originally posted in:The Black Garden
Ladies and gentlemen, the time has come for us writers to take center stage for a time. The Black Garden as well as our friends over in Arts and Stuff are going to host a contest that is solely devoted to writers. The rules are simple.
For any who wish to enter, you are tasked with writing a short little anecdote that is to have a maximum of 300 words. The location for this piece of work is to be located in the picture provided above. The deadline for entering is this Sunday(14th) at midnight. For any who wish to enter, please submit your stories by placing them in the comments.
Judging will be done in two phases. The first phase will consist of a Panel of both groups reading over each story and deciding which seven are the best of the best. Once the first stage is complete, we shall hand it over to you, the audience, to decide who is ranked number one as lore master. The Winner of this contest shall receive a print of the Buried City signed by the Destiny writing team.
Good luck and Be Brave.
-
Edited by Cpitate: 7/13/2013 2:42:57 AMA dead and desolate landscape with only giant monoliths and buildings to mark that life ever existed in this lost and ancient place. The surface was tortured by the air that still seemed to carry the screams and fires of the souls that died long ago here. Deep underneath, buried in the sands, was something far different from the surface that masked it, something lurked in the dark here. whispers and hushed screams filled the darkened corridors, the only [i]things[/i] that existed in this place were demented and tortured by the fallen. hostile to anything that so much as breathed. Determined only to protect the only thing they had worth taking, their [i]home.[/i] As we descend further into the darkness more is uncovered. Every level that we delve further the more the walls talk, the more "stories" that are force fed through our eyes, those stories we relive every moment we spend down here. But there are promises in the dark that keep us moving. There is a light down here. we just have to find it... we have to uncover it... [b]we cannot falter.... we cannot fail...[/b]else we suffer the fates of those before us and all those counting on us will suffer too. If we do find what we are looking for... if [i]it's[/i] here, we might just take another [i]step[/i] toward the next golden age. A new dawn for us all!
-
I have a question...what is an anecdote?
-
Winnoen was here. The dust - still alive in the air, the bones - still red where they broke, the buildings - looming toward the courtyard; all these things spoke of her passing. The smell of ozone hinted at her means. The lack of sound to her thorough nature. She had taken her time. The cabal scout nearest to the central plinth of the ruin had been stripped of armor down to the joints with which it had been fused to the creature's skeleton. Then it had been slagged until the blood boiled into the air and the nano in its veins had oozed in rivulets through the rust-colored sand. I knew this because Winnoen had taken none of these things with her. They were stacked, fused together in a macabre warning to the others. A warning that they clearly had not heeded. Three Juggernauts in various states of... not death, exactly. Disassembly. Methodical, surgical. She had removed armor, an eye, and just the front - Ghost says 3.4277 centimeters - of the creature's brain, up to the point where it stood, gaping, drooling, unaware of me or anything else. It would not move until it starved to death. The other two were worse. I envied her dispassion. Following in her footsteps, knowing it took me just a fraction of the time to pass through a given hunting ground than it took her, a fear grew in my mind. The Traveler had blessed her, same as me. And where I was conflicted, she was merciless. Where my marks felt nothing, she made hers suffer. And blessed she remained. I have learned all I need to. Ghost tells me that I have been in this ruin for two hours. Not long enough. At this rate, I will catch my sister.
-
The titan shambled on towards the ruins. He glanced over to his right as his warlock companion sank to her knees. He took a difficult step in her direction and grunted at the difficulty of it. He quickly scanned himself over and pried off any red dirt that had caked around the joints and seams of his armor hindering movement. He looked back to the warlock and noted that her armor was showing just as much damage as his was. They had set out about fortnight ago, in search of a fabled piece of ancient Cabal technology. They weren't sure what it was or what it could do, but they were not willing to risk letting the Cabal get their hands on it. They had spent an uneventful first few days before they were ambushed by a raiding party of Cabal. They had managed to stave off the brunt of the attack and kill most of the raiders. But the attack had come at night, and the sounds and lights of the firefight had notified every Cabal within ear or eyesight of their location. The titan and the warlock had spent the rest of the time being attacked here and there, slowly whittling away their resources. They were no closer to their goal than they they had been when they set out and their supplies were running low. The titan tore his gaze from the ruins looming over them and looked down at the warlock. The warlock looked up and cocked her sideways. "What's that look for?", she asked. "What look?" replied the titan. "You can't even see my face." The warlock took off her helmet, and merely answered back, "I know that look. And I'm telling you I feel fine." The titan gazed upon his lover's face. Her fiery auburn hair was an extension of the red sand surrounding them. Her twinkling hazel eyes showed no sign of weariness, even though her body posture clearly indicated otherwise. She wrinkled her nose, bunching up her freckles. "What?" "You know, I was wondering." "What's that?" "Why do they call it the 'Buried City?'" The titan tilted his head down, to ponder her question. "What do you mean?, he answered shortly after. "It's called that because there used to be a city here and now it's under all this sand. You can see the remnants of the city right in front of us." "Right, yes I suppose so. But I had heard something more sinister before we set off, from a few locals. They said it's because many people keep dying here, seeking shelter, to the point where they think there may be enough dead for an entire city." The titan laughed. He looked back at the ruins. How could it be anything other than an old city being buried under the sand. And of all things, because people keep dying here as if making some sort of necropolis? The titan laughed and looked back down at the warlock, just in time to see her head explode sending up a pink mist and puffs of sand in the wind. He felt his head jerk sideways. --------------------------------- "Well?" An impatient Cabal officer rubbed his hands nervously. He didn't want to irritate the camouflaged hunter. He had hired out the services of the hunter just under a month ago and had kept him holed up here, taking out any travelers who happened to come upon the ruins. He had explained to the hunter that he and a few other Cabal officers and drawn up an imaginary grid on the maps of these ruins. Each officer had lay claim to a square. Any traveler caught near these ruins would be killed by the Cabal, but they had turned it into a game. They had bet money, women, and finer things. At the the end of the month, who's ever square held the most corpses would win. But this officer was going for that and something better. He was trying to get the most Guardians killed, not just travelers. He had been lucky enough to find a Guardian willing to kill other Guardians. Especially, one as seemingly powerful as this one. The Cabal officer looked upon the prone form of the hunter. Or rather the spot where he was. The hunter's armor had a special kind of camouflage that allowed to disappear completely when motionless. Any movement would cause him to be seen, in the same way that hot air rising from a stove can be 'seen.' "Well?" the Cabal officer dared to ask one more time. "It is done. They are dead." The officer failed miserably to contain his surprise at the sound of the hunter's voice coming from directly behind his ear. "Do you think--" "I care not, Cabal minion. I have completed my time here and everything you have required of me. I am through here. Stay and play with your beloved 'buried city' of the dead. I am done." The hunter left the Cabal officer to his thoughts. Yes, the officer thought. It is my beloved buried city. A slow smile crept along his withered face. The officer smiled and pondered the riches that waited in store when the score would be totaled. Not even the sounds of the buzzards loudly feeding in the distance could shake him from his thoughts.
