faderifting: (Default)
Fade Rift Mods ([personal profile] faderifting) wrote in [community profile] faderift2016-05-16 08:35 pm

OPEN: The Western Approach

WHO: Everyone!
WHAT: The Western Approach is a terrible place. You should definitely go there.
WHEN: Bloomingtide 15 onward
WHERE: The Western Approach
NOTES: This is open to everyone. Characters who would not happily go to the hell desert probably have to go anyway; it's a war, not a vacation.



Once these wastes were a land of plenty. Can you believe it? The rain came north over the Gamordan Peaks, turning the plains green and verdant for three months of the year. Eight hundred years ago, that changed. During the Second Blight, darkspawn spilled out of an enormous crack in the earth, corrupting it with their foul blood... and it never recovered, even after they were driven back underground. The Grey Wardens built Adamant Fortress to stand watch over that chasm, but eventually even they abandoned it to the wind and the biting sand.

What few of us eke out a living in this Maker-forsaken place do so knowing that any number of deaths await us: darkspawn raids, dragons, bandits—not to mention starvation from the lack of water and game. If we stay, it is because we know there are treasures buried in the bones of this place, ruins from the time when Tevinter ruled, and even earlier. We pass tales around our campfires of the things we have seen shrouded in the dust storms. My favorites are the ones about relics that could restore the Western Approach once more... but I don't believe them. Truth be told, on nights when the wind is calm, I can stand on a hilltop and see for miles in the moonlight over a stark beauty of which no other Orlesian can claim to know the equal. On those nights, I hope it will never change.


—From Lands of the Abyss by Magistrate Gilles de Sancriste



I. THE DESERT

When Scout Harding calls somewhere the worst place in Thedas, that's probably a bad sign. Even when nothing in the Western Approach is deliberately trying to kill you, there's nothing kind or forgiving about the landscape: bare and arid, carved through by sharp-dropped canyons, dotted with abandoned mines and signs of the deaths of lost travelers. Winds sweeping through to whip stinging sand into uncovered faces, and periodic dust storms obscure visibility entirely. It's warm enough to be dangerous but not so hot, at this time of year, that heat exhaustion and dehydration can't creep up on you while you aren't paying attention.

And at any given moment, something probably is deliberately trying to kill you. The food chain in the region is top-heavy, with quillbacks, phoenixes, hyenas, and varghests roaming hungrily and as likely to attack one another as the sparse local prey population. Compared to their natural competitors, the Inquisition's forces look like easy marks. The camps the Inquisition scatters at lookout points throughout the region require constant watch, and going anywhere alone is inadvisable. Not only because of the hostile local everything, but also because it is incredibly easy to get lost. One rock formation looks much like another after hours in the sun or bathed in shifting moonlit shadows, and good luck finding many other landmarks. There are a few: chunks of pillars or arches from some ruined structure, or the occasional odd pillar that might, if someone investigates, prove to mark a trail of sorts.

Plus: the only people who seem determined to survive out here are cutthroat bandits and stray Venatori. Double-plus: a high dragon makes occasional fly-bys, scouring the ground below for anything edible, armored or not.

Some reprieve comes at night, relief from both the sun and the area's primarily diurnal predators. But that's when the darkspawn come out.

II. GRIFFON WING KEEP

Bloomingtide 16-17: Taking the Keep

Only a small force of Tevinter cultists remains in Griffon Wing Keep when the Inquisition arrives, seemingly on their way out the door already, but the sight of Inquisition banners is enough to make them stay and fight. There's no need for siege equipment, but there is call for a little bit of patience. With it, a small battalion is able to evade the mages and archers on the walls and storm the doors with few casualties. Fewer than three dozen warriors wait inside. It's a quick, brutal fight; it only takes a night.

Bloomingtide 18 Onward: Home Away From Home

Once the Keep is cleared of occupants, it's ripe for the Inquisition to… occupy… But with implicit permission, at least. Those who aren't needed for fights elsewhere may be put to work clearing out debris and small animals and the remnants left by the cultists, and within a few days the fortress is a serviceable outpost, much more hospitable than the camps out in the sand. Barracks mean even those who don't have beds at Skyhold may have one here, and it takes less than a week for an enterprising merchant to arrive with ale.

III. THE STILL RUINS

Despite signs of recent activity, the lavish Tevinter palace tucked incongruously into the canyons is quiet and still, when the Inquisition discovers it—quiet, still, but not empty. The ancient ruin is brimming with demons and Tevinters in incredibly outdated fashions, all frozen in place, as they have been for hundreds of years. No one breathes or blinks, but their skin is still warm and alive to the touch.

