Jesnoria . . . it was a good place to eat, a good place to drink, and a good place to lay one's head at night, but for the hopeless, it slowly became the worst town the world ever knew. It stood at the edge of the world, overlooking the remnants of the battlefield that ended the world as they all knew it. It was an endless stretch-- a vast depth of craters and ruin that peered into the horizon and beyond. Here, there never seemed to be an end to it, and that's exactly why people came. Jesnoria was a small place, but it attracted pilgrims of all shapes and sizes.
And it especially attracted them: the people that lost everything during the End of Days-- or, perhaps, those that lost it all before the End. The End itself truly became a matter of convenience, then, a problem on which to blame their past woes, find purpose in a pilgrimage, and spit hatefully upon the battlefield.
The town ended with the battlefield itself, ending right where a cliffside began, and dropped off, straight down into a gray and torn basin that stretched on forever, the battlefield that ended the world. It was far too high to jump from, and thus had a convenient rope ladder nearby.
How many had come to Jesnoria to marvel at the stories of heroism and the terran scars of a battle so epic that it changed the world forever? And then . . . how many came to Jesnoria to see the source of their woes, sit upon the edge of the great cliff, and spit hateful remarks and curses down into the pit of a ruin that made up the field of battle? There was no way to tell . . . but there was one more, on this day-- one more to visit Jesnoria, another Hopeless One, one to hate, one to mourn, or one to find a disappointing indifference in the scars of the world?
That . . . that was up to her to decide.