by Nayt on Fri Apr 09, 2010 3:06 pm
The ruins were monochrome. Gray gave way to shades of black, and a dark shading colored every corner of every stone, every inch of the man's face, and the dead earth on which he stood. Specks of gray flooded the blackness in static falls, like rain without moisture, providing only the thickness of stale, slate air, and the weight of a crushing world. Crenelations surrounded him on every side, all within a ruin that had neither entrance nor exit. The only way out was up. The jagged ruins, however, extended far too high for him to reach; only a very select few could climb their way out, and he was not one of them. Truth be told, however, he'd no intentions of it to begin with.
In the center of the jagged, fallen ruins, there was a circle. It was the remains of a fountain, empty now, dried even in the world of the living, and crushed into dust.
With the End, some parts of Purgatory succumbed to a numbing darkness. Gray faded to black, and it caused problems all around. In these lands, not even the color of souls permeated; they were dulled and mixed with shades of black, until theirs were little more than silhouettes in the dark atmosphere, like living shadows gifted with specks of color here and there.
Here, Scott Thompson was barely more than an outline of himself, a literal silhouette in an overcoat and brimmed hat. The features of his face were barely illuminated by the orange glow of a cigarette. He stood with his hands buried deep within the confines of his coat pockets, his hazy gray eyes watching the dust of the old fountain. Scott paced to it with casual lethargy.
"Circe, Myrria," Scott Thompson whispered their names between a drag.
A grin quickly spread across his face. The End made his job harder at first; he had to adapt to new routines and talents, but he had. Now, in its own right, his job was vastly more entertaining--and in the same right, so was life itself. The social structure of the Dirige was all but collapsed, but who needed social structure when you could drag a spirit to one locale, from any place in the world? The looks on their faces was always priceless. They were always in the middle of something, and then . . . poof. There they were. It became like something of a necessary practical joke.
He could've always contacted the Reapers beforehand, and he often did, but he hadn't the time to spare exactly. Scott withdrew his right hand from his pocket. He pointed his index finger at--but not into--the dust, and trailed across the air with expert precision. Dust parted at his beckon, and before long there set an intricate design within the dust. It was impossible to follow, a circle with offshoots and curves and curls, a glyph or a rune or something in-between. Scott stepped several paces to the right and traced a similar image into the dust. Only then did he back away from the lost fountain.
"This is gonna hurt. Brace yourselves, 'kay?" Scott whispered. He stepped back, snapped his fingers, and took a drag of his cigarette as, if only briefly, an azure light filled this dark part of the world . . .