-
4 of 5 Martin was worrying more every second as he piloted his ship into the Martian atmosphere. Fália was his good friend, and when she didn't return back from her scouting mission he was morbid and depressed that entire night. Missing guardians were classified as K.I.A. normally. The next morning however, when they classified her as a prisoner of war, the Titan did some digging around. The files described her last known location as Mars, now that wasn't right. He knew she was scouting on Venus because she had told him face to face before leaving. The files even mentioned a location, Charlemagne's Vault. Martin knew it vaguely. He knew it was a great place to loot, he knew it was a very large place, and he knew that it was very dangerous. As he landed on the harsh red dust that covered the planet he wondered who or what it was that would do this. The Cabal were the only real enemy inhabiting Mars and the culprit would have to be independent in nature to come here from Venus. He hoped Fália was okay. Charlemagne's Vault wasn't far off now. He looked at his G.P.S. to confirm the location and that's when his spirited lifted somewhat. The entrance to the Vault was only a mile away, but that wasn't what made the normally cool and controlled Titan gasp. Faintly, very faintly, blinking on the holographic screen was a small green dot, indicating that another guardian was nearby. She was here. Whether she was dead or alive, at least he had found her. The hulking soldier prepared for a fight when he walked up the steps to the entrance. Instead of a combatant though, he only found the cumbersome corpse of a dead Cabal Legionarre blocking the surprisingly small door cut out of the side of the cliff overshadowing it. He pushed the hundreds of pounds heavy body out of the way and examined the door more closely. Etched into it simply was the symbol of the emperor of the long fallen Holy Roman Empire, an authoritative iron crown. He was puzzled by this and walked inside, using all his strength to push the stone door inwards. Instead of the entrance he expected, he only found a strong looking spiral staircase descending deep into the darkness. "Damnit, I hate the dark." Martin whispered to himself before fastening a flashlight on the end of his shotgun and slowly descending. The staircase ended in a long dimly lit hallway. He walked with reflexes tensed and with caution, finding another dead Cabal on the other end. The hallway opened up into a large room lit only by high hanging chandeliers and the blue glow of Glimmer that was littered all over the floors. Martin had no mind for greed right now though, his only concern was finding Fália and killing whoever did this. He had determined that this was an intelligent being that had done this. No beast could have plotted such a masterful and precise course of action, and besides, it took skill to take down two, no six Cabal. Four more were heaped in a pile in the corner of the room. More cautious now then ever, Martin found a long ramp descending down into another section of the complex Vault on the opposite end of the chamber and followed it. The Vault followed a pattern like this for several more minutes until Martin, now scared out of his wits, felt that the Vault was hotter down here. Sweat dripped down his forehead inside his helmet. He felt that he was getting towards the deepest chamber as he descended an especially long ramp. This room was excellently lit for some strange reason, and the Titan removed the flashlight. He looked around and found a strange event going on far to his left. In the center of the left portion of the huge chamber a diabolical contraption stood. It seemed to be powering up, but this didn't disturb Martin so much as it slightly put him off. The real cause for disturbance was the great amount of insane giggling that echoed in the vast room originating from a person standing beside a large cage next to the machine. Colin couldn't help himself. He was so anxious to get started but the Milker needed to power up first. Fália was unconscious still. She had groggily waken up a couple of times, but he had taken care of that. "Hee hee hee hee!" He broke into another laughing spasm as the machine registered that it was ready. Martin watched with horror as the Warlock jumped up and down like a child in a candy store when the machine made a ghastly sound like a mix between a blood curdling scream and the grinding of gears. He came back to reality when he saw Fália in the cage. "Fália!" He yelled with relief to see that she was alive and breathing. Colin stopped in his crazed ecstasy and slowly turned around. Who was this?! Why was there a Titan standing in his home?! Who dared to invade him in his moment of triumph?! "Who the -blam!- are you?" He asked with pure curiosity. "Whoever he is," said the diseased portion of his mind, "I should kill him now." "Let her go, now." Was all Martin said before he rushed at the Warlock, shotgun raised. Colin took a deep breath and thrust his left hand outwards. A black bolt of energy lightninged at Martin's feet and sent him flying. Everything was a blur, all Fália saw was stars and...what was this? Lying just outside of the cage she found herself in was something that would do her just fine. That bastard. Martin was unfazed as he shot back up and whipped out the rifle strapped to his back. Colin took cover behind the thick metal Milker and knew that the intruder would have to reload sometime, and when he did.... Fália struggled but eventually got to her feet. She used what she found to break open the door to her freedom and her revenge. That bastard. The sound of the bullets exploding from Martin's rifle drowned out all others. He would destroy that crazed Warlock. He would have at least, if his barrel hadn't ran out of ammo. This was his chance. Colin ran out and jumped. Arms high, the power of eleven guardians including himself flew down into his fingertips. Contact was made, deadly force used, and a dead guardian crumpled to the floor.
