groundrules: (Default)
let's set d o w n some ([personal profile] groundrules) wrote in [community profile] westwhere2023-08-17 06:16 pm

unkharil | event



UNKHARIL







Leaving the House of Manouk through waypoints, the party arrives back to the present time of Akhuras, in the jungle swathes of Unkharil. Those undergoing a canon update fleetingly detour into their home worlds. Old or new, you wake with a start, on high alert — body ablaze with static electricity. Some characters might struggle with vertigo, misted memories and dimmed powers for up to 48 hours, while their bodies readjust to no longer being lost in time.

You are in the care of a highly disciplined, if largely nomadic caravan — the refugees of most holy Alem, the kingdom built upon hell that succumbed to the undead. Karsa informs new recruits that the party assisted Alem’s king Deimar with evacuation efforts and with sealing the gates of hell, months prior. Their kingdom lost, Deimar has now taken his people to his mother’s ancestral grounds of Unkharil — a temple-fortress in a valley bordered by four tall mountains that serve as its protective walls.

Legend says the four mountains pillared the heavens, while snake god Kharil-asuk nested in the valley below to recover after birthing the world. So long was his sleep that cloud gods sent down the first bursts of lightning and thunder — frightening awake Kharil-asuk, who slithered into the jungle, never to be seen again. Since, sacred Unkharil has served as site of worship and coronations.



King Deimar — whimsical, breezy, but cuttingly sharp — welcomes you in Unkharil, until the Merchant finalises your travel arrangements east. His people are weary, battle-worn and starved for kindness. Where applicable, some might optionally remember you under the false identity you wore in Arc V.

Seek out accommodations in the stone huts of the temple-fortress or the humble, often single-person cells that were dug bluntly into the mountain walls for hermit monks. Unkharil was deserted over the years as Kharil-asuk’s cult lost worship — but superstitious bandits have kept their looting away from temple grounds. You may still find furniture, pieces of clothing and worship, while refugees can spare clothes and food supplies.

TASKS

■ Assist with cleaning and reconstructing the destitute grounds of Unkharil, raising new stone columns and cleansing altars. Those with a connection to nature or the animals sense this is a quiet, revered territory.

■ Many survivors of Alem’s siege suffer from burns, cuts or trauma you can allay. The orphaned, widowed and wounded appreciate a kind word, company or help settling in.

■ Find a thin golden stream in the jungle, whose tepid waters may accelerate healing, improve your spirits or give you a day of staggering good luck. Bring back waters for recovering refugees.

■ Learn to use mountain scaling gear (rope-bound pairs encouraged) — or tame a 3-meter Kalioperus flier (useful for scouting and the Wailing below). Refugees and the few remaining temple monks may assist, but it’s learning by doing on the slippery mountain sides and with the thin-tempered fliers.

■ Largely warriors, Deimar’s people lost numerous troops defending Alem and now replenish their forces by teaching their youth weapons combat and light magic. Come dawns, join them in the courtyard to learn a skill or offer your own lessons. Alem instructors are strict, disciplined and martial — but fair. Characters who lack natural magic can learn to operate gem-triggered spheres that generate shields or a burst of fire/lightning. You may keep the gems after, but your character will need a few weeks of study to achieve mastery.

■ (Learn to) fish, hunt and forage to renew supplies. Beware flesh-eating fish in some jungle rivers. Ride an okapi?

■ Yet wary of traders, Deimar (grudgingly) invites merchants to revive their routes to Unkharil, with many caravans, errant scholars, priests, necromancers and sorcerers arriving to study his proposition. Some arrive all the way from magical jewel city Taravast — including an exuberant acolyte of old master Wrath! — and may offer exotic food and drink, or unique items. You may trade or earn coin by selling services or performances. Musical, art and thespian instruments can be found on the grounds.




QUESTS

THE HEART(H) OF IT
Rise and shine, lads! Heat of a jungle’s sun won’t be waning, no use waiting it out. The iron here’s rung cold too long. What little’s left of it. Shows the place was run by monks. They abandoned the smithy, once the fires guttered, and the mines, soon as the mouths collapsed only a little! Ha. Spoiled devils. Even left behind the ore already dug out. You go right in and fetch some iron… some copper, some silver… whatever yo find. We’ll get the blaze going. Time to forge. Don’t worry. We’ll make it worth your while.
Eitam, master forger


Deimar’s ironmongers revive the smithy of Unkharil but require precious ore and materials for manufacturing. Scale the steep mountain of Masida that walls in Unkharil to the east and infiltrate its abandoned mine to recover some previously discovered, but abandoned goods. Beware crumbling paths, rotten wood stairs and moulding ropes, as parts of the mines threaten collapse. Refugees supply golden fireworks that can shoot out to alert anyone within the mine you are in danger. Blacksmith rewards await.

