=EC 2018= Factory Arena (Full Version)

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Starflame13 -> =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/15/2018 12:06:04)

If Bren’s people had learned anything from the ever-changing, exceedingly powerful, and highly fickle arena complex that dominated their city, it was how to adapt. Quickly. Of course, the giant horde of strange, formidable, and otherwise insane competitors that visited every year probably helped with that as well. So despite the rampant destruction and piles of debris which still littered the streets, everyone was already consumed in revelry by the time hopefuls started to trickle in.

Music permeated the air, punctuated by the calls of innkeepers and shop owners. Delicious aromas of fine food and finer drink wafted about. Laughter and excited shouts grew louder as the sun warmed the city, illuminating the water droplets which clung to the walls of Bren’s homes and businesses until the city itself seemed to glow.

Still, as the trickle of newcomers turned into a flood of entrants and spectators, the air grew heavy. The first storm may have passed, but now it merely felt like the calm before a second, greater one. The Arena thrummed with power as the doors swung open to welcome the crowd. They yawned like the maw of some great beast, hungry and savage and ready to swallow those who dared accept its challenge. Even the seasoned officials, people whom had attended to the tournament’s needs for years, felt unease as they passed into the complex itself.

This would be a fight to remember.


A steady rhythm of grinding and clunking slowly drowned out the sound of the crowds. Stone walls transitioned into bands of smooth iron and copper, which gleamed in the flickering torchlight. Faint traces of steam slipped out from between the cracks, bringing with it the acrid odor of burning oil. The floor beneath the feet of the competitors buzzed as they drew nearer to the padlocked doors barring their path, and even the air itself hummed with constant activity.

The clamor and commotion in the Factory was unrelenting. Like time ever ticking forward, it neither slowed nor ceased.


With a clatter, the locks fell from the heavy iron doors, which then fell forward into the arena itself, forming narrow bridges between the relative safety of the hallway and the immense danger before them. Empty space on either side revealed a mesh of copper gears far below, through which hazy light filtered upwards. High above, a similar network separated the arena from the excited audience, the sunlight which slipped through the gaps casting shadows on the Factory’s circular floor.

Spanning the distance between the two sets of gears, and passing directly through the center of the platform, stood an immense iron rod. Heavy spokes, as thick as tree limbs, spiraled up and down its length. They caught at the gears above and below, creating a rhythmic, steady ticking sound that could be heard over the creaking of the other mechanics. With a groan, the spire slowly began to rotate, pulling with it, like one enormous gear, the entire floor of the arena itself.

Puffs of steam leaked out from the surrounding coppery walls, dissipating before reaching the platform but bringing with them the same putrid stench. From the hallway behind came an ominous whirring, and the stationary walkways that each competitor stood on gave a slight shudder. For the moment, they reached all the way to the outer edge of spinning platform. But only for the moment.

Between the constant ticking of the gears and the whining of machinery, voices echoed out from above and below. “Let the Trial of Factory: Clocktower, begin. Fight with valor, adventurers, or else forfeit your lives!”




Chewy905 -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/16/2018 5:50:56)

The city of Bren was extradorinary. Maled Con took one step in it and realized that instantly. Clamor and sound surrounded him as he walked through its streets. Vendor’s shouted, trying to get the attention of passerby to sell them food, or good luck charms, or magical glasses that would let them view the championship better. Out of the open doors of taverns came the sound of music and cheering, performances for the crowds of people as they waited for the championships to begin. Maled whistled along to a familiar tune a bard was playing on the street side, absentmindedly tossing a coin into the boy’s instrument case. Bren was much more lively than his hometown, where nothing happened day after day after day. The change of pace was something he wasn’t even aware he needed.

Yet even as he walked the streets of this new haven he fell back into his old habits. Over there, a dark alleyway, given a wide berth by the common folk that went past it. And on that side of the street the unmistakable look of a street urchin, subtly holding a small knife behind his back, ready to take advantage of the rich that the championship brought to Bren. Maled Con even watched a young girl, so small that she was barely visible in the tall tall crowds, weaving from person to person, cutting purses and picking pockets.
Even in a place this close to the gods, crime still exists, huh?
The thought brought Maled Con some joy. Why was he here? Did the tournament attract him? Or was it wanderlust, the need to leave his boring old city after 15 years of ravaging it? No. It was neither of those. He was here not because his town was boring, but because he was already known there. Maled Con yearned for more. The Wraith of Senses demanded more recognition, and what better place to get it than the location everyone in the world was watching?

Maled had felt its influence before he had even gotten into the town. The Elemental Championship Arena gave off an unmistakable aura of intense magical energy, noticeable even by those such as Maled Con, with little attunement to the elements. As he moved further to the reaches of Bren, the arena made its presence known visually. The massive arena looming over everything else. It was impossible for Maled to take his eyes off it.it exuded so much intense power, no wonder the gods themselves watched over it. As Maled had walked through Bren he had noticed the occasional burnt down or toppled building, likely a result of the arena’s awakening. As he approached the arena itself his theory was confirmed. It was chaos. To one side, a building was floating 10 feet above the ground upside down. To his other side, there was a roof. Just a roof, lying on the ground, no building to be seen. It didn’t get any better either. One building was filled to the brim with water, kept inside by some powerful magic. Maled thought he even saw a large shadow pass by through the window of the drowned house. He decided to walk on the other side of the street. Unfortunately, that meant walking next to a flaming building, a discarded sign out front ironically deeming it the “Fireheart Forge.” Maled chuckled to himself, and wiped some sweat off his brow. He was almost at the arena. He leapt over a small crack in the ground (could never be too careful of being swallowed by the earth) and stepped up to the arena gates).


“Sir, we’re not open yet.”
Maled stood face to face with the arena guard. He supposed it was too much to ask to be able to just waltz right in to one of the most famous events in the world, but that didn’t make the denial any less annoying. Still, while fighting with the arena guard may get him noticed, being banned from the championships entirely would be bad publicity.

“Alright. When do they start, and how can I register?” The guard hesitated for a moment, though as to why, Maled wasn’t quite sure. Perhaps the guard had just now noticed Maled’s black hands, eyes, ears, nose, and mouth. Or maybe the guard saw the two knives sheathed at Maled’s ankles, far too thin to be designed for anything but killing.
Whatever the reason was, he seemed to get over it quickly. “The paragon round begins in two weeks, registration can be done at the designated registration tents located inside the arena closer to the opening date. Or, if you’re impatient, most tavern’s have a tournament register inside them during most hours.”
Maled thanked the guard and turned back towards Bren, trying to ignore the loud humming in his ears that the Arena’s power was causing.



A small bell rang as he opened the door and entered the tavern. The barkeep, a large burly man with an impressively bushy beard, glanced at him slightly, then grunted and went back to cleaning mugs. Seems like quiet hour. Maled thought. Must be too early for drinks and shows. Up on the stage, a woman in an exotic dress was reading over a stack of papers, likely notes on whatever performance she had planned. Maled’s attention was grabbed by a table that had been pushed off to the side, surrounded by multi-colored flags. A very bored looking boy sat behind it, absentmindedly flicking a container of ink lightly. Above the table was a sign with an arrow pointing straight down, helpfully labeling the table as Elemental Championship Registration!

The tavern reeked of alcohol, so much so that it made Maled feel a little lightheaded. He wandered over to the bar itself and sat down.
“What’ll it be?” The barkeep asked, not even bothering to look away from the mug he was wiping out.
“What do you recommend?”
The barkeeper raised an eyebrow. “Whatever makes me the most money.”
“I’ll have a water then.”
The large man gave a very audible sigh of annoyance, and wandered off through a door behind the bar.

The bell above the door rang again. Out of the corner of his eye Maled saw a thin man in a black cloak, carrying a gnarled wooden staff, come in and walk over to the registration table. Maled could just barely make out a bit of black leather armor hidden under the man’s cloak. Maled glanced down at himself. He didn’t have any armor. Just his normal everyday clothes. Maybe he was a little underprepared for the Championship. The cloaked man stepped right up to the registration table, but the boy sitting there didn’t even look up from his joyful flicking. A few minutes passed, the barkeep came back and set down a large glass of surprisingly clear water in front of Maled, then went back to cleaning his mugs. The cloaked man cleared his throat and the boy bolted upright, clearly startled. They were just far enough away that Maled couldn’t hear their conversation, instead only getting mumbles and the occasional word. He reached up and nonchalantly patted his ear, as if trying to clear out a ringing.

Instantly, the smell of alcohol faded away entirely as Maled’s hearing increased. Maled sipped his water, listening in on the now crystal clear sounds of the distant conversation. The first voice was low and grating, probably belonging to the cloaked man. It was an unsettling voice, reminding Maled of the final gasps someone made as a dagger was being pulled from their gut.
“I’m here to register for the Elemental Championships.”
The second voice was higher pitched, and sounded incredibly lazy. The registration boy, then. “You understand that the Championships are incredibly dangerous, and it is very likely that you will die, correct?”
“Yes. I would hope most people understand that.”
“And you accept all liability for participating, and do not place any blame on the Arena, the Lords, or the city of Bren?”
“Yes I do.”
“Okay I’ll need your name and the element you’re representing.”
“Oro, representing Darkness.”
“Wonderful.” The boy said, in a tone that showed absolutely no traces of wonder. The boy had Oros sign various documents and go over some uninteresting rules and regulations, then accepted an entry fee and bid Oro farewell. Oro wandered over to the bar and sat next to Maled.
Quickly deactivating his hearing boost so Oro wouldn’t sound like he was shouting, Maled engaged in some friendly conversation: “You don’t seem like the type who would be able to win such a prestigious competition.”
The man scoffed, his face hidden beneath his dark cloak. “Excuse me? Barkeep? I’d like two cups of your finest. One to drink, and one to break over this idiots head.”
Maled chuckled lightly. “I’m serious, what are you gonna do? Bonk then with your tree branch?”
In a flash, a small ball, quite like Maled’s Ball, was hovering directly in front of his face, crackling with dark energy. The man’s wooden staff had an aura of the same crackling energy.
“No. I’ll bonk them with this ball. Which, upon merely touching their skin, will cause it to dissolve and decay away until nothing remains of them but bone. If you’d truly like to experience that, keep talking.” The last statement was punctuated by the ball moving ever closer to Maled’s nose, which was finally starting to smell the reek of the (thankfully one) glass of alcohol the man had received.

Maled raised his hands in surrender, keeping his mouth shut, and the ball of energy flew back into the depths of the man’s cloak. “Let’s start this conversation over. I’m Ormane Tyde. It’s nice to meet you.” He extended a black hand forward.
Surprisingly, the man took it, in a firm shake. “Oro.”
“Where should I be watching so I can see people dissolve on Championship day, Oro?”
“I don’t know yet. That idiot boy said I’ll be contacted later. How they intend to do that I have no idea. Do you intend to enter the Championships?”
“No no. I have no interesting man-dissolving powers like you do. I’m simply a cursed soul, here to enjoy the sights.”
“Shame. I would have liked to have the legal excuse to watch you die.”
“I get the feeling you’re not popular with the crowds, huh?”
Oro drained his glass and stood up, heading for the door. “The crowds don’t matter.” He said as he opened it. “The Lords do.” He shut the door, giving what Maled Con believed was a little too much dramatic effect.



Maled Con stayed at that tavern, The Leaking Horn for the rest of the night, watching and listening to people enter and head for the registration table. A surprisingly large amount turned back without signing any papers, white-faced with fear at the realization of the stakes. Others signed up fully, representing various elements. Maled talked with a few that came to the bar, even ordering a drink or two for some of them. As he watched the exoticly dressed woman dance
on stage, a wonderful idea came to mind.
Maled Con stood up from his seat and bid adieu to the bartender, Victor, who had become more and more amiable after Maled started actually buying drinks. Out the door went a tan-skinned contender by the name of Semed, representing Earth and leaving a trail of sand behind him.
Far behind him was Maled Con, watching closely.



It wasn’t supposed to turn out this way. Maled Con thought. He’d been so careful with his movements over the past two weeks, aroused zero suspicion. Just like his hometown, he had been able to wander the streets of Bren in broad daylight, greeting passerby, listening to music, and attending the performances at the different taverns. None of the discovered crimes had been linked to him. So what had gone wrong? Why was he running away from Bren’s guards? He passed another poster, they were everywhere. Probably posted last night while he was reveling. It’s amazing he hadn’t been recognized until now.

“STOP! TURN AROUND NOW AND SUBMIT, AND YOUR PUNISHMENT MAY BE LESS SEVERE!”

Maled nearly scoffed. There was no way he was getting away with a slap on the wrist after everything he’d done. He pushed aside a woman in the street as he kept running, having just enough courtesy for an over the shoulder “Sorry!” Maled turned and ran into an alleyway, trying to get off the streets, but almost ran head first into the side of a building. Dead end, drat.
The guards, all suited up in plate armor, crackling with blue runes, turned into the alley, trapping Maled in. There were three, standing shoulder to shoulder, almost unable to fit in the cramped passage. The middle one had a short, blue cape, likely denoting his higher rank. The other two flanked him, holding spears forward, pointed at Maled. Maled tapped his arm slightly, and felt his muscles bulge slightly, though he now couldn’t feel his hands at all. He raised his arms above his head. The guards stayed at a slight distance, likely wary of any tricks the man they presumed was highly dangerous had up his sleeves. The middle guard unfurled one of the posters that were posted on every building and bulletin board in Bren, and read it aloud.
“Ormane Tyde, you are wanted for multiple crimes, including but not limited to: thievery, pickpocketing, scamming, defying authority, assault, attempted arson, presumed extortion, fraud, and forgery.”
“Really? That’s all?” Maled chuckled
And. the presumed murder of multiple individuals.”
“Ah yes. About that.” In one swift, deft motion, Maled slipped Ball out of the pouch at his side and launched it diagonally at the wall, rushing forward and sliding under the guards outstretched polearms. He rocked back and pushed himself up, kicking the middle guard in the chin and off his feet, while Ball bounced off the wall and into the side of the left guard’s head, startling him. Now on his feet, Maled spun and elbowed the right guard’s head while grabbing his spear out of his hands, relying on seeing him grab the spear rather than feeling it in his hands. Using the spear as a pole vault, Maled launched himself upwards, and grabbed onto the edge of a roof. Maled pulled himself onto the roof, caught Ball as it came hurtling back towards him, and ran off towards the center of town, easily clearing the gaps between buildings. As he got closer to the arena, he once again came upon the chaotic area the arena’s awakening had caused, and was forced to drop down from the rooftops. He stopped a moment to catch his breath and disable his sense boost, exhaustion hitting his muscles as the speed and strength wore off. He turned and looked behind him.
By the Lords, there’s so many.
It wasn’t just Bren’s guard’s now, a whole crowd was charging down the street, made up of men and women, soldiers and even children. Most had some sort of weapon, others hands had the unmistakable glow of magic. Maled even recognized some of his drinking buddies in the crowd. How high is the bounty on my head? he thought. He chanced a quick glance at a wall, where, sure enough, a wanted poster for him was up. This was his first time truly looking at one. Wow that’s not the most flattering picture of me. Ormane Tyde, wanted for blah blah blah. Bounty: FIVE THOUSAND GOLD?!

Maled Con’s shock was interrupted by an arrow landing uncomfortably close to his foot. He turned and bolted into the ruined parts of Bren, towards the arena. He could hear the crowd behind him, just a little too close for comfort. Maled saw the drowned house and rushed over to it, ignoring how every inch of his body was screaming at him to stay away. He ran up to the door, gripped the handle, and pulled with all his might. The door SHOT open, flooding the street with a massive amount of water that swept away a good portion of the crowd. Maled leapt back as the head of a giant eel appeared in the doorway, plugging the flow of the water. Unfortunately, the wave had failed to hit about half the crowd, so Maled turned and continued his escape towards the arena.

The uncomfortable hum of magic was returning to his ears as he sprinted closer to the large gates. The two guards that had been standing lazily next to the entrance noticed him and shot to attention, crossing their spears to prevent his entrance. Behind him, the roar of the crowd got louder as they realized he had nowhere to go.
Nowhere to go, but in.
As he came upon the guards he hit the dirt, sliding right underneath the crosses spears and into the arena. He quickly got to his feet, his ears burning with the intense feeling of the arena’s power. Every inch of his body screamed at him to leave, that he wasn’t supposed to be there. He forced himself to ignore it. The guards at the gates were shouting at the crowd, trying to prevent them from following Maled into the arena. A lone man pushed past the guards and into the arena, but collapsed before he got anywhere close to Maled, clutching his head and shivering intensely. The feelings were getting stronger, it was taking every ounce of Maled’s willpower not to end up in the same situation as that man.
At least the guards can’t follow me in.
There was a loud mechanical whirring, following by heavy clangs of steel. Coming out of the crowd were two large humanoid automatons, made of bronze. The guards at the gate stood aside, allowing the machines to past, and they rushed towards Maled Con. Maled turned, quickly surveying his options to traverse further into the arena.

There were various hallways and paths ahead of him, he picked one at random and dashed through, the automatons clanking at his heels. He became faintly aware of the cheers of the crowds, there were so. Many. People. Slowly, the cheers faded, and a new noise penetrated his eardrums. Mechanical grinds and clunks. He glanced over his shoulder, the automatons were gone, but he didn’t let up his mad dash forwards. The walls transitioned from stone to dark copper and iron, illuminated by torches. A crack in the wall blasted Maled with scalding hot steam and he stumbled, stifling a scream as he inhaled the pungent odor of oil. His arm hadn’t burned, luckily, but he’d have to be careful not to get hit again. Ahead he could see a large iron door, padlocked shut, and a man in a black cloak stood at it, carrying a gnarled wooden stick. Oro, from the tavern two weeks ago. Maled picked up speed, feeling the air charged with activity and magical energy. His ears continued to scream with the sounds of machines and the power of the god-watched arena. Oro couldn’t hear Maled’s frantic footsteps, likely drowned out by the cacophony of noise the arena was giving off. As Maled approached, the padlock on the door fell to the ground. Oro went to take a step forward, and Maled leapt, ramming into Oro right as the large iron door fell forward.



Oro yelped in surprise as the two of them flew through the new opening. The door had fallen and created a pathway leading to a central platform. Together, they crashed onto the walkway, rolled forward twice and stopped on the central platform. Maled, landing on top of Oro, lifted Oro’s head up, then smashed it down on the platform, knocking Oro out with a sickening crack.

Maled quickly rifled through Oro’s possessions, removing the black leather armor and withdrawing Oro’s dark blue ball from the depths of his cloak. He pocketed the ball and quickly slipped on the stolen armor, a perfect fit. He examined the gnarled staff, but found it uninteresting and tossed it over the edge. He also found a small potion, conveniently labeled “instant healing!” He downed it quickly, feeling all the fatigue and exhaustion of his escape from the City of Bren fading away entirely, then tossed the empty bottle over the edge. Maled then took his time to look about his surroundings. Around the outside of the circular room were more walkways formed by fallen doors. He could see some silhouettes in the doorways, some taller than natural. High above him he could see copper gears meshing and turning. He took a quick glance over the edge of his platform, and was greeted by a similar sight. Behind him, his walkway had already retracted back into the wall.
No turning back now.
There was a groaning as a central spire started turning. If he had been standing, Maled surely would have lost his balance as the floor moved beneath him. He took a deep breath, and stood up shakily. The unbearable buzz of magic in his ears was gone, replaced by the constant ticking of the gears, and hissing steam continued to bring in awful stenches. Booming voices sounded, the almighty speech of the ever-watching gods.

“Let the Trial of Factory: Clocktower, begin. Fight with valor, adventurers, or else forfeit your lives!”

A clocktower. Maled thought. The gears may make problems if Ball gets caught in them, and I certainly don’t want to fall off this platform. The spokes on the central spire may make a good escape route in an emergency, and I’ll have to get used to fighting with this constant movement underneath me.

He checked over his possessions, and adjusted the straps on his new armor. He focused on what he had in his belt: metal shards, sand, a blindfold, nose plugs, a gag, three fireworks and a matchbox, and a container of breath mints. He popped open the mints and tossed one in his mouth, savoring the fresh sensation, a last respite before the coming chaos and the taste of blood. Finally, he removed two small ear plugs from his belt and held them in his palm. His left hand drifted up to his left ear, brushing against the two white feathers that were permanently affixed behind it. He closed his eyes and bowed his head, suppressing dangerous memories. He opened his eyes and slipped the ear plugs back into his belt.
These are gifts. Gifts from those that want to see me succeed. Gifts from those who couldn’t be here themselves. These will bring me victory, for all of their past owners.

Next to him was Oro, still lying prone, who began groaning slightly. Maled lifted Oro up with one hand, finding the man to be surprisingly light. He turned and faced outward from the edge of the rotating floor, looking out at the challengers he was about to face. He saw some interesting sights;
a man, no, a boy in a dark coat, covered in blades, one red eye glowing menacingly beneath a dark hood.
A tall fellow in multi colored clothing, face covered completely by bubbles spewing from a pipe.
A regal, slender man, wearing a white suit and spiked gauntlets.
Next, was that a corpse? In a SUIT?
A darker man in a golden plate belt, a well built but heavily scarred man, annnnnnd…...
A tree.
Quite a ragtag group, Maled couldn’t wait to start.



