DATE: January 5th, Year 2
LOCATION: The Grand Palace Cathedral
TIME: 10:00 A.M.
It was for the Saints that they gathered, for the promise of hope that was entailed in the title. Into the cathedral they herded themselves, faithful sheep that longed for a shepherd that would deliver them from their suffering – as a person, as a people, and as a nation. As a nation they were represented in the pews of the grand cathedral of Os Alta, in the back sat the peasants, the farmers whose clothes were torn and frayed, the cobblers whose hands were roughened with work, the blacksmiths who carried with them the scent of a furnace burning, the sailors whose faces were weathered with sun and wind, and the First Army soldiers who shifted uneasily from foot to foot, faces upturned in equal parts hope and scrutiny. Closer to the stairs of the altar were those whom had their servants, both human and Grisha, stake their seating out for them. In their finery and silks they sat with quiet, excited muttering rippling from them like a drop of rain in a pond. It would start with one word from this lady or that lieutenant, muted talk that bespoke trepidation and nerves. They were here for the Saints and they were here for the reassurance that the plight that they had been so unduly handed would soon be ended with the blessing of those above. But that is a lot to ask from those whose bones were eaten by the earth and whose souls were as far to reach as the stars in the skies.
There was one whose reach was much closer, whose reach was as far reaching as the winds that swept through the cathedral on occasion, filling the lungs and caressing the faces of peasant and noble alike.
She did not bring blessings, though. What she brought was terror, was damnation, was curse and abomination.
It did not come in a furious gale, like one might have suspected. It did not come as a ruthless wind that tore the roof of the cathedral and stripped the breath of life from the lungs of the faithful. As gentle as the hands that bade it, as inconspicuous as the dust that catches a person’s eye as the sun turns it gold. No one noticed, for their eyes were turned towards the Apparat that made his way to the podium, his movements like that of a phantom, his features like that of a shrewd rat. He squinted at the flock that was gathered beneath the podium, his eyes lingering on the individuals that occupied the balconies. Selected members of the Second Army, the Darkling and the Sun Summoner who sat at his side. Across from them sat the beloveds of Ravka, the Lantsovs whose names was almost as ageless as the book that sat was open in front of him, the Book of Saints.
Anastasia fidgeted in their seat, their eyes always glancing at those who gathered beneath their balcony, their eyes shifting away whenever they met one of the peasant’s. Viktor need not glance at those beneath him, so he sat stoically next to his siblings, lips pursed in a look that could only be described as distasteful. Contrarily, his brother sat next to him with a look of effortless ease, one which was not mirrored in the least by his personal guard or his advisor. The two women seemed equal parts unhappy and apprehensive, Iskra’s expression carrying one more than the other. But, whoever could be unhappy sitting next to the great Sankta herself?
The people looked up surreptitiously every couple of seconds, as though they could not believe what their own eyes were telling them: a new age was dawning on the fingertips of all those who gathered above them.
Slowly, a smile crept on the Apparat face, easing its way there like a wolf’s when it has found its crippled prey. Little did he know, that with this smile he invited death, that as he inhaled to let his voice bellow out a great sermon, death clung to each and every one of his words. As did the people who worshipped beneath his feet.
“People of Ravka,” he began, his fingers slowly curling around the edges of the podium as he leaned forward. “Let us recall that we are often punished as a means of repentance. What did your father and mother make you do when you tarnished your room, your home? When you, in your impudence and selfishless had little thought for the cleanliness of your household? Did they allow you to wallow in your filth, to bask in living as a pig might – in a den of castoff and mud? Bah.” He sneered, lip curling in disdain. For he knew there to be sinners sitting in this hallowed place that did just that. Soldiers who frequented the houses of the night, nobles who indulged too often in spirit and wine, peasants who deserved not even the scraps of a dog.
