Fable - Ask Following the trail of bones

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The Mortis Engine drifted forward with the patience of centuries, its trajectory as inevitable as rot. Beneath its bulk, a vast sarcophagus wrought entirely of bone, yellowed and lovingly assembled into something that might have been beautiful were it not so profoundly wrong, a congregation of spectral arms churned at the empty air. They were translucent things, half-glimpsed, their fingers splayed wide as if grasping for purchase against the veil between worlds. And somehow, impossibly, they found it.

Radu stood at the engine's heart, one hand resting upon the pillar of calcium that rose from its center like a monument to his labor. The bone was cold beneath his palm, and yet it thrummed with something that was not quite life, a resonance, perhaps, or a memory of the marrow it had once housed. He did not need to guide the vessel. It knew the way.

The boneyard unfurled before him, vast and terrible in its abundance. Here lay the preserved architecture of extinction: skeletons heaped and scattered across the flatland in configurations that suggested violence, or worship, or perhaps both. Small things and large things and things of such enormity that the mind recoiled from their implications. What manner of beast had worn that ribcage, each bone thick as a man's torso? What world had permitted such a skull, horned and hollow-eyed, to exist?

Radu knew, but he suspected no one else did.

Hills rose at the boneyard's edges like the hunched shoulders of mourners, throwing their shadows long and dark across the pale earth. Nothing grew here save for the occasional tree, leafless and arthritic, its branches clawing skyward in mute supplication, and the mushrooms. They clustered in the eye sockets of the ancient dead and between the ridges of fossilized spines, their flesh luminescent with a sickly phosphorescence that seemed to pulse with its own slow heartbeat.

The mist lay thick upon the ground, fetid and clinging, wrapping itself around the greater skeletons with something approaching tenderness. Mock clouds for monuments that needed no sky. Radu breathed it in and tasted age, tasted the faint sweetness of preservation, tasted the silence that had settled here like sediment.

Upon the massive skulls,those ambiguous remnants whose origins defied classification, carrion birds had gathered. They were wrong, these creatures. Feathers patchy and iridescent where they should not be, beaks curved at angles that spoke of mutation, of adaptation to a world that had grown strange. Their eyes, wet and knowing, tracked the Mortis Engine's passage.

But they did not approach.

The Mortis Engine continued its inexorable advance, and the boneyard received it in silence, and Radu stood among the relics of the vanished world and felt something that might have been contentment.
 
It had been something of a wonder of this world, at least that was the case in the eyes of the cursed being that had started his journey to the Ixmus graveyard, a long journey that would take him several moons to complete. It had taken a while longer still for him to find the hills that signaled his proximity to the destination he sought, the lone individual cresting such a hill in a matter of hours. The anticipation was enough to keep his thin frame going, despite the soreness in his muscles from the travel, the fatigue in his chest as his lungs swallowed more air than they knew what to do with.

the shadow of his visage would cascade over the peak of the hills as he crested them, a shadow that imposed a figure of robes and not much more, perhaps a walking stick, perhaps a staff, the length of the shadows cast form him and their strange bending making it impossible to be sure. Amber eyes swept the expanse before him, bright with an energy of excitement and nervousness as they fell upon the goal he had sought after, what he had heard was likely one of the oldest graves in human history. As he began his descent of the hills he would marvel at the sheer size and scope of some of the bones and other remains as he inched closer, mesmerized by the enormity of it all. There were a handful of skeletons that made sense to him, from beasts to monsters and the like, though the bigger and more grotesque they became the less he recognized, only able to theorize what might have once been of the ivory.

Standing in thick robes of black, the only thing that shone on him would be the gold trim of the threading in said robes, that and the white of the skull adorning his head in stark contrast to his dark attire. The skull of a deer, antlers still attached, adorned the head of this would be interloper, fashioned in such a way that it would mask the upper half of his face. The pale skin that peeked out from under said skull held thin lips mouthing silent words, a wealth of ebony hair falling down his back blending in with the fabrics as he moved, only ever truly separate when a gust of wind would carry the locks from his back momentarily. He was adorned with little in the ways of travel gear, looking more like he had been plucked from the world and dropped here, rather than someone who had been travelling for several days in succession. His movements would stop once he got to the bottom of the hill, the reason two fold. the first was that he knew of the rumors of bandits making temporary homes here, something he didn't want to verify with his own eyes if he could help it. the second, and more important reason was that he could hear the sound of something in the distance, something larger than himself and lumbering. While it sounded slow from what he could tell, Lazarus was not of the mind to find out unless it was something he could get away with unscathed. There was a sense of something darker lurking deeper within the graveyard, but the energy of death and stillness was almost overbearing, it made it difficult for him to tell one thing form another, and as he continued on slowly, keeping to the larger frames of the deceased, his skin would crawl thinking what he might find here that roused amongst the bones.
 
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Bones and carrion eaters. As far as the eye could see. Here was a physical manifestation of one, unalienable truth of the universe: the dead vastly outnumbered the living.

Her hand tightened on an exposed ribcage; a macabre railing of support on this strange vessel, bare feet planted on the very edge of the massive bone cradle, staring down at the landscape prostrating itself below them. What manner of underworld had they sailed into now, by the winds of necromancy and the waters of damned souls? And where might this invisible river lead to?

Questions such as these occupied Archanae, but she knew better than to ask. Her current host maintained a perculiar silence - one that did not broker interruption. A warped sort of serenity, drinking in the graveyard quiet and the gentle, creaking death tolls of his bone-hulled ship. Now that she had had the chance to study Radu Basarab and the Mortis Engine at length, she could make some conclusions.

The central column, the yellowed skull and the bell formed the core of its power. It was what allowed it to drift ever onward, without the steering of its captain. The souls it drew in, twisted by dark magic, remembered echoes of their former lives. Such was the nature of bodiless spirits, yearning for their days of flesh. Somehow, this engine gathered them together, forming them into a single locus of dark desire, and channeled them into drawing their shared and cumbersome corpus to their place of remembrance. It might feel as if their vessel plunged ever further to the abyss, but it would be more accurate to say that it was pulled by a maelstrom of appropriated wants, seeking to unite with its other mangled parts.

Another realisation, and perhaps even more disturbing, had struck her about Radu. He was no mere necromancer who had managed to cheat Death at every turn, like some card player in a gambling den having scores upon scores of good luck. Luck ran out, and eventually, even the best player must needs surrender to the house. But Radu was something different. Every probing spell she had employed below her breath and below his scrutiny turned strangely inconclusive. Not quite undead, not quite mortal. A god? Impossible. But he did appear more like a force of nature rather than one who could claim personhood. An entity set outside the rules that bound everyone else. In this strange voyage, he appeared more like a weir to the continual flow of souls, his true nature as elusive to sight as the hidden river they sailed. Forces of dark magic cascaded down his shoulders and past his engine like he was some barrier swerving its shape, bending its trajectory -- altered just enough to bring them here.

Her eye caught movement, different from the slow drudge of spectral arms. A small skull far below them glided through the boneyard, steadily passing by its larger, inert cousins. Soon, her vision could confirm a wink of gold threads and dark, flowing robes and satchels, drifting below this moving skull like burdensome appendages.

A wanderer in the graveyard. Could one imagine a living denizen in this place? Hardly. More like as not, this could be some ancient sentry or guardian to this place.

Archanae tapped the sapphire in her medallion and whispered to it:

"Maldragos. Awaken."

In response, a clay figure stirred. Its scarred surface cracked and rumbled, inevitably crunching and flattening bone as the golem sidled up to his mistress.
 
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