! Tomorrow they shall be cut down so that they may rest in the earth. Swearing, cursing, adultery, bigamy and fornication are but the least of their crimes, but forgiveness is virtusian! We shall be a land of honest men, and virtuous women!"
The people of this isle had traded a King for a Tyrant. For every banker, churchman, and coroner that was happy, there were a dozen others paddling at the poverty line. Tellers, millers, laborers, sailors, he watched as they passed him by on the rain sodden streets, clutching their livelihoods as well as their cloaks. The apothecaries and actors not granted clemency by the church were hanged or run out of town. Hungry and destitute, or merely not seeking to be singled out, the masses went about their day with little word to one another. Good riddance, William McTaggart remembered thinking when he sailed from these shores three years prior. These Angals deserved what they did to themselves. His people had suffered enough under their lowland yolk, why can’t they feel the ache of sorrow, something that had marinated in Alban bones for a thousand years?
After what he had seen, he thought differently now, at least to an extent. These poor had not wronged him, and he would wait until they did before he passed judgement. Even the very rich, bastards though they were, weren’t the true devil he was after. While Thomas Sewell worried over the heirs of the late King James to return from the mainland with an army at their backs, Will would keep the bastard's lands safe from the occult, as best he could.
If he could.
To his left, the keening whistle of a piston carriage could be heard from Broadwind Avenue. The rails groaned under the weight of its cargo. When he was a boy, he could only dream of seeing a steam engine in action. Now? There were three in the capital, and word had it a number of the aristocracy had smaller, personalized vehicles they could use without the need of rails, powered by gears and an electric charge rather than steam. He would have scoffed at the notion before his travels, but it was mundane compared to what he had seen.
He stepped out of Wyvern's Street down Montague Abbey, and a cadre of Protectorate soldiers hustles past him. Despite the effectiveness of the new regime, the death and deprivation had led to increased poverty, which led to increased crime. The patrolmen were built for war, as if they were about to be shipped to the Continent. Their armor comprised of a buff leather coat, iron back and breast plate and a baldric, with an iron three barred lobster pot helmet. The sigil of Thomas Sewell's house was the Ram, and so the soldiers had donned small, curved horns on their helms, dubbing themselves Rammers. The lower folk, or those not in range of their swords or flintlock muskets, called them goats and other, more colorful names of that nature.
Will kept his wide brimmed hat down to better cover his eyes, though it mostly served to keep his midnight blue hair from catching the light. In shadow it looked black, but lamplight and the sun betrayed his Yr Alba heritage. Once the goats were passed, he picked up speed, his Jabbokwool cloak swaying behind him as he turned into an alleyway. He had been to this part of Galanburg before, but despite his confidence he moved with careful, wary steps. His quiet feet were even silent in the myriad of puddles, but somehow, a black cat appeared as if summoned and screeched, sprinting past him down the sidestreet. He recovered, let go of his wheelock, and found himself standing behind a reinforced door of oak and swyftiron.
Three knocks, and then two knocks twice, before a single knock. Reminded him of an auld song from his youth. An eye slit was shoved aside, and the bolt of a crossbow poked through. Guns had taken center stage in warfare, but crossbows were still popular for hunting, the peasantry, and… less noisy killings.
“What rises without sleep, and slumbers without rest?”
“The moon,” Will replied, and the crossbow was removed, the hatch was closed, and the door opened. Inside he saw draperies and carpets and many different doors to smaller rooms of unknown purpose, but Alaric had been clear. The last door of the hall, on the left. Will kept his other hand on his sword hilt as usual, walking past archways covered by sheets. The scent of hookahs and opium and other spices pinched his senses, but he ignored it. He found the portal Alaric had granted him, and he stepped within.
Before him were three hags. Fortunetellers, he had been told. Each swathed in cloth from the orient, only their keen eyes of purest black was visible, looking at him with the same alien nature as a toad. He could not tell if they were friendly, dangerous, or even if they were surprised. He saw a cushion he could sit at, but he waited for them to greet his sudden appearance. None did so, and he sighed, reaching into his coat to produce payment, before the leftmost hag raised her hand to halt him from doing so. The rightmost hag indicated the seat, and after hesitating a moment, he did as he was bid.
The first fortuneteller cried: "Hail, sir William, Hammer of Witches!"
The next croaked: "Hail, sir William, Savior of The Isle!"
The last fortuneteller crooned in William's native tongue: "Fàilt ort, sir William, leannan cìochan!"
"Do you mock me!?" He asked them, giving them a glare of warning. He had not fought in war nor slain denizens of the crypts to made into a bit of fun! Not unless he was in a tavern, mind. He was no sir, either. His father had been a cattle driver!
"Mock? No!" The central one confessed. At her side, a black cat wriggled onto her lap. If he didn't know any better, it was the same cat as before. "A storm approaches! In three days, a darkness will land in the midst of this terrible storm. Men will see portents, and dragons will fly above amidst the thunder! Whirlwinds and sheets of lighting, and a great famine will descend upon the land!"
"Dragons?" He asked incredulously, but his smile faded. No one had seen a dragon in five hundred bloody years. No, they were speaking in metaphor or allegory, but even still, it intrigued him. His fingers idly brushed the small, coarse goatee on the admirable taper of his chin. "What darkness is this? I've been searching to know..."
The left one said "One cannot know."
The middle on foretold. "Shrouded, but imminent."
"Boireannach a dh’fheumas tu a lorg!" rasped the right one.
"A woman?" He echoed. He did not like the fortuneteller on the right speaking in his mother tongue, but she would not stop speaking of a woman. One he had to find. "Is this the warning you speak?"
"She is not of the darkness, but to be consumed by it."
"Find her, and you shall find it! Together, you may weather this coming blight."
As one, the sisters murmured in a low chant. He was beginning to grow tired of this trickery. He needed to know the nature of this evil, and they could not know? And they throw some portent of a woman? Paid by them, no doubt. However, despite himself he was drawn in to their theatrics. The ball, seemingly made of pure crystal, began to grow obscure from clouds of powder, likely released by some mechanism. He could not ignore their words, but so far they had yet to prove their skills in any meaningful way, without him merely waiting the three days. How was he supposed to prepare? He had a few ideas, no thanks to these crows. Still, he watched the crystal ball intently from under his hat, and the smoky fog began to dissipate of its own volition. He saw a feminine figure, but his stubbornness led him to begin a denial before the image was clear.
"I don't need a wooooo-" The crystal ball showed a dark woman swathed in wool, satin and gossamer of purple and red. Trinkets and bracelets of bronze and faux gold and hoop earrings glinted in torchlight. She languidly stretched, an immense bosom protruding into the air as her supple arms of honeycream raised above her head. The dark waves of her raven hair tumbling to the cushioned chair beneath a plump bottom. Will's denial ended in a "-hrmmmmm."
He wasn't convinced, by Saint Anderlon, but he wasn't gallus either. At least they showed him something. With a sigh, he looked at the hags. "Where do I find her?"
Together, they spoke without preamble: "The carnival."