[center][img]https://i.ibb.co/V0t4TWJL/image2.png[/img] [sup][img]https://img.roleplayerguild.com/prod/users/019c0856-058d-710e-81db-06847004baee.webp[/img] [color=be9650][b]#be9650[/b][/color] [color=2e2c2c]....[/color]|[color=2e2c2c].....[/color] [url=https://i.ibb.co/Ng7jtbxc/9d422dce-f72b-4ef7-9114-d946967baaad.png][color=808080][b]outfit[/b][/color][/url] [color=2e2c2c].....[/color]|[color=2e2c2c].....[/color] [color=9b9b9b][b]Kingdom of Moonreach[/b][/color] [img]https://img.roleplayerguild.com/prod/users/019c0856-058d-710e-81db-06847004baee.webp[/img][/sup][/center] [indent][indent][indent][indent][justify][color=808080]She dreamed of her own funeral long before she understood she would never have one. The sky in the dream was wide and unbroken, a living expanse of gold that poured itself over the valley in long, gentle rays. Sunlight moved like something living, settling across stone and skin, warming the air until even breath felt softened by it. It touched everything without hesitation, the worn paths between homes, the carved pillars of her people’s shrines, the quiet slope where the pyres were raised, and it gave freely, as if it had never known scarcity. She stood within it, though she did not feel it then as she once had. The memory of warmth lingered like an echo pressed against her skin, close enough to ache, distant enough to be unreachable. They had laid her body with care, white cloth wrapped her form, simple and unadorned, marked only by thin bands of gold thread that caught the light and held it. Her hair had been braided with steady hands, each strand woven the way her mother had taught her, tight enough to endure flame, gentle enough to honor what it had once been. Flowers rested at her sides, pale and deliberate, chosen not for beauty but for meaning. The pyre itself was built from cedar and old wood, its structure balanced and precise, each piece placed with intention so that it would burn clean, burn true, carry her upward without resistance. They gathered in silence at first, then the hymn began. It rose low and steady, voices joining one by one until the sound filled the valley, ancient and resonant, shaped by generations that had sung the same words into the same light. The language carried weight, each syllable measured, deliberate, shaped not just to be heard but to be offered. It was not grief that filled it, but rather it was reverence. A recognition of completion, of a life brought to its proper end and given back with purpose. She knew the words like she knew her own heartbeat. In the dream, they slipped through her grasp, leaving only the rhythm behind, a cadence that pressed into her chest and settled there like something echoing in the body rather than the mind. This was how her people believed freedom was earned. Not in living, but in the moment one's life ended. The elders had taught it beside the fires, their voices steady as they spoke of those who had gone before, of warriors who stood when they could have fled, of healers who remained when the sickness spread, of quiet souls who found meaning in the final breath rather than the first. Death was not an end to be feared. It was a shaping, a final act that gave the rest of a life its meaning. She had listened, younger then, turning those words over in quiet moments, imagining what her own ending might be. She had wanted it to matter. She had wanted to meet it without hesitation, to feel the world receive her as something close to a hero. That was what their Goddess wanted of them, the one thing she asked of her people, for them to be heroes. The flames took slowly, they curled along the edges of the wood, catching first at the oil soaked kindling, then rising in careful, deliberate tongues that grew brighter with each passing breath. Heat gathered, thick and immediate, carrying with it the scent of cedar, montwood, and ash, a fragrance that settled into the lungs and stayed. The light shifted as the fire rose, gold deepening into a richer hue, something that moved with its own rhythm now, separate from the sun above. She watched as it reached her body, as cloth darkened, as form began to blur beneath the growing brightness. In the dream, she stepped forward, or rather she [i]tried[/i] to. The ground resisted her, soft at first, as though the earth itself wished to hold her in place. Then it hardened, turned to stone around her feet, unyielding. She pressed against it without understanding why, her body answering a pull she could not name. Someone spoke her name, but it didn't reach her as sound. It struck against her chest instead, a distant pressure that could not cross whatever space now lay between her and the moment unfolding before her. The hymn continued, the fire climbed higher. There was no fear in it, only completion, only release. She felt something within her reach toward it, a quiet