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=EC 2020= Forge Arena

 
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7/11/2020 22:55:23   
  Starflame13
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The sun crested the horizon, its rays glinting off steel armor and silvered weapons as they wove through Bren’s congested streets. Shouts and laughter rose above the excited babble, growing louder along with the crowds as more and more people filtered into the city. From strangers to old friends, visiting dignitaries to lowly cutpurses, lone travelers to entire families, all kinds were drawn by the Arena’s call. Children ran about underfoot while city guards attempted to maintain some semblance of order. Coins changed hands as veterans and newcomers alike scouted out potential competitors, debating this one's skill or that one's survival.

No matter the verdict, the Arena drew all of them onwards. Through the wide city gates. Across the twisted streets lined with shops and inns. Past grimy alleyways and grand courtyards tucked amongst the houses. Up and over the final bridge, along the cobblestones of Supplicant’s Way - polished smooth by the footsteps of pilgrimages past. To the entrance of the complex itself - a looming gateway that swelled to grant access to the tide of hopefuls and spectators surging through it.

And here, the crowd parted. Many streamed towards the sands, shoving and jostling against each other in the hopes of better seating. But the entrants found themselves alone. Whether led by unseen officials or by magic itself, the Arena tugged them forwards toward their fate. A destiny of bloodshed and carnage. A chance for one to stand victorious. A hope, however slim, of earning a Boon.

All that stood in their way was the Arena itself, and the greatest combatants the world had to offer.


Grey stone turned to black bedrock as the competitors descended deeper into the complex. Light faded behind them as the air warmed gradually, guiding them forwards along the empty hallways. Just as the darkness became absolute and the heat nigh unbearable, the ceiling above split. A wall of magma, flowing as smoothly as a waterfall, cascaded downwards to block the path and bathe the hall in an intense crimson glow. It pulled all moisture from the air, leaving before it a sweltering haze that tasted of ash and smoke.

Fervor. Fracture. Hostility. Devastation. Few can long survive the scorching heat of the Forge.



The stone rumbled, as if the earth itself had chuckled, and the magma parted to allow passage into the heart of the flame. Beyond them lay a path of black stone crossing over a river of lava, the bridge leading to a rugged island surrounded by molten flame. The lake bubbled and steamed, splashing up at the edges and leaving the rock singed and charred. Cracks, pulsing scarlet and orange light, riddled the ground and filled the arena with a vibrant, fiery light.

With a thunderous crack, an obsidian stalactite - one of many hanging from the domed ceiling above - split from its brethren and plummeted towards the heart of the island below. It plunged straight through the fragile stone, shattering into jagged shards that were consumed by the newly formed hole of liquid fire. Roaring magma surged upwards in a fiery column - incinerating the last remains of the crash before subsiding back to the pool below. In its wake, black rock scabbed over the chasm, hiding the lava beneath once more.

The stone pathways leading forward shook, edges crumbling and sinking into the molten flow. Safe passage to either the isle before or the halls behind remained - but only momentarily. A choice from which there would be no going back.

A deep voice echoed through the chamber, the call bubbling up from the lake of flame itself. “And so begins the Trial of the Splintered Forge! Fight or Die, adventurers, but let the Elemental Championships begin!”
AQ DF MQ AQW  Post #: 1
7/12/2020 15:09:52   
ChaosRipjaw
How We Roll Winner
Jun15


Arbeiter groaned. At this rate it would take him another five years before he could leave his shift. In the past few years of the Elemental Championships, the officials of Bren had ordered a system of canals built under the city in order to fill up the new arena known as “Fountain.” From what he had heard, the arena was a smashing success, well received by both the spectators and the competitors --- or at least the ones that survived.

Arbeiter hardly cared. Now that the fun was over, it became glaringly obvious that with the Championships being held only once a year, without water constantly being pumped back and forth through the water pathways, the system was quickly becoming overgrown with scum and trash. Naturally, in such a disgusting environment, creatures and plants sprung up, attracted to the mess, nesting in and feeding on it. Which meant that workers were needed to maintain the canals. Unfortunately, the worker for this shift was none other than Arbeiter himself.

Arbeiter shook his head. Thanks to great effort and vast amounts of money and manpower, the canals remained relatively clean. At worst, the council would probably relent and hire a mage or two to forcibly cleanse the water. In any case, this year’s Championships were due to begin in a week or so. Maybe less. It was hard keeping track of time when all you saw were stones covered in algae. The muck wasn’t going anywhere, he thought. No one would notice if he took a break. Tossing his scrubber into the bucket, he headed off to the break room.

If only Arbeiter had decided to be diligent for only a few more seconds, he would have seen the fin break through the water’s surface. A fin that anyone would recognize instantly, even if they had never seen one in person.

Shark.

The shark knifed the water’s surface, moving lazily but with terrifying speed and purpose, heading deep to the center of the city. Hang on, one might say. These canals aren’t connected to the ocean. What was a shark doing here?

Even if Arbeiter had seen the fin, the shark --- or what looked like a shark --- would have been moving too fast for him to see the faint glow near the back of the “shark’s” head. Even an underwater observer would be hard-pressed to make out the features of this “shark.” Perhaps this would be a blessing, for if one did manage to perceive this “shark” through the gloom, it would become horribly clear that this monstrosity is no ordinary shark.

All the marine life that was hardy enough to survive in the canal’s waters scattered instantly as the dark shape plowed onward. One rather large barracuda, large and lean from a diet of very interesting waste and other hapless fish shot forward, hoping to snatch a bite out of this newcomer. It proved to be a fatal mistake. The barracuda stopped abruptly in its charge and bounced aside, as though it had hit a glass wall. A faint sizzle followed. The reaction was instant: the shark-like creature twisted and bit. The barracuda, stunned by the shock, was helpless. Blood filled the dirty water, and within a few seconds it was over. Even the scavengers dared not to follow for the slight possibility of scraps.

Shinjri’shakraphrjat’shu’Sinaken swam through the water unfazed, fin slicing the surface with barely a ripple, single-minded towards his goal.

<The Elemental Championship.>

One would mistake Sinak’s dull, predatory gaze as that of a typical predator, concerned only with food. But any experienced hunter would instantly see what would make any sane hunter’s skin crawl: a glint of cunning and malice. For even as he swam with purpose, his mind returned to memories of both moons and ages past.



Sinak swam restlessly in circles in his hideout, a grotto deep underwater. His side had been pierced with multiple arrows, which framed a rather nasty stab wound, a reminder of a failed attempt to assault a local fort. Sinak uneasily recalled the particularly violent encounter with the Ssaatw'ppa --- the Ender of Beasts. Although he had carefully planned his attack, he was thrown completely off guard by the unexpected arrival of the Ender. If he had not retreated, the Ender would have likely finished him then and there.

‘“This need for vengeance, it will destroy you,” a voice said.

Sinak did not need to turn; the voice belonged to the Sage of the Southern Lakes, also known as the Way of the Water. The Way was a diminutive, fishlike creature that amazingly had limbs and was amphibious. For the past few moon cycles, Sinak had recuperated in this grotto, shared with the Way.

One would find this a very strange scene: a shark and a fish conversing. But in reality, this is not so strange, for Sinak was no shark.

<As long as I can take revenge for my ancestors, my life is of no consequence,> Sinak rumbled.

The alien, incomprehensible tongue of the Shha’rarken would normally inspire deep dread in any who heard it, but amazingly, the Way not only was unaffected but it understood the Shha’rarken language where few others had even heard it.

The Way did not respond. Another reason Sinak tolerated the Way, and not just because Shha’rarken tradition dictated against killing based on emotion. Both creatures were silent as Sinak continued to pace. Again, he recounted the past.



Shinjri'shakraphrjat'shu'Sinaken, shortened to Sinak, was the last of the Shha’rarken, a race of sentient marine creatures closely related to sharks. Born from the Phyxfaa --- the Skyfather --- and the Maeeluuk --- the Deep Mother --- the Shha'rarken were once the mightiest of the sea nations, feared but also respected by even the mermen.

Then came the day of fate. The Shha’rarken were aware of the encroaching fishermen from the dirtwalking empire, but resolved not to antagonize the dirtwalkers unless they severely disturbed the ecosystem. As it happened, the fault was not due to the dirtwalkers, but to Phirsannurroc the Archtraitor, the Shha’rarken who instigated the wrath of the dirtwalkers by forgoing eating sea life and attacking a fishing boat instead. As Shha’rarken were superior to typical sharks, the boat stood no chance, and all on board were killed and eaten.

Enter the invasion of the Saarphisscaakplaa, the fishbanes, known by the dirtwalkers as the Hunters of Beasts. Due to Phirsannurroc’s mistake, the Hunters seized this as an opportunity to ruthlessly purge the sea of “danger” for the dirtwalkers' empire to expand. Although the Archtraitor was killed by the Hunters, the insult became too much when the Hunters extended their targets to each and every Shha’rarken. Shha’rarken tradition dictated that to not retaliate in full force was a sign of weakness. Bound by pride, the Shha'rarken brutally retaliated in what would be called the War of the Crimson Tides, which was reputed to have clogged the ocean thick with blood while the Hunters' burning ships sank into the black depths. Unfortunately, the Hunters gained the upper hand despite fighting on the Shha'rarkens' territory, thanks to their superior weaponry and tactics as well as their discovery of Shha'rarken meat and oil having the potential to be used as delicacies and fuel respectively. In the course of twenty years, the majority of the Shha'rarken had been slaughtered.

Sinak himself was not present for the war. Toward war’s end, he was born prematurely when his mother was caught by the Hunters. When the Hunters cut into her corpse to harvest the meat and oils, Sinak tore out in a frenzy, killing the butcher and injuring multiple other Hunters before disappearing into the sea.

Although he was only born then, Shha’rarken are aware and alive in their mothers’ wombs. Even in incubation, Shha’rarken parents communicated to their offspring the most basic teachings of the ways of the Shha’rarken warrior; their ancient legends, and in the case of Sinak, the war.

For the first few years of his puphood, Sinak avoided the hunters even as he voraciously scoured the remnants of the Shha’rarken for every scrap of information to prepare him for the coming days. As soon as he reached young adult status, he began his quest to uphold the bloody reputation of the Shha'rarken and take revenge by constantly harassing and killing the coastal peoples and their fishing boats, as well as massacring the Hunters when they came after him. However, his quest for vengeance faced an almost insurmountable obstacle. Due to his premature birth, he was stunted in growth, only reaching 9 feet long whereas others of his age would have reached at least 20 feet by now. No dirtwalker could hope to understand the burden this placed on Sinak; to be male and smaller than the small.

This did not stop him for long. While wandering the sea, ever harboring a cold fury that rivaled the heat of the Core at the Hunters for the deaths of his ancestors, he discovered an ancient temple that once belonged to the Klaayphaunthuu --- Mutagenic Shamans of the Shha'rarken. Once, long before the Hunters came, the meteor fell from space; a meteor that contained DNA of an alien species dubbed the Yyranaiads. The Klaayphaunthuu had learned how to harness the mutating abilities of the Yyranaiads, specifically that of psionic powers, an Energy element discipline. However, Shha’rarken tradition dictated that a Shha’rarken warrior should use only his senses, his body, and his teeth in combat, so the Klaayphaunthuu were ultimately disbanded.

Due to secondhand learning of Shha’rarken culture, without constant indoctrination Sinak was far more open-minded, willing to do whatever it took to take revenge. Even if it meant heresy. Sinak entered the trials of the Klaayphaunthuu as a Shha’rarken and emerged as far more. Although by this time, the Hunters had since realized that the best cure is prevention, and had set up a maze of defenses in the coast, making it nearly impossible for Sinak to hunt with his past efficiency, it hardly mattered. Armed with new abilities, the leviathan emerged from the sea, ready to strike at the heart of the dirtwalkers' empire, at a place where they once thought they were safe.



Which brought him back to the present day. Even with his powerful Yyranaiad abilities, he still could not defeat the Hunters of Beasts. It was true that each time he attacked, he killed scores of them, but rarely did he ever escape unscathed. Despite his new ability to move about on land, the fact remained that land was the home territory of the Hunters, not of the Shha’rarken. If he were to truly make a difference, he would need something else, something---

“Sinak, be rational,” the Way said patiently. “By yourself, with your current abilities, you cannot hope to inflict a lasting defeat on the Hunters. Sooner or later, you will perish, and who will avenge your people then? You will simply go down in history as a mutant baby shark that was finally put down.”

The reality of his situation depressed him, try as he might to shrug it off. Shha’rarken warriors ought to feel neither pain nor fear. However, this did not mean they ought to have no reason either, and many times he had ignored the Way’s advice and regretted it.

<What am I to do then?> he growled. <Do you mean to tell me the situation is hopeless?>

“At last, you have asked the right question, Sinak,” the Way responded with satisfaction.

<Although I ask this question, I wonder: do you have an answer, Thaang'kkhyxng'nnaa?>

“Indeed I do, but I have never given it because you did not ask for it.”

<Then answer me, Thaang'kkhyxng'nnaa.>

“However,” the Way said gravely, “You must also answer my question.”

<Ask.>

“What,” the Way asked, “is your motivation for revenge?”

If Shha’rarken could frown, Sinak would have. He had only known the Way for a short time, but had come to quickly understand its wisdom. He knew this was no ordinary question. Silent once again, Sinak swam and pondered. To avenge his people? But his people were not entirely in the right; the instigator was a Shha’rarken. To avenge his mother? But the butcher who killed her had died by his teeth almost immediately after. Then what? What was the purpose of revenge? He could not bring the dead back to life.

“I said I wanted an answer to my question,” the Way said wryly, “but I never said when.”

Sinak paused and turned to face the Way. <What are you implying?>

“When I first met you, I found you to be the most stonefish-headed fellow I had ever met,” the Way said, chuckling. “But it seems in these few moon cycles you have learned how to think. There is a way to achieve your purpose, which you alone know deep in your heart.”

Sinak waited. Although initially he felt only perplexion when he heard it, much much later, he would feel a chill when he recalled this memory.

“The Elemental Championships.”

Sinak stared blankly at the Way. “The Elemental Championships,” the Way repeated, “a tournament where anyone and anything can enter with no prejudices, as long as they align themselves with one of the eight Elemental Lords: Fire, Water, Earth, Energy, Wind, Ice, Light, and Darkness. The champion who passes all the trials and defeats all challengers is rewarded a boon granted by the Lords beyond his wildest dreams!”

<And for a boon---,> Sinak said, understanding beginning to dawn on him.

“Anything, Sinak,” the Way said. “Anything. Furthermore,” the Way added, “the next tournament is one moon cycle from now.”

<Then the answer is simple,> Sinak rumbled. <I must win this tournament.>

"You must be careful Sinak," the Way warned. "Even now, you still have difficulties against the Hunters. The competitors of the Championships on the other hand, are no easy prey. I know only of a few of the victors of ages old; a shaman and a dancer of fire, a drakel that wields salt, a lady who dissolves into light, a man strong enough to bend metal with his bare hands, a creature that hunts from the sky, an warrior bear, an automaton shaped like a ferret---"

<That means nothing to me,> Sinak growled. <Through storm or spear, I will win, and I will take this boon you claim the Lords are capable of granting me. What use is this life of mine if I were to remain the last of the Shha'rarken?>

The Way sighed. "I see you are as resolute as ever," it said. "In that case, take this."
The Way produced a map. Sinak shifted, peering closely at it. Within seconds, the neurons of his evolved brain had realigned, imprinting the map into his memory.

<Bren,> he hissed.



It was this map that he was following, and had been following all the way since the start. After a long and arduous journey across the continent, he had finally located Bren, the home of the Elemental Championships. Hardly sparing a thought for the festivities of the dirtwalkers above ground, he had swum blithely down the canals, past unsuspecting civilians and guards, and was now deep underground in the inner works of the waterways. The pathways were seared into his mind. He never hesitated at any of the winding pathways through the canals.

It would be dishonest for him to say that he would have liked for the trip to go smoothly. Quite the contrary, as a Shha’rarken, he was ready to face any obstacles in his way. What he had not predicted was that his troubles were of a far different kind; one he could not defeat with tooth and fin.



The canals were hardly a straight path into the heart of the city. Not only did they twist and curve in every which way, sometimes they were impossibly blocked --- like the grate right in front of him.

Sinak eyed the grate. He could probably bash it down, but who knew how sturdy it was. Now was not the time for unnecessary injuries. Which left only one other option. For a few moments, Sinak was motionless. His electroreception detected no one in range. Now was as good a time as any.

The water surface broke as Sinak emerged, his brain crackling, ready to levitate over the grate. His senses detected no one---

<Doyhhlaauk!>

He had hesitated a moment too many. Out of nowhere thundered a plaawaal --- a giant --- of a dirtwalker. By the Core, she was massive, as tall as he was long. He had never seen any dirtwalker so large; she dwarfed even the strongest of the Saarphisscaakplaa. Sinak whirled, ready to battle, the deep hatred towards all dirtwalkers surging---

Sinak halted again. Although an outside observer could not readily detect it, confusion clouded his eyes for a split second. His tail slashed uselessly against the stone of the walkway. One would think it uncharacteristic for a creature both hunter and hunted to dawdle in the face of an enemy. But that was precisely the point. As both hunter and hunted, Sinak had long since learned to recognize not only their tactics and prowess, but also their states of mind. Whereas humans reacted to him with fear and Hunters reacted with anger, from the plaawaal he sensed---

Foreign. Incomprehensible. She was utterly fearless, but this wasn’t the same as Ssaatw’ppa’s fierce, cold determination. She was bellowing --- in a language he’d never heard before --- but it wasn’t the same as the shouts of fury as the Hunters swarmed in on him. Inexplicably, this emotion somehow touched a deep part of his warped brain. Lost in reverie, he almost didn’t notice as the plaawaal reached out her hand toward him. Startled by the sudden contact, he jerked away, immediately rearing up, baring his teeth and raising his scimitar fins in the Yyranaiad warrior stance.

He should have attacked. It was careless to have let an enemy get so close to him. Instead, without meaning to---

<Why do you not fear me, Dinsskpyrk?>

Inconceivable. Never before did he ever have reason to attempt conversation with a dirtwalker, and certainly not with a Hunter. But yet, he couldn’t help himself. It was both fascinating and disturbing to have a dirtwalker react to him in this way. His silent voice, both a whisper and a thundering roar, echoed like whalesong through the plaawaal’s mind. Although he doubted the plaawaal would understand Shha’rarken as the Way did, the intent behind his inquiry was clear. To his surprise, instead of recoiling, she answered.

And so he listened.

<You are wrong,> he hissed in reply, <we speak the same tongue not, but I need not understand it to comprehend its meaning. Just as you can understand me.>

Telepathy was a powerful ability indeed. When he spoke with the giant woman, he had not communicated with merely words; with them came the “idea” behind them. Words were only a carrier signal. What most creatures did not know was that his telepathy also worked the other way around. To attempt communication, you would still think your thoughts. A transcension of language, as even pups did this before they learned Shha’rarken.

<Who are you?>

Again, she answered. In other circumstances, he would have only faintly registered a string of vocals. Not this time.

<Sledaristan,> Sinak started. Again he hesitated. The emotions he felt from her and that he felt himself swirled in his mind like a maelstrom during storm season. In this storm, one thing stood out to him, like an anglerfish in the darkness. A desire to . . . communicate? Though normally eloquent, he was at a loss for words. So instead of speaking, he thought. Images flashed through both of their heads. Memory and imagination flowed together to create an elaborate portrait of war and destruction, as Shha’rarken warriors circled and fought fiercely against the black ships that belonged to the Hunters of Beasts. Through it all echoed the fear and rage of both Shha’rarken and Hunter, fueled by mutual hatred. Wordlessly, he poured the history of the Shha’rarken, the nuances of his kind’s age-old feud against the children of Skyfather, into Sledaristan.

