Fade Rift Mods (
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faderift2016-05-16 08:35 pm
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Entry tags:
- ! open,
- { adelaide leblanc },
- { alistair },
- { anders },
- { araceli bonaventura },
- { benevenuta thevenet },
- { bethany hawke },
- { bruce banner },
- { cade harimann },
- { cassandra pentaghast },
- { clarke griffin },
- { cole },
- { eirlys ancarrow },
- { ellana ashara },
- { hercules hansen },
- { hermione granger },
- { iron bull },
- { jamie mccrimmon },
- { jim kirk },
- { katniss everdeen },
- { korrin ataash },
- { leliana },
- { malcolm reed },
- { maria hill },
- { martel },
- { maxwell trevean },
- { rachette dakal },
- { samouel gareth },
- { samwise gamgee },
- { sera },
- { the outsider },
- { thranduil },
- { velanna }
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.
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.
no subject
"I have no idea. Just anything," he shrugged. "Slavery, money laundering, skimping on the taxes, where the hell this Corypheus guy might be." He waved his hand and sat in the chair at the desk, piling the papers he found on the desk in front of him and searching for hidden bottoms to the drawers themselves.
"Maybe not the recent people," he agreed. "But if it was just one person, and they were careful, the could keep this place from losing to much of the 'old' feeling."
no subject
"You think there might be hidden documents in there?" Sam walks around the desk at that, leaning in over Kirk's shoulder to get a better look at what the man was doing. This seemed like something Kirk did a lot or knew about. It wouldn't be too strange if there was actually something in the bottom of the drawers, after all even in the current Circles there were hidden compartments.
no subject
"It's possible. I would rather be thorough than potentially leave something important behind," he said, shutting a drawer that had proved to hold nothing beyond what he'd already found and moving on to the next. "Even if we find nothing, it's better knowing there was nothing to find than to wonder as we march back to Skyhold."
no subject
"I'll go see if there is a basket or anything that we can gather the papers and books into then." No way they would be able to carry it all easily with weapons and such. Even so Sam doesn't wander too far so that Kirk still has light to work by.
no subject
"Good idea," Kirk said over his shoulder as he moved to another drawer. A part of him wanted to find something, anything, even though the logical part said there was a more likely chance he would not. If people had abandoned this place, it was likely they would come for those documents first and foremost.
He made a 'hah' sound when he popped a false bottom, but as he suspected, anything that might have been of value had long ago been taken.
no subject
It takes a bit of time on Sam's end before he finds anything of use, and even then the basket is falling apart along the edges - the bottom was sturdy at least at the time. "Did you find anything?"
no subject
He shook his head. "No, unfortunately. Anything that might have been hidden was removed long before we got here probably." He took the papers they did have and set them in the basket, rising from the chair and brushing his rear off from dust and cobweb. He glanced out the window and sucked his lip, clearly debating before reason won out.
"We should probably head back to camp."
no subject
no subject
He nodded. "I think we can tend to that in the morning though. Let's go find ourselves a meal, something to drink, and... think of better, nicer things." Than the scene they had just witnessed. Distraction sex would be a welcome such nice thing, though Kirk couldn't say if Sam was up for it or not. If nothing else, he could amuse them both with stories of his antics on the Enterprise.
no subject
"That sounds like a plan I certainly can get behind." Once outside the room his eyes are immediately drawn to the pyre again, the fire burning bright and obviously doing its work properly. "Come on. We better get going."
no subject
At the end of the day, he might not want it either. It was just one of his better ways of holding off nightmares, of exhausting body and mind so that neither could betray him in the night. Maybe tonight Sam's heartbeat would be enough, the sweeter stories they could tell each other.
He paused to watch the pyre, the bodies shadows within, oily smoke drifting upwards and the stench of charred flesh particularly strong. His gorge rose and he pressed a hand to his mouth to avoid vomiting, keeping it down out of sheer force of will.
"Yes, let's," he agreed and turned to quickly walk away from the sight.