There was a gentle cough in the crowd, the sound of uncomfortable shifting – guilty glances cast, heads bowed in shame. They were used to his sermons of fire and brimstone, yet it did little to alleviate the guilt that colored their cheeks pink, that made them glance away from the sharp features of the Apparat. His eyes glared down at the congregation of the faithful, the sweat on his brow there for all to see. He could very well sweat blood for the whole of Ravka, proving to them that repentance for their sins was necessary and imminent. Yet, even then, they were likely to continue in their path towards condemnation.
“You think that because your Sankta has arrived, that she will pay the price for your transgressions. But no one can cast that burden from your soul,” suddenly, her inhaled a ragged breath, the knuckles of his hands white as they gripped the podium, “not even a Sankta who was meant to burn it away with her everlasting light.”
And with that, he fell to the ground. Dead.
DATE: January 9th, Year 2
LOCATION: The Grand Palace War Room
TIME: 8:00 A.M.
A couple of days later and they still do not know how the Apparat died. He showed no sign of foul play, although his attendants filled in some of the lingering questions. The man had been in unstable health due to a fever that had been plaguing him for the last week. They had, apprehensively, elaborated on how it had began, how his ghosts had plagued him, and how he had recovered - only to die. It all begins with a fever, they murmured, with your skin growing hot as a furnace, with sweat coating your skin. Sleep is stolen away from you, because fevered dreams would be too merciful. Instead, you are subjected to laying with your eyes open, ‘til they grow red with weariness. It is then and only then that your demons haunt you, plague you for all the wrongs you have committed. Fire and brimstone, hellfire and screams of agony. Their mouths shut, they avoided each other’s gaze. Then, they quickly made their leave, the dark circles under their eyes the only hint of grief that they were willing to give. It was all the gossip of the Os Alta as to who would be the new Apparat, but the discussions of their superiors were less inclined towards religion and more inclined to politics.
Politics and warfare, for the two often went hand-in-hand.
“We can’t have blatant animosity between both the Fjerdans and the Shu Han,” Konstantin said impatiently, eyebrows drawing together in a scowl.”We are choked by that scar upon our coastline and demons who want our blood surround us and wait for our death.”
“You think I don’t know that, general?” the Crown Prince asked quietly, brow arching as he studied the man. If he had glanced to his right, he would have seen the satisfied twitch of his brother’s lips, but instead he gazed steadily at the man.
Ilya and Maksim glanced at one another, before turning their attention back to the map that took up the entirety of the table. The whole of Ravka laid out before everyone’s eyes, with those who held its future under their thumb gathered around it. Including the messenger boy in the corner of the room, whose eyes were dark and red, whose fingers twitched and trembled. Iskra had been watching him the whole time from her nook in the corner, eyes unblinking as they studied him. Her arms were crossed as she leaned against the wall, exchanging glances with Inessa who was across from her every so often. The bickerings between the men gathered in the room, Arisha chiming in every so often. But, as all things do, they eventually quieted down - many of the people gathered somewhat breathless, undeniably red in the face.
“We should have invited the ambassadors,” one spat.
“To do what except dangle the prospect of all out war in our faces?” hissed another.
The boy’s eyes flickered and fretted, his fingers slowly curling into claws.
“These matters are best discussed between us,” Viktor said. “Including anyone else would have been a sign of vulnerability – the extra counsel unnecessary as well as unwarranted.”
“The only counsel needed is mine.” Arisha said, her voice sharp and firm, her eyes daring anyone to claim otherwise.
Iskra glanced away from the boy, eyes flickering towards Arisha, then to Anton.
“I think we should have brought the Sun Summoner.” All the heads turned to her, her gaze holding Anton’s. “She’s just as much a part of Ravka’s future as the Crown Prince’s.”
Maksim cleared his throat.