-
3 of 5 She was going to kill the bastard. No matter what it took or however long it took her, Fália wouldn't rest until she saw a knife through his throat. That warlock had betrayed her twice only for his own personal gain and she was determined to get even. The growl sounded closer now and her wrist was stick attached to that infernal pipe. Fália had no choice but to wait and she knew that whatever she was waiting for was not going to be happy to see her. A sudden sound echoed through tunnel, it was the slow clack of what sounded like hooves on the frosty cold concrete of the floor. The huntress wasn't surprised in the least by the coupling of the two sounds and knew it could only mean one thing. The smell of rotting meat was palpable as the green glow filled the tunnel. The growling and clacking were unmistakably close as it revealed itself from the darkness of the tunnel and confirmed Fália's suspicions. The space zombie's drool formed a trail as it slowly made it's way toward the cornered guardian. She had no idea how it had gotten into Old Russia, let alone how it had came to be on Earth. The Hive was only supposed to be present on and around the outer bodies. It must have gone through a lot to get there though. The damn thing was starving. normal Hive are already skin and bones, but this creature was ROTTING. That solved the mystery of the smell, and the three small holes meant to be eyes drilled in its skull by some cruel world's evolution had been the source of the green glow in the tunnel. Fália stood up as far as the waist high pipe would allow and prepared to defend herself. Colin, being the asshole that he is, had taunted her by taking and placing her shock dagger right outside of her reach. The half dead Hive picked up speed now, getting a fresh whiff of her scent. It closed in and lunged with both arms, razor claws spread wide. She dodged to the right, tripping the bedraggled creature over the chain. It barked and hissed as she stood over it and efficiently stomped its head in with her boot. Her quick wits gave her a bright idea. Kneeling over the limp body of the zombie, with great force she ripped out one of its long razor sharp teeth and started cutting through the rusted iron of the pipe that trapped her. There was almost an irony in her escape; her use of her peril as a means of freedom was almost poetic in circumstance. Fália had no inclination to try and radio a return ship from the city as she made her way out of the wall and into the rusted husk of what used to be a powerful empire. She had a score to settle before she went back to her superiors. Being a huntress, she was especially adept at tracking and quickly found the warlock's trail. She would track him to the ends of the solar system if she had to. He seemed to have made shelter in the smaller housings and buildings and not any that the Fallen would bother to inspect. She had to remember that this wasn't any normal enemy. This was a fellow guardian, ruthless and cunning, willing to do whatever was needed to survive. He made that quite clear with the note he wrote her after he betrayed her in the wall. Not to mention, he also intended on taking her powers for himself before she had given him a good blast in the side from her hand cannon and was forced to jump ship. That was another thing to consider. Even though the Fallen had tended to his wound, it was bound to be bleeding again by now. He must have been weakening this entire time. That was also most likely the reason he left her to the Hive rather than finishing her off himself; either that, or he was just being nice...bastard. She spotted something in the distance. Crouching behind a rock, she used the binoculars programmed into her helmet to get a closer view. It was. It was him. He was a good three mile away, but he was struggling. "Not so tireless after all; huh, Exo?" She murmured under her breath as she continued to jog on after him. Colin made his way deeper into the city. She tracked him to a rusted office building on the outskirts of the once great city. He was really losing blood by this time. Fália could see the crimson fluid splattered all over the floors and walls. She silenced herself now, knowing she was drawing closer. Moving very slowly and very carefully, she saw the light of a fire in the centre of the floor. Taking cover behind a cubicle, Fália peered behind the corner and saw him. It didn't make sense. He was standing there with as much strength in himself as when she met him, poised and standing in a way that just gave off a sense of self control. He was also looking straight at her. She knew he had planned all of this now and strode out to face him. "Did you really think I was weakening that much? I didn't suck the power and souls out of 10 guardians for nothing Fália. It's going to take much more than that to kill-" He had to duck to avoid the knife launched at his chest. "Okay that's it you bitc-" The kick in the crotch was simple payback. Colin collapsed and narrowly missed being kicked in the face several times. He rolled to the left through the fire he created from several mouldy office chairs and came up arms ablaze and blind jabs flying. Fália was a huntress after all and her reflexes greatly outmatched his. She dodged his blows easily and kicked him to the ground again. "-blam!- you." was all she said before she planted her boot on the beaten warlock's chest, pulled the dagger out of the wall, and was blinded by a searing light. She sliced wildly and even hit her mark a few times, but something hit her head hard and the last thing she heard before she fell unconscious was Colin's voice saying: "Nice try. That hurt greatly, but this isn't the first time I've been beaten in hand to hand combat. A compressed nova bomb will normally shift the fight in my direction. The knee to the head doesn't hurt either. You almost got me but your powers are mine now."
-
1 of 5 As she fell to the ground, Fália didn't feel betrayed, she only felt...peaceful if that was the right term to describe it. She was tired of this universe and its trivial ways and was relieved to be free of it at last. whatever waited for her on the other side must have been better then this. 5 hours earlier, Fália sighed as she made her way out of the tower bay in her ship. The graceful huntress had been assigned the task of scouting out the Vex Citadel on Venus by her superiors, who she slightly despised because of the boring and business like manner that they experienced life. SHE had been out in the restricted zones. SHE had seen the majesty of the solar system and knew that it was only a matter of time before it imploded with its own violence and tragedy. As she descended into the Venusian jungles an hour later several miles outside of Vex territory, she cloaked her ship and electrified the hull to incline any animals that got too curious to go the opposite direction. She jumped onto her pike and silently entered the territory under the cover of a moonless night. As she drew closer to the perimeter of the citadel, she programmed the pike to return to the ship and continued on foot. Fália felt a chill in the normally warm Venus air, knowing this was a sign that the citadel was close, due to the Vex's strange preference for cold. The guardian pulled her cloak closer around herself and continued. The floating structure loomed over Fália on the high ridge she crouched on. She unstrapped her sniper rifle, Escape from Pain, from her back and viewed a strange seen below her taking place. Explosions peppered the ground far below her as a battle took place. She spied several Vex with her high powered scope, circling a lone figure. They appeared to be having a rough time as shadowy energies ripped through their thin metal bodies. The figure appeared to need no assistance, and Fália assumed it to have to be a warlock, having such mastery over magic and prowess in combat. As the last Vex fell to the ground, Fália slid down the side of the rocky ridge and dropped her rifle on the ground in universal peace. The warlock noticed her and walked over, lowering his weapon, a small sub-machine gun, as well. "Hello there!" He greeted her, kicking a Vex head out of his way as he strode up. "Scouting out the Citadel I take it?" "Very astute of