certainty that she belonged there, that this moment was meant to close around her and carry her into something beyond breath and bone. It was a pull deeper than thought, older than memory. And beneath it, something else held fast, a resistance that didn't come from her will but from somewhere further in, something already changed. The light did not dim, not right away, but when it did the eclipse came like a wound across the sky. It hadn't fallen with violence at first, but with a slow, terrible certainty, a shadow that stretched across the sun and swallowed it piece by piece. The gold thinned, fractured, and then was gone, replaced by a dim, ashen glow that held no warmth. The hymn faltered, and voices broke, not in panic, but in something closer to disbelief. They looked upward, toward a sky that had always answered them, and found it silent. Her people were the first to die. The light had been part of them, as constant as breath, as present as the ground beneath their feet. When it vanished, something within them followed. One by one, their voices stilled, bodies lowered, the hymn unraveled into silence that spread across the valley like frost. The pyre still burned, but the meaning within it had already been taken. She watched them fall, she could not reach them no matter how hard she tried, how she cried and begged and screamed, and she woke before the ashes settled. The chamber was cold, though the air trembled with a vast and unseen presence. Six figures stood around her, not as bodies, each one a weight in the world that bent toward her. Their hands rested against her, touching something deeper than skin or bone, something within her that felt like it was being opened and rewritten. She couldn't find her breath. It left her, fast and fluttering, as though her body understood before her mind what was being asked of it. She thought, distantly, of the sun as it had felt on her skin, warmth that had once belonged to everyone, and the memory sharpened as everything else began to slip. The moment stretched, then closed, the memory of her last moments with the Sixfold blurring at the edges until she couldn't hold it fully. Something within her went still, not quiet, not empty, but finished in a way that did not belong to the living. Time loosened its hold, slipping from her like water through open fingers, and in its place came something unyielding. She felt the shape of herself shift, not outwardly, but in the way a boundary dissolved and could not be remade. The Sixfold did not speak as they left her, not that she could recall. She felt each of them slipping away, one after another, their presence thinning until it was only her remaining. Each loss landed heavy, a hollowing that didn't bleed but deepened into the root of her being. Only later did she understand what was taken alongside what was given. She was the last of her people who still remembered the warmth of the sun, the last who carried the quiet faith of a Goddess who promised that endings meant freedom. The last voice of the Sixfold, the last echo of a world where magic answered and life moved toward something final. She was not simply living beyond them, she was what remained when everything else had been allowed to end. It was not her life that was taken, but her ending. [img]https://i.ibb.co/hR3gND6B/divider-fixed.png[/img] Rain had already begun by the time she reached the outer wall. It rose from the earth, a sheer expanse of stone veined through with moonlite that glowed faintly beneath the falling dark. The first gate stood open beneath a reinforced arch, guards posted in quiet vigilance as they watched the far perimeter more than those who passed through it. Beyond the wall stretched the farmland, a wide, necessary ring of survival pressed into the shadowed world. Rows of hardy crops bent beneath the weight of cold rain, their leaves silvered faintly where moonlite dust had been worked into the soil. The air there felt different, more exposed, less protected, like the dark leaned closer, testing the edges of what the kingdom could hold. She passed through without pause, boots sinking slightly into the softened ground as she moved along the worn path cutting through the fields. Watchtowers rose at intervals along the perimeter, tall and narrow, their upper platforms lit by steady lantern fire and strips of moonlite set into the railings. Figures stood within them, still and watchful, silhouettes against the dim glow as they scanned the horizon beyond the crops. When the horns sounded, and they would often, without warning, the response came from below. She saw them before she reached the second wall, the [url=https://i.ibb.co/cSGrHT9Z/aa294a8d-fe61-41f6-93c3-04928e5c29dd.png][i]Scarecrows[/i][/url] moved along the edges of the fields in loose patrols, their cloaks long and ragged at the hems, weighted to break