[Torg] Folklore of the Fall (The GodNet and The Grid: 7 of 7)
Jeffrey Hosmer
jhosmer1 at gmail.com
Thu Feb 4 08:42:01 EST 2010
Cool story. Reading the bit about the nuclear-magic destruction at the end
made me wonder... what if those weapons were SO terrible that they warped
causality, travelling backwards through time and caused the Spasm in the
first place?
That sort of thing makes Tharkold-sense to me. :)
"So, no one knows anything about the techno-demons. Maybe you've heard the
barest whisper of a rumor that says someone saw SOMETHING that MIGHT have
been a demon, but it's all second-hand and unverified. Ready to play?"
"Yeah. Ok, I go out my front door."
"A techno-demon kills you."
:)
On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 5:19 PM, Jasyn Jones <jasynj at gmail.com> wrote:
> This is the world that was:
>
> There were cities, we know, built wide and tall. Vehicles thronged the
> streets and the skies. And everywhere you looked, people. Smiling, laughing,
> living in abundance and happiness.
>
> There was no war, or none to speak of. There was no hunger, no poverty, no
> want. They had put an end to all that. It was not heaven, but it was not far
> from it.
>
> All of this burned.
>
> ###
>
> It was the Spasm, the week that ended the world. And it began with the
> demons. One day, they weren't there, the next day they’d appeared
> everywhere.
>
> The appearances began at sundown, in the heart of the lands of men, and
> swept west with the setting sun. They happened In every city, on every
> continent, in every land. During a long day of horror, they just came forth,
> wings and talons and roiling ferocity. It was a cataclysm of blood and
> violence.
>
> Nor were the demons alone. Things both great and horrible also came forth.
> Monsters the size of buildings, that swallowed people whole. Monsters too
> small to see, that ground people up from within. Monsters that roared in
> rage, monsters that whispered in darkness, monsters that stalked in silence,
> hunting men like men hunted animals.
>
> That day also, the dead came back to life. Parents returned to their
> children, husbands returned to their wives, wise leaders and executed
> criminals spoke with all who would listen. For a long day, the dead communed
> with the living, then returned from whence they came.
>
> The demons and the monsters did not.
>
> ###
>
> In many places, the great and shining cities fell to darkness. People were
> slain, order collapsed, and the demons began their rule. Many people died
> and many more were enslaved.
> But in some places, people survived. In some places, people fought. In some
> places, people won. They wrested order out of chaos.
>
> They reconstituted their society, their government. Their armies. And they
> fought back. They made war with a will that surprised even them. Not that it
> mattered, in the end.
>
> ###
>
> It was a decision born of desperation. Despite all they could do, the
> demons would win. It was ineluctable. They could not be stopped.
>
> On the day of decision, a week after the war began, the leaders of men came
> together and made a choice. On the lands of men, on the cities that had
> fallen to the enemy, on their own homes and on their own surviving people,
> they would call down fire.
>
> Part nuclear destruction, part magical devastation, and greater than the
> sum of its parts, the weapon would leave nothing standing. Whole lands would
> be wiped clean of everything that was life, vast cities would crumble to
> dust, millions would burn with a fire that consumed the body, the mind, and
> the soul. The destruction would be total.
>
> This was the fire of the world that was, and with it they burned the world.
>
> - Traditional Tale of the Free Nation of Ullagh
>
> Jasyn Jones
> jasynj (at) gmail (dot) com
>
> "To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield."
> Ulysses, Alfred Lord Tennyson
>
> Check out my Torg webpage, Storm Knights:
>
> darleyconsulting.com/games/stormknights/
>
>
> _______________________________________________
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>
--
Jeffrey Hosmer
jhosmer1 at gmail.com
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