Maled hefted Oro’s body up higher, holding him forward and presenting him to the other challengers. He cleared his throat, and spoke in a loud booming voice so that he could be heard over the ticking and grinding of the gears.
“I AM MALED CON. THE SENSELESS WRAITH. THE CURSED MAN. THE UNMISSABLE AND THE ETERNALLY HIDDEN. I HAVE ALREADY SLAIN CHAMPIONS SUCH AS YOU OUTSIDE THE RING, AND TODAY I SHALL SLAY THEM INSIDE AS WELL. I WILL FIGHT FOR DARKNESS, IN THE STEED OF THIS BRETHREN OF YOURS.”
He threw Oro’s body over the edge, watching it fall far below, shattering and tearing as it got caught in the eternally shifting gears.
“Now then.” He reached into his waist pouch and removed Ball, watching for signs of weakness in any of his opponents as the he spun around on the platform. “It’s showtime!”






Lorekeeper -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/17/2018 21:33:31)

— As it began, so was it decided long before. Stagnation interrupted by destruction, silence betrayed by a call reaching far and wide. The stones thirsted for blood, and blood they would receive. —


“There is a pulse to our home, as with any other. We can feel its heartbeat with every moon, in the swelling and fading of the tides. And before it, we are minute. We each are but one wave in a vast ocean, carried away from this Temple and cast on the shores of far lands. Thus we celebrate your return today, and that of every son and daughter that returns to Eridani.

And thus we say that we are sworn to balance, yet do not control it. No wave can shift the seas, but we can each hope to extinguish a fire burning on their shores. For if the pulse of our home is one of traveling tides, the pulse of our world is one of war. The beating of our land is one of rising evil.

Rest your bodies and your pride, children of the river, that we may go back unto the world without hubris. Free of the delusion that we each can save the world, humble enough to remember that we may only take what opportunities are given to us to right a wrong. To turn a skirmish or war, so that the wronged may learn to stand on their own. And to return with the waves, where gold and glory are too heavy to sail.

Welcome home.”


Walking west along the shores of the Forsaken River, the gold and orange hues that all but burned away the mountain’s veil of clouds reminded Gabriel of Elder Letho’s speech. Twelve hours of walking had passed, and still the words would not leave his palate. Like an excessively seasoned meal, they were as hard to digest as they had been to swallow. Ever since the last coming of The’Galin, each homecoming speech left a longer and longer aftertaste. This one, far from an exception, had been the worst of them all.

“We’re making good time. Assuming mad old Pontius doesn’t get it in his head to spook the big cats again, we should be at the source right before night falls.”

“Mhm.”

“The guardian’s test should be a breeze if you’ve managed to get your water control, well. In control. Striking around me instead of bringing me down with the lumbering thing would be nice. I know it’s been almost ten years since you had issues with it, but how’s that been coming along?”

“Yeah.”

“...And while I have your rapt attention, I’m thinking I’m going to marry Master Lena. Move in with her, have three kids named Gabriel, Gabrielle and Gabrielus Deafius.”

“We’ll think about it when we get there, we were kids last time we saw Crenon Gate.”

What few trees remained at the foot of Eridani’s northern mountain were soon abandoned by any living creature with fur, feathers, or just the sense to flee from the sounds of a swift impact, a rough tumbling and an indignant cry.

Gabriel rose to his feet, standing up to turn what had been an absent-minded walk into a sprint that began inches away from the river he nearly fell into and ended inches from his older sibling. “What are you trying to start? Did the sea salt dry your brain or something?”

“And he finally disembarks. I know it was rough out there, but what’s going on with you? You’re usually the sharpest of us all. Now you’re drifting like a drunk sailor chasing his figurehead.” Adam had always been one for tough love, but a long time apart had lowered Gabriel’s guard. Of course, the younger of the notorious pair was too annoyed and bitter to readily confess to that.

“You maced my arse, you mongrel idiot!”

Adam had seemed punier than his more threatening looking sibling from a young age, yet he stood firm. In spite of his disadvantage, it was concern that lifted the clear grey of his eyes to meet the swamp of dark green hues and light blue motes. "And I'll hit the other side if you get that distracted again when you're supposed to be watching my back! Seriously, brother, what troubles you? Friendly and familiar as the words appeared, there was a strength behind them that Gabriel knew well. Appearances meant very little when it came to their oft-separated team, as a hand was more than sufficient to count the times he had prevailed over his older brother. And every single time he rose, it was this deliberately jovial, melodic and yet faintly severe tone that administered the necessary lesson.

“You try that and I will seriously run you through… Despite his reaction, Gabriel was quick to take the hint. His brother was the only person he snapped at in this manner, but that same bond made him the only person he could quickly spill his problems to. “Elder Letho.”

“The old goat wouldn’t leave you alone today, eh? Prodigy this, prodigy that, our son who stood up to a god, and won’t somebody please stop me from running my pompous mouth. Almost made me jealous; he wasn’t quite so happy with me at your age.”

“No, he wouldn’t. He made very sure to butter me up for this mission.”

“It is a very important mission. This is the river we surrendered our clan names to. You know what it means for our sorcery. It’s got to be an embarrassment for the Elders that we haven’t opened the Crenon Gate yet.”

“I know I got dropped into this at the last second, but that’s not it. Today was the first time I got to hear him give the speech. He was Lena’s mentor, so I thought he might be different than the others.” A smack of the tongue, two, three. The ascent through the coldest part of the island numbed the senses, but this was a bitterness born of slow, simmering realization. Cold would not remove the stomach-turning feeling, nor its rise through the young man’s throat.

“Is that so?” Now it was Adam who sounded distracted, off even, but his eyes had turned as bright and focused as they did in anticipation of battle. His gaze became firmly fixed on the figure of his brother, keeping pace even as shorter legs made the snowy end of the trail more difficult to manage. He was waiting, not only for the next words, but for the right ones.

“We shun personal pride, but he tried to swell my chest with it. He talks about taking what opportunities the balance of the world offers us, but the Elders have been very selective with the missions they send me on.

“That’s right. This is what you’re good at, you can read more than just a battle. You have to see the bigger picture. What pattern are you seeing? The talk of pride was suddenly very relevant. At that moment, it was exactly what uplifted Adam’s voice, but there was a dissonant contrast with the anticipation in his eyes. Patience had been substituted by eagerness, which was swiftly escalating into downright hunger.

“Stalemates. Deadlocked battles, sieges, skirmishes with more dead morale than dead bodies. The kind of fight where our intervention couldn’t be more obvious. I go in a stranger and leave a hero, no matter where I sneak off to rest.”

“You snore like a wild hog that got maced in the buttocks, which would explain — Nevermind. Jokes can wait for tomorrow. Go on, please.”

The speech didn’t need prompting to continue, picking up in speed and intensity until it became a full-blown rant. Some light encouragement was all that took for the cracks in that particular dam to begin overflowing. “The Keldros mines were no righteous mission. Sure, starving the robber barons was hardly a poor deal, but the people had long departed. The miners were enchanted stone, like the Guardian. They used the rock to restore themselves and left the ore behind. When they got strong enough, they left to become house wardens. So flooding the place just meant that only people like us could get at the silver. So what was all of that about gold and glory? He might just be the worst hypocrite of the lot, and we’re up to three generations of Initiates under their tutelage.”

“Would you change that if you could?

The question was quick to come, but slow in the delivery. Each word was cautious, pregnant with further anticipation, and starving for an answer. Had Gabriel not been swept up in his reverie, he might have suspected that Adam never wanted to hear him speak as much as he did at that precise moment. A moment that hardly lasted, as the question barely finished before the desired answer was barked right back.

“Of course I would— why else would I be this angry?” Truth be told, however, he had released most of his tension already. Though his brother seemed elated at the moment of fury, the way in which he grinned and began trudging through the sunset-stained snow at full speed kept him from noticing the steadier puffs of air. Something colder than the air was starting to flow freely where the tarnished regard for his Order had long impeded rational thought.

“Perfect! That’s exactly- That’s everything I ever wanted to hear you say. I’ll catch you up along the way, we’ve got a lot to do from now on. Come on, hurry up! You’re not the only one, Gabriel! And when we come back, you’ll see just how many of us there are!” All attempts to reply were completely overtaken by a hearty laughter that defied the gelid winds of Source’s Pass. Gabriel had never seen his brother quite this pleased, but this was not the kind of mirth they often shared. Thunderous as always, yet forceful. Avid. “That’s right, you silt-sodden hunk of rock! My brother is back!.






The Crenon Gate was an unwelcoming place. More so than the day two children had been reckless enough to stow away with scholars seeking to study it. It stood at the center of a massive circle of stone, carved and polished to a degree of perfection that mortal hands could not achieve and erosion should not allow to remain. Two openings led to this eerie ascent: One opened to the east, carved by hands far younger than the ancient site, yet long since buried all the same. South, along a canal formed where the stone seemed to part of its own accord, flowed the source of the Forsaken River.

At the center stood an imposing structure of rough stones fit so tightly together that the dim light of the newborn evening made it easy to mistake it for a monolith. Dull azure streaked by white and gold stood firm, well below the peak and yet far more intimidating. The lines followed a strangely even and natural pattern, flowing upward from the base where the river seemed to coalesce. This motif ended abruptly at its summit, where the colors still shone bright and clear, offering a message to all who would dare approach.

ALL WHO ART SWORN UNTO BALANCE, BREAK YE AND REBUILD


The brothers were far beyond exhaustion. Every heaving exhalation was quickly stolen away by the unnatural winds howling along the cliffs. The thin trails of fleeting warmth fled their sore nostrils at such a speed that the wind should by all rights be casting them down the deadly heights. Instead, it seemed to flow through them, into their bodies, a breath of the world itself that found their breast unworthy. It carried away breath, resolve, focus, at times even memory. The idea that this was where their people cast away their clan names suddenly made more sense. Perhaps they lingered here for so long that the wind took even that from them.

They stood, if it could be called that, hunched and ragged under a clearer firmament than they had seen since their infancy. Before, they had been reprimanded and dragged away from this stone by harried researchers trying to explain that there was no test for two insolent children to throw their lives at. Now, they felt belittled once again. The whole of the heavens, every single star of the celestial expanse seemed to turn their joined beauty into judgement. Who were these fools that dared to disturb the silence of the Gate?

“I’m out… I’m out of ideas. That’s the seventh time we’ve broken this thing to rubble, and it’s just...” A wheezing cough delayed Adam’s ragged voice for a minute, each following the other so quickly that he dared not speak until his throat ceased convulsing. What ice remained on the once proud mace only clung to its form through the same sheer stubbornness that let the man’s swollen, bruised hands keep a grip on the frost-shaping weapon. Impact after impact was beginning to leave more of an imprint on the extremity holding it than the stone on the receiving end.

Whatever their expectations may have been when approaching the source, the creature that stood before them met none of them. Surrounded by rubble from every prior clash with its opponents, it waited with a serenity that ill fit their desperate state. Stone bound by light crumbled again and again, each time reemerging in a form that seemed yet more vulnerable to the tactic that felled its last, but still outmatching it. Seven times it fell, and six it forced the brothers to prove its equals in terms of sheer flexibility. Inviting a seventh such show of proof, it stretched a smooth and porose hand out almost gently.

“Again?”

...That was new. It had made no sound before, only waited patiently for them to make the first move. It spoke without threat, overt or implied, making itself a gentle instrument for the rising gale. Stranger still was hearing a calm word from what now seemed to be a faceless statue of old Pontius. It figures, thought Gabriel, that I’d get taunted by the only decent Elder we had in my lifetime.

“No, no blasted way. I’ve got one try left in me, and we’re no closer to figuring this out. Besides, I don’t want to know what your legs feel like right now.”

Gabriel had no small reason to invite his brother’s concern. The source of the river provided an endless supply of water for him to strike with, and these were strongest when he stood at the shallow, frigid bed. It was trivial to make the water flow around his body, but fatigue was making his focus falter more and more frequently. Hypothermia would soon become more of a hazard than any guardian construct.

“The Elders won’t send anyone here for a while if even we can’t solve this.” It took quite the force of will to still his breath long enough to rush out the words, though the reply outmatched it for haste and frustration.

“The Elders don’t matter anymore. And I guess this doesn’t either, now.”

The statue’s hand lowered almost dejectedly. With an unnaturally light stride for the heavy echoing of its footsteps, it moved closer to the brothers. Standing where it did upon their arrival, sleek and familiar where it was once lumbering and misshapen, it scrutinized the two with a gaze of featureless stone. Adam stopped in the middle of turning toward his brother, eager to depart but still reluctant to turn his back on the warden that spurned defeat at every turn.

“Wasn’t this your big idea? Open the… Open the Gate, then s-stake a legitimate claim?”

“Start backing away slowly. Don’t take your eyes off of this thing. It’s let us breathe so far, but if it’s imitating Pontius now… Look,I don’t see this thing opening. And since this was the only chance to do this without bloodshed? Trust me, the Elders really don’t matter anymore. As soon as the next ships set sail, we’ll—”

The wind howled no more. A more harrowing sound took its place: The gasping memory of a breath denied. A cry that found no air to birth it, nor to ask the question begged by the plunging steel that stole it.

Only one man stood before the guardian now, and it asked with the mountain winds what the one that no longer stood would have.

“Why?”

A thin trail of red marred the river’s purity, carried away from a spreading pool. With no will to halt the waters anymore, the rapidly chilling blood lingered around Gabriel’s legs while clear stones grew crimson from drinking of the rest. Tears flowed as freely as his kin’s blood, but neither pain nor cold cracked his voice anymore. His stance, head and gaze turned forward, was as rigid as the interloper’s. The hazy image of the Crenon Gate filled his unfocused eyes. He wondered, almost idly, why the rapidly freezing tears had stopped running so soon. Why he had acted so swiftly and ruthlessly. But what he truly couldn’t understand was: Why did words come so easily now?

“The Elders have forgotten our principles. Under them, the Order of Tempests will languish. We are already a shadow of what we were meant to be. In a generation, we will become less than that. But what Adam was determined to do all this time was something worse. A bloody revolution would cast away these values all the same.

What would we become after slaughtering our way to the elders and seizing power? The very thing our god came here to have us prove we are not. Tyrants, chaos with a lofty name. And it would not take a generation. If everyone else had the blood of their brothers on their hands… We would be done for in a night.

Better that people like us fade away, as the Elders will in time. Worthier warriors will win the hearts of our people when we’re gone. ”


“You are broken, Gabriel of the Crashing River.”

He was unsure what to make of the statement. Given his state, it seemed obvious enough. What was there left for him to do but freeze to death, to die as cold as the blood that coursed through him at the moment of his deepest betrayal? His thoughts were already as numb as his legs, to the point where even the slow grinding of stone upon stone was enough to cut them short and drown them out.

The Crenon Gate had opened.

It was as though one could see right through the mountain, beyond the horizon, and stand closer to the stars. For an instant, its light was almost welcoming. Then the kinslayer’s weary vision was flooded… quite literally. Once fully open, the gate unleashed a rush of water that completely enveloped him. The Forsaken River threatened to slam against Gabriel, but did not sweep him away as it did the rubble, his weapons or the corpse of his brother. If the current remained so swift, they would soon drift past Eridani and into the sea, into the deepest oblivion. However, the water neither bit with further cold nor robbed him of breath. It flowed through him as the ruthless winds had, seeping into his very essence and carrying the guardian’s voice in their place.

“You are broken, but you will rebuild. And after you, so will your people. Your heart is turbulent, but it is given unto Balance. It is fit to carry the Legacy of the Crenon Gate, divided as you are. May Achernar be restored when your mind is still once more.”






“Barkeep! I can almost see th’bottom of me tankard! And I still see only one of ye!” The rolling of silver coins punctuated a hoarse voice with enough energy to make up for its bygone years.

A rugged and flame-tanned hand struck the bar, seizing the coins with a jovial slam. The barkeep’s typical uniform - long sleeves and a spotless apron - were nowhere to be seen. It was a burly arm and thick smock that met his eye instead, tense muscles and a pattern of burns paving the way to the all-too-wide grin of a… peculiar barmaid.

“A good thing, that. Don’t think you could handle two of little old me.” Keen eyes of the clearest green surveyed the customer from underneath what strands of red escaped a rather long ponytail. Though she could hardly seem friendlier, the woman behind the bar was quick to spot trouble… And that hammer at her waist looked like it had seen an awful lot of use.

“Well, haul me an’ flog me. Shanna. Straight here from the forge? You gon’ sleep any time this week?” A somewhat wrinkled, yet completely spotless bald head turned up in surprise. Grey-dotted black eyebrows, the closest thing to hair on the hunched man’s whole figure, pulled up a heft of loose skin from under the closely secured straps of an eyepatch. Someone had clearly done their best to look the part of a sailor, though they’d forgotten the hat.

“Captain Thorn, baldest rat in... however many seas there are these days. Pa’s got his hands full with the hopefuls lining up. That registrar gal is scaring them off by the dozen, but they all drink their fill. Look at him go back there. So, the usual?”

“Spiced.”

“Ooh, feeling expensive?” The tankard was swapped and cleaned with surprising grace for someone of otherwise very forceful demeanor. “You haven’t sailed in ages, how’s the coin still pouring in?”

“One of yer ‘opefuls. ‘Pretty boy’ over there with the blue coat, eyein’ up the registrar.”

“Gabriel, huh? So that’s the one you brought in. Didn’t take him for the type.”

“With scars like that? Ye goin’ daft on us?”

“This is The Old Fang. You know how many of those I’ve — Actually, for crying outloud, this is Bren. Doesn’t get any more rugged than us.You know how many scars I’ve seen? Half the injuries around here nowadays are just from the Arena’s morning breath.”

“Fair enough, lass. But I’ve seen the rest. I think. Been sailin’ that lost soul anywhere with a tussle for years now. Pay’s as good as it gets, quality silver for trips I have to make anyways. Leaves port, gets all bloodied up, comes right back to me ship before it’s time to leave. Crew doesn’t much like the lad, but I reckon that’s just on account of ‘im being quiet. When there’s trouble at sea, ‘e’s got our backs and we got his.”

“Didn’t ask for his whole story, but alright, you’ve convinced me.”

“First time I change your mind. Well, I’ve still got more blood than drink, so I’ll toast to that.”

“I’m pulling your soon-to-be-peg leg, actually. I stopped paying attention halfway through, but the guy’s at the registrar now.” For all her flippancy, she did immediately take Thorn up on his word and pour a hot beverage. This time, the payment came reluctantly.







The registrar’s table was practically pristine. Not a single filled form on her side, but enough weighted scrolls to sign up the tavern’s entire population if they were so inclined. Hardly a typical sight, given the eagerness most of her peers were met with. This wasn’t quite what surprised Gabriel, but it did raise some questions that the pair of boots on the table didn’t seem eager to answer.

“Come on, people, I am booored! Doesn’t anybody want to live forever?~” If one thing could be said for this lady, it was that she was…honest. Leaning back on a heavy wooden chair, she huffed a sigh and resumed nibbling on a corner of the white hat that rested precariously over her face. ...Yes, that would be what a very bored person might look like.

“I’m in.” Hands on the table, Gabriel picked up the knocked-over quill and waited for the representative to hand him a form… Or react at all, really. It took a few more seconds of frustrated gnawing for her to intone a dull and practiced droning.

“Round twelve, Cerise, here we go. Alright, prospective participant. Are you aware of the risks of injury and death faced by entering the Arena as a combatant?” Rather than wait for a reply, she quickly inhaled and continued with a steadily increasing pitch. “Do you accept of your own free will the choice between valor and death, and acknowledge sole responsibility for any injury sustained during the events, whether you be stabbed, beaten, crushed, impaled, disemboweled, dismembered, burned, electrocuted, covered in wasps, mauled by bears, and generally humiliated to within an inch of your life before ignominiously bleeding out for the entertainment of the crowds?”

The crowd shifted ever so slightly away as the woman was reanimated once more, her rising enthusiasm and balance-defying gesticulations clearing enough space to leave an empty circle around her and the unimpressed young man. Gabriel was unsure of what to remark upon: The fact that she had extended the brief waiver so dramatically or that she said all of that so loudly that it drowned out the scribbling of his quill— And all in a single breath.

“There. Form’s full. Is that it?”

The attendants that had slowly drawn back were startled by the crashing of a chair and the rattle of inkwells. She moved fast, almost faster than they could see. Cold hands were suddenly upon Gabriel’s face, gently turning it for the close scrutiny of an intense amber stare. It was as though she had completely inverted her mannerisms; entirely too giddy for comfort yet suddenly calm and clinical in speech.

“Oh, yes. You will do. These are a fighter’s, not a poser’s. Let’s see… Big knife, you were lucky with that one. That looks like a kick, maybe armored, but probably just a really unlucky angle. And that… Ooh. Bullwhip? No, silly. Too old for that. Leather! That must have taken a tooth. Now, I could technically say that you looked like just a madman with a deathwish so I can still reject you, but I’m going to be nice and assume you’ve given a lot more of these than you’ve taken. Would I be right?”

