Topic: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

What happens to Paradise gone bad?

It was a second chance for everyone, another chance to rebuild - a blank slate on which the lost and the newly dead were free to live out their ideal lives. Sadly, the peace and harmony of a thousand years has given way to conflict. An unbalancingly powerful artifact, God's Sword, has entered the world, with the power to unite or destroy entire countries. The world's most central nation, Utopia, guarded the artifact for many years in its capital Second Chance, the regent Augustus Lupus Bloodmoon refusing to allow anyone, even himself, to even look upon it. However, whispers of its existence spread quickly, and greed overtook the neighboring nations of Salamandastron, Nordenstadt, and Sanctus Petrus. Within a year of Regent Augustus's death, war broke out among the four powers over control of the powerful object. Within another year, Second Chance, once the most glorious, beautiful, and prosperous city in the entire world, was a ruined wasteland, torn asunder and blasted to dust by the fighting. God's Sword, the most brilliant work of craftsmanship and swordsmithing known to mortal eyes, lay in pieces, shattered into four shards each claimed and guarded by one of the four warring states.

The few survivors of Utopia, rechristening themselves as the Bloodmoon Order, is now a band of guerrillas fighting desperately to regain control of the land that is rightfully theirs, and their leader, Regent Septimus Deus Bloodmoon, believes that the power inherent within God's Sword will help them bring order to the chaos of the world. They guard their piece of God's Sword jealously and claim rightful ownership over the three remaining pieces. What technology they have left centers around the advanced projectile weaponry they have salvaged from the ruins of Second Chance as well as fast-attack buggies that can get them in and out of a fight in the blink of an eye. Of note is the fact that their piece of the Sword is the only usable one, containing the weapon's hilt as well as a small piece of the blade; even in its mutilated state, the shard serves not only as a weapon, but also as a powerful unifying force for the Bloodmoon Order.

The archipelago nation of Salamandastron, descended from a legendary band of pirates, controls the Western Sea with an iron fist. With the most powerful navy, bar-none, among the surviving factions, they are interested in nothing except economic prosperity at any cost. They believe that, using God's Sword, they will be able to bring the entire world under their rule and exploit it for untold wealth. With the eradication of Utopia's hyper-tech naval force, the nation of Salamandastron rules the Western Sea in fast, maneuverable sail ships complemented by gigantic, lumbering dreadnoughts capable of laying waste to whole cities with large batteries of cannons. On land, they use swords, primitive firearms, and cannons with frightening effectiveness.

The northern nation of Nordenstadt, a nation of arcanists isolated for hundreds of years by steep mountains and harsh, icy climates, is ruled from its fortress-capital of the same name by a long line of Magi appointed by a Council of Wizards. Its power draws from its citizens, coming from a great many worlds and practicing a diverse collection of arcane arts. They see the other powers as a potential threat to their craft, having developed a deep distrust of technological society from hundreds of years of isolation, and believe that God's Sword will grant them the solitude and peace they have lost. They have the only remaining air force, a blend of flying creatures and avatars that can scout large areas qujickly and rain death from above. On the ground, they fight with the crafts they have been taught, including archery, magery, and roguery.

In the South lies the nation of Sanctus Petrus. Formed from a devout order of monks, their monastery-cities have grown to harbor the pious from a wide variety of religions, including Christianity, Buddhism, and Saradominism. Differences among the religions are overshadowed by the overarching reality that they are the only Faithful Ones in a secular world. Sanctus Petrus's leader, High Abbot Innocent XV, believes that God's Sword was sent down by their Common Deity so that they may together eradicate the Unbelievers and thereafter live as one. Sanctus Petrus's warrior-monks are trained in a variety of disciplines, but the majority of their divine strength comes from their gods, especially the Common Deity, who was said to have walked the earth in the Creation Days. It is rumored that, by calling upon intervention from the Common Deity, the warrior-monks of Sanctus Petrus can stop bullets, sink the greatest warships, and even reduce entire armies to ashes, though no hard evidence exists to support the matter.

The war between the powers has now raged for two decades, and though the factions are growing tired, plagued by popular dissent, diminishing resources, and supply problems, they show no signs of stopping. God's Sword is as lucrative and attractive a target as it was twenty years ago, but no side is any closer to uniting the four Shards and reforging the Sword in its former glory.

What will it take to stop the fighting and find Paradise once again?

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Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"Septimus," a lieutenant growled.

"What?" the Regent barked back, crouching down, snapping his rifle forward from where it lay slung over his shoulder.

"I have a feeling that the pitiful Alchemist dogs are trying to sneak up on us," the lieutenant responded.

Regent Septimus snapped back, "Find them."

The rest of the platoon of twenty-five immediately fanned out, weapons at the ready, looking for where the suspected Nordenstadt ambush was hiding.

A shout. A gunshot. Suddenly, they were surrounded by Nordenstadt battle-mages.

Regent Septimus roared, and his men followed suit, spraying lead at the Nordenstadt warriors.

A bolt of lightning clipped the Regent's right ear, pinning one of his men cleanly in the chest. Regent Septimus ignored the man's cries of pain, mercilessly gunning down the battlemage that dared to try and make him bleed.