But the tension in the room was broken by the man who burst in, Feliks - and with the open door came the sound of a bell tolling, confusion quickly marring the looks of everyone gathered in the room as they stood up. Iskra and Inessa moved to the Crown Prince’s and the prince’s sides, their hands already on their swords. Before saying a word, Feliks glanced around the room, looked at the boy and grabbed him by his throat, forcibly throwing him out of the room with little more than a blink. The sound of footsteps running up and down the hall, people shouting this and that - mayhem, utter mayhem ruled over the Grand Palace. Grabbing one of the bottles of spirit from the buffet table, he poured it over the hand he had used to grab the boy with, still not having said a single word. As he wiped his hand against his uniform pants, he looked up until his eyes met that of his future king and the fellow guards.
He walked over to the three, bowed, then whispered to the Crown Prince. Anton’s lips thinned, his jaw clenching as he closed his eyes briefly before nodding. Turning to the table that had been holding their breath since Feliks first entered, he met the eyes of every person in the room. When he opened his lips, they expected him to say that there had been an attack, that blatant war was finally upon them all and Ravka had no choice but to defend itself until it broke a part. Perhaps their ships had been attacked by parents, maybe they had lost someone else to the Fold. But what came from his lips was much more dreaded, was much worse.
“Plague.”
OVERVIEW: All characters are affected by this plague. The least affected are the Grisha, but they still suffer from the symptoms. As far as the medics know, there seem to be three stages of the plague:
Stage One: The Onset
Raised temperature
Insomnia
Profuse sweating -- often leading to dehydration
Inexplicable twitching and trembling -- muscle spasms
Stage Two: The Demons
Onset of hallucinations -- typically deceased loved ones
Stage Three: Death
Disappearance of symptoms, often times resulting in death
The fever escalates over the span of a week for humans, about 13 to 14 days for Grisha, and there have been cases of recovery, although they are few and far between. The most affected at this moment are the lower class of Os Alta, the working class on the outskirts of the city. Anton has ordered Corporalki healers to gather in the cathedral and tend to those the best that they can while Alkemi and the Grand Palace’s healers attempt to create a cure. Please date interactions between JANUARY 10TH and JANUARY 17TH. Also, please check your inboxes every couple of days in case some tasks or clues have been assigned to your characters. You may tag this event as EVENT: PLAGUE. We hope you all have fun with this event!
DATE: December 21st, Year 1
LOCATION: The Grand Palace Ballroom
TIME: 11:30 P.M.
One by one, as if they were born for it and as if it were the most natural thing in the world, they slip away: those donning violet to their posts, those dripping red to the shadows, and those draped in blue to the light, to the raised dais the royals themselves had stood upon mere hours before—a pedestal, a stage. And the ordinary ones, the otkazat’sya—the lucky and abandoned—are none the wiser, for men and women who have never known fear nor hunger needn’t worry over every passing figure, every fleeting face.
It could be dangerous, this show, and perhaps in a way it is, letting the kingdom’s most powerful Grisha have their way with the elements in such a sprawling, enclosed space like the Grand Palace—like training wild animals to do tricks and trusting they’ll be docile enough not to keep any up their sleeves. But they are, at least for the night—obedient and deadly and bored, and it makes for quite the attraction.
Let it be known that men are, at their very cores, peculiar; they delight in that which is dangerous, fear that which they do not understand, and love, above all else, what will inevitably be the end of them. In this, the Winter Showcase does not disappoint; in this, it never will, not as long as there lies a difference between the chosen and the others, the poor and the rich.
One day, it may even be something more than a waste of talent eternal, but today is not that day. Instead, it is as it always has been, and despite the protests of those performing—each with their own varying intensities, there’s a sort of magic to be found in that. The Corporalki watch from the darker corners with eyes narrowed, rendered acutely less intriguing than those they see as inferior to them for one torturous night; the Materialki linger behind the fruits of their handiwork, the unsung mechanics of a show too perfect to be natural; and the Etherealki move into view, silk blue keftas—crafted specifically for this night, no less—glimmering in the chandelier light.