PAVED WITH GOOD INTENTIONS
Visiting merchants are willing to resume trade, but have ongoing safety concerns.
■ Meet a first set of incoming grain-bearing caravans in the jungle and escort them on the last six-hour leg of their voyage to Unkharil. These are hefty and slow wagons, frequently targeted by bandits who dam their paths or pretend they are wounded, while their brothers attack from tree outposts.

■ Destroy the encampments of the vicious jungle-based Red Claws bandits. These outlaws typically attack in groups, share nightly meals and drink to strengthen their ties, providing excellent ambush opportunities. They cover their faces with a cinnabar or blood print of their leader’s palm.

■ Hold talks to appease the merchants Balthazar (easily impressed by shows and the arts) and Anathula (who wants a clear business pitch). Give diplomacy your best!

THE WAILING
… they were so happy, so holy, then why do they shame themselves with tears now? You must be wondering. The truth does not honour us: first, Unkharil’s priesthood only accepted brothers from among those who survived snake’s poison. But the chosen were few, and the lands needed tending. Then, Unkharil accepted brothers from men of great skill, literacy and wisdom. But the learned were few, and the lands needed tending. Then, Unkharil accepted orphans, survivors of the jungle, men of the snake’s vision. But wanderers were few, and the lands needed tending. And soon, what recruits Kharil-asuk did not provide, in his mercy — his priesthood took… from the breasts of widows, from pillaged homes, from bandits. They kept even the most unwilling.
groundsmaster Kayik


Unkharil’s new residents soon find their beauty sleep disrupted by nightly wails, projected from several of the monk cells dug into Mount Nathadi, which walls in Unkharil from the south. These are the ghosts of former monks, whom you can appease by scaling the mountain and cleaning their cell, recovering their bones for burial (where applicable) or providing a minor service for the ghost (your choice of what the monk might desire: perhaps the recitation of a poem, an update on the weather outside, a good deed, etc.) Many of the monks were especially devoted to Kharil-asuk and to theories of reincarnation — for the lives of men are to the soul like a snake shedding its skin — and may impart you their wisdom.

WATER MY CROPS
Help Deimar’s people to revitalise local soil, seed gardens and crops, build dams and redirect jungle rivers. Water or lunar tide sorcery also work. Alem refugees were primarily warriors and will need you to illustrate the basics of gardening and land care.




TO DAYS GONE BY
To welcome the start of their new lives, the refugees hold two nights of celebrations. During the day, you prepare tall bonfires or purify the lands with incense and sage-infused water, finding you are readily welcome in every home.
■ The first banquet night (OOCly on 25 August) pays homage to the lost: the survivors of Alem remember the siege and encourage you to speak of your own dead. Letters of penance, love or remembrance are written to the dead, read by the witness of your choosing and burned in bonfires. Heavy, syrupy and thick drink abounds.

■ The second banquet night (OOCly on 5 September) honours the living: everyone must show and express gratitude to someone alive, for any reason. Grit your teeth and offer thanks.

SERVANTS OF AFIRU (warning: snakes)
There was no strength left in the bones of Kharil-asuk, after birthing the ground and the sky and the moon, and man and his mountains. And the first son of his likeness paid the price: brave white Afiru, small and feeble, but how proud he was! And the dozen men who caught him, not knowing his right divine, thought they did him a kindness to cull his pain young: to set him on a slate of stone and cut him in small parts, and eat of him for their dinner. Fools! Each bite of Afiru took root within them! Come morning, a dozen men woke in the image of Afiru: half snake, half human, beastly and cunning, their roiling bellies only quenched when they ate of their brothers. So, Afiru seeded his curse, and that same stone plate is now his altar: and just as he washed it with his life’s blood for men, so too must men now pay the price of bleeding.
old village tale


Within the jungle depths sleeps the minor, ruined temple of serpent god Afiru — malicious son of Kharil-asuk — whose mind-thralled servants abduct hapless innocents as sacrifices to the deity’s naga emissaries. Infiltrate the decayed temple to ruin Afiru’s altar — releasing his servants from their thrall and ending his worship. The naga priests are half beasts, half men, but deathly silent and possessed of fiercely sharp and venomous claws and fangs. If poisoned, your wounded limb swells, then numbs, then darkens as the toxin spreads through your body. You have 12 hours to get back to Unkharil, increasingly groggy and stiff, and drink a cure — or may pre-emptively carry a few doses, going in.