He ducked just in time to avoid the swing of another battle-mage's staff. He elbowed the Nordenstadt fool behind him, then turned about and gave him a good kick. The battlemage fell to the ground, and the Regent fired a few bullets into his skull.

Then, it was over. They had defeated another Nordenstadt ambush, but had lost three of their own men. "That was no scout force," the lieutenant remarked gruffly.

Regent Septimus replied, "We're looking at heightened Alchemist activity. Be on your guard, men."

The Regent nodded at the corpses. "Search them. Take anything useful. Leave the rest."

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Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"Fire!" Captain Ramsey yelled and the line of sharpshooters opened up. The new twelve-shot repeating rifles barked out in unison, shell after shell hitting the deck. The rifles had been based of off Utopian rifles, but were not fully automatic. Now that they had been approved by Military Command, the rifles had been put in mass production to replace the old single-shot rifles of the past. Ramsey drew his pistol and fired into the air, signaling them to stop. Silence hung on the air as the soldiers on the Utopian ship struggled to find out what had hit them. He smiled wickedly; the first deployment of the rifles had gotten the wanted effect. Suddenly a low level of moaning came from the wounded upon the Utopian ship.

Even from where he stood, Ramsey could see the deck was covered in the blood of many sailors, but he banished the thoughts out of his mind, they were the enemy. He drew his rapier, grabbed a rope and jumped off the side of his ship, yelling at the top of his lungs. The boarding crew followed him, shouting war cries and brandishing swords and pistols.

Ramsey landed on the Utopian deck and raised his pistol, firing off two more shots at incoming soldiers. He charged into a pack of them and slashed furiously with his rapier, cutting them down. A sailor saw his face and recognized him and ran screaming that the Devil had boarded them. Ramsey gave the Utopians another wicked grin before his men ran into them and cut them apart.

"Please! Spare me, please!" The Utopian Captain screamed as he was held against a wall in his cabin. Ramsey walked around, looking drawers and opening closets, inspecting the Captain's personal items and keeping a few things he liked. "Take what ever you want, but spare the lives of me and my men, I beg of you!" Ramsey turned, his pale blue eyes looking like ice as he stared into the Utopian's eyes.

"Pathetic worm, do you know who I am? I am Captain Brian Wolfric Ramsey, descendant of the Captain Ramsey who once called himself a friend of your long dead founder. Recognize the name? You should, because I'm the reason your navy no longer exists. I was a rat inside your navy for seven years, until I finally got my own ship and now you will see how I treat enemies of Salamandastron!" Ramsey yelled and drew his sword. He lunged forward, over a table and thrust the rapier thru the man's heart and into the wall behind him. The Captain's eyes widened and then glazed over, looking as if they had been frozen by a layer of frost, Ramsey's calling card.

"Get rid of the crew, take what your men want and prepare to send the ship towards Utopia in twenty minutes!" Ramsey said, giving them both icy stares. They simply nodded veterans of his crew and left the cabin. Ramsey continued to explore until he found everything of value, smiled, kicked the dead Captain's body and left.

George Smith Patton
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

The Bloodmoon Order, the de-facto power in Utopia, had several safehouses nestled in the ruins of Second Chance that operated as command-and-control. Using salvaged communications technology, they could keep in constant contact with each other and with the rest of the soldiers on the ground, functioning as a jury-rigged networked battlefield.

There was no main command-and-control base; the whole Order was massively decentralized to prevent crippling of the command structure. In practice, though, each safehouse's commanding officer determined its importance, and if the Regent were to stop by one, it would have an authority that overrode the others.

The Regent's platoon made its way to one such safehouse now, located in what used to be an industrial storage building. They looked about them and saw a motley collection of aging computer consoles, ammunition crates, and weapons racks interspersed among the few buggies available to them.

The safehouse commander nodded to them. "Welcome back, Regent Septimus," he said.

The Regent nodded back. "Still alive?"

"We do what we can," the commander responded.

The men of the platoon offloaded their plunder. From the skirmish with the Nordenstadt mages, they recovered several sets of robes and cloaks that could be cut up for spare cloth, as well as some trinkets and charms that could be melted into bullets. As well, they recovered the equipment of the three fallen platoon members: sets of now-damaged body armor and a trio of assault rifles, still good, as well as the communication headsets, boots, and wristwatches they had been wearing.

"I'll have my boys process what you brought in," the commander said.

"Very good," the Regent commented. "What news?"

The commander sighed. "That boat we stole from the Alchemists? Looks like it got blasted. Salamandastron got to it."

"Did they have time to send a report?"

"We mounted cameras on the boat. Looks like Salamandastron has repeating rifles now."

"Blast!" the Regent burst out in frustration. He sighed. "If Salamandastron has repeating rifles now, that negates one of the only advantages we have. Firepower."

"Oh, and another thing, Regent," the commander continued. "The Saints came by."

"What did they do?"

"Looks like they got to C&C 11 on the other side of town. Heavy casualties, some equipment's been raided, but looks like we fought them off."