Then suddenly, the spell broke. If Sinak were a dirtwalker, he would have staggered. It was as though the light of Skyfather had suddenly pierced the depths of Deep Mother. The potential of Sledaristan’s suggestion staggered him. Of course. Of course! Why had he not figured this out before? Perhaps---

Then just as swiftly came a realization that banished the deceitful light of Skyfather. Almost invisibly, Sinak shuddered. Incredibly, despite his years of endless war against the Hunters, this warmblood had somehow, with almost no effort, single handedly undermined his will for vengeance. Even if it seemed tempting, he wouldn’t --- couldn’t --- yield. How could he explain this? Bound by tradition, bound by fury, bound by honor? He thought his rage was directed toward all that walked under Skyfather’s eye, yet he found he did not hate this Dinsskpyrk named Sledaristan.

No more. He abruptly turned, ready to jump back into the canal. He needed to get away from this person---

Sinak paused. Slowly, deliberately, he squeezed out: <My. Name. Is. Shinjri’shakraphrjat’shu’Sinaken.>

Without waiting for an acknowledgement, he kicked his tail and dove headfirst into the other side of the grate with a tremendous splash. He despised fleeing. It grated against his pride, though he grudgingly accepted it when he was certain the odds were against him. This was different; he was entirely unscathed. He hadn’t even been attacked. Then why was he fleeing like a Khyx'hhxy, afraid of spears piercing his throat? Because this time it wasn’t spears. Grimly, he noted to himself the power of words and emotions. To see --- to feel --- a dirtwalker react to him with neither fear nor anger deeply unsettled him. As for the prospect of peace . . . could it be---?

<No.> He twisted violently in the water for seemingly no reason, the fish scattering in a panic as the Shha’rarken plowed through the canal.



SInak shuddered slightly. The memory of the run-in with the plaawaal’s called Sledaristan had since been covered by scar tissue, fading through time and his own effort to disregard it. But like a scar, it would always remain, just out of sight, as a reminder.

Now was not the time for reminiscence. He had to find his way to this arena that the Way spoke of. Briefly, he wondered how the Way knew of such things.

The tunnel he was swimming in suddenly dipped down sharply. Without hesitation, Sinak dove into it. It was dark as pitch but Sinak cared not, for a Shha’rarken warrior did not rely on his eyes alone. The tunnel snaked and twisted like the body of Jormungandr. Then quite suddenly, it ended, and Sinak found himself in a large open space in the water, like a cavern. His heart beat steady as ever. His bravado in the face of the Way’s warnings was not entirely feigned, though he did feel the familiar prickle of anticipation that came whenever he knew he was headed into battle.



<I depart now, Way of the Water,> Sinak rumbled, as he turned to exit through the tunnel leading out of the grotto.

“Before you leave, heed my last word of advice,” the Way called.

Sinak waited.

The Way of the Water was as expressionless as ever, but even if Sinak was not the most empathetic creature, even he thought the Way sounded wistful. “Combat is not the only way,” it said. “I asked you about your motivation for revenge. The answer you give will not be for me, but for the Championship, and most importantly, for yourself.”



<My purpose yet unknown.>

With no other pathways than the one he came from, the only choice, he determined, was to go up. His brain crackled with energy and he rose out of the water as the psychic shield asserted itself as he had done many times before. His predator’s gaze took in a dark hallway. Without hesitation, he followed it---

Into a cavern straight out of the legends. By the Core, he thought. Quite literally; it was as hot as he’d imagined how the stories said the Core was. A surge of heat made him back away as a wall of magma, torrid as Maeeluuk’s wounded heart, poured over the doorway he had just exited from. So, there would be no escape from this battle.

In his lifetime, Sinak had never really thought about the possibility of higher powers watching over the material world. True, he had learned about the classic Shha’rarken tales --- Grandmother Moon, the Skyfather, the Deep Mother --- but despite using the related expressions in his speech, he couldn’t honestly say he believed in such entities. No longer. The voice reverberated from the walls, deep and resonant, bubbling from the lava. Sinak shuddered, imagining Maeeluuk speaking directly to him. He listened, and he understood. So, he thought, the Championship begins.

<Deep Mother, watch me.>
AQ DF MQ AQW Epic  Post #: 2
7/14/2020 3:46:30   
Fionnes
Member

Circa was equally bewildered.

A Sandcat Elemental should never be outside their desert surroundings, and yet here Circa was, standing in the centre of the great city of Bren. It was as if this place was exactly where she was meant to be.
But Circa would have never known about this place had she not encountered a pale, white-haired lady walking out in desert alone; a lady that would have surely dehydrated if they had gotten to the Sandcat village by foot. And in addition, that lady carried around a large weapon almost as tall as she was. No small feat for what appeared to be human, that’s for sure.

“The light brought me over here,” the lady had said, “she has led me on a quest to find those worthy to challenge the elements.”

A grand task, of course, but the Sandcats would hear none of it. They were a reclusive, nomadic tribe, and would prefer to stay away from danger, rather than seek it. Upon hearing this, most, if not all of the Sandcats camouflaged themselves back into the sand, as if the wind had swept their very essence away.

Well, aside from one lone girl with cat ears. That would be Circa, an oddity of a Sandcat who, despite being several hundred years old, didn’t look her age, and really didn’t know better. Circa approached the lady and sat down, preparing herself for the mystical angel’s story.

The lady talked about her adventures in Bren, and how she was looking for worthy opponents to test her skill on. It was a fierce, brutal and violent competition: a fight of wits, power and skill. Circa ears flicked up, and they heard that lady’s words loud and clear.

“This was what I was meant to do all along!” she exclaimed, loudly towards her fellow villagers, “I need to explore this world, and this is where I need to go!” The sands, although silent, slowly swirled around Circa and nestled close to her core. They were reluctant, but they were also in agreement, for they felt that Circa would have a better life knowing and learning more about not only her own element, but also the nature of all the elements. The Elemental Championship, although dangerous, would be the ideal place to experience these.

And so Circa packed her weapons and armour, and travelled from her village, across the vast deserts and plains, training and charging her elemental powers and moulding her fortitude with the earth for weeks on end, until at last, arriving in the centre of human civilisation; the last place a nomadic Sandcat would think about entering. What was in store for her? What challenges awaited? A young Sandcat knows no bounds, she chuckled to herself. I may only be a Sandcat, but I’m the strongest Sandcat out here, meow!

But before she could finish her sentence, a strong gust of wind blasted across the plaza, and Circa leapt for cover behind a statue. She hissed, staring around defensively, as if she was under attack.

“Meow… you’d think as a three-hundred year old Sandcat that lives in a desert I’d learn to not be afraid of the wind by now…” she muttered, “but I promised Sera that I would do my best!” She clenched her fists tightly, the bandages around her body resonating with energy, sand and dust around her feet levitating from the surge of energy and determination, “I’m not going to let a little breeze stop me from giving my all!” Circa then threw her fists down, casting a shower of dust before walking briskly towards what was clearly the largest structure in the city: The Arena.

There would be no way to miss the Arena. The sheer size of the structure, along with the sheer quantity of the crowd that bustled in towards to spectate and cheer on the competitors, made for a huge spectacle. It was nothing close to what Circa expected, and then plenty more after that. She had slowly slipped into the crowds, trying to find her way through the mass of people and chatter. Moulding her body into a thinner shape to make it easier for her to manoeuvre through the masses, Circa eventually found herself in somewhere… different. The stone walls had transitioned from the rough grey granite to a smooth, dark, almost glass-like substance. It was something Circa had never seen before. It was beautiful, yet it felt cold. But the further she walked in, the cold was gradually replaced by warmth. She could feel the heat emancipate from the black glass as she dragged her fingers along its smooth face. The warmth was welcoming, Circa thought, for it felt like home.

Then she saw the cascade of magma in front of her, along with the smell of burnt ash, charcoal and death.

“Not… quite like home after all,” she thought. The desert is sweltering, for sure, but this was a volcano. This was a very different world altogether. Circa could feel the remaining moisture on the surface of her body wisp away, the sand in her very body heating up and warming her core. She’d spotted figures around her who, no doubt, must be the other contestants. They too looked to be affected by the sheer temperatures of the arena, but Circa was curious how each would react to her, and to the combat that would eventually unfold.

What sort of challenges could be awaiting our inexperienced contestant? May the earth have faith in this young, endearing Sandcat’s challenge to both her contestants, and herself!
DF  Post #: 3
7/15/2020 4:52:47   
Anastira
Member

The tavern is too bright.

Voices mingling into a perilous slipstream, currents of words and syllables and vowels running together and pulling Carina from one to another; faces reflected in the polished wood of the bar counter, eyes glinting with the confidence of the drunk; lights flickering against the walls, transient, like so many intangible candle flames teetering on the edge of existence. Here, in the dimness, the faces and tapping fingers and red-bitten lips merge into a single monochrome palette, somewhere halfway between brown and gray. But it is too bright. Too bright.

They can see her, and so she knows it is too bright.

A flash of memory, the bitter taste of regret settling against her tongue: I’m sorry, mama, fleeting words whispered where her mother will never hear them. The daggers sheathed at her hip, against her leg, hidden against the beige of her clothing: suddenly heavy, weighing her down, heavier than any chains. There is the strangest feeling - a physical fight to lift one foot and put it in front of another, the ground anchoring her like a magnet, its gravity insurmountable. Her muscles seem to ache with the effort. She is tired. No - tired does not even begin to describe this feeling, the heaviness that sinks into her chest and creates a hollow blackness that paints her vision dark.

The eyes. They watch her. She can feel them.

It is too bright.

Three days ago, a week ago, a month, it all feels like yesterday. His lips so hot against her skin, feverish, she imagines they’re burning a brand into her neck: an incandescent mark of everything he is, everything he was. The memory laps her up like a tidal wave, or maybe a tsunami: the force of it almost knocking her off her feet. She wavers and tips towards a man sitting by the stage. The tattoos on his arms register, vaguely, as tattoos of his face. But when she blinks his face is gone, the tattoos are just swirling incoherent dark lines against a stranger’s skin and they mean nothing to her. Nothing means anything to her.

She opens her voice.

It is strange, how it has come to consume her, this music. Once, she believed she controlled it, the things that flowed from her mouth. But here, now, standing in the middle of the tavern staring at the musicians with their exotic instruments, she knows she is the slave, not the master; she belongs to her music, it does not belong to her. She can feel it flowing through her, pulsing with her heartbeat: soft at first, a funeral dirge sung as a lullaby beneath the undertone of the stage musicians; louder with time, soaring, emptying her lungs of air, her notes rising higher and higher. She takes a step forward. The musicians are staring.

They see her. It is too bright.

She can feel the plucking of the dulcimer like an off-tempo metronome, resonating through her body, pulling at her heart. The dulcimer is like his fingers, playing her skin as he tells her she’s beautiful: she, standing there in the darkness in her plain clothes, and neither of them knowing she’s about to steal six daggers from his father, neither of them knowing this will be their last night. The strings are the sound of her soul screaming as her fingers touch the daggers for the first time, a high shrill keen that falters on the notes, trembles with an inconstant vibrato. The stamping of the gitar player’s foot against the floorboards is the trembles of her heart as it thunders against her treachery, forces her to flee, to walk away from her crime as though forgetfulness can be forgiveness.

Her voice is a wail, notes tripping down a minor scale, harmonics weaving their way through in eerie dissonance, the instruments playing so quickly they almost match the racing of her heart. Her fingers weave themselves together as she sings, tangled tight, as though holding onto herself will save her from her demons. The instruments are so loud, but her singing is louder somehow, a wash of pain and fury and terror and loneliness and god, oh god why did she come here? This was a mistake. Here of all places. Here she cannot hide. Here she cannot escape. Here she will be seen, she cannot stop being seen, if she is hidden she will never be a champion.

She cannot pay this price. It is too high.

She cannot pay it even for freedom.

She closes her eyes, lets herself become a part of the music, tries to feel what it must be like for her listeners: the way it takes her in and swallows her, folds her in its deep embrace. But she doesn’t know what it’s like for them, she can’t know, it is different for everyone: that is the beauty of it. And because she knows the secret of it, the secret of her, there is something lost, a little less enchantment, a little less mystery.

With her eyes closed, the music swirling around her, the unexpected pinprick of pain is sharper when it comes, worse than it would be otherwise - at first, nothing, a numb ignorance of the world around her; suddenly pain against her arm, a single point that explodes like a star in her conscious. She swings back, jumping, everything going abruptly into overdrive, the pain cutting through her focus, causing her music to falter and tremble - all of the breath going out of her at once; and the pain becomes worse, deeper, elongates itself -

There is an ache that fills her up, disembodied, completely separate from the pain: a memory, the forest dark around her, the tree branches like gnarled black claws against the stars, a wailing voice. The feeling of being violated, filled up with something that isn’t her, something that doesn’t belong. Stars glimmering in the black nightcap of the sky, constellations and galaxies and nebulae stretching away into the vast unknown reaches of a world far away, a world without bounds, a world without chains, a world of freedom. The faint, unbidden yearning to fly away into that infinity, to leave all of this behind.

Go away, she tells it. Not now. Go away.

It haunts her in her dreams, when she closes her eyes; haunts her when she pickpockets on the streets; haunts her through every breath of every day. But not now. She can’t let it now.

She still does not understand where it comes from, or what it is.

She snaps her eyes open, and her hand is on one of her daggers by instinct, the curved edges of the winged hilt spreading against her fingers. Columba. It would be so easy to lift it from its sheath, to defend herself against the pain.

No. Not in here. Not in the tavern, close quarters, too many people around, so many eyes -

Something has cut her, she realizes hazily. Her arm. There is blood in her vision, blood dripping from her skin, red and hot and she can almost taste it in her mouth, the strange salty iron tang, she can almost feel it sticky in her throat. There is someone standing in front of her. A shadow. They are all shadows to her, but this one especially - the dark of her clothing, the dark of her hair. She thinks the figure speaks to her. It is strange, blurred, slim in her vision, she cannot quite seem to grasp onto it - but everything is blurred now, the tavern around her, and the pain is somehow sharper than she had imagined possible. She closes her eyes. She is faint, the world spins. A carousel going round and round, and she at the center, her fingers tight around Columba like a lifeline.

She hears sounds, a whisper of them, something close to syllables but not quite registering as words, but it does not matter...she can see the intention in the way the shadowy figure looks at her. She can hear it in the figure’s voice, too - a woman’s, high and lilting, the words rising and falling almost like music, like a strange kind of lullaby. There is an apology hidden in those syllables somewhere. She knows she should flinch away from the woman’s hands as they tend to the smiling red mouth of the wound, wrapping it carefully, almost tenderly. She knows she should run, pull Columba from its sheath and let it loose. But she can’t, she is frozen in place, it is almost as though her own music has turned its power on her - and she doesn’t know how to bring herself back to life.

Or maybe, maybe she is only numb because she has taught herself to be numb. Because it is too painful to remember the last time someone seemed to care.

I am sorry, she says, not knowing whether she says it out loud, if it is to herself or to her demons or to the woman bandaging her arm. I am sorry for the music.

She closes her eyes against the pain, against the touch she is too numb to feel, and there is only darkness.
____________________

Musca. Musca, my little fly -

I have done the unthinkable, she whispers. Please -

It’s okay. - the shushing of his voice, the gentle track of his fingers tracing constellations against her skin. His voice divides itself into syllables, into poetry: we are galaxies, each of us, a map of stars in the dark, and when our galaxies collide we are like supernovae blooming in the night - she wants to listen, tries to listen, but it is so hard, he seems to slip away from her like water through her fingers, like grains of sand. Musca, his voice carves through the dark.

I am Carina. These unspoken words - she feels them inside her, welling up: this final gift, this final curse from a woman she has never known, the woman who abandoned her. She wants to say it out loud, but something stops her.

Carina. She did not understand it, in the beginning, but now she does. Carina: the nebula, the constellation, the keel of a ship prodding forward through the night. As though even her mother, walking away from the tiny newborn girl, knew, somehow, that that would not be the end. That Carina would go on through the dark, with the dark.

There is music inside of her, too, she finds: not the music of humans, not the music of instruments, but something deeper - the music of the cosmos, a cosmic noise translated through her lungs into something tangible, something human. She feels it in the metronome of her heart, the singing of the blood in her veins, the rhythm of her footsteps. She feels it as she walks away from him, as she turns into the shop with the daggers shining in front of her, as she flees that night with the blades tucked into her belt: Canes Venatici, she calls them. Her hunting dogs.

The music never stops -
____________________

Now tell me… what purpose did that melody serve?

Her eyes snap open. The pain of the cut is piercing again, almost like the sharp scent of strong drink cutting at her throat and her nostrils. The girl from before is staring at Carina, still wrapping the cut, but this new voice does not belong to her. Around Carina, every sound within the tavern seems heightened, amplified. Without thinking she focuses on the other figure in front of her, tries to detect the rhythm of their heart pulsing at their wrist, sweat gathering against their white skin. But she finds nothing. The tavern is too loud, the music inside of her is too frantic, she can’t seem to focus.

Instinctively, she changes her presence, projects herself as smaller, frailer, more fragile. Anything to be invisible - unseen.

I am not a threat, she wants to whisper.

“I’m sorry,” she says, instead. “It was just a...I like to sing. Sometimes I -” She blushes like a child, suddenly bashful. Makes herself seem even smaller. “My mother always said I sang too much.” It is not even a lie. Even here, she can remember the smell of the herbs hanging on the walls, the rise and fall of the herbalist’s ululating wail as he told Jendayi that Carina was gone, what she had done, how she had taken the daggers. Carina lifts her eyes shyly to the figure in front of her, voice falling to a murmur. “But Cailean always loved it when I would sing.”

The white-skinned one inches closes, and it takes everything Carina has to keep her hand from straying to Columba, to keep herself from recoiling from the strange white skin, the purpled veins. She finds herself wishing it were Cailean instead. Tell me...I came to this city on the promise of splendor. Aer voice is neither woman nor man, something in between - bright, eager, with a vigor that is almost infectious. She finds herself clinging to the words for no reason, drinking them in like ambrosia. Of a battlefield where warriors from across the land sought to impress the gods themselves for the honor of a single wish.

The creature licks aer lips - aer tongue, a paled red; aer mouth like a canvas bleached of color. Carina shivers.

I watched. I saw. I left unimpressed. A bloodbath where most survived and the winner walked away with faint flowing hair. A parlor trick when I was promised wonder. The emphasis on the last word, wonder.

She can feel aer breath on her face, hot against her skin.

For the last year, I’ve been waiting. Back then, I did not know for what, but today your song gave me an answer as to what I seek. Where shall you next perform? A voice such as yours deserves to be heard by all.

An end to the words, a finality. They tug at her uncomfortably - the idea that she could have inspired a creature like this. If only it were Cailean - but Cailean would never come to a place like this. A city built on a tradition of bloodshed. It hits her like a wave, all over again, how little she belongs here, how out of place she is; this is not her, it was never her. But it is her last hope. To impress the gods for the honor of a single wish, as the white-skinned one would say.

“I came because I need help,” she whispers, the words catching at her throat. “I need to win these championships, or I’m lost.” She can feel tears stinging at her eyes, salty-hot, and she blinks, turning her gaze to the woman beside her instead, the girl who had bandaged her arm. “I think maybe I’ve always been lost and I just didn’t know, or I...I don’t know, maybe it’s the opposite, I’m not as lost as I believed. I left my...my home behind -”

Home. There is something about the dark-clothed woman that makes Carina feel as though maybe, maybe she will understand. That she will feel Carina’s pain. The names tattooed on Carina’s heart like a promise, like a regret: Cailean. Jendayi. Cailean. Jendayi. An ostinato of two broken hearts repeated endlessly in her mind.