And then, as if on an ancient whim, it begins. A squaller wind whisks the flames of the ballroom candles away, sweeps the hems of ladies’ ballgowns up in an embrace and waltzes them into awe, into delighted gasps, and inferni fire rises to the challenge, painting the tapestries and those who paused to admire them mere hours before in a brilliant orange glow. A chorus of ooh’s and ah’s go up from the crowd, but these sights are but child’s play for the men and women pulling their strings, a game they’d mastered and grown bored of sometime between the weighty realization that they were unlike the melancholy masses, living from ration to ration, and the somber acceptance that even gods hungered for more than they’d been given, more than they could ever have.
Tidemaker mist meets the flames midair and steam blooms from their union—plays tricks on the eyes of those watching in ways to number the stars. Some see the living; some see the dead; some see things only their own minds have ever known. But none see the man and woman in black take to the stage, and though the mist is partially to blame, there’s something else at work, too—something darker, intangible, raw.
And it is beautiful, so beautiful, but in the way of a wild thing caged.
They appear as if out of thin air, and when one takes into account the sheer impossibility of the goings-on around them, the idea that they may have seems almost likely, but the crowd hardly has time to consider the odds before they’re plunged into darkness with a boom like rolling thunder, and the ballroom falls deathly silent; such is the way of children raised to be afraid of the dark.
And then it cuts through the black like a blade through water: light, first blinding white and then gentle gold, painting a portrait of a summer morning in a ballroom consumed by winter’s night, and the crowd erupts—some into gasps, some into gleeful shouts, some in thanksgiving. It’s all the same, really, but make no mistake: the coming of the Sun Summoner is not a quiet one; a sankt’s arrival rarely is.
TIME: 11:50 P.M.
The performance is over, and all that lingers is hope and the faint smell of smoke, both of which cling to the audience like a burr caught in their best coats.
The Grisha descend from the dais to applause, each taking a small bow—first the tidemakers, then the squallers, and lastly the inferni, before they’re joined by their sovereign and their guest, both dressed in black and one accented with gold. Some reverently reach out to touch the hem of her kefta as she passes; others clap their countrymen—Grisha or otherwise—on the backs in celebration.
The war will soon be over, my prevaliruyem. My prevaliruyem, it will be as it once was. No one in the room—save for one soul, unbeknownst to the rest—knows what it feels like to live in a Ravka not ruled by the dark, but it seems they’re the chosen ones, the first to see the sun.
The divide between the nobles and the Second Army has fallen away, abolished by well-executed winds and the taste of impending victory and peace on the tips of their tongues. Grisha dance with dukes, and generals exchange war stories with the strange soldiers not under their command for what may be the very first time.
Princess Anastasia finds a worthy companion in Katya Aristov, but the squaller finds the royal utterly pathetic, and she puts forth no particular effort to hide that sentiment, but ruled by the etiquette of an event like this, they look to be exchanging friendly small talk from afar, the cruel twist of the Grisha’s lips the only indication that anything is amiss.
Inessa Razin and Druvik Jadeja discuss the brutal beauty of a mounted sword, Druvik’s eyes alight at the sheer artistry and Inessa’s voice dripping with condescension; she’s mildly intrigued, to be sure, but she’d much prefer to see the blade driven through her companion than admire it from its pedestal.
Shona Yul-Jun and Lei Yul-Keung escape the crowd and lament their mandatory presence at the Fete, bonding over their passionate desires not to dance with glossy-eyed nobles or to drink their fill of champagne, but to be anywhere else, doing anything else; even gods grow bored.
Oyun Kir-Naran approaches Sergei Valke as he watches the goings-on from the outskirts of the crowd and wastes no time in making him acutely uncomfortable, although for a man like him in a position like his, being bothersome is hardly a feat. He does his best to drive her off, but she stubbornly remains, intent on poking holes in his facade.
A certain Luka Mravkinsky loses sight of his so-proclaimed bratvas in the throng of people and strikes up a conversation with Stasya Belov to pass the time. They’re quiet, soft-spoken—hardly a proper replacement of the fiery friends he’s misplaced, but they’ll do for now. Even a soft breeze can stoke a fire.