The Regent thought for a moment. "How many positions do Salamandastron occupy again?"

"Their camps are mostly in the countryside," the commander responded, "but we know of two within the city. Looks like they've been stockpiling stuff for a while now." He pointed to their locations on the situation map on the nearby table.

The Regent nodded. "Do you have any rocket buggies around?"

"Two. What do you need them for?"

The Regent signaled to his men, ending their five-minute shore leave. "We're going to teach those pirate boneheads a lesson."

The Regent and his surviving platoon members climbed into six of the five-man buggies at the safehouse, two of them armed with multiple-rocket launchers, and the other three armed with heavy machine guns. The men checked their equipment and drove off toward a Salamandastron camp to the west.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"His Majesty is not only concerned about the outcome of this war, but the manner in which it is fought! From now on, Captain, You will take prisoners and obey the rules of engagement. You are one of our better Captains so there will be no punishment, yet. But mark my words, if you continue on this path, I will act against you!" The Naval Lord, commander of Salamandastron's Navy, yelled. "But, as you know, the Army is mostly a Marine Corp attached to our Navy along with defensive units. His Majesty is attempting to turn from the Royal Family's ancient greed and is now looking into something else. It is our goal to control trade over all water ways, yes, but we are changing our approach."

"Changing our approach? Is he reducing the Navy? The Navy is our greatest advantage over our enemies; we control the coasts, rivers and Ocean because of the Navy. If we reduce it, the Utopians can load their better guns onto boats and compete with us!" Ramsey replied hotly.

"No, it has nothing to do with the Navy. It

George Smith Patton
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."

6 (edited by [RPA] Matthias Bloodmoon 24-Jun-2008 01:41:33)

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

They were across the city in six minutes, turning a Salamandastron patrol into mincemeat along the way. They took the opportunity to salvage more ammunition, as well as some primitive firearms and swords that they could disassemble for scrap metal and firewood.

They hit the Salamandastron camp hard and fast, the multi-rocket launchers on the pair of rocket buggies tearing the camp's inadequate fortifications into Swiss cheese. With heavy machine guns and assault rifles, the Regent's platoon cut down the Salamandastron soldiers, who were unprepared for an assault, while avoiding the sporadic return fire from less advanced firearms.

The Regent's platoon dismounted, leaving only a driver and gunner in each buggy. The Regent roared like a madman, and all of his men followed suit. They charged, gunning down every last Salamandastron soldier.

The salvage work afterwards was rapid and hurried; they loaded what they could - clothing, armor, food, weapons, ammunition, technology, recyclables - onto the buggies, then climbed back in and drove off.

They were at the safehouse in another five minutes, narrowly avoiding several groups of Nordenstadt mages who were undoubtedly out for revenge.

"Welcome back," the safehouse commander said. "You got everything all right?"

The Regent grunted. "All in a day's work."

The safehouse commander nodded as his eyes turned to the plunder. "You're getting too good at this."

The Regent replied brusquely, "Is that a problem?"

"We're running low on fuel and rockets for those buggies," the safehouse commander warned. "Better to choose your targets carefully."

The Regent nodded. "The Alchemist dogs are on the warpath. We'd better hold off on expeditions for the time being. We'll need the supplies if they decide to pay us a little visit."

"Are you worried?" the commander asked.

The Regent lifted his battered uniform top slightly, revealing the hilt of the fragment of God's Sword that he carried with him.

"With this at my side? Not at all."


Far to the north, another power was brooding. Ten thousand miles away, tucked safely away in the northern fortress of Nordenstadt, High Mage Arasul was meditating.

He was suspending in midair the fragment of God's Sword that so many of his kin had died to retrieve and that so many more had died to protect. He considered the other fragments as well. Nordenstadt and Sanctus Petrus had pieces from the middle of the blade. Salamandastron had the point, and Utopia had the hilt.

From his position at the top of the Grand Tower, he could see plainly what went on in the fierce battleground to the south. Nordenstadt's already fickle presence inside Second Chance was fading, being beaten back by both Utopia and Sanctus Petrus from two sides, and their retreat into the portal at the south of the city blocked by Salamandastronist pirates.

He knew, as well, exactly where the other three powers kept their pieces of the Sword. Regent Septimus Deus Bloodmoon of Utopia carried his shard with him as a dagger - a foolhardy and na

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"Sir, can you smell that?" The helmsman asked quietly.

"Yes... a storm is brewing, soon the clouds will darken. Damn it all, if we run into any of those ships the Saints have supposedly gotten from God we'll be in a tough spot." Ramsey replied and took off his hat, adjusting it. "Well sailor, this is what its all about..." He said and put the aht back on. Pushing the man out of the way, Ramsey grabbed the wheel and began to steer the ship straight into the storm.

"What are you doing?"

"I guess its time to say the old family motto, passed down from the first Ramsey himself: 'The closer we are to danger, the farther we are from harm'. Besides, I've sailed through a storm many times, this won't be too difficult." Ramsey replied, hoping inside himself that it wouldn't be too difficult.

