Obsidian
Character
Commenor
Several hundred kilometres from the capital city rise a jagged, unforgiving mountain range that can be seen on a clear crisp day from the lowlands. Before the cataclysm centuries prior, it was home to a small population of inbred peasants toiling away at the infertile plateaus with only the bare minimum of modern comforts. Their villages connected by narrow unpaved roads that seemed to be cut directly from the sharp cliff-faces. Originally said to be part of an ancient Duchy whose lineage as well as its territorial integrity had long since disappeared from the Galaxy, Alfonso Constantius could only shake his head as he looked up from his desk out of the window of his pre-fabricated shelter to look at the ruined towers of a once mighty fortress.
"How did a simple petty lord, a vassal to the Dukes of House Zenos construct this structure deep in these mountains? Sure, there was the tech, but what of the finances? The manpower?"
At the heart of the mountain range was the ruined settlement of the largest town in this ancient fiefdom. Nestled in a valley, it was almost as if it was built in a deep crater of a giant, ancient, dormant volcano but with the added twist of sharp chasms between the surrounding mountains and the plateau the town had once stood on. As if competing with the rim of the valley, rising high above the town in a dominating position was an ancient castle reinforced and built upon over the millennia that had been further strengthened by internal renovations. As a testament to the last touches imposed upon it, even after the chaos of the Four Hundred Year Darkness, it still stood intact and ready to invite its old residents back.
The fortress was built near the northern rim of plateau, close to the edges of the crater-like valley, atop a hill that on its southern face had a gentle, almost inviting slope but on the northern face was a jagged cliff face that dropped down past the edges of the plateau into the chasm that formed the second circle within the crater. Its spires were like claws or talons reaching up into the sky. Indeed, the lesser spires seemed to be connected to each other and helped form the base of the five primary spires. When looked on from above, the primary spires were equidistant from each other around a single wall forming a perfect circle. When looked at from the front gates, it was clear that the northernmost spire was directly attached to the four-sided keep, as if a bell-tower to an ancient cathedral to some unholy deity. The four other spires were shorter and less impressive than the first, they formed the four corners of this irregularly sized keep.
Outside the inner fortress was evidence that in the past, a series of outer walls protected the fortress grounds to the foot of the slope. Even if it was gentle and inviting from a distance, Alfonso knew from personal experience that the trek up by foot was a good workout in and of itself. The unpaved road from the town took an intentionally winding approach that showed clearly where the outer wall gates had once stood. Whether the local serfs in the more modern days had used separate footpaths was uncertain, and the excavation team had spent a good ten days finding this path, nature having taken its course even in this infertile environment, beautiful grass had overrun the grounds of the Cromwell Estate.
At the foot of the slope, the township finally started, the ruins of these houses indicated a poorer technological level than the fortress and the greater world as a whole, the primary construction material was masonry, but with the exception of the town centre, all evidence pointed to the remaining housing to be one or two storeys tall. As befitting the status as the centre of local government, the town centre featured evidence of public facilities large enough to accommodate more than the projected population of the town based on its size. The town occupied only a little more than a third of the total area of the plateau, the remaining southern half appeared to have been used for farming or grazing the herd animals.
Alfonso Constantius was a Commenorian archaeologist in name, but mostly a historian. He had recently stumbled upon unusual entries in the Commenorian archives that indicated a period when the noble houses of Commenor had been wiped out in an incident. Only three houses are said to have survived and two of them for the most part departed from the political sphere soon after. The Noble House of Cromwell was the de jure vassals of the Ducal House of Zenos, while the Ducal House of Roetblume is recorded to have only had one heir in the twilight years of aristocratic rule of the planet who was married to the head of the Zenos household in a political union. These two houses disappeared for two very different reasons. The House of Zenos on the other hand continued to serve as a symbol of sorts in the transition period from aristocracy to a more meritocratic oligarchy. Since the Ducal House of Roetblume was consumed in the alliance with Zenos, their disappearance made a certain sense. Alfonso was concerned with the Cromwell's fate.
