player plot: who's a heretic now?
WHAT: Temple of Falon'din
WHEN: Now
WHERE: Northern Orlais
NOTES: CW suicidal ideation, blood, general creepiness. If anything else comes up I'll edit, and if there's a CW you can think of while reading that I didn't include, lmk and I'll add it!
The ruins look, on the surface, much like any other Elven ruins might — crumbling stone structures overrun by plant life, chipped mosaics and tiled floors almost entirely hidden by centuries of overgrown underbrush. A quick investigation reveals nothing of note; this temple, it seems, had been picked over many times throughout the centuries, and anything of note has already been taken. The venture seems to have been pointless, at least for a few minutes.
Until someone stumbles upon a hidden stairwell, camouflaged in the underbrush and a secret to the original temple besides. It's a long journey down, lit only by magelight and the torches of the Inquisition, but as soon as the first foot steps down onto even ground, the Fade-green flickering of veilfire lights up a massive antechamber. The veil pricks at the skin, here, warping perception and sensation for those sensitive to its fluctuations, and embuing the whole room with a sense of foreboding solemnity for those who aren't. An eerie silence broken only by the sound of flowing water, and the musty scent of stale air make it clear: this place, whatever it is, hasn't been seen in centuries, if not millennia.
At the foot of the stairs is a landing butting up to a moat of dark liquid, fed by a pool set into a dais in the middle of the chamber. The pool itself burbles quietly, a waterfall spilling into it from the two cupped hands of a massive elven statue. The only way to reach the dais is to ford the river, but as soon as the party approaches, it becomes clear — the dark liquid within is not water, but blood, still fresh despite the millennia of abandonment.
On the journey to the temple, Solas told a story of Falon'Din, and the words seem more apt than they perhaps had at the time, given the weight of myth rather than truth:
It is said Falon'Din's appetite for adulation was so great, he began wars to amass more worshippers. The blood of those who wouldn't bow low filled lakes as wide as oceans.

no subject
Now is not the fucking time, both of you! Fight about who the dead belong to once we're sure we won't be joining them.
❰ it's still too dark too see further into the utheneran, so adalia calls a ball of sparks to her hand and throws it into the darkness. as it flies, it all too briefly illuminates the coffins around them, momentarily revealing the whole room — and all of the coffins beginning to be pushed open. the illumination is too brief to really count, but there are at least a dozen coffins opening. from the sounds of it once the spark dies, probably more. ❱
no subject
These People should not have been awoken. They should not have disturbed their rest; they should have left them to their deaths, to their eternal sleep. That is what they deserved after so many years, after what he had done to them, after he had ripped their lives from them. He can feel it gnaw at his stomach, the uncertainty and pain prickling at him before he hears Adalia's shout.
She has a point, loathe as he might be to admit it.
His staff slams into the ground as he casts a barrier around them before summoning the power of the Rift into his hands. It's easy to cast a Veilstrike forward to one of the zombies, even if it hurts somewhere deep inside. ]
Enough!
no subject
Also, Iorveth is an asshole, and a soldier, and a commander of elite commando squadrons. He has very little exposure to people without the same experience sharing a battlefield with him, where any distraction from victory is just offensive. Solas, your feelings are offensive. As such, Iorveth's quick to get his attention back to the battle, pushing the lid of the coffin he's slammed closed open again, once the creature inside stops writhing, the flames there roaring back to like with renewed oxygen, and this is now his fire pit. Because who doesn't love flaming arrows?
Zombies, apparently. An arrow tip dips into the flames as he nocks it, the time between reload and fire a minuscule thing that comes with ages of muscle memory, it can be missed with a blink. The closest handful of zombies get fire lodged into their chests, before he turns his sights on the coffins starting to writhe and rumble, thudding an arrow in a few to get the bonfire going before the sleeper wakes. Crowd control, my dudes. ]