George Smith Patton
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

(OOC) I will post tomorrow, am tired now and my internet got fixed, Finally!

Then I lived.

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

Gunfire. Energy beams. The occasional thump of a grenade launcher. The occasional noise of a mounted railgun that once belonged to a warmech now lost in the ashes.

All around the Regent's safehouse, pandemonium reigned. The Nordenstadt mages, eager for revenge, were tearing into whatever they could without mercy, followed by Salamandastron soldiers who saw an opportunity to take advantage of the situation.

Regent Septimus fired for all he was worth at any enemy he could see. "Alchemist dogs! Filthy pirates!" he roared, first gunning down a squad of Nordenstadt mages, then a small group of Salamandastron warriors.

When ammunition ran out, the fight became personal. With fists, bayonets, swords, empty rifles, and staves, the survivors fought each other hand-to-hand. Regent Septimus seized the hilt of the sword fragment he carried and drew it; the weak sunlight glinted on what remained of its golden blade.

He stabbed powerfully into a Salamandastron soldier, who fell, too surprised ever to react.

He threw a mighty punch at a Nordenstadt mage, who was sent flying by the sheer force.

He spun around and slashed at another Salamandastron marine that was sneaking up on him; out of nowhere, a thousand cuts appeared, and what was once a Salamandastron soldier now collapsed into chunks of flesh.

Then, it was over. The dead from all sides lay strewn all over the abandoned remains of the warehouse they called Safehouse 4. Regent Septimus had lost two more of his men; also among the fallen were four safehouse staff, a platoon of Nordenstadt mages, and about twelve Salamandastron combatants.

Regent Septimus was plain. "Salvage what you can. Dump the rest."

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"Heave God damn you! Heave!" Ramsey shouted as he battled the wheel for control. Rain pelted the ship as monster waves tossed it about like a bath toy. Ramsey had underestimated the storm, which was now a giant hurricane, and now the convoy was fighting for its life.

"Sir! The waves are pushing the ships behind us out of the storm, but we're too far in, we're being sucked into it!" A shipmate shouted about the wind.

"Use a flare! Tell the other ships to get the hell out of here and continue around the storm! We'll meet them there!" Ramsey growled back as he thrust his weight against the wheel. "Take this!" The shipmate stepped forward and Ramsey bounded up onto the railing and leapt down to the main deck. He grabbed one of the mast's heavy ropes and pulled on it with all his might, spurring on the others to do the same.


"Very well, steer us out of this mess. We will take up the frontal position and lead the convoy around the storm." The Captain replied and looked out one of the windows of his cabin and saw lightning strike down on the Talon's deck.

George Smith Patton
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"How many rocket reloads do we have left?" the Regent demanded.

"Seventeen," the wounded safehouse commander responded; his arm was in a makeshift sling and his leg was bandaged.

"How much fuel?"

"These buggies are electric. We have twenty-five gallons of ethanol fuel left for the afterburners and the generator."

The Regent looked at the large pile of firewood to the back. "How much do you reckon we can distill from that?" he asked, pointing to it.

"The closest distillery is in C&C Three, about twenty seconds down Fifty-First Street. We estimate we can convert that into about twenty-five or thirty more gallons, if we do it all."

"What's the limiting factor?"

"We need that wood for fortifications."

The Regent considered. "Are there a lot of trees in the countryside?"

"Many of them have died, but there are definitely some."

"Can we work on setting up a camp next to what's left of the forest?"

"We have two of them, C&C 13 and 14, to the east of the city where we don't get too much action."

"Okay, fine. Are they shipping wood to our distilleries?"

The commander nodded to a nearby communications officer, who immediately started working the safehouse's computer. "Now they do."

"Excellent. Now for the rockets. How easily can we manufacture them?"

"Hmm... C&C 7 has the necessary machinery and technical expertise. We think they can churn out about three reloads every day as long as they're fed with materials. The materials, though, will be a challenge."

"Materials... metal we can do... what about explosives?"

"We've been able to plunder some from Salamandastron, but we can't obtain raw materials to produce our own explosives. The flaskheads say we can produce nitrocellulose for the bullets given ammonia, wood, and the right equipment, but getting ammonia's going to be the tricky part."

The Regent sighed. "Keep thinking about it. In the meantime... remember that bullets are my first priority."

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

To the far west, furthur then even Nordenstadt lay a very small village. Namely three houses surrounding a sizable farm. It held cattle and sheep which were situated in a small pen, with the rest of the farm dedicated to crops af various foods. Seventeen people lived here. The farmer and his wive with five kids between eleven and nineteen, and the other three families in the houses. The surrounding lands consisted of sparse amounts of trees and mainly lush green grass but a large river flowed close to the houses, which was the source of their water. It was popular legend that the river was created by the farmers great ancestors, one of the creaters of this world. It was said that when the creater was in anger, the river would burn red, but that had not happened in their life time. Another legend was told of when the river was a constant raging fire, when the eastern world was at the beggining and at the fiercest of war.