Overcome with joy, Darya Voronov begins searching for the Crown Prince out of what can only be called habit, but she instead happens upon Svetlana Gavrikova, who is looking for her own sovereign. Uninterested in courtly small talk but having heard of the common lady-in-waiting, the oprichnik bides her time by making her feel just inferior enough for her words to carry a bit of sting. It’s nothing personal—with her, it seldom is; some people were just born to be victims.
Dmitri Alekseev prowls the floor in search of a victim and finds another, familiar predator: Adrik Vahkrov. Never one to shy away from an opportunity, the heartrender quickens the guard’s pulse as he approaches and taunts him accordingly, only to be struck in retaliation by a few biting barbs himself. The oprichnik may be deadly, but he’s not deaf; he’s well-aware of Dmitri’s fall from grace.
Arisha Kovrov is approached by Aarvas Rai, who speaks of the salvation the Sun Summoner’s arrival must herald. The royal adviser is uninterested in their preaching, but intent on remaining more or less unnoticed so that she can keep an inconspicuous eye on the Crown Prince, she allows them to remain at her side.
Valeriya Vasnev spots her fiancé in the crowd and begins making her way over, pausing only long enough to soak up the adoration and praise of any who care to give it, only to be intercepted by his cousin, Tatiana Lantsov. The latter duchess is doubly jealous, both of the attention the Vasnev woman is receiving and the title of princess she’ll soon be bestowed with, and she ceremoniously pours a glass of red wine down the front of the other woman’s dress. Chaos ensues.
Fyodor Drugov approaches the younger prince in the crowd, making a half-hearted attempt at a joke that they’d much rather be kicking his ass, for a lack of more eloquent wording, than sharing a drink with him. Viktor Lantsov responds in kind, clinking his glass against that of his sparring partner’s and jovially offering to take them up on such an offer later—but with a drastically different outcome.
Valerian Petrov and Ira Sorokin meet for a drink in the shadows, both out of coincidence and a mild desire for companionship that neither is quick to claim nor deny. The latter scoffs at the pretenses of propriety and laments how warm it is in the ballroom, to which Valerian responds by toying with a flame in his free palm. She doesn’t bother to hide her annoyance.
Farid Tereshkin, ever a great conversationalist, asks Feliks Bazin if there’s any truth to be found in the rumors that he was killed and brought back to life on the battlefield. The oprichnik coldly suggests that he mind the skeletons in his own chambers, mentioning details of the count’s affair with a squaller with equal shame—none. The count takes it in stride, however, aware—if not proud—of his conquest; his smile never falters.
The Darkling, largely left alone out of fear (all children are afraid of the dark, and even once they’re older, a man who can practically become it is terrifying in his own right), is keeping a close eye on the Sun Summoner when he’s boldly approached by Margarete Starikov, an unremarkable young girl in healer colors. She tries to make conversation, but he largely shrugs her off, uninterested in a woman who can scarcely reach his shoulder’s small talk. Her cheeks burn red, but she’s not wearing any of Rita’s blush.
Rita Jakov is conversing with an older noblewoman about her crow’s feet—it’s intriguing, really, and utterly crucial—when Arsen Tarasov interrupts, making a show of clearing his throat and asking to borrow the tailor for a dance. Conscious of making a poor impression on her companion, she accepts, only to be taunted mere moments after he has her alone—silly, silly girl.
General Mironov finds himself conversing with Vera Nikolaev, and though he finds her rather intriguing in the way she carries herself—wise, despite her inferior status and age, he can’t help but regard her warily; even hope can’t weed out something as deeply rooted as prejudice. Yet she works with Margarete Starikov, the she-witch he’s watching from afar with a gaze to cut, and he can’t help but pry a bit. Is it true that she often struggles to save her patients? How often does she lose them?
Neysa Rai, who has noticed Maksim Kaev watching the princess dance and converse with nobles and Grisha alike, decides not to chide him about it, instead sparking a conversation about the war, something she’s certain they’ve both got in common. And how is the war going? Not well, but then again, it seldom is; if he picks up on her discomfort, he allows her the same reprieve she did him.
