faderifting: (Default)
Fade Rift Mods ([personal profile] faderifting) wrote in [community profile] faderift2016-07-07 10:54 pm

You can't concern yourself with bigger things

WHO: New rifters & their helpful rescuers
WHAT: People fall out of a rift and get attacked by stuff, it's pretty old hat by now (sorry Jefferson).
WHEN: Solace 7
WHERE: High in the Frostbacks, within a day of Skyhold.
NOTES: This log is open to any characters who would have volunteered to go welcome the rifters, whose arrival sites can now be predicted, thank you Solas. Rifters are also welcome to begin RPing at Skyhold as soon as they are ready.


You were asleep--deeply or fitfully, for the last time or just resting your eyes for a moment-- and then you were not. And wherever you were was not, anymore, replaced by nothing but the sensation of falling, tumbling into endless, bottomless nothing. If this were still a dream, you would wake before you hit the ground. You can't die in a dream, they say. In some worlds.

In this world, something has definitely died. But not you; not yet. When the afterimage left by a flare of too-bright, greenish light fades, you will find yourself in a pile of bones, stripped by teeth and weather, bleached almost as white as the snow that covers most of the rocky, mountainous terrain around you. Beneath its threadbare blanket, it's easy to pick out heaps of earth and stone and debris arranged in a rough ring-shape on the ground around you and the rift that just spat you out. Almost like...a nest? Whatever might once have lived here, it must have been very large, because the bones scattered about are the size of large livestock, at the least. Some of the bare rocks show what look like marks from very large claws, and where snow doesn't cover, the stone looks suspiciously scorched. There are no recent tracks, but maybe that's a good thing.

Less good: the cluster of demons that is emerging from the rift to take over the job of killing you. Some are tall, spindly stick-things with too many eyes, some hunched and hooded with no eyes at all, others mere wisps of greenish light. None look friendly or familiar. Also unfamiliar is the narrow splinter of light the same sickly green as whatever brought you here that now glows out of the palm of your left hand. It aches, a bone-deep pain that gnaws even through all the distractions. Hopefully you can set it aside enough to pick up a bone club and get to work in self-defense, because there is no immediate sign of road or path or settlement anywhere to be seen.
rowancrowned: (043)

[personal profile] rowancrowned 2016-09-12 12:35 am (UTC)(link)
Happiness looks good on her—he resolves to coax it out more often. But it’s impossible to miss the past-tense of it all—‘my husband was’ ‘he took’ and so on. That she describes the ‘khalasar’ as hers now, well—she is small, but she is fierce. Could be fierce, if she were not half-frozen and wholly dazed.

“You loved your husband.” He states it anyway. “And he loved you. That is good. I have heard that discontentment is oft found in marriages ‘tween mortals. I am pleased you went without.”

The gelding is antsy, perhaps smells the rift in the air—he wants to go home, to his stall and to his oats, and Thranduil is inclined to agree. “Can you bear a smooth trot, my lady?”
unsullies: (028)

[personal profile] unsullies 2016-09-20 03:36 pm (UTC)(link)
She wonders briefly what marriages are like within his world, his people, but doesn't ask. Not now.

"It was an arranged marriage, I... was terrified of him, of it all, at first." She hesitates, not wanting to recall too much, to look back and forget where she is now. "... But, yes. I grew to love him, to appreciate his world. He was more gentle and caring than I could have imagined."

He loved her and she loved him and then he was killed. This is her reality now.

"I can," she confirms, eager to be at their destination, considering the events of the day. "Thank you."