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SANCTUARY

Somewhere high in the vast jagged eternity of the Himalayas exists a timeless cluster of weathered stone buildings, clinging to the icy cliff face, attacked by howling alpine winds, only accessible by an ancient winding path, a stone stairway said to be cut into existence by the gods themselves. Nobody has climbed this stairway in centuries.

In 1907, British explorer Charles Norway, said to have gone insane in search of the elusive Yeti (whom only his fierce Australian rival Buck Lancaster claimed to have witnessed a year earlier), took his team of fellow explorers, assistants and admirers with him into the deadly peaks of the Himalayas, never to be seen again. After a month of pointless wandering, their last known contact with the outside world, at the monastery of Paro Taktsang, went down in legend as being bizarre. Norway, caked in ice and missing many digits (as well as most of his crew), was said to have been speaking in tongues, uttering things about a terrible disease, about a prisoner of the gods, about a simple truth that threatened to undermine society. Then he and his most loyal friends and mountaineers disappeared again, forever.

Ten years later, near the end of World War I, renowned expeditioner Bront Brontson and an international crew of dedicated scientists, mountaineers, military officers and local Nepalese are on the trail after a decade of fading public interest in the story of (posthumously knighted) Sir Norway. It began with the discovery of Norway's base camp at the foot of a colossal, antediluvian staircase carved directly into a massive mountain, a mountain too newly discovered (or rather, re-discovered) to even have been named yet.

However, something quickly became clear. Due to the nature of the mountain and surrounding topography, every day vicious winds slice across the face, making it impossible to travel. Night is calmer but not by much, forcing the explorers into a nocturnal assault. It's constantly snowing. It's tough going - the staircase has been eroded and reshaped over many many years into a hazardous ascent: part ice-chute, part collapsing ruin. In some places where the mountains have oozed apart, blocks are dangerously close to dropping directly into abysses and chasms below. It's cold. There may not be enough supplies. And there's something out there, in the snow. Something deadly.

And not just that. The very first day of the staircase's discovery, at the same instant everyone beheld the much distant shape of what might just be a building near the top of the mountain, Bront Brontson was murdered, from behind, with an icicle.

When I see how many people join I'll then put up the names/professions/slight backstory of everyone in the group, you can choose which you want. But of course each role has secrets too. There are more things going on than meets the eye.

Brontson's Team:

[1] …

[2] …

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That was the only obstacle, so now you find yourself at the end of region 3. It appears to be the end of the staircase... the ancient worn steps rise up from the snow, digging into the side of a cliff and zigzagging up a vertical cliff wall for almost miles before opening onto a windy ridge. At this ridge, a narrow abuttment sticking out from the slope, one can stand and look over a mystical snowscape of mountains rolling and spiking off into the horizon. Glaciers and peaks are laid out before you, rising above the whispering clouds like some kind of geologic heaven. The staircase ends with two massive stone pillars guarding either end, showing you the final region (region 4) : an almost vertical snowy slope, going up into the foggy distance.

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The winds have become blizzard force and you find yourself moving in a crazed zigzag pattern across the snowy mountainface, just to continue footing. You seem to have overshot the peak in an arc, curving back around to the other side. However, this results in the discovery of a set of ice caves, sticking out visually with a frozen twinkle. Pushing aside clumps of snow that have since gathered, you see the entrances of two caves, one a few meters up the mountainface from the other. They both go relatively deep. The one on top has an empty bag with bread crumbs and dried fruit, as you might have found in your rations. It tightens into a narrow crack near the back, opening into a darker tunnel that snakes deeper into the mountainside. The bottom cave is larger and wider. The floor and a good deal of the ceiling and some of the walls are coated in lichen - a fabulously exotic, fully grown, non-sulfur-stunted version of the lichen growing by the volcanic lake. You can almost visibly see the complex symbiotic interaction of the fungus and algae. There is evidence that somebody was forced to survive in the cave for a matter of days. It reeks of human waste. There's also some blood and gnawed bones. There is also evidence that someone tried to break through the ceiling of the cave where it's thin and icy enough to see through into the top cave.

Also, there's rummaging around nearby. Other people are here!

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there's also another set of footprints, larger and more erratic, coming around in a loop. All of these things are quickly being obscured by the fresh snow though

See?! See!? Footprints of the Beast! Those aren't the prints of your Sanskrat thing. He's nearby. We must be careful! :wacko:

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Nischal:

Ok that's it. I'm heading back. I don't care about travel conditions. They've gotta be better than this. Anyone with me? respond now, because I'm not angering the spirits any longer.

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Nischal:

Ok that's it. I'm heading back. I don't care about travel conditions. They've gotta be better than this. Anyone with me? respond now, because I'm not angering the spirits any longer.

I strongly doubt you'll survive the trip down today; you'd best stay with us until tomorrow night at least. This night must be nearly done. We can stay in one of these caves to shelter from the wind. The bottom one's probably safer, if you can stand the smell...heh heh. :lol:

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Willem:

Not very sure John disappeared because he was kidnapped by the monster or he himself sneak away from the team. But we must continue. We have 2 choices: Lower cave or upper cave?

I vote for lower cave.

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Willem:

Not very sure John disappeared because he was kidnapped by the monster or he himself sneak away from the team. But we must continue. We have 2 choices: Lower cave or upper cave?

I vote for lower cave.

Definitely feel that the lower cave is safer...much safer. Food to be had, if you care for it. Though I doubt you'll want to partake of it Willem. But when you get the choice between starving and madness, that's a decision you'll have to make...

I wouldn't advise a trip down the mountain on your own Nischal. How do you plan to get across that ice plateau by yourself? We're almost to the top. We can go back together once we get there.

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