A HUNDRED MOUTHS (newcomers only)
Large stone gates carved into the northern mountain that walls in Unkharil hide an ancient granary whose wares could allay starvation… and interest visiting merchants. To open the doors, you must fit missing ruby beads back into the gate’s carvings. The gems, you learn, were picked out and dragged away by feral Kalioperus fliers — larger and more vicious than the ones you ride — and taken back to their nests at the very tip of Unkharil’s walling mountains. Report your ruby finds — rewards await.

ANOINTED (warning: snake)
I saw him! With my mind clear, and my eyes shut, and my heart open. And he was beautiful! I ran in high grass, and my feet tore, and my dress ragged, and do not listen! I was not as the others are, greedy. I wanted nothing, nothing! He asked, ‘Daughter, what do you wish of me?’ And I said to him, ‘Only to see you.’ And he said, ‘So be it.’ And after mother Moon rose, and the good rain downed, and it was silence in this world he gave us, but for this breath, that was the murmur of the skies! No vastness greater than the drums of his heartbeat, and his sundered gaze: one eye, it was blood, and the other gold. And together, they saw me. He saw me. And he loved me! So he gave me the silk of his shed skin, to remember him by. In the morning, old women say, hunters found me in the jungle, stroking a piece of old, mouldy rope. But I know, it was him, it was the Father. And he saw me, as they do not see him
Laila, weaver


Deimar inherited his mother’s lands, but his uncles are likely to contest the claim of a pauper king with a feeble army. To legitimise his rule, Deimar wants the blessing of snake deity Kharil-asuk. The few remaining locals of Unkharil say the great serpent may be seen on stormy nights with lightning and thunder by those who wait at night in the jungle, after purifying themselves with meditation or partaking of ‘mind-cleansing’ asuk — a strong drug that triggers hallucinations and prophecy. The enormously large serpent body of Kharil-asuk — two-kilometres long, 100 meters wide — slithers before his chosen and must be chased into the depths of the jungles, no matter the animal and bandit dangers, before it disappears.

Inquisitive and untamed, but not necessarily malicious, Kharil-asuk often seeks to shrug off his pursuers, camouflaging in the landscape. He speaks as a voice in the heads of his pursuers, assessing them with questions about true worth and what entitles men to land, wisdom and nobility. He may attempt to drive those he deems unworthy for their past sins (betrayal, murder) in the path of mortal danger (cliffs, bandits, traps). Anyone can chase Kharil-asuk and speak with him. You can still sign up for a RNG to receive his blessing.


NOTES

■ Newcomers may be introduced to the large undead dragon, now bound to the party since Arc V. Formerly a tormentor of Alem, she keeps her distance and flies outside of Unkharil for now.

■ This downtime event lasts until 15 September and is followed by Arc VII. Pace yourselves and engage in as much or as little as you want, quests-wise!


QUESTIONS

NPC INBOX

mashiara: (mmmkay | would you walk in)

nynaeve al'meara | the wheel of time

[personal profile] mashiara 2023-08-20 03:26 pm (UTC)(link)
( ooc: starters, open and closed, will be below. please hit this up with wildcards for anything in the event too! )
mashiara: (oh? | that the fire's gonna burn)

for jon | kharil-asuk

[personal profile] mashiara 2023-08-20 03:56 pm (UTC)(link)
If these are ablutions, they are alike and unlike what she knows and guides in the Two Rivers, for the women, for the braiding of hair as one is accepted by the community as an adult, to her loneliness and yet also her wholeness, the connections and ties each has together.