Now Gabriel had a pretty good idea of why this table had such a low entry rate. He wasn’t much for sudden physical contact, but he settled for brushing her hands away. It was almost as if she had been playing with a doll rather than scrutinizing an entrant… even if in such a peculiar way. “Yes.”

“Wonderful! Still, don’t take any offense, but you might want to… You know. Dodge when you’re in there. The stones thirst for blood, you see, and whether it’s yours or that of your enemy doesn’t make a difference. And do your new best friend Cerise a favor: Put on a good show, or I’ll make a good list of whatever the Arena doesn’t do to you for when you get out. If you do. For making me look bad, you see. And now...” Seeming to forget about her ‘best friend’ entirely, she snatched the form and stormed towards the bar, screaming her lungs out while dramatically pointing at his signature. “Alright, every single one of you that bet I wasn’t recruiting anyone tonight! LINE UP AND PAY.”

As the gathered congregation returned to their seats, save for a few people dejectedly passing coins to a now very happy Arena registrar, Gabriel found himself in the middle of an entirely different crowd. A nearby regular addressed him with no small amount of awkwardness, covering the emotion with a hearty slap on the back.

“I think she likes you.”

“Great.”

“That’s not a good thing.”

“Great.”






There is a pulse to this place.

To most of Bren’s inhabitants, the thought would be meaningless. They moved with this pulse, lived by its beat and grew from its call. But for Gabriel, it was a feeling that was impossible to ignore as he entered the arena for the first time. The senses that directed his power took some time to settle after first colliding with a flow so vast that he couldn’t quite perceive the whole of it. Although he was familiar enough with the sensation to filter it out, the impression only grew stronger while crossing the walkway to the Factory Arena.

Tick.


One could describe it as jarring at first, discordant even, but the rhythm of hissing, grinding and clicking became clearer as the arena gates loomed closer. The pulse was stronger here, a mechanical heart reaching up from below to turn the Clock Tower’s muscles of stone and metal. Nearer to the acoustic center, it had a certain music to it, one that could disorient or guide his senses according to how well he kept his wits about him.

Tock.


The walkway was retracting already. Even before a message echoed down from on high, it was clear that this experience would be nothing less than the blood sport he was warned about. The hissing steam and wafting stench it left behind offered a sharp reminder to what senses were left untouched by the shock of entry. Gabriel’s pores dilated, clinging to clothes that absorbed just the right amount of moisture to stop flapping with each hissing interruption to the stagnation of the industrial air. His nostrils narrowed— It would take time to get used to the smell, even once more instruments were added to the sinister orchestra. Still, he relaxed his torso for but a moment, clenched his abdomen as he began breathing deeply and steadily.


Tick.


Evenly spread combatants. This starting position would delay his usual tactics for some time. It was too easy to turn one’s back on an opponent; it would take a calm mind to spot the opportunities that the scarred young warrior normally thrived on. The pillar didn’t exactly help either, but oh, it would have its uses. Rotation shouldn’t have been as much of a surprise as it was on his hips, but was nonetheless no immediate concern as his legs bent ever so slightly and kept him aligned. Sealegs - he thought - I owe the Captain a round. In truth, it had been the years of sailing back and forth from his abandoned home that developed them, but only Captain Thorn had explained the parallel between the sailor’s habit and a warrior’s stances.

Tock.


Don’t look at the walls. The pillar is your axis. One hit from that tree might be the end of it, but distance is in your favor for now. There’s few things that water can do to that… Better see it in action before narrowing down ideas. The man to the right could be more dangerous, but he might just be the spark you need all the same. Let him see you begin. Show just the right hint of strength to one, and vulnerability to the other.

Now
breathe.

Tick.


Gabriel chose to mostly ignore whatever boasting was ensuing to the other side of the pillar, paying only enough attention to deem it meaningless. From his point of view, being able to kill someone on the caliber of other champions wasn’t a particular distinction in here— It was an inescapable requirement to dare entry. Starting to step ahead and slightly counter-clockwise, careful to not yet turn his back on anyone, he breathed deeply and at a pace that subconsciously found the medium between his optimal rhythm and that of the clockwork stomach they had all plunged into.

A crystalline flow arced behind his back, thin as a finger at first, then steadily broadening in its spiraling course around his right arm. Both of the nearest opponents were too far for any water attack to be worth attempting. The one to the left couldn’t be defended from with a water impact, and would be very involving to affect with it... not yet. Not with a fresh and prepared opponent to the other side, and no guarantees that the elegantly garbed musician beyond him would grab his attention with miraculously convenient timing. It was only worth looking threatening to the desert-tanned warrior, then.

“Let’s dance.”

TOCK




Rayen -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/18/2018 13:28:58)

A storm raged outside. It was a big one, wind wailing at the windows, grating against the roof. But all those who had found respite within the tavern sat at peace. Each individual, though greatly varied in age, occupation, strength, kindness, and curiosity, found themselves completely transfixed by the eyes of a peculiar man standing on a table in the centre of the room.
The man was tall and powerfully framed, though carried a softness that only age and wisdom can bring. From his confidence, he’d clearly fought in a great war, maybe two, though the soul-scars worn by many ex-soldiers were nowhere in sight - his enigmatic eyes were bright and consumed by a vibrant adoration of life.
Dalavar, was his name, and he claimed to be the nemesis of those who utilise magic for nefarious purposes. A storyteller. Perfect company for those trapped inside during a fearsome storm. And by the quick, clear manner his sonorous voice carried above the thunder, and the intense manner in which his every movement punctuated each word, it was clear that the captive audience were graced by the presence of a master raconteur.
The story he told this night took place in an unfamiliar world, long ago. It continued thusly:
“…known as Children of the Moon. Each Lunarian possessed a strong connection to the lunar force which shaped them into being, physically manifested as some such a circular scar or ghostly white hair, and expressed in their ability to shape their world as the Moon itself did. Many were shapechangers, and others great sorcerers of the tide or Season, but one small boy who lived in a small village in a small hut with his parents possessed not a flair at all.” The orator’s gaze drifted across the assemblage, the sympathy for the boy clear on his face quickly mirrored by each spectator.
“However, his parents minded not; they loved him still.
His friends minded not; they adored him still.
But do you think this forsaken boy minded?” Dalavar’s question was sincere, and the oppressive silence it brought begged to be broken by an answer.
One heavily-scarred sailor piped up: “Of course he did,” she slapped her glass to a table with conviction, “because he was weak and he knew it. Others would prey upon him, and he’d get nowhere without the ability to prey instead upon them.”
A young man with laughter lines around his eyes offered another perspective, “Of course he did, children are very sensitive to difference and dissimilarities.”
Dalavar nodded slowly in agreement to the opinions, before briskly shaking both comments aside. “But nay, the boy had no reason to feel shame towards his weakness, and did not conceive his arcane disparities as a serious detriment. He was happy and loved, and he made sure that those around him knew that they were also.”
Suddenly, internally, The Mage Slayer became very tired. Rubbing a hand along his jaw, he puffed an aerial bombardment of minuscule opalescent bubbles from his pipe, then abruptly, though smoothly and satisfyingly, concluded his tale.
“So, this evening amidst the pleasant company of this gathering of friends, and forever, as all who live and breath contain the potential of friendship, remember to be a beacon of joy and love. For in doing so you honour the Moon Mother, and many say that if you admire the beauty of her reflection in the waters of the sea or stream, lake or even a single droplet of rain, she may bless you with the long lost gifts of her children.”
With a flamboyant bow to all corners of the room, and heartfelt praise for the barkeep’s watery but gratefully accepted tea, Dalavar ignored the torrential weather, marching audaciously outside to continue his pilgrimage towards Bren.



Many moons, and many renditions of enthralling, fantastical stories later, His Great Audaciousness, Dalavar, The Mage Slayer finally clacked his cane satisfactorily at the foot of a grand arena. He paused for but a brief moment to admire its wondrous arcane construction - a veritable roiling rainbow containing wafts and weaves of every colour (or magic, as the mortals called it) possible to fabricate - before carrying himself confidently through the entrance to whatever great occasion fate had conspired to entwine him in this time.

The path Dalavar had valiantly followed, as he was wont to do, had ultimately resulted in the fantabulous figure finding himself in an undeniably claustrophobic, malodorous, vibratory space about which he was not greatly impressed. At the very least, the density of colour in this antechamber easily compensated the silver-auburn haired man’s curiosity. As he studied its shades, he noticed a pattern flowing outward from the end of the passage, likely signalling the opening of his arena door.
Were one privy to Dalavar’s thoughts at this time, they may communicate somewhat, A man worthy of attention deserves a grand entrance, and though my worth may yet to be proven in this setting, I indubitably am most grand. ’Tis but polite to reflect such in my appearance, and in doing so I may find myself a worthy audience.
So, in response, he began carving perfect circles in the air with the foot of his cane. After merely two full breath cycles of drawing, and a well-loosened wrist, a bright and luminous light emanated from The Mage Slayer, bathing the now-lowered entrance platform as the unique competitor strode boldly onto the rapidly rotating arena floor. Continuing forth towards the central column, Dalavar ting’d his cane rhythmically as he took in the arena. Eight others, high ground available, presumably a full audience, and…one fellow so utterly enshrouded by dark hues it came as little surprise when he declared himself a senseless, violence-hungry imbecile who would dare to take the lives of others for a magical concept he likely failed to comprehend. How utterly irksome, but delightfully youthful. He may prove difficult to reason with, but nothing lies beyond the grasp of His Great Audaciousness.

Slowly he approached the one identified as Maled Con, stopping part way to spread his arms as if to encompass the entire arena and announce, “Friends, let us not fight, for in fighting, we must win or lose. However, we fight not now, so let us continue not fighting, that in doing so we may consequently avoid the potential negatives of engaging in such an activity. Instead, perhaps you would care to join me as I regale you with a tale of a great battle long ago in a far distant land. There was fighting there, and in fighting many fought and died. Conceivably, knowledge of the precarious duality within our disorderly actions may inspire you all not to fight, but to, instead, live. And furthermore I would challenge you all - and I know this may be a struggle, but all are well capable of it - to live well!”

As he spoke, the colourful storyteller turned to face each competitor within line of sight, puffing out, as he spun, a small cloud of skull-sized bubbles which glimmered sporadically in the filtered light of the arena. Dalavar believed there was great beauty in the intangible and the ephemeral, one of the primary reasons he felt so drawn to bubbles, and though held little hope that his message of peace would be well-received, he figured that at least someone, whether in stands, or the arena itself, may see the wonder within his particular brand of airborne magic - both verbal and effervescent.




Necro-Knight -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/19/2018 6:37:06)

Bren was creepy. Not in the sense of the old “ghosts and mummies and tax collectors” way, but creepy in that… “it reminded me of home” way. Granted, my home was never a bustling city like this, or ever hosted a championship that could, quite literally, change someone’s reality forever. I didn’t really think of that as I walked the streets, soon realizing that my home didn’t have streets anymore. In fact, it didn’t have a whole lot of anything anymore. A magical cataclysm, starting at they ley line beneath the city, had overloaded everything magically attuned for a few dozen miles and left nothing but barren wasteland.

From where I come from, magic isn’t just something you wield to make yourself look awesome to a tavern girl or show some beasties that they should hunt someplace else. It is a flowing, living energy that exists in everything in some manner or another. The wildflowers on the road towards our front gate always had a soft thrum of power to them when they bloomed every Spring, the untapped potential of life magic, and the lake to the south almost sang if someone magically talented focused enough to hear the tune. So, when some idiot felt the need to play around with the order of the surrounding natural world, things went disastrously wrong. That idiot being me.

See, everyone from my home was born with some affinity for the natural energies of the world. You could be born with a connection to the earth and strength enough to crush stones like they were cheap tin. You could also be born with an affinity for life itself and your touch could sprout entire groves. Others could be born with a more passive connection to the power of the world itself and acted as sages and scholars.

As if I needed a reminder of my own elemental birth, the fire from a set of candles in a tavern window tilted towards me as I went by and a young woman did a double-take, crystal-blue eyes wide, and suddenly locking on me. I gave her an awkward wink and continued towards the arena. Charisma was important in the Elemental Championships but I hadn't really interacted with anyone properly in weeks, and before that, I'd never really interacted with anyone besides my brother.

He had also been a Fireborn, and being a few years my senior, he enlisted into the warrior caste. He was a glorious fighter, and it’s also because of him that I have any martial skills whatsoever. One day, he leads a scouting party to our borders to investigate reports of a foreign people crossing into our lands. Now, we weren’t a hostile people, but being a coastal state, we would’ve been a excellent port if conquered by a greater power. So of course, we had this happen every few years, and thought nothing of it. But as the months rolled by, we never heard back from that scouting party. We sent others and while they returned unharmed, they reported nothing on my brother or his team. No traces, no signs of conflict, it was as if the ground itself had simply swallowed them whole. Months turned and seasons changed, trade caravans started disappearing in the forest that laid just short of our eastern border and the Arcane Sages started forbidding travel out of the village unless on business relating to survival; trade, scavenging, that sort of thing. This meant when I became of age, I was forbidden from leaving to search for my only family, which was complete and total stupidity. I wasn’t endangering anyone but myself, but of course, the elders knew what was best. Heh, they didn’t see what happened next coming, did they?

The night after I was publically forbidden from finding my brother, I committed two crimes. The first was a small-scale act of larceny, which wasn’t as bad as you’d think.The altar I burned was to the Fire God our people worshipped anyway, so it was bound to appease someone. While the town was up in arms over a sacred altar being desecrated, I slipped into the Chapel of Elements, the place used for elemental communion. Usually, only the sages and elders are meant to perform rituals of this intensity, but as I began gathering my will, I realized I no longer cared what they said. It was in that moment, I understand now, I was committing my second crime. Heresy.

The elders told us all that anyone who tried to communicate with any Elemental Lord was racing towards their own demise, or something equally dramatic. The technical reason I believe was that the human vessel isn’t built to sustain an arcane connection for so long and you needed to use your essence to establish the link to each respective God. Doing so was both too taxing on the mind and terribly painful upon the body, since the magic you were born from could reach out through you to lash out at the material plane of reality.

Unfortunately, the fire spirit was none-too-happy with me beckoning him like a dog and passed “righteous judgement” upon me in the form of a feral fire elemental that tried to merge with my Fireborn soul. My resisting this blazing rebirth sent all the excess magic out of me and, well… into my home. I simply laid and burned at the heart of my own firestorm as my city died for my mistake. Only through the destruction of the chapel, and thus, breaking the ritual circle and severing the link to the burning plains did I find mercy, but the fire entity still remains trapped just beneath the surface of my skin.

As I stepped through Bren’s buzzing crowds and towards the Arena proper, I understood now how truly wrong I’d been to think I could perform that act of magic, and wondered if my power would go awry here as well… It was such a beautiful city and I’d hate to have two destroyed societies under my belt… Not the legacy you want to carry around this early into your life. Thankfully, I was only planning upon drawing on my natural gifts and the entity if I had to, whose power was great but not enough that I couldn’t choke it back down when needed.
No way for me to summon a fire god… Just the way I liked it.

I finally made my way inside and moved through the lines of other competitors, as well as starry-eyed fans who were ogling the lot of us. I couldn’t really blame them. I fit in with Bren’s people physically, but not everyone here seemed to. I noticed one young woman with dark fiery hair and an ornate black hood, and a man in a pure white formal attire of some kind. I honestly couldn’t tell some competitors from the audience, but I’d find out when they came for my throat.

As I stood there taking everything in, a woman perhaps in her middle years beckoned me over to her window in the wall with an impatient motion. Her aging face was full of urgency and I saw in her eyes that she’d seen a lot, but had been impressed by very little of it. Once I approached the window, her voice came out sharp and impatient, as if she’d done this dozens of times today, which she probably had.

“Name, elemental faction?”

“U-uhm… Suhmat, I’m.. I’m with fire,” I said, perhaps sounding a bit timid. I hadn’t spoken to anyone in Bren yet, and my social skills had deteriorated already from lack of anything like friends for weeks. Maybe I could try to meet some people here after this was over.

Before I even finished speaking, she thrust a pamphlet through the tiny port in her glass window and motioned for me to move on. I responded with as much of a pleasant smile as I could manage, before moving back into the crowd and looking down at the little paper. It read “Suhmat, Fire Competitor. Clocktower Arena, proceed with haste. The Lords do not wait.”

“Well, guess I’m off then.”

----------------------------------------------------

As the tick-tock-tick-tock of this clocktower arena became louder, I slowly synced my breathing with each sharp sound, feeding more and more air into my lungs as I felt the flames flicker and glow beneath my flesh. El’nath was hungry, was restless… It hadn’t been let free since I’d been cursed with the monster and all that rage had been condensed over time. Now, he was clawing at the walls of my mind like a starving animal smelling food behind a door.

Despite holding the creature in my own soul, I couldn’t determine if it was hungry for me, or my enemies. So many ambiguous factors in this exchange… I needed something concrete, something to target this growing blaze towards. There was a loud slam from the other side of the heavy door I stood behind and I deepened each breath until I was nearly panting when the giant door itself fell forward. The impact and bombardment of sensations nearly sent me back a step, but I needed to move forward, not show weakness before any fights even began. The smell was vile, something I’d never experienced before, but then I had never seen so much technology in one place. The mechanisms were huge, all working in sync for one purpose.

I wonder if you and I can become like this tower, El’nath. A fine-oiled machine.

I got no response, as always, so I stepped onto the center platform and focused in on my fellow competitors. I didn’t recognize any of them from earlier, save one. The man in the snow-white formal attire. I got a good look at him now. His suit wasn’t just white, everything was. Hair, clothes… I think even his eyes were but the lighting wasn’t sufficient to tell without getting closer, and El’nath simply curled up at the brief thought. I’d never felt my curse turn away from anything, but this man… He wasn’t what he seemed.

Tearing my eyes from the cold presence, I browsed over the rest of my arena as we spun on the center platform, each sound of the massive clock almost shaking my teeth. To my right, one man looked as if someone had drug him from a tomb beneath my home, a necromancer perhaps, and sent him in their stead. If that were the case, I pitied him, but it wouldn’t stop me from ending his decrepit existence.

To my left, a man I would’ve mistaken for one of my peoples’ WaterBorn from his attire, coat looking as if it had been woven from the sea itself. A water competitor would be… complicated to deal with, if his level of control was anywhere near my own, but I couldn’t waste time hypothesizing that. He was scarred rather visibly, even from this distance, but I somehow wanted to see the other people who had given the scars to him.

Near him, it seemed as if someone had animated a tree of some sort, an ancient entity, and simply brought it along. I’d never seen something that looked so unnatural and natural at the same time, and the size was intimidating alone. I’m not short, by any means, but this creation had me beaten in every aspect… Reach, size, mass… but I had to have it in speed.

Another man, brightly dressed and making a mess of bubbles from some smoking tool was quickly passed over. If he was here to play the fool, that was his choice, but I needed to take everyone in before the blades and magic started flying. Next to him though.. Was that two beings already engaged in a brawl? I couldn’t hear the sounds as clearly as I might’ve outside the tower, but I’d been a FireBorn warrior long enough to know what cracking skulls and dying screams sounded like as someone was immediately dispatched. Thrown away like trash, without a care. This being who now stood in the previous ones place was… simple and efficient, which made them dangerous. I had to prove myself more so. Somewhere in my head, that meant tackling the biggest, and yet I assumed easiest, threat in the room; The walking pile of timber not too far away. Not coming up with any better ideas, I decided this plan was as good as any, and it also kept me farther away from the man in white… That was completely coincidental, I promise you.

They were going to see me coming, I couldn’t do anything about that, but I could give them a little surprise and make a statement to the whole arena at the same time. Multitasking, after all, would have to be key here. I slowed my panting to a more controlled breathing through my nose as I took a few steps towards the wooden construct and swung as wide of the water-garbed man as I could before breaking into a run. The arena was relatively small and it wouldn’t take me long to get in range, but I didn’t wish to give the supposed aquatic wielder an attack of opportunity as I went by and giving distance to him would.

I closed to about five meters of the tree creature and finally let the roaring inferno in my chest flow down my left arm, feeling my muscles tingle and crackle as if I’d just filled the veins with carbonation, before the dripping orb of lava formed in my palm. The deep orange glow was stark in the low light of the clocktower and I was sure to get everyone’s attention as I planted my feet and twisted at the hips, sending the grapefruit-sized lava spell hurtling towards the tree monstrosities center mass. As I did, I tucked my right arm in tight to my ribs and chest, using the armored gauntlet I wore on both hands as a makeshift shield, in case someone tried to attack from outside my peripheral vision and I wasn’t able to dodge.

Best case scenario, the wood was weak and would hopefully burst into flames upon contact as my lava splashed and burned… but knowing my luck, it’d spit razor leaves or thorns or something at me. Somehow, that idea didn’t scare me though… none of this did. After staring down the fire lord of your realm, and living ( albeit scarred and half-insane) to tell about it? This was simply risky in my book. Besides, as far as I know, they are all alone here… I’m never truly alone.