To the north of the town, past the few trees and just out of sight and knowledge a cave was cut into the gentle sloping hillside. Inside was a temple with a vast stair way into the earth. At the end was a vast tomb within which lay the legend himself, Flame. He was not truly dead, neither were any of the founding figures that raised the world. They were all in a very deep stasis, not to be disturbed until the time of greatest need. Nobody knew were these tombs were located, and the knowledge of the existence of their forebearers was lost down the ages.

This village had taken itself away from the conflicts of the east, although when they were very quite, they thought they could hear the explosions in the distance and sometimes fringes of mighty storms swept over them. Something was growing, everybody could feel it. The world seemed to get smaller around them and the peace seemed to press in on them. Something was going to happen soon, they all knew it.

Then I lived.

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

Somewhere below Arasul's chamber, in Nordenstadt's Grand Armory, the Armorer-General of Nordenstadt, Calas-El, was reviewing the Grand Armory's inventory.

He extended his hand out toward one of the many floor-to-ceiling weapons racks and summoned a staff into his hand. Staves were the main weapon of most Nordenstadt battle-mages. Simple and powerful, they served both as the most common spell focus in existence as well as a competent close-range weapon. Unfortunately, their slow speed and weight made them unsuitable for operations in tight, enclosed battlefields.

He inspected the staff he was holding, checking it carefully for defects, twirling it in the air to test its balance. The typical staff was about five feet in length, a relatively straight, thick staff of wood with a gem or an orb of glass secured at one end. Every staff was different, and though at least three guilds of craftsmen mass-produced them for training and emergency purposes, the most advanced arcanists carved their own.

The staff he was holding was made out of sturdy oak, with one end forking into three prongs that wrapped securely around a quartz crystal. Crafted by the Aardabas Guild, it served its purpose efficiently and without ceremony. He deftly tossed it into the air, whereby it flew back into its mounting bracket, ready to be summoned at a moment's notice.

He opened a small box resting on a table nearby, taking out a wand. Wands were much smaller than staves, about as long as a quill pen, and considerably more fragile, but no less powerful in the right hands. Issued mainly to non-combatants, they were less effective on average than staves, but drastically more useful at close range. Despite their small size, they could still cast all but the most powerful spells, and much faster than a staff could.

The typical wand was cut from a branch and infused with a core of magical essence that gave it its power. This core, typically from a magical item like a thread of enchanted gemstone or a shard of dragon bone, supplemented a wizard's innate skills, much like the gemstone or orb of a staff. Since the construction of a wand was a long, arduous, and complicated task requiring a great deal of skill and patience, with the best wands taking a lifetime to perfect, none were mass-produced. Anyone who required a wand needed to make their own or "inherit" one from another wizard.

He put the wand back into its box and closed it, then walked on a little and picked up a rod from a weapon bracket nearby. The rod was intended as a compromise between staves and wands. Manueverable and light enough to be lethal at close quarters, yet durable enough to cast the most powerful spells, a rod was the best of both worlds. However, they were a relatively new invention, and few had the privilege of owning them.

He put the rod back and moved on into a different section of the Armory, summoning a composite bow from where it hung on the wall. Proven by millennia of combat experience, the composite bow was a great improvement on the longbows of ancient times. Short yet powerful, their arrows could easily pierce plate armor. Additionally, Nordenstadt's archers used enchanted arrows, with different types of gems at the tip of each arrowhead to hold the needed enchantments. Some arrows exploded inside their targets; others flew perfectly straight, unencumbered by gravity or air resistance; others shattered into a cloud of lethal shrapnel that could incapacitate an entire platoon if aimed correctly.

He examined the bow in his hand for a while before placing it back and summoning a sword. The tried-and-true sword was still a useful weapon in an era of magic and technology, still capable of slashing through anything that got too close, though they were becoming obsolete as magic advanced. As most swords still used by Nordenstadt warriors were backup weapons, they tended to be of the shorter variety, often nearly short enough to be called daggers, but were still lethal to enemies. Swords could carry their own magic, as well, and an entire class of warriors, the ever-so-rare spellswords, still used them as primary weapons on the battlefield; as metallic focuses of magic, they could call down lightning upon unfortunate enemies and even slice through space itself, unleashing creatures from the Void upon foes.

Nordenstadt's air force was an interesting piece of work. Often indistinguishable from the creatures of nature, it could nevertheless turn the tide against unsuspecting enemies. Nordenstadt's armies could call upon the services of the Invari ravens, faithful scouts that could pinpoint the most secret of hostile encampments. They could also call upon the Great Eagles of the North, strong creatures that could lift supplies across long distances to the front. If fire support was desired, they needed only to call upon the Avara, winged magic-born avatars that could strike any target, anywhere, with a barrage of explosive spears that could tear apart anything.

Nordenstadt's navy, though, left something to be desired. Its old, obsolete boats armed with ballistas and fire arrows could not stand up to Sanctus Petrus's blessed ships, supposedly sent down by God himself, or to Salamandastron's dreadnoughts armed with batteries of cannon sufficient to shell a whole coastline into oblivion, or to any surviving Utopian carriers, if they still existed, each one with enough munitions to level a small country.