And so, despite the scepticism of his colleagues, he had set out with a team composed of some hired hands, his students from university and several apprentices/interns who had all shown interest in his endeavour. It helped he was giving them academic credit for their participation. The valley may have been isolated by land, but with atmospheric shuttles, the trip from here to the university was but an hour flight away, most of the students went back to their dorms at regular intervals, if not daily. It had not even been a month into his expedition and Alfonso was leading a team of several hundred individuals. A rudimentary but highly disciplined chain of command had been established. His post-graduate students each took a team of graduate students who in turn lead undergraduates. They took shifts so some would scour the library and archives while others came to excavate the land, documenting everything they found to hint at the life spent by those who lived here centuries ago.
What was spectacular about this day, on the fifteenth week into the excavation, was that they had to charter almost all the shuttles in the university hangar. Everyone involved in the expedition had assembled for this historic day. Last week, a team had stumbled upon a hidden doorway in the inner sanctum of the fortress. The throne room they had been investigating was supposedly a dead end. However, an undergraduate student had accidentally tripped on his way up a set of stair-like platforms to a magnificent and modern looking throne, pushing a button that caused a tremor in the chamber. If Alfonso was not there himself, he would have hardly believed such stupefying series of coincidences, but the wall behind the throne gave way to a turbolift shaft. They had long since tested that power was not running in the fortress, so no one had thought to try out the buttons on the command throne. Naturally, everyone wanted to be the first to go down with their professor, but the one week they spent investigating the turbolift shaft indicated that the hidden area ran deep underground and split off into various directions under the plateau and perhaps, even further below. Alfonso decided to call in everyone involved at the end of the academic term for a full month of vacation period extracurricular archaeological expedition into this underground facility. In light of the fact that power was running, they even recruited volunteers from other departments as well as the CSS (the Computer Science Society) also known as the SlicerSoc.
Alfonso felt a strong sense of destiny as he came out of his prefab office at the entrance of the inner fortress and he looked down the hill to see the grass fields filled with bright young minds. He was even met with several of his colleagues in the various faculties who had come to join him. In the world of academia, jealousy and self-interest was always self-evident, but so was a begrudging acceptance of facts before speculation. Alfonso did not hold any misgivings about how quickly his colleagues switched sides once he had made this discovery, he had even told them. He was glad to share in this historic moment with his fellow co-workers and students.
But the greater galaxy on the other hand, he had made sure to not let them know. Sure, the University of Commenor would make this knowledge public...but only after they found out what exactly was buried under an abandoned settlement deep in the mountains.
Several hundred kilometres from the capital city rise a jagged, unforgiving mountain range that can be seen on a clear crisp day from the lowlands. Before the cataclysm centuries prior, it was home to a small population of inbred peasants toiling away at the infertile plateaus with only the bare minimum of modern comforts. Their villages connected by narrow unpaved roads that seemed to be cut directly from the sharp cliff-faces. Originally said to be part of an ancient Duchy whose lineage as well as its territorial integrity had long since disappeared from the Galaxy, Alfonso Constantius could only shake his head as he looked up from his desk out of the window of his pre-fabricated shelter to look at the ruined towers of a once mighty fortress.
"How did a simple petty lord, a vassal to the Dukes of House Zenos construct this structure deep in these mountains? Sure, there was the tech, but what of the finances? The manpower?"
At the heart of the mountain range was the ruined settlement of the largest town in this ancient fiefdom. Nestled in a valley, it was almost as if it was built in a deep crater of a giant, ancient, dormant volcano but with the added twist of sharp chasms between the surrounding mountains and the plateau the town had once stood on. As if competing with the rim of the valley, rising high above the town in a dominating position was an ancient castle reinforced and built upon over the millennia that had been further strengthened by internal renovations. As a testament to the last touches imposed upon it, even after the chaos of the Four Hundred Year Darkness, it still stood intact and ready to invite its old residents back.
The fortress was built near the northern rim of plateau, close to the edges of the crater-like valley, atop a hill that on its southern face had a gentle, almost inviting slope but on the northern face was a jagged cliff face that dropped down past the edges of the plateau into the chasm that formed the second circle within the crater. Its spires were like claws or talons reaching up into the sky. Indeed, the lesser spires seemed to be connected to each other and helped form the base of the five primary spires. When looked on from above, the primary spires were equidistant from each other around a single wall forming a perfect circle. When looked at from the front gates, it was clear that the northernmost spire was directly attached to the four-sided keep, as if a bell-tower to an ancient cathedral to some unholy deity. The four other spires were shorter and less impressive than the first, they formed the four corners of this irregularly sized keep.
