06-11-2017, 06:47 AM
I made no attempt to hide my contempt, only begrudgingly depressing the brake and bringing the car to a stop. Sighing disdainfully, I popped the door open and made a prompt exit. I wasn’t keen on taking orders from a woman--especially one with a gun trained on me, however outdated it was--but it wasn’t like there was anything else of interest in Blank White Land anyway.
“It’s...a portal,” Cyril said, striding excitedly toward the archway, his soggy shoes squishing as he walked. The stonework had the look of an ancient castle, just barely wide enough for two people to cross the threshold comfortably. The two dozen or so hewn stones that composed it were grimy and well-worn to relative smoothness.
“As in.. ‘synonym for door’,” I inquired, approaching the gateway, “or...?”
“As in ‘actual magical transportation method’”, he snarked in return, placing a pale hand on the stone. As he did so, the arch’s silvery contents quivered and rippled as if he had disturbed a perpendicular door-shaped pond. “Or is that not obvious?”
“And how do you know that?” I snapped, stepping forward to examine it more closely. “When did you become an expert in fictitious interdimensional travel?” I paused for a moment, a smirk crossing my face. “Wait, don’t answer that. Judging by the LARPing comment and your general...just, demeanor, I imagine you’re more than qualified.”
“Thank-”
“Youbigfatnerd.”
“Oh shut up, Archer.”
“Listen, boys,” Emily interjected, suddenly appeared between Cyril and I. Whether or not she had Wagner-ed her way over or was just naturally quiet was anyone’s guess. “This is clearly the entrance to somewhere. One of you should step through and find out where.”
Silence.
Cyril shook his head. “Well, I’m definitely no-” His complaints promptly ceased as I clapped a hand on his back and forced him through the portal.
Within seconds he re-appeared from beneath the silver ‘surface’ of the portal, stumbling forward with equal parts annoyance, wonder, and disbelief painted on his mug. “It is a portal," he affirmed, eyes refocusing behind his thick glasses. "To someplace...gloomy.”
Without waiting for another word to pass between us, I pushed past the Victorian and the comptroller, traipsing over and beyond the transcendental threshold. My eyes shut instinctively as a feeling of cold coupled with weightlessness crashed over me, only to quickly fall away as readily as it had come. In an instant the nearly blinding white backdrop had been replaced by a somewhat dreary image of countryside, a light spring rain dampening the already muddy path leading away from the portal. I sighed as water droplets spattered against my suit coat, soaking into the expensive wool. A moment later I was joined by Cyril and Emily, the former attempting to conceal a smile.
“I was going to warn you,” the bespectacled man vowed, pulling off his own already-soaked jacket and lifting it over our female companion’s quickly-dampening head. She held up a hand to deny the offer, eliciting a shrug from its owner. “Suit yourself.”
“Were you though?” I inquired, glaring as cool water droplets dribbled down my face.
A pause.
“No.”
“Well thanks for nothing, petty.” With a long sigh I closed my eyes and began to focus, holding out my hands as I got to work summoning. Apparently, I had to do everything
“Making yourself an umbrella?” Figgis chided, crossing his arms over his chest. “We’re already wet, let’s just hurry up and follow this path.” He glanced ahead at a signpost pointing away from the portal. “That sign says a place called ‘Darkshire’ is pretty close.”
“I was ACTUALLY going to summon Genie again,” I retorted, “because I’ll be damned if I walk in this mess if I don’t absolutely have to, which I don’t.”
“And you think your spy car is going to do well on this narrow path through hilly, overgrown terrain?” Cyril challenged, gesturing toward the rough hills visible down the barely-present path.
I sighed, opening my eyes and cancelling the summon. “Do you have any better ideas, idiot?”
“Are you two coming?” Emily called, interrupting our quarrel. I turned to retort, my mouth falling slightly open at the sight of her at the reins of a horse-drawn carriage not ten feet away. Evidently she had somehow managed to conjure up a handsome carriage and twin Clydesdales while we were bickering.