Tiphphany -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/19/2018 6:38:00)

As Lán Harrow trekked through the forest skirts of Bren he prepared for the fights he would face ahead, he had killed elementals before, in one on one fights, however these had been merely recruits trying to show their worth, he had fought and slain children with more guts then they. The voice of Hārüi-Rägîñ echoing through his mind as he took the shadowy back paths hoping to arouse as little suspicion as possible. However, before he is able to walk through the gates he is stopped by one of the guards of Bren. Asking for identification he shows him, however this doesn’t go as smoothly as hoped for Lán Harrow is a known demon, the guard asks Lán Harrow to step aside and to explain his business in Bren. Knowing that no matter what he says he will either be turned away or executed he does the only thing he can think of, turns tail and runs back into the woods, knowing nothing good could come of this the guard gives chase, but Lán Harrow planned for this, he slinks his body into the shadows and darts to the soldier through the shadow realm, melding his body into the shadows cast my the gap between the guard and his steel armour Lán Harrow impales the guard and walks back to the city by melding the guards body, and talking by applying pressure to the dead guard’s throat and vocal cords. Walking immediately to the nearest bar, somewhere where he can unpack his runic wares, equipment that can meld with the shadows just like him, he requests a room within the nearest tavern. Well the nearest one with a roof left on it. Immediately scanning the room, he noticed nothing of import until the darkness elemental with the ball of energy, talking to the one he overheard say is a cursed soul, obviously also here to fight for the favour of darkness. Walking into the room he asked for a room, which, as a guard raised a few eye brows after all they all have brilliant 5 star rooms, but after dropping a hefty piece of gold onto the bar the suspicions seemed to fade, walking up to his room he dropped out of the long dead guard and left his decaying body on the ground of his room, having a living shadow inside you for an hour does wonders to the human anatomy. He walked back down stairs to see the old man leaving, he decided to enrol into the completion he walked up to the child and told him he wanted to enrol, and barely listening to the blabbering’s of the boy, something about death and favour, writing down his name and the darkness rune next to it he was requested to sign it, melding his finger into a sharp shadow edge he pierced his flesh and signed the paper in his blood before sealing it with and eternal shadow. He left the room thinking he’d make it all the way to the place of his tournament now, he was stopped by a group of guards who were facing the child just earlier. He had had enough of these pesky mortals now, never liking people his tattoos sparked to life underneath his armour and his eye grew a sickly crimson as he turned his trench coat flowing just a little bit as he did he slammed his foot to the ground and melded it into a wall of wicked spikes impaling and killing 20 civilians and 3 guards, he quickly stole their souls and ran, making it to the clock tower in time to see the cursed child throw Oro the mage he had wanted dead from the top, exclaiming the name at the top of his lungs, calling upon his glaive he threw it quickly lobbing the head off and stealing the soul from the magician. Sheathing the glaive and calling upon his swords his eye returned to its normal colour, and with the voice of two people speaking in complete unison he called back “WE ARE LÁN HARROW, THE NEW CHAMPION OF DARKNESS, MY KIND IS OLDER THEN TIME IT’S SELF AND YOUR, IS UP”


Note: sorry mine isn't as long as others I'm super tired plus I've never done anything like this before, never even playing D n D




Chewy905 -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/19/2018 9:17:17)

Maled Con just couldn’t understand. He showed up, made a huge scene, went outside of his normal style just to appeal to an audience!

And no one cared. Scar man was threatening someone else, the fire mage was attacking the tree, and bubble face was suggesting that they don’t fight in the arena designed for bloodshed and instead sit in a circle and tell stories. AND HE WAS SO CHARISMATIC THAT MALED ALMOST WANTED TO GO ALONG WITH IT.

But worst of all…. WORST OF ALL! The child in the arena just tried to directly upstage me. ME! MALED CON! This will not do at all. I’ve worked too hard, done too much to get here and be out-done by a young boy.

“Go ahead and tell a story sir. As long as it’s about me of course. There are plenty of stories to tell! Why, I’ve done so much in my life!” As he blabbed on and on he could feel Cursed Spotlight taking effect, a tingling overcoming his body as he faded from sight.

“Why you could regale us with the story of my first kill! Or the beautiful details of my birth! Or you can tell a story of the future, the future where I win this silly little championship and make a fool out of the rest of you! I even have quite the amount of stories of the past two weeks. I have friends you know! Friends that gave me gifts so that i can win this for them….




Maled Con followed Semed through the streets of Bren. He never once lost sight of the man, although even if he had the trail of sand Semed left behind would make it easy to find him. Maled Con transitioned from crossing rooftops to blending into crowds to hiding behind objects so that Semed wouldn’t see him, but Semed never turned around anyways. Eventually, Maled’s target turned and entered a large stone building, the wooden sign hung on it declaring it the “Pathfinder’s Rest.”
An inn, then. Maled thought. It’s late enough that it shouldn’t pose too much of an issue.

Maled followed after Semed through the door, ending up in a cozy lounge with a stone fireplace that gave off a comfortable amount of heat. There was a wooden table, likely for reception, but no one was there this late. A stone spiral staircase led upwards, and three separate hallways split off from the main lobby. Semed was nowhere to be seen, but the faint trail of sand continued across the lobby and up the staircase. Maled laughed quietly.

This really is almost too easy.
Maled went up the stairs, exiting them into a large open room with multiple doors lining the walls, each with its own number. The sand trail led to door 208. Maled noted the door mentally, then went back down the stairs to the reception table. He found what he was looking for, a parchment listing all the rooms and their inhabitants. Despite the tournament, there was no one but Semed on the upper floor. Returning to the upper floor, Maled went over to room 208 and inspected the door. Wooden, but sturdy, with a carved gargoyle knocker. Taking the knocker in hand, Maled rapped it against the door twice.

“Who’s there? What do you need?” The voice carried a thick accent, making it a little hard for Maled to fully understand, and sounded full and strong.

Maled reached up and touched his throat with one hand, while silently unsheathing a dagger from his ankle with the other, though he couldn’t feel the cold steel of the handle. When Maled went to reply, his natural smooth gentle voice was replaced with the deep growl of the bartender from earlier that night.

“It’s the barkeep, Victor. You left behind something at the bar, I came to return it.”
There was only silence. Maled twirled the dagger a bit in his hand and settled into a crouch, knife arm ready to shoot forward as soon as the door opened.

“What did I forget?” There was clear suspicion in Semed’s voice now. Maled had been banking on Semed having forgotten something at the bar, patrons often did.
“You left behind a knife, it’s a pretty nice one too. Wouldn’t want you to forget it!”
“Alright I’ll be right there.” He sounded trusting enough. Maled tensed, ready to lunge.

The door opened, revealing Semed standing there. Maled Con exploded forward, knife arm springing out and aiming directly for Semed’s throat. It never found it’s target. A wall of sand filled Maled’s vision, throwing him back, his head cracking loudly against the stone wall he collided with. Maled’s body crumpled down, his vision blurring. His voice had returned to normal, but he was too shocked to speak. Semed stepped forward slowly, sand pouring out of his clenched fists.
“I had not expected the Championships to start so soon.”

The sand from his fists floated up and gathered into a spearhead. With a thrust of his arm, the spear flew forward. Maled rolled aside, the spear crashing into the stone wall and dispersing in an explosion of sand. Semed rushes forward, a scimitar formed from sand in his hands. Maled Con parried the blade aside with his dagger and punched Semed in the gut with his left hand. As Semed doubled over, Maled slipped behind him and away, putting space between them, then sealed his own sight, activating Sense Disruption.

Semed started shouting. “GET THEM AWAY FROM ME!” Maled could hear the crashes of sand on stone, supposedly from Semed attacking nothing.
“What are you seeing?” He whispered. “What torturous sights are you experiencing?”
The screaming and crashes continued. If he kept this up, it could disturb any guests that were downstairs, Maled had to end this now. He stepped forward and stabbed forward into the darkness, feeling his knife sink into Semed’s back, accompanied by a scream. He twisted the blade and felt Semed collapse to the ground.
“I yield! I yield!” Semed gasped. “Just call off the scarabs, and spare me just a few minutes, I’d like to talk.”

Scarabs? The hallucinations must have connected to Semed’s fears then, interesting.
Maled disabled the distortions, his sight returning to him. Semed was on one knee, panting heavily. Maled removed the blade from Semed’s back, and moved it up to his throat instead.

“Whatever you want to talk about, you’d better be quick. I don’t like leaving work unfinished.”
Semed stood up shakeily, while Maled followed his throat upwards.
“Please, I’d like to talk peacefully. Please, sheath your blade.”
“No more sand?”
“No more sand.” Semed opened his hands, sand stopped flowing from them, though a slight trickle was coming from under his pant legs.
Maled lowered his knife, but did not sheath it. Semed shakeily walked over to the wall and collapsed against it.

“Are you another combatant for the Championships then? Or an assassin sent to stop me?”
“What does it matter?”
“I’d like you to hear me out, I don’t have much time left.”
“Obviously.”
Semed chuckled slightly, clearly in pain. “That’s not exactly what I mean.” He pulled up his pant leg, revealing a leg made entirely of hardened sand. “An infestation of sorts. A side effect of overusing my magic. Every day it gets worse.”
“You entered the championship to get cured?”
“Correct. Eventually the sand will reach my heart, and I’ll die. There’s no leg at all here, I have to put some focus at all times into maintaining the form or else I’d fall to the ground. But as we just witnessed…” Semed gestured to the room, which looked like a literal desert at this point. “I can’t even stop a simple assassin, even when I landed the first blow.”

“Let me stop you there. You want me to enter the arena and use my wish selflessly to cure you.”
The Sand Mage shook his head furiously. “Nothing so selfish of me. I’ve achieved what I wanted in life, this disease is simply an inconvenience. Furthermore, I’m not afraid of death. One doesn’t enter the championship unless they’re prepared to die. If you are entering the championship, I only ask one thing.”
Maled sighed. “What?”
“Win. Take my blessing, and, if you wish, my life, and embrace your own wish. I’d rather someone with conviction wins it than a fool who cuts down others for the joy of the crowd.”

Maled bowed his head, the room going silent except for the laborious breathes of Semed. As he reversed his grip on his knife and raised it high, Semed closed his eyes and presented his heart. The blade came down, a story ended. Semed’s body slumped lifelessly against the wall, legs dissolving into sand.

Maled Con knelt down and scooped up some of Semed’s sand, filling a pouch and sealing it. He weighed the pouch in his hand thoughtfully, strapped it to his belt, and left down the stairs, out the door, and into the sounds of Bren’s night.




“They want to see me win this, they’re cheering me on from up there in the stands I know it. I can’t let them down now! I’ve tossed aside everything I’ve known for this! I don’t usually like being this flashy but when on stage you have to flaunt, you know? I mean I’m sure you know, you’re obviously a stage-man yourself. Say how does that pipe work? Are those bubbles coming from within you, or is it magic? I don’t know a lot of magic myself, I’m merely a cursed soul, oh Woe is Me.”

He shifted to strike a dramatic swooning pose becoming visible for just a moment, then returned to a neutral position and resumed his blabbering, vanishing from sight again.

“It really is rude of all of you. Here I am pouring my heart and soul into this tournament and you can’t even be bothered to respond in kind? Shadow Boy over there even tried to upstage me! But you can’t upstage Maled Con! Congratulations kid, you killed an unconscious fool that was on his way to death anyways. Are you proud of yourself? Did killing a dead man bring you joy? And also, older than time itself? You’re definitely not older than time itself, heck you look like you should be off serving tables. So run home with your little magic swords and go earn some allowance because you’re simply outclassed here.”

“As for you Scarface, it’s extremely impolite to just ignore a challenge like I’ve given and go off challenging someone else. I can’t even see you from here, but you can’t see me either so I suppose we’re at a standstill. Anyways-”

Maled kept talking, rambling about whatever he could, keeping his invisibility active.




Lorekeeper -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/19/2018 12:07:38)

“Let’s have a quick exam, young Gabriel. Single question. Why are you on the floor, having dirt for breakfast with a foot on your buttocks and a cane smacking your head?

At the ripe young age of twelve, Gabriel wasn’t sure of how the answer. He had practiced his acrobatics very intensively of late, and his spinning had always been on par with the older pupils. Why didn’t it work this time? Still, the question itself wasn’t exactly accurate.

“...What cane? You didn’t—”

“About to call your master a liar, eh?” Although Gabriel instinctively moved his head, realizing too late that he should have seen this moment coming, sixty years weren’t nearly enough to make the always spry master think slower than him. The dry whacking resounded after the boy’s attempt to dodge.

“Ow Sorry, Elder Pontius. I don’t know. I saw that big thrust coming and thought I’d dodged for sure.”

“It is good and wise to respect the threat of your opponents. But you should only ever turn your back once you’ve conquered theirs. Luckily your numb skull can take enough of a caning to repeat this lesson a few more times, if you should need it.”

“...No, no, I’ll remember.”

“We’ll see! Now get up, it’s time for an actual breakfast.”




Gabriel’s impressions of the arena continued to be swept aside by surprises. He foresaw introductions, despite preferring to offer silent respect for his competitors’ prowess, but did not expect quite so much dialogue. Still, at least one of the surprises was to his taste.

The warrior of the sands chose another target, one to theother side of Gabriel’s menacing posturing. Before even getting a moment to engage with the FireBorn, his dark form was already sprinting on a curve that gave Gabriel enough berth to keep him out of immediate interception range. Clever. A moving target was harder to hit with a ranged attack, after all, especially on a rotating medium. However…

This was exactly the kind of opportunity he thought he would have to bid his time to seize. A chance to manipulate the rhythm of battle beyond a singular duel. A large amount of combatants saw fit to spend time chattering, allowing him to pay much less attention to them. And a foe with an alacrity to challenge his own choosing to run past him was simply ideal. He could find a moment to strike, and in pursuing, more than double his distance to the next un-assessed threat. In a moment’s analysis, he relied on the possibility that a lower guard would be more difficult to quickly punish while he focused on a very threatening group engagement.

Just a moment longer. His back is turned. No, his field of view can still find you quickly… Now.

Gabriel exhaled, bidding the water on his arm to slither across the floor on the way to his target. It wouldn’t reach him, but it would certainly accelerate faster than he would when taking off after his target. Half of the combatants were no longer in his sight, and more would follow when he engaged so close to the walls, but that risk was worth the opportunity. A flick of his left hand bid the rushing water to adopt the shape of an inverted ramp, a small tile meant to combine its reinforced tension with the warrior’s ability to walk on water. His right hand, rising where its opposite fell, beckoned from the depths of his essence a short blade of gleaming silver that trailed with blue runes.

Charging footsteps and the faint sound of rushing water came to an end a fair distance still behind the charging prey, letting the arena’s own percussion compliment the hissing of steam and now emerging lava. Preceding the interruption of a more fleeting instrument, however, a shadow was cast over the shifting light that the molten rock drew along Suhmat’s path. Having sprung from his momentary addition to the terrain, Gabriel had taken the use of magic as a cue to draw Flow towards his opponent’s back.

There was no certainty in trying to stab an opponent running directly away from him, and thus he chose to let the momentum of his fall dictate the nature of his strike: A diagonal slice along the direction of his fall. Suhmat’s attack robbed him of the opportunity to inflict crippling damage, interposing the right shoulder and causing the blade to cut by the clavicle and glance off of the scapula. Still, first blood was drawn. And as it was drawn onto the stones, landing alongside Gabriel, the weapon’s power coursed in its place. The victim would swiftly find that more of their reserves were forcefully pushed into their attack, intensifying its power through a strain well beyond the intended.




Apocalypse -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/19/2018 14:06:20)

Moonbeams pierced through the thin fog blanketing the ground below. Its soft light revealed a frosted bed of snow hidden within a tranquil clearing of the forest. No chatter disturbed the silence as snowflakes descended in lazy drifting patterns across the mound spoiling the otherwise smooth glade. This haven had been conceived in a breath of absolute serenity.

Alas, the moment came to its end.

There was a shift from underneath as drifts of snow expanded upwards into a chain of anthills. These dunes reached a pinnacle before fingers, rigid and pale, breached through the virgin snow. The hand paused for a few precious heartbeats before curling in and back out rhythmically to a tune unheard. It fell forward, breaking through the snow cover and finding purchase in the frozen blades of grass beneath. In a meticulous process, a figure rose from the ivory blanket covering him. Dirt caked the man’s hair and suit while snowflakes coated his features bit by bit. The figure hung his head in silence for a moment with half of his body still interred below. There was an unnatural stillness to his posture, as if he wanted to move but had to remember how. When he at last opened his mouth, a clod of dirt fell out. The figure stared at the splotch tarnishing the white sheet before him, mouth agape as more specks trickled out.

Finally clamping his mouth shut, the man pulled himself free from his earthly prison. He brushed himself off, stopped when the task proved fruitless, and began walking. A trail of sullied snow was left in his wake.

No mist from frozen breath escaped his lips, but the low hum of a lullaby was lost to the empty forest.




“Follow me with an elven kiss
‘Cross the seas through the isles of mist
To my home in a land of bliss
Before you break my heart”


Finishing her verse, the elven woman pranced around the humble stage as the tavern exploded with shouts of praise. Her blonde braid twirled with grace behind her. Without missing a beat, her fingers plucked the strings of her lute amidst her dancing. Quick and beautiful, joyful and charismatic.

Dapper thought the song was decent, too.

The tavern erupted with cheers as Loralyl bounced downstage and flashed her contagious smile. Dapper’s gaze lay on her as he played away. Unprofessional? Perhaps. But these folk were already deep in their cups. Why should they be the only ones to enjoy the view?

With a slight bow and roar from the crowd, the elf retreated upstage. As she approached the fiddler, she gave a wink and mouthed some quick words with her scarlet lips.

“Knock ‘em dead.”

A grin crept across the revenant’s blotched face as he moved towards the audience. He did not possess the lutist’s poise, but he had about him a rhythmic sway that fit into his style of fiddle-playing. Coupled with the stomping of a foot to the song's tempo, it had quite the captivating effect on the crowd. Their shouts died down as they joined in by clapping their hands and beating their own feet against the ground. With their rapt attention, the fiddler dropped his voice several octaves to achieve a rich deepness that flowed over one like melted caramel.

“Come with me to a foreign land
By my side, I will hold your hand
I’ll be yours for this one command
Before I break your heart”


Another round of applause washed over them as the verses broke for a bound of music. As Dapper stepped back, he turned to his left to see Loralyl - all smiles and sunshines - playing besides him. The duo circled around each other to the stimulating beat as they played, never breaking eye contact. At last Loralyl moved away from him and sang in her voice that was just on the cusp of being too sweet and pure for mortal ears.

“If I come with you to a land so new
My bright shades will fade to the dullest hue
I’ll burn away like the morning dew
If I come with you”


The two encircled each other faster as the music grew louder. Dapper’s voice broke over the clamor.

“If I follow you to the morning’s blue
My mem’ry will fail, my love won’t be true
I will no longer be the man you knew
If I follow you”


A quick crescendo accelerated the already rapid pace. Dapper and Loralyl fell back from each other to opposite ends of the stage before being drawn forward again. As they did so, they echoed their last verses in an unwilling confrontation: the elf and the man who longed for one another but could not follow where the other led. In that moment, Dapper forgot about the crowds as he gazed into those eyes of emerald. Her cheeks burned red as they often did. Was it from the heat of playing or something far more intimate? These thoughts danced across the bard’s mind as his voice joined hers for the finale.

“Torn worlds apart
You’ll break my heart
But I will ne’er stop loving you

My love will fore’er be true


Always be true!”


Patrons whistled and spilled their drinks in their ovations as the piece concluded. Dapper turned to the crowd and surveyed their reactions. He only found genuine joy and laughter splayed across their faces. It was typical for taverns to need some time to warm up to the walking dead man, though he supposed Bren was accustomed to strange sights and stranger people.

“All right, all right!” A plucky halfling clambered onto the short stage. His combover did a shoddy job of masking his encroaching bald spot. “Give one last hand for the players of ‘Sweet Serendipity’!” The bar roared once more with applause and the thumping of tankards on tables. The halfing basked in the crowd’s admiration before waving his hands to quiet the clamor. “And we have a special event for all you lugs and ne’er do wells!” The audience erupted with laughter more so because of their drink rather than any actual quality in the joke.

The bard caught a blur of movement at the bottom of his vision. He turned to see Loralyl holding his hand by the wrist. The elf had the look of a mother reprimanding a child. You’re doing it again.

Dapper touched his free hand to his neck and inspected the fingertips. A brown liquid now stained the pale skin. The revenant dropped his gaze. He had been scratching at his neck again. A peculiar habit considering he could not feel, and thus could never have an itch. While it was inconvenient to draw blood and unknowingly ruin his shirts, the fiddler thought it was small potatoes in comparison to his other problems. Loralyl was persistent though, and she had conjectured that the filthy habit cropped up more often when Dapper was nervous.