Why did she leave them behind? Why did she walk away?

She pulls her gaze back to the white-skinned one. There are so many questions she should ask, so many things she should ask about. This one has seen the championships before, knows the city. Maybe ae could help her. She should ask aes name - but she feels frozen in place, unable to move her lips. Petrified by everything around her. It is too overwhelming. She has only been in this city, this Bren, for so little time, a few hours, and the idea of stepping into an arena is terrifying.

It will be different once her life is on the line, she knows that. But not now. Now, she is a coward. She is afraid.

She cannot go into that arena alone.

Without hearing the rest of what ae has to say, without knowing she’s even quite saying it, she turns to the woman next to her, her voice dropping to a whisper. “Please. Please, I don’t know who you are, but walk with me to the arena. I can’t do it alone.” Her eyes widen, huge, glassy with tears, and there is almost a cadence of song, a suggestion of poetry in her voice. “Please walk with me, at least to the gate. I know civilians can’t go inside, but I...I can’t go alone.”

“I’d love to,” the woman says. Her name - what is her name? Why does Carina not know? “I was planning to enter, myself. I know there can only be one champion, but...maybe we can work together. It’d be nice to have a familiar face in there.”

Carina bites her lip. She knows, she knows she should say no. An alliance - what a pretty idea...but if they both enter, they are enemies by default. Maybe this woman will die to Columba, or to a less merciful blade - Vulpecula, Sagitta. Or maybe Carina will die at this woman’s hands instead. You cannot trust anyone here, Carina, you are a fool to say yes to this woman, to give into your emotions -

I will stay with you.

Cailean’s voice, a vague memory like butterfly wings brushing against her mind. She falls into the sound of it helplessly, the warmth that floods her, the lullaby music singing in her heart.

Carina, my child, there is strength in you. You must trust yourself.

Jendayi, the faint roughness of her voice edging her words. An exotic tinge to the syllables, syncopating them - one against another. The remembrance of Jendayi’s hands, rough like her voice, holding Carina as a child, rocking her back and forth in front of a murmuring fire.

Carina lifts her eyes to the woman in front of her, the sounds of the tavern receding like a curtain pulled closed as she focuses on the woman’s face, on her eyes. “Tell me your name,” she says. “Tell me your name and I give you my word, we will fight together.”

“My name is Spider Lily...I think just Lily would be better, though. If we end up in the same spot, I’ll stand by you as an ally, and a friend.”

Carina nods - turns away, towards the door, out into the morning sunlight. There is something strange in walking next to Lily: she, standing out in her dark clothes, and Carina in her plain beige shirt and trousers, her daggers hidden. There’s a list somewhere, she knows, that will tell her where to go, which arena she is in; but she doesn’t need that. Not now, not since the night she stole into Cailean’s father’s shop and left Cailean behind for good.

Here, in the open, with her daggers weighing against her belt and her shins, she is simultaneously hidden and vulnerable: revealed by the sunlight, hidden by the crowds. A part of her wants to reach out, to hold Lily’s hand. But she has to walk away, she knows. She cannot enter the arena with this woman.

She turns her eyes on Lily one last time, gives the woman the smallest nod - and then she turns sharply and slips away into the crowd. Stops partway down the street and pauses, her hand snaking past her belt to clutch the crowned basket of Auriga’s gilded hilt. There is the faintest pulse, a gentle tug that draws her through the people, weaving past the buildings crowding around her, insistent.

She enters the arena almost without knowing, without realizing where Auriga leads her.

She is reminded, somehow, almost of a cathedral, or a grave. A holy place almost, sacred in life or in death. The gray of the stone melds gradually into black bedrock, the air becomes hot enough to sear her skin and almost crackling with dryness. Her lungs feel starved, aching, and she gasps in breath, chokes on the taste of smoke and the heavy suffocating thickness of ash, her breath coming out in hacking coughs, her throat raw. The metal of her daggers feels brightly hot against her skin, through the fabric of her trousers and shirt.

There is a wall of lava in front of her, a curtain of it like a fiery waterfall scorching through the air, filling the hall with the smell of it, with its heat. She pauses behind it, releases the hilt of Auriga. Auriga - her first blade, her charioteer. No. Auriga is too impulsive today.

She reaches to her shins and pulls Pegasus into one hand, Sagitta into the other.

The curtain of magma parts. There is a path in front of her, black stone arcing across a glowing river of lava. The arena stands in front of her: opening out like a cavern, a maw of blackness rimmed with the fire-light of the lava, an abyss. Her heartbeat hiccups in her chest. The music inside her: syncopated, racing, so fast she feels as though the rhythm of it blurs together into one never-ending drumroll, her hands sweaty, her jaw clenched against the taste of ash and smoke and fire and, yes, her own death. She will not survive this. She is not strong.

Are there others in this arena? She cannot say.

A stalactite plunges from the ceiling, piercing the ground. The stone floor shatters, a high-pitched drumroll. In her head, it registers as a different kind of music, almost bell-like, twinkling. A column of magma in its wake and then - then nothing, the floor reformed, a brittle black expanse in front of her.

She tries to think of Lily, of her comforting voice and her pact.

Her fingers clench tight around her daggers, so tight it hurts.

She steps forward onto the stone bridge.

Cailean, she thinks, and it is as though he is there beside her, forgiving, believing. His hand against hers, joined around Pegasus, inside the twirling wings of its hilt. My Musca, his voice says. My little fly. I’m not worried about you, you know.

She closes her eyes, her fingers white-knuckled. You should be.

No. In her mind, his voice caresses her music, joins its harmony. There is darkness inside you. But you are like a moth drawn to a flame. You are drawn to the light. A sensation, a fragment of memory, the softness of his lips against her neck, the gentle warmth of it almost cold compared to the heat of the arena. Use your wings.

Just her imagination, she tells herself, it’s just her imagination. But the knot in her stomach unwinds. She opens her eyes.

The smell of chrysanthemums in the windows, white jasmine curling against the walls. Jendayi, her hair flowing thick and black in curls and braids across her shoulders, against the coffee-brown of her skin. Her eyes brilliant like amber in Carina’s mind. Strike sweet and true, my child. The darkness belongs to you; make it your light.

If she lets her mind wander, she can almost feel Jendayi in the hilt of Sagitta, a different kind of warmth.

She checks her daggers one last time, each of them in turn: her left side for Cailean, sweet Columba and fleet-footed Pegasus and brilliant Auriga; her right for Jendayi, arrow-headed Sagitta and confident Vulpecula and all-knowing Circinus. And then she steps forward, off the bridge, onto the island, and behind her the bridge shakes and crumbles from the edges, sinking into the roaring heat of the molten lava.

And so she calls forward her daggers, her hunting dogs, her Canes Venatici; and she turns, seeking, to see if Lily stands within the arena walls.
AQW  Post #: 4
7/16/2020 8:37:12   
Necro-Knight
Member

24th of the First Month

My dearest Maria,

I right to you even as my body shakes with cold and my spirit claws at the walls of my tiny room aboard this vessel. We set sail from Dragesvard not but a few days ago and yet it feels like we’ve been floating aimlessly on this icy ocean for a lifetime. The fog is like a living thing, coiling through whatever protection I wear and biting at my bones. No members of the fishing crew, nor the captain, seem phased by the fog. I assume that, as a scholar of the magical arts, my lack of sea-faring experience leaves me vulnerable to the sea’s cold presence more-so than the rugged men and women around me. Still, I accept whatever warmth I can acquire and huddle close to my lamp in order to write you this mana-letter.

What time is not spent trying to fight off the chilling fog is instead spent with my studies. Other ships arriving from this charting path reported extreme levels of cold fog and sea creatures unlike any described on Lore moving through the depths. We have just recently reached the first set of coordinates and besides the cold mist clinging to every inch of our vessel, I have yet to witness any monsters of indescribable horror. Kilguins and ursine warriors are known for these parts, as well as the occasional ice dragon, but not this far into open waters. Even robust creatures such as those require some form of solid land upon which to retreat to, yet here we are in waters so deep, I cannot fathom how anything humanoid could survive the almost-unholy cold that radiates from its dark surface.

Despite this, I continue my efforts shortly after breakfast. This involves tracing underwater ley-lines through a precise set of arcane and arithmetical calculations that I shall not bore you with, though I have managed to reduce a few members of the crew to drooling states once I got rambling as I do. Once I conclude that daily ritual, I collect samples of both seawater and ice, if I can collect it. While I could freeze the seawater of my own accord, I need a natural specimen, to see if another magic is creating this below-average weather or if something more complex is afoot.

So far, the results have been extraordinary and have rapidly begun to border on maddening in regard to their origin. The water itself contains a pollutant, thick and black as if one of the crew dumped a barrel of oil wells overboard. To further this idea, I even used a few pages of the ink-like waters to prepare my ritual notes this morning and the liquid took to the parchment with almost reckless abandon, practically dragging my quill into the proper runes. While I appreciate this new resource, I also find myself wary of it. The fish drawn from the depths and onto the deck every morning are… unnerving, featuring optical organs and tentacles in locations that should not be, yet are. Once again, neither the strange fish nor the staining black waters seem to slow the almost mechanical motions of the crew’s daily routine, but I have since only accepted porridge from the kitchen.

As if the midnight waters were not peculiar enough, the ice I find drifting upon its surface could not be more distant from its surroundings if it tried. The ice is a pure sea-green and contains the same essence of black, inky stains in which it floats. I initially hypothesized that the ice itself was the source of the obsidian liquid polluting the waters and found my intellect confirmed when I finally found a sample small enough to bring on board. The surface of the ice was smooth beyond anything I’d seen, rivalling even the crystals hosted in the Swordhaven art galleries, and its contents seeming to twist and churn like a love potion being prepared by an eager acolyte. Once I subjected it to a stable enough sense of heat, that being the very same lamp I am currently surviving from, the ice reduced to a more pure, inky substance that seemed to flow away from the light of my quarters.

I have since informed the captain and his crew about this discovery, though their usually cold response is making me question interacting with them at all. I receive enough chill from the fog, I dare not seek any more. Regardless of my own emotional or physical discomfort, this fascinating anomaly requires further study and I shall keep you informed of my progress, as I always do.

Your fellow scholar and partner in life,
Peter Roldrin

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

13th of the Second Month

My lovely Maria,

I miss the warmth of home and of our study, but most of all, I miss you beside me. The fog has become so invasive of the ship that I swear it has become a regular bedfellow and I lose sleep to its bitter presence as I shiver. I will admit, I have cursed my own hubris in becoming a Cryomancer solely and I’m sure you revel in the realization that I should’ve expanded my studies, as you instructed. Despite my lack of feeling in my limbs and a lack of restful sleep, I have made headway in to deciphering this strange ocean around me.

The waters, at this time, remain unchanged and the fish drawn from them become increasingly bizarre. As we’ve yet to find any port in this frozen wasteland, I have been forced to dine upon the strange wildlife due to lack of any alternatives. Much to my own shame, I have become rather fond of this “Ashoo” fish, as the crew calls it, snacking on it cooked or raw when I have the free moment. As I am denied sleep, a full stomach is one of the few pleasures I can still obtain.

While the waters still remain silent with the source of their alien inhabitants, the ice samples I have collected seem almost excited to spill their contents, albeit done without any form of illumination. The chemical initially seemed to recoil from the lamp I used to melt it and I have since discovered why. When placing a few samples upon one of the cooking stations in the kitchen, in order to obtain heat without light, I found the ink is pure liquid shadow, once it has been freed from its frozen prison. Its reaction to light and its near-primal level of sentience matches all definitions of textbook elemental shadow, though I have never seen it so condensed as to form a liquid that I could bottle if I so chose.

Yes, I will also note here that this means I have both utilized water with an unnaturally high attunement to the shadow plane in my rituals, as well as eaten aquatic life with its essence soaked into its sweet flesh. The thought initially unnerved me, but after a moment of calming recollection, every being is composed of an elemental balance and surely, I have not disrupted my own with a few weeks odd fish. If I must be honest, my love, I find myself more drawn to my work than ever, ignoring my odd diet and lack of rest. In one of my studies that ran for well over 48 hours, I determined that the shadow ice is, in-fact, not forming through some natural phenomenon. The cryomantic binding around the liquid darkness is artificial but seems almost… accidental in its nature. Given you and I’s knowledge of magical artifacts and the repercussions of leaving them unattended, I believe a direct investigation is needed to prove my theory. If some shadow-based relic is polluting this location, then it is my right as a scholar and mage both to see it retrieved for study.

My stomach grumbles for another bowl of fish before I prepare the diving spell, so I shall go appease it before perhaps finding one of the greatest magical discoveries of our time. You shall be ever in my thoughts, my dearest, even in these frozen depths.

Yours forever,
Peter Roldrin.

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

6th of the Third Month

My beautiful Maria,

I greatly appreciate the blanket you had delivered via portal a few days past, though I regret to inform you that since my dive into the murky world below, I no longer suffer from the bone-biting chill of the fog. It seems that, as I theorized, I simply needed time to adjust and now meet the morning fog with pleasant expectancy.

Regarding my dive itself, I am happy say that my second hypothesis was correct. I did indeed locate the source of the shadow pollution; a ceremonial dagger, seemingly carved from a substance like that of the ice and glaciers we sail through. Its blade consists of aquatic tendrils that twists as if it was originally a living thing and is simply suspended within its frozen tomb. This is not the case, however, as any forms of heat I applied did nothing to ward off the chill that radiated from the blade and I can spot no other organs or limbs beyond the tentacles upon which I grip to examine it.

One thing I can say with complete surety though, is that the artifact is beyond infused with the raw power of a dark place. It seems the ice and polluted waters were simply a byproduct of the weapon, as I imagined, but the elemental enchantment running through it does not seem to originate from the Plane of Darkness. Upon further inspection through a detection ritual, the energies seemed to respond in the frantic, almost psychotic pattern known to the void denizens. While powerfully enchanted, it seems unable to cast magic of its own accord, as I have attempted numerous times to channel my cryomantic powers through it to no avail.

Not trusting one of the sour-faced crew not to try and swipe the artifact to sell once we finally return to land, I have now taken it upon myself to keep the dagger on my person, hanging visible from my belt in a statement. I have braved these obsidian depths and am not to be trifled with when so close to a magical discovery. The sea-scum aboard this vessel cannot begin to fathom the importance of my work and I will not risk them interfering with it, unknowingly or otherwise. Their presence is only required to retrieve more of that outlandish wildlife that seems to never run out, as if the ocean herself is providing me the nourishment I need to continue.

We are returning to Dragesvard now, as I have located no other sources of enlightenment from the Great Depths below us. I shall bring you back her glorious bounty and we shall share in its supple flesh together, my love.

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

Yours always,
Peter Roldrin

18th of the Third Month

My hunger for the sweet, tender flesh seems never-ending now and I have a barrel on the deck I often return to feast from in between sessions of study or arcane experimentation upon the dagger. While it is unable to be used for any spell-casting purposes, I will say that the weapon seems extremely apt at carving the flesh of living creatures, as I have been able to remove my favorite organs from the Ashoo fish with incredible ease through usage of its edge.

Between my ravenous meals upon the seemingly endless supply of fish and the further-enlightening experiments on the enlightening world below, I have abandoned sleep entirely outside of the few times my body has collapsed onto my table or the deck. I cannot begin to describe my dreams during these short periods of unconsciousness in their true beauty, for even my endless genius is unable to form the words to properly do so, though I shall try. Endless expanses of coral structures, filled with aquatic beings of every shape and origin, as if all the land and sea beings became one in a great unifying species. They welcomed me as one of their own, despite lacking any of the aquatic features that seemed to extend from every free patch of their bodies. I was fed more of the holy Ashoo and flesh from other creatures whose names I can’t reproduce, though they were all equally blissful in flavor. Every time, I awake before I can get my fill and find my hunger sparked anew, almost mad until my craving for salty-sweet meat is sated.

The crew has begun to eye me during these episodes, as I break into the barrels like a starved dog and tear at their latest catch with nails and teeth, not even wishing the great bounty to be wasted with spices or land sustenance. The meat is perfect in its freshest form when raw and I intend to have my fill. They plan to prepare the last of the Sweet Flesh for sales to the other land-people, but I have a plan, my dearest. The Dagger of the deep carves flesh so easily, surely it will find no trouble in disposing of the sea-scum before they can ruin that which they do not understand. I shall dispose of their remains as a gift to whatever deep god has blessed me with the truth and feast upon the bounty of this vessel before I return to the depths and seek out the beings from my dreams. Together, we shall gorge ourselves upon the sea’s bounty until the time comes to bless the surface world with our gifts and our knowledge of the dark places. I shall miss you, Maria, my sweetest flesh of all, but know this; one day, I will return and show this blind world the truth found in the cold, dark depths.


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

The being formerly known as Peter Roldrin drug his webbed feet with every step towards the open arena, footprints of stinking fluid left behind with every movement. His slimy, fish-like form was not accustomed to the climate that came along with the town of Bren, though its surface-walking inhabitants reacted to his presence with a familiar state of chaos. Some fled in a manic attack of pure terror while others simply bowed their heads in submission to the presence of a power beyond their understanding. The truly weak of mind and body simply passed out from the stench of knowledge that had only gotten worse since arriving in such dry temperatures, its strength now like that of rotting fish left in the desert sun. Thankfully, the beings he encountered at the arena had no such weakness, though they did move to avoid the stench that brought wisdom.

The young woman who had ushered him over to some form of window space held her nose tightly as she requested his name and other information regarding this elemental competition, her otherwise cheerful voice now nasally and distorted as she extended a paper form towards him. Like so many surface-walkers, she wished to remain ignorant of the vast, dark cosmos off the shores of every continent, he concluded, and decided to free her from her ignorance.

Spreading the many tendrils located around his fish-like mouth, R’thazz ejected a mouthful of black ink from his throat, catching the young arena attendant mid-word and staining both her face and mouth alike. Ice crystals began to form upon her skin even as the woman screamed in disgust, though R’thazz’s wide lips split into a sharp grin as her eyes became wide and glassy and her hand began to write with sharp, frantic motions across the parchment without needing to look down. R’thazz waited patiently until she reached the bottom of the form and her maddened scribbling became seizing convulsions that threw her from her chair and onto the wooden floor behind the counter. Sea water began to drip from her lips as she lay there, whispering words that none of her fellow land-walkers would ever understand.

Collecting the parchment in his pincer-claw with an almost casual motion, R’thazz’s bulbous eyes studied the rough Under-Language the woman had written both is information and his directions in. He was assigned to an arena known as The Forge and the sanity-shattering letters provided directions before the woman’s sanity had deteriorated beyond the point of cohesive thought entirely. As he tucked the parchment into his tattered green robes, the Frozen One simply licked his lips. That woman’s sanity had been an unexpected appetizer, but he had come with a hunger as deep and yawning as the ocean itself and hoped his competitors would sate that need. Sunken stomach almost growling in agreement, the fish-man stalked towards his designated feasting area, feet squelching in pools of their own muck.

Upon entering, R’thazz realized the land-walkers had developed an even greater sense of bravado than the last time he had come upon land to feast. The wall of molten rock had parted in to an arena that was sure to broil some of his brethren of the depths, but the purest of icy chills rain through his veins and he felt only the air become thicker as he moved into the central platform, the smooth walkways reminding him of the pearl bridges in the Deep City.

