16 Jan 2018
Galen rested one hand on the wall, idly noting the worn smoothness of the surface. Between the carving itself and the erosive work from the constantly shifting wind, the rocky cavern wall (granite, but with tempting flecks of feldspar and other rare minerals blended in) felt almost as flat as a brick.
That he now stood under a wonderful approximation of open sky for the first time in what seemed like months claimed the largest portion of his awareness, and his wings fluttered behind his back. Just a reflexive adjustment in response to the shifting breeze, he wanted to tell himself. And the winds were picking up.
But no, the truth was that Sky, the environment that called his hearts, no longer welcomed him. This space... a 'room' crafted by magic to feel so vast that he had to strain to find clues that he was still inside... formed what he hoped was the last of four gates. The previous ones drew on classical elements: a room of fire, another of water, and what he hoped was a 'gate' of earth. That one amounted to an agonizing, clawing excavation of a small tunnel into one large enough to admit his claustrophobic self.
This 'gate of air' presented an alluring trap after the previous ones... and the jaws of the trap appeared to be slamming shut on Galen. Were it simply an extension of the Elemental Plane of Air, Galen might well have struggled to stay on the trail he followed. Instead, the vast 'gate' contained a large enough volume to maintain it's own weather systems. Systems that seemed to oscillate between 'idyllic breezes' and 'raging thunderstorms'. The clear blue skies teasing Galen's desperate eyes as the aftermath of the previous gate flung him into the 'space' now turned from curdling milky white to angry grey iron. The undersides and interiors of the gathering storm clouds illuminated by ever more spectacular... and frequent... lightning bolts.
Galen had been struck by lightning before, on occasion. He had heard a strange Mystic who cloaked his understanding of magic in technological terms describe electricity as 'that child of capriciousness'. And the lightning bolts striking the side of the mountain seemed more like the act of an enraged, somewhat petulant deity than a 'mere' force of nature.
Which, of course, made a certain amount of sense. The carvings on the side of the mountain now providing ever less certain shelter amounted to crypts for some lost tribe of Norsemen, as evidenced by symbols honoring the Aesir, such as All Father Odin and All Mother Freyja. More to the point, the wooden spear shaft in Galen's left hand bore intricate carvings identifying it as none other than Gugnir, Odin's own weapon.
Somehow, the shaft had fallen... or been thrown... from its place of honor at the highest carving Galen had yet examined. Down the side of the cliff for what seemed like almost a full mile... to rest within what Galen could only describe as a 'forest' of metal.
Orichalcum.
The Bane of Gargolyes. One touch of the blood-tinged copper-gold metal would evaporate Galen's flesh like a white hot knife through ice. And yet... He could not risk taking to the air, striving for the highest part of the cliff and what he hoped was the way out of this place. Not empty handed, at any rate. He set his very life on the only gamble available: retrieve Gugnir from it's resting place, in the hopes that a token marked by Odin would somehow grant him safe passage through the onrushing storm.
Galen let a thin grin cross his lips. He held no illusions that Odin would allow 'easy' access, even if Gugnir served as Galen's passkey; Odin tested all who came to his attention, and this situation seemed to present no evidence that it would be an exception. Still, his choices seemed to amount to 'stay and die for certain, or try and risk dying in the process of escape'.
So. Galen somehow managed to worm his way through the forest of death metal, finding an approximation of a clear path to Gugnir's resting place carved by previous lightning storms. And then managed to retrace his steps back to the dubious safety of the mountain.
Which brought him to this place, to this moment.
He gripped Gugnir in his hand and studied the oncoming storm. The air positively sang with ozone and rising elemental fury. Above him, a tiny black speck in the upper reach of the rock face marked the highest cave.
He pinned his hopes on the All Father's dubious mercy, and cynical expectation that Odin would provide some means of escape from this trap... provided that the victim could properly puzzle his way through it all.
The spear in his hand seemed to shift, somehow; now a hardened piece of of wood, now a patterned length of crafted iron, now a buzzing solid mass of lightning. But all the aspects seemed to pull at Galen, communicating the thing's desire to rejoin its children in the storm and direct them at the object of its wrath.
Galen muttered to it, as many words as he could fit in a single, deep breath. He swore to return it to where it belonged, in exchange for guiding him to the goal of his desire with all due haste and with respect for the challenges he, himself, had undergone to return the shaft to its home.
The oath whipped away on the wind; Galen hoped that it somehow reached receptive ears.
He took another breath and launched himself into the air.
The wind wrapped him in flows and twists and turns as he clawed at the air. His joints and muscles strained to ride the forces trying to shake him like a dog with a toy in its jaws. For the second time that 'day', he murmured gratitude to the brutal training methods of the tengu, the Japanese bird-men. Human legend held them as nearly unbeatable with swords. But as humans lacked any natural means of flight, they had no way of knowing how well the tengu fought in the air.
But the Gargoyles knew.
As a reward for a service, Galen accepted an offer of training at the tengus' clawed fingers. For an entire year, they had subjected Galen to merciless attention: correcting miniscule errors in his stances while also stretching his muscles to their limits on a dual quest for strength and flexibility.
Once again, the tengus' training saved Galen's life.
The wind tossed and spun him. He absorbed the wind's force and rode it toward his goal from whatever direction presented itself.
And then the lightning began to streak and flare around him.
The tengu may have held vastly different opinions about flight than the Gargoyles, but one thing both groups agreed on in reference to flying in a lightning storm amounted to a very simple rule: Do not fly in a lightning storm.
While a large mass of reasonably low electrical conductivity... such as, for example, the stony flesh of a Gargoyle... would seem to offer little enticement for drawing lightning, the truth presented a far more treacherous challenge. Lightning followed trails of ionized air, from sky to ground or vice versa. A Gargoyle's nose and skin could only trace such a trail in the space between two layers of air; if an ionized channel happened to follow one layer moving faster than the Gargoyle could detect, a lightning strike could still conceivably detour through said Gargoyle on its way to its destination.
All of this flashed through Galen's thoughts as he gripped Gugnir, brandishing it before the storm in hopes of parting it like a curtain.
Instead, the lightning seemed to gather itself, to rush at Gugnir like a school of pirahna surging toward a bleeding and helpless animal in the water.
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
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