He wiped away the blood on his breast pocket. I’m fine, the bard mouthed back. Also, you ripped your skirt . Dapper turned away and suppressed a smile as Loralyl’s eyes widened and stooped down to search for the offending, and non-existent, tear. Dapper would hear about that later, but that was better than her fretting over him. She would have more than enough of that tomorrow.

“-and with that I present to you the future Paragon of Fire, Dapper Phoenix!”

Fenix, Dapper thought to himself as he seated himself at the piano. Understandable given the name, though it was far too haughty. He should have picked a different one. Something more subtle. Maybe harder to pronounce so announcers would give up saying it altogether. Alas, what could one do? As the crowd’s ovation died down, the bard flexed his fingers over the black and white keys. Functionally useless to someone who could not feel them, but it just felt wrong to not partake in the ritual. The halfing quieted the last few shouts and turned to the musician. Dapper gave a nod and bent over the instrument.

His fingers danced. A slow waltz across the keys that accrued together a simple melody. The patrons were silent, though whether out of confusion or awe Dapper could not tell. But it did not matter - this one song was for him.

Gasps came from the audience as candles upon the walls flickered. They extinguished one by one in sync with the melody. But as each one died another was born. Candle flames bloomed to life around Dapper’s presence, each one a small beacon in the darkness. Their glow shifted from red to blue and back in a simplistic yet entrancing pattern. Light splashed across the keys as the flames began to revolve around their composer. They swirled to the music, note and flame in perfect harmony to produce this siren’s song.

And then the flames winked out.

Not all at once - the ones closest to Dapper had been extinguished first. The loss of light caused the bard to halt his playing. Frost spread across the keys. The revenant dropped his hands to his sides and fluttered his coat tails out of the way as he stood up. He took a slow turn to the face the open tavern.

To the icy figure standing front and center.

A face chiseled, sharp, and handsome. Skin bright like diamonds and mist freely pouring off. The nearest patrons had recoiled from the angelic being and were shaking either from fear or the cold. There was a crash as one of them dropped a tankard. It shattered across the floor and the liquid began to freeze without hesitation.

Pride.

The face was not the one he wore in their last encounter, but there was no mistaking the wraith. From the body’s construction to the contempt in his eyes it was him. The specter pursuing the unlucky revenant across the continent in order to reclaim his body.

Dapper stepped to the end of the stage, noting that even with its added height he was only looking Pride in the eyes. The bard crossed one arm over his torso and rested a hand on his chin. He swayed for a moment in silence before offering forward an empty palm. “Can I help you?”

The ghost was silent as his gaze poured over the fiddler’s form, no doubt judging every aspect of the poor sod before him. The slight smirk that appeared on Pride’s unnatural face vanished with a sigh.

“You seem to be doing just the opposite, actually. You’re entering the championships as a paragon of fire? Honestly, I had hoped to come here to wish you farewell, as once this is all over, I won’t have any need for you anymore.”

“Oh?” Dapper raised his eyebrows for the first time in genuine surprise to Pride’s remarks. Can it be true? “So you’ve finally decided to move on after all? Commision a new body to suit your needs?” Dapper glanced over Pride’s new appearance. “Never would’ve pegged you as fancying elves,” the revenant said as his eyes caught sight of the ears’ pointed tips.

“Please, don’t be so...foolish.” If looks could kill, then Dapper would be dead. Again, that is. “I don’t intend to stay like this. I merely had to recycle your previous efforts to be rid of me. Are you saying I don’t look familiar to you?” The grin that replaced the scowl was somehow more disturbing on the wraith’s form.

There was a pause as the bard took in Pride’s new appearance. Truth be told, there was something familiar about the face, though Dapper could not quite place his finger on it. He stroked his chin in thought. “It’s the cheekbones, right?” He raised a hand and touched his face where the decay around his eyes met pale flesh. “Solid half-inch higher, I’d wager.” Dapper gave a shrug. “It’s a good look - sported by any half-important noble who hopes to inherit his title sooner rather than later.”

“So you are as stupid as I left you.” Blunt words, but Pride was never exactly one for subtlety. "It’s unfortunate, I had been hoping you would keep your wits enough to at least maintain my body while I was away. It is a shame, though, I had hoped this would be an ample reminder of what happens when you try to involve others into our little squabble.”

The perpetual half-smile on Dapper’s face vanished and was replaced by a slight frown. “And here I thought you would have learned a thing or two. ‘Manners’ would have been my top pick, but ‘personality responsibility’ is a close second.” Dapper sighed, a rare sight as the act of breathing did not come naturally and had to be consciously performed. “Or are you so detached from this world that nothing seems personal anymore? Have you even done anything besides pursue this old meatsack of a body, Wot?”

The comment earned another sigh from the wraith. Dapper figured ghosts and the like were not able to breathe either, so Pride must have been doing it for the theatrics. “You do know that wasn’t our name, don’t you? You insufferable botulous mass, you can’t even remember who you were. It’s no matter, though. I hold no responsibility for the lives of those you send after me.” Another sigh, though this time Pride dropped his shoulders as well. “Especially the lives of those insignificant holy warriors that seem so bent on keeping me from getting my damn body back.”

Dapper gave a soft shake of his head before crossing his arms over his chest. “You know, for an icy wraith you are sure full of hot air.” With a wave of his hand, the musician gestured to the surrounding patrons frozen with fear. “Are you quite done? Because if belittling me is the best you got, then move on already. You more than anyone should know the taboo of interrupting a performance.”

“I’ll be concerned when anyone of significance calls this a performance. Part of your sentiment is correct though: I’m wasting my time here. Be sure not to destroy my body during the tournament, and pray to whatever you hold dear that I don’t see you in the arena. There will be no holy knights to protect you there.” The wraith turned to leave, flourishing his hand like the pompous icehole he was.

“Pride, you forgot something.”

As the spirit spun his head around, Dapper flicked his finger. A drop of blood flung through the air towards the specter. On the fiddler’s command, it burst into flame. Hardly larger than a candle’s light, but still enough to make Pride flinch as it washed harmlessly across his face. “It’s called ‘humility’. A good look on anyone, though the nobility have yet to wear it. Perhaps you could be the trendsetter.”

One particularly brave patron stifled a giggle before being silenced by Pride’s icy glare. The wraith turned his attention back to the bard...and then to Loralyl. A wry smile crept across his face. “And be careful who you get close to. She would make a lovely sculpture.” With a final flourish of his cape, Pride took his exit. A fine pool of mist lay in his wake.

“All right, well that was certainly a special turn of events! A chilling spectacle, if you will!” The halfing clambered back onto the stage. He continued with an enthusiastic speech to lighten the mood. The words were lost as Dapper remained unmoving on the stage, staring at the tavern’s exit. Of course he would be here. There’s never an escape from him. No end to his obsession.

No end until tomorrow.


His body was jerked to the side and the dead man found himself face to face with Loralyl. Eyebrows knitted together and biting her bottom lip. “Are you gonna be okay? There’s still a few sets-”

Dapper pushed passed her and into the crowd. “We’re done playing.”

Loralyl called after him as he made his way through the throngs of people. “Dapper, come on, we-”

“Sorry,” the bard put a hand on the door frame leading outside. “I’m done.”

And he stepped out into the snow.




Around the revenant gleamed bands of copper and iron. Steam hissed as it poured out at periodic intervals. The hall echoed with the churning of machinery before him in a simple yet meticulous beat. Dapper pulled out his fiddle. He drew the bow across the strings a few times. “No no, that won’t do.” He did so again, this time accelerating the pace of the notes. “Ugh, *lords* no.”

The bard listened again to the din coming down upon him as he approached the arena. He cocked his head to the side before nestling the fiddle underneath his chin one final time. Each clangor of metal upon metal was followed by a long note, finishing just in time for the subsequent peal. Simple, yet better. Dapper strolled along as two études sprung to life in the air around him. They took the form of faeries small enough to fit in the palms of his hands. The études darted to and fro, their wings fluttering in a frenzy to the bombastic tune.

A massive iron door gave way as the revenant approached, causing the ruckus to grow even louder. He took ginger steps across the makeshift bridge and onto the main platform of the arena. Before him stood a gargantuan pillar that stretched up to the metalwork of gears above. A spiral staircase revolved around the structure. As Dapper observed it, the other competitors were already springing into motion. Out of the corner of his eye, the bard caught a glimpse of blue and white. No.

For the second time in as many days, Pride intruded in on his life.

With a gait as egotistic as one can manage by only walking, the wraith sauntered towards the central pillar. Mist rolled off his form with each step. And in this larger than life, he seemed at home.

Without hesitation, the bard drew the bow across the strings in a sharp motion to launch the first étude. Embers trailed in its wake as it streaked towards the chilling specter. The second étude swirled faster about his form as the music took an erratic, almost violent, turn. Dapper himself rushed towards the colossal structure with all the speed he could muster while maintaining concentration. A plan, or at least the barest hints of one, began to take shape in the fiddler’s mind.

But one thing was clear: this time there was no running. This ended today.




draketh99 -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/19/2018 15:20:51)


Cold. Everything cold. Ol’ Tom shut his eyes, the dim torchlight from outside that alleyway only made the throbbing in his head worse. With each breath, grit and snow scraped across his face, digging tiny cuts into his cheek, inconsequential in comparison to the sharp pain that pulsed so violently in his back. He took in a deep breath, gathering all the effort he could muster before being struck down by a twinge of hopelessness. It was useless, after all. His legs wouldn’t move, no matter how much effort he tried to drive to them, nor could he even feel them to know where they were.

This small alleyway was slowly changing, shifting into a frozen hell. The silence itself was a torture, hearing nothing but his own ravaged breathing, the crunching of snow, and that awful sound. More than anything else, it was that sound that drove him to despair more than anything else. That high pitched whining drone that grew louder and louder in his mind. No longer could he fill his head with the songs of his youth, no longer could he draw any comfort from them. No longer could he hear the strum and melodies of his favorite instruments. No longer could he hear the thunderous applause of a concert well performed. There was no longer anything else, only that sound.

A chill slowly crept up through his chest, numbness now replacing each sense in its wake. Gone was the firey pain that shot through his back. Gone was the warm trickle that seeped out from that pain, staining the surrounding snow like strawberries in the summertime. Gone was the acrid smell of the garbage that littered the alleyway. Gone was the irritating scrape of the snow against his cheek. Finally, gone was the calming illusion that shrouded the inevitable. The curtain over his mind torn asunder, panic seizing what thoughts he had and striking him like lightning.

From the panic, thoughts wisped about in his head, like sparks from an ember, like the flicker of a flame about to go out. A single phrase gripped that panic, buzzing about in his entire being, just like those sparks. The only thing left in him echoed across the empty expanse.

“I don’t want to die.”

And then, cold. Everything cold.





“Sir, sir!”

Pride snapped back to attention, the haze of that memory still flitting about his mind like a gnat just out of reach. Hm? Yes?

“You’re here to compete in the championships, yes? The registration table is right this way.” The younger man waved a hand, motioning for Pride to follow, leading him through the winding streets of Bren. The frozen revenant noticed, with some contempt, that the crowds didn’t seem to part or take notice of the two of them. The outdoor markets were swarmed by spectators distracted in an attempt to find exotic treats, bobbles to entertain their children, and any other comforts one would imagine while observing such an event. Hopeful entrants and contestants made their last minute stops to blacksmiths, looking for that one weapon, that single piece of armor that may spare their life in battle, that may land them favor with the elemental lords.

“If you don’t mind my asking…” The man looked up to Pride, eyebrow cocked. “Just what...are you? I mean, when I first saw you, I’d assumed you were just as pale as any man from the southern mountains. Now that I get a good look at you, though, you’re not human at all, are you?”

Pride’s shoulders tensed. He did indeed mind. Undead was such a humiliating concept. Admitting to undeath was admitting to having lost your very life. It meant admitting to being unable to pass on. It meant admitting having failed to finish your endeavors in life. It meant having failed at life.

“I’m as human as you are.” This was a lie, obviously. “I’ve merely bonded with the elements, taking steps towards perfection.”

“Oh…. well alright then.” The man dropped his eyes down and to the side, avoiding Pride’s cold gaze. “What brings you to Bren, then? What’s got you wanting to participate in the championships?”

“Your people speak of the champion being granted a wish.” A deep breath. An impatient sigh. “Something incredibly dear to me has been taken from me, I intend to use that wish to get it back.”

“What’d ya lose, if I may ask?”

“You may not.”

“Well, alright then.”




The rest of their journey continued in silence, the young man taking his leave as soon as they reached the long, wooden table that served as a registration desk. The process for registration itself happened to be rather straightforward. The easiest part by far was acknowledging the risk of bodily harm and even death. Having no next of kin or family to notify upon gratuitous injury or death, that section was sorted rather quickly. The difficult part, he found, happened to be providing a signature before the quill and ink it touched froze in his hand. Three, four, five attempts later and his unlife was signed away and sealed in a wax stamped envelope.

“Alright then, a Mr. Pride was it?” The clerk began with a chuckle. “Your arena will be… ‘Factory’ it appears. Return here at dawn tomorrow, provide one of us with your name and you will be guided in to the preparation rooms. There, you will be provided with clerics and priests of various orders. Be sure to make peace with any and as many as you see fit. Once you’re ready, simply follow the hallway into your arena, you won’t be able to miss it.” She looked up at him, meeting his curious gaze with a smile, though her eyes betrayed a knowing sadness. Doubtless she had given this talk to many before who hadn’t made it out the arena. “If I may make a suggestion, you should enjoy some revelry tonight, enjoy life a bit before tomorrow. Perhaps you would want to visit one of the taverns? I’ve heard there’s a contender for Fire playing in town, a ‘Dapper Phoenix’ I believe? I’ve heard they’re quite the treat to listen to.”


Dapper. Was he actually here? This was good, perhaps even fortuitous.




The Brass Tankard. It certainly didn’t look like much. Granted, neither did the poor fool likely to be performing inside. The music, that voice in particular, that came from the inside was unmistakable. He was certainly here. Pride pushed the door open, the creaking hinges barely noticeable over Dapper’s melody.

”His timing is off, he’s behind by a count every third measure.” While Pride would never admit it, the melody was lovely. He slowly approached, his steps aligning themselves with the song’s tempo through habit alone. It had more warmth and more heart than anything he’d composed in life. How could it, though? It was so simple. It lacked the subtle complexities that he’d grown to love in his re-education. It lacked finesse. It lacked nearly everything he’d spent over a decade pursuing. Even worse than all of that, it was perfect.

“Can I help you?”

A wave of disgust shot through Pride’s mind. Dapper was even more aged, torn, and ratty than the last time they’d seen each other. “You seem to be doing just the opposite, actually. You’re entering the arena as a champion of fire? Honestly, I had hoped to come here to wish you farewell. Once this is all over, I won’t have any need for you anymore.” Pride smirked. What need was there for his body to even be present when one could simply have a wish granted by an elemental lord? This was his chance to have his body back, a chance to truly live again.

“Oh?” The bardic corpse seemed genuinely surprised. “So you’ve finally decided to move on after all? Commision a new body to suit your needs? Never would’ve pegged you as fancying elves.’

Oh. Pride’s concerns felt validated. He was that stupid. Subtlety in this situation felt useless. “Please, don’t be so...foolish.” Pride began, attempting his best to speak slowly. “I don’t intend to stay like this. I merely had to recycle your previous efforts to be rid of me. Are you saying I don’t look familiar to you?” This last bit brought satisfaction creeping over Pride’s expression. It seemed a wonderful irony, after all. The last time they’d met, this cretin had hired a number of holy knights to exorcise him. It was only fitting that their flesh paid tribute to his new, more perfected form.

“It’s the cheekbones, right?” Dapper began. “Solid half-inch higher, I’d wager. It’s a good look - sported by any half-important noble who hopes to inherit his title sooner rather than later.” It was time for this conversation to near its end. Pride quickly grew tired of these games Dapper seemed so keen on playing.

“So you are as stupid as I left you.” Patience had left Pride’s voice faster than warmth left his body. “It is unfortunate, I had been hoping you would keep your wits enough to at least maintain my body while I was away. Also, I had hoped this would be an ample reminder of what happens when you try to involve others into our little squabble.” Perhaps this was clear enough. As dense as he was, Dapper kept getting in his way. He needed a reminder that there would be consequences to pay. And as Pride’s old body needed to be kept in one piece, that price would have to be paid by loved ones and allies alike.

The bard’s grin, finally, began to fade. The fool was starting to understand.

“And here I thought you would have learned a thing or two. ‘Manners’ would have been my top pick, but ‘personality responsibility’ was a close second.” Alas, it was indeed just a start, it seemed. “Or are you so detached from this world that nothing seems personal anymore? Have you even done anything besides pursue this old meatsack of a body, Wot?”

Wot. Wot. This piece of rot had even forgotten his own name.A blatant disrespect to both their origins. “You do know that wasn’t our name, don’t you? You insufferable botulous mass, you can’t even remember who you were.” Even in life, patience was never a strength in Pride’s possession. “It’s no matter, though. I hold no responsibility for the lives of those you send after me. They’re all to be sacrifices and sculptures.”

“Are you quite done?” Dapper began, obviously growing as tired of the conversation as Pride felt. “Because if belittling me is the best you got, then move on already. You more than anyone should know the taboo nature of interrupting a performance.”

Did he truly consider this a performance? That was beyond comical. Playing to drunkards for change was a waste of talent at best. “I’ll be concerned when anyone of significance calls this a performance. Part of your sentiment is correct though: I’m wasting my time here. Be sure not to destroy my body during the tournament, and pray to whatever you hold dear that I don’t see you in the arena. There will be no holy knights to protect you there.” With a wave of his hand and a sharp about-face, Pride turned to make his leave, a trail of fog in his wake.

“Pride, you forgot something.” The bard flicked his finger, flinging a drop of hot crimson onto Pride’s face. The drop ignited before splashing across his cheek, causing the intricate crystals underneath to crack and deform. “It’s called ‘humility’. A good look on anyone, though the nobility have yet to wear it. Perhaps you could be the trendsetter.”


Pride stopped at the doorframe, taking a long, deep sigh. Nothing in this life, nor anything after it, came without a price. Whatever childish satisfaction Dapper gleaned from this would have to be paid in blood later. Pride’s gaze flicked from Dapper to his elven companion and back. “Be careful who you get close to. She would make a lovely sculpture.”

Pride watched with no small satisfaction as realization crept over Dapper’s face. Content with the knowledge that his intentions were finally understood, Pride left.




The air was warm, doubtless a result of the excessive steam that permeated the room. The air itself tasted as if it were coated in iron and copper. The floor itself trembled with the droning tick the arena produced. “Clockwork” Pride pondered, steadily making his way through the narrow hallway. “This is more intricate than I would have imagined. Likely a sign that, more than a victory, the lords require a show.”

The hallway grew uncomfortably narrow towards the end, punctuated by a sharp drop off bridged by a fallen iron door. Pride took a step out onto the door, surveying the arena that would either be his second chance at life or his second grave.

A large rotating platform stood in the center of the room. This would indeed be a show. Pride took a confident step out onto the platform, white frost appeared underneath each his feet just before each step, adhering his boots to the ground and preventing an embarrassing slip.

Pride quickly strode to the center and turned his back to the center rod, hoping to keep his blind spot covered by the massive obstacle.

Confident with his positioning, Pride looked out into the rest of the arena, now surveying his opponents. To one side, it appeared that combat had already begun. A man had been thrown into the grinding gears below. His assailant seemed to be a creature with less life than even Pride possessed, lacking both the mass and hues of pigment one would normally associate with vibrance. The thing roared out, boasting and threatening in some odd combination. Good. Hopefully he would remain as boisterous, it would save the effort of remembering where he was.

Content with this surmising and looking to his left was-. Fwoom. Instinct took over as Pride pivoted to the side, dropping his shoulder and tilting his head away, a ball of flame billowing off by his side. Pride quickly snapped his attention to the source of the flame. He pivoted his right foot behind himself, turning to present a more narrowed target. His right hand gestured at the floor, drawing up a spiraling javelin of clear ice from the floor. Grasping this new weapon at the center and snapping it from its frozen base along the floor, Pride turned to aim at his foe.

Oh. Oh this was perfect. Of all the chances, it seemed the prodigal son would indeed always return.

“My dear Dapper, is that you? Or should I call you Tom now?” Pride smirked. He kept his left hand poised in front of himself, prepared to react to Dapper if need be. “Please to try to keep this interesting for me. This will be your final performance, after all. Let’s give these kind people a show to remember!”




Randall Flagg -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/19/2018 22:56:47)

“Aren’t you awful small to be entering this tournament…Miss?”

“Wyrmwood!” She had to shout over the raucous conditions of the tavern. Her eyes were alight with fascination as she took in the smells and sounds flying all around her. She looked up at the tournament official, who was currently returning the gremlin entrant’s gaze with a mixture of worry and what seemed to be curiosity.