Glancing about at the meals who had blindly provided themselves for his and the Deep One’s hunger, R’thazz’s unblinking eyes caught on a form who was strikingly familiar to his own people. The shape was clearly that of a predatory fish, though twisted as if blessed by the Great Dreams of the dark, like R’thazz himself now was. Spines and additional fins jutted from the creature and intelligence swam behind its gaze, as if it too had tasted the Sweet Flesh and grown wise from it. Perhaps it had.

Returning his gaze to the actual land-walkers around the arena, R’thazz spoke, though his once smooth voice came out guttural and wet as he formed words with his mouth and directed the understanding towards the fellow fish-thing. They would be received by the shark-like creature simultaneously, the words as vocal madness, but the meaning being translated through spirit.

“Ymg'… ah nafl shuggoth. Ymg' ah nng hup nafl'fhtagn mgepog llll bthnkornah?”
“You... are not human. Do you too rise from the Deep to feast?”

Even as he spoke, the tendrils that extended from R’thazz’s right wrist coiled and twisted around one another like a nest of eels, nervously coiling and relaxing as what remained of his intellectual mind began to consider distance and risk to engaging each strange opponent around him.
If push came to shove, he would drag the shark-thing into the dark depths where it belonged and move forward from there.
DF MQ AQW  Post #: 5
7/16/2020 17:55:03   
ChaosRipjaw
How We Roll Winner
Jun15


Sinak hardly noticed the guttural growls, but the corresponding thoughts echoed through Sinak’s head. The language was not Shha’rarken, but it did not matter. Just as he communicated with others, so did this creature communicate with him.

By the Core, the creature smelled of death. The rot rolled off of it in waves, a vile, sickening smell that even Sinak, used as he was to the odor of the dead and dying, found repellent. He warily noted the amalgamation of features: the stance of a dirtwalker, the head of a fish-creature similar to the one that was the Way of the Water, arms resembling a P'phuukphaan’s --- a great squid’s and a lobster’s respectively, and fins arrayed like a perversion of the Lm'rii'dexyrr --- wind riders, birds. A monster not of Maeeluuk, but not of Phyxfaa either.

<Like myself.>

Even in the gloom that was the Forge, Sinak could see the bioluminescence emanating from its limbs, like the strange, distorted fish that roamed the Abyss . . . the ones closest to Deep Mother’s embrace.

Sinak recalled the lessons of history. In the expanse and vastness of the seven seas, there were a great many Shha’rarken tribes. In the reaches of the great depths, there was the Blue Tribe. Smaller than most Shha’rarken, the Blue Tribe made up for their size with their brutal and cunning teamwork. For this reason, they were among the last tribes to be wiped out by the Hunters. A valuable lesson to be learned indeed. Of course, the creature that had decided to speak to Sinak was hardly a Shha’rarken, much less a Blue.

“Do you too rise from the Deep to feast?”

Sinak thought of himself as one who had no reason to converse with dirtwalkers. But as much as this one was no child of Maeeluuk, it was also no dirtwalker. Besides, Sinak thought darkly, he had had no reason to talk to the plaawaal earlier these past few moon phases either. With that consideration, he responded. The floodgates opened and like a tsunami, his thoughts surged without restraint. The meanings accompanied these words, thoughts layered upon thoughts, and with them also came the images. Scenes of death and carnage, war and slaughter, between Shha’rarken and Hunters. Alongside these came the shades and memories of the Trials of the Klaayphaunthuu, and of the Yyranaiads. Hatred and duty, valor and honor, repulsion and affinity, all rolled into one. Memories, emotions, and speech, condensed into one cohesive psychic message.

<I rise from the Deep to kill the ones that walk the land.>
<<The dirtwalkers. The Hunters>>
<<<The children of the Phyxfaa. Skyfather.>>>
<Your scent repulses me, but to you do I feel kinship.>
<<One of the sea.>>
<<<One of the Maeeluuk. Deep.>>>
<<<<Twisted. Changed.>>>>
<Your blood is cold.>
<<Our blood is ice.>>
<<<Their blood is not.>>>
<<<<Their blood is warm.>>>>
<If from the Deep do we both rise, shall we fight together?>
<<Like the Blues, shall we fight together?>>
<<<To taste the warm blood, shall we fight together?>>>

AQ DF MQ AQW Epic  Post #: 6
7/16/2020 23:07:40   
roseleaf320
Creative!


Though the tavern was lively and full, the elf across from Spider Lily was turning out to be incredibly dull. Silly of her to think someone with vibrant purple hair would also have a vibrant personality. She’d come to this tavern for a bit of fun and information before the Championships, but she had found boredom and… well, not necessarily no information. This was just information about Bren’s sharkian wildlife instead of potential opponents. Spider Lily had wanted quick and easy entertainment from this one, but the rant paired with the constant draft on her neck (even with her hood on) made the entire operation a failure. It wasn’t even worth a tiny slice, just to see what the elf’s Life really looked like. She shifted her weight forward, ready to stand and walk out of the tavern altogether.

But a quiet voice reached her ears and made her pause. A slow singing, timid and low, but something about it struck Spider Lily. Its quiet melody somehow cut past the noise of the bar’s thousand conversations-- tangible enough that Spider Lily felt she could reach up and pluck it from the air. Her eyes sought the singer, and landed upon a rather plain girl so fragile it seemed her voice could break her own bones. It rose higher and higher, and Spider Lily felt chills rush down her spine. Her stomach clenched. Something felt incredibly wrong. She glanced at her surroundings, her head flicking around like a squirrel searching for a preying eagle. The singer was warning her about something. Spider Lily needed to get out of this tavern, fast, before someone-- No! She would not give in to the infinite web of emotions that always threatened to overflow. There was no danger; only her own paranoia. The song had caught her off guard. That was all.

But who was this woman whose voice could cause such panic? What did she feel; what did she know? What was her Life? Spider Lily rose from her chair. Her legs shook, as if she was standing up from bed after a fifty-year-long slumber. Each step she took tightened the cords that bound her chest with a painful lurch. “Turn back!” they screamed. “Why do you move towards the source of your pain?” But with each step, Spider Lily’s mind fled further from the body that screeched at her to stop. I control you. Your feelings are unreasonable. A biological trick. Do as I say. And so they did.

A couple steps more, and the melody pierced through everything. The barriers Spider Lily had erected to shield herself from her own nature-- from the feelings that constantly threatened to consume her-- were ripped away. All she wanted was to turn tail and flee.

But she needed to know. Spider Lily’s endless pit of emotion felt tiny compared to the raging desire for but a glimpse of the enchantress’s true beauty. Her boot struck the floor once more. The click of a finger revealed a knife sharp and shimmering with heat. Their sleeves brushed together for but a moment. The Spider’s body lurched forward, stomach tumbling over itself, as time both quickened and slowed. Everything inside her raced to escape from the haunting music. But the turn of her head, the sweep of her cloak, seemed suspended in an endless wait. Show me your beauty, oh cursed enchantress.

A small prick became a slice as the girl jumped backwards, and as blood rose from the wound, Spider Lily was met with the night sky itself. Dark blacks and purples erupted from the singer’s wrist, swirling into the air like thick smoke. In its winds twinkled tiny silver dots that mimicked stars and clusters. It was every bit as beautiful as Spider Lily had hoped-- as the breeze carried stars further into the open air, Spider Lily’s turmoil fled with it. The light smell of earth and herbs filled her nose. But much too soon, the dark swirls of Life dissipated into the air around them and the world became dull again. It had been a small glimpse into the enchantress. The heavens themselves had sprung from her pale skin-- and left Spider Lily an astrologist craving another glimpse into the night. She stepped towards the girl with a look she knew would convey distress and guilt. “Oh my gosh I’m so sorry, I think I caught you on a sharp end of my bracelet-- I really need to get that fixed-- please, can I help you? I have bandages.” She studied the girl carefully, taking in every detail of her soft young face. Her expression was clearly distressed, but elsewhere. Far, far away. The pain had triggered something… but what? How? She must learn everything about the pale, powerful daisy whose voice caused such despair within her; whose Life Force sang of light and dark as one. Spider Lily reached a hand towards hers, expecting the girl to jump back again, but she seemed too enveloped in her mysterious daze to even notice. Chills ran up Spider Lily’s arm as their hands met. Hers were so soft, so small and thin. Spider Lily closed her eyes for a moment, taking in every detail of the girl’s fingers. To hold something so precious… I’m certainly lucky today.

As she delicately wrapped the gash she herself had opened, Spider Lily leaned in close to it, catching one last long breath of her enchantress’s Life. What a shame to cover it up so quickly. But she knew the rules. An open wound wasn’t beautiful. An open wound was ugly. Dangerous. Unclean. How blind the world around her was.

She smelled the breath behind her before they spoke. Clean and subtle, a wet dew settling on a summer evening perhaps? But there was a soft hint of lavender, too. It was more complicated than what Spider Lily was used to. She turned her eyes towards them, and was met with a specimen almost more mysterious than the enchantress. As ae spoke, providing an excited demeanor and pronouns which sang like a bell, Spider Lily took the chance to silently study the new arrival. Ae looked human, and yet… black and white eyes, ghostlike skin, and obvious veins with lilac hue… like a strange painting. Had she not already found a subject for her fascination, she would have loved to see if this one bled as lilac as aer veins.

The first words out of the girl’s mouth were “I’m sorry.” Sorry? She had sung with all of her heart. She’d pulled at heartstrings and shown Spider Lily the magnificence of a Life touched by the heavens. “Please, don’t apologize,” the Lily responded. “I thought it was beautiful.”

Nothing. The girl said nothing. Yet as their companion speaks again, the girl’s voice finds itself once more and provides more apologies, more explanations, as if this random person in a bar was someone worth confiding all her secrets to. As if Spider Lily was not.

I’m tending to her wounds, and she hasn’t even acknowledged my existence. Yet she’ll respond right away to this purple-blooded freak. Spider Lily felt her stomach begin to churn, the web of emotions twisting and tangling into painful knots. No. Not here. Not now. Spider Lily closed her eyes and strained to take a breath as if her lungs were weighed down with water. As she exhaled, she imagined the movement propelling her mind backwards, further and further away from the body that was spiraling into anger. It needed to stop that. It needed to control how it reacted to things. And so it did.

The lavender-blooded said ae’d been watching the Championships. Ae said ae’d had been disappointed by the bloodbath. Ironic- the bloodbath was exactly what had brought Spider Lily here. And.. the girl said she’d be going, as well.

“Ha! That makes things just perfect." She would speak just fine. She would not let her body’s emotions ruin her life. "If the bloodbath last year was not to your liking, change it. I'll make sure my bloodbath is beautiful." There was no need to fake sincerity for that one. Spider Lily’s bloodbath would be most beautiful. Eight paragons, all in an arena together, all prepared to fight and die. Their Life Force would spill onto the arena floor and Spider Lily would experience bliss.

Finally the girl looked down to the Lily and spoke. “Please. Please, I don’t know who you are, but walk with me to the arena. I can’t do it alone.” She seemed so desperate. What could cause such a scared girl to enter a death ring? “Please walk with me, at least to the gate. I know civilians can’t go inside, but I...I can’t go alone.”

Civilians. Apparently Spider Lily was a civilian now. But the chance to walk with her...
"I'd love to. I was planning to enter, myself. I know there can only be one champion, but... maybe we can work together." Spider Lily tilted her head a bit sheepishly, using some of her leftover fear to convey what she hoped seemed like a bit of a confession. "It'd be nice to have a familiar face in there."

Though the girl’s eyes were on Spider Lily, everything inside them screamed of a distant loss. A glaze that prevented her mind from truly focusing. She does not see me. Maybe I was wrong to believe this singer would satisfy me. Her voice yielded no reminder of its potent song as she begged, “Tell me your name. Tell me your name and I give you my word, we will fight together.”

Her name. She’d picked it herself. She always enjoyed the rhythm of it on her tongue. For someone she was trying to befriend, a nickname of “Lily” would probably feel less foreboding. “My name is Spider Lily...I think just Lily would be better, though. If we end up in the same spot, I’ll stand by you as an ally, and a friend.” Ha. Allies in a championship with a sole victor. Curiosity still tickled at her mind, but the more she interacted with this girl, the less Spider Lily believed she’d actually get anything out of it. How weak and naive would you have to be to think you’re able to just walk into the Elemental Championships with an ally?

Whatever that threshold was, this girl-- Musca, as Spider Lily was finally able to pry out-- had surpassed it. As they began to walk, Spider Lily contemplated how an alliance in the arena would even work. Perhaps it could be fun… it would certainly add to the excitement. Two young women working together despite all odds. Life Force spills around them, but theirs are intertwined, joined by the intimacy only the prospect of death can bring. But would Musca even be a woman worth allying with?

And just like that she was gone.

With a nod, the enchantress who had conjured intense pain and happiness inside Spider Lily melted into the crowd. They hadn’t even gotten to the arena complex, and this tiny, fragile girl decided she didn’t even want Spider Lily to finish the task she’d asked of her. The Spider stomped her feet on the ground, scaring a few people passing by her. I put in so much effort to care for you, to learn about you, and all I get is a nod? If we do end up together in the arena your stupid starry Life Force will be all over my-- Wait. She wouldn’t shut down that anger this time: she could use that. So what if Musca was weak and distracted? The girl herself didn’t have to be worth anything. Her Life Force was what really mattered. And if Musca ended up in Spider Lily’s arena… will you lead me to her? Or find me a better battleground to die on?




The lava that erupted in front of Spider Lily brought the smell of sulfur rising to her crinkled nose. Heat singed her face-- just like the first time I…

Obsidian fell from the ceiling to shatter their battlefield, lava reforming it soon after. Behind her, the pathway crumbled. A voice bellows their arena’s name. It was all fluff for Spider Lily-- her eyes were elsewhere. She felt her heart racing knowing what was to come. Her final bloodbath. And in it stood Musca.

So our fates are meant to intertwine, after all. What glorious death will await us here?
Post #: 7
7/16/2020 23:20:24   
draketh99
Purple Armadillo


My darling baby sister,


It’s my wish that, despite the circumstances between us, my words find you well. I know in my head that we haven’t been apart for all that long, but I also know in my heart that it’s been so much longer than I know.

There is so much that I want to tell you. So much I’d like to ask you. Knowing you, though, you are as busy and important as you’ve always liked to be. So, I promise to keep this as brief as I can, for your sake. I can’t confine these things to myself anymore. It’s been so lonely here, ever since you left.

The first thing I’d have you know is that I gave mother and father a proper burial. My heart burns knowing that you hadn’t done that. Now, more than ever, sister, I want to think the best of you. Please, please don’t make that more difficult than it already is.

Secondly, of the prefectures that remain, many will be seeking governance from the east. There existed a time when I thought that, in your absence, I could provide the leadership they so require. However, my shattered devastation in finding out that you wouldn’t... couldn’t stay, has been enough proof to me that I could never fill your shoes. What you found to lack in compassion, dearest one, I have found to lack in strength. I thoroughly believe my weakness would be an insult to you, and a detriment to everyone that we serve.

It’s for these reasons that I intend to leave this temple and the prefectures behind. I’m now ashamed that I had scoffed at father when he told me to truly listen to the chimes. Not to listen to their tones, but to their words. I can hear them now, sister. I had wanted to tell you so much of what they have to say. But the day I had finally understood father’s wisdoms was the very same day you made it clear that you’d abandon us. That two such things happened on the same day causes me to lament to my fates every single morning and night. Do you know how much this hurts, sister? Can you grasp the broken glass of the truth of what you caused?

I’m sorry, darling. I shouldn’t be so angry with you. I know the time you had spent as the high priestess was trying upon you. It was trying upon me, serving behind you. Mother tried to warn us how difficult things would be, I believe. She knew of the lies, the politics, the betrayals that would have to be endured. To this day I’d still like to know if your actions are because you didn’t understand, or if mother taught you to understand far too well.

I don’t quite know where I may go. I suppose that I’ll trust our father, listen to the guardians that sang to us in the temple, and follow the path which the chimes lay out before me. I have to find my own strength now, as I no longer have yours to depend on, and I know there’s none here for me. It’s inevitable that you would disapprove of my abandoning this place. As far back as our history can speak to, this will be the first time our family has left the temple empty. However, the chimes tell me that I cannot stay, and it’s not within me to forsake the last gift our father had left for me.

Please, hold fast to your strength, and find success wherever your journey’s end takes you. Please know that I break when I’m reminded of how much I miss you. Please know that, no matter what opposition had grown between you while you served here, mother and father loved you. Please know that I love you, baby sister.

- Taria





The cool water enveloped her feet and ignited a small shiver all the way through Taria’s spine. That cold embrace washed away the aches and pains of a near forty days travel in the scorching sun. The chilling tendrils of the water, contrasted against the warm sunlight which caressed her face in its hands, caused a small string in the back of her head to tug at her, luring her to sleep. Knowing there was still a journey ahead, she shook off each tug, instead choosing to be as cognizant as possible of this peaceful moment.

Vibrant sparks of excitement danced around inside her mind, intertwining their steps with that of nerves and excitement which came with such novelty. Though the journey had caused her feet to ache and her shoulders to burn, with the winds having laid out a path for her each and every day, it had been a simple endeavor. It was the uncertainty and the anticipation of the destination which now left her stomach tightened into a knot. The city was now just hours of travel away and full of strange new things.

Abruptly after that thought, Taria turned about, casually calling out. “So, what brings you to Bren in the first place?”

“You know what they say” began the calming voice of her recent travelling companion. “If you haven’t been to Bren, haven’t really been anywhere!”

Taria couldn’t help but grin a little at the singsong tone of Mia’s response or the knowing chuckle that followed.

“And me and Thu have been travelling for our whole lives, it would really be a shame if, at the end of the day, we haven’t been anywhere at all.” The weathered timbre of the woman’s voice granted Taria as much comfort as the playful mystery she added to their conversations.

In the single day they had been traveling together, Taria had grown grateful of the levity and conversation Mia provided. The decisive weight of her steps, and the wisdom threaded through her words caused Taria to feel small as a child, listening to her father’s tales and fables. Mia’s heartbeat, a calm and steady tempo, reminded Taria of a woman who had seen everything, and who refused to be surprised by anything. That such a tempo had then become interrupted, caused a buzzing of panic in the back of Taria’s skull.

“What about you? Don’t tell me you’re here to join the championship, dear,” Mia’s voice arrived, now tinged with concern.

Taria forced a smirk, Mia’s tone caused a frigid grasp to take hold inside her chest. She left her face skyward, wishing the sun to melt away the anxiety which had been awoken by such concern and heal the wounded pride that came with such condescension. What other reasons could I possibly have to go to Bren? She wondered.

“I intend to go places, too,” Taria began. “And besides, it’s not as if I’m going there to watch.” A small hint of regret drifted off of Taria’s breath as she realized that she hadn’t intended to respond with the taste of venom, as playful as it may also be. She slowly exhaled, leaning back and gathering a few more ounces of self control. Taria continued the conversation, hoping Mia wouldn’t notice. “What do you think it will be like? This isn’t the kind of thing I’ve done before.”

“Well, to be fair? Blood, pain, and death. Tales of champions reaching their wish are a lot different from up close.” Mia had finally responded, her voice trailing off away from Taria. “Though, If you’re here, you know all the risks, don’t you? Who am I to patronize. I hope it’s at least fun.” Her voice arrived with a more cheerful tempo this time. A small respite in the accidental, if not inevitable, tension.