However, Nordenstadt had no real reason to develop its navy. Nordenstadt thaumatologists, or magic researchers, had recently come up with a way to open direct portals to certain points within the world. Such portal points were spread out across the entire world, with locations conveniently available within strike distance of all the major powers. However, Nordenstadt's magic allowed the empire to sustain only one portal link at a time, and for whatever reason, Arasul demanded that it be located in Second Chance.

Personally, Calas-El would rather it be in Salamandastron, but Arasul had his reasons, or so Calas-El supposed.

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Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"We have given the local government the letter, as well as unloaded the entire cargo of weaponry. I think it best that, in light of Sanctus Petrus's new navy that can supposedly stand up to us, that the rest of the ship stay here to boost the islands naval defense." The Captain said, as he looked Ramsey up and down. The Captain was dry, but the water had taken its toll upon him, and his ship. Holes and gashes were visible on every part of the ship, made by destructive lightning. Ramsey's crew had taken many casualties but still held high spirits.

"I agree... in the mean time, my surviving crew will take your ship back to Salamandastron, while you stay here and begun repairs on the Lark. His Majesty will want to hear of these developments immediately." Ramsey said. The Captain began to respond but Ramsey cut him off. "Need I remind you that by completing this task, I have been made Commodore? I am now a Flag Officer of His Majesty's Navy. Now get your ship prepared and stocked with extra provisions, I plan on leaving at first light tomorrow."

Ramsey walked off quickly and headed towards an Officer's barracks. As soon as he entered he dropped onto a cot and slept. While he slept men were busy running up and down gangways, loading supplies and moving items off of the Sparrow, the ship Ramsey planned on taking on the return journey.

"He

George Smith Patton
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."

15 (edited by [RPA] Matthias Bloodmoon 30-Jun-2008 05:50:15)

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

Arasul sighed, relaxing his concentration from the weather spell he had summoned. Once again, Salamandastron's finest had weathered the comparatively feeble hurricane he had summoned at them. This was going to be difficult. If only he could get closer, though...


Regent Septimus awoke abruptly from where he was nestled in a corner of the safehouse. He reached for his water canteen, drinking deeply, then got up.

The night-shift commander nodded to the Regent as he approached. "Good morning, Regent," he said. "Sleep well?"

Regent Septimus shook his head. "I never do. Did I miss anything?"

"Nope, doesn't look like it. Those pirate boneheads need as much sleep as we do, all four hours' worth. And the lazy Alchemists need more."

Regent Septimus nodded. "Weaknesses of being human."

"Of course. The Jaradan Order contacted us this morning. They've reviewed the alliance documents you sent them last week, and their response seems favorable."

Regent Septimus scoffed. "Of course it was favorable. All they want is a piece of the sword. My sword." He paused a moment, then shrugged. "Are we supposed to take their gesture as meaning they accept our proposal?"

"Yes, with your approval."

"Fine. Let them know I buy their sympathy."

"Done."


"Pater noster, qui es in caelis..." the monk whispered.

He lived as a hermit on the shore of the Western Sea in a small chapel on the top of a sheer cliff. On the ground floor, in front of four benches set in two rows, was a small altar in front of a stained-glass image of a religious figure. To the rear of the chapel, a spiral staircase led to the upper floor, consisting of two rooms - one with a rather large bell, the other serving as a bedroom.

The monk lived a simple life, dedicating most of his waking hours in the service of God. When he was not praying, he was tending to the fields of flowers around the chapel, or tending to the small farm where he grew vegetables. At night, after locking up the chapel, he slept and dreamed of Heaven, of the time that Humanity might one day set foot on its doorstep.

Although his chapel was many miles away from civilization, that didn't mean it wasn't well-visited. This chapel was no ordinary hermit's home, but actually the equivalent of a military outpost for the nation of Sanctus Petrus. With God's grace, armies of warrior-monks could materialize in the chapel, sent from the capital of Paterdomus, ready to fight off any enemy incursions from the sea should the need ever arise.

"...sed libera nos a Malo. Amen," the monk concluded. Just as he finished saying these last words, the candles on the altar suddenly flared up, and a column of pure white flame descended from the sky, landing on the chapel floor. The flame cleared away, revealing a tall man dressed in priestly attire. The four-pointed star he wore identified himself as a Saradominist, differing from the monk's own Christian teachings but nevertheless no less welcome.

"Welcome, Father Aereck," the monk greeted the Saradominist priest.

The priest nodded. "Thank you, Brother Adrian. Do you know why I'm here?"

"Do tell."

"We are in trouble. Salamandastron is on the move. Even now they are sending ships in the direction of this outpost."

"To my chapel? Well, we shall give them a proper welcome then."

"A plan is in motion as we speak."

"Does it involve God's Armada?"

"See for yourself."

The two of them traveled out into the sunset air, looking out toward the ocean. As Father Aereck raised his hands in the air, whispering in Misthalinian, great columns of light shot down from the clouds, creating splashes of pure white where they landed. As the clouds of divine mist cleared, the two saw a small fleet of about fifteen mighty, majestic ships float gently along the ocean waters.

"The Salamandastron pirates will soon know divine wrath," Father Aereck whispered.