“Okay, miss Wyrmwood, sign here and we can get you into the pool of contenders for this year’s championship.” The official seemed lost in thought for another moment before grabbing a small ladder from underneath some important looking documents, setting it up so that the gremlin would be able to reach the registration to actually sign it. “Okay, sign here, here, and here.” The official ordered, pointing to a few lines on the document: it was the normal legal jargon for a deathmatch, how the organization running the tournament wasn’t responsible for injury or death, the usual. She would politely sign wherever asked, until finally the official cracked and inquired: “H...How do you plan on fighting?”

“Oh he’s parked out front.” She said with a cheerful grin on her face. “He’s my pride and joy...!” The gremlin trailed off, waltzing on the table with an invisible partner and only speaking up again after one final flourish. “And together we’re gonna crush the competition!” She let out a little gleeful laugh as she looked up at the tournament official again, curious to see how she would react.

“Uh... Well you’re signed up then. You can go now.” she stammered. Obviously bothered by the gremlin’s quick change in demeanor, the woman behind the table put a note on the table signifying that she was closing up for the day. “Good luck to you, miss Wyrmwood.” She said before collecting her things and walking off, leaving poor Sylvia lingering on the table for a little longer before climbing down the tiny ladder and out the front doors.

Sylvia was working at the base of the effigy her tools making noises tools should make, but upon further investigation you could see that they were made from wood. Stranger still was what she was using the tools to repair. It looked as though Sylvia was working on a complex mixture of mechanical parts, but the construct was made completely out of wood— like everything else she was working with. “Okay, repair systems seem good.” She continued to fiddle with a control panel and socket wrench, adjusting things ever so slightly while reading the display. Nodding to herself, she moved around the suit to check over its structural integrity. A display in her goggles was showing her that everything was in working order and ready for its first real combat trial.

Walking into the effigy’s open palm, with a slight brush of another rune carved onto the goggles the effigy would spring to life The hand rose up towards the shoulder, stopping gently to allow Sylvia to walk onto it and all the way to the base of the ‘neck’, where there appeared to be a crude carving of a door. Bending at the knees she waved her hand across the marking to bring this magical rune to life as a full fledged hatch. Swinging open on its own, it allowed Sylvia to climb down and into the effigy’s cockpit, where a rolling cage of sorts awaited for her to suspend herself from its harness system. Steady and secure, she began to flick switches and turn knobs positioned in front of her, sparking yet more of the effigy’s internals to life with the light of displays and systems. Reaching up, she bid the hatch to shut behind her with another wave of her hand before picking up the large weapon sitting next to her. The rather wicked looking spiked mace looked almost impossible to hold, yet in commanding the effigy’s strength, she had no problem handling it. Her pride and joy, as she called it, finally began to lumber its way towards the arena. Its heavy footfalls sounded more like large rocks hitting the ground, ominously giving away its approach.




Walking into the arena, she could already hear a familiar sound; one that brought her back to a childhood nearly forgotten As a young gremlin, she would sneak into factories and other mechanically inclined area’s ten break,to study, and of as much as she possibly could. She swayed inside of the mech, mentally noting how the floor seemed to be rotating along with the music it was making. It was so nostalgic to be reminded of such a pleasant noise... it soothed Sylvia. She could just sit here and listen to this wonderful tower all day.

Tick….Tock….Tick...Tock….Tic- “Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!”

The jarring shrill of the warning system snapped Sylvia out of her trance and into action, all while swearing at herself for not paying attention to the other combatants; namely when noticing a man run towards her and T.R.E.E. Another beeping would begin to go off as a large heat signature would begin to focus from around the charging mage. “Ohno.” She mumbled before attempting some countermeasures of her own. Watching a glob of heat leave her attackers palm, Sylvia began to maneuver the effigy, knowing she was far too slow to avoid the slag hurtling towards her. Instead, she attempted to maneuver the effigy by having its torso spin into a more suitable position to counterattack with either K.L.U.B. or her shielded arm.

Before she could react, however, another contender intervened by slashing at her attacker with what initially seemed to be water. Just as she was lining up her shot on the projectile, Sylvia felt another surge of heat from her sensors: Her assailant had begun to flare up with heat again. She knew that the effigy wasn’t going to be able to survive a follow up attack like the first heap of slag flying at them. Instead of moving to swing at the now supercharged slag of magma, Sylvia would attempt to get out of the way... Or, well. Attempt to get T.R.E.E. moved to the best of her ability.

The magma wouldn’t impact the effigy directly, but it would graze the upper part of the shoulder covered in the ironwood buckler, magma sizzling on the lumber as it rolled across a small part of the effigy’s frame. Checking systems and feeling like nothing was impacted too heavily from the smoldering, she ignored her repair systems for now to instead focus on loading a seed into the compartment for her S.P.A.D.E.. Thusly steadied, she began to advance towards both men with the K.L.U.B. lazily dragging along the ground at its side. The effigy could do little more than follow Sylvia’s will as she was ready to show them what she could do. Just think of a happy place, something to keep you calm while you focus, like old times. She strained to listen as they lumbered forward, as the sound of the tower’s heartbeat would be a grounding distraction for the fighting ahead.

Tick...Tock…Tick...Tock...




Tiphphany -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/20/2018 21:10:07)

Looking around at the mortals surrounding him he knew this would be easy. These people, their races had feared his lineage for millennia. He was an Esoteragi. A race of immortal, unageing dark demons, their blood and culture perfectly mixed with his oppressed hatred and rage had created the perfect dark lord of the shadows, a being capable of melding and adapting his physical form, becoming immortal, a creature capable of destroying the humanity and ripping the soul from the head of any physical form he could lay his gnarled hands on. As he stood there, his runic tattoos alight and burning his human flesh with the power of the demon living within him. He could tell this would be fun, the familiar tingling in his blacken horns hidden beneath his hood and helm. His eye alit once more. The foes surrounding him were worthless. That ‘Wraith’ as he called himself was the only person he saw as a challenge, sure he knows that the two flame elementals could pose a threat but his demonic state could tear them to shreds before they could blink. However, he knew he would need his strength for the final fight, the fight to earn him his rightful title as the champion of darkness. He would take control of that foolish runt with the armour, Sylvia they called her. Then using her power he would be able to destroy other foes that were more threatening to him before the real fight began. Between him and the cursed child, the fight for the rightful place to fight in the final place in the arena.




Necro-Knight -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/21/2018 0:31:33)

As my power surged out of me, I felt cold and sharp pain erupt from my right shoulder and cut inward towards my shoulder blade. It wouldn’t have normally earned a cry from me, since nearly having ones soul burned alive tends to give you a high pain tolerance, but the suddne roar from El’nath tore through my lips before I could stop it, the sound guttural and inhuman. It wasn’t rage, though I felt that too, but one of… power. The blast I’d just about released was suddenly leagues stronger than I had expected and made my head spin for a split second as I let it go.

The orb of lava impacted the wooden creation and while I earned some smoke and a satisfying smell of burnt wood amongst the otherwise-vile steam in the air, the creature remained mostly unscathed as the rest of the molten substance splashed and glowed in a sizzling puddle behind it.

On top of this, I realized I’d just lost a lot more willpower than I’d wanted to give up, even if my spell came out stronger for it, these were fights of endurance. Whoever had just take a cut at me as I pivoted and threw my weight into the attack had wanted to burn me out of my energy and most likely cut me down as I became weak… Instead, I let El’naths rage burn hot and growled through clenched teeth.

You just gonna let this punk stab us in the back and get away with it?

Now… I felt it respond. The slamming of fists against my psyche, the thunder of cries for bloodshed and charred corpses. For the first time since we’d been joined, I agreed with my spirit. I couldn’t see my foe, since they’d come at my back with cowardly precision, but had a relative guess of their location from the direction of the stinging slice in my shoulder and pulled back my weight to reverse the motion I had just to done to swing my armored elbow back at my attacker. I had an idea it was the man in the water-styled coat but with these kind of arenas, who knew.

A solid crack against strong flesh signalled I’d gambled wisely and El’nath howled with victorious fury. Again. More. Claw and bite and kill. I wanted to agree, but it was too early to let him fuel me entirely, so I clenched my jaw as I continued my motion and brought my left foot back, twisting on the balls of my feet and extended the arm blade hidden within the bracers on my forearms.

As I turned, I caught a glimpse of my attacker. It HAD been the water contestant, slippery jerk, and he’d come down into a crouch as he’d landed. My first blow must’ve caught him higher than I’d planned but that wasn’t going to change my course of action. Having completed the turn entirely, I swung the full weight of my right arm towards his upper torso. He was crouched too far from me to reach his mangled face, so I settled for the next best thing. I tilted my blade and felt the slight resistance of cutting flesh as my weapon parted sinew and skin a few inches beneath the armpit, a trail of crimson following as I finished the rather-stylish spin and came to a stop. The man was now to my right, still tucked low and as I craned my neck to look over my shoulder, I saw the aboral abomination moving towards us both. If it had any ranged skills, I was going to need to haul my gold-plated rear to get out of the way, but striking back at this aquatic arse was first priority. To bring my point home, I clenched my last two fingers and reversed the extension of my blades, the elbow-facing blade now extending back towards my enemy and spoke loudly over the tick-tock-tick-tock of the tower, as well as a few other competitors who seemed to think this was some form of political gathering where talking was meant to kill.

“Come at my back again, and I’ll do more than just leave a small wound. If you wish to face my fire, do it directly and have some dignity… You’ll gain no one’s favor fighting like a coward.”

My accent was a lot thicker than I realized now, after having heard so many other voices and dialects in Bren, and it made my voice falter for a moment, but I still finished the threat. El’nath had nothing to add, for the moment, but I wasn’t expecting him to suddenly develop a vocabulary beyond growling or screaming.




Lorekeeper -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/21/2018 18:20:26)

“The storm has passed. Signal the fleet to disperse.”

“Aye, Captain. Sound the horns! Give the signal, each to their destination!”

The booming voices of the captain and her aging first mate were all the indication that the crew needed to carry out their orders - plus one more. Sailors took to their stations, turning the prow southward. Meanwhile, those warriors of the Order stationed aboard knew that they would be called to line up, and did so in perfect coordination as the first syllable left the woman’s mouth.

Captain Margrid Vernaris, or Margrid the Relentless as she was once known, was the living flesh of one of the youngest stories that the Order of Tempests taught its initiates. At an even forty years of age, her sly grin and impressive tactical prowess once commanded a brutally efficient pirate crew, notorious for carving the date of a future attack onto mockingly decorated rafts that would serve as a humiliating signature — Survivors found on their floundering lifeboats bore not only the stain of defeat, but also the shame of falling prey to a raid that had been planned weeks in advance.

Few knew what immense injustice was so bitter as to turn even her allegiance, but the Deren’s Pride, her crew’s proudest theft, now flew the colors of the Order of Tempests. Her smile was even more passionate these days, easily stealing a decade from her features, but the fire of a shared cause made it seem more threatening than ever. She asserted her authority with brutal confidence and acid humor, perpetually amused by the role reversal that the seas offered: On land, she acted with humility and shared a close friendship with Gabriel’s master, Lena. The Elder that was to direct the warriors to the coming battle and had been her direct superior for as long as Eridani harbored her.

Once at sea, however, Elder Alphemius served as her first mate, and it was only at her indication that he finally addressed the warriors.

“Initiates. Adepts. We make way for Deren again.”

“That far from the others? We’re spread thinner than usual, Elder.” Gabriel thought the words to be his brother’s, as this was the young man’s most frequent concern. Instead, it was an older Adept raising the inquiry.

“We are, my son. Dragons stir in the mainland. Their kin to the north, their slayers to the south. Your brothers and sisters will head there. But you all have a special purpose today. We address concerns from the King, though not at his bidding. A message from d’Oriens has turned his eye to suspicious activity within his own realm. There is an unseen hand behind conflicts we thought disconnected. Methods much like our own, but ancient and nefarious in intent.”

“How will we deal with a threat we cannot see?”

“We shall pay chaos unto Chaos.”




Keen as Gabriel’s maneuver had been, it was clear from the start that it would not meet the enemy as planned. When drawing Flow, he had expected the intense light at his prey’s hand to birth a flame — One that could then be intensified to engulf the construct he was being ignored in favor of. The results were unexpected, and fell well short of his expectations. Still, Gabriel spared no time nor thought for frustration. No plan, least of all the first in a battle, could survive its execution unchanged. No set course should be so rigid as to collapse entirely in the face of unexpected turns.

This was natural, good even. For while certainty led to predictability, Gabriel’s greatest strength was his ability to adapt at each singular step. Once the flow of the battle stagnated, it would take far more effort to manipulate. One thing it absolutely wasn’t, however, is safe. The cold numbness of severed flesh quickly parted way for a stinging line of familiar pain. A blade, small but keen and definitely well-maintained. The cut had been blind but well-executed. Had it been entirely deliberate, it would have cut through more than flesh, likely plunging between the underlying muscles and through his ribs.

Moving forward was no longer an option, not with his balance thrown backwards. The momentum of Gabriel’s fall made it too awkward to reverse his direction and rise, the familiar taste of his opponent’s steel carving a new scar into his back before he could manage an escape. Another hiss of pain escaped Gabriel’s lips, his right foot sliding back and elevating his weight with a push of the left leg. In that instant, he saw at least two opportunities to close in for a counterattack of his own: The growling warrior’s left foot was pivoting, exposing every vulnerable point on his leg to any number of well-placed cuts. It would take time for his spin to complete, during which he could sheathe Flow in Suhmat’s vitals… But even a flesh wound had been enough to force a reflexive recoiling of the right arm over the crimson stain denoting the place of another future scar, preventing Gabriel from capitaking any further offensive action.

This backlash had cost his right arm some range of motion; a disadvantage to his guard that he had not yet built up enough adrenaline to simply push through. For the moment, all he could do about the spinning reversal was abandon his own riposte and interpose his left armguard in the path of the slower follow-up cut.

Gabriel stood silently during Suhmat’s exasperated taunting, processing what he had learned.

Insufficient awareness, but well compensated for. His reactions are far above the average. Upper range of motion on par with mine, though the footwork needs improvement. Still enough to get every bit of value out of those hidden blades.

I need to stay up close or very far away, he’ll be extremely threatening anywhere in-between until there’s fewer of us left. I can’t afford to do all the work myself quite yet. I’ll have to offend his
dignity for just a moment longer.

Although he would be inclined to oblige Suhmat if they were merely dueling, threats and accusations of cowardice had stopped mattering for the one long known as the Kinslayer of the North Gate. Still, there was some reason to the indignant fire. He couldn’t hope to skulk in shadows and pick at low hanging fruit all day, now could he? Though they met with steel, spell and wit, those assembled in the Arena weren’t only there to fight.

This was a spectacle, after all, and at least one of the other combatants carried himself accordingly. Were they not there to entertain? Then Gabriel would have to come up with an equally eloquent and dramatic response to the threats of his interloper, and righteously repel them with his own rousing retort before the encroaching construct robbed him of the opportunity.

Gabriel smiled, a charming little grin full of openly false innocence, dismissing Flow into thin air while he tilted his head for effect. Still standing with his left guard up, he moved only a finger to point over Suhmat’s shoulder in a silent indication that his back was once again turned towards the enemy.

In place of any words, he instead directed his power straight ahead. Without a moment’s wait, his body projected a rush of every last drop of water that he could safely conjure on immediate notice, now that his hands and thoughts were clear. It was a simple but involved first step, giving the crashing surge a direction and enough tension to hit with the force of a barrel’s worth of water… being hurled with the barrel and all. It was nowhere near the force it would take to send a foe beyond the boundaries of the Clock Tower, but it was more than enough to send Suhmat sprawling backwards into an… impactful encounter with the druidic contraption. That was as far as the immediate threat went, but not where the maneuver ended. In addition to thoroughly dampening both opponents, the frankly excessive amounts of water released by Gabriel soon rained down onto the small amount of lava at the T.R.E.E.’s feet… And the larger pool that lay just beyond it.

The ensuing explosion of scalding steam was exactly what Gabriel had hoped for. Pure spectacle, far lighter to move, wonderfully timed utility… Form meeting function

I never fancied theatrics… But let’s put on a show, effects and all. I’ll have to thank that fiddler when this is done.

The overpowering hiss that filled the air was the cue to finally move. Gabriel charged off once more, sweeping his hands — The left one wide and swift, bidding the steam to coil and linger around where the three combatants had met. Grimacing as he reached down, the right turned its control toward the warrior’s own dripping blood and directed it to splash on the stones underneath. He directed it to shed in a line near his run, intending to lead the trail just slightly off the mark. The Arena’s rotation, however, diverted it even further.

Gabriel continued to gesture towards his point of origin as he skidded to a halt, weaving a flowing shape into the air. This diversion wouldn’t last long, but it would spare him the concentration to try and re-engage after playing with his opponent’s expectations some more. Perhaps if he created the expectation for underhanded tricks… No, planning that far ahead would be folly. For now, he turned his back toward the clash of fire and ice and concentrated on the steam. While a medium so light was too dispersed to perform any particularly fine control, he specifically sought out the spots where he couldn’t find anything to manipulate. It would only give him the vaguest idea of what happened with his opponents, but the glow of fire and hissing of any water it evaporated could let him have a sufficient idea of any incoming threats before he was seen again — Which wouldn’t be long now.




Rayen -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/22/2018 18:21:51)

Softly, slowly wades the end of an age. Its feet are cold, but its eyes burn with hungry anticipation. He knew not when, nor where, but somewhere, sometime, oblivion appraised Dalavar’s world as a hungry child does its next meal.

Long ago, so very long indeed, such a thought would have caused The Mage Slayer to tremble at such a frightful rate he dare not speak for risk of abscising his own tongue. But today, in the company of a menagerie of individuals both capable and concerning, the unwelcome musing elicited an amused - though moderately irked - sigh, followed by a puff of more skull-sized bubbles to replace those already beginning to swirl and pop haphazardly about the arena.

From beneath his tilde-shaped moustache, a knowing smirk crinkled the left side of Dalavar’s face. His words had fallen upon deaf - or at the very least, “dim” - ears. Dim was the hope of a peaceful resolution within the ceaselessly ticking Clocktower arena; dim was the peace within the hearts of the other competitors within it; and greatly diminished was the likelihood that Dalavar would be given the opportunity to grace his audience with a truly fantabulous tale. The lack of acquiescence displayed by his competitors left Dalavar, briefly, at a loss for words.

To his right, a frightening creature enveloped by a thick fog of dark intensions issued its prematurely overconfident challenge. Further to his left, quick, clear music rose high through Factory’s ceiling of cogs, as hot embers and the whitest of mists intermingled menacingly with the arena’s pervasive steam below. And directly through the central pillar, equally lacking a creative utilisation of potential new companions, indications of a three-way magical conflict were already making themselves apparent.

Meanwhile, Dalavar stood staring at a faint shimmer of darkness from which a seemingly incessant fountain of near-empty chatter spewed. Inhabited just moments before by the one known as Maled, the audacious and shrewd storyteller assumed the space continued to harbour him. Suppressing a haughty chuckle, Dalavar graciously listened for a moment as his invisible neighbour requested a recitation of his own life accomplishments before proceeding to provide key points to include. Perhaps inadvertently, Maled revealed himself to be a rather pitiable individual, and His Great Audaciousness found himself losing the desire to silence him. So Maled babbled on.

“…from my childhood, about the fabled creature known as the Calcar. Some may recognise it as a chimera, but really it’s a different myth altogether. With the heads of a wolf, a dragon, and an eagle, the Calcar walked on two legs like a human or flew on powerful, leathery wings. None dared challenge the Calcar - its weapons proved too overwhelming - however it possessed one weakness: All three of its heads bickered incessantly and could never get along. Anyway, in the end of the story the hero defeats the Calcar by asking it which head he should cut off first, to remove the greatest threat. The alpha predator, prideful but foolish, became so absorbed in its argument with itself that it didn’t even notice when the hero cut out its heart.” Maled drew a gasping breath before launching into what must have seemed a logical progression to him. “But I never managed to master summersaulting until I was eight years old. Or maybe I’m making that up, it really doesn’t matter, the point is…”

The brilliant flash of an eruption of magical flame to the left reminded Dalavar that his adoration of the spoken word was easily overwritten by his distaste of harmful magics. Resolving himself to more decisively conclude hostilities, His Great Audaciousness politely interjected Maled’s monologue. “I thank you for your company - or lack thereof as the case my currently be - but company or not, our wider case has evolved to reveal a pervasive deficiency in similarly questionable - though nonetheless appreciated, as far as I can reasonably determine - companionship within the remaining members of our competitive camaraderie.”