Taria allowed her voice to lessen, to humble and soften itself. She knew it wasn’t her place to grow angry at someone so kind to her, even if that concern reminded Taria of a peculiar type of pity. “You’re free to answer as you wish.” Taria started, in her softened tone. “I was the one who asked you, after all. Though yes, I know the risks. I’ve had my own few exposures to death and… it’s far too late for me to turn back now.” Memories of home caused Taria’s voice to tremble.

Death was a part of life, yes, but it had never once in her mind been considered entertaining. “I just want to understand, I suppose. War for sport is such a foreign idea to me. Especially when each death is a wish unfulfilled.”

And what such a wish would one be willing to die chasing?

The thought seared curiosity into her mind like a gleaming brand. She turned to Mia, listening to her heartbeat and regretting she couldn’t search her eyes. “Is it alright if I ask what your wish would be?”

For a moment, tension amongst wind, warning Taria that she may have somehow overstepped an invisible boundary. The older woman now grew quiet, yet the tempo of her breath and labored rhythm of her heart sang a song of hesitation, and perhaps dishonesty.

After what felt like an eternity, the woman’s voice finally reached Taria. “It is, of course it is. I wish…” The thrumming of her heat drove that song of hesitation to a crescendo. “Well, I’ve been here for a long time, dear. I wish to show my appreciation of Lady Celeritas, and all that she’s done for me in my years. Do not worry about me, I’ve lived a good life, though…”

Such a response struck Taria, leaving her dazed for a moment, unsure of how to respond. The exciting staccato of curiosity about the woman’s craft mixed so poorly with the dishonesty that had woven its way so subtly into the tapestry of her words. Despite this, Taria knew she couldn’t grow angry at her. It was Mia’s right to keep whatever secrets she wished from someone she’d only just met.

“You have all of your years ahead of you,” The older woman began again, the concern weaving back into the tempo of her breath and the fabric of her words. “What wish brings you to risk them all?”

With that, a flash of memory, like white hot coal, burrowed its way into Taria’s heart. It seared at her, simultaneously coaxing her to cough and to cry out. One by one, they flashed their way through her mind. Her father’s voice, comforting as a warm blanket on a winter evening. The ironclad shield of her mother’s cunning, watching over her in any situation she found herself in. Finally, she found her sister. The sheer luminance of her dear sister lanced into Taria’s heart and refused to be dislodged. She bit down onto her lip, refusing to cry out. A small trickle of crimson on her chin serving as the reward for her effort.

“There are people that I haven’t seen in a long time.” She finally relented, gathering strength and attempting to wring the quivering from her voice. “I really miss them, and I was hoping- I was hoping that maybe if I won, that I could see them again.” Those final words, stubborn and almost refusing to be pulled from her breath, had stripped Taria of the last of her strength.

The low, humming tempo of whatever floating companion had arrived alongside Mia, approached near behind Taria. While she was unsure if it was truly an attempt at comfort, she appreciated the proximity nonetheless. Taria left her gaze once more skyward, wishing herself to remain unbroken for only a few more days.




Downwards. Step. Downwards. Step.

The chimes of her chainmail rebounded down the empty hallway. The rough wall, which braced
careful steps, grew uncomfortably warm against her fingertips. Gradually, everything around her turned stiflingly warm. A sliver of frustration wedged into her pride as the name of the arena, Forge, now made complete sense. What had begun as a very tolerable and temperate passageway had transitioned into something that wove discomfort among her senses. The smell of sulfur left her gut tight and threatening to wretch. The sheer heat slithered its way under her armor like a nest of serpents. Worst of all, the air grew stale and unmoving, it lacked the playful dance she’d come to love.

“Foolish of me” She muttered. “To think the journey to Bren would be the most unbearable part.” A dizziness rose its way up from her stomach, burning into her throat like a ball of hot iron. A drop of blood trickled from a bit lip as she realized that, in her discomfort, she’d lost track of her positioning, and how far she’d come down the path. Taria stopped, stood straight and alert, and clicked her tongue. Echoes from that click danced all around her, rebounding off the walls, and playfully finding their own way through the tunnel. Of the echoes that traveled behind her, many returned quickly. Of the echoes traveling ahead ahead, far less so. She continued onwards, following the echoes which had lost their way, the ones that failed to return. “I must be nearing the end then.” She wondered. “At least, I hope I am. Leave it to mages to play with false hope.”

Forwards. Step. Onwards. Step.

A wave of heat coiled around her chest. Pressure constricted and squeezed the breath out from her lungs. Her mouth became parched in an instant. A heated wave of air held its hand to her face. The flush rolled its way across her skin as she took her own breath back. Holding, she took a moment to resist choking on the ash and steaming air, before she let out a sigh. Exhaling, she let herself relax and allowed the tension to melt away from her shoulders. The heat was oppressive, yet it brought forth memories of the sun; of how the warmth would blanket her as she left her gaze skyward.

“Is this what orange used to feel like?”

Another click of the tongue. This time, the echoes slowed their dance. Something soft, fluid, and apparently very hot intercepted her path ahead. Soft and fluid was a strange combination. To add such heat was stranger still. She pondered the possibility of boiling oil. It would be a cruel joke if it were true. Especially cruel to her. It wasn’t the smell of oil, though. It smelled of stone, sulfur, and fire. Boiling stone oil it was, then. It would likely be no less dangerous than the name suggested.

Before she could attempt to consider how to continue, her heart seized as she felt the ground beneath her feet become angry, nearly shaking her to her knees. She quickly braced a hand against the wall, dropping to a low stance. Nothing touched her. Then a rumble once again. The stone laughing at her from below. The laughing slowed to a halt, as did the small, trickling tones of the stone oil before her. With another click, all of the echoes ahead lost their way. The curtain had been pulled back and the way forward cleared. Taria took another slow beath, fighting the ash scraping her lungs. Steeling herself, she let her hand leave the safety of the wall and began forward. The path ahead hollowed underneath as the walls parted behind her. A bridge likely, into an open room.

Taria dropped a hand under her cloak and retrieved her mask. She felt the warm porcelain against her skin as she fastened it in place. “Well then,” She began coaching herself. “I suppose it’s time to get to work.”

It had been mere footsteps before a loud CRACK resounded through the open space ahead, grabbing Taria’s attention. The constantly self-surmounting whistle of an object plummeting followed the loud crack, and preceded another. Immediately, the tempo of the floor changed. A song, once boasting of a concentric wholeness, now chimed of pain and brokenness. The chimes themselves sang of danger. Echoes of her own footsteps fled out beyond the stone beneath her feet. Upon their return, the muffled sensation of the same boiling stone oil arrived with them.

Immediately, Taria’s footsteps grew light and delicate. The threat of hollow footing beneath would not be far from a death sentence in combat. To potentially fall into the boiling stone oil beneath, though, seemed a much more painful death.

Taria quickly muffled the song of everything on her person, the dance of her echoes falling lifeless. Each step, each movement, each breath now made no sound. Feeling more secure in her own steps, Taria willed her touch to sing a silent song to the stone below. With a breath of patience, the chimes answered her call. They sang to her of seven entrances identical to her own, and only of five sets of footsteps to accompany them.

Before Taria could even begin to question the two empty passageways, the stone behind her cried out, the bridge crumbling away. A low voice, rising from what felt like the depths themselves, sang to her a song of death, pain, and blood for sport. This shock of realization struck Taria as if it were lightning. She had been left realizing there would likely be only one way out of this arena, were she not willing to risk a leap over boiling oil.

Allowing her own fear to take grip of her, she dropped into a low stance as she felt her senses heighten. Conversations were beginning to be had. A cacophony of nervous, confident, and even unnatural footsteps danced along the stone floor. Of all the footsteps, the closest had been to her right.

Taria tightened each muscle down to a coiled spring. She inhaled slowly once more, listening closely parallel to her exhale, just as her father had taught her. She felt the guardians from home, riding upon the wind, coil and wrap around her, all whispering the same song.

“Fly!”

Keeping her stance low, Taria uncoiled like a tensioned spring now set free. She charged the presence to her right in a full, dead silent, sprint. Unsheathing both her blades and allowing them to sing only after she could have crossed half the distance between them.

Please, please allow me to end this quickly.
DF  Post #: 8
7/17/2020 7:15:18   
Fionnes
Member

The Sandcat was still rather confused by her surroundings. Still getting accustomed to the warmth, she shrugged and rolled her shoulders gently, feeling the heat slowly seep through the cracks of sand and flow throughout her body. Circa could feel the warmth spread across her core, as it reminded her of home, both of its beauty and its harshness. It reminded her of the training she used to have with her fellow cohort, or Purra, in her village.

I’ll just treat the heat like what it was like back home, then that should make it easier to adapt to my surroundings, she thought. After all, if she was going to feel out of her element, she would definitely lose not only her confidence, but her life as well. She was in a battle arena that was about to be tainted with violence and blood. The last thing she needed was something to falter her.

Then suddenly, out of nowhere…

“Fly!” she heard someone scream, rather abruptly and out of the blue. Cracking the silence, her cry had signified the very start of combat in this inferno of an arena.

Circa’s cat ears flicked up and twitched a little, and noticed the sudden advancement. It was the echo of chainmail, the crushing of earth and stone beneath that shadow’s feet; that drew her attention the most. This was a determined strike. This was what combat was all about.

To which Circa sighed a little. “We don’t even know each other and now we’re already killing each other,” she mumbled to herself. She took a quick stretch with both of her arms, letting out a brief meow, before unsheathing the oversized carbon-steel katana blade from her back. Dear Cupris, I guess I have no choice but to really use you this time, she thought, firmly gripping the weathered but sturdy handle. She held the katana downwards with both her hands, and then gently tapped the tip of the blade twice in succession onto the hard stone surface; the earth echoed back, as if understanding Circa’s next move; Circa nodded back towards the ground in approval.

“Let’s go, Cupris. I don’t know how this will turn out, but let’s see what we can do.” The red-hot glow from the flowing lava reflected fiercely along the smooth polished edges of the katana, and glistened as if it was pulsing with life and energy. The copper engravings down the side of the blade glowed warmly, as the blade attuned itself with its wielder. It seemed as if Cupris was eager to demonstrate what it could accomplish at the hands of a skilled, if not naïve Sandcat Elemental.

Circa then made a slow approach towards the figure who had initiated the combat. The other figure, of which the lady from the distant right had begun her strike towards, seemed unfazed by the advancement. The Sandcat squinted a little in an attempt to notice who was who, but with the billowing smoke and intense heat, it was difficult to concentrate and focus on the blurred, distant figures. Circa would have to walk closer, or possibly engage the two of them, to learn more about what was going on. She purred in anticipation.
DF  Post #: 9
7/18/2020 2:00:09   
Anastira
Member

Carina counts not in seconds, but in the rhythm of her heart.

Here, now, she lets her music control her, a soaring battlecry, the strings of her heart played like the strings of a viol. She calls herself forward on the tide of her music, feels her heartbeat surge with its rhythm.

Eight. Eight for the black stone bridges crumbling into the molten outer ring of magma.

She summons herself, shifts who she is: this small, frail girl in plain clothes transforming, her hair suddenly richer and thicker and gleaming a deep, dark brown, her pale gray eyes flashing like cut-glass fragments of glittering starlight; at once she is tall and willowy, regal - drawn up to her full height.

Seven for the entrants around her, their figures outlined against the arena walls, thirsting for blood, thirsting to kill.

She opens her mouth, feels the music begin to rise from within like water crashing towards a ragged cliff, like high tide polishing itself against a rocky shore.

Six for the daggers sheathed at her belt and clutched in her hands.

These shards of blades flickering in the lava-light, these deadly promises waiting for a kill.

Five for five promises broken, the things she regrets.

The breath of life in her lungs, the darkness stealing inside her soul; Cailean, Jendayi, an old man in a weather-worn shop with stained glass doors. Her mother. This arena.

Four for the days it took to reach Bren.

Three for the stars on Orion’s belt, following her wherever she goes, always watching.

Two for those she must not trust: the white-skinned one, and Spider Lily.

One for her target.

Movement in the corner of her eye, a flash: instinctively Carina reacts, spinning, dropping to the ground and rolling all at once; the solidity of the floor hard against her body, the heat washing over her like the tide of her music finally breaking against the shore. Her song breaks out of her suddenly, all at once, spills from her lips and her throat and her lungs: the battlecry of her music set free, rising so loud she can hardly even hear her heart. This voice is not like the one she sang inside the tavern.

She turns to the flicker of motion to her left, rises up with Pegasus held high, the lava-light turning the dagger’s iridescence a candle-flame mosaic of red and orange and black. Pulls Sagitta back with the other arm, ready to throw, shimmering dark between her fingers.

And she targets the figure coming towards her with her music, the battlesong freeing itself of its chains and billowing out into the air around her, its strength like a tidal wave. The song of the universe, coaxing the rhythm of the murmuring lava, echoing the crash of the stalactite, the sound of her heart within her chest. She imagines Cailean next to her, staring at her, this girl he thought he knew; imagines Jendayi, the magma reflected molten in her eyes.

What would they think? She can’t remember the last time she has done this purposefully, the last time she needed to defend herself like this. She never needed this kind of power, not when she was pickpocketing on the streets.

Musca.

Musca, remember the light -

She pushes against the voice, crushes it like crushing a fly in the palm of her hand, pierces it through as though it’s been shattered by Sagitta’s blade. Not now, she tells herself. Now she needs the darkness, the riptide, the power.

She lets Sagitta sail free of her fingers, cranks her wrist sharply as she lets go, watches the angry arrowhead of the blade as it twirls and spins through the air. The figure coming toward her, white-masked and foxlike, seems not to notice, or maybe not to care. The white fox, Carina thinks, diving to the side and rolling again, Pegasus still in her hand. She reaches with her empty hand for Columba, stops herself: no. She does not need to be merciful, not yet.

Instead, staring at that strange fox mask, the white edges gleaming in the dim, she reaches for her own fox: feels Vulpecula’s long hilt warm against her palm, the claw of its blade escaping from beneath her fingers. Pegasus still in her active mind, Sagitta piercing itself through the center of one glittering chainmail ring. Is there blood? She does not know; the figure moves too fast to tell.

There is a sound suddenly: the white fox’s blades singing against each other like a finger run against the rim of a glass. A high, keening wail that cuts against Carina’s song angrily, sharp and sudden, and Carina’s breath catches in her throat, for a moment her music is uncertain and wavering: caught off guard. Another music; she did not expect to hear music that was not her own, not in this deep desolate place full of ash and flame and blood and death. She dances to one side with Pegasus in her hand, trying to anticipate the white fox’s advance, but the mask comes so quickly now, so close, the distance between them disappearing so quickly she’s afraid to blink -

She musters her music again, as loud as she can, wraps it around the singing wail of the blades. Don’t fight it, she tells herself, even though the keen of it makes her grit her teeth, echoes and vibrates in her bones, almost takes her completely off balance. Her head hurts. Her pulse pounds, throbbing, fighting against the sound of the white fox’s blades.

For an instant, she shifts her mind to Vulpecula - the tiniest moment, just enough to clear her head, so quickly that she hardly notices the flicker of her focus from Vulpecula to Pegasus and back again. In that instant, that fraction of a heartbeat, she loses that feeling of flying, the lightness of her feet like a ballerina poised on her toes, the agility; but in that instant the headache cuts out, the vibrations seem almost a part of her, she lets the sound of it flow into her and into her music.

Her music shifts, too, weaving itself around the strange keening: becomes higher and shriller and angrier, a keening to match the singing of the white fox’s blades. Sagitta flashes back to her belt, on her sheath, as the white fox is almost upon her, but she barely notices; her mind is on Pegasus, fixed on the blade, on the lightness it gives her.

The veil of projection she casts over herself becomes slimmer and more gangly to match the music, a fierce siren with her hair rippling out from her head in angry dark waves, her body angular and almost stylized, her eyes a hard slate-gray like shards of broken glass reflecting the glow of the magma.

There is an abrupt fire, but Carina does not have time to know what it is or where it comes from - and then the white fox is upon her.
AQW  Post #: 10
7/19/2020 21:13:20   
Necro-Knight
Member

So much excitement would’ve most likely overwhelmed a lesser mind, but R’thazz’s wide eyes swept around the smoke-riddled arena, taking in as much of the growing conflict as he could and running his options over like a complex arcane equation. The flood of intentions and thoughts from the fellow Deep Dweller added only a handful of variables to the equation, the Frozen One already used to a cacophony of images and visions from his master on a regular basis. Still, he decided not responding would've been considered a rejection and directed his wide eyes back to the shark-like being. R'thazz spoke again through both voice and mind, through his words were lost to anyone but the shark being as the arena was filled with the echoes of shattering stone, enchanted song and battle cries. Chaos was its own sweet melody to the Frozen One and he found no fragment of his focus disrupted by the assault of sound.

“Mgepathg, ephainafl ilyaa fahf. Mgephai, ah nafl l' nog ya gifh guthagn. C' ephaiunite ahhai f' least h' ilyaa.”
“Agreed, the land-walkers exist only to feed those who dwell in the dark. Still, do not come to my side immediately. We will unite when they least expect it.”

His own intentions shared, R’thazz focused his brilliantly shattered mind back to the immediate task of combat growing with very crackle and hiss of the arena around him. The strange land-walkers to his left were already seemingly move in on each other with an incredible eagerness to draw blood. If he’d been given a more patient setting, R’thazz would’ve almost considered taking the chance to feed that bloodlust until it overflowed into full-fledged barbaric insanity from which these poor land-walkers would never rise from, but he doubted he would be given the freedom for such thorough manipulation.

Swinging his bulbous gaze around to his right, the feline-esque creature and the humanoid figure across from him had yet to truly make a move from their starting entrances and the sheer lack of enthusiasm made the tendrils on his face twitch. Violence, anger and destruction was the anvil upon which mortals found themselves. If these land-walkers were unable to make the first swing towards that attempted perfection, he would have to do it himself.

Choosing the closest enemy to his right, R’thazz broke into a determined trod towards the feline woman as he gathered his will, the feeling like liquid methane had been poured through his veins as his cryomantic power responded in kind. The rotten frost that ran between the tendrils of his right limb collected as he moved towards the woman's left flank, the shards rapidly coalescing into a singular, sharp projectile of ice that pulsed with a sickeningly green light. Once the Frozen One had reached what he calculated was a distance of fifteen feet, he twisted at the waist, extended his right limb and released the shard from his grip with the sound of shattering ice and a hiss of polar wind.

A less intelligent creature would’ve most likely tried to simply impale the cat creature with the spell, but R’thazz had calculated against the odds of that before he even began mustering his power. Instead, the Frozen One’s distorted limb was directed a few degrees towards the arena floor as he unleashed his spell, sending the vessel of frozen madness cutting through the smoke until it ultimately collided with the arena floor in an explosion of icy shrapnel and foul-smelling slime towards the woman’s legs and feet.

Even as the shard shattered and released its maddening contents, R'thazz recoiled, his arm returning to his side as he brought his wide wings around his body. He had not yet focused any will in to them for a shield of any kind, but their slick membrane alone made his form more imposing should he consider retaliating.

'Come, feline child... allow me to show you why your kind fears the truth of the sea...'
DF MQ AQW  Post #: 11
7/20/2020 0:35:48   
roseleaf320
Creative!


The timid, anxious Musca that had asked a stranger to walk her to the arena seemed like she would’ve turned and run when the path behind her began to collapse. But the girl standing on the obsidian floor now was not the same Musca Spider Lily had met. No doubt it was Musca herself, of course-- Spider Lily had known that from the very start. But this girl was confident. Strong. Beautiful. Everything in her stance, the flow of her hair as it followed her movements, the way her hands instinctively settled by her waist, conveyed that. This was a Musca that was ready to fight, and die, for a purpose. This is a Musca I could love. This is a Musca I would be content dying to.

