DnD Solo Write

Chatterbox: Inkwell

DnD Solo Write

DnD Solo Write

 

The Prologue, starring Danie, Esthaenie, and Adelram:

 

The mist wound thick around the meadow as Danielle Amora picked her way across, cloak dragging through the dew-hung grass. Her boots were soaked through, toes clenched against the chill that drifted across the way.

Ahead of her, Adelram stalked through the fog, feathered arms clasped in reverence.

“This is as far as I shall take you. Be wary and wise, Amora.” The kenku’s beak clicked as he spoke, silhouetted by the light of the moon. His simple brown robe draped in billows over his shoulders. Danielle liked the man: he was quiet, and honest, much unlike most kenku. Adelram was an excellent monk and guide.

“Thank you, Adelram,” Danie said, wrapping her cloak more tightly around her middle. She winced at the tremor in her voice. Adelram nodded solemnly and began to leave when he paused.

“Ms. Amora,” he said, raven-like head bowed, “if I may… why are you here? There is naught here but a meadow, last I heard.”

Danie’s ears turned pink. “Do you know the Oracle of Verineth?”

The kenku shrank back. Danie regretted her words, wincing under her mask of calm. She was a fool to tell him.

“You spoke to the Oracle himself?” Adelram said, half-terrified and half-reverent. Danie’s eyebrows quirked at the hint of awe in his tone. She straightened.

“Yes, I did. And he said to come to this meadow, outside Graywing City.” Danie crossed her arms, but doubt ate at her all the same.

Adelram, however, looked satisfied. “The Oracle is wise, and trustworthy, despite being a filth--”

Adelram’s eyes widened. He put a hand to his beak. “Amora, I did not mean to speak in that way. I hope you understand.”

Danielle nodded. “I get it. And I know what he is. I’m not afraid of them.” Her voice went just a bit too high on the last word.

Adelram nodded, casting his eyes down. “Until we meet again.”

Danielle gave him a weak smile. “So long.”

He vanished into the mist without a sound. Danie shivered.

She walked forward, eyes scanning for trouble, ears pricked for the sound of pursuers. She was a rogue. Rogues prepared for the worst.

There were no footprints on the ground. The wet earth sucked at her feet as she walked, caking her boots and dragging her backward. She grumbled under her breath.

She dragged her boot along the ground until she came to a toadstool. It was green, like her cloak and hair, and almost blended into the grass but for the pulsing glow that came from within the bulbous top. It was a flight fungus.

She stopped in the meadow and screamed in irritation.

“A flight fungus?” she called, “I walk for miles to get to the city, pay 30 diamonds to hire a guide, and I get a flight fungus?”

She swooped down and plucked it, eyes blazing in blind irritation. Flight fungi were common around Verineth, and almost completely useless. One bite meant fifteen seconds of flight, and only fifteen. They couldn’t even be useful enough to give more than one bite, either. They crumbled to powder after the first nibble. Danie growled and crumpled the stalk in her hand. There went the last of her money until she bartered or stole for a meal. There went three days of walking. By the gods, she had had enough of Oracles.

A thunderclap drowned out her screaming. She tensed, waiting for rain, but it never fell. An electrical storm. Perfect. She looked up to the sky, daring the lightning to hit her. It would be preferable to her current existence.

A flash of golden lightning illuminated the woman in the clouds. Danie stopped shouting, suddenly sobered by the sight.

The woman hovered, violet dress billowing against the clouds, curls of red hair scattering across her back. Two ivory wings curved against her back as she levitated in the clouds.

An angel? Danie watched in awe as the woman’s eyes fluttered open for a moment, deep gray-green eyes glazed with lightning’s glow.

The woman began to fall.

Danie’s breath caught. The woman pitched backward and fell, unconscious, skirts twirling in dizzying whorls. The flight fungus grew heavy in her hand.

Danie took a bite from the fungus and felt it crumble in her hand. She stepped off the ground and began flailing, trying to make it to the falling woman. Thirteen seconds left.

She picked up some speed, wind battering her face, and swept in under the falling woman. Danie wrapped her arms around the tall woman and tried to slow the descent, breath wheezing through her lungs, grasping for oxygen. Seven seconds left.

Danie slowed in the air and readjusted her grip on the winged elf. The woman curled against her. A strained sigh escaped Danie’s lips. She was safe.

The woman’s eyes fluttered open, bleary in the mist. She blinked twice and let out a ragged cough.

Danie’s vision faded for a moment. In her mind, she saw the dark, gaunt face of the Oracle of Verineth, laughing, the third eye stitched to his forehead glowing with scarlet light. She shuddered.

She snapped out of her reverie when the gorgeous woman screamed and punched her in the face.

 

submitted by Brookeira
(October 24, 2017 - 8:10 am)

Yay!

submitted by Leafpool, age Eternal, Hidden in the forest
(November 24, 2017 - 1:22 pm)

The house was dark, and Danie’s eyes blurred with green-tinted light as they adjusted. The front room was shrouded in dark and verdant vines that warped the walls and burrowed into the floor at their feet. Little shards of glass hung in chimes above their heads, blue and violet and yellow as the sun. Some of the vines were moving more than others; Esthaenie let out a little shriek. Danielle jerked back to see a snake, flickering from green to gold to aubergine, cross the low ceiling just above their heads.

Danie sighed and squeezed Esthaenie’s head.

“Snakes. Why do the gods hate me?” Esthaenie huffed, gathering her composure.

There was a tinkling of glass from the back room, and the Oracle stepped out.

Danielle sagged with relief. This woman looked nothing like the Oracle of Verineth. She was a wood-elf, lithe and graceful, with hair shorn to her skull and tattoos inked across her body. They changed color. Perhaps that was just a trick of the light.