"Is there anything I need to do?" Adrian asked.

"Do what you have always done," Father Aereck replied. "Hold the chapel." He looked up to the sky as if someone up there was calling him. "I must go now," he said, turning back to Adrian. "Saradomin give you grace."

Adrian nodded. "God be with you, Father."

Father Aereck raised his hands into the air and turned into a column of white flame that flew up into the clouds and vanished. Adrian turned back to the ships. Few that they were, they were nevertheless fine pieces of work indeed. Propelled and guided by God's blessing alone, they needed no crew, and they could never be captured. Though they were forbidden from mounting cannon, they still had a few tricks up their sleeves - warrior-monks could be called from anywhere in Sanctus Petrus to board enemy ships, and the ships themselves could manifest God's wrath in mysterious ways. Though Adrian had never personally seen them in action, he had heard stories of Nordenstadt ships set aflame by streams of divine fire, as well as other stories of enemy ships simply breaking apart into a mess of planks, the nails holding them together inexplicably vanishing.

Adrian turned around and put these violent thoughts aside, locking up the chapel for the night and heading upstairs, while somewhere outside, a small piece of God's Armada sailed northward to meet Salamandastron's navy.

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

Marcus Harmen, the leader of the small village to the west stood in the porch to his house, looking to the east. Almost out of sight, he could see dark clouds breaking. Another storm had passed without incident. The sun was setting, and it's light seemed to be pulled back from the land. Marcus decided to take a tour around the farm, checking the livestock and the crops before the night set in. He spent the next few hours making sure everything was fine and headed back to his two-story house. Furthur west past the forest of dark elder trees, in the well hidden fortress of Geldor, the soldiers were getting ready for the night that lay ahead. The archers were seated at three foot intervals along the walls and the lanterns were cast low low so as not to reveal their position. Deeper within the walls were the living spaces and the training facilities. Furthur inwards was the Order of the Flame, deep under ground.

The order was dedicated in keeping the shards of the Great Sword apart, for if they were ever reunited again...

The order specialized in fire magic and could cast just about any Fire spell and could manipulate and create any sort of fire. The order was small, numbering twenty people. Their temple was far beneath the ground where the warmth was great and their spell casting was easiest and strongest. In the direct heart of the temple was a pit of fire, where the Order congregated and practiced their art. The arch-mage of this generation was talking with his second and third about the impending attack of Salamandastron and how best to make a stale mate for the two sides.

An aid came forward and relayed news of the other warring factions. The Arch-Mage thanked the man and continued on with his discussion.

Then I lived.

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"Bleh," he said.

He looked all around him and discovered that he was in a cave. Outside, he could hear harsh winds. He followed the sound and found the cave entrance blocked by a heavy stone.

"They don't call me Father of Second Chance for nothing," he whispered.

He straightened up and barked harsh words at the stone blocking his way... and the stone moved aside, too ashamed to speak. He stepped out into the morning light and was carried off by the winds that chronically blew over the Northern Mountains.

The winds carried him northward; as he spread his arms, he turned about and glided south. He had known many things in his day, but not flight such as this.

He looked down for the first time and realized why. He was spirit made solid, made of a gossamer material lighter than space itself.

He knew why he had been called back, of course, but by whom?

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

He knew he should feel wet, with all this water around him. He saw fish swimming passed, as if he wasn't there. He looked at himself and paused. His was a spirit. Thats very interesting, He though to himslef and swam upwards, breathing normaly.

He was in the middle of the Ocean, far away from all human life. Oddly, He knew why he had been brought back, yet couldn't know by whom or from where. He saw a deserted island and swam, with inhuman speed, towards it. He always liked coconuts.

George Smith Patton
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

His gaze turned southward to Second Chance, and a bitter expression formed on his face when he saw what they had lost. He could taste the smoke from a thousand battles; the cries of a million dead brushed past his ears.

He howled with fury, and far away, the pieces of the Sword came to life, and a certain river in the west turned blood-red...


Regent Septimus suddenly reached to his belt, taking out the Sword fragment he carried with him. The fragment had turned perceptibly warm and seemed to be exuding a golden light.

He whispered to himself a bit, recalling an old legend, then turned to the rest of his platoon. "Today we ride. Today we push Salamandastron and Nordenstadt from our beloved city. To arms!"

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

20 (edited by Salamandastron 14-Jul-2008 05:52:33)

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"So... this is what happened when we left..." He said, sadly. He rose in the air and turned towards Salamandastron. He sped forward, an odd, yet familiar, feeling guiding him along.

"The Armada has sent sail, My Lord. But a storm seems to be brewing to the West... It will surely hit this night, probably just an hour or so after nightfall..." The Advisor reported. The Man on the throne stroked his beard and replied.

"There is something changing out there...Get me my coat... I will bear the storm."

George Smith Patton
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

He was at Second Chance in a heartbeat. He looked all around at the devastation, unnoticed by the hordes of warriors battling below him. Even in ruins, the city looked so much different from when he had been governor. He saw the ruins of a mighty castle where the old town center should have been; the wreckage of a skyscraper where the physics lab had lived; the burnt ashes of a commodities exchange where he had remembered a marketplace.