The asuk is not her first choice, but it is a measured one, weighing the concern she feels for knowing there are others of their group, there are others of the refugees who came here with their pauper king, who will have, will do, can continue to try this same thing. Meditation is not her strength, that stillness a space she finds rarely, and with great focus, not great letting go. Asuk makes aspects simple, even as the voices of the youths who'd been led out of the Two Rivers, out of Emond's Field, flicker and dart, limed with light, in the foliage.

There, for a breath, stands Perrin, eyes a molten gold even as he lifts his axe, and that must be his, to settle on his shoulder. Even as his features slip back into the dark, long strides strong and lengthening, smaller shadows breaking off from the leaves and trailing after.

There, for an inhalation, stands Matrim, uneasy in his own skin, twitching, a blood-red glint of a dagger in his hand as he slips between deeper shadows, tendrils reaching out to try and recapture him as he passes. Laughter and the sound of dice rolling, and he, too, is gone.

There, for a heartbeat, stands Egwene, in unfamiliar raiments, lifting her hands, glowing so painfully, beautifully, awesomely bright. Nynaeve doesn't look away: between one heartbeat and the next, Egwene simply ceases to exist.

There in the pause of her breathing, her heart, stands Rand, hair a touch longer in those tight, red curls, his father's sword or no, another, at his hip, his eyes shifting from hard to tired and softened. A carving of some kind, a man, a sceptre, in his hand, and he holds out another, imperfect mirror to his own, voiceless words stretched toward Nynaeve, and she holds out her hand to accept, and —

Crashing. Sliding. Silence that screams as the serpent, impossibly large, impossibly present, overwhelms every vision of those she fights for back home, those who feel like they're hers, responsibility and otherwise, with its improbable grace. A creature so large should be impossible to hide, yet she feels it, deep in her marrow, deep in the shiver of magic she doesn't know how to control, he is seen only as he wishes.

Nynaeve doesn't look for Jon before she begins running. Faster than all the boys, the men, in her village. Faster than anyone. Nynaeve runs in the wake of the impossible serpent, the local god, terrifyingly gorgeous, over the plants, the rocks, the earth shifted out of his way, drifting to refill itself to splendor in his wake. She trust he'll be there, or he won't, this longstanding member of their abducted group, hunting for what? The snake, now. A way home, more than all others.

There is moonlight but no moon, starlight from hidden stars, glints of silver and the call of every creature that delights in the night, or frightens before it. Her heart pounds, her feet pound harder, faster, and she's breathing as if her lungs were made of wind when she catches sight of the immense tail of the snake once more, when she exults in the finding, after two rolling tumbles she hadn't allowed herself to be slowed by, coming back up from them into the ground-eating run sustained past all sensibility.

She comes to a stop so abrupt, she vibrates with it, the air sings with it, magic comes near to bursting, but the One Power, the True Source, stays close, does not extend, explode outward, radiant and beautiful and dangerous depending on the turn of her mind.

Why are you so certain this man deserves the crown you seek?

Breathing in, and out, and snorting, because what is deserved, what isn't?

"I'm not." She says, blunt. "What I'm certain of is he's willing to work for his people, has worked for his people, and of the available people who'd make themselves ruler of these tired, healing refugees, right now, power is not his desire for the sake of it. I won't pretend I know what he'll be later. That's not what I've seen. What is deserving, in your eyes?"
northerndragon: (can't climb to heaven on the cross)

[personal profile] northerndragon 2023-08-25 08:37 am (UTC)(link)
What is he chasing?

At times, Jon thinks he sees the shadow of a dragon -- but that might just be the dragon who never truly leaves him now, keeping close than she normally does. Might be that she wants to see the snake. Other times, he sees his father. Ned Stark also runs ahead of him, out of reach, and then he shifts like a wolf's leaping shadow, and he is a dragon too. They had taken his head and so blood falls over his chest onto the ground, like so many rubies, as he flies on ahead. There is no time to pause and try to pick the rubies up.

Instead, Jon hears a voice, asking him the same thing it asks of Nynaeve.

"Deimar withstood temptation, withstood ghosts, the dead, the damned, withstood his brother's betrayals. Withstood a siege. He never gave in, not even when it would have been easy. Not when it might have spared him trouble and pain. Where I come from, I will fight an enemy as relentless as he stood against for a year. I hope to have the same strength. I hope to have anything like it.

"What makes you think he isn't deserving? Many men come here with a train of their people, needing shelter and aid?"

He is not sure the snake will appreciate this.