The Reaper made use of an open ground floor window to get in, situating herself within the confines of the tower's back room. The place was a mess--and the whole tower was probably just the same, too. There was blood on the walls, the floor, and even the ceiling in some instances. Whole bodies were optional. Whole limbs were optional, too. A torso in the room's corner, festering in a sickly red soup of future decay, was torn at the shoulder, leaving the right arm completely separated, yet setting next to the body--and also torn in of itself, ripped in half at the elbow. Lower, the hand was also crushed. In the next room, she could see trails of blood leading to a stairway . . . or perhaps they were leading down the stairway. Maybe even both. Although her job required a complete neutrality towards the dealings of the average living soul, this Reaper could not help but feel sorry for these poor people.
Most of them were unidentifiable. If they weren't torn to shreds, other wounds and splattered blood made it impossible to discern even the slightest detail beyond the barbarically shed excess of gore. The Reaper could not figure the age, sex, nationality, or even the height and weight of the average victim.
She reluctantly investigated the first room, but not without first lifting her right hand to her nose. She squinted her eyes and held back a sudden rush of tears. The smell was awful. It stung her nose so harshly that she found difficulty in keeping her eyes from at least watering. In only a few seconds, she felt a growing thrumb within her skull. In all her time as a Reaper, having seen bloody massacres, entrails spilled and limbs split, heads broken and spines torn through--having even committed similar massacres herself, as obligation when the mission required it--these images and the raw smell of death never failed to make the Reaper feel nauseous . . .
. . . and unfortunately, to complete her mission, she had to stand the sight of it all, at least for long enough to quiet the spiritual activity in the area. This might call for her to actually touch a body or two, which was an extremely disconcerting thought. It prompted an immediate want of a bath--and truth be told, that was usually the last thing she wanted to do.
There was something extremely wrong about this, though. There should have been lingering spirits here. For there to be such a recent battle, the spirits not only should have been lingering, but they should have been close to their bodies. Granted, while these spirits should have not been fully aware of their situation yet, the obviously traumatic means of their demise may have left them well aware of their deaths, and thus conscious to what would otherwise appear to them as a flood of achromatic mist--the mist which filled the colorless land of the dead. It was possible, but would they have really moved out so quickly?
The Reaper, again with the utmost reluctance, made her way up the stairs, conscious of the layers of blood thick upon them, and insistent that she only step upon clean surfaces, even if she had to strain to reach her leg up two or three steps ahead to avoid a completely covered step. When she reached the second floor, she was greeted to an image just the same as the downstairs. There were bodies--but no souls to account for them. Cautiously, if only to fulfill a suspicion in the back of her mind, the Reaper crept to the front of the tower, still walking only on the scant few clean surfaces available, to crouch before a similar window to the one she got in from. This one, however, was situated upon the front of the tower, and looked out to where the soldiers from before were heading.
No spirits amongst them. Odd.
To evade the potential of being seen by any soldier who might happen to look back, she removed herself from before the window just as quick as she got there. Sometimes you had to enlist the help of the living under the guise of a well thought out lie, but ninety percent of the time, it was simply best to avoid them entirely. Crouched next to the window, the Reaper held her hand over her nose again and thought strongly on this situation. There should have been souls here. Even if they were aware, they'd not have been able to get out of her sight so quickly. She wasn't around for the battle, but she was for the aftermath . . .
There were numerous possibilities to account for. One of which entailed that someone or something did something with these spirits. That, however, would have been a serious conclusion, one a serious reaction--and also a personal report to her superiors. Sometimes, the latter could have actually been a little more dangerous than a threat itself. This was the last conclusion she wanted to make, and so the Reaper took to the rest of the tower, hoping, perhaps, to find the spirits holed up somewhere here. Even if they were gathered together, aware of their circumstances, and (therefore) extremely dangerous for the potential Reaper that needed to send them on their way, they'd be much less of a threat than something that could manipulate them--if that even was the case.
There was a worse case scenario than that--the worst case scenario, in fact. The Reaper didn't even want to think about that one, though.