The graceful building holds the meetings of the Balican patricians. The assembly hall is a perfectly square structure which sits just east of the White
palace, between the Palace and the docks area. It is on the same bluff that holds the actual
Palace, and the hall itself is considering part of palace complex. One hundred fifty feet of
courtyard seperate the Palace proper from hall. Five steps lead from the floor of the
courtyard to the front colonade, with is shaded by a roof nearly forty feet in height and
supported by fluted columns. Atop the front, facing the White Palace, is a beautiful
entablature with a scene of senators - some sitting, some standing, and some debating.
Like the White Palace, the assembly hall is made of gleaming white marble, though bas
reliefs of scenes around Balic are often in a pale yellow stone.
All but templars and patricians are forbidden to enter. Sessions are normally held in the mornings on the first
two or three days of the week (depending on issues).
The double doors to the assembly hall are tall, reaching ten feet in height, and each door is
five feet in width. They are carved with scenes of patricians sitting in judgement while
Andropinis looks on. The doors are quite heavy, and are usually opened by one of the two
half-giant guards outside.
During the day, the outer doors are usually kept open, the
guards closing them at dusk, unless late sessions are being held. The shaded colonade
runs around the entire outside of the building, though the front doors are the only means
of entering the building.
Inside the doors is a small foyer. The floor of the foyer has a circular compass pattern, with
each cardinal direction colored with rose marble. At the end of the foyer are another pair
of double doors, these made of deep brown wood, and carved with intricate patterns.
These doors are quite solid, but not nearly as heavy as the outer doors.
Another half-giant guard is posted inside to open the doors for the entering
or departing patricians.
The wooden doors open into a dimly lit chamber, with only small slits high on the walls
letting in any natural light. Three wide steps lead down into the actual senate chamber. To
the left and right are long stone benches a dozen deep. There are four tiers of seating, with
three benches on each tier. Thick marble columns, swirling pink in color, hold up the
ceiling. This is where the senators sit to mentally "debate" with Andropinis and to give
him their tribute. Though meetings between the patricians and the sorcerer-king are called debates, there is little debating going on, though did allow his patricians some freedom of opinion.
At the far end of the chamber, directly opposite the double doors, is the throne of
Andropinis, a beautiful throne made of a variety of crystals.
It can
best be described by a passage from The Obsidian Oracle:
"[The throne was] constructed of translucent alabaster and stationed upon a pedestal of
pink jade. Inlays of blue-tinted moonstone decorated the back of the magnificent seat,
while the arms had been shaped from solid blocks of chalcedony and the legs from limpid
crystals of citrine. All of the light passing through the room's narrow windows seemed to
flow directly into the chair, which cast a radiance which cast the radiance back into the
chamber as a muted white glow."1 1
Between the doors and the throne, sitting between the rows of benches that face each
other, is a long stone table, surrounded by comfortable wooden chairs.
Word count: 566
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