you." The Huntress replied, shaking his hand and recoiling. "Sorry!" He apologised for the wave of the energy that had flown into Fália's body when they embraced. "My power's still flowing after that scuffle, I do hope you are alright." "I'm fine!" She detested being pitied and quickly regained her cool. "It's nice to meet you out here, I thought I was the only one assigned to this zone right now." The Warlock stood back and explained, "Really? Now that's a surprise, it's very dangerous for one person to be doing a job like this. Non the less, I'm freelancing tonight. I have friends in high places that allow me to bend the rules, my name's Colin by the way." Fália was puzzled. She had heard about the freelancing guardians and had always admired their independence, yet she was slow to trust. "Colin? That's an unusual name for a guardian, especially an Exo guardian." She noted his race as she analyzed the tall and composed warlock. "Never the less it is my name," he retorted sharply, "However I have still not learned your name." She both admired and hate how bold he was being to a person he had just met. "Yes, of course. I'm Fália." She offered her hand again, knowing he had probably cooled down by now. They shook successfully and he offered to help her in her endeavor. "Thank you for offering but I don't really need the help." "Oh, I insist. The Vex are particularly alert tonight." He swept is arm out, gesturing to the piles of seared metal littered around them. Fália hesitated but eventually agreed, "I suppose you're right, I won't need much help though, I'm only here to take pictures and collect a few A.I. samples." "I won't bother!" He promised, holding up his hands in surrender. Fália strode silently onward. Colin followed her, malevolent purposes racing through his mind. An hour and 37 Vex later Fália was prepared to leave and thanked Colin for all his help. He shook her hand again, a malicious smile hidden under his helmet. She turned to her now arriving pike and secured her samples and camera to the back of it. "I really did enjoy your company, but oh well." Colin sighed. Fália didn't have time to turn around when she realised his intentions. The pain was as searing as the sun. She gasped as another nova bomb struck her back. She collapsed and her vision became hazy. "It's nothing personal, the pain is temporary and I don't mean to kill you. Once I study and milk out the power the Traveler has given you, you will be free to do as you wish. Sweet dreams!" Fália wasn't in peace. "Damnit," she thought in a blur as she lay in Colin's ship's storage bay. She pulled out the hand cannon she had hidden in her cloak. "At least the bastard was too arrogant to search me." A few short minutes later, she was plummeting a mile up over Old Russia hoping for a miracle.
-
2 of 5 High above the cold dark expanse of Old Russia, free falling a mile up, Fália was in a panic. That warlock bastard Colin had underestimated her and hadn't anticipated her to have a hand cannon strapped to the inside of her cloak, which was currently gripped incredibly tight in her hand. She'd given the crazy asshole a good blast in the side before she'd jumped ship. As she fell, thoughts raced through her head at insane speeds. She knew that there was only a very dim glimmer of hope she could possibly survive this, but she was prepared. She sighted her savior and knew it would hurt, very much so. The ground was rushing up faster, and now that she was below the lowest hanging clouds, an icy lake came into view, but it was at least a hundred yards to her right. Luckily, she remembered her jump pack. Under normal circumstances, she used it to reach vantage points while she was scouting or providing cover for her fellows, but this wasn't a normal circumstance. She pushed it to the brink and hoped for the best before she hit and everything became murky and black. The huntress awoke to great pain and a vicious and ugly sound, and she knew it could only be the voice of a Fallen. She instinctively grasped her side for her hand cannon but only found the cold metal of her leg armor. groggily, Fália's vision came to her and she found herself very suprised. Firstly, she was suprised that she was staring at the ground as she quickly realised that she was being carried. she tried to turn her head to view her carrier but that only sent a wave of pain through her body. She looked up, which was less painful and found her suspicions confirmed; it was a squad of Fallen. Damnit. They must have fished her out of the lake and taken her prisoner. Her second suprise came as she found who was being pushed and jabbed to walk faster behind her, the one and only power-crazed bastard Colin. It gave her pleasure to see that the wound from her hand cannon was deeper than she had originally thought. He raised his head, saw that she was awake, and smiled. "Hello there!" He said weakly and coughed, "You gave me quite a scratch you know, but it's nothing I can't handle." He gasped and flinched as the fallen behind him elbowed him hard on the head and pointed to his rifle to indicate to Colin to shut up or he would do it for him. He gave her one last glance and lowered his head again. They walked on for a few more miles and made camp under a starless night. The Captain, a large and especially ugly Fallen, personally tied them up in the center of the camp and managed to spit a few bogies at his two prisoners. A couple hours later, the two guardians had had their wounds tended to, only for the purpose of them having their health so their didn't keel over before torture and interrogation could be performed. They rested long enough to be able to form a plan. "There's no way that I'll team up with you, you prick." Fália was somewhat hesitant. "You know you'll never survive the torture," the warlock tried to persuade her, "and you'll never get out of here without my help." She knew he was right and had no choice but to comply. They formed their plan and waited for morning. At sunrise, they enacted their strategy. At gunpoint, Fália and Colin were slowly untied by two Dregs that grumbled under their breaths as they worked. The instant they were both untied, Colin took action. He stood up and cracked his neck, then he did something the Fallen didn't expect. Moving quickly, Colin thrust himself at the Vandal holding the gun and knocked him to the ground. Before the other Fallen could react, they all had either been blasted to bits or stabbed in the back by Fália, who had grabbed a shock dagger from one of the fallen Fallen. At the back of the camp, the Fallen Captain had been violently awoken by the shaking of an explosion. He ran out of his tent to find his men being slaughtered by the prisoners. This simply would not do. He activated his radio and issued a command to the rest of his squad that had found something special earlier that night. Fália and Colin sprinted away from the camp as fast as they could when they heard it. "Damnit!" Colin yelled as he ran from the bulletstorm flowing from his ship, "I forgot! They found me unconscious in it! I had just enough time to land before I blacked out!" "You deserve it bastard!" "Oh will you just shut up!" He stopped running and turned around. "What the hell are you doing?!" "Ending this shit!" He widened his footing and took a deep breath. A dark aura surrounded him as he focused his powers. Colin suddenly thrust his hands out above him and a black energy shot out from them, hitting the ship. The sound stopped all the Fallen following on foot. The screech of metal or metal and the booms of the explosions inside the cargo ship crippled the hyper sensitive ears of the alien creatures. The pair of escapees ran on, unfazed by it. They made it into the night. Fália's G.P.S. led them to the city wall, where they took shelter in the maintenance hatchways. The next day came and Fália knew she had been betrayed again. She woke up only to find that Colin was gone and that her arm was shackled to a pipe. She would have screamed curses at the world if not for an alien growl she heard disturbingly close. In a panic, she looked around to find something to defend herself with. Stopping, she noticed a note scrawled on a degrading newspaper. Simply, it read "Survival of the fittest, Fália-love Colin."
