Scene 1
Expected Scene: Arriving at Ekkurad and meeting with the Seekers
Test: 3, Altered Scene
The ruins of Ekkurad are known to local Faa tribes. These dusty, crumbling ceramic structures have given temporary shelter to many nomads. They still reach high above, as much as 40 yards in some places, with hexagonal patterns etched into the sides, eroding into smooth surfaces lower to the blue dunes. Seen from a distance, the ruins could be mistaken for a copse of white tree trunks, stripped of branches and hollowed.
Pidash is puzzled by Vash’s certainty that the Seekers would be here. He himself has sheltered here from sandstorms and hidden away from pursuers, and he has never seen sign of the Seekers here. It is possible that they took up here recently…
Pidash snakes between the towering structures, gloved hand brushing against warm ceramic as he circles the cylindrical hulls. He listens to the sound of sands, but they are still. The air is unmoving today, the dying red sun bearing down on the sands. Pidash looks up at the sun. It is worthy of respect, though some days it feels more a sad, dying man glaring its regret down on the Urth. It still heats the air and dries the skin, but without the vigor and intensity that the ancestors knew.
While he paths through the ruins, he takes note of defensible locations. He imagines himself a Hegemony soldier, moving through the ruins in search of prey. In his mind he becomes one of them - lacking the wisdom of the desert, but carrying the strength of Hegemonic arms, armors, technology, and pure numbers. The Legionnaire has orders from his his Centurion - flush out the occupants, put them to the blade or the rifle, and tighten the grip of the Empire on the desert.
He starts to move like a Legionnaire. His stride becomes less Faa, less confident, less graceful. It becomes more clodding and brutish. Pidash is not underestimating his opponent, just observing the truth of those who were not born in the azure sand and do not know how to dance with it.
His eyes follow the path of the hexagons up the side of one of the ruins. It stands stark against the indigo sky, broken peak. The Legionnaire’s gaze would be skyward, awestruck by the timelessness of it, maybe even a bit resentful of its origins, predating the Emperor and the Hegemony itself, proof of the supremacy of the desert.
The sands suddenly shift underneath his feet. He grabs his rifle sling and crouches, the floor underneath him gives way and he’s falling, plummeting through a narrow chute, crashing onto a hard floor. Pain shoots from his ankles to his hips. (3 fall damage, HP: 5) Sand continues to fall from what was once the floor beneath his feet. He lowers his head, keeping it from his eyes. He reaches out and his hand hits a solid bar, and he peers up through the diminishing curtain of sand to see bars. He quickly glances around. The bars fully enclose him - he grabs one and pushes on it, shakes it. Panic bubbles up within him, the caged animal ancestor in his spirit growling in his mind. It’s all he can do to keep from lunging at the bars and screaming.
He suppresses this urge, pushing it down. The bars are evenly spaced, and not rusted. They only rise about ten feet up. These were not originally part of the ruins. They were placed here by someone who occupies the place, or at least someone who occupied it recently. He considers shouting out for help. If the Seekers are here, they are unlikely to harm him. But if they are here, they knew he would be here, in this cage, long before he even arrived.
Chaos: 6 (up)
Scene 2
Expected Scene: Arrival of the Seekers
Test: 6, expected
Is Pidash alone in the trap for very long? 50/50: 13, Yes
Is Pidash there for more than a day? Unlikely: 58, No
Hours pass. Pidash can sense night falling by the coolness of the air. He decides to rest now, regain some strength, and if he is undisturbed by sunrise, he will take more drastic measures to break himself out.
Sometime in the night, his sleep is disturbed by the sound of soft footsteps. He sits perfectly still but allows his eyes to open, even though only faint moonlight reaches down the shaft. The footsteps stop outside of the cage. He considers shouldering his rifle, but before he can make a decision, a soft voice calls out to him.
“You’re a son of the desert. Not one of the outsiders.”
The voice is soft, but grainy, like a window opening after several seasons, scraping dust and sand. A voice that wasn’t accustomed to being used out loud. It’s female, Pidash thinks, and when the figure steps into the moonlight, it’s more or less confirmed.
The woman wears robes of mixed white and brown linen fabrics, blue sand dusting the hem of the robe that brushes the ground. A sash fastens the robes at the waist, and is embroidered with a pattern that he can’t make out in the darkness. The collar of the robe is high and fastened just below the jawline, giving the person the impression of an elongated, thin neck, with a narrow head gently balanced atop it. And most telling of all, a yellow strip of fabric, tied behind the head, covers the woman’s eyes completely.
“And you are a daughter of the Seekers, unless there’s another flock of the willingly blind that has migrated here without my knowledge.” Pidash sits up. He has nothing to hide from the Seekers, not that it would do him any good to try. He peers carefully at the blindfold. There are no scars on her upper cheeks, so this woman likely still has her eyes, but regardless, she would have seen straight through him.
