Castle Lurroc. The ancient home of the Royal Family of Lurroc -- and currently unoccupied, though not through lack of bloodline. The gigantic behemoth of a structure sat on a cliff overlooking a grey-watered bay, its central tower jutting up as a tired grey-black pillar. Smaller towers surrounded the central tower, each topped with a sky-piercing spire. The walkways of the castle's thick walls were teethed with pointed stones. As the sun set behind it, ending the day, the rays cast the indomitable fortress into the shadow of age and endurance.
Rifyll Wyndcall did not look forward to taking census of Castle Lurroc. She, an elf of 113, stood in front of the near-black stony mass with her delicate hands holding a staff and a hefty rucksack slung across her back. She was pale-skinned, thin, and lanky, the features men desired in women left small or flat on her. Her face was classically elven; thin nose, thin face, thin eyebrows, delicate chin and cheekbones, with eight-inch-long pointy ears and blazingly green eyes. Her autumn-colored hair hung past her shoulders and ended in cute little curls, but it was straight for much of its flowing length. For this mission, she wore crème-colored pants, a dark-red shirt, and matching boots.
Rifyll's deepest wish was to be a wizard. Being a wizard had been part of her family for generations, and she was destined, she knew, to continue that legacy. Her grades at the Ycohon's College of Wizarding said otherwise. She, an elf, was the bottom of her class, and the only chance she had of remaining in the school was this 'errand'.
Due to Castle Lurroc's ugliness, the Royal Family hadn't used it in years. It was there if they ever needed it, but they seemed content with letting the hideous building rot and crumble while they ruled from their newer, more fashionable castle.
The Academy had cut a deal with the Royal Family. In exchange for more funding, the Academy would send someone along to check the castle and make sure that monsters hadn't decided to occupy the empty castle. Rifyll was that someone. She was expendable, and it stung.
Her fingers danced past a heavy ring of keys tied to her belt as she journeyed around the castle's walls to find the gardener's door. It took little effort to find it, but it stuck and Rifyll had to ram against it with her shoulder to get into the grounds surrounding the keep. From there, she had skirted overgrown gardens and rocky pathways to the front of the keep, a massive door emblazoned with the (now outdated) coat-of-arms for Lurroc. It was barred, but Rifyll selected another key and applied that one to a small door set inside the large door, and she slipped into the main hall.
The inside was nothing short of epic. It was so cavernous that it was dark inside. Pilasters stretched up into the night-like abyss of the roof, and doorways at the hall's edges led into darkened halls. Just how had they built this again? Rifyll knew that her people, the elves, vastly preferred to grow their large structures. It was both impractical and awe-inspiring that humans would go to such lengths to make a building like this.
However, if Rifyll wanted to avoid tripping on or encountering something in the dark, she'd need a light. Rifyll held the end of her staff in the palm of her hand and mumbled a few words. It sparked briefly, showering the area with harmless drops of light, but remained ordinary. She scowled and spoke the words again, enunciating carefully. This time, the knobbed end of the staff lit up like a lantern, casting light on the bare stone floor of the hall.
Rifyll smiled and held the staff-light up. The hall had been stripped when the family left, and it still remained bare. There were cobwebs in corners, of course, but not giant cobwebs. She couldn't see any kind of bones lying around, nor much in the way of detritus. That was a good sign. She could leave now, actually. She came, she saw, she hadn't died, everything was good!
No, that'd be boring. What else could lurk in the castle, left untouched when the Royal Family left? Gold? Unlikely. Tomes of knowledge? Slightly more likely. Rifyll wouldn't know unless she looked! That was the joy of exploring!
At the edge of the light, something moved. Rifyll hoisted her staff-light up higher to try and catch it, but it fell upon nothing. Probably a mouse.
She began to walk down the hall. The light cast the edges and recesses of the hall into deep shadow. They shifted, thinning and thickening as Rifyll passed by, her eyes tracking them. By chance, her gaze slid to the edge of the light. There, at the ring formed by her light, was a dark shape on the floor.
Rifyll stopped and watched the shape. It was very flat, like paper, and black, like the deepest shadows. In fact, Rifyll wasn't sure it wasn't a shadow! The problem, of course, was that it was leaned towards her light, something no shadow would do.