Beyond the entryway and halls and through the courtyard, there are signs of research and experimentation, and one man stood unmoving with his hand clasped around something unseen.

Perhaps someone will discover the cause. Perhaps someone will undo the spell that's been cast over the palace. Perhaps, if someone does, someone will take the opportunity to not immediately murder all of these valuable sources of ancient information, and instead only murder most of them. In the meantime, however, it is unlikely that anyone will ever be able to get this close to a rage demon without receiving a face full of fire. Take advantage.

IV. CORACAVUS

Signs of the Venatori point upward: up the hills, up ladders and towers, and into the ancient Tevinter prison, Coracavus, that was built into the mountainside. The ruin is filled with sand now, with half-collapsed walls and anything not made of stone worn away by winds, and the Venatori are long gone, their hunt for relics from the glory days of the Imperium abandoned when an excavation attempt opened the prison to darkspawn, instead. The darkspawn have retreated as well, but there are signs of their presence. Namely the smell and the half-eaten corpses of slaves—primarily elven and dwarven—who were left behind to their fates when the Tevinters fled.

There's no sign of them now, but digging through their abandoned camps may turn up a name, if anyone would like to see that he pays.

V. ADAMANT FORTRESS

A day's determined walk from the nearest Inquisition camp, Adamant Fortress overlooks the vast chasm—dubbed the Abyssal Rift—from which darkspawn poured during the Second Blight. It stood abandoned for nearly 150 years before the Grey Wardens' recent reoccupation, and it's abandoned again now, emptied out well before the Inquisition's forces arrive. There are signs that the retreat was a hasty one: scattered belongings, opened doors, abandoned meals, and no fewer than fifty bodies left on a mass pyre that only half-burned without anyone to tend it.

The Veil has always been thin here, and it's thinner now, where demons have been pulled through from the Fade. Rifts hang over the battlements and in the corridors, and escaped shades lurk in the dark corridors, siphoning away the willpower of those who linger until they come close enough to attack. Those who visit the Fortress set up camp outside of it rather than within it, wisely.

There are clear signs of blood sacrifice, for those who look: the bodies, blood stains on the stone floors, neat lists of names systemically crossed through. Sorting through documents left behind may turn up vague notes in a mage's runic shorthand or the journal of a trepidatious new recruit (Lourde, a pickpocket, crossed through on the registers). Behind a locked door in the lowest rooms are the bodies of sixteen mages, still in their Circle robes, left lying where they fell when the Joining took them. Mages who were among the rebels in Redcliffe may recognize a face or two as belonging to the hardliners who left with the Tevinters.
universal_charm: (Oh?)

[personal profile] universal_charm 2016-06-24 05:07 am (UTC)(link)
Oh Sam, you are so small and precious. The astonishment makes him smile a little, and he wonders if it's a bad thing that he finds everything Sam does adorable. Was it because he was a hobbit? Was it like kittens - small and cute?

"We use -" how did he explain cars and trains and motorcycles and space ships? "We use things that are like wagons, but they can move on their own, and much, much faster than a horse can travel. You can travel hundreds of miles in a day."

A small huff of a laugh, rubbing the back of his head.

"But you do have the right of it - I should learn. I'm not sure my boots can take it if I insist on walking everywhere."
fightingale: (pic#9852347)

[personal profile] fightingale 2016-06-24 02:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Leliana pauses, as well, and if she were less controlled she would pinch the bridge of her nose or rub her hands over her face, try to rein herself in, take the jagged sharpness off herself.

"And when the costs of happiness are unknown?"

It is a ridiculous counter, but she is not fully sure how to articulate it, how to express her concerns without laying all bare, and that in and of itself is infuriating to her. She should be sharper than this, better than this, and instead her mind feels muddled, and by Morrigan, no less.

"It is not terrible," she replies, more quietly. "But I do not know if I want will be the bring of happiness, or disaster."

Good thing she is not melodramatic as all hell.
dreadinquisitor: (smirk)

[personal profile] dreadinquisitor 2016-06-24 06:09 pm (UTC)(link)
"You'll have to read my first edition to find out," Maxwell teased. "First edition, volume one."

He waved an airy hand as they trudged along through the sand.