-
My ventilation system was damaged. Grit and sand began to fill the spaces in my helmet; some of the grit found it's way in between my teeth. The rusty grain left a terrible metallic taste in my mouth. My thoughts kept drifting. "Those Cabal bastards!" I said angrily. "They took Taurus!" "Just try to stay calm. We need to get you out of this storm." said Libra in a concerned voice. She gestured towards me, her sights set on the buried city. "They headed towards the Dust Palace." she murmured and gave me her cloak. It helped to filter the sand from the air. Her deed comforted me. We came across what appeared to be an old subway station. It's infrastructure dug deep into the dunes of the sand. Orange footprints speckled the floor into the building. "They definitely came this way." she said confidently. Libra and I slowly walked up the steps of the station. As we walked past the gates and entered the station I could hear gunfire deep within the corridors of the building. Libra and I nodded and darted towards the direction of the noise, hoping we could rescue our companion in time. As we got closer to the source of the struggle we could distinctively hear Taurus; heartily chanting an old war poem. "...For the strength of the pack is the wolf, and the strength of the wolf is the pack!" As we turned the next corner the sight that struck us was one that we would never forget. There was Taurus, standing atop the back of a Centurion, pulling his combat knife out of the neck of the beast. The bodies of Legionnaires scattered the room. He turned to us as if we were late to his party. "Loots in the corner." he chuckled.
-
Edited by Saxoclone: 7/13/2013 11:29:39 PMI title this short story "The Phoenix City." A storm of dust covered the barren landscape of Mars as a lone figure stood on top of a dune, his cloak flapping violently in the gale. For three days the Warlock had searched blindly through the red waste, guided only by the fading tracks of the Fallen. And for three days, he had found nothing but desert. But now something felt different. An unexplainable feeling of hope welled up within him. This had to be the place. The Warlock felt the power of the Traveler coursing through him, knowing that if he did not succeed now, he would die alone in the wilderness. It was his final chance. The Warlock closed his eyes. [i]Be brave.[/i] He released. With a deafening roar, the power of the Traveler erupted across the landscape, cutting through the storm and driving the sands away. Just as quickly, peace returned. A dazzling brightness drew the Warlock’s gaze. The Buried City stood before him, newly arisen after being covered by the sands of time. The twisted, ruined steel gleamed in the sunlight. The city once held millions of lives before becoming a tomb. Now, lost over hundreds of years, it was reborn. A testament to the will of humanity. The Warlock collapsed to his knee. He had sacrificed everything to find the city. This would be his final act. An outstretched hand suddenly came into view. A Titan, followed by a dozen others waiting for the Warlock’s signal, had arrived. In silence, the Titan pulled the Warlock to his feet. A Fallen scream from the ruins shattered the calm. The Titan nodded as the Guardians readied their weapons. No words needed to be spoken. Together, they would not fail. As brothers, they would reclaim the city. For humanity. For all that they had lost. For hope.
-
[u][b]Standoff[/b][/u] We stood in the city’s corpse, weapons raised and senses on edge. There were three of us: each come like vultures for our own morsel of ancient carrion, each determined to walk out of the rust-filled boneyard with a prize. I studied the Warlock in my scope. Lanky and cowled, they held a pair of pistols on me and the newcomer, a thick-shelled brute who brought to mind stories about the Titans, those who held the walls long past when most would have fallen and been forgotten. Their ordinance was real enough; a ballistic wolfshead was pointed at the steel ledge I hung from, enough of a payload to wipe out both me and the Warlock below. “So how’s this going down?” the Warlock asked, her singsong voice revealing much. The words [i]woman[/i] and [i]Awoken[/i] fluttered through my mind, attaching themselves to her image next to [i]sharp-eyed[/i] and [i]quick[/i]. “Looks like that depends on you,” the Titan responded. Gruff, with a telltale mechanical resonance. [i]Exo[/i], [i]brute[/i], and [i]cautious[/i] filled in his blanks. I twisted slightly to adjust my rifle’s aim as the Warlock shook her head, then holstered her weapons. “Then I suggest we stop acting like targets for the Fallen and start acting like the Guardians we are,” she replied, crossly. [i]Diplomat. Temper. Leader.[/i] The Exo tilted his rocket launcher up. “How about you, Hunter?” he shouted, “Do you still stand for the City?” [i]Patriot. Paranoid. Loyal.[/i] I lifted the rifle and spread my hands, undoing my harness clasps. The leather webbing snapped loose, and I tumbled in freefall down to their level. I landed on my feet this time. “Aye,” I said, powering down the rifle’s scope. “Now let’s talk about that signal which drew us all here in a right damn hurry.”
-
Sorry for going over the cap. Here's the edited version. No title. I see where are mission is taking us. A building two clicks of our position. Supposedly there are supplies in there. The Fallen are also there. I look at my comrades, a real motley crew. Some I just met, others I've known, but each has my respect. We advance forward, watching for patrols. As we move, an unusually large patrol exits the building. Twenty, followed by another ten, each carrying a crate of supplies. Before we can mobilize we notice something horrid. They have hostages. If we move, they die. I've killed many of the Fallen throughout my missions, never phased by the blood. But could I risk having the blood of a [i]human[/i] on my hands? Before I can give a command, my own charge in. They will declare the hostages having sacrificed their lives for humanity. Seeing their blood spilled on the sand makes me wonder if we have not already lost it. There are times where I question what we do to save ourselves. The violence, the loss. I wonder why we don't just die, escape. There are times where it feels like we have. But then I look up. I see it there, above our city. Hope for humanity. I realize that we don't give up because we can't. Humanity is something we humans don't give up, and seeing the Traveller there, above our species, above our world, I realize that we have a future. A future of joy, happiness, peace. The only way to get there is use what's been given to us and take back what is, and always will be, ours. So I step forward, strong in my conviction, gun in hand, and begin my mission. Praying for our dead. For our living. For myself. For our future. For our Destiny.