their outline against the shifting dark. Polearms rested easy in their hands, moonlite edges catching what little light there was, their movements measured and deliberate. They didn't speak as they passed one another, only shifted direction, adjusting to something unseen. It was a safer post, she remembered hearing once. Close enough to danger to matter, far enough from the walls to keep it from becoming something deadly. They guarded what fed the city, and at the end of the day, they were the lucky few who returned home. The second wall rose ahead, smaller but no less fortified, marking the boundary between survival and structure. Inside, the city opened around her. Rain settled into stone, turning streets into glistening veins that reflected the steady glow of moonlite threaded through every surface. Buildings rose tightly together, their foundations laid deep into what had once been a silver mine, long before the eclipse had carved the world into something unrecognizable. It hadn't been design that saved Moonreach, it had been circumstance. Where other cities fell within the first months, their lack of silver leaving them defenseless, Moonreach endured. The mine had become its bones, and those bones had been shaped into something that could withstand the dark. Work didn't stop for rain, not anymore. Blacksmiths stood beneath covered forges, hammer striking moonlite with steady rhythm, sparks hissing out into the damp air. Masons moved along the inner walls, checking seams where silver met stone, hands running across the surface with practiced familiarity. Seamstresses worked near open doorways, mending heavy cloaks and lining garments with insulating layers meant to hold warmth against a world that no longer gave it freely, adding charms of moonlite when someone paid enough to warrant it. The scent of food drifted from narrow kitchens, broth, roasted roots, whatever could be stretched into something sustaining. Life here was constant maintenance, every role mattered, every failure carried consequence by the entire community. There were shrines, though not many. Cathedrals of moonlite rose in quiet prominence, their interiors lit with soft, reverent glow. Figures of Vaelune, a minor Moon Deity, said to be the daughter of Vaelion the God of the Moon, were carved into the walls, her form slender and serene, hands outstretched as if still offering light to the world below. Silver leaf traced her features, catching the ambient glow so that she seemed always half present, a reflection rather than a body. Offerings lay at her feet, small, practical things more than ornate. The people believed she had given them this place, that Moonreach was not just a refuge, but a gift. The King spoke of her often, she had heard, as though his rule extended from her will. Rain gathered in barrels set along the streets, their surfaces crusted with a thin layer of ice. A woman stood beside one, raising a carved wooden ladle and bringing it down with a sharp crack that split the surface. She worked steadily, breaking through the ice, dipping beneath, lifting water into a basin her son held with both hands. The boy’s gaze lifted as Caelrele passed, catching on the mask, the cloak, the shape of her cutting through the dim light provided by the eclipsed sun and moonlite. His grip faltered, and some water sloshed over the edge. [color=d6d6d6]“Ash Monk,”[/color] the woman said, her tone gentle but edged with quiet correction. [color=d6d6d6]“Don’t stare, and take mind not to spill.”[/color] The boy lowered his eyes at once, though the curiosity lingered in the way his shoulders remained tense. The woman did not look up again. She did not need to. By the time she reached the third gate, the crowd had thickened. Travelers pressed inward beneath the final archway, their numbers swelling beyond what the guards were willing to accept without question. The line moved slowly, halting as each person was weighed, examined, dismissed or allowed through with little explanation. Moonlite ran thicker through the stone here, its glow sharper, more concentrated, casting long, pale shadows across the gathered bodies. She joined the line without drawing notice at first, it moved in uneven breaths, advancing a few paces only to stall again, each person pulled forward, questioned, weighed, and either admitted or dismissed with quiet finality. The rain softened the edges of sound, but it couldn't dull the tension that threaded through those waiting. Ahead of her stood a dwarf, broad and compact, his shoulders set like stone beneath a travel worn cloak. His beard, a bright and vibrant shade of red, was braided tightly against his chest, each cord bound with small metal rings that caught the moonlite in dull flashes, and his expression held a scowl that seemed to be permanently set into his face. He shifted often, impatience rolling