She also did not have a third eye stitched to her forehead. Her eyes were unmutilated.

“Visitors,” she said, “a young human, and a young…”

The Oracle trailed off, cocking an eyebrow at Esthaenie. The avariel blushed, taking a step back. The Oracle smiled invitingly and sat cross-legged.

“This is the West, not the East.” The Oracle said. “You’re safe here. Come, sit.”

The two sat, slowly, watching the Oracle with fascination (and, in Danie’s case, a bit of dread). She waved at them and turned, lighting the incense afire with a flick of one graceful finger.

“I ask only fifty gold pieces each.” she said.

Esthaenie forked it over. Danielle began to protest, then thought better of it.

“Which of you first?”

Danielle shrank back. Esthaenie turned and smiled before approaching.

The Oracle wrapped a blindfold around her eyes and began to chant softly. Danielle only caught a few words: “eyes” “python” “Demeter”. Then the Oracle relaxed, removed the blindfold, and smiled.

“Your sister is searching for you, but she will not find you until you are ready.”

Esthaenie looked just the slightest bit relieved. Danielle was glad to see it.

“You are braver than you know.”

Esthaenie blushed. The Oracle perked up at the last moment.

“Oh, dear.” She gave Esthaenie a mischievous grin and whispered something that Danie couldn’t make out. Esthaenie went red.

“What is it?” Danielle asked.

“Nothing, nothing!” Esthaenie bit her lip and shifted back, “It’s your turn.”

Danielle felt dread, heavy and ulcerous in her stomach. She took a step forward.

The Oracle smiled and wrapped the cloth around her eyes. She began her chant again. Danielle caught the same few words, but then the chant began anew, and was longer. The Oracle began to shake. Esthaenie yelped as the vines at her feet began to jerk and shift. Danie shuddered.

Something deep within her laughed.

The vines lashed out and wrapped around the Oracle, lashing her against the wall. Esthaenie screamed and tried to draw her sword, but she was held down. Danie was frozen. Frozen like she’d been when-

“GO BACK TO THE NORTH, WOLF.”

The voice was like a thousand snakes, hissing and nipping and biting down, poison dripping. The Oracle’s eyes were bound shut by vines, yet smaller ones crisscrossed and drew an eye across her forehead.

“BRINGER OF CHAOS. OF FIRE.”

“Danielle! Please!”

Esthaenie’s panic shook her out of her daze. She pulled a knife from her pocket and began frantically slashing, hacking at the vines that snared the avariel. One hand was free now, but Esthaenie didn’t move. The Oracle screamed in the background, chanting of the north and fire and death.

“Esthaenie, move!” Danie turned and saw it. A snake hung in the air in front of them, hissing, ready to strike Danielle. She gasped as a vine lashed up, pinning her down, and the snake hung over her, poison dripping from its fangs into the earth near her.

Let me out.

Danielle shook her head, crying out. Esthaenie tried to grab the snake, to save her, but was dragged down.

WOLF. WOLF. WOLF.

Danie screamed.

F

Danie screamed.

E

Danie screamed as the word etched itself into her mind.

N

Danie’s scream became a roar of rage. She lashed out, ripping through the vines, and grabbed the snake in one hand. She brought it to her mouth.

She bit down.

The snake, missing a chunk of its midsection, flopped to the floor. Blood streamed down Danielle’s chin. Esthaenie huddled against the floor.

The vines retreated. Esthaenie gasped for breath, staring in terror at the Oracle.

The Oracle, unconscious, was lowered to the floor by so many snakes and vines. The snakes bore their fallen brother away. Danie sagged with relief.

She wiped her mouth on the back of her hand. She took Esthaenie’s hand with the other.

“We need to go.” she said. Esthaenie nodded, shaking.

Danielle ran from the shop with the avariel in tow. Something smiled inside her with

rows and rows of teeth.

It made her lick her own lips.


submitted by Brookeira-New!!!
(November 27, 2017 - 9:34 am)

I am . . . speechless.

That was absolutely amazing. So well worth the wait.

submitted by St.Owl, age Recarnated, Everywhere
(November 27, 2017 - 5:32 pm)

holy GUACAMOLEY that was freaking cool!

submitted by Danie
(November 27, 2017 - 7:43 pm)

(In regard to the last few paragraphs) 

Oh, that can't be good. *Grins* 

submitted by Leafpool, age Eternal, Hidden in the forest
(November 30, 2017 - 12:57 pm)

--
Lonnie

submitted by top
(November 27, 2017 - 10:18 am)
submitted by New part is here!
(November 27, 2017 - 11:32 am)

WHOA that was intense and amazing and action packed and...WOW.

submitted by Aspen, age 12.416, Not here XD
(November 27, 2017 - 4:28 pm)
submitted by top
(November 29, 2017 - 10:42 am)
submitted by TOP TOP
(November 29, 2017 - 10:21 pm)
submitted by TOP TOP
(November 29, 2017 - 10:22 pm)

Whoah. Nice with the dripping poison... Foreshadowing? Very intense. 

submitted by coyotedomino, age 14, the Wood, Omniverse
(November 29, 2017 - 10:53 pm)

Dude.... that was... just wow. You create amazing character development! *Slowly claps* Well done!

submitted by Tuxedo Kitten
(December 1, 2017 - 2:53 pm)

Oi Brookeira, I've just been reading that Evernaught city RP you made a while back. No spoilers, I'm only on page 17, but it's AMAZING!!! Sorry this has absolutely no relation to this solo write but I just thought I would let ya know. :) :)

submitted by Aspen@Brookeira
(December 2, 2017 - 12:56 am)
submitted by TOPTOPTOP!!!
(December 7, 2017 - 8:41 pm)