But the enchantress’ blood would be the first spilt anyways, it seemed: while Spider Lily had been left unnoticed, a small assassin wearing a fox-like mask had lowered two blades to the ground and charged straight for the little siren. Spider Lily could walk away right now and leave Musca to the mercy of her opponent-- whose blades were creating quite a piercing ring as they dragged across the black stone-- but for the Spider’s new friend to die at the very start would be utterly boring. So they’d be allied after all, then. For now at least. Spider Lily took a step forward, and her eyes caught movement to her right. She barely needed a glance to put a name to the gigantic shape-- shark. A shark. I guess that elf was onto something… She gave the aquatic predator a wide berth as she continued to move towards the center of the arena. Hopefully, she could position herself to react to Musca’s fight while keeping an eye out for the shark’s first kill. Where sharks go, death is soon to follow. I’ll be there when it does. She’d be there for Musca, too-- but the Fox had a head start. Her enchantress would likely take a hit before Spider Lily could get to her. With powerful songs and the ability to change her very appearance, Spider Lily was desperately hoping she had underestimated the frail girl she’d first met at the bar.

As if hearing her silent plea, a dagger flew from Musca’s fingers with a simple flick, embedding itself through a ring in the Fox’s chainmail with ease. A perfect shot-- and the Spider’s pale enchantress had drawn the first blood. The first Life.

From the dagger erupted a thick, pale fog. Tiny droplets reflected the bright orange light of the arena, refracting and adding countless other hints of colors into the mix. Blue, purple, red, green. Glistening in the light of day for the very first time.

Dew caught and echoed the morning sun’s infinite colors as the old woman strolled through the grass. Her steps kicked up droplets; her fall kicked up swarms. Lily called to her, already knowing she would not get a response. Her tears caught the morning sunlight as the dewdrops had. Spider Lily was always crying.

To die an old woman was to die insignificant. I vow this will not happen to you, my little Fox.
This time, the sudden flash in the Spider’s eyes was not tears, but a reflection of the Fox’s shimmering cloud. She alone could see their Life Force. She alone could see the reflection of the flames it could become. A simple flick of the wrist, and the dew erupted: shimmering, subtle Life Force becoming a bright and violent inferno by Spider Lily’s hand. It licked upwards from the wound in the Fox's stomach, slipping through the metal rings that served as its makeshift prison. The Fox’s momentum carried them headfirst into the newborn blaze. The flames dispersed around them, quickly flickering into nothingness-- As if their Life Force had never been-- except for the single, whispering flame that licked at the Fox’s dark cloak. That is my gift. By my hands, you see the energy that flows within you. Carry it with you, now.

Isn’t it beautiful?

Post #: 12
7/20/2020 6:16:23   
Fionnes
Member

As the surroundings seemingly cleared and Circa’s vision fully adjusted, she started to take in her environment. Noises that seemed incoherent and garbled started to become sharp and distinct, as her ears waggled and adjusted to the varying echoes and rebounds of sound across the barren stone arena. The sudden sonorous voice of music piercing the arena and giving it newfound life that was absent only moments ago. The two combatants that Circa had been walking towards had started their exchange, blade against blade as they fought with all their might.

It really was a situation where Circa had no reason to enter, for the two combatants appeared very powerful, and their movements unpredictable. Although her confidence faltered a little, Circa remained steadfast. “I’ll have to keep an eye on them, and try to monitor their tactics,” mumbling to herself, before briefly being interrupted by a rush of cold air to her left…

Circa instinctively leaned down low, then darted forwards with her cat-like reflexes. The cold does not belong here, she immediately thought, such an unnatural, rotten scent. Her eyes peered quickly to the left to see what had launched the offensive, but to be honest, Circa couldn’t really determine what it was. But one thing for certain, was that it was not friendly. And it was powerful.

Spooling up her defences, the Sandcat formed a small, knee-high wall of sand from her body, as she tucked herself into a ball to roll a metre or so ahead of herself. She heard the snapping of ice and the crunching of frost as the enemy’s projectiles came crashing into her barricade of silica. The pungent smell came back even stronger, and Circa could barely contain her repulsion for it. “Ugh, how disgusting!” she shouted loudly, and quite possibly defiantly at the creature responsible. The wings, the pose it stood in, the appearance it had: it all spoke of something evil.

As she recovered from her defensive manoeuvre, the Sandcat noticed a figure to her right, just slightly behind her. A slumped-over outline of a human, immobile but perhaps still alive. It must be another competitor, but perhaps they could not cope with the heat and had fainted from the extreme temperatures. Or it could be another trap? Circa could not be certain which was the case, but she couldn’t just let someone die without having a proper fight. Keeping her eyes on her newfound enemy, she took her steps back carefully, maintaining her distance with the strange creature, before standing right in front of the collapsed human. The Sandcat was now close enough to identify them: a medium-height male human with quite an attractive outfit, steam gently billowing off his body. He must be water-based, she thought; no wonder he wasn’t doing too well in this arena.

Circa then kept her position, katana drawn out and pointed at the creature that attacked her. Her determination now was very clear: she had chosen to protect this hapless contestant. The Sandcat felt it was the right thing for her to do.

“Who are you? Tell me who you are!” she exclaimed. If she was going to buy any time to learn what the enemy was capable of, it would be now.
DF  Post #: 13
7/20/2020 9:31:30   
ChaosRipjaw
How We Roll Winner
Jun15


Sinak heard and understood the amalgamation’s words, but he didn’t respond; he didn’t need to. By this point, both knew they could hear and understand the other. And judging from the response of each, both had basically agreed to fight together, (at least for now).

Sinak turned his gaze on his surroundings. Walls of cooled firestone, falling stalactites which bored holes into the ground, from which blazing hot magma spurted and flowed before cooling and sealing them. Overall, a rather unfavorable environment to be fighting dirtwalkers in, but nothing he couldn’t handle.

That was odd, he could have sworn the lava wall had flowed to block his entry, and yet there was nothing sealing the doorway. The only obstruction between him and his point of entry was a river of lava that ringed the entire arena.

(He pushed the thought out of his mind, though it made him slightly uneasy.)

In any case, visual observation, while useful, was utilized mainly for environmental analysis. A Shha’rarken warrior focused first and foremost on his opponents.

Dirtwalkers tended to forget that beyond his sight, hearing, and smell, he possessed two more senses that made him one of the deadliest predators to hunt in the sea. The first, the electroreceptors could pick up the electrical signals given off by all living creatures. As such, it mattered to him not whether he could actually see his opponents, when they flared so brightly in his electric radar.

The second sense, even less obvious, was possessed by practically all children of Maeeluuk: the lateral line, a system of sensory organs that allowed him to detect minute changes in water pressure, direction, movement, and vibrations. Now one might wonder --- but he’s on land, how would it work now? Thankfully, the very same Yyranaiad mutations that granted him the ability to traverse Skyfather’s realm had also modified him so that all his abilities that were normally made for Maeeluuk’s embrace now functioned in the air.

These two senses together told him what his eyes confirmed: his opponents had all begun moving. Except one. Completely ignoring the rising cacophony of battle, Sinak fixated on a limp form quite a distance past the center of the arena. This dirtwalker’s electrical signal was the dimmest of the bunch, which signified that he or she had lost consciousness. How weak. To have the guts to enter the arena willingly, yet lack the stone needed to keep up even a modicum of defense---

Sinak bared his teeth. He struck the memory of the incident in Bren out of sight, forcing it down as deeply into the confines of his brain as possible. That would not happen again. Ironically, this one was not just much weaker, it was also much smaller than the plaawaal. How his ancestors would laugh at him, the sight of him fleeing from the strong one to fight the weak. (“Fighting” would be an egregious overstatement.) ((It was a shame he would never know what his ancestors were really like.)) But even though he was a warrior, he was first and foremost a predator.

Sinak unfurled his fins, which glinted sharp as scimitars despite their deceptively pliable appearance. Good, it appeared as though his newfound ally had gone after the female dirtwalker near his target.

He kicked his tail and sped directly for the fallen combatant.



One moon cycle before the Elemental Championships.

They sat across from one another at a table on a terrace overlooking the sea. The sun was setting but the candles offered ample light. The sea was calm.

“To your health,” said the woman in heavily accented Nordic, raising her cup of rice wine. Her eyes caught and reflected the candlelight so it seemed they were both glowing. Along with hair and skin that shimmered with a strange bluish violet color, she looked as ethereal as an undersea aurora.

“And to yours,” the man replied in slightly less accented Gaoli, tapping his cup against hers. His white hair seemed to shine like a beacon in the dark. With his pale skin, he looked like an incredibly lifelike marble statue. Also like a statue, he seemed almost perfect . . except when the light caught the shadows at the left side of his face, revealing the deep scars of claw marks, which marred his cheek and cut his left eye closed.

They both drank at once. The woman exhaled. “Delicious,” she commented. The man simply smiled.

“How is your lovely wife?” she asked.

“Valentina will be arriving at the border in a few days,” the man replied.

“Oh Vasily,” she said, laughing, revealing her slightly elongated canines. “Always so laconic!”

“Oh?” Vasily Jarishnikov, the Ender of Beasts smirked. “What about you Iseul, how is Yulan?”

A flush stole across Hae Iseul’s cheeks, a surprisingly human response when juxtaposed with the Purple Dress Dragonslayer’s otherwise alien appearance. Vasily just chuckled. “Ah, I won’t pry,” he said. “What did you want to talk with me about?”

“I heard about the Hasong fort.”

The mood seemed to darken almost instantly. The waves, once quiet, now roared against the rocks. The shadow of Vasily’s hair covering his scarred face deepened.

“The shark is on a rampage,” Vasily confirmed. “It has slipped through the shoreline defenses. Nearly every fort has been attacked at least once; the number of casualties are yet to be determined. If I hadn’t arrived at Hasong when I did---”

“Shha’rarken,” Iseul said quietly.

“I beg your pardon?” Vasily said with a start, taken off-guard.

“The creature is a Shha’rarken,” Iseul said. “Charybdis has observed it.”

“Shha’rarken,” Vasily murmured.

“The War of the Crimson Tides,” Iseul affirmed. “You were inland at the time.”

For a moment, Vasily was silent. “Good god,” he whispered. “Could it be . . . the baby shark?”
AQ DF MQ AQW Epic  Post #: 14
7/21/2020 22:40:34   
draketh99
Purple Armadillo


Taria continued her unbridled pursuit of her opponent, the veil of uncanny silence muffling her every footstep. And with each footstep, echoes scattered themselves throughout the cavernous expanse of the forge. Each returning echo brought with them a fracture of a story, weaving together into a mosaic of Taria’s surroundings, of her target.

This creature, around which the chimes now swirled, had dropped down the floor and rolled, repositioning to face Taria head on. Echoes whispered and danced to the rhythm of the creature’s movements, forming together a story of a creature whose grace and agility exceeded that which their stance and footsteps portrayed.

Taria felt the anxious thrum in the back of her skull, the sensation of foreboding. Each echo, and every chime spoke differently of this strange creature. Some sang of frailty, others of strength. Each note seemingly of its own composition.

“Just what are you, strange one?”

Taria lowered both her blades, letting the tips of each drag against the floor.

“Sing for me.”

The resulting sound, not the scraping of a blade against stone, but a high tone only the purest glass and crystal could produce. With each stride closer, the tone of her blades modulated, simultaneously echoing the previous tone layered together with the new. These tones wove together as if chimes on a windy day, each one refusing to end their song.

The surroundings of Taria’s target assembled into her mind, an explosion of space and color. The echoes around this creature forming melodies of warning, of daggers drawn and aim taken.

In an instant, however, Taria faltered as she felt her sight once again stripped away from her.

The creature had responded with a song of its own, with a melody of strength, confidence and power. The discordance of Taria’s own tones now snapped into tempo with that of the creature’s. Bile rose to the back of Taria’s throat as she now found herself as blind prey, within an expanse filled by creatures of the hunt.

”No....”

The warmth of the forge had drained from her body as familiarity gripped at the back of her neck. Only once had she felt such a song of strength before.

”No it can’t be you...”

Before Taria could slow her pace, white hot pain severed the rising panic in her mind. Something had struck her ribs and pierced her armor. The shock of such a pain reeled Taria’s focus back to her, anteceded by a cry of pain. She allowed her momentum to carry her along the remaining distance to her target, choosing to strike first and ponder later. Taria escalated the pitch of her blades gradually modulating her tones in an attempt to rip control-- and her sight-- back from this mysterious creature.

The sound of a candle now lit caught Taria’s attention. In an instant, the warm trickle along her ribs erupted into a searing heat, seemingly ignited by the wrath of the forge itself. Taria choked down the need to wretch, the stench of charred flesh filling her nostrils.

Taria’s pursuit still did not rest. It could not rest. There would be no time.

“I have to know”

With the distance between the two combattants now closed, Taria lunged forwards. Her left blade feinting a strike to the creature’s upper right, just above the shoulder.

“How are you here?!” She cried out, panic dripping from her lips. “You can’t be her!”

“Scream.”

The tone of Taria’s right sword instantly jumped from a modulating chime to the tonal scream of glass against glass. The crystal blade itself reverberating with the deafening tone, now baring its fangs with a sharpness unparalleled. She swung the blade up from her opponent’s lower left.

“Sister, we’ll watch the sunset together again, won’t we?”

Taria feinted back a half step, readying herself for a counter attack. While she had felt the familiar thrum of a heartbeat through her crystal fang, the wound wouldn’t be fatal. The blade had merely clipped flesh.

Taria faced her opponent, fighting her fear to remain unflinching. She tore the burning cloak from herself, exposing leather backed chainmail and long black hair underneath.

“You can’t be her. Why do you bear her strength?”
DF  Post #: 15
7/22/2020 5:16:43   
Anastira
Member

Carina is still staring into the flames of the white fox’s cloak when the blades close in on her, gleaming in the molten red-white of the arena, dual missionaries of death.

Pegasus’ instinct brings her a step back, trying to dodge, but too slow: she can feel her heartbeat in her chest, in her throat, an incessant throb, and in her head there are bells tolling, but she does not understand why, she pushes them away. Her music screeches high and wild, a banshee’s scream, and she lunges instinctively away from the blade above her right shoulder, the fatal blow to her head, sidesteps like a ballerina twirling on the precipice of a cliff.

She almost does not see the sword coming from her left, slashing upwards.

A ribbon of pain, fierce and angry, white-hot - angrier than the prick she’d felt in the tavern. A thought flickers through her head: if the white fox falls to her daggers, it will not be to Columba, never to Columba. This creature does not deserve a merciful death. This creature deserves pain, the kind of pain that -

Cailean, staring at her in the dark in front of his father’s shop, his eyes meeting hers, this strange hollow unearthly feeling in her chest as though there’s a piece of her that’s missing or gone or never even belonged to her in the first place. His hands weathered and rough against hers, his voice far away like a mirage. I know it hurts, Musca, he says, and there’s a choke in his words, a reluctance. I know it isn’t easy to forgive. But you didn’t need her. You’re stronger than that. You can rise above it -

I don’t know if I can, she’s saying, and her tears are like fire against the chill night-bitten cold of her cheeks. It’s hard to forgive.

I’m not asking you to forgive. It’s not about forgiving. It’s about forgetting. It doesn’t matter. She doesn’t matter. You are here, now -

She was my mother. She was supposed to be my mother. - here Carina looks up again, into his eyes, then up even farther into the stars, their strange distant faraway eyes speckling the sky like so many unseeing white pupils ringed with black irises, blind. Uncaring. When she looks back at Cailean, the tears have evaporated: I want a mother. I want a family. I want to be able to trust someone finally. And she took all of that away.

You are not alone, he says as she draws away, but he knows as well as she does that the words fall flat. His next words, though, they are filled with a conviction, an emphasis: Just believe in who you are and you will be whoever you need to be -


The pain recedes, the anger subsides. The seconds seem to stretch out like hours, all of these precious little infinities, the white fox-mask in front of her, the heat of the arena beading droplets of sweat on her skin like miniature jewels, Lily somewhere behind her and the cloak on fire. Her daggers in her hands. Pegasus urging her on, fleet-footed. She steps back, uses Pegasus to dart out of range; closes her eyes for the slightest instant, letting her veil of projection fade away so her opponent can see her for what she is: small, young, afraid, but brave. Determined. Her chin held high, her hair cascading down her plain shirt, defiant. Worn and weary from travel, wound tight like a wire in the face of battle, but ready to fight, ready to hold her own. Desperate to succeed.

And she focuses on the white fox.

She can feel the music inside her gathering, straining to listen, to attune itself to the white fox’s body: the beat of the white fox’s heart, a rhythm, a metronome, a syncopation, a guide. To feel its way through the creature’s body, to become a part of it.

It only takes a second, but she feels, and then she sings.

It flows out of her like a cascade, her veil of projection back in place, Pegasus still clutched in one hand and clever Vulpecula in the other, but now she bolsters her music with Vulpecula and lets Pegasus lie dormant: letting the music flood with conviction, something long and low and sorrowful, something that taps into the soul of what it is to be alive, to feel, to care. Love, desire, yearning, loss. The feeling of missing someone or something, a home, a person, a universe. To have that which means most torn away and hidden, out of reach, but never forgotten.

I wanted a mother.

Walking away from the darkened building of Cailean’s father’s shop with her heart spilling out of her chest, the pain like a dagger plunged deep and twisted over and over again, corkscrewing through everything she is. Knowing that in this one action, this one crime, this betrayal, she will have lost him forever. He cannot love her, not after this.

Knowing that Jendayi, the only mother she has ever had, will hate her for this -

When she opens her eyes again, they are huge, and wide, and glassy, and her hair streams around her like a dark ocean, she is an abyss and if you look too hard, if you listen too long, you will fall in, be sucked into her like a whirlpool. And her music is not just sounds: it is the raw rhythm of the white fox’s heartbeat, the raw emotion of Carina, everything she has lost, everything she has regretted, everything she has left behind. The home she surrendered to the dark.

In that moment, she unleashes herself fully, pain like never before to swallow everything around her, an enchanted vortex of feeling, built on her own loss, strengthened by all the magic of Vulpecula’s gleaming green eye in her hand, written to the beat of the white fox’s heart.

You are mine, the music of her voice cries, meaning written in the wordless depths of sound. My universe, my world, my creature, our heart beats as one and your music is my music, the music of the cosmos. I am written in the stars and the galaxies and the nebulae and the planets, in the pull of gravity and the deepness of the dark-matter void. Do not fight me. Do not resist the power of us. Remember we are one. Remember what you have lost. Together we can be whole again, together we can reclaim what was taken, but fighting will only tear us down and make us weak and there will be blood, so much blood, and what for? For pain? There is already too much pain in this world -

For an instant, her hand drifts to Columba, touches the hilt with a brush of her fingertips, and she knows: in this arena, she will be merciful. For these are people too.

And it is only the most desperate, the most human, those who have lost everything and have everything to win back, that would risk their lives for one wish - for one flimsy dream.
AQW  Post #: 16
7/22/2020 8:51:45   
Fionnes
Member

Breathe, Circa, breathe…

Circa took a few short, but deep breaths. She rolled her shoulders gently, feeling the sand holding tight in her body, as she kept her front-facing stance, weapon pointed directly at the half-melted creature. She could finally focus her attention on what she was facing: a human-like figure, around the same height as her; something that looked as if it had been dragged back up from under a bayou after… well, a significant period of time. It looked far from healthy. Cold, chilling and rather disturbing.