"I'll be sure to add you to the waiting list."
bookish_lioness: (Pensive)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-06-24 08:37 pm (UTC)(link)
"But you can see them," Hermione noted softly, glancing up at Kirk. "Isn't that almost like... well, spying? I know it's for a good cause, but the lines do get a bit blurry in those sorts of instances." And then she paused before asking, "What were you doing there if you couldn't explicitly interact with the planet? I'd think you'd have ways to remotely collect whatever samples you might need for study."
universal_charm: (Default)

[personal profile] universal_charm 2016-06-24 08:52 pm (UTC)(link)

"That's one way of looking at. We do it to see what level their civilization is at or if there even is one at all," he explained. "A civilization has to meet certain criteria before we're allowed to make contact to help preserve that civilization and its natural evolution."

He gave a wry grin at the next question.

"Ah. Well, this particular civilization was sitting right under a very active volcano. And while we can't interact, the fact we knew this volcano was going to erupt and essentially destroy these people - well, I didn't think it was right to just turn a blind eye to it. So we went down to stop it, but do it secretly and quietly as possible."

Never mind that he had been raked over the coals for it, and he still wasn't sorry.

el_tybs: Evan Antin (grin_tilt)

[personal profile] el_tybs 2016-06-24 09:00 pm (UTC)(link)
"First edition, volume one? Just how many volumes you plan on making exactly?"

First edition no less.

"So you tell in your book where you keep your mud? Isn't that getting rid of your secrets then? Or is that integral to mud collecting?"
dreadinquisitor: (smile4)

[personal profile] dreadinquisitor 2016-06-24 09:06 pm (UTC)(link)
"Well, of course." Maxwell tipped his head, eyes rolling dramatically. "I'm happy to labor over the writing for you, but to actually go back to the likes of The Fallow Mire? You're on your own, friend."
Edited 2016-06-24 21:07 (UTC)
el_tybs: Evan Antin (Default)

[personal profile] el_tybs 2016-06-24 09:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Well sorry, Maxwell - he isn't a mud collector so he doesn't know.

"You have your mud collection at the Fallow Mire?" That was an interesting place to keep mud - at a swamp.

After a time of just walking, Sam sighs and pulls his waterskin free. "Do you suppose there are any alphas out here?"
stabsbooks: (pic#10231022)

[personal profile] stabsbooks 2016-06-24 11:44 pm (UTC)(link)
"The smiths are capable of building staves. All they require is a schematic and the correct materials." She raises an eyebrow. "I doubt you would be capable of damaging a staff, not if you are careful. But perhaps it would be best to request a simple one from the smiths to start with, rather than 'borrowing' another mage's." She can hardly see Dorian or Vivienne simply handing over their staff, in any case. "I am sure it would make training easier as well."
stabsbooks: (Not all my feelings involve stabbing)

[personal profile] stabsbooks 2016-06-25 03:47 am (UTC)(link)
"Fortresses are built where there is something worth defending, or something to stand against. In this case, Adamant Fortress was built by the Grey Wardens as a stronghold against darkspawn emerging from a great chasm in the ground." She glances at him. "As it happens, Adamant was built long ago, when the Western Approach was still lush and green. But even if had not been, the fortress might have been built anyway."
dreadinquisitor: (talk2)

[personal profile] dreadinquisitor 2016-06-25 03:58 pm (UTC)(link)
He tipped his head back, raising a hand to shield his eyes as he scanned across the sweltering horizon.

"Here exactly?" He shrugged his shoulders helplessly. "I'd like to think they aren't so elusive that I would have missed the signs if one were here. But maybe..." He glanced back the way they'd come. "Maybe they are smarter than your average bear."

Or maybe he was just particularly unobservant.
dragoon_pride: (think sulk mope angst woe emo)

[personal profile] dragoon_pride 2016-06-26 09:10 pm (UTC)(link)
"Sometimes." Kain sighs, shaking his head. He won't deny that in a very abstract sort of way, he's not wrong. Endings having new beginnings and all. But there's no chance when it came to the Gods' War. "Not in this case, though. Not with so many lives and worlds at stake."
dragoon_pride: (smirky)

[personal profile] dragoon_pride 2016-06-26 09:15 pm (UTC)(link)
"Perhaps," Kain replies, not about to deny that this is a thing that often happens, wild creatures can be very single-minded about this sort of thing. Still, he has a sense that there's more to this. He's seen this sort of bond happen plenty after all.