“You are familiar with my people?”
“Your people came to my village when I was a boy.”
“I see. So you know that lying to me would be embarrassing for both of us. In light of that, why are you here?” The woman’s tone is firm but not threatening, all the confidence that one should have standing on the outside of the cage bars.
Pidash considers a clever answer or two, before sighing, a wry smile wrinkling his leathery face. “I came to deliver a warning, and to offer my help. The Hegemony is coming. I overheard their plans in Moongaze, the settlement to the southwest. They are coming for the Seekers.”
“Such nobility! To brave the desert and all of its threats, just to deliver a message of warning to the helpless, defenseless Seekers. And with no expectation of reward!” That smirk was much more audible now.
“My people are friends to the Seekers, and the Hegemony are a pestilence to both our houses. We have a common enemy.” Pidash grins. “And if you wanted to employ my services against our common enemy, I would not turn down a place to stay, and food.”
The woman steps closer to the bars with a smile on her face. “Come along then. The Master has been waiting for you.”
Pidash stands and brushes himself off, grabbing a bar with one hand. “I am Pidash, although I suspect you already knew that. What do I call you?”
“My name is Yudhi.” She turns to walk off down the dark hallway. Just before she disappears into the darkness, she holds out her hand and a small hovering light appears in it and then circles around her. “And I believe you can let yourself out of that cage, yes?”
It is pointless to try to keep secrets from these ones. His insides twist and burn, and the bar rusts away under his hand.
Chaos: 5 (down)
Scene 3
Expected Scene: Audience with the Master Seeker
What’s the dramatic question: Will the Master hear the warnings and accept Pidash’s help? And what would he get in exchange?
What is the Master doing before this scene begins? Singing with one of the Choirs
Test: 8, Expected
What is the inner temple like? Occupied, Abandoned
The winding hallway eventually opens up into larger chambers. A number of them are empty and silent, and an equal number are occupied by people of all ages, wearing clothing similar to Yudhi. A minority of those are blindfolded. All told, Pidash counts around one hundred people.
All of this, beneath the hex-clad spires above. Some similar patterning is found on the walls here, and other symbols that bring to mind ages long past. Pidash isn’t sure why he assumes that, but he does. These halls, beneath these ruins, didn’t belong to the Seekers to begin with. There is very little light - the Seekers see without seeing. But in some places, a small lamp for reading, the glow of a bulb over edible plants. That bit of light, the one that hovers around Yudhi as though it has its own intentions, and Pidash’s eyes slowly adjusting.
As Yudhi leads the way, Pidash begins to hear something. At first it seemed a bit of wind at an odd angle, making a fluting or whistling sound in some distant corridor. Then, they turn a corner and enter a room and the sound is suddenly a full throated singing voice. Pidash shakes his head, mildly confused, as the sound seems to come from nowhere, and the sensation of the sound is so foreign. Yudhi’s light floats to a standing rod, and hovering there, brightens. At the same time, three other rods in the corner of the room brighten as well, like candle sticks whose flames are unwavering white spheres.
Yudhi steps forward from Pidash. “Master, I have brought the desert child.”
Pidash feels a flash of annoyance, but it is quickly subsumed by the sound he is hearing without hearing. Once Yudhi speaks, though, the music quietens, and Yudhi backs out of the room.
In the center of the room, levitating above a raised circle of stone, is the one called Master. Threadbare robes cover his crossed legs, and a yellow blindfold, in the same style as Yudhi’s, covers his eyes. Where her skin was unmarked, the Master’s cheekbones and forehead are scarred. Pidash shivers. He’s familiar with the Seeker tradition of removing one’s own eyes in pursuit of greater sight, but it unnerves him all the same.
When the Master speaks, it is the same voice as the singing voice that Pidash heard moments ago. It takes a moment for Pidash to realize the Master’s lips aren’t moving.
“Desert son, Yudhi tells me you have come to deliver us a warning. Please, drink of our water, and if you hunger, I will have food brought for you.” The voice is soft, subdued, almost sleepy. Pidash glances around the room, and behind him on a table against the wall is a crystal pitcher half filled with water. He licks his cracked lips but turns back to the hovering man.
“I will accept your hospitality in a moment, Master Seeker, and thank you for it. First, though - the Hegemony are coming for your people. There are a large number of them who just arrived in the settlement of Moongaze, and I overheard their plans. I… am not sure if there is time to evacuate your people.”
The master bows his head slightly. “There is not. Already, they have set out from Moongaze. Our scouts see them now. They leave on silt striders, war camels. There is an ornithopter in the air. We do not have time to take my people away from here.”