Dalavar paused for a moment, nodding disappointedly, before offering an exaggerated wink to the invisible autobiography. “Out of respect for your poorly conceived intentions, I offer you a parting gesture of faith in homage to your death, which by all accounts likely approaches with great rapidity. Though I’m hardly one to offer advice on the matter - in so far as my advice could ever be found lacking on any subject - I recommend a more clandestine approach to surreptitiousness. While silence may very rarely aid in the acquisition of wealth, the old ‘silence is golden’ adage may be accurately reapplied in your current situation as ‘frugal speech allows for the continuation of one’s own existence’. Though I recognise that the sesquipedalian phrase in itself hypocritical…”

His Great Audaciousness glared at the dark-shimmering fountain of noise as it offered advice on food items to avoid while suffering from indigestion, rather than pause to listen to his own farewell. Tapping the foot of his cane, Temerity, thrice against the ground, The Mage Slayer regained composure, twirling the strange construction of timber and gemstone in his left hand while expelling a final head-shaped bubble from his dark pipe.

With no intent to cause harm, only to reaffirm his appreciation of Maled’s peculiar tactics, Dalavar announced, “I long that your fairness well within you, sir, but above all, I bid you farewell!” Dalavar punctuated his final word by tossing the timber rod to twirl twice in the air before catching it by its handle in his right hand. All bubbles compacted, filling instantly with clear, pure water, though all but the one now before him popped, discharging to splatter in small circular puddles of water on the similarly annular floor. Once firmly gripped, he flourished Temerity’s metal foot in the air before striking with great force the now compact, fist-sized orb of water in the direction of the aura of Maled.

Swiftly striding to the clash of antipodal elements to his left, Dalavar hoped to avoid having to immediately engage with the baffling blabbermouth now behind him. However, if he could rapidly reach the aggressing wielders of fire and ice, he could perhaps drag any hostile parties following behind into a four-way celebration of the sanguine vitality so often found on a battlefield.




Chewy905 -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/22/2018 20:36:42)

The ball of water was heading straight for him, and getting wet unexpectedly is not usually an enjoyable experience. The pacifist had turned out to be quite friendly and polite though, and Maled made a mental note to save his death for last, potentially after a spot of conversation. Maled Con was still holding Ball, so he quickly identified the path of the incoming ball of water, rose his hand level with it, and released.

Ball shot forward, colliding with the water head on. The orb of water exploded, launching a slight wave of water towards Maled, who back-stepped to avoid getting splashed. Ball continued on, unfazed by the collision. It crashed into the wall of the arena, bounced upwards towards the gears, bounced off the gears towards the floor, and disappeared below the platform.

Maled doubled over, falling to his hands and knees.
Oh come on, really? It had to get caught in the gears?
He retched a few times, eventually spitting out a perfectly dry, black rubber Ball that by no means should have fit in his throat. He looked at it in disgust and pocketed it, surveying his surroundings for his next move.

Off to one side, the corpse in a suit and a man in a suit, creating some lively music, along with fire and ice. Lovely. Off to his other side, the child stood still, doing nothing but glowing menacingly. Boring. He turned, seeing a three-way fight between the tree, the scarred man, and the darker skinned man, who seemed to be capable of throwing fire. Huh. Toasty.

What to do? What to do? That bubbles popping really sprayed water effectively towards me. Hmmmmm popping. Popping is like exploding, so you could say the bubble exploded towards me…. And popping usually makes a noise…..IVEGOTIT!

Maled Con rushed over to where the two suited men were battling, getting close enough for his next move to work but attempting to be discrete enough to not be noticed until he was ready. He crouched low to the ground, watching the fight with one eye while removing from his belt 4 things; a matchbox and three fireworks.

The fireworks were small rockets, designed to launch forwards at high speed, screaming up a storm and popping into a massive shower of flashes, sparks, and colors. They weren’t very dangerous, but they’d certainly create a show! Keeping in mind the rotation of the platform, Maled placed each firework down on the ground, pointing them towards where their targets would be rather than where they were at the moment. He quickly reflected on the friend that had given him these lovely gifts…




She’d been a very lively woman, with short, bright red hair, matching the color of her craft. Her name had been Tani, and she had introduced herself to Maled as soon as he commented on the bandolier of fireworks she wore. They had spent the day hopping from tavern to tavern together, discussing what the championships may have in store.

“Nothing gets a crowd excited like some fireworks! And if I put a little magic into them they have much more kick! Really gets the opponents respect!”

“Really? How interesting! Why, I’ll be sure to keep a close eye on you when I watch the championships! I’m sure it will be impossible to look away, after all.”

“I’m so glad to have your support Ormane, truly. You’ve made this day one to remember. A toast to new friends!”

“A toast to new friends indeed!”


The authorities had found her dead at the inn, her body still resting peacefully under the sheets. The room had been decorated with bright, multicolored banners and papers, emanating from the bed to make it look like the center of a massive firework. The doctors of Bren ruled it murder, the result of a slow acting poison that had to have been given to her sometime the day before. “The only relief.” The doctors said, “Was that it would have been painless. She probably simply drifted off to the next life.”
The killer was never found.





Maled Con silently thanked Tani, promising that her gifts would win him this championship. He also took a brief moment to touch the feathers at his ear, a reminder of why he was really here. He struck a match on the box and lit each firework quickly, slipping Ball out of its pouch as well. The fireworks shot away, screaming loudly and leaving behind a dazzling trail of sparks. One was flying directly at the shadow boys face. Another, towards the battle of three. And the last flew directly towards the space between the two suited men, rushing towards its short, flashy destiny. Maled followed it up by tossing Ball, aiming it so that it would impact the white suited man’s left eye, ready to seal his sight if proper contact was made, or create disruptions if the throw missed.




Apocalypse -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/23/2018 2:23:31)

Dapper stepped out into the night air. Aside from the mist lingering around the tavern’s door, there was no sign of Pride. A fortunate turn of fate, as the revenant had no idea what he would have done if the specter had been waiting for him out there in the darkness. He paused and sent a glance back over his shoulder to make sure Loralyl was not following.

For better or worse, she wasn’t.

The dead man gazed up at the moonlit sky as he trudged through the dimly lit streets. He had never traveled to Bren, but he had traversed roads like this before...




The dead man gazed up at the moonlit sky as he trudged through the murky streets below. The satisfying crunch of snow accompanied every footfall. City guards gave the lone figure cursory glances but continued on their way without intruding. A part of the man was relieved that they had not bothered to stop him - he doubted he would be able to answer any inquiries they pressed upon him. By prioritizing their own warmth and comfort over giving aid to a potentially needy drifter, the watchmen had given the stranger what he wanted.

“Hey!”

But then not everyone possessed such reservations.

The figure swiveled his head toward the origin of the voice. An elven woman with radiant hair was already shuffling out from a nearby building. Soft slippers meant for the comforts of a wooden floor and warm hearth jumped in and out of the snow accruing on the street. The figure found himself stopping to watch as this plucky elf hopped herself over to him. He glanced to either side - not a city guard in sight. Did this woman not know the terrible things that could happen in the bewitching hour? Why, someone could be murdered…

...murdered...

The elf came to a halt a few paces away from the stranger, her shawl pulled tight across her slender shoulders and loose strands of lustrous hair all aflutter. She gave a huff as the man simply stared back at her, white breath escaping her bright lips. “W-well?” she said through chattering teeth. “W-w-what are you doing out in the cold?”

The stranger opened his mouth but paused. Where to begin? That he had clawed his way out of the dirt? That he had no memories of who he was? That it was the dead of winter and yet he felt no chill?

Or should he start with the unmistakable knife wound in his back?

Seeing the elf shiver, the man swallowed to loosen his tongue. “Don’t know. I’m lost...and confused, I’m afraid.”

“Don’t know?” The woman gave a quick laugh before giving in to another shiver. The sharp inhalation of breath from the act was eerily loud amidst the snowfall. “Well that’s s-simple. Let’s start with n-names. I’m L-”, she cut herself off with a sneeze. It was adorable. “Loralyl. And you are…?”

The stranger froze for a moment before rummaging through his pockets. After more than a handful of seconds where the poor elf was forced to tremble in the elements, the man brought forth a silver pocket watch dangling from a thin chain. “Sorry,” the dead man said as he struggled to open the clasp. Damn, if his fingers did not seem responsive… “Aah, there we are.” His eyes locked not onto the watch face but rather the lid. Etched into it in intricate characters with all kinds of excessive embellishments were three letters.

“Wot.”

Wot? Wot kind of name is that?” Loralyl sneezed once more, this one decidedly less adorable due to the splodge of mucus on her upper lip. She wiped it off with her shawl and sniffed. “Ah, that’s no good.” The elf gave the stranger a quick look up and down. “You’re much too dapper for such a strange name. Here, come inside and warm up before we both freeze to death.” With that, Loralyl turned on her heel and marched back towards the building from which she had come. The elf was not even looking to see if the stranger was following her.

The dead man felt the urge to suppress a smile. She had a fiery attitude. And she was right.

Wot was a terrible name.




A clicking sound escaped from Dapper’s cheeks as the étude sailed through the air and splashed against the distant arena wall. Pride had dodged the blow, but what was embarrassing was that the evasion had been superfluous. “Well, that was stupid”, the bard muttered to himself. The gears were not just for show; they were rotating the entire arena. The trajectory of all projectiles would be off unless one considered the motion of the Factory itself.

Dapper came to a halt as Pride’s gaze fell upon him. His playing came to a slow strum, falling in cadence with the heavy whirring of machinery surrounding the two lost souls. The étude lingered in the air just behind the fiddler’s shoulder, bobbing up and down like a child playing peek-a-boo. Pride was, well, proud, but not a fool. Even in his taunts the ghost was readying himself for another assault. Arrogant yet practical. But could that be used against him...

“I suppose you can call me whatever makes you feel better.” Dapper remained in place but bent his knees ever so slightly. “Because while people will remember this performance, the same won’t be said of your name.”

The fiddle gave a horrendous screech as the bard drew the bow down at an angle. With this, the étude hurled itself at Pride. Or rather, just to the right so the platform’s rotation would bring Pride into the searing path of the faerie. Not that Dapper was paying heed to this. The étude had scarcely left the fiddler’s shoulder when he made his break for the central structure. Notes every bit as harsh and shrill as the first followed with every footstep. This was the raucous sound that was bane to all musicians - the chord that made ears bleed and teeth shatter. And Dapper was playing this note again and again. Between the attack and the borderline blasphemy of his ‘performance’, Pride would have both his hands and mind full. Hopefully.

A shriek unrelated to the fiddler’s cacophony pierced the arena. A bright burst of light careened through the air past the revenant before colliding with the spiral staircase. A dazzling display of sparks crackled around the metal structure. From the corner of the his eye, Dapper caught a glimpse of the perpetrator. A skeletal figure clad in onyx leathers. Solid patches of obsidian skin. Two empty voids filling the sockets of his eyes…

...wait…

...no...

..was this another undead!?

“Why! Why can’t anyone stay dead!” the bard shouted as he maintained his path for the arena's hub.




Randall Flagg -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/24/2018 0:10:27)

Sylvia would continue to advance the Effigy towards the pair of men fighting one another she meant to get even with the combatant who had thrown a cheap shot at her before she had even actually walked into the arena! “Oh i’ll show him.” She mumbled inside of the suit while glancing at displays to make sure the damage was indeed superficial. Seeing her attacker Suddenly propelled in her direction would cause the tell tell hint of a grin beginning to form accompanied shortly after by a small titter.

“For me? You shouldn’t have!” A rather comical voice booming out of the Effigy’s loudspeaker as it looked down at disoriented fighter sprawled before it. Another small titter would hang, caught between the ticking sounds of the factory as air and heat began to coalesce

Inside of the cockpit Sylvia would begin to raise arm that was brandished by KLUB with the obvious intent to maim, the target being Shumat’s head and chest while her free hand maneuvered a seed from her bandolier and into SPADE loading the seed just in case. Finally she would get to test out some of the new features of the suit, she was so excited. Field testing was great!




Tiphphany -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/24/2018 1:57:06)

The trained eye of the Esoteragi scanned the ever-moving battle field. The two bards, pitiful were spewing elemental flames from their disgusting flames at each other. That log was fighting with two other beings, unimportant, and the darkness elemental, his only challenger, had just vomited up another ball after his other one got lost. Disgusting, how was he supposed to fight a creature so pitiful? Sensing the impending impact his body dispersed into the shadows at his feet before becoming a lasso and swinging the harmless firework towards the fighting tree. A worthwhile distraction as he darted from the shadows and morphed his body around the giant trunk, attempting to take control.




draketh99 -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/24/2018 2:49:26)

Pride watched Dapper, tracking his movement and counting out steps under his breath. They were both roughly an equal distance from the pillar. “Compensate right.” He told himself. “Don’t let a spinning floor get the best of you.” He poised back, about to heft the javelin at the undead before him, left hand prepared to draw up a wall to defend against an inevitable counter attack.

Tick

The rest of the tower blurred in his vision as his eyes focused solely on his target. Crystalized muscle in his torso and arms tensed and coiled. This could be over in a single- HISSS. A screaming, flaming projectile intruded its way between Pride and his prey.

Tock

Practically in an unfortunate sync with this intrusion, Pride’s attention was instantly drawn to Dapper, the bard’s fiddle producing a screech that rivaled the firework’s in audaciousness. Regret found a foothold in Pride’s resolve. He was right, Dapper’s counter attack was indeed inevitable, it simply had come before Pride could get a single attack off of his own. Was a wall even useful now? There were attacks coming from all sides, though it seemed the screaming fireball hadn’t been aimed properly at Dapper or Pride.

Crack

Flash

Tick

No more time to think. The bright flash of the fireworks colliding with their target left bright and unwelcome spots in his vision. With a quick one-two motion, Pride drew his left hand across the floor and hurled the javelin at Dapper with his right with much more force than necessary. He had remembered to account for the rotation of the floor though the throw wasn’t likely to be accurate at all. It didn’t have to be accurate. The momentum of the throw knocked his shoulders back as he let his feet slide forwards on the slick coating underneath himself. With a sharp crack Pride fell backwards onto his hip, his right hand smacking the floor in time to steady his balance if not absorb some of the shock.

Tock

The daze of hitting the floor gripped his mind. The fog over his focus only clearing at the tinkling sound of ice crystals colliding and not sliding as they were supposed to. A small, webbed crack crept its way across his shoulder. He cursed under his breath. Though a glancing blow, Dapper’s small ball of fire had made contact.

Pride quickly surveyed the battlefield, refusing to lose his awareness for a second time. He made note of a small black ball darting directly overhead. It seemed almost unnatural in its perfectly straight path. “Don’t let that touch you.” Pride mouthed to himself. “You don’t know what it is, but you know it’s not natural.”

The direction the ball had come from was no less threatening. Two figures stood just beyond him. Pride sat very unhappily seated between the group of two to one side and Dapper at the other. The first figure of the two was the lifeless looking one that Pride had taken note of earlier. The second stood in colorful and almost amusing juxtaposition to the prior, what was more, he seemed to be approaching them.

Pride braced himself on his back hand, keeping contact with the slick ice below himself. Staying seated between two opponents happened to be one of the last positions he had hoped to find himself in. Still, there seemed little chance of standing in time. Pride’s attention darted back and forth between the colorful man and Dapper, his expression that of a cornered animal.




Starflame13 -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/24/2018 17:53:43)

For one brief moment, the movement stopped. For one mere second, the noise ceased.

A crackling of arcane energy reverberated throughout the expansive walls that enclosed the Factory. Displeasure resonated from these energies as they coalesced into a single piercing beam of light, a kaleidoscope of colors that focused down on Lan Harrow with dread intent. In that instant of stillness, Lan was enveloped, his effects snuffed and dispersed, his personage instantaneously transported leagues away from the entirety of the Arena complex and the city of Bren itself.


The ticking of the arena resumes once more, with a smoking hole through the rotating platform the only reminder of the former competitor.




Chewy905 -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/24/2018 19:20:21)

White suit fell back, possibly accidentally, and Maled watched as Ball soared over his head and struck the central pillar, bouncing off towards the wall. Maled followed it with his eyes expectantly, hoping it wouldn’t be destroyed again. It rebounded upwards, flew past the gears, then reached its tether distance, returning to him at high speed while expertly maneuvering around the gears. He breathed a sigh of relief, lazily standing up and catching it in one hand while glancing around at his opponents.

“Why can’t you move like that all the time?” He chastised Ball quietly.
It sat in his palm, completely silent.
“Hmm yeah that’s what I thought.”

The musical corpse was lamenting why no one would stay dead. Dead? I’m sure not dead. I guess perhaps I look it, especially my eyes. Guess if he noticed my eyes he’d notice a change in them, better keep that in mind.

White suit was still on the ground, making him a potentially easy target for a follow up Ball throw. It may prove difficult to hit his face however, since he had already seen Ball. Coming from the side was the polite, colorful gentleman, moving with no haste.

Three opponents. The max iI could seal, but that would require contact, and getting between fire and ice doesn’t seem like a good idea. The fire could also potentially destroy Ball, so I don’t want that. But, hmmmm. Maybe this is a good situation. I’ve got three opponents in range, so it may be time to use some trickery.

Maled Con slipped Ball into his belt, instead removing a pale green blindfold. As always, he bent his head, thanking his benefactor. Surprisingly, during his second of reflection, there was silence. The arena had stopped ticking, and the floor had stopped moving. As Maled looked back on his past, someone else was losing their future.




“Okay I’ll need your name and the element you’re representing!”
The registration clerk at this tavern, Four Cups was much more upbeat than most of the others Maled had seen. It was a teenage girl that happily oooo'd and ahh’d at any small displays of magic the contenders displayed for her.

“Samuel.” Replied the large, buff man signing up. He dwarfed the girl in size, and was quite intimidating. “I’m entering for energy.”

“I always love energy contestants, they always have so much BOOM and PIZAZZ to their performances! What can you do Samuel?”

“I punch people. Then they light up.”

The girl was entirely unfazed, practically bouncing up and down in excitement. She presented more forms to Samuel and had him agree to all the liability checks, then wished him good luck as he wandered away from the table and to a table in the tavern .

Maled spun around on his stool and surveyed the tables, disabling his boosted hearing and waiting for his scent of smell to return once again. It had only been a day since he had killed Semed, and he knew it would take more than that for him to get noticed.
He sipped his glass of water. The tavern was very and very loud today. The musicians on the stage had given up trying to play over the noise, instead choosing to examine and clean their instruments. The patrons sat or stood at, on, and around the tables, and there was hardly room for anyone else to enter.

Everyone was shouting, laughing, and swearing up a storm, Maled was surprised his enchanted hearing had even worked.

Samuel was at a table by himself, his huge bulk preventing anyone else from wanting to stay near him. He was drinking a very large mug of liquid and trying to tune out the crowds around him.

Maled sipped his water again, his ears changing to his natural skin tone as the loud sounds of the tavern faded into complete and utter silence. He waited, watching the crowds, anticipating the effect of his illusions. Nothing happened. He waited longer. He could see the room of people, there was no way his prediction wouldn’t come true with this many people being affected.

There. In the corner. A group of men and women had been drinking side by side peacefully. Next to each other, but not interacting. But suddenly one of the men spun around and started yelling at one of the women.

Bingo. He must think he heard an insult. With this many people it was bound to happen eventually.

The man and woman argued for a bit, then the woman punched the man square in the face, knocking him to the floor. All hell broke loose. Everywhere around the tavern people started fighting, throwing punches and kicks, bottles and chairs, and even some magical attacks. Samuel stood up slowly from his table, removed a blindfold from his pocket, and covered his eyes. He turned around, reared his first back, and slugged a man in the back.

The man lit up. Multiple flashing shades of yellow and blue surrounded him as his limbs flailed wildly and he gave off the smell of burnt toast, then he fell to the ground. The girl at the registration table cheered and leapt into the air, then gasped and ducked as a spare glass crashed into the wall behind her. The crowd tried to back away from Samuel but he was having too much fun punching. The bartender was gone, having disappeared into a backroom while muttering something about a typical day for the EC crowd. Maled Con smashed his glass cup against the bar, shattering it and leaving behind a long sharp shard in his hand, and stood up.

He ducked and weaved through the silent brawl, dodging punches and cups as he tried to make his way to the behemoth that was Samuel. The brawl was going full force, but he couldn’t hear any of it. Everything played out like a silent movie to him, and a few times he almost got caught from behind when he would have heard an attack ahead of time. The raging sea of bodies was difficult to wade through, but he succeeded, sometimes dropping low to the ground and tripping folks to make room to proceed. Those who fell were swarmed upon like carcasses, but everyone seemed to have enough of a right mind to leave people bent, not broken.

He came up behind Samuel right after the monster had just finished lighting up another patron. Samuel spun around and threw a fast, heavy punch at Maled, but Maled was ready. He slipped to the side of the punch, stepping close to Samuel, and rammed his shard of glass right into the man’s heart. As Samuel collapsed, Maled slipped off the former-contestants blindfold and disappeared into the crowd, the raging chaos of the brawl causing no one to notice that a man had just died in their midst.

Later that night, Maled examined the blindfold in his room within one of Bren’s various inn’s. It seemed completely ordinary, save for a stitched message on one side:

“For Samuel, because your heart will guide you more than your eyes. -M”

Fat help it did him. Don’t worry Samuel, M, I’ll use this gift you’ve given me to win for you. Watch me.




The return of sound and motion jolted Maled out of his memories, and he looked around to see what had caused the disturbance.

