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Drip. Drip. Drip.
The leaking rainwater of the evening storm mixed with the ocean's spray and seeped through the cold, cruel rocks of Cerak At'Thul, down through the lower dungeons. This tepid, salt-poisoned water collected in puddles. One such puddle sat in her cell, near her bedroll and some straw - the only kindness afforded her, if it could even be called that.
Here, in one of the deepest parts of the ancient fortress, there were no windows. No slits in the wall. No skylights. Nothing to admit light, or to judge the passing of time.
Nothing but the drip, drip, drip of water to note a passing storm. And the roar of cracking thunder, heard even through so much sorcerous stone. Ah. The stone. Black as pitch and offending to the eye to look at for too long. The whole fortress was made from it. Those in the town said it was cursed by the builders, that it drove men mad.
Perhaps it did.
Drip. Drip. Drip.
Utter darkness gripped the cells, broken only by the approach of torch light when the gaoler came to feed her - that horned schemer, Gwyddion.
In the past innumerable hours, or maybe days, two other prisoners had once sat in cells of their own nearby. Company at least. Before they'd been taken away by Gwyddion, through the door. They'd never returned, but their distant screaming had echoed, even through the stones.
The door at the end of the hall groaned opened with a squeal and torch light flooded the cell block - empty but for her, Keres.
The approaching footsteps were not the clip of Gwyddion's cloven feet upon the stone, but leather boots. The blinding light of the torch grew closer, until a tall, hooded figure stood outside the bars to her cell, the torch in one of his hands. Locks of long, white hair spilled out from beneath his hood, but his jaw was clean shaven - skin a dark gray.
"Well, Spy," came a thin, cold voice, sharp as a dagger's razored tip, "will you confess?"
The same question Gwyddion had asked her, every time he brought food. They thought she'd come to their island with the rest, to spy on the Black Bay's Wardens.
Outside, waves broke against the cliffs of Cerak, beneath a fortress of black stone that made eyes water and ache just to look upon.
The leaking rainwater of the evening storm mixed with the ocean's spray and seeped through the cold, cruel rocks of Cerak At'Thul, down through the lower dungeons. This tepid, salt-poisoned water collected in puddles. One such puddle sat in her cell, near her bedroll and some straw - the only kindness afforded her, if it could even be called that.
Here, in one of the deepest parts of the ancient fortress, there were no windows. No slits in the wall. No skylights. Nothing to admit light, or to judge the passing of time.
Nothing but the drip, drip, drip of water to note a passing storm. And the roar of cracking thunder, heard even through so much sorcerous stone. Ah. The stone. Black as pitch and offending to the eye to look at for too long. The whole fortress was made from it. Those in the town said it was cursed by the builders, that it drove men mad.
Perhaps it did.
Drip. Drip. Drip.
Utter darkness gripped the cells, broken only by the approach of torch light when the gaoler came to feed her - that horned schemer, Gwyddion.
In the past innumerable hours, or maybe days, two other prisoners had once sat in cells of their own nearby. Company at least. Before they'd been taken away by Gwyddion, through the door. They'd never returned, but their distant screaming had echoed, even through the stones.
The door at the end of the hall groaned opened with a squeal and torch light flooded the cell block - empty but for her, Keres.
The approaching footsteps were not the clip of Gwyddion's cloven feet upon the stone, but leather boots. The blinding light of the torch grew closer, until a tall, hooded figure stood outside the bars to her cell, the torch in one of his hands. Locks of long, white hair spilled out from beneath his hood, but his jaw was clean shaven - skin a dark gray.
"Well, Spy," came a thin, cold voice, sharp as a dagger's razored tip, "will you confess?"
The same question Gwyddion had asked her, every time he brought food. They thought she'd come to their island with the rest, to spy on the Black Bay's Wardens.
Outside, waves broke against the cliffs of Cerak, beneath a fortress of black stone that made eyes water and ache just to look upon.
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