The Sandcat slowly lowered her left arm slightly, to grip the fallen figure by their coat, keeping them close to her vicinity. Still Circa kept her sword held high, as the creature slowly walked towards her. She could then suddenly feel a strange oozing sensation crawl around her body, focusing around her leg: from where she’d formed her sand barrier. The slime just then, she thought! It was doing something unnatural to her; something felt uncomfortable, both physically and… mentally, but she couldn’t quite put words down to it. She’d have to focus more if she needed to make sound judgments; otherwise she’d risk losing not only the fallen combatant, but even her own mortal soul.

If anything, the fainted competitor reminded her of home. The desert was a cruel and unforgiving sandscape, and so too was this lava world. Every soul should be given the chance to fight for itself, and… no. Circa simply could not let the human be eviscerated without mercy: even if it meant risking her own safety.

Then a sudden wave of noise suddenly echoed across the chasm of stone and rubble.

Her ears suddenly flicked to the sound of rumbling footsteps. Strong strides coming directly for her, just to her right; it was a clear assault from another opponent! Circa had to act fast! Without hesitation, she bared her teeth and hissed, before quickly starting a charge towards the forthcoming threat. With her newfound unconscious companion in tow, the Sandcat would have to distance herself from either enemy, and having been cornered by both, she’d have to break through either of them. Given her unfamiliarity with the ice-like creature from before, Circa hedged her bets on this other figure. Instinctively, Circa let one of her bandage wrappings tighten its grip with the human’s arm, keeping them close to her as she continued her forward strike.

“Out of my way!” she declared, as she swung her sword with all her might in a horizontal swing towards the charging assailant before ducking and sliding downwards with her unconscious buddy sliding along with her. Circa sure hoped that they were okay after all this physical abuse; after all, they were only human. To ensure her safety, Circa quickly deployed a sand barrier from her right arm whilst holding her arm above her, hoping to shield any attacks from the second enemy if they had tried to strike her as she slid past. Circa hoped that, through the confusion, she could make some distance between these two seemingly powerful creatures; this could potentially give her a battle advantage, especially with another life in her hands that she needed to desperately protect.

But just after the manoeuvre, something felt strange, as if her core skipped a beat. Her vision faded in and out for a split second. It’s nothing, surely… just my concentration fading, Circa tried to convince herself…
DF  Post #: 17
7/22/2020 20:38:42   
ChaosRipjaw
How We Roll Winner
Jun15


The female dirtwalker that appeared to have features of both human and Khn'kkhein --- furred ones --- was a curious one indeed. Even as Sinak “swam” toward his downed prey, he watched as his fellow denizen of the Deep launched a bolt of ice at the ground, which exploded and sent a wave of pungent slime (the foul smell seemed to cut the air to his enhanced nostrils) flying toward her. He observed as she created a wall of sand from her legs to block the sludge.

(Something about her smelled strange.)
((Unusual.))
(((Familiar.)))

And (not entirely) to his surprise, the sand wall then retracted back into her leg. Perfect correlation with the odd smell he detected from her --- the smell of sand, and only sand. The first time seeing an elemental in action would have been a treat for a dirtwalker, but Shha’rarken were not exactly the most inquisitive of species. (He did find it odd that she was somehow both sand and living.) ((But she was living, and that was all that mattered.)) Besides, it would be shameful to become Leuuxdxuun over such a trifling matter. Sinak coldly filed away this information for a later date.

Then he was literally on top of her. Just when he thought he had caught the semi-Khn'kkhein at her most vulnerable, the next thing he knew, she lunged at him and swung her sword. Sinak jerked back instinctively but it was an unnecessary gesture; it was more of a swing to get him to back off more than a serious attempt to hit him. She dragged the fallen combatant away as her arm morphed into a shield, which she raised as though to protect her quarry.

(Her bio-electrical signal briefly flickered. A minute thing, but few details escaped a Shha’rarken’s scrutiny.)
((At the same time, something sparked in the warped organ that was his brain.))

So, she had chosen to die along with the fallen.

Sinak slid toward her almost lazily, then reared up, ready to drop down and take off her arm with a single bite. His depth scream ripped through the torrid air of the Forge, silent as the Abyss but as ear-shattering as a thunderclap---

And his teeth stopped a bare few inches from her shield.

<Again!?>
<<What is this!?>>
<<<Again!?>>>

The spark from earlier quickly erupted into a roar that drowned out all his senses. Though his eyes stared at the semi-Khn'kkhein, his mind was no longer in the present.

He sensed---



An indeterminate number of moon cycles past.

They scream and they cry. But in the end, all is silent. Sinak moves through the village. The carnage is terrible. The stench of the dead and dying permeate the air. Sinak breathes it in, struggling to stave his bloodlust. His brain crackles. A signal, a heartbeat.

There are more.

Smoothly, without hurry, he turns and heads toward the signal only he can sense. Fires rage out of control from the chaos, but Sinak sees none of it. Lost in the hunt, time is meaningless to him. And then he is there.

The last of the dirtwalkers is but a female, huddled in a corner, face covered in sweat, tears and ash. Feebly, she grasps a piece of the rubble, a piece of metal with a function one could no longer easily identify. It is burning, and it is sharp, yet she grips it with surprising strength even as it sears and cuts into her palm. Useless. Nothing she can do against a Shha’rarken, and especially not against Sinak. He rears up, opening his jaws---

<Mother.>

He grinds to a halt. That sound. That sound! A typical Shha’rarken might have missed it in the din, but the Yyranaiad enhancements are not merely for show. A second one! <Where!?>

He swings his head back and forth --- and reels. He remembers now.

<Mother.>

He roars soundlessly at her . . . and at the second being that she carries within.

<Mother.>



“The baby shark?” Iseul asked.

“I’m surprised that you didn’t hear about it,” Vasily said. “It was quite the nasty story. Beast hunters caught a Shha’rarken and were in the process of harvesting it. Unfortunately, the creature was pregnant and its pup burst out, killing the one with the knife and injuring the others before disappearing into the sea.”

“And what makes you think this creature is the same baby shark from that story?” Iseul asked.

“I didn’t make the connection before,” Vasily explained. “Like you said, neither of us were present for Crimson Tides. But I have studied the Shha’rarken, however briefly. There wasn’t much to go on aside from Tennalyss’s notes. Though I do know this: they’re fiercely bound by honor. They never forgive, never forget, and they will do whatever it’ll take to claim revenge.”

Iseul was silent. Vasily noticed and said, “Is something the matter?”

“‘Whatever it takes to claim revenge’,” Iseul repeated. “Not an entirely unreasonable hypothesis to be drawn . . .”

“But?” Vasily prompted.

“But, I’ve heard some other strange news,” Iseul said.

“Such as?”

“A few things here and there,” Iseul said. “First of all; don’t you ever notice how nearly all of its targets are military based?”

Vasily narrowed his eyes as he quickly scanned through everything he knew about the Shha’rarken. “Yes,” he said slowly, “Nearly all had some sort of connection with the Hunters.”

He frowned and shook his head. “I see where you’re going with this,” he said, “but no. More than half of the attacked locations had civilians, and the Shha’rarken had spared no one.”

The wind howled and the candles flickered.

“Not quite,” Iseul said softly.
AQ DF MQ AQW Epic  Post #: 18
7/23/2020 9:37:22   
Necro-Knight
Member

Outwardly, R’thazz curled his pockmarked lips in an expression of disgust at his attack having been blocked so expertly. When hunting, it was best to confuse your prey from your true motives at first. Internally, the drowned cryomancer cackled. The dark one’s blood was not so easy to escape and as the feline creature drew the tainted earth back into her form, he began running the seconds in one of the warped corners of his mind. Psychological effects would set in soon and true, pure madness after that. His, and therefore the master’s, calculations were accurate as ever. One formula down, only an endless oblivion left to conquer and therefore create billions more.

For a mind so obsessed with knowledge, it was no surprise to R’thazz that the master had accepted his loyalty so eagerly. The Deep One thirsted for knowledge, craved it with an insatiable hunger that only grew with every drowned or frozen being beneath its great shadow. In the end, once the Deep One knew all there was to know, it would begin to create knowledge. Reality was to be re-written, for when one singular being knows the very rules of creation, why still follow its rules? Even R’thazz’s mind spun with the possibilities, but first, he had to feed the master with the knowledge of these sad land-walkers and hopefully, the Avatars themselves.

He was about to test and see if she could reproduce those same reflexes a second time when the woman suddenly adjusted her movement and moved to the side of a being whose mental processes were so slowed, R’thazz hadn’t noticed them until now. They lied there like a beached whale baking in the noon sun and steamed in a similar fashion as well. Pity, a corpse was of no use to the deep, but what connection or compassion did the earth-thing feel for the man? A mystery, how delicious.

The feline woman held a crude bladed weapon towards his drowned form and with a tone that would’ve earned an eternity of suffering had she directed it at the Deep One himself, demanded the knowledge of his identity. Now, knowledge was not something a being could just demand. It had to be earned, through sacrifice and action, to show the right to behold the truth. So, R’thazz remained silent. If she could pry the secrets from his body and taste their sweet flesh, then he’d bless her with the mad truth, but not before.

Preparing to move in on the walking sandtrap and her new-found companion, the Frozen One suddenly felt a prickle through the psychic fabric of his mind. Turning in the direction of the sensation, he found the shark-like entity hurtling towards the woman with predator-like ferocity. Did it somehow sense the woman’s newfound weakness or was it trying to take advantage of her distraction the same as he was? Even as his mind threatened to spiral down into that mystery, R’thazz gripped his razor-sharp intelligence and refocused it to the task at hand, even as the earth-creature lashed out at his ally, naturally trying to keep the beast at bay.

Then suddenly, it stopped. The hunt, the pursuit of prey whose blood was most likely that of stone and rock and the display of carnage R’thazz was so eager to see. Mouth agape as if caught on some invisible hook, he watched as the powerful fish-esque being simple froze a few breaths from the female landwalker. The Frozen One had not sensed any magical energies surge from her shield as it was formed, but there was rapidly becoming more questions than answers in this place and the Deep One’s hunger vibrated through his bones like seismic tremors.

Feed. Taste the sweet meat of wisdom and gorge yourself upon its decadence!

The Deep One’s wisdom radiating through every muscle, R’thazz tucked his wings back behind his form and broke into a sprint fueled by inhuman strength. He was not graceful and every squelching footstep had a rough impact due to his posture, but the speed of the movement was undeniably deadly. Instead of heading directly for the woman around the shield, R’thazz continued directly towards his petrified ally and once upon the fellow water-dweller, pushed off the rocky floor with his left leg and aimed to continue the stepping motion right on to the square of the creature’s back, avoiding its obviously-sharp fins.

Instead of finding cool, familiarly slimy flesh or scales, R’thazz’s right foot launched him up from a translucent, energized field, his leg's nerves lighting up with the teasing touch of raw electrical current. He’d thought the buzz of magic around the pair had indeed been from the woman’s shield and that was what locked his ally in place, but near-euphoria filled his muscles for a split second as he discovered the truth. The barrier was from the shark-thing itself, a somehow-natural defense mechanism. R’thazz stored that information for later hypotheses as he put as much might into his lower body as he could and kicked off the water-dweller, finally spreading his wings and giving them a powerful swipe towards the ground at the same time. The motion was very similar to him suddenly diving into the depths when seeking prey, except he had gravity to compete with here, hence the need for leverage off his seemingly stupefied companion.

The powerful kick combined with the added thrust of his wings pushed R’thazz over the height of the woman and barrier alike and brought both her and the fallen land-walker into view as her vaulted over them. The tentacles hanging from his cheekbones and jaw suddenly flared as his cheeks bulged, as if suddenly swelling from within, and R’thazz unleashed a sickening mouthful of black liquid towards the female. Skin, earth or arena floor, it didn’t matter. The fluid would begin to freeze on whatever surface it found once exposed to even the thick air of this arena, a fact R’thazz was certain the feline creature would soon discover for herself. As gravity finally found his form again, R’thazz turned the leap into a roll and tucked his wings in tight, coming up on one knee beside the seemingly useless mortal man with his wings spread out in as much of an intimidating pose as he could. Mental assaults were just as deadly as a physical one and he would not have such effort wasted if she had found a way around his vile gift.
DF MQ AQW  Post #: 19
7/24/2020 11:30:43   
roseleaf320
Creative!


A gift rejected.

They never understood. The Fox’s cloak dropping to the floor. A mother screaming as a slip of the kitchen knife became open flame. A friend flinching at the pain as Lily grasps her hand, pinching just hard enough to draw Life. It was all the same. It all amounted to the same. You are dangerous. You are destructive. You are unwelcome. Spider Lily smothered the sharp aversion she felt towards her opponent when she watched the burning cloak-- her beautiful painting-- clipped off and discarded without acknowledgement.The woman had simply been avoiding a danger. That’s what Spider Lily had created-- but danger was rewarded here, in this arena already full of it, in these Championships meant for a single soul to arise victorious from the bloodshed. Will you force the breath from my lungs, vibrant vixen? As you discarded your cloak, so too will you rip mine away? Bare our faces together for the audience to see? There was a certain thrill that came from the possibility. But if the Spider wanted to make herself known— to thrust herself into a dangerous dance of blades and blood and song— she’d have to do more than stand back and create a bit of token fire.

She had to be fast-- catch the little assassin while she was right up against Musca, too focused to realize someone could strike from behind. Spider Lily’s awareness lowered to the hot metal bands that wrapped around her ankles. Time to run, Cyprus?


It had been years since they’d last met. Old childhood friends running into each other at a bar. Cyprus hadn’t understood Lily’s sight, but xe indulged her, just like xe had before. Xe apologized for their unfortunate parting. For xer father’s outrage at the cuts that would appear every time Lily came over to play. Cyprus even had matching anklets made. Xe was the one to think of infusing them with Life-- Lily suspected the idea was taken from her daggers. Xe was always so overly enthusiastic.


Spider Lily tapped her ankles together, and thick smoke trickled out of them, the color of noontime sky on a clear day. In a flash of heat and light, Cyprus’s Life Force became flames. They fled from Spider Lily as she took off in a sprint, leaving a low trail of fire in her wake; with no fuel source amidst the blackened rock, the flames fizzled out soon after they left her feet. She formed a looping path, bolting past the Fox only to curve around and head straight for her backside. Spider Lily caught a glimpse of the other fight as she moved: a catlike human facing off against the shark and a tentacled monster. The poor little cat creature… death by a shark's teeth would be death as helpless prey. Spider Lily was not interested in being reduced to such. If she were to die, it would be by mortal's hand or knife. By someone strong, and beautiful, and smart. Someone who cared.

As Spider Lily turned once more towards her own fight, she spotted that same vibrant sky from the bar flaring up and disappearing into the air. So there’d been a second slice-- this time the Fox's. Spider Lily wondered if her night sky was in pain. “I’m here, Musca!” She doubted the girl would hear over the clash of blades and the song she weaved. It felt distant to Spider Lily somehow; a dark thought tugging at her conscious, not quite insistent enough to show its full colors. What are you thinking as you sing? Where have you been, to conjure up a melody of feelings as strong as mine?

As Spider Lily grew closer, the enchantress’s dark song crept through the cracks in Spider Lily’s mind. It sung of danger; each harsh note weaved a melody promising death. But it held no fear of last time, of the frail girl seeking the reassurance of strangers. The song was merely a threat— the fear was Lily’s own. No, it must be from the song as well. It had to be. That, she could ignore.

A subtle click, the natural motion sending expectant chills through Spider Lily, and the jet-black dagger in her right gauntlet unfolded. The heat radiating from it gave just enough focus to keep the enchantress’s spell at bay. Spider Lily was in control of the situation now. The Fox was locked in her duel with Musca. Back turned towards Spider Lily. Wide open. Armored— but that didn’t matter.

“Bleed for me, Fox.” A harsh whisper straight in the duelist’s ear. A challenge; a wish. The clash of metal on metal rang out through the song and noise that berated Spider Lily’s senses. This is my contribution to your music. Her dagger’s screech rang out in her mind, drawing forth a still, controlled calm. It was hesitant, waiting on a finale. She could draw momentary respite from her weapon, but could not fully breathe until it drew results. The harsh, nose-curling scent of melting metal wafted between the Spider and the Fox-- oddly familiar. Ah, yes. Xe’d had chainmail on as well, hadn’t xe?

I killed xer, too.


Post #: 20
7/25/2020 20:25:55   
draketh99
Purple Armadillo


“Bleed for me, Fox.”

Shoulders tightened, squeezing breath from Taria’s lungs. Fear brushed its fingertips along the back of her neck like the legs of a spider. This tone’s intrusive whispers had been violating, sharp as glass, and dripped with maleficent thirst. A whirlwind of echoes erupted around Taria, each whispering their own siren song of warning.

“Run!”

“Fly!”

“Move!”

Her legs screamed in protest; they would not move. Her heart had begun to strum alongside the thrum of the siren’s song. She desperately tried to take a grasp of her own strength, floundering as a child chasing a butterfly. As the beautiful insect fluttered away, so did the world. “Remember what you have lost.” The butterfly had been the last thing to leave. Darkness overtook Taria within her own mind. There was nothing left, only the darkness, only this black expanse which had cradled her since that fateful night. “Together we can be whole again.” But how? What’s been dead cannot return. How can we become whole when everything has been taken!? When there’s nothing left!? When everyone has left!? When only the whispers will embrace me, now…

A clash, a chime, a scream awoke Taria, sending her own heart towards her throat. Another presence had been behind her. Another presence had whispered so lustfully in her ear. Sharp pressure, anteceded by searing heat wracked at her back. Though she opened her mouth to scream, her own voice had been drowned out by the sound which erupted behind her. The screeching of warping, twisting chainmail echoed loudly before falling silent. The metal rings which she had counted on for protection now melted away, leaving behind an acrid, rising fog in their place. Taria instinctively threw an elbow back behind herself, echoes whispering of the spider’s stance. Hard knuckles cracked against the jointed strike, freeing Taria from the white hot pain that seared into her back.

“Dance, Taria.”

“Do not be slow now.”

Pivoting on a heel, Taria allowed the momentum of that strike to carry her through a full about-face, bringing her right arm up and over in a wide arc. This dance carried her blade around like a whirlwind of glass, she slammed the screaming fang down into the spider’s collarbone. This whirlwind of a dance carried Taria down into a low stance, pulling the blade into and away from flesh along the followthrough.

“You are cruel, Taria”

“That strike was neither clean nor merciful.”

“Perhaps you no longer listen properly to us.”

Taria’s pulse now raced against time, shifting out of tempo from her own rhythm and that of the siren. She felt her body move on its own, unsure of whether she danced to the chimes or to panic. She dropped her left fang, grabbing instead one of the two spheres attached to her belt. She tightened her hand around it, quickly cracking the smooth outer shell before she hurled it against the floor. A thick, chalky cloud of dust and smoke fought to fill her lungs as she exhaled it away, holding her breath.

Taria stayed low, pivoting back around on her now free palm. She allowed the low stance to coil her legs back again like a spring, reaching out and feeling the siren’s heartbeat and the two points of stone through which it traveled.

“Are you strong enough, Taria?”

“Are you able to do it again?”

Taria leapt out of the smoke, charging directly towards the siren. The chimes whispered a promise of three steps until the rites of blood and song could be finished. Taria landed the first step, taking hold of the right fang with both hands. She landed the second step, breathing in and saving that breath for a clean strike. She allowed the third step to drive herself forwards, thrusting herself nearly on top of the siren. Her right fang cried out with the sound of a thousand years of shattering glass as she thrust the blade across the throat of the siren.