“Uh...yeah, that’ll...work,” I stammered, trudging eagerly through the muck and popping open the lacquered ebony door. “When in Rome, I guess. Or...wherever this is.”
“It’s...a portal,” Cyril said, striding excitedly toward the archway, his soggy shoes squishing as he walked. The stonework had the look of an ancient castle, just barely wide enough for two people to cross the threshold comfortably. The two dozen or so hewn stones that composed it were grimy and well-worn to relative smoothness.
“As in.. ‘synonym for door’,” I inquired, approaching the gateway, “or...?”
“As in ‘actual magical transportation method’”, he snarked in return, placing a pale hand on the stone. As he did so, the arch’s silvery contents quivered and rippled as if he had disturbed a perpendicular door-shaped pond. “Or is that not obvious?”
“And how do you know that?” I snapped, stepping forward to examine it more closely. “When did you become an expert in fictitious interdimensional travel?” I paused for a moment, a smirk crossing my face. “Wait, don’t answer that. Judging by the LARPing comment and your general...just, demeanor, I imagine you’re more than qualified.”
“Thank-”
“Youbigfatnerd.”
“Oh shut up, Archer.”
“Listen, boys,” Emily interjected, suddenly appeared between Cyril and I. Whether or not she had Wagner-ed her way over or was just naturally quiet was anyone’s guess. “This is clearly the entrance to somewhere. One of you should step through and find out where.”
Silence.
Cyril shook his head. “Well, I’m definitely no-” His complaints promptly ceased as I clapped a hand on his back and forced him through the portal.
Within seconds he re-appeared from beneath the silver ‘surface’ of the portal, stumbling forward with equal parts annoyance, wonder, and disbelief painted on his mug. “It is a portal," he affirmed, eyes refocusing behind his thick glasses. "To someplace...gloomy.”
Without waiting for another word to pass between us, I pushed past the Victorian and the comptroller, traipsing over and beyond the transcendental threshold. My eyes shut instinctively as a feeling of cold coupled with weightlessness crashed over me, only to quickly fall away as readily as it had come. In an instant the nearly blinding white backdrop had been replaced by a somewhat dreary image of countryside, a light spring rain dampening the already muddy path leading away from the portal. I sighed as water droplets spattered against my suit coat, soaking into the expensive wool. A moment later I was joined by Cyril and Emily, the former attempting to conceal a smile.
“I was going to warn you,” the bespectacled man vowed, pulling off his own already-soaked jacket and lifting it over our female companion’s quickly-dampening head. She held up a hand to deny the offer, eliciting a shrug from its owner. “Suit yourself.”
“Were you though?” I inquired, glaring as cool water droplets dribbled down my face.
A pause.
“No.”
“Well thanks for nothing, petty.” With a long sigh I closed my eyes and began to focus, holding out my hands as I got to work summoning. Apparently, I had to do everything
“Making yourself an umbrella?” Figgis chided, crossing his arms over his chest. “We’re already wet, let’s just hurry up and follow this path.” He glanced ahead at a signpost pointing away from the portal. “That sign says a place called ‘Darkshire’ is pretty close.”
“I was ACTUALLY going to summon Genie again,” I retorted, “because I’ll be damned if I walk in this mess if I don’t absolutely have to, which I don’t.”
“And you think your spy car is going to do well on this narrow path through hilly, overgrown terrain?” Cyril challenged, gesturing toward the rough hills visible down the barely-present path.
I sighed, opening my eyes and cancelling the summon. “Do you have any better ideas, idiot?”
“Are you two coming?” Emily called, interrupting our quarrel. I turned to retort, my mouth falling slightly open at the sight of her at the reins of a horse-drawn carriage not ten feet away. Evidently she had somehow managed to conjure up a handsome carriage and twin Clydesdales while we were bickering.
“Uh...yeah, that’ll...work,” I stammered, trudging eagerly through the muck and popping open the lacquered ebony door. “When in Rome, I guess. Or...wherever this is.”
![[Image: sterling-archer.jpg]](https://hollywoodhatesme.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/sterling-archer.jpg)