-
Edited by Ragashingo: 7/13/2013 1:38:11 AMThe rail system was working again. A few hundred years ago the same news would have caused a throng of unhappy, impatient travelers to cheer, Nairb thought. Now, there were no travelers. Just burnt cars, smashed buildings, overgrown piles of rust colored Martian sand… and movement! “Cover!” Jenn, the fire team’s Hunter yelled. Nairb scrambled forward and braced against a wall as a series of shots rang out from the rail station’s upper level. “Suppressing fire!” he ordered, looking towards Jenn, who had taken refuge behind what was left of one of the cars. “Missed!” she said, annoyance evident in her voice as her first shot went wide. “Suppressed. No further movement,” she reported with finality after the echo of her second faded. “Two shots Jenn?” Phil, the team’s Titan, teased. “You wouldn’t be firing ever again if I hadn’t just saved your ass. ‘Sides, damn rifle is giving me fits again… Wish I had the one that Vandal was using.” “So, Fallen confirmed?” Nairb asked, cutting off his teammates’ usual banter before it could begin. “Yeah… saw the extra arms as it went down,” Jenn replied. “All right. Double time into the lobby. Look for enemies and cover,” Nairb ordered. “On three. One… Two… Three!” “Clear,” each of the Guardians reported in turn after scanning their sectors. Before them the station’s main subway tunnel vanished into darkness. Only the occasional burst of sparks from an overhead conduit provided any light. “How many do you think might be down there?” Phil asked nervously. “I mean, it could be hundreds, more even…” “… and we’re just gonna wade in there?” Jenn concurred. “You want that rifle don’t you?” Nairb asked her. Jenn’s helmet tilted slightly as she examined her battered gun. “Sure, but…” she began. “Then we’re going,” Nairb said. “Let’s move!”
-
Take 2 [b]The Suns ray's scorching my already burnt face. With my back on the floor, I try tentatively to lift my self up of the floor. My head is banging but I've got the sudden urge to run to safety. I see a station, so thats the way I head. It's a good job I do because as soon as I reach the station, a gang of Fallen come racing round. They come to a stop, they seem to be looking for something or someone. (86) That's when I remember, the intel. I rummage around, trying to find it in my clothes, but it isn't there. That's when I spot the package lying where my body was once were. The fallen are still looking around, they're probably about 25 meters away. I try to make a plan to sneak around without them seeing, but it's futile. But try I must, at least I've got my weapon. I've started by crouching and firstly opening the door and head down the steps and hide behind a rock. Luckly they didn't see me. Now I've got a better vantage point, I can see my vehicle, it looks in order. As I was about to make my next step towards the intel, another batch of fallen arrive, but these were from a different house. That's where things escalated, it was now me vs Fallen vs Fallen. How luck can change. So the new plan, bolt it to the intel and ride off Into the sunset. Thats what I thought......[/b]
-
Edited by TheZealEffect: 7/13/2013 1:36:29 AM[quote]A time ago, this desolate Martian city stood proud and full. The dunes of red sand not the occupant, but the people its dwellers. Once a building, now a mocking tomb; this is said of each tower and home in the city. Only now to be revived from its coma, a lone fire team approaches. The Guardian taking point, Perdidit, is a fine boy. He does his job, and he does it well. Today his job was the recovery of a lost item, an audio diary, in the Viator building. This job was further away than his usual ones, but this place was sentimental. This building was owned by his family, and was the same place his mother died a year ago. He and his squad casually walk up the stairs to the building, there is no present danger. He remembers the last time he came here, it was with his mother, when they were ambushed. It was another fire team, they shot his mother right in front of him. He walks inside and tells his fire team to stay by the entrance, that he had some personal business to attend to. They are confused but obey, and Perdidit walks over to a nearby hallway. Last time he was in this hallway, he was carrying his mother’s body. He was shot in the foot and had to drop her, then fall out a side window. He looks at the end of the hallway, there’s a suit of Titan armor, his mother’s class. It’s not all together; he sees her glove and picks it up, it has something inside. [i]His mother’s hand[/i], with a notable bite mark on it, is inside. He turns around and sees the beast. Forgetting the job, he sets his helmet down by his mother’s, and stands. [/quote] I'm pretty sure I severely messed up on wording, but that 300 word limit is tricky.
-
Editors note: this is a short message for apologizing for any incorrect spelling and I apologize if I go over 300 words. The city has reported countless Fallen and Cabal guarding a vault in the Buried city located on Mars. I, as a Titan, saw this report and asked my friend Darla; a hunter, and my close friend Sean; a warlock, to help me secure this vault. We took my ship, the swordfish II, out of the city and set our destination on Mars. In the ship, we went over our battle plan and armed ourselves to the teeth for the impending battle. When we landed in Mars, we landed about a kilometer from the Buried City to be off the enemies sensors. Darla took point and led us towards the city. As we were traveling we were ambushed twice by small Cabal patrols; fortunately, I was able to wipe out half the patrol before Sean was able to kill of the last with a Nova grenade. As we were on the edge of the city. We noticed a Fallen warship hovering over the city. "We'll at least it's not a frigate." I said to my friends before we ventured into the city. We were able to sneak past squads of the Fallen with Darla picking off enemies with her silenced Long Rifle, The Splinter. We were getting close to the vault as Sean accidentally tripped an alarm and almost every Fallen and Cabal headed towards us. We rushed to the vault and Sean was able to hack some defense turrets around the vault to help us. Sean whipped out his ghost, Darla armed her sniper rifle and I loaded my LMG as a squad of Fallen came towards us. I fired the first shot at the first Fallen, who was a Dreg, climbing down the walls of a nearby building. The more I kept killing Dreg, more of them were coming down the walls. Sean's ghost, who he called Sparky, fired a lazer beam at a Fallen captain as Darla shot the captain's head off with her sniper. I was shooting Fallen left and right until the Cabal appeared by charging through rusted,deserted old world cars. As I was getting low on ammo for my LMG, another fireteam came in on Pikes and distracted the Cabal so Sean could wipe them all out with his explosive semi-auto assault rifle. Finally, a Devil Walker appeared and I fired at it with my rocket launcher. I emptied everything I had in it until one of the Titans who was on the other fireteam delivered the final blow to the tank. After the battle, Sean hacked the vault door and I agreed to split the reward with the other fireteam. As we entered the vault, there was enough loot for all of us to split. I also noticed an object that had me realize why the Fallen and the Cabal were guarding it. And we were all shocked to see what it was...