Arina Zahkarov lingers on the outskirts of the crowd, curious enough not to turn away—though the people have nothing to do with it—but disinterested enough not to venture in any further. Recognizing her as an alkemi by her colors, Ilya Tsarov inquires about blasting powders, seemingly having forgotten—or perhaps not laying claim to—the prejudice many of his brothers in arms hold toward her kind. She eagerly engages, taking full advantage of the opportunity to talk about what she knows with someone at least half as knowledgeable.
Vasily Baranov spots the Sun Summoner alone in the crowd for a fleeting moment and seizes the chance to speak to her for himself, greeting her with a bow—strange, a noble bowing to one of them, but perhaps it’s habitual—and asking her to dance. Gemma Pavlova obliges, and the two talk about their upbringings, finding they have a bit more in common than they might’ve imagined.
Altan Yul-Suhe congratulates Rhea Tereshkin on her recent marriage and slyly apologizes for not having offered his congratulations sooner, deliberately making it evident that he can’t be bothered with the affairs of the otkazat’sya. The countess has been striking out a bit more on her own lately, and he commends her for that, as well; ambition recognizes ambition.
Iskra Raevsky seeks out the Crown Prince, a feat accomplished relatively quickly, considering she’s been watching him like a hawk since the night began—and even before that. Anton Lantsov is happy to see her, glad to have an anchor in a sea of faces he must remember and hearts he must win. The two share a brief moment together before he returns to his charming work, and she trails him at a distance once more.
Then, as if to disturb the champagne-glass peace the Sun Summoner’s arrival has brought, the double doors swing open, and through them slips the winter chill and a man, wild-eyed and bloodied, with a tattered First Army uniform clinging to his frame. The more sensitive of the nobility gasp at the mere sight of him, hunger-driven and half-dead, but his appearance, it seems, is the least of their worries. His entrance is that of a survivor; his message is that of a prophet. The silence in the room is pulled so taut it might snap.
“The Shu!” He screams, voice ragged and rough, and every individual who’s ever laid claim to Shu lineage stands at attention, stock-still and waiting for what’s certain to be a madman’s accusation. “Fifteen men, fifteen good men—dead, all because of you!” The soldier picks out the Shu diplomat with remarkable ease, a calloused and dirtied finger jabbed in her direction. A royal guard steps forward to seize him, but he lunges forward, grimy fingers nearly grazing the Crown Prince’s coat; he’s beaten back by a certain pyro but his tirade, it seems, has only just begun.
“What is the meaning of this?” The king grounds out, eyes narrowed, but the general, who seems to have guessed what the man might intend, cleared his throat.
“The border, is it?”
“No.” The man is nearly in hysterics now, arms spread apart as if to embrace the room one final time. “Closer.”
“What happened?” Ivan presses on, impatience bleeding into his words like scarlet into the man’s dull brown trousers.
“Grisha hunting, what else? The Shu came looking for our Second Soldiers and took ‘em all, like they tend to do—” He spits in Oyun Kir-Naran’s direction, having left his shame somewhere on a battlefield in the South, “and killed the ones they couldn’t use, filthy bastards. And you—” Those nearest him shrink away from the sheer vulgarity of him, but he sees only her: the living, breathing representation of the enemy, even as several other Shu Grisha mill about, “—you conniving, no good bitch—”
“That’s enough!” The king roars, and the people around him seem to agree, their unease evident in the way they shift and whisper, a tide of fear reignited.
“Nonsense,” comes the diplomat’s reply, eloquent and cold. “He lies. We’ve been trapped.”
The soldier laughs a hyena laugh, but no one moves to quiet him, so transfixed by the story he tells that his sandpaper manners hardly matter. “No, spy, we have.”
“And we will continue to be, because this has been going on for months! Months! First the border, and then a bit farther inland, and now here, a few days’ ride.” He straightens up now, fingers raised to his forehead in a backhanded sort of salute. “Your men are dying, tsar, and still you dance.”
