The abyss is a steep wall


SUBMITTED BY: azzar

DATE: Sept. 5, 2017, 9:36 p.m.

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  1. The abyss is a steep wall, reaching left and right for as long as
  2. anyone has ever travelled, up at least ten thousand levels from where I
  3. sit, and (in myth) down to the depths of Sheol, where the air burns, and
  4. the face of the abyss wall melts and runs perpetually downward, into a
  5. molten infinity. Standing on one of the switchbacked roads that men
  6. have scratched into the wall, looking out away from the wall, there is
  7. just darkness, fallers, and debris. Down and out, an occasional red
  8. glow from (one supposes) Sheol appears, but nothing else. Sound from
  9. the abyss is (in the absence of passers-by) only an occasional sighing,
  10. as of distant winds, or very distant gales.
  11. Our scientists have determined that the light we see by, that wells in
  12. the day and wanes in the night, comes from the rock of the wall, and the
  13. air itself near to the wall. Why it waxes and wanes, and what force can
  14. cause the very air to give out with light, they cannot say.
  15. Men's houses sit on the wall like the round, dusty hills of the
  16. spider's nests, clinging to the houses' walls. Roads are hacked into
  17. the rock, winding switchbacked between the houses, through towns, narrow
  18. and crumbling in the wilderness. Left to itself, the wall face is
  19. irregular, bumpy, with long cracks and clefts, ledges leading to
  20. nowhere, chimneys and hollows.
  21. The general tendency of each level is to slope inward (toward the
  22. wall) at an angle comprising about one twentieth part of a circle from
  23. the abyssward direction (the direction of the pull of gravity). At the
  24. border between one level and the next, there is an overhang, so that the
  25. lowest parts of the upper level thrust outward into the void beyond the
  26. upper parts of the lower level, and in fact beyond the lower parts of
  27. the lower level, so that although each level slopes wallward, the
  28. general tendency of the wall as a whole is to jut abyssward. At least
  29. this is what the legend says, and the dim looming greyness we see
  30. looking up in the daytime, and the evidence of debris and fallers,
  31. supports it.
  32. Passing from one level to the next lower is thus possible, although
  33. neither easily nor without danger, by the means of long ropes and
  34. pulleys or (if no assistance is to be had on the level below) by
  35. swinging. Travel in the opposite direction, from lower to higher
  36. levels, is on the other hand all but impossible in the normal course of
  37. things. The rock of the border overhangs is tough and not subject to
  38. cracks or fissures large enough to permit passage, yet has enough of a
  39. tendency to flake and chip near the point that all efforts to establish
  40. permanent bridges from this level to either of its neighbors have met
  41. with (usually tragic) failure.
  42. The vertical height of the level varies, being generally between two
  43. and five days travel from lower overhang to upper. This does not take
  44. into account the twists of our roads; if it were possible to move
  45. directly against gravity, the distance would of course be much shorter.
  46. Because it is in general possible to cross the boundaries between
  47. levels in only one direction, the general spread of humanity has been
  48. downwards, towards (presumably) Sheol. The population seems to be
  49. distributed uniformly in the lateral direction (left and right across
  50. the level), but to be spreading slowly downward between levels, as if
  51. humanity had begun somewhere far, far above (and why else would the
  52. levels be numbered, reckoned from up to down). Strong tradition holds
  53. that when one level becomes too crowded, the dangerous migration down to
  54. the next becomes more common, until the lessening of population due to
  55. bordercrossings (successful and unsuccessful) balances the birthrate.
  56. As our people are never extremely fecund, this desertion rate need not
  57. be high.
  58. There is some evidence to support popular tradition's picture of human
  59. migration. The villages near the top of the level tend to be the oldest
  60. and best established, and the density of population there is higher.
  61. One of the favorite and longest-disputed topics among the
  62. philosophers of this level is the fate of fallers. Fallers are those
  63. persons, or seeming persons, who pass by the level, more or less far out
  64. in the abyss, on their way from somewhere above to somewhere below.
  65. The popular wisdom states that the fate of fallers is simply to fall,
  66. until they reach the levels of Sheol, and are melted to nothingness.
  67. This is too simple for many of our wisest, however. They are divided
  68. into several schools. One set of schools holds that, somewhere between
  69. this level and the deadly nether reaches, there is something that brings
  70. the fallers to a halt. The schools disagree in the nature and placement
  71. of these obstacles, the purposes of their creators (if any), whether or
  72. not the obstacles are such that the fallers are destroyed upon meeting
  73. them, and a host of other questions.
  74. One of the more notorious schools of faller theory, popular in our
  75. great-grandfathers' day, held that ten thousand levels down, silken nets
  76. bring the fallers to a gentle halt, and they are led off by servitors
  77. (there was a schism early in the history of this theory on the question
  78. of the gender, if any, of these) to await, in honored opulence, the day
  79. when the normal migration of humanity reaches those regions. This
  80. school flourished in that time of optimism, but it tapered off as its
  81. most staunch defenders journeyed to the lower edge of the level and
  82. hurled themselves hopefully into space, equipped with greater or smaller
  83. numbers of philosophic texts, missives, and holy runes intended to
  84. ensure their friendly (not to say warm) reception in the Advanced
  85. Regions.

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