Introduction
These are the adventures of Peridur and Eleanor, two elves who share one soul and a taste for adventure. Exploring realms both physical and spiritual, our heroes seek to grow and learn about themselves and the world around them.
Peridur and Eleanor have been brought up in the elven court. Recognised from birth as Soulbound, or one soul in two bodies, it was foretold that they would accomplish great things and be celebrated among their people.
Soulbound, the sages explained, are born when a great task has been decreed by fate, a task so great that no one elf alone can accomplish it. Only two working in perfect concert may have any chance of success. But what great task was set to these children, not even the star readers could clearly see.
Decades have passed and the Soulbound have come into their maturity. The elves have placed great faith in the Soulbound, as they are a people in decline, long past their greatness and dwindling in number. The elven queen has tasked the Soulbound to recover lost artifacts of great power in the hope that these magics can save what remains of the elves and other races that yet value the beauty and goodness that exists in the "Twilight Era."
Or so the elves name this era - for their time in this place is limited by their ability to bear the sorrows that come with dwelling in a mortal realm. If an elf loses sight of what she most values and succumbs to grief in spirit, she dies.
Mountains rise, lands are lost to the sea and the lesser races live and die in a twinkling. Who can blame the elves for forsaking these lands for the undying realm, the promised paradise for all members of their kind.
Before he took the ship to the undying realm, a legendary elven singer was heard to remark: "I am a lonely soul." Most assumed his words were a statement of the countless ages he spent singing his songs upon Arda. But the Singers of the inner circle of the Etharchy knew the truth.
If not Soulbound born, as all but two upon Arda are, souls are sentenced to an incomplete and unspeakably lonely existence. For this is the Twilight Era and long is the lament of the elves.
Spirit Walking among the Shadows
Prelude
As Peridur and Eleanor prepare to embark on an epic quest to recover dangerous and powerful artifacts from the past, they share a series of cryptic dreams, filled with symbolism, monsters and magic. Through the examination of their experiences, the Soulbound are beginning to believe that not all of the lost artifacts of the elves exist in the physical world as we know it.
Some may have been lost in the unmapped realms of the spirit.
Elves believe the physical and spiritual worlds are inextricably linked together. What a human might call a dream is simply a different reality for an elf. Though it may be a nebulous, fantastical experience, it can have consequences further reaching than simple cause and effect.
For when elves dreamwalk, they awaken gods, banish evil and, in so doing, change the fabric of reality itself.
It will take all of the Soulbound's unique skills, courage, but most especially the ineffable bond between each other, to venture forth into the spirit realm to reclaim their heritage.
But venture forth they must- as there is no one else with the talents required to answer the call.
A Piscine Message
One of the Soulbound's favorite past times is dancing. Having perfected the various forms long ago, the pair now enjoys the challenge of dancing on different types of surfaces to improve their technique. This night, they were waltzing on water.
"The trick seems to be..." Peridur paused to pull his foot out of the water. "Not to stop moving."
Eleanor giggled as she tripped over an errant ripple in the stream and fell into Peridur's arms. Her stumble caused them both to stop moving and sink up to their knees in the chilly water.
"Again?" Peridur asked, preparing to begin the steps once more.
"Not right now," Eleanor said. They had been at it awhile and the sun had gone down below the horizon. She was both tired from the exertion and cold from the repeated missteps into the water. When her Soulbound noticed her shivering, he wrapped her in his cloak and carried her to one of her favorite places to sit and watch the movement of the water down the stream. Long ago, Peridur had constructed a fire pit at that spot for their enjoyment, so he lit the waiting fuel and a cheery flame began to warm them both.
Peridur gazed at the stars while Eleanor reclined on the riverbank next to him, chattering about nothing in particular, as she was wont to do, with her fishing line in the water.
Imperceptibly to all but her Soulbound, the elf utilized her bardish skills to vibrate the fishing line between her fingers in a rhythm that mimicked the beating of her heart. Between the conversation with Peridur and her peculiar brand of fish-related magic, Eleanor's split attention put her into a light trance. She was no longer herself, but something else, a creature of both the land and water, held to the shore only by the unbreakable bond she shared with the elf next to her.
Suddenly, there was a tug on her line and Eleanor carefully reeled in a fish with scales the color of rubies. Humming the song that allowed her to speak to animals, Eleanor issued her customary greeting to the fish.
"Wise one," she sang. "What secrets have you to reveal about the nature of reality?"
The fish flicked its tail back and forth, pulsing to the lingering call of Eleanor's summoning song and the beat of her heart. When the light mesmerism began to fade from its mind and body, the fish spoke: "Deep beneath the realms of blood, lies a pool of stagnant water," it said. "Brave adventurers, beware! There is a price to pay to solve this mystery and close the gate. The gods themselves will be watching you."
Then, with a final glimmer of ruby red scales, it flipped out of the elf's aura of influence and vanished once more into the depths of the river.
Eleanor related the curious words to her Soulbound, who pondered them for a time, while cradling Eleanor's head on his shoulder and continuing to view the heavens.
After a comfortable silence, Peridur said, "In the annals of history, I can remember only one mention of a place called 'the realms of blood' and even then it was a term used by an enemy of the elves rather than our people."
Eleanor lazily ran her fingers through Peridur's hair, marveling as she always did at the seemingly endless amount of knowledge he held in his mind. "And what might that be," she asked, encouraging him to continue.
He looked troubled for a moment, but quickly relaxed once more under Eleanor's soothing hands. "Do you recall the strange events surrounding the brief orcish alliance with the Etharch?"
Eleanor paused for a moment of reflection then shook her head, negatively.
"Doubt the fish had much to say about it," Peridur teased.
"You have your sources of inspiration and I have mine," Eleanor replied, unruffled.
Peridur's eyes lost focus as he went deep inside his mind and recited his learning. "It is often said, 'The enemy of my enemy is my friend.' When the world was younger many fell things walked its pathless forests, some much worse than the Orcs. Chief among these were the Abhors."
"They had the appearance of serpents, though details are lacking, but were not native to this land. Instead, they dwelt in the shadow plane and from there stole into the dreams of all sentient creatures," Peridur said. "Those they terrorized in dreams were thus controlled by them, and they could harm others."
"How awful," Eleanor interjected.
"Indeed," Peridur replied. "Many had their psychic aura taken to a place in the shadow plane where the Abhors could pen and torture their victims, a 'realm of blood' as the orcs called it. Whilst one could kill the creatures they controlled, no one had a way to strike at them directly."
"Through repeated battles on the borders of consciousness, the elves learned that Abhors drew power from a pool of water, or so it appeared, on the shadow plane," Peridur said. "To counter this strengthening of their powers, our loremasters created a potent weapon that existed both in the shadow and physical planes."
"If only some of our loremasters had remained on this side of the sea," Eleanor lamented.