The Authors

The Authors
Me, Prayag Ray on the left, Ronojoy Mukerji on the right. The joy of creation on our faces.

Preface: What is 'The Ruby Of The Fallen'?

Ahem ahem! Attention please! ..'THIS TALE GREW IN THE TELLING, UNTIL'.. until I realized I was sounding stupid, and that I was aping Tolkien again.. Apologies..apologies.. Can I start over?? A few years ago, while I was in school (St. Xaviers, by the way... Greatest place on earth), my fellow fantasy-fiction fan and best friend (The accusations of us being.. ahem.. gay, as many an ex- Xaverian has come to believe, are completely false, I assure you) Ronojoy Mukerji, and I, Prayag Ray, began on a highly ambitious project, humbly titled: 'The Ruby of the Fallen' .. Yes yes, immediately you see the telltale signs of crummy fantasy fiction- a) the inanimate object in the title (eg. 'The Lord of the Rings' or 'The Wheel of Time' or 'The Sword of Shannara') b) The pompousness of the title c) The ---- of the ---- format.. etc. (You realize I've read considerable quantities of 'crummy fantasy fiction') And yes, your conclusion is entirely correct: it is (or was intended to be) another adolescant tale of big guys in shiny armour, dark lords in spiky black gothic armour, and hot elf chicks wearing litte or no armour (only chainmail bikinis allowed) .. In any case it never got written. Just as Samuel Taylor Coleridge awoke from an opium trance, and never finished 'Kubla Khan' (there I go again, droping names.. I swear English Honours will make a complete prig {with a 'g' not a 'ck'} of me) my friend and I awoke from the idyllic dream of childhood and entered the 'big bad world'.. Consequentially the dream of 'The Ruby of the Fallen' vanished like drops of water in the Sahara. Fortunately, I managed to write down a summary of the plot and stored it, for a later day, when I shall (hopefully) sit in the corner of a big study in Oxford (laugh if you want to) and type away on a laptop, churning out pages and pages of chainmail-bikini clad fight sequences. The next few posts on this my humble blog page, will give the reader a synopsis of the tale, so that the reader may spend several happy minutes laughing at the teenage immaturity of two dreamy eyed school boys - Prayag Ray and Ronojoy Mukerji, who shall soon enough be washed away by time and tides, and their 'novel' shall go down in the history of the cyber world as yet another inconsequential blog in the wall. God Bless Pink Floyd. Amen.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Hell flames

(Gah! Fuck the strange line-breaks. This is just a draft anyway.)



Red petals, flickering, burning, fell slowly from the sky. Ascronos stood in the great garden of his dreams,

shrouded in a cloud of falling petals. They kissed and caressed his hair, settling upon his head, they skimmed silky

smooth along the length of his drawn steel. There was no snow here, thought Ascoronos, no cold draghts to bite

though your armour, to freeze your bones, to turn the childrens' faces to ice. Back home in Asgaroth, the snow fell

thick and fast, all year round with no rebate, no mercy and with the fury of an angered god. Here it snowed fire.

Red flames on burning petals, consuming, charring and turning them to ashes. Fumes spread across the garden, vapours

that shrouded the earth, wreathed tendrils of smoke around his armoured feet. They did not touch him, they skirted

along the bare steel that shod his feet. A broken breeze blew through his hair, his long silver-grey locks drifting

gently, shimmering in the light of a full moon that shone through the canopy of dark trees in which he stood

embowered. It was a place of savage beauty, haunted by ghosts of Ascronos' mind, shaped by hopes, dreams and fears

only he could know or understand. Sheltered as he was in the dark garden where the thin grey trees hid him from

view, he could not help but think about the past.

They had him in chains in Zarabusa. Locked and hidden deep in a valley. Within the prison of Din-a-Zar, a place so

dreary that life within it passed in an endless blur of bleakness. They smashed his citadel, burnt his books, stole

his secrets and all the knowledge he had acquired after years of sheltered study. Then they bound him in chains and

threw him into the darkest corner of Din-a-Zar. To what good? Thought Ascronos, there in that garden as the petals

turned from red to withered black. They would not use it, they could not. They would not understand. Dark Magic they

called it, the ignorant fools. Men, they hate what they fear, they fear what they cannot understand. He had the

secrets of life within his grasp. He stood on the brink of a discovery. A revelation that would change the world and

those who lived in it, whether they liked it or not. But one bitterly cold night as the candles in his study

guttered down to dregs and the yellow light spilled shakily upon his ancient books of lore, they came for him. From

his window he could see them down below, pools of lights spilling from where they stood huddled, holding up flaming

brands and shouting for his blood. Their breath formed in clouds of white but their voices were loud and angry.