-
Edited by SpudSized: 7/13/2013 1:22:04 AM[i] I've given it a lot of thought- how I feel about this place, that is. This Buried City, this broken monument to the former glory of mankind. Its wretched stench, piercing even my advanced respiration systems, makes me nauseous. The dilapidated skyline is pathetic. It is complimented well by the tattered remains of society, including rusted cars, debris, and broken housing environments, which pepper the view at street level. Until you reach the Dunes of Metropolis, that is. Massive deposits of sand, collected against the buildings still grasping for the heavens, hide half the landscape, showing only the battered tops of the previous existence below. A pitiful sight to behold. These deposits slowly grow and regularly release particles back into the air, choking any hope for survival without proper filtration apparatus. They also provide the benefit of casting a sickly orange glow on the region, as the sun's unrelenting rays carve paths to the scorching hot surface. It is only by understanding how utterly miserable this place is that I remember why I came here: like most others, to scavenge like a rat. Digging into the Dunes of Metropolis and ransacking the Station for leftover supplies is commonplace. The occasional exchange of pleasantries, or lethal discharges of ammunition, still take place. The latter is happening right now, in fact. The towering skyline provides me a point of reference, as I weave from broken buildings into a debris dump bordering the base of the Dunes. Rising from cover, forcing my opponent to face the blazing sun, I fire a single round. The familiar hiss of a punctured oxygen tank blesses my ears. Taking in the sounds of a windpipe deprived of clean oxygen, I resume my stroll across this Buried City, which I love [b]so much[/b].[/i]
-
The once sprawling city is only a lawless backwater these days. The only ones crazy enough to call this their home are those who have been exiled from The Last City and those desperate enough to try a scratch a meager living here. On the outskirts of this skeleton of civilization rests a disheveled saloon. Its patrons are brawling drunks, gamblers, and swindlers. Even on the busiest nights, one stool at the bar is always left unoccupied. On the seat is carved "The Exterminator". On one typical night amidst the intoxicated raucous came a thunderous BANG. The swinging doors flew open, and in the doorway stood a hooded figure. A hush fell over the crowd and the man stepped in. They all knew who he was. He's a Hunter and the closest thing they had to a sheriff. He earned his title of The Exterminator for his uncanny talent of keeping the Fallen raiders out of town. His marksmanship is legendary and the folk say that he had once picked a gang of Fallen rustlers off of their speeding Pikes from half a mile away. He made his way to his stool (which was always kept vacant out of respect), took his seat, and said to the bartender "Two X's". Just then, another crash was heard at the entrance. The people collectively gasped as they laid eyes on the newcomers. It was a pair of wandering Fallen dregs, hoping to pull off an easy robbery and to kill the hapless occupants while they were out of their wits. They had come to the wrong place; all in one motion The Exterminator stood up, pulled his gun out of its holster, and fired a shot into the aliens' heads, right in the middle of their multiple eyes. As they collapsed onto the floor, he calmly put away his weapon, sat back down and said "On second thought, make that three X's"
-
The sand kicked up beneath the Titan’s boots as he strolled through the desolate alleys of the forsaken city. This city was one of the many long lost relics of humanity’s past – a Golden Age unlike any other the world had seen before. What drew him to the city? Was it for the treasures that could be found beneath the sands? Was it just to remind himself of the past and what he was fighting for? He had ventured beyond the safe haven of the walls that surrounded the Last City so that he could protect humanity. His intent was to be noble, courageous, and selfless when he left his only home behind him. Now in this husk of a city did he question himself. Was he really doing this for humanity? Did greed for treasure overcome him? What he did not know was this city – though it looked empty – was still alive. Dangers lurked in the old buildings, enemies who wished root out humans stalked the ruins. But it was not just the aliens that were a threat; other treasure hunters scavenged the empty halls of the buildings. The Titan, who was one to keep up an appearance of courage, was disheartened at the abandoned city. The sound of shrieks echoed through the alleys as a group of Fallen rushed out to attack the lone wanderer. The Titan fired at them, steadily walking back to put a wall behind him to avoid being flanked. The enemies continually came at him, but a loud crack filled the air. Perched in the ruins of a building was a Hunter who fired his rifle at the onslaught of Fallen. “Why is he here?” Thought the Titan, “What drives him?” But this question had to wait for the time being.
-
Can we submit more than one?
-
The wind swept wide and the wind swept low. Sand lifted and fell. Dust swirled. The searing sun pounded the back of Mandroreyayl Derowin, his grey cloak doing little to stop its punishment. Mandroreyayl lay, stretched out on a small dune overlooking the ruins of a city. Mandroreyayl lay, stretched out wounded. Dying. He could only watch as a small contingent of Cabal marched toward the ruins. It took far too much effort for the Guardian to lift his head. His right arm lay outstretched from his body, bent and bloody. His breathing was hard and ragged. His throat burned and his body felt like fire. [i]Damn, Cabal.[/i] Mandroreyayl let out a hoarse cough as he tried to work his left arm. At least that still worked. He began to work his legs. When he felt no pain, Mandroreyayl pushed himself up with his working arm. He let out a groan when as he felt a sharp pain in his abdomen. Looking down, he could see that his armor was broken through by some shrapnel. Mandroreyayl began looking around and his heart sunk. He bit off a cry at the scene before him. Bodies were all around him. Guardians and Cabal alike. His dry eyes teared up as he gazed upon his friends he had known for years. Mandroreyayl stumbled over to his nearest comrade and cradled her head in his lap. He reached deep down into himself, crying out toward the Traveler and the powers it gifted. [i]Please, just live. Don’t leave me alone.[/i] Brilliant light shone from his hand and enveloped the dead Guardian. Nothing. The dead remained dead. Mandroreyayl’s heart calmed, his breathing became even. Rage filled him. The Traveler’s powers filled him as he stood and hobbled toward the Cabal. Dead remained dead. That never changes.