Curious, Rifyll moved her staff-light to the right, and then to the left. The shape didn't react. She took a step forward, and the shape slid back, remaining as far from her as it had been. Perhaps a slime of some sort? Rifyll could take care of it easily enough.
As she mentally walked herself through the steps to create a small fireball, Rifyll saw the shape change. From its former indiscriptness, it molded itself through curves. A humanoid head seemed to pinch itself out of the dark mass, then some shoulders established themselves, with their arms hidden within the shape. Finally, a thin waist led to the swell of feminine hips, and from there, the shape was consumed by the darkness.
A shower of arcane sparks erupted from Rifyll's hand, fizzling against her skin like embers. She yelped in surprise. She had forgotten about the fireball spell! Rifyll hissed and looked at the shape, now seemingly the shadow of a woman pointed into her light. A willowy arm seemed to have separated away from the body, and now the shape was beckoning for her to follow.
Well, why not? It could be a deadly trap, but the College clearly did not care about her at all. Besides, it'd be fun and interesting! Rifyll walked towards the shadowy being, even though it remained as far away from her as it had been.
Rifyll was more intent on following the being than she was on observing her surroundings. When it abruptly circled around to the left, she turned to follow it down a passage-way. It led her to shine the staff-light on stairs leading up, directed her to follow it up them, going up and up and up.
She stopped when she came to a door. The shadow-woman had vanished, but the door had an inch of gap between it and the floor. Rifyll tried the door, only to find that it was locked. Her hand brushed down to the countless keys, but perhaps she had a better solution.
Rifyll pointed at the door's lock and focus. Words that felt like the color blue formed in her mind, and she spoke their arcane syllables. The keyhole started showering out blue sparks with a loud, continuous crackle, dying down after a solid minute of hissing. The lock was untouched.
Of course, it would be untouched. Rifyll screamed in rage and slammed her staff against the door. Then, the lock clicked.
Rifyll paused, then her hand shot out for the door and shoved it open. She quickly hopped into the room and raised her staff to see it. It was the top of one of the towers! Broken windows let wind whistle through the room and the full moon shone through the glassless ports to reveal an empty chamber.
Nothing. Rifyll scowled and turned to the door, intent on leaving. On the door, the womanly shadow was plastered, with one hand placed over the door's lock. So, it had unlocked the door! Really, it didn't need to have. Rifyll could've used the practice.
Before Rifyll could sweep out the door, the shadow-woman circled around the light's edges and beckoned her to come to a section of wall. Rifyll took a step towards the door, and the shadow beckoned more vigorously.
Well, what'd be the harm? Rifyll turned to the shadow and followed it to the wall. As her light crawled up the blocky stones, the shadow retreated up the wall until it seemed to be growing from out of the ceiling. When she had reached the wall, the shadow pointed at a small stone in the wall.
Rifyll looked at the stone. It protruded maybe a half-inch from out of the wall. Her interest piqued, she set her staff down and began to pry at the stone. It took some effort, but she quickly had the rock in her hands. She tossed it aside, took up her staff, and aimed the light into the hole made by the loose stone.
Something glinted silvery in the hole. Rifyll placed her hand in the hole, and her fingers felt a small, loose chain. She tugged it out, and pulled a locket from out of hole! It was human-made, so not particularly elegant by her standards, but, if she had to guess, it was real silver. She clicked the locket open, and saw a small portrait of a woman. Quite beautiful for a human too, but she'd be long dead by now, Rifyll thought.
Rifyll shoved the locket into her rucksack and turned to face the shadow. "Okay, little Miss Shadow, you've earned yourself an audience," she said.
The shadow, of course, didn't speak, but it did seem to bow. It circled around the light again, aiming back towards the tower's stairs. It seemed to know where it was going, so there was no reason why Rifyll shouldn't get a tour!
The shadow-woman led her back down the stairs and through the passageways, leading her back to the main hall. Once there, it stopped and wavered, as if waiting for her. "Okay, where to next, Shadow?" Rifyll asked.
The shadow beckoned once, then shot off! It nearly disappeared from Rifyll's sight before she could begin running after it. It dived into a corridor, twisting through passageway after passageway, remaining just barely ahead of Rifyll's light as she chased it.
What was worse was that it was getting faster. She was slowly, but surely, losing the Shadow. Inch by inch, the being's speeding head disappeared from the radius of her staff's light even as her boots clopped over stone after stone.