through him in small movements, fingers flexing, boots grinding against the slick stone, while the crowd around him kept its distance, their attention drawn despite themselves. It was the kind of attention that didn't linger comfortably, eyes slid toward him, caught, and then snapped away too quickly, as though recognition came with consequence. Dwarves were rarely seen this far from whatever lay beneath the mountains now, their absence turned into rumor, then into something half believed as existence and not myth. He felt it, Caelrele could see it in the way his posture held firm, in the way he refused to shrink from the space he occupied. When his turn came, the shift in the line was immediate. The guard looked up... then down. It was the first time she had seen it happen since she had joined the queue. The man’s gaze sharpened, interest breaking through the dull repetition that had marked his earlier questioning. There was no delay, no measured pause to assess, no careful ticking of boxes in the ledger before him. A few curt questions passed between them, name, origin, purpose, and whatever answers the dwarf gave were enough. The guard nodded once, quick and decisive, and stepped aside. The gate opened without further ceremony. The line behind him stirred, not resentment, not quite, something closer to unease. The dwarf didn't look back as he passed through, but the tension he left behind lingered, settling into the space he had occupied. It hinted of something unspoken, of rarity mistaken for value, of attention granted not out of trust, but out of something harder to define. When it was her turn, she stepped forward into the space he had left, and the guard didn't look up again. His gaze remained fixed on the ledger before him, quill scratching steadily across the page as he spoke, voice worn flat by repetition. [color=d6d6d6]“Ill?”[/color] he asked, the word clipped, followed quickly by more, as if she were very simple and needed the question explained further. [color=d6d6d6]“Are you ill, or have you been within the last moon cycle?”[/color] [color=be9650]“No,”[/color] she answered, her voice softened and slightly muffled beneath the mask. [color=d6d6d6]“Afflicted?”[/color] he asked next, still writing, still not lifting his head. [color=d6d6d6]“Blood or descent?”[/color] [color=be9650]“No.”[/color] There was a drop of humor in her tone now. The quill paused, and a breath passed between one moment and the next, thin and deliberate. Then, slowly, the guard looked up. The change was immediate. Indifference slipped, replaced by something sharper, something more aware as his eyes took in the mask, the fall of her cloak, the stillness she carried within it. Surprise crossed his face, brief but unmistakable, followed by the quick adjustment of someone recalibrating what they thought they understood. He straightened slightly, clearing his throat as his tone shifted. [color=d6d6d6]“Oh— I didn’t realize.”[/color] The words came more carefully now, measured. [color=d6d6d6]“Go right in. Apologies.”[/color] She inclined her head once and stepped past him without hesitation. There were certain privileges she had learned to wear as easily as the cloak on her shoulders. The mask, the silence, the posture of someone set apart from the rabble, people filled the gaps with their own assumptions, and those assumptions worked in her favor more often than not. As a monk, or something close enough to be mistaken for one, she was afforded a kind of distance that required no explanation. Ash monks very rarely left their temples, and when they did it was never for anything [i]good.[/i] Identifying as one parted crowds, it quieted questions before they could form. It made her presence something acknowledged, but not challenged. Beyond the gate, the city shifted again. Sound softened as she moved closer to the castle, the noise of the crowd folding inward beneath the weight of stone. Moonlite ran so much thicker through the walls here, its pale glow more concentrated, threading through the rain in clean, unbroken lines. It reflected off the ground beneath her feet, catching in the edges of her vision, constant and unwavering. She felt it as she passed, a low hum beneath her skin, familiar in shape... [i]magic.[/i][/color][/justify][/indent][/indent][/indent][/indent] [center][sup][img]https://img.roleplayerguild.com/prod/users/019c0856-058d-710e-81db-06847004baee.webp[/img] [color=808080][b]interactions[/b] [color=2e2c2c]....[/color]|[color=2e2c2c]....[/color] none [color=2e2c2c]...............[/color] [b]mentions[/b] [color=2e2c2c]....[/color]|[color=2e2c2c]....[/color] none[color=2e2c2c]...............[/color] [b]collabs[/b] [color=2e2c2c]....[/color]|[color=2e2c2c]....[/color] none[/color] [img]https://img.roleplayerguild.com/prod/users/019c0856-058d-710e-81db-06847004baee.webp[/img][/sup][/center]