"We'll see about that." He smirks a little bit, but figures that it's worth giving it time just to see what does happen. He's fairly willing to bet that Bruce isn't returning back alone, though. Kain will have to do a little searching of his own soon enough. "Just allow him to do as he wants, and I'm sure you'll find out soon enough what he truly wants."
universal_charm: (Brow Raise)

[personal profile] universal_charm 2016-06-27 12:03 am (UTC)(link)
The darkspawn. He kept hearing that word, and though he had some understanding of it, it wasn't very detailed and basically came down to "they were bad". His brows crinkled at the information, looking around them and trying to see it as green and lush. How long ago was long? Deserts didn't just pop up overnight or even in a matter of years. It would have been the work of Millenia. Naturally, anyways. But Cassandra made it sound like there definitely were not natural forces at work here.

"How long ago is 'long ago'?" he asked her. "Deserts and the ecosystems that come with them don't just pop up out of nowhere. Or does it have something to do with that Blight I hear mentioned now and then?"
stabsbooks: (don't start with me varric)

[personal profile] stabsbooks 2016-06-27 03:23 am (UTC)(link)
Cassandra shakes her head, less in rebuttal than confused helplessness. Naturally, this is all going wrong. All she had wanted - all she wants is to talk to Leliana, to have a conversation that does not feel as if it could turn sour any second.

She opens her mouth, perhaps to ask Leliana just what it is she wants - she must know that Cassandra would do everything in her power to help her achieve it, if it will make her happy. But before she can speak, she is interrupted.

A scout runs up, looking beyond terrified at the prospect of interrupting a discussion between the Seeker and the Nightingale, but Cassandra turns her attention to him immediately. The message he brings must be important, if he would dare to approach them despite his terror. "What is it?"

"Seeker Pentaghast, Sister Leliana," he manages, eyes darting between them as he bobs his head in a cursory bow. He focuses on Cassandra at her question. "My apologies, but the darkspawn have attacked again, and a scouting party was caught unawares. They do not have the numbers to defend themselves - "

Cassandra cuts him off, sharing a glance with Leliana. She is grateful to note that in this, at least, they seem to still completely understand each other, as Leliana graces her with an infinitesimal nod. She nods back, expression tense with worry, before turning to the scout, already beginning to walk as she interrogates him.

"Lead me to them. How many enemies?"

Her conversation with Leliana will just have to wait - and as guilty as it makes her feel, Cassandra can't help being somewhat relieved at the forced delay.
stabsbooks: (pic#10355055)

[personal profile] stabsbooks 2016-06-27 06:20 am (UTC)(link)
She frowns. It has always seemed clear-cut to her, and she hadn't considered that others might not understand just as easily. "It is not so complex," she reassures him. "Do not harm others, nor threaten to do so. Do nothing that will put the safety or goals of the Inquisition at risk. We do not ask that - " Here she pauses, with a sideways look at his black eyes, the thought of his strange magic, "that you do not - frighten people. Not if you cannot help it. Only that you do not act outright against us."

Hopefully that's clear enough. As for the second question, she merely nods. "Both are true. We mean to close the rifts, and to put a stop to Corypheus, the ancient darkspawn who originally opened the Breach. I believe there are classes, now, back at Skyhold, to bring new rifters up to speed, as it were."
bookish_lioness: (WTF? / Oh that's not good)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-06-27 11:25 am (UTC)(link)
"Wait..." Hermione commented, frowning as she moved from her comfortable position to look up at Kirk more directly. "By not interacting, that means you're also not allowed to intervene in the event of a disaster? But... wouldn't you want to preserve the culture for study, if not the actual sentient life that hung in the balance?"

She couldn't possibly imagine having a job where she'd be forced to overlook the fact that an entire civilization was just going to be wiped out by a natural disaster, especially not if she had the ability to help. The fact that Kirk and his crew had done what they could to help those people came as no surprise, though it does bother her that their actions hadn't simply been the status quo.
bookish_lioness: (So worried over you)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-06-27 11:27 am (UTC)(link)
"Would I have to bring them anything? Money, or perhaps the materials in question?" She has a tidy sum that she's managed to stash away in Skyhold and away from prying eyes (so far), but she really has no idea how much these sorts of things would go for. "I confess, I don't really know much about the weaponry here, though sometimes I've wondered if I should learn how to use something other than a wand or staff, given how many times I've been on excursions that have gotten more... physical than I'd like them to be."
universal_charm: (Default)

[personal profile] universal_charm 2016-06-27 01:15 pm (UTC)(link)

"I felt that way. That because we were there we should do something. But no one came to help us at Pompeii, or any of a multitude of other disasters. The Prime Directive views it as interfering with a culture's, a planet's, natural evolution, which can include a civilization not making it. Think of how many didn't make it on Earth, right? The volcano we stopped would have had catastrophic effects on the entire planet, not just those people, so I stepped in. That, and no one would see us. Any other disaster, I'm not sure we could have done anything."