-
A dead city, slowly being reclaimed by the shifting sands, that was the Hell the Hunter now found himself in. But that was the life he'd chosen, wasn't it? He'd struck out looking to find his fame and fortune among the stars, become a legend. But that had been years ago, and all he had to claim was what he carried with him from the crash. He continued on regardless, marching through the silent city, and it was maddening. .. Somewhere overhead cold eyes tracked his progress. He started thinking… Maybe he was already dead. Maybe this was just the transition to the void. Maybe he didn't survive the crash. He was back in the crater, bleeding into the already blood colored sand. Maybe. Maybe. Maybe. He rounded the corner then, and saw it; the Construct. And there, in the failing light, its edges blazed with the light that legends were made of. He couldn't be dead. Not yet. Not now. The first round struck him then, punched clean through his pack, his armor… flesh and bone. He dropped to his knees. He didn't feel the pain, all there was the Construct. His calling… His legend. The third round struck low, his left shoulder, and the force of it spun him away from the Construct. The magic was broken. The pain finally registered. A final shot rang out among the ruins… --- Back in the decrepit ruin of a building, the shooter, another Hunter, pulled their own sun-bleached hood off from over their helmet and sighed. "Gone." The Hunter would deal with the body in the morning. If there was still one left to deal with. The light was failing, and that was when the city, and the real monsters, came out. Welcome to hell.
-
For the first time in my memory, my feet dragged. I was tired – exhausted, even. My head was starting to feel woozy, and the sky was populated by swimming black dots. Much more of this and I would certainly pass out. According to my HUD, target location was only another two-hundred meters out. My whole body longed for rest, a chance to plop down and empty my canteen. Once this stupid objective was complete, my contractors would supply me with everything I needed. Up ahead, what looked like a stony outcropping in the wind-blown sand came into view, only it wasn’t stone. It was a metal building. [i]The[/i] building. I turned. “What’s up, Grinch?” I heard the voice crackle through my radio. It belonged to Dave, the new black-op sniper standing behind me with his team. “This doesn’t look like a tango to me. Ain’t nothin’ here but us and dirt.” “They’ll be here,” I promised, struggling to keep my voice steady. If he even [i]detected[/i] a lie… “I’ll set up on top of this hill,” Dave decided. “If anything moves, it’ll be dead before it can say ‘ouch!’” Before I could respond, he disappeared up the sandy slope. The rest of the warriors shifted awkwardly. “I guess we’ll load up,” said one, cocking his rifle. “No,” I said firmly. “Wait.” Echoing footsteps rung out as Dave mounted the metal structure. His eyes were already darting around the vast landscape like a hawk’s, sniper at the ready. I held my breath. Seconds passed. “I see movement!” he cried. “Get ready!” Three shadowy figures emerged from behind a dune close by. Straight away, one looked right at me and nodded, as eerily and deliberately as a ghost. The signal. Without hesitation, I drew my pistol at Dave and pulled the trigger.
-
[quote]I was sat there, immobile and struggling to reroute what little power I had left to my transmitter. I thought of the many stories of brave journeys across endless deserts, and great merchant ships stranded on lost islands. Maybe it was my memory banks short-circuiting, or maybe it was the undying hatred for the billions of coarse grains of sand lodged in every aperture on my body. Either way, sand was all I could think about. Two days prior, I had been responding to a distress beacon from the Buried City. It turned out to be a trap laid by a small pack of Cabal scouts, clearly pining for a promotion from lookout duty. A lucky shot from one of their rifles had pierced my power cells, and I lost all motion in my left leg. I took them all out swiftly, before pulling myself into cover from the sandstorm I could see brewing in the distance. As I slumped into a corner against a wall, the ceiling above gave way, burying my body beneath sand and rubble. I tried to move my working leg and arms, but the sand flowed into the joints like water, jamming them into position. I was stuck. The only thing I could do was activate my own distress beacon, and wait... I could tell I only had a few hours of power left at this point, and assumed I was doomed to become one with the ruins of the city. I considered simply shutting down and giving up, as the sandstorm raged on. But then, over the howling winds, I heard a familiar voice. "Over there!" it called. I watched as a hooded figure materialised from the darkness of the storm. If only we Exos could smile; this would have been the perfect time.[/quote]
-
The one and his gun is the title I am a warlock I like to head in and kill everything usually. I love to not have to reload my weapon until all my enemy's are killed and if that fails who needs backup I have ammo. And if I run out of bullets then melee kills for the win. When the dust hit me I never thought I would see this much dust. This is an old city I walked in and I seen a sign that said enter at your own risk I laughed at this and continued to walk into the city I had a feeling that someone is watching any way. I went on until there was a wired noise and next thing I know the place starts to shake I fell into a hole I then got up and there was a door that leads into a cave. I contained into the cave until something shot me then it jumped out from behind me this thing went to stab me with my own knife I grubbed this creature and throw him to the wall. Then I went over to him and the creature tired to crawl away I got my knife and ran it true him. I seen a switch I turned it on and out came a gun that spoke and said I will guide you to the riches that you seek. so I picked it up it was a little heavy for a rifle I looked to see what the rounds were and there was none the voice said I don't use rounds I charged up from sun light and I was put here to help the person that found me and your that person but the riches are not here but I can help.
-
Edited by THE CHIEF64: 7/13/2013 12:54:48 AM[b]The Buried City.[/b] Once, long ago, this was a great and magnificent city. Over a hundred years ago this city was a home to thousands of citizens. The city was well known before it became lost and forgotten, but through the sands of time it was. War started to spread throughout the galaxy, and like a deadly virus soon it infected those within the city, now forgotten from our world. One by one the citizens started to leave, abandoning their hope thinking that somewhere else they may find safety. I knew that there was no safe place, and I would rather die in my home awaiting the inevitable end that was upon us all. As time went on, there became less and less of us. What was once a mighty people soon became a few hundred, then a few dozen. Until it was only I that remained here in the city, I don’t know if the ones who left became lucky in their search for safety, but I never regretted my choice to stay…. Soon they came, the creatures from another world beyond our rim, seeking the resources we had. They tried to wipe us out, even into extinction. The armies came and attacked the city, I can still see them in my nightmares, marching their forces, destroying all in their path. As I write my recollection of these events I don’t know if any will ever know of the truth, or even seek to find it. If one day the remnants of this city are to be discovered and excavated then you can find the truth buried in the heart of the city center. Pathways through the darkness….Per audacia ad astra [i]I await your arrival….Destiny awaits you.[/i]