Post by Secrets on Jan 5, 2007 1:35:53 GMT
Before the arrival of Alexander the Great and before the great city of Alexandria, in the Late Dynasty Period of Amyrtaios, Egypt is recovering from a ten year Persian Conquest. A new young king is on the throne in Lower Egypt and is promised a Roman Princess. Upper Egypt is split into three kingdoms, and the Nile is being used to transport stolen goods and material. The alliance with Rome if successful could prove beneficial to Egyptian welfare and security.
But somewhere in the Gobi Desert away from this all a secret lies hidden. Only a few of the youth know where this wonder is. A cave that holds an ancient tale told to children at day break.
The tale of Asilia. An age old story of a woman during the beginning of time who took her children to a cave in what used to be forest and fertile land. She dug into the earth with her bare hands creating a safe haven for her two babies. It was said she stayed there for years and years, growing old and teaching her children to hunt, becoming like jackals. The myth is exposed to us as a story for survival, but it is also a story of magic. Inside the cave she lived in were relics she collected and were thought to be of the gods. Many think Asilia herself was a god. Because there are only two spots of oasis in the desert they believe she traveled to both places hiding the pieces of the gods that descend on Earth. Each item performs an act of nature, love, and prosperity. But if all of the items are together it could be the end of the world and the beginning of a new species. A species like Asilia. The gods.
Only a few of those items have ever been recovered. Five in all. Four remain in the Lower Kingdom, and one has been missing for three years.
In the meantime a single High Priestess, a favorite of the Pharaoh's as well as the Roman Emperor's court. Seemingly more accurate than the Oracle at Delphi and closer in relation to the gods has somehow been blessed by the Aryan gods and only she seems to have some key to the location of these items.
The Roman alliance could ensure the recovery of all of the items... and the solidity of the Egyptian people's belief in their Pharaoh...
Thats only the begining of....
Secrts of Asilia
But somewhere in the Gobi Desert away from this all a secret lies hidden. Only a few of the youth know where this wonder is. A cave that holds an ancient tale told to children at day break.
The tale of Asilia. An age old story of a woman during the beginning of time who took her children to a cave in what used to be forest and fertile land. She dug into the earth with her bare hands creating a safe haven for her two babies. It was said she stayed there for years and years, growing old and teaching her children to hunt, becoming like jackals. The myth is exposed to us as a story for survival, but it is also a story of magic. Inside the cave she lived in were relics she collected and were thought to be of the gods. Many think Asilia herself was a god. Because there are only two spots of oasis in the desert they believe she traveled to both places hiding the pieces of the gods that descend on Earth. Each item performs an act of nature, love, and prosperity. But if all of the items are together it could be the end of the world and the beginning of a new species. A species like Asilia. The gods.
Only a few of those items have ever been recovered. Five in all. Four remain in the Lower Kingdom, and one has been missing for three years.
In the meantime a single High Priestess, a favorite of the Pharaoh's as well as the Roman Emperor's court. Seemingly more accurate than the Oracle at Delphi and closer in relation to the gods has somehow been blessed by the Aryan gods and only she seems to have some key to the location of these items.
The Roman alliance could ensure the recovery of all of the items... and the solidity of the Egyptian people's belief in their Pharaoh...
Thats only the begining of....
Secrts of Asilia
<a href='http://secretofasilia.proboards99.com'><img src='http://xs411.xs.to/xs411/07011/seetf.JPG' border='0' alt='SOA' title='SOA' /></a>