Could, not would. It was an important distinction for him and he knew he walked that razor wire line of playing god and doing what was right. He felt he had done the right thing on Nibiru, nothing would change that.

bookish_lioness: (Are you sure about that?)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-06-27 08:20 pm (UTC)(link)
"No one helped us with Pompeii because, presumably, there hadn't been anyone watching us at the time." Even as she said it, Hermione realized that they didn't really have any way of knowing whether or not that was true, so she decided to steamroller on before he could consider it a flaw in her argument.

"What's the point of learning about new planets and people if we're just going to stand aside and let them crumble? When animals on Earth are facing endangerment or extinction, we do what we can to see to it that they survive as long as possible. I don't think the-... the black rhino, for instance, is going to be better off if humans stopped setting up conservation centers. No, you saw people in danger and you did what you had to do to save them, which is a natural inclination of anyone with any sort of moral compass, human or otherwise."
universal_charm: (Default)

[personal profile] universal_charm 2016-06-27 08:29 pm (UTC)(link)

"The Prime Directive is meant as a protection. I admit I don't agree with every aspect of it, but it's not entirely wrong either. We can't save everyone from the natural things on their planet that effect them, and in some ways our presence could be as dangerous as that of the disaster. As I said, I stepped in because I felt it was right, but I also thought we could render aid without revealing ourselves," he said reasonably. Maybe at the time he hadn't quite thought it through that much, but looking back he still felt what he had done was right, and given them a chance.

harthad_uluithiad: (Did you see that?)

[personal profile] harthad_uluithiad 2016-06-27 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Again Sam gives Kirk a skeptical look. He's seen many things since leaving the Shire that he never would have imagined; but like Middle-earth itself being up in the sky, far away, the idea of horseless wagons moving hundreds of miles in a single day is something beyond either his experience or his imagination.

Still it's not worth arguing over, as far as he can tell; and besides, it is hot out, and even Sam's feet are starting to grow tired.

"Well, that's as may be," he mutters doubtfully. "Any road there's nothing like that here I'm certain, or none of us would have to walk anywhere at all. It's horses or nothing I'm afraid."
stabsbooks: (pic#9976373)

[personal profile] stabsbooks 2016-06-27 10:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Cassandra pauses to think, trying to remember her history. "Adamant was built before the Second Blight, during the Divine Age," she says at last. "We are now in the Dragon Age, and there have been eight Ages since. If the Blight itself caused the land to grow hot and dry, it is not well known. I believe it is merely due to time."

Up ahead, the leader of their small group calls a halt, ordering camp to be set up. Cassandra sighs in relief. Her protests aside, marching through the desert in armor is far from comfortable. "I must assist with the camp. If you wish to learn more of the Blight or the wardens, you may explore the library at Skyhold, or speak to the Wardens themselves." She nods - cordial enough, if not quite warm - and departs to oversee the soldiers now setting up tents.
extramural: (017.)

[personal profile] extramural 2016-06-28 01:41 am (UTC)(link)
Well, at least he shouldn't be outright attacked for being creepy. Not that it will necessarily stop anyone, but if it happens, he'll just have to see if Cassandra will do something about it.

There's a returned nod as he thinks, more distant now -- his thoughts are pulling him along, like the wind stirring up the sand. "I was told of darkspawn, briefly. Perhaps I will sit in on some classes, dig further into the library."

Wings flutter overhead and he looks up. There is a moment where he says nothing, then- "There are trees." Where there are trees there is water, and so he nods to Cassandra once more. "I suppose the time to rest is over."
bookish_lioness: (Are you sure about that?)

[personal profile] bookish_lioness 2016-06-28 11:43 am (UTC)(link)
"Observation without interference is generally better for both species and researcher, but that doesn't necessarily mean you shouldn't ever step in. Especially not if there's a relatively easy way of helping without compromising your main objective." Hermione wasn't arguing with him, strictly speaking, since she knew he'd acted against this "Prime Directive" thing, but she still didn't like the idea that there have likely been countless lives lost just because a particular crew didn't want to bend the rules to do the right thing. Even she knew better than that.