I experienced a dream last eve. It was a new sensation for me: something layered on my consciousness like a heavy throw despite my attempts to pay attention to my surroundings. And as much as I tried to control it, my mind raced with no hope of yanking on the reins. I suffocated in this dream.
'Do you think power changes people, Lasvi?' was the first thing that made my thoughts err. Dain posed this question to me when we spoke mere hours beforehand. I agreed with him --- a sentiment borne of prominent thoughts about my brother --- for more than one reason. For I am a fool and I know it.
The power behind knowledge and its ramifications are something that's been engrained on my person because of my father. He too knows the allure of intelligence yet he alone has experienced the full extent of its consequences. I'm still young, just a child, and Safriol would not see me become what his kin have. He wants to protect me from the world.
And for good reason, for what am I if not a child for doing what I have?
'Iyachtu Xvim is the answer to your question, creature,' I called up to the animated mound of corpses perched at the foot of the graveyard, serving as warden to protect whatever lay beyond its master's broken wooden gates. Simple knowledge for me from having spoken with the Zhentarim of Anauroch across my few years. They told me he was a savior: a fiend lording over the remains of his father Bane, god of tyranny, after his death little over a decade ago.
This place was what I next revisited in my dream. It is an untended graveyard that's nestled beyond a bog, northeast of the capitol. There could be beauty in this place, somewhere that the dead would feel grateful to be buried in, if not for the necromancy galvanizing it. I confess that a part of me wants to maintain it if I could without being stopped.
My hands and arms trembled with fresh wounds, for I foolishly spilled my own blood upon the various tomb lids that lined the broken trail. Perhaps the rest of the undead didn't cross my steps because they knew what I would do. Perhaps they were as curious of me as I was of them. 'By solving your riddle,' I insisted, 'I earn access into the doors beyond that I might be enlightened.'
And so the hinges on the gate creaked to life and the corpse golem crumbled piece-by-piece without warning. The magic animating it was temporarily cut off to grant me admission, but I wisely nursed my injuries before creeping closer for inspection. Beyond the door looked to be the skeleton of a chapel; perhaps a building not much larger than the Triumvirate temple.
Each glimpse brought more ruins to my eyes, similar to how I experienced it after breaking away from Ignus and Rafael, yet there were disturbing differences. Where once stood walking dead in the cathedral, objects existed that reminded me of the past. The veil given to me by the Bedine. The medallions I stole from the mummy's crypt. The first bracelet I made for the warchief after he fought the Zhentarim.
The rear of the temple that previously held an undead seated on his throne sat instead my beloved sibling, his forearms gradually slipping off the armrests. It was just as I remembered him the day I left, his hair still tangled from having been teased by Terani. He had a puzzling book in his lap with no discernible opening from which to read, but he pressed it closer to his gut every few seconds. His hand shook when he tried to leave it alone. He loved this book.
'He would rather kill someone than absolve you of the guilt that keeps you from home. Lasvi, I'm as certain as I can be without having him before me so that I can search his heart.' The paladin's words looked to have struck a physical blow to this vision of mine. Avistolis brought both hands to the tome and pushed it against his armored chest, grimacing in pain.
I am too exhausted. I could never fight him, vision or no. To bring a sword down on this would reflect more harm unto myself.
Dain looked at his incomplete weapon and said to me, 'They could be. My sword tried to harden my heart before I mastered it, and it was nothing so vile as a relic of the Tyrant.' I wonder now if he suggested his blade had a consciousness; if whatever grips Avistolis does, too. Again, my brother looked wounded and he let out a cry that begged my help.
But no phrase could burn more than what was last said to me in my dream, my warchief suddenly hissing as he stood. He looked betrayed, disgusted: an expression I won't soon forget.
'He could resent you.'
~ Memoirs of Tyros Lasvi Norreitryn, Chapter 1: Exhausted.
'Do you think power changes people, Lasvi?' was the first thing that made my thoughts err. Dain posed this question to me when we spoke mere hours beforehand. I agreed with him --- a sentiment borne of prominent thoughts about my brother --- for more than one reason. For I am a fool and I know it.
The power behind knowledge and its ramifications are something that's been engrained on my person because of my father. He too knows the allure of intelligence yet he alone has experienced the full extent of its consequences. I'm still young, just a child, and Safriol would not see me become what his kin have. He wants to protect me from the world.
And for good reason, for what am I if not a child for doing what I have?
'Iyachtu Xvim is the answer to your question, creature,' I called up to the animated mound of corpses perched at the foot of the graveyard, serving as warden to protect whatever lay beyond its master's broken wooden gates. Simple knowledge for me from having spoken with the Zhentarim of Anauroch across my few years. They told me he was a savior: a fiend lording over the remains of his father Bane, god of tyranny, after his death little over a decade ago.
This place was what I next revisited in my dream. It is an untended graveyard that's nestled beyond a bog, northeast of the capitol. There could be beauty in this place, somewhere that the dead would feel grateful to be buried in, if not for the necromancy galvanizing it. I confess that a part of me wants to maintain it if I could without being stopped.
My hands and arms trembled with fresh wounds, for I foolishly spilled my own blood upon the various tomb lids that lined the broken trail. Perhaps the rest of the undead didn't cross my steps because they knew what I would do. Perhaps they were as curious of me as I was of them. 'By solving your riddle,' I insisted, 'I earn access into the doors beyond that I might be enlightened.'
And so the hinges on the gate creaked to life and the corpse golem crumbled piece-by-piece without warning. The magic animating it was temporarily cut off to grant me admission, but I wisely nursed my injuries before creeping closer for inspection. Beyond the door looked to be the skeleton of a chapel; perhaps a building not much larger than the Triumvirate temple.
Each glimpse brought more ruins to my eyes, similar to how I experienced it after breaking away from Ignus and Rafael, yet there were disturbing differences. Where once stood walking dead in the cathedral, objects existed that reminded me of the past. The veil given to me by the Bedine. The medallions I stole from the mummy's crypt. The first bracelet I made for the warchief after he fought the Zhentarim.
The rear of the temple that previously held an undead seated on his throne sat instead my beloved sibling, his forearms gradually slipping off the armrests. It was just as I remembered him the day I left, his hair still tangled from having been teased by Terani. He had a puzzling book in his lap with no discernible opening from which to read, but he pressed it closer to his gut every few seconds. His hand shook when he tried to leave it alone. He loved this book.
'He would rather kill someone than absolve you of the guilt that keeps you from home. Lasvi, I'm as certain as I can be without having him before me so that I can search his heart.' The paladin's words looked to have struck a physical blow to this vision of mine. Avistolis brought both hands to the tome and pushed it against his armored chest, grimacing in pain.
I am too exhausted. I could never fight him, vision or no. To bring a sword down on this would reflect more harm unto myself.
Dain looked at his incomplete weapon and said to me, 'They could be. My sword tried to harden my heart before I mastered it, and it was nothing so vile as a relic of the Tyrant.' I wonder now if he suggested his blade had a consciousness; if whatever grips Avistolis does, too. Again, my brother looked wounded and he let out a cry that begged my help.
But no phrase could burn more than what was last said to me in my dream, my warchief suddenly hissing as he stood. He looked betrayed, disgusted: an expression I won't soon forget.
'He could resent you.'
~ Memoirs of Tyros Lasvi Norreitryn, Chapter 1: Exhausted.
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