Another gasp ripples through the crowd, and when a guard steps forward and draws his sword, the king raises his hand. “He lives.” The officers each pick their way to the eye of the chaos, and once they’ve all gathered around, he clears his throat, deathly calm. “The war room—now.” And then they’re gone, falling into an organized line leading out of the corridor with the war-struck man in tow behind them.
“Take her for questioning.” He dismisses the Shu diplomat with a wave of his hand, seemingly already having condemned her in his mind.
But if he hasn’t, the court certainly has. Even the Grisha unfortunate enough to have once called themselves Shu are shunned as they regroup into their respective Orders, shouldered aside and ignored. Your countrymen did this, they seem to say.
Tonight, they are not all Ravkan; the lines are no longer blurred.
The nobles slowly gather their bearings, some retreating to their quarters and others quietly slipping out the way they came, until none remain but five: the king, his sons, their general, and his hesitant ally—the heads of two armies and the blue blood that commands them.
And together, they must decide how to win a war when it knocks on their door invited. My prevaliruyem.
Or will we?
OVERVIEW: And that concludes our very first Rule & Ruin plot drop! We hope you enjoyed it as much as we did creating it, and we’re eager to see where else the story will go from this point forward—it’s only just begun.
The interactions described above may be played out on the dash, in chatzys (please post them once you’re finished!), or plotted out in private. However, these were certainly not the only interactions to have taken place after the performance; they were merely the most notable. Feel free to write or headcanon as you please!
You may date your post-event threads from December 21st (Year 1) to January 4th (Year 2). News of Shu attacks drawing closer and fear of a possible invasion has spread, inciting a sort of hysteria among the nobles and renewed determination within both armies. Oyun is currently being kept under surveillance, but has evaded any concrete punishment for lack of certain evidence—but not for a lack of trying. Anyone known to have Shu blood is feeling the sting of the hostile power’s actions, despite their personal lack of responsibility.
No canon characters or their immediate relatives were killed in the attack.
DATE: December 21st, Year 1
LOCATION: The Grand Palace Ballroom
TIME: 8:00 P.M.
Without winter, there could be no summer; without the dark, there could be no light. It was a balance universally acknowledged even before the war, even before the Fold—when the second Ivan Lantsov ruled with an iron grip and Ravka knew not what despair was, and it was this hope that founded the tradition, this brave welcoming of adversity that began it all. They ate and drank and danced and the cold had no dominion over them; in those days, the glory days, few things did. The Winter Fete was but another show of prosperity for a country unfettered by war and famine, and even as the two squandered the nation’s pride, it lived on, spanning generation after generation, era after bronze era.
It isn’t like it once was, but things touched by hardship seldom are.
The Ravkan countryside is a wild thing—so vividly alive even as so many of the things it holds dear are dying, as its trees shed their leaves and its songbirds fly south in search of warmer weather—stubborn, like any creature with a beating heart, but beautiful, too. Winter has crept in on autumn’s dying breath, and with it, the first snowfall, glittering and cold. The days have grown shorter and the nights longer still, and the change comes as both an inconvenience and a comfort to all, like a last dance long-practiced, familiar and bittersweet.
Inside the towering walls of Os Alta, few things have changed since the first Fete centuries ago. The Grand Palace buzzes with the hustle of preparation—the clink of champagne glasses and porcelain plates and silver platters, the clap of hooves and the creak of wheels against cobblestone, the ringing of a dozen bells, each with their own meaning. The servants walk the same corridors they did long ago, and those fortunate outsiders called in for the sole purpose of making the ball even more memorable than the one before it run in the same circles—the architects, the artists, creators of beauty and wonder.
