Fade Rift Mods (
faderifting) wrote in
faderift2015-10-21 11:34 am
Into the DANGER ZONE
WHO: All Rifters + the 7 natives who signed up
WHAT: Searching the ruins of Haven for survivors, an Inquisition crew finds something strange. And demons. It's kind of scary that the demons aren't the strange thing.
WHEN: Third week of Harvestmere, 9:41
WHERE: Haven
NOTES: We've broken rifters and rescuers (or "rescuers") into two groups. This log has an arrival comment for each group--you can start smaller subthreads beneath those rather than try to have an eight- or nine-person log, just incorporate surrounding chaos/fighting--and a third top-level set for the whole group's journey back to Skyhold
WHAT: Searching the ruins of Haven for survivors, an Inquisition crew finds something strange. And demons. It's kind of scary that the demons aren't the strange thing.
WHEN: Third week of Harvestmere, 9:41
WHERE: Haven
NOTES: We've broken rifters and rescuers (or "rescuers") into two groups. This log has an arrival comment for each group--you can start smaller subthreads beneath those rather than try to have an eight- or nine-person log, just incorporate surrounding chaos/fighting--and a third top-level set for the whole group's journey back to Skyhold
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.
But there's no waking here, just a flare of green-white light and a jarring impact, barely softened by snow that lies a foot deep with an icy crust that cracks beneath the force of your landing. The wind is biting cold, the sun is bright, and you are not alone. Others thud to the ground nearby, as bewildered as you, and others run up who look no less confused for having their feet beneath them.
You are also not as you were: in the palm of your left hand there glows a narrow splinter of light the same sickly green as whatever brought you here. It aches, a bone-deep pain that gnaws even through all the distractions. Like that you're being attacked by monsters, some tall, spindly stick-things with too many eyes, some hunched and hooded with no eyes at all.
Welcome to Thedas!

no subject
The always having a body part was, at least, comforting. He hoped.
"I wish I could tell you," Gavin offered, his voice quiet. "But I - I've never seen anyone like you, or heard of them, save perhaps in legends."
Or you know. Religious dogma. But you couldn't exactly come out and ask someone if they were a god.
no subject
This was terribly confusing, both for herself and for him.
At once she realized she had put a question to him, one she had not intended to, and her expression softened with apology.
"I am sorry," Galadriel said. "I did not expect you to know why I am here, you have already told me more than I expected. Thank you."
She paused, then, and weighed the value in questioning him further. He had done her a great service, and the battle had ended, but she did not know if the danger had truly passed. If it had not, she could be wasting precious time. If it had...she greatly desired answers and, unfortunately, he was the only person she could ask at the moment.
"How do you not know another elf? Are you not an elf, also? Did you not say you are of the clan Ashara?"
no subject
"I thought for a moment you were Mythal," He admitted, feeling absolutely ridiculous. "Come out of the Fade to... to help us. With Corypheus, and the sky."
no subject
His admission seemed to discomfort him, though Galadriel had no idea why. It was troubling that he was mortal, yes, but the fact that he had never met an immortal elf...that concerned her. That the immortality of the elves was unknown to him except in legend, that was something she would have to investigate.
Not now, however. She was disoriented, their company had just been in mortal peril, and she would trouble him no more with questions.
"I know not the darkness you face, but if it is within my power to aid you, I will see it done." She pressed her hand over her heart and, for a moment, hazarded a bow to him. "You have helped save my life today and I thank you, GavĂn of Ashara. I am in your debt."
no subject
That made him flush for an entirely different reason, his ears turning bright red. Thanking him, of all people--
"No! No, no, you owe me no debt, none. I -- I am most honoured - truly humbled - that is- It's my job, I'm supposed to-" The words just kind of tumbled out onto each other, jumbling together, making it worse as he went. Finally, as red as a tomato, he just put a hand over his mouth to stop himself, and looked away. "I -- Follow me, I think you should come talk to a few people."