The plague, they said, was his doing. Black Magic that emenated from his tower, controlled by him. Puny fools, he

had thought. What cared he for their mortal trappings, their day to day goings and comings, their homely woes and

joys, when immortality itself beckoned to him from the shadows of his study, fumed and spread its delicious odour as

he wore the hours away, bent over his jars of bubbling potions. But at last, just as he glimpsed the distant light,

just as it all began to fall into place, they came for him. The cursed plague had done him in. The same plague that

mutilated his servants and left him the sole inhabitant of his castle. He remembered their sickly faces, as they

came to him, begging for leave to go home to their families. Sire, my children are dying, the one with the festering

face has begged. Disgusted, he had turned them all out. Ascronos Hell does not deal with the pestilent miseries of

the crass. Rats, of course it was the rats. He had known it all along. He had long ago taken such precautions with

himself so as not to be bothered by the diseases of village whores. 'Magics', as the ignorant calld it, potions he

had brewed for himself, which he could not nor would not be bothered to produce for the masses. He had come so far

down the path of his secret studies that some of these cures could have effect only on himself, because he was not

like the others. When the villagers had found him years ago, an infant bundled in silver cloth, with a burning star

branded upon his forehead, they had known he would not be like the others. But now, those 'others' stood with

firebrands at his doorstep, and he could do nothing.

He could do nothing. It was a thought that drove him mad, in his days of imprisonment. When he escaped, it was not

a question of course, he would make sure they could never touch him again. He would rise, great and powerful beyond

the scope or thought of the little. He would draw to himself, like minds from all the lands. Those of remarkable

vision and intellect, those fit to rule and conquor, even protect the miserable masses they reigned over. He would

have an army. An army such as the realms had never seen. So that he never had to run again, never flee in haste from

his own domain, sought after by those who could never understand the gleaming truths within it. But there, that

night, the wind rapping the verse of his doom, etching patterns of cold demise in lines of ice upon his window pane,

while the rabble smote their crude contructs of war upon his shivering castle doors, fleeing was all the choice he

had left. Escape was the only possibility. But as he fled down the passages of his citadel, they cornered him. They

smashed the wooden doors and flooded in from all sides, their shouts bounding off the walls as they trapped him and

clapped him in chains. Then came the long and hard journey to Din-a-Zar. They put him in a cage. A cage, like a wild

animal. Him, Ascronos Hell, the greatest mind in all the realms trapped like a beast in a snare, helpless. They

threw him in the dungeons, if so they could be called. Cold and dingy spaces closed in by icy stone, where the few

beams of sunlight that filtered through seemed to die, to wither like the petals that fell all around him, to fade

to grey before they touched his lined and dusty face. Most died of cold there, the others went insane. Ascronos

lived. Lived, fought and dreamed within this icy tomb. For he knew that one day the shackles would break and he

would rise, greater than before. And the world would know the anger of Ascronos Hell.

Ascronos arose from a dream within his dream, into the forest where he took shelter when his mind lost hope, there

in his icy cell. Still, the pathetic petals of red burned and withered around him, as would the fools who confined

him. The ones who had him in chains, the ones who burnt his books, his life, his home. All but his dreams. His

dreams still shone dimly around him, ensnared as they were by tendrils of doubt, much as this forest was shrouded in

half formed mist. A great tide of anger rose within Ascronos as he thought of the woe they had worked upon him and

the vengeance that he would wreak, merciless and cruel when he broke through the fetters of this mortal prison. He

held up his sword in the moonlight. A withered petal petal, once red, now burnt to cinders, drifted down, settled

upon its edge and turned at once to blood. A drop of fresh dark blood gleamed upon his sword. It slid down the

lenght of the sword and dripped down to the shrouded misty earth below. All at once, every petal in the air, every

burnt or burning sheaf of red that twirled in the air around him turned to blood. It rained blood upon the bare head

of Ascronos Hell, drenching him, soaking him and satiating the burning hatred within him, quenching the carnal

craving for retribution that had buried itself in his breast like an arrown and had seeped its acid into his veins.

The trees around him began to shake in a hideous agony. They writhed like trapped beasts that saw their death

rushing at them but could do nothing. They split and exploded into a thousand splinters of wood, burning as they did

so, scattering Hell's fury into the world of his dream. The mist that had calmly wrapped its fingers around his feet

swirled in mad wrath, as if stirred by an angered demon. The demon was within him, him that stood calm in the midst

of chaos, his anger burning, scarring, destroying the outer world. It shone through his frenzied eyes, it fed the

flames that consumed the forest, it turned the petals to blood.

At last it was all over. The remnants of the once calm forest shivered in the aftermath of their creator's fury. The

drops of blood dripped off the ends of Ascronos Hell's hair. They trickled down the edge of his blade. This dream-

world that kept him sane would vanish and he would rise again, greater than before. And the world would know the

anger of Ascronos Hell.

And the prophets spoke of rain. And the coming of him that would bleed the earth, so that the rain fell red and painted the faces of the children. Woe be to the fathers of the hatred for the flames of Hell would burn them.