And you’d be wrong.
Since the earliest days of Ealderdish settlement, strange things have been seen and heard in the area that would eventually become the city of Hoborxen. These irruptions from elsewhere have only increased over the centuries since. Now, in the night, the working class neighborhoods and decaying waterfront of day Hoborxen are intruded upon, and sometimes replaced, by an otherworldly city of tall spires, all its buildings made of something resembling glass, warm to the touch like the mantle of a recently lit lantern.
Every night, some part of Hoborxen is replaced by the intruder--sometimes only a single structure, other times an entire neighborhood. On nights of the new moon, Horboxen is entirely replaced. The city begins to appear at dusk, as if emerging from an unseen but evaporating fog, or coalescing from the dying light. The strange glow of its structures rises slowly; it's brightest at midnight and wanes toward dawn.
No human inhabitants of the alien city are ever seen, but it's not completely deserted. Fairy-like creatures--obscenely jabbering, cinereous, and moth-winged--sometimes buzz about its streets or lewdly call from high perches. A low growl, a sound as much felt in the bones as heard, periodically reverberates through the streets, and some explorers have claimed to heard a woman crying or laughing softly.
Would-be treasure-hunters should weigh the likely gain against the potential dangers. A number of people entering the areas of the alien city are never seen again.
The people of Hoborxen are inured to these nocturnal visitations, and rarely remark on them, though addiction, violence, and suicide are more common there than in neighboring towns. No one knows where they go when they’re elsewhere. “Nowhere,” they say, and shrug and turn away.
Some thaumaturgist muse darkly that there may come a time when Hoborxen will be gone entirely, every night. And after that, will the incursion spread?
If you ask around enough in Hoborxen about the glass city they may tell you the cautionary tale of Able Blix who dynamited one of the strange buildings to sell the scrap glass. But it did not work as he had thought, when the building fell, it revealed a . . . hole to someplace filled with things that should not be. Blix's crew vanished. Blix still wanders the alleys of Hoborxen, his mind broken, muttering to himself, unable to leave.
ReplyDeleteInteresting! Though that tale may be aprocryphal. Reports of the durability of the buildings vary..
ReplyDeleteSo true, there are those who say that Blix simply miscalculated the amount of dynamite and blew up his crew by accident and it is the guilt that broke him.
ReplyDeleteLove this one, man. ...really enjoying getting lost in this world. My favorite line: "Fairy-like creatures--obscenely jabbering, cinereous, and moth-winged--sometimes buzz about its streets or lewdly call from high perches."
ReplyDelete@Seaofstarrpg - Yes, the truth of these matters is often obscured by rumors. ;)
ReplyDelete@Brandon - Thanks for stopping by, Brandon. Glad you liked it.