“Your mother was right. You lack her strength”

A rushing blossom of pain exploded within her abdomen. Taria had frozen, trembling, the screaming razor’s edge barely nicking the siren’s throat. The siren’s song had grown warm and familiar. It felt like sunshine. Tears now rolled down Taria’s cheek as she choked back a sob. The unbridled yearning to have sunshine returned to her once more.

“I can’t, not again...” Taria’s trembling voice pleaded.

“Please don’t make me do it again…”
DF  Post #: 21
7/26/2020 1:43:02   
Anastira
Member

A voice catches Carina’s ears through the sound of her own music, cutting through the air like a knife: the sound of her name, Cailean’s name for her, Musca shouted through a void like a lifeline. The sound of it takes root somewhere deep inside, holds her in an iron fist, and she closes her eyes to let it drown her. Something deep inside uncoils, bit by bit, a knot coming loose, a forge coming to life deep within. A fire, a warmth that rears up, but instead of burning and searing, it is the warmth of a lullaby, coaxing, this seductive embrace.

She is on her knees with the weight of it, a strange kind of weight that anchors her to the ground as the rest of her feels as though it’s floating, carried away with her memories -

A flash of smoke, darkness spreading across the white-hot of the flaming cloak. The white fox spins away from Carina. She knows what that movement betrays, what she understands it to mean: she is not alone.

Lily.

She holds the images of them in her mind: Lily, Cailean, Jendayi. Mercy: she can be merciful to the fox without surrendering her life. She can be merciful and strong. She can defend herself.

She is the universe.

Hers is the music of the cosmos -

She focuses on the fox again, searching for anything to go off, a heartbeat, sweat, to tell her what to do, but the smoke billows in front of her and it is so hard, so hard to find anything, somehow the smoke is a distraction and she finds herself lost. And the music welling up inside her is so hard to contain; she fights it like trying to keep the universe at bay, but it is too strong, stronger than she is, and it’s all she can do to keep hold of that warmth, the sound of Musca echoing through the arena.

Stop, she tells herself. For once, stop. You are not Carina. You must be Musca.

A little fly searching desperately for the warmth, for the light.

She opens her eyes and focuses on the magma shining bright around her, lets her focus on the white fox evaporate like mist into the night. Draws elements of the magma into her song, its own miniature universe, tempering its heat into something more manageable, a lullaby, calming. Peaceful. When she sings again, her song has shifted: a mother’s embrace, a fire burning in a hearth, a gentle folk song in a half-full tavern.

The white fox appears from the middle of the smoke, and without thinking Carina drives Vulpecula forward, fox against fox, a dance of blood and song, her music wreathing the shimmering blade as its claws sink through the rings of the chainmail and into flesh. She flicks her wrist sharply, twisting, feels the blade stop itself against the metal of the chainlinks and pulls back, letting go, Vulpecula embedded in the fox, the two of them made into one. She reaches for Auriga, but as her fingers brush its hilt, her mind - torn from Vulpecula and not yet anchored to Pegasus - finds Auriga, and the pull is so strong that she gasps, freezing in place:

The feeling of a string attached to somewhere in her chest, pulling her away from here, out of this arena, jerking her so strongly she feels as though she’s a marionette dancing on a string.

Is that really what I want?

No. I have to be here. I have to be free -

The taste of blood in her mouth, the feel of a blade at her throat, the biting pain of steel cutting against her skin snaps her away from Auriga and back to the white fox in front of her.

The fear rises like bile against her tongue, but she keeps singing:

It is dark here. The smell of chrysanthemum wafts against her nose like ambrosia, woven against the tang of spices and the heady scent of fragrant wood. Jendayi kneels by the slow-flickering fire, her amber eyes reflecting the flames, her skin seeming almost to glow with the warmth. Her hands waver over the fire, and in the dancing silhouette of the shadows the flames seem to stir beneath her fingers, a carefully choreographed dance, one flickering tongue flowing into another.

“Mama -” Carina begins.

Jendayi turns to look at her. For so many years now, the herbalist has shuttered her emotions, her eyes like windows with the curtains drawn shut, but today her eyes are brilliant and Carina nearly shrinks from the intensity of them. “This thing inside you,” Jendayi whispers. “You think it is a cage, but it is a gift, too, Carina.” She holds a hand up, sudden, to keep Carina from speaking, and there is something strange in it, an almost physical pull against Carina’s throat stopping the sound before it can emerge from her lips. “You’re fifteen. You’re coming of age. You need to understand what you are facing, or you’ll let it destroy you.” Her eyes darken. “You can’t let yourself run from it.”

She turns back to the fire, makes a slow circle with her hands, and it is then that it happens: the flames dancing up against her fingers, curling around her skin, and Carina tries to scream but there is no sound, nothing comes out. The words lost in translation, lost in silence.

“There is magic everywhere,” Jendayi whispers, almost more to herself than to Carina. “But it is not some foreign thing, a mysterious enemy. There are those that are scared of it, but they are fools.” She lifts her head to look back at Carina, and now the flames are no longer just reflected in her eyes; they are held inside her eyes, burning fiercely, a fire all her own. “Magic is talent. The innovator engineering a new automaton speaks his magic in breathing his life into the creation. The politician and the actress manipulates the mind of the viewer through presentation. The herbalist feels the rhythm and movement of living things and harnesses it, pushes and pulls their rhythms to match hers. Magic is a misnomer. It is merely ordinary talent and skill, but with a little extra something - a concentrated skill...if you will.”

She reaches out to take Carina’s hands, and Carina feels the fire in her work-roughened fingers, molten, the rhythm of the flames flickering in time with Jendayi’s pulse. “I have this thing just as you have it. If a person devotes enough time to any one skill, they will have it. The power to sway people, to sway things, to sway the world around them. Magic does not exist. We exist, and the ability to hone our skills, to listen to the universe, to feel what is around us.

“My child...when the shadows took you that night, they gave you an edge in your skill, but they did not choose your skill for you or sculpt you as a person. You were born with a heart for music. And you know where the rest came from.”

It does not occur to Carina until much later, standing in the middle of an arena made of lava with a blade at her throat, that she does know. The universe that is hers, the world whose heart beats all around her, the cosmos in her music: she has spent her whole life listening to the living growing world of Jendayi and her skill. Of course she is attuned to the creatures around her. She has spent her whole life practicing.


“I can’t,” the white fox’s voice whispers, through the fog of memory. “Not again...please don’t make me do it again -” The trembling in her words like the flickering of the flames, a singer’s vibrato. Carina closes her eyes, feeling the blade against her throat, the heat on her skin.

She has a sudden urge, a feeling that wells up inside with a strength she has never known before, a need to touch the lava, to see it come at her call. To protect her - her ally, her friend, her mother. And she knows at last what she must do.

As the white fox’s blade cuts against her skin, the warmth of Carina's own blood becomes Jendayi’s honeyed voice, a song of life, a song of flame, a song of fire - a dance of death, the touch of life: a rite of blood and song.
AQW  Post #: 22
7/26/2020 3:36:05   
Fionnes
Member

Circa had just begun recoiling from her assault towards the shark-like creature, but already she felt herself losing control of her senses. Her mind felt confused, almost as if it was being altered, or manipulated. That slime… that awful slime, she thought! She finished off the swinging motion of her blade before tugging firmly at the human she was dragging along, hoping to drag them out of harm’s way. She saw that the armoured shark was only a mere inch away from her neck before it had seemingly stopped in its tracks. For whatever reason, she couldn’t immediately figure out, but from the glint of anger and the surge of energy coursing along its body, Circa could tell it wasn’t necessarily happy about what had happened.

Before she could reflect on what had happened, she noticed the icy humanoid draw closer. Nothing about this was fair; Circa was being attacked on two fronts, and she was also protecting another person, limiting her own ability to defend herself, let alone stage a proper counterattack! Her vision started to cloud a little as the effects of the slime, which started to bind to her sandy innards, started to take hold.

“Ugh… I can’t hold out for much longer,” Circa groaned, “this really has to end sometime soon…” Circa could feel her grip on her human companion weakening as a constant whine and drone echoed in her ears.

Give in… give in… it reverberated against her eardrums. Give in to your deepest fears… Circa… all you need to do… is let go…

For a brief moment, the Sandcat had thought about letting go. As she leaned herself backwards, she could feel the warm air flow against her back. It almost felt like falling over onto the sand. It could’ve felt like home. She could, as the eerie voice continued to resonate through every passage of her mind, just simply… let go. For that split moment, she did want to let it all go. She would fall backwards, landing rearwards against the warm stone bed; the memories of home would kick in, and then there would be no more. She felt the slime ebb against her left leg; she could feel the source of the vicious signal whispering along her veins. The more her legs moved, the more she felt it. She could see the icy creature spread its wings and launch a sickening black liquid above her, like a tarry cape of darkness. She could easily just give in, and succumb. To let the shadows take over…

But it couldn’t end like that, no. Circa didn’t hesitate. It had to stop! Lifting her right arm, katana in hand, she flung it directly towards the icy being. Gritting her teeth, she dug her right hand directly into the pulsing slime on that part of sand and tore it off. She screamed, loud and clear, the sound piercing the stone antechamber, before tossing it aside. “It’s now or nothing!”

Lifting her human buddy with her left arm, she used some of her remaining strength to toss them behind her. With her falling stance and feline reflexes, Circa quickly arched back to form a backwards cartwheel. Using a good portion of her energy, the Sandcat cast a sandstone figure of herself: a mirage figure, as it were. Like a cicada leaving its shell, Circa left a sandy shell of her former position, right in the path of the black sludge. She watched as the putrid mess poured over the illusory Sandcat mould, before rapidly finishing her cartwheel and catching the human in mid-air. Circa suddenly crumbled upon receiving the weight of the human, a testament to the amount of energy she spent; her other free hand slammed against the stone floor, as she caught her breath.

“That… that was too close…” Circa let go of the human’s collar, clearly too tired to even consider lifting or dragging them anywhere, and assumed a position on all-fours, as she lay down defensively to see her opponents’ next moves. She felt a little bit of energy return to her as her palms and feet kept in contact with the stone. “Oh mother, how I wish I was at home right now…”
DF  Post #: 23
7/26/2020 20:01:22   
ChaosRipjaw
How We Roll Winner
Jun15


He remembers his mother’s soundless voice.

<Long, long ago, before there was sea or sky, there was Khunnyaadwngcaanthrr --- Grandmother Moon. She watched over the emptiness, gazing in loneliness. She closed her eyes and wept, and so great were her tears that they flooded the world and became Maeeluuk --- the Deep Mother. Overjoyed by a companion, Grandmother Moon and her daughter lived happily for ages, until from the distant stars came Phyxfaa --- Skyfather.

<Enchanted by Skyfather's light, Deep Mother failed to heed Grandmother Moon's warnings and bore Skyfather's first generation of children: the sea life. Overcome with emotion, Deep Mother did not see Skyfather's subtle manipulation, the beckoning of light. When she least expected it, Skyfather anchored Deep Mother down into the earth with land, while at the same time he drew some of the sea life into his hands, molding them to live under his light. Grandmother Moon could only watch in anguish as Deep Mother thrashed in pain and Skyfather gloated in his victory. Deep Mother's wounded heart opened a blazing hot gash of agony in the earth, while her once loving embrace became cold and harsh.>




Again. Again!

The Hunters of Beasts, he had learned early on, were coldly professional. They operated with perfect teamwork, luring him into traps, attempting to crush him with overwhelming force. Sometimes he won, and sometimes he had to flee. Either way, they always ended with heavy casualties, and even the most hardened of squadrons fell apart in the chaos. Oh sure, they would try to rescue their fallen, but first and foremost, they focused on the beast they could see in front of them --- namely, Sinak himself. The profession of Hunting was a dangerous one, and they all knew that.

This one was not a Hunter; he could tell at a glance. But even if he were blind as a cavefish, his enhanced brain had no trouble picking up her state of mind. Fear, as expected, but once again, not fear for her own life. No sense of true anger either. He wasn’t exactly the best at picking up other emotions; he’d only managed to interpret the plaawaal’s from before because she had wanted to communicate. Still, he could guess (though he didn’t want to). The way she had moved to protect the comatose combatant had conjured up memories he’d long since buried so deep not even Deep Mother herself would know they existed---

Sinak unleashed a string of curses that even he had trouble pronouncing despite his telepathy. This was the second time in a row a dirtwalker had shaken his resolve---

No. It had happened before. (Curse the blasted plaawaal and her talks about peace.) ((And many times before that, since the beginning, only with the memories repressed.)) Sinak shook his head back and forth as though to clear the cobwebs. No longer. Perhaps he could have afforded to entertain such ideas in an idyllic place like Bren, which this hellhole was certainly not.

In the time he had hesitated, the semi-Khn'kkhein had acted fast. His hybrid ally had somersaulted over him---

(Coming into contact with his passive psychic barrier, he noted.)

---and attempted to spray her with his foul slime, but the semi-Khn'kkhein had managed to toss the unconscious human out of harm’s way, backflipped herself out of the way, and his ally’s muck splashed onto---

Her, again. Sinak’s eyeballs flicked. He was not mistaken; suddenly where there once was one, there were now two. What was---

Ah. A fine trick indeed, Sinak thought, one that would have confused most predators long enough for the semi-Khn'kkhein to make her escape. It might have even taken Sinak himself off guard as well, had he not been stationary. Unfortunately for her, Sinak was no ordinary predator. Even if they looked the same, it was glaringly obvious to his electroreceptors that the duplicate which remained in place was merely a sandy shell.

(She caught her breath, another minute thing but Sinak heard it.)

HIs predator’s instinct flared and he came to a conclusion at lightning speed. So, that trick with the clone seemed to have taken a lot out of her.

(She’s made of sand.)
((The clone is made of sand.))

Normally he wouldn’t have bothered to go after a being without meat or blood but---

(((Perhaps she merely transforms into sand---?)))
((((Matter cannot be generated at will---?))))

Rule of jaws: When prey are exhausted, strike at once!

<I gift the fainted to you,> Sinak said to his hybrid ally, the image of the unconscious combatant being passed to the latter’s tentacles slipping invisibly between their minds. <The female made of sand is mine.>

Another psychic scream ripped through the air as Sinak snapped out of his trance. He spun clockwise, his bladed tail swinging at the sand clone. He might have been a dwarf compared to his much larger brethren, but when juxtaposed with dirtwalkers, he was still quite large . . . and very strong. Not to mention with Yyranaiad enhancements. The sand clone stood no chance. His warped, empowered muscles sent his tail blade cleaving into the sand construct’s abdomen, tearing it almost in half. His gaze immediately zeroed in on the semi-Khn'kkhein.

(He found it odd that the clone didn’t attempt to roll out of the way like its creator.)
((He wondered if the sand construct could reform itself?))

No matter, it wasn’t in any condition to go after him anyway, at least not at the moment. He bared his teeth and lunged straight at the semi-Khn'kkhein, who was now on all fours like an actual cat.

(She had thrown her sword at his ally.)

He cleared his mind of hesitation.

<I am Shinjri’shakraphrjat’shu’Sinaken.>
<<Shha’rarken warrior.>>
<<<Last of my kind.>>>
<<<<Bane of the Sarphisscaakplaa.>>>>


It was probably a rash, warmblooded thing to do. But if he wanted to erase his doubts entirely, he resolved, then she would need to die by his teeth.

<Like the Mother, my heart is cold.>
<<No regrets.>>
<<<No remorse.>>>
<<<<ONLY DEATH!>>>>




A few days after the meeting with Vasily.

Hae Iseul entered the grotto. It was deep underwater, far too deep for even a champion swimmer to make the trip and return. With no air bubbles to take advantage of, divers would be headed toward a watery grave.

It mattered not to Iseul, for thanks to her breathing technique she could stay submerged indefinitely. She glided smoothly through the depths almost as though she were flying. The grotto was empty, but her trained senses detected---

Blood.

Not just any blood. The patterns the blood trail made as it clung to the stone, she noted, could only have belonged to a very, very large fish. The grotto was empty. And the Southern Lakes harbored no large fish that Iseul knew of. Which meant only one thing.

It was here.

The Shha’rarken had undoubtedly taken refuge in this grotto after the attack on the Hasong fort. The blood trail matched the wounds that would have resulted from a stab from Vasily’s greatsword. From a cursory review, Iseul would have assumed, like any other Hunter, that the Shha’rarken had been recuperating. However, Iseul was far from just “any other Hunter.” Something didn’t add up. The Shha’rarken had proven itself to be extremely intelligent --- disturbingly so, especially since the mental image of a shark driven by instinct persisted. Even with Iseul’s mastery of underwater tracking, she had failed to pick up any traces of the Shha’rarken despite all of its previous attacks . . . until now.

Iseul wondered, if she were the hunter being hunted, what reason would she have to dawdle? The memory of the conversation with Vasily flashed through her mind. No reason at all . . . except perhaps to talk to someone!

Or something.

Iseul drifted cautiously in a circle, taking care not to miss any details. The disturbance of water from her violet cloak flapped against something half buried in the sand. Iseul reached down with one slender hand and pulled out a worn scrap of paper. Gingerly, she peeled it open.

Her eyes widened. “Bren,” she whispered.
AQ DF MQ AQW Epic  Post #: 24
7/27/2020 0:39:00   
roseleaf320
Creative!


Pain crackled through Spider Lily’s hand as The Fox’s elbow swung around to slam into her knuckles. Knife slipped from its chainmail nest, anticipation fleeing from Spider Lily’s consciousness. The Spider lept backwards, frustration flaring up at the loss of a kill. The feeling of a body falling limp from her touch; of fire exploding outwards at her command. All knocked away from her. A vortex of primal need rose up inside Spider Lily, swirling around a now clearly empty pit-- all its turmoil searching for something to calm it; catching onto the porcelain animal mask now inches from her face. Lily’s heart skipped a beat; it was so detailed and beautiful, dark curls dancing across the face in skillful strokes. She could sheathe her knife and reach up to trace her fingers along the gentle lines. Musca would yield too, surely, her song now a soft lullaby, agreeing with Lily, comforting her. Lily could slip a hand underneath the mask and caress the soft skin of a face so used to cold stone; she could touch a woman, love a woman, without having to--

Two sharp screams pierced through the air: the first from the Fox’s crystalline blade as it cleaved through the air, the second mimicking it like an echo, but Spider Lily did not know its source. She only knew the harsh burning in her chest, the rancid smell of smouldering leather; the glow of pink and orange… pink and…

The Fox had hit her.

The fizzling in her chest spread like a parasite through Spider Lily’s body. Her vision blurred; her ears rang; her stomach curtled. Her thick leather garb revealed a bloody gash that stretched diagonally across her collarbone. From it sprung curling lines of brilliant orange and fuschia, gusts of color that twirled together as they erupted from Spider Lily into the bright arena light. In their beautiful mists swam little pink petals, leaves, and pollen dust. They echoed a pure sort of beauty; hints of flowers previously untouched by the harsh environment around them. As they flew further from Spider Lily, they grew black and began to curl, withering until they were nothing but ash that scattered harmlessly into the air. Go away. Go away go away go AWAY! I don’t want your cruel reminders now, your ugly wilting plant bits! It means nothing!

A sudden crash, and smoke buffeted up from the floor, filling Spider Lily’s senses entirely. She struggled against its suffocating presence, desperate not to lose relevance in the fight.

She’d been violated. Made to think of love and hope only to be instantly cut through and ignored like she was easy prey. Fooled into imagining things she didn’t want to think about, things she’d pushed away for her own safety. The enchantress and the Fox had both made a joke out of her. You will burn for what you’ve done. Spider Lily dashed headfirst through the dissipating smoke, eyes set on her target. From her side, she ripped a small daisy she’d picked earlier that day, its petals still too ripe to realize it had been torn from its source of Life