Outside the inner fortress was evidence that in the past, a series of outer walls protected the fortress grounds to the foot of the slope. Even if it was gentle and inviting from a distance, Alfonso knew from personal experience that the trek up by foot was a good workout in and of itself. The unpaved road from the town took an intentionally winding approach that showed clearly where the outer wall gates had once stood. Whether the local serfs in the more modern days had used separate footpaths was uncertain, and the excavation team had spent a good ten days finding this path, nature having taken its course even in this infertile environment, beautiful grass had overrun the grounds of the Cromwell Estate.
At the foot of the slope, the township finally started, the ruins of these houses indicated a poorer technological level than the fortress and the greater world as a whole, the primary construction material was masonry, but with the exception of the town centre, all evidence pointed to the remaining housing to be one or two storeys tall. As befitting the status as the centre of local government, the town centre featured evidence of public facilities large enough to accommodate more than the projected population of the town based on its size. The town occupied only a little more than a third of the total area of the plateau, the remaining southern half appeared to have been used for farming or grazing the herd animals.
Alfonso Constantius was a Commenorian archaeologist in name, but mostly a historian. He had recently stumbled upon unusual entries in the Commenorian archives that indicated a period when the noble houses of Commenor had been wiped out in an incident. Only three houses are said to have survived and two of them for the most part departed from the political sphere soon after. The Noble House of Cromwell was the de jure vassals of the Ducal House of Zenos, while the Ducal House of Roetblume is recorded to have only had one heir in the twilight years of aristocratic rule of the planet who was married to the head of the Zenos household in a political union. These two houses disappeared for two very different reasons. The House of Zenos on the other hand continued to serve as a symbol of sorts in the transition period from aristocracy to a more meritocratic oligarchy. Since the Ducal House of Roetblume was consumed in the alliance with Zenos, their disappearance made a certain sense. Alfonso was concerned with the Cromwell's fate.
And so, despite the scepticism of his colleagues, he had set out with a team composed of some hired hands, his students from university and several apprentices/interns who had all shown interest in his endeavour. It helped he was giving them academic credit for their participation. The valley may have been isolated by land, but with atmospheric shuttles, the trip from here to the university was but an hour flight away, most of the students went back to their dorms at regular intervals, if not daily. It had not even been a month into his expedition and Alfonso was leading a team of several hundred individuals. A rudimentary but highly disciplined chain of command had been established. His post-graduate students each took a team of graduate students who in turn lead undergraduates. They took shifts so some would scour the library and archives while others came to excavate the land, documenting everything they found to hint at the life spent by those who lived here centuries ago.
What was spectacular about this day, on the fifteenth week into the excavation, was that they had to charter almost all the shuttles in the university hangar. Everyone involved in the expedition had assembled for this historic day. Last week, a team had stumbled upon a hidden doorway in the inner sanctum of the fortress. The throne room they had been investigating was supposedly a dead end. However, an undergraduate student had accidentally tripped on his way up a set of stair-like platforms to a magnificent and modern looking throne, pushing a button that caused a tremor in the chamber. If Alfonso was not there himself, he would have hardly believed such stupefying series of coincidences, but the wall behind the throne gave way to a turbolift shaft. They had long since tested that power was not running in the fortress, so no one had thought to try out the buttons on the command throne. Naturally, everyone wanted to be the first to go down with their professor, but the one week they spent investigating the turbolift shaft indicated that the hidden area ran deep underground and split off into various directions under the plateau and perhaps, even further below. Alfonso decided to call in everyone involved at the end of the academic term for a full month of vacation period extracurricular archaeological expedition into this underground facility. In light of the fact that power was running, they even recruited volunteers from other departments as well as the CSS (the Computer Science Society) also known as the SlicerSoc.
Alfonso felt a strong sense of destiny as he came out of his prefab office at the entrance of the inner fortress and he looked down the hill to see the grass fields filled with bright young minds. He was even met with several of his colleagues in the various faculties who had come to join him. In the world of academia, jealousy and self-interest was always self-evident, but so was a begrudging acceptance of facts before speculation. Alfonso did not hold any misgivings about how quickly his colleagues switched sides once he had made this discovery, he had even told them. He was glad to share in this historic moment with his fellow co-workers and students.
But the greater galaxy on the other hand, he had made sure to not let them know. Sure, the University of Commenor would make this knowledge public...but only after they found out what exactly was buried under an abandoned settlement deep in the mountains.