The Little Palace, too, seems to hum in anticipation, its best and brightest set to the task—at times, begrudgingly—of making everything as it should be. The Materialki make recluses of themselves in the days leading up to the ball, backs bent and heads bowed over blueprints and menial requests alike—of chandeliers, of violins, of lady’s gowns, each frivolous in their own strange way. The Etherealki make fools of themselves in similar fashion, making flames dance and making art out of the breeze, of the snow; the show must go on, even if it’s a waste of their talents, even if it’s only inferni smoke and materialnik mirrors. Even the Corporalki are called upon in matters of health and beauty, for in the eyes of a shallow nobility, there can be no life without the former and certainly no hope without the latter.
And then, almost as if on nature’s whim, the night arrives, and with it, all the pomp and circumstance the gentility pride themselves on—carriages laden with gold, women swallowed by satin and tulle, men decked smartly in military dress. The chandeliers’ gleam rivals the stars, and champagne flows like a river. Everything and everyone is beautiful, and for one night, there is no war; there is no famine. There is only a dance, a song, a smile, a woman in a blue dress and a man in a violet kefta—there is only hope, fragile and raw and lasting, if only in moments like this.
The guests arrive to the sound of trumpets, and the procession to the ballroom is a slow thing, a dignified thing, but it’s flushed with the warmth of anticipation, alight with something akin to excitement. Lords and ladies file in, arm in arm or proudly lacking, and they line up like little toy soldiers in rows: barons and baronesses, dukes and duchesses, the rich and the brave and the old and the young and every respectable individual in between. Their military heroes join them not long after—their generals, their colonels, their bright-eyed lieutenants, courageous and proud and with medals dangling from their necks to show for it. And gathered before their king and his family, they wait, chins high and eyes fixed on the crown, for the words their sovereign has uttered dozens of times, and his ancestors before him, hundreds: “We celebrate, but above all else, we prevail!” It’s a mantra of sorts, a promise—wishful thinking at times and stone-solid at others, and the crowd, draped in their finery and blessed with the ignorance of never knowing what winter truly means for the less fortunate, raise their flutes in response and drink to the health of their friends, to the prosperity of their nation.
And they dance, the kingdom’s finest—the first of the ball and the first of the season, though, they hope, certainly not their last; the music lilts and sways and so do they, steady on their feet but only just. Silk and taffeta rustle across the floor, hellos are exchanged like currency, and though it’s the sort of gesture that never truly gets old, the moment is still taken for granted, as all things to be treasured inevitably are, for the guests are not all here, and the knowing of it weighs on them all—some like a feather, curiosity-tinged and excitement-laced, and some like a stone, somber and cold. But they’re coming—they always are, and they’ll be here soon enough: the magicians, the witches, the gifted—the practitioners of a Science they were never invited to learn.
The doors swing open, and the ballroom pauses as if drawing a breath—waits in anticipation; the crowd parts not in the way it had for its soldiers, but in the way of wary children, eager to get a closer look but fearful of a look too close, and they march in, violet and blue and scarlet, each order more formidable than the last. No one speaks; no one cheers. They are greeted by the music’s crescendo and the sort of reverence borne of a heavy silence, and it is as it has always been: a ceasefire for a war that was never truly declared.
And they notice something different, a break from what’s come to be second nature to some, but though they wonder at the meaning of it, none dare to ask about the girl in the black kefta, for in order for hope to thrive, there must first be a bit of mystery.
The procession comes to a halt, the trumpets blare, and the spell is broken. Their voices ring out, “My prevaliruyem!” and their glasses raise, and just as it has hundreds of times before, the celebration begins.
OVERVIEW: Welcome to Rule and Ruin’s opening event! We’re so incredibly excited to begin this journey with you all, and we hope you’re as ready as we are to dive right in.
This will be a two-part event, with this half of the event spanning the events before the Grisha perform. All characters are free to roam throughout the ballroom, gardens, and all surrounding corridors at this time. You may play out threads between 8:00 P.M. and 11:15 P.M. Please tag your event starters with #rarfete and #rarstarter.
For your reference, humans are dressed in formal evening wear; military officers and guards are in uniform. Grisha are wearing their appropriate keftas.