He looked at what remained of his people, battle-hardened guerrillas fighting for the sake of a cause many of them had trouble remembering. He looked at where they lived, camped in safehouses nestled in the wreckage. He looked at their piece of what they were fighting for, a battered golden hilt attached to a mutilated shard of what had once been a mighty blade.

He glanced into the eyes of the one who kept it and recognized him as of his own blood. This was a Bloodmoon, descended from the creators, and it was not without cause that he bore the name Septimus Deus.

He was close to home now, and even as he floated he could feel himself gaining weight, gaining substance. Now was the time to set in motion the events he had been called back to manifest. It was time to reverse the damage...

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

The farmer had been watching the river as it surged along for a while now; his family had come to watch for a while before he told them to go back inside and watch from there for the river was giving off an intense heat. It had become a raging fire moving along. He wondered why it was happening and offered a quick prayer that the river wouldn't destroy all he had worked for.


Furthur west the Order of the Flame were also worried for the river flowed deep into the monastary. Also the Heart of Fire had burnt out, leaving a black void to no-where. Everyone was on edge not knowing what was coming next.


To the north of the town, down the vast stairway, an explosion rocked the earth as the top of Flame's tomb was blasted off, and Flame himself flew up the staircase.

Then I lived.

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"Bring him. Now." The Spirit said. King Reginald III ordered for a long imprisoned prince to be brought to him.

"This is him... My Lord." The King said and bowed to the Spirit. The Prince looked ill, poorly fed, but understood what the Spirit was.

"Jonathan Buckley. It is time you took your rightful title and ruled your Kingdom. Long has Salamandastron been governed by false rulers... Your Fleet sent to attack the Monks has been borne back here by My Sea. You must now decide what must happen here." The Spirit said to the young Prince, now King. "And as for you..." The Spirit rounded on the false King.

"You can't-" The winds blew him off of the ramparts, into the water and rocks below.

"Now," Said the Spirit, "It is time to enter the crypt and secret Vaults of your ancestors, my children. There we may find my purpose in this world."

George Smith Patton
"No bastard ever won a war by dying for his country. He won it by making the other poor dumb bastard die for his country."

24 (edited by Wolves of Fenris 19-Jan-2010 03:03:23)

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

Flame leapt up the stairs and as he passed each step it exploded in a fireball and behind Flame a growing fireball was tearing past whatever he passed. A great thundering grew louder and louder and Flame burst through the temple with a great explosion which tore out the side off the mountain and flung debris as far as the ocean. Flame, borne aloft by his own flames looked up and took in a great breath which seemed to last forever. Suddenly his focus snapped westward, as did his head. Within an instant he had sped off nothing more than a single flame which arced across the sky before fading away.



Marcus looked on as the flaming river seemed to die down to its normal clear blue and as it slowed down.

"Well..." He said to himself. He went to turn away and walk back to his house when he thought he felt some rumbling beneath his feet. He stopped and listened. It was slowly getting heavier and then he could hear it; as though a great flame had began and was just getting bigger. Then a wave of heat hit him just before a colossal explosion rocked the earth. Marcus fell to the ground and as he rose and stabled himself, he saw gigantic chunks of charred earth go flying over head at great speeds, followed by a wave of flame. Against the bright blue sky a small figure wreathed in blue flames arced upwards and remained stationary for what seemed an age. Suddenly it was gone and only a thin arc of flame was left and that too faded away.

Then I lived.

Re: The Global Sketchpad: Paradise Lost

"You," Regent Septimus whispered, seeing the spirit materialize in front of him. His men immediately raised their rifles.

"Me, my son, me," the spirit answered.

"Why?" was all Regent Septimus could manage.

"Because I cannot bear to see my beloved city in ruins over a silly sword," the spirit answered.

Regent Septimus was about to speak, but the spirit cut him off. "I know what you're thinking. You believe that God's Sword will give Utopia its former glory again." The spirit's eyes suddenly became downcast. "And I believed that it would serve as the cornerstone of my people for generations. I was wrong. Jealousy is a human sin, powerful enough to destroy whole civilizations. I should have known better than to introduce something that would spark the envy of others."

The spirit paused, then said, "It is time to correct my mistake. It is time to rebuild. It is time to undo the damage that the Great Sword has wrought upon my beloved land."

The spirit stretched out his hand, and Regent Septimus's sword fragment flew through the air and into the spirit's grasp. "What I take from you, I repay ten thousand times. Behold, my son... I reclaim the fragment of the Sword I have so foolishly cast upon the Plane. In return... I grant you myself."

The spirit leaped into the air and coalesced into a crystal sphere set in gold and threaded with a loop of string into an amulet, which placed itself gently around Regent Septimus's neck. Immediately, the Regent understood what had just happened.

"I'm sorry I couldn't give you a more proper welcome, Father Matthias, but your wish... is our command." He straightened up. "Gentlemen... you heard him. We have work to do."

Proud user of Ubuntu 11.10 / 12.04 LTS