One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Six. Seven. No Eight? Wait… where’s the kid?

The boy was gone. Maled couldn’t see him anywhere. It was possible he was hiding, but a smoking hole near the battle of three on the other side of the arena suggested otherwise.

Angered the Lords? I wonder what he did. Oh well, guess that removes one potential darkness competitor. No telling who's in the other arena’s though, I better keep the spotlight on me.

Despite the flashy thoughts, Maled was entirely focused on blending in. He crept around the two mirrored men, wanting to position himself such that he may be forgettable in comparison to what they may see. He was low to the ground again, the lower profile allowing him to hide better. He got to a position he was comfortable with, his place close to and behind the Musical Suit hopefully obscuring him from the vision of the downed man, who was focused on his other two opponents. He took note of the central pillar he was quite near, the spokes on it just close enough that he may be able to reach and grab them if he jumped.

Maled mentally registered the positions of his enemies, then slipped the blindfold over his eyes and tied it tightly, welcoming the comforting blackness it provided. Then he allowed his sight to slip away entirely. Hopefully the blindfold would hide the change in his eye color, and his opponents wouldn’t link his new lack of sight to the sights they experienced. If one of them realized he was creating the illusions, they hopefully wouldn’t announce to the other two. He focused his hearing and changed his crouched stance slightly, ready to leap straight up if he sensed anything coming close to hitting him. One of his hands strayed to his right ankle, while the other once more brushed the feathers behind his ear.

Now then. What will you see? I’m almost shaking with anticipation.




Necro-Knight -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/24/2018 21:39:33)

Now, I’m no stranger to sudden blasts of water, growing up in a seafaring, coastal city the way I did. Stand too close to the pier or sand and suddenly your butt over teakettle with the taste of salt to remind you of your mistake. This… was more directed than that, but the sensation was relatively the same, albeit far less salty. My sinuses burned as the water invaded and I felt my feet leave the ground as the sudden blast sent me flying back towards the arboreal creature. My heart beat ramped up suddenly as my brain went into the natural response to sudden surges of water in the face, before I landed hard on my side and slid to a halt with my left side facing its massive feet.

I hadn’t truly grasped their scale until I was staring up at them and lifting that wicked looking club for my skull, but I didn’t have long to admire the view before a broiling steam engulfed us. I still had a relative sense of where the creature was, since neither of us had moved in that insant, and I’m sure it did for me. That clever, water-brained… Mixing his water with my lava from earlier. Thankfully, being able to throw lava and spit fire gave you a comfortable resistance to heat, though I had to wonder how the wooden construct would fare. Still, the last thing I’d seen was the monster about to bring that gnarly weapon down on my skull and I didn’t even need to consult my other to get myself moving.

Getting to my feet wasn’t an option, so I simply threw my weight hard to the right and did a full roll, landing on my back again. A moment or two later, a solid thump was heard, followed by an explosion from the center of the arena that cracked with such force and sound, I jumped about another foot off the arena floor.

A… firework? Like during the New Year festival every winter? These people are insane…

The burst of sound had driven El’nath even further into a rage, and for once, he had a point at the core of his fury I could make sense of. We needed to make a statement, prove to both of these fighters that we weren’t the person you just kicked back and forth. We were Fireborn. Rolling back the way I’d come, the motion was stopped just a bit short with my left hip-armor resting against one of the spikes of the tree things large weapon, and brought my right arm across my chest, reaching out to where I assumed the rest of its arm was holding its weapon. As I did, I felt my blood bubble and sizzle again as my limb melted and elongated into a writhing tendril of searing heat and dripping lava. The best I’d been able to manage with this spell was roughly five feet in length and I felt the steam around us rapidly increase in temperature from the new source of heat within.

Now, the process of going from a fully-articulated hand to one, long tendril of dense, liquid-like substance was always weird, but this entire situation was weird. I mean, I was fighting a walking tree and a someone had just set off a firework somewhere. But, I still had a statement to make, and steeled myself for the next step. Without a word to give away my plan in the steam, I wrapped my tendril of lava and sweltering heat around the club and sent it quickly coiling up further until I felt the odd competitors wrist. From there, I tightened the molten appendage tightly as I rolled my weight hard back to the right, pulling on the tree abominations limb and club with every inch of strength I had left. The cut in my back burned with its own fire and I grit my teeth, using the pain to push harder and try to work against my opponents natural strength advantage. With any luck, the tree wasn’t as resistant to my lava on every part of its body, and my added tension on the limb would just tear the entire wrist free, sending the club flying out of the cloud and out of useful reach.

Feed off the pain, the fire within, let it fuel... Quiet. Why is it quiet?

I didn’t lessen my effort on removing this beings hand from their arboreal body, but El’nath had sensed the sudden silence in the room. Something was wrong, different… I was about to crane my neck and risk a glance through the cloud when a rainbow of color erupted and the the floor shook beneath me.. Fire red, ocean blue, earthen brown, solar golden…All brilliant enough to be seen from within the steam even. Oh spirits, someone had earned the wrath of the Lords themselves. For a moment, I wondered how close I was to angering this Fire Lord like I had the last. My thoughts were suddenly interrupted as I felt the limb give free and I roared with triumph.. As soon as I’d removed the lower arm and weapon from my enemy, I released them from my grasp and continued the jerking motion into another roll back towards my right and away from the creature. I heard the club-like weapon land heavily maybe three feet away, but at least it was no longer being used.

It had to have other weapons, other means of harming me besides that brute weapon, and I wasn’t about to rest at its feet and find out what.




Lorekeeper -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/25/2018 17:26:05)

Gabriel had never truly realized just how much he was trusted and relied upon until he announced that he intended to compete in the Elemental Championships.

Up until that point, no matter what conflict he became involved in, it seemed to be taken for granted that he would return to the crew. In the past, they had often been the ones to ferry him to and from Eridani. But ever since his flight from the Order, they had always waited for Gabriel to rejoin them, treating him as a somewhat detached member of the crew who disembarked wherever trouble reached his ears.

This occasion was not taken nearly as lightly. Recognizing that this could well be their final sojourn together, Captain Thorn had charted a different route than usual, stopping by Old Keldros — as per an arrangement with the young man — before setting a direct course for Bren. He’d made a show of trying to dissuade the “reckless lad with a bleedin’ deathwish”, as he put it, but it was Thorn himself who had taught Gabriel the look to give someone when one would not take ‘No’ for an answer. Needless to say, the Thunder’s Bride stayed its course. As they were due to reach port well in advance of the tournament’s start, the crew would be granted an extended shore leave to partake in the festivities, recruit any daring would-be sailors, conduct business and perform some long overdue maintenance on the vessel.

Arriving at Bren was a paradoxical experience. The colossal Arena that breathed mystery and purpose into its streets was the first feature to come into view, an impressive and ominous presence the likes of which Gabriel had never seen before in his travels.

The settlers themselves provided an equally baffling first impression. Though seasoned beyond his young age, trying to make sense of them left the runaway Adept feeling like a novice having his first taste of independent life. These were the inhabitants of a city built around, in more than one sense, the most peculiar and notorious blood sport in the world. Their industry and culture were inextricably tied to it. But they received Gabriel, well, jovially. They were polite, welcomed him into their homes with alacrity, and never once did he notice someone's eyes sizing him up for the slaughter. By and large, the arrival of people like him seemed to be celebrated, providing some well-deserved spice to the lives of Bren’s inhabitants.

And yet, confusing as it was to first settle into the city, living there for some time was bizarrely familiar.

After a week's stay, a stray thought broke through the quiet discipline of his morning exercises and resolved the paradox, if only by replacing it with a slightly less puzzling notion.

Bren is like the ocean.

At that time, Gabriel took the lapse humorously and inwardly started hoping that the Captain wasn't rubbing off on him. Nautical imagery and platitudes were the unacceptably hatless individual's domain, not his own. Yet there was a poetic truth to the notion. Calm, yet with a foreboding air of anticipation that forbids complacency, this land had quickly taken from his heart the same purpose and meaning he had assigned to the seas: A place and state of resolute transition, not merely from one land to another, but toward an uncertain future.

On the final days of anticipation, he would come to realize just how correct this moment of inspiration had been.

Just as occurred with the most fearsome gales at sea, the Arena's awakening arrived with nary a portent. It was a storm flaring with every color of magic, warping its surroundings as though the once-steady land truly was a turbulent sea, each building another flimsy vessel at its mercy. And the people, just as the disturbed waves settle back after the tempest passes, adapted with nary a wasted moment. He found himself swept up in this phenomenon, working with the people of Bren who did not fight the elements, but harmonize with them instead.

Observation, cooperation, dedication and hard work built his idle thought up into an epiphany: Bren naturally possessed the synergy with the elements that Gabriel had always taken to sea in search of, even though what he openly pursued was war. There was no sprawling magical metropolis bending them to their will, only a fundamentally humble understanding of the place each played in the world, and how life moved from the center of their conjunction.

A wake-up call, the end of a journey, and a terrifyingly effective call to action, all had been delivered at once through but a glimpse of the power of the Lords.





The vibrant surge of sparks racing past Gabriel and into the steam cloud was a cause of fleeting confusion, but nothing as remotely distracting as the display that ensued. A moment of stillness rocked his body forward slightly, halting the music of the place entirely. The sudden prevalence of the combatants’ own sounds was a strange turn to the arena’s cacophony that made him wish to slug, rather than thank, whoever was tormenting the strings some distance behind him. But that thought, too, was immediately rendered ephemeral.

Gabriel generally had to actively focus to perceive a flow of magical energy beyond what it offered to the mortal senses, and especially to sense it before it was enforced on the world as a clearly visible effect. This overwhelming power, however, refused to wait for his efforts. It was too intense, too primordial to ignore. It commanded his hidden sight, and yet unfolded faster than it could make sense of the surge of energies and colors, both so varied that its bearer could not describe them if he tried. For all its intensity, it would be easy to label this as the wrath of the Lords, but the truly chilling thought was the realization that this was merely their disdain.

The further surge of steam that he had been waiting for snapped him out of his reverie and back to his normal senses, resounding from within the cloud that he gently moved counterclockwise. It was more intense than he expected, with a spreading glow that made one thing absolutely clear: The time for subterfuge was over.

A sweep of his left hand bid the steam cloud to reverse its direction, and then he released the gentle control. The platform’s movement would thus see it quickly billowing past the combatants. Gabriel had a good idea of their positioning and movement, but now he desired details. ...A hole through the floor. The druidic effigy had been dismembered by quite the dangerous maneuver from the fire warrior, who was now in a precarious position — and perhaps continuing to expend energy to maintain the lava tendril, though he had no safe angle of engagement to try and affect that from.

The sweep became a turn, and the turn a step. A second step back left the warrior standing with his left guard up once more. At this distance, his power would need to be guided by the precise motions of his own body to sacrifice neither force nor accuracy in such haste. First, he pivoted the left foot counterclockwise, giving his hips the tension to snap forward with a right kick for what would seem to be an imaginary opponent’s knee or shin. The movement, shadowed by a stiffer arc of the right hand, ended forcefully enough for Gabriel’s pants to rustle along the path, finally eliciting a soft impact as the leg halted while the fabric’s momentum was still high.

Mirroring this movement, a growing surge of water drew a wide arc around an imaginary axis between Gabriel and Suhmat, the force behind this flow making the now-fading mist look like a mere parlor trick. As it swelled larger and faster, peaking at the height of its semicircular path, this wave turned its full mass toward the effigy’s severed limb. He couldn’t hope to lift it, not without an external source of water — Or the kind of time that combat simply wouldn’t grant him —, but a swift push across the arena floor was a much easier proposition. The wicked barbs menacing outward from the wooden club minimized its friction against the surface, simplifying the task of turning the armament along the axis of the severed limb gripping it… To send it right back toward the combatants and slam its business end into Suhmat’s rolling body.

Although the blow lacked the sheer power that the effigy could have lent it, there was no small amount of threat to the shrill sound those spikes made as they were drawn over the platform's surface, the ear-rending screech a horrifying complement to the faraway fiddler's performance. Blessedly, this agony was brief - to all but Suhmat. Depending on how his adversary’s roll came to an end, the thorns could well drag across the pierced flesh and menace his side or front. To add insult to injury, the wave would then surge past the severed limb, expending what little force and tension remained to push the man slightly closer to the arena’s edge.

Not yet done being a thorn on the prone warrior’s side, however, Gabriel launched into motion as soon as the knee-high wave stopped holding his focus. This time, he turned his weight to the left before even dropping the right foot, launching into a spin that brought that same limb arcing through the air and slicing sharply downward. From a distance, that might make him appear to be a proficient martial artist, but it would be many years before his unarmed combat skills were anywhere near good enough to apply them outside of focusing his elemental power. Though he weathered the tugging pain on the taut skin of his back well, it slowed down this final swing enough that it took longer than the properly executed maneuver should. Consequently, there was more of a delay to the loud snap that signified the descent of a coiling mass of water, manipulated to retain its surface tension, upon Suhmat like a whip aimed for his upper body.

The landing hurt more than the initial maneuver, making Gabriel’s guard falter. The pause in the arena’s clockwork had made its polyphony of steam and clockwork resume at a timing slightly off from what he’d grown used to, and so it was once again a source of sonic stupor clashing with the surrounding symphony of sanguine staccato. He would need to regain his bearings before he could isolate the sounds again and spare some attention to other engagements, but that could not be done immediately. Suhmat had simultaneously proven himself too threatening and too vulnerable to divert his focus from now.




Rayen -> RE: =EC 2018= Factory Arena (7/26/2018 15:52:20)

Soft light filtered through the ceiling of the arena as its inexorable cogs toyed with the transient beams which sporadically elucidated the environment below. The muffled visibility, heavy atmosphere, and inconsistent gleaming of surfaces reminded Dalavar of the first time he encountered deep water - on this very world, a very great many years previously.

Unlike most worlds Dalavar had been required to forcibly rehabilitate, Lore possessed a great deal of water. It was perhaps the primary reason he’d remained dormant for so long, and even now his actions were embarrassingly less direct than ever before. However, if there was one thing could not be denied Dalavar, it was certainly his audacity. While other individuals praised for their bravery and valour may charge into battle against impossible odds, the gallant acts of His Great Audaciousness stood in stark contrast: Without doubt, it takes a great deal of backbone and conviction to stand in the face of insurmountable power and fight it to the death… but what madman, what utter embodiment of foolishness, would find a chair, empathise with aforementioned power, and attempt to make peace over a hot cup of tea and an engaging story? There were many in this world who knew the answer to that question, and many more elsewhere.

Dalavar’s conviction was resolute. The most challenging path is always the correct one, for those who challenge have already adopted the path of least resistance, and blood spills far more quickly than a mind can comprehend a compassionate agenda.

Approaching the dissonant pair with caution, so as to interject at the most opportune moment, Dalavar noticed an unmistakeable splashing sound nearby the site of his previous interaction. Tempted to spin around to more fully interpret what the sound meant, the Mage Slayer’s attention was drawn further beyond. Magic in the arena coalesced upon the body of the disconcertingly Stygian young man who had himself issued a challenge to the entire arena. Little did he likely expect that the arena itself would accept. Unified elemental magic descended upon the one known as Lán Harrow before, in a flash of light, he vanished, leaving only a vacant space in the floor beneath his former footing.

Turning back to the dazzlingly bright fellow enshrouded by mists, and his perhaps more practically dressed combustible counterpart, Dalavar found an interesting perspective to open dialogue. “Gentlemen! Allow me to interpose a more practical proposition upon your primitive dispute. I know not what that poor man did to invoke the ire of the arena, but if you cannot even trust our own footing, rest your feet upon a firmer foundation. Me.” Punctuating his proclamation with an emphatic gesture with his cane, and an exuberant outburst of a few dozen thumbnail-sized bubbles, His Great Audaciousness continued, “All you need do is surrender - not to me, nor your opponent. Merely surrender to the arena and we can resolve all of this without further conflict or savagery. And likely you’ll avoid being swallowed by the floor and minced like a prize sausage.” A pointed glance through his newly formed cloud of minuscule bubbles towards the former location of Darkness’s ‘darker’ competitor encouraged the statement to linger threateningly in the thick, steamed air.

However, amidst the muggy atmosphere, the clashes of frantic fighting, the mellow sparkling of myriad watery orbs, and overriding it all, the methodical rhythm of the arena cogs, Dalavar’s attention slipped for a moment, drifting away to spiral between old memories, like gases trapped within a bubble. Lost in thought, his body ceased all movement entirely, not a single twitch, pulse, or intake of breath could be seen. To an observer, this unnatural stillness might seem discomfiting, inspiring attention to be naturally drawn towards active competitors where life more clearly manifested. Meanwhile Dalavar was acutely aware that this place, this point in time, was no more tangible than any others he’d experienced. It too - for all its arcane vibrancy and natural splendour, hope and love - would end before the blink of an eye. Like a bubble: fleeting; ephemeral.



Someone had once attempted to describe colour to Dalavar. A poet, from memory, and a rather good one at that. He’d enjoyed their conversation about how one’s senses shaped their soul - someone possessed of a sharp eyesight was often a proactive sort, whereas a keen-nosed individual was likely to be cautious but act with great conviction. They’d agreed to disagree that one’s interpretation of the cold splattering of rain falling upon the skin was itself directly shaped by the soul, given that neither was able to persuade the other to abandon their understanding of the mechanisms behind rain - for His Great Audaciousness not to win an argument was a rare event indeed, and spoke highly of the talent of his fellow conversationalist. However, the poet’s biggest regret would come to be attempting to explain and describe the concept of colour to a man who had lived his entire life - which in itself had spanned many decades, perhaps even centuries - perceiving the world in grey tones…

After irrevocably convincing the hapless poet that he was, in fact, utterly delusional, Dalavar comforted himself further by using this “fact” to justify the poor fellow’s misunderstanding of precipitation. Although Dalavar was a kind and good man, his vast experiences had given birth to the unwavering conviction that his path was, without fail, the correct one. Unfortunately, and beyond his ability to patiently observe, this path’s destination was far beyond realms safe for the mortal mind.



Suddenly awakened back in the present, Dalavar focused his eyes before him upon a large, ornate-framed mirror. Moderately displaced by his reminiscing, and not unused to seeing glimpses of himself in the bubbles his pipe produced, the Mage Slayer was not initially startled by his reflection. In fact, upon noting the perfect condition of his comfortable outfit, he allowed a touch of pride to square his shoulders and puff out his chest just a little bit more. Then a pertinent question crossed his mind. From whence came this mirror…and why? The mirror reflected Dalavar’s quizzical look. Then, out of turn, it blinked, then reached out a strong, confident hand to point accusingly at its original. Suddenly, the reflection’s skin began to crack and tear, shedding off its body like the shell of a boiled egg, and in its place stood a different man. Shorter, dark-haired, human, but no less confident…and twice as haughty. He wore robes that would have appeared resplendent to anyone but Dalavar, woven from rich gold, red, and purple thread and gemstone alike, and carried a long, copper staff topped with an clear orb much the same size and shape as the inexplicable crystal atop Temerity.

Dalavar knew this man, and whispered the corresponding name beneath his breath, The Mage. Solko, the Timekeeper.

In stark contrast to the motionlessness displayed just moments earlier, Dalavar swept into a series of fluid motions in attempt to countermand the existence of the long-defeated mage now smirking disdainfully before him. Quickly as a bubble bursts, The Mage Slayer lashed out at the cloud of marble-like watery orbs, setting several of them hurtling towards the visage of Timekeeper Solko just before the majority were whisked out of reach by the rapid rotation of the dizzying arena floor. Then, passing the foot of Temerity to his left hand, Dalavar watched as each bubble flew…straight through Solko and into the path of the chalky man with an aura like cold ash.

Alerted now to the inconsistency of his illusory opponent, Dalavar inspected his immediate surroundings more closely, noticing for the first time a faint, shadowy ambience hovering in the air, centred upon a now-blindfolded Maled. Slightly amused at his own gullibility, Dalavar began to centre all of his concentration upon his pipe, causing an enormous bubble, large enough to stand in, to form in the air between himself and the skulking illusionist. Then, tossing his dark cane into the air slightly off to his front, His Great Audaciousness marched confidently inside the bubble’s lustrous walls before catching the metallic foot of the cane with his left hand.

Instantaneously, Dalavar could feel the large bubble draw upon his reserves of magic, but its surface remained uniform. He could sustain the orb for a short while, but the longer he remained within, the greater the toll he’d experience after it receives its dismissal. Nevertheless, some protection against the full brunt of further illusions, as well as more harmful physical attacks, would be more than welcome.

Flipping Temerity comfortably from foot to head in his defensive hand, consequently maintaining intermittent magical and physical barriers, Dalavar turned to address the three immediate others, of dark, ice, and fire, but felt it likely wiser to gauge their reactions and interpose if the need arose. With any luck it would not - an alliance between these four would prove a strong basis for the leverage of an arena-wide treaty, or at very least, a formidable weapon with which to remove the aggressors of whom The Mage Slayer remained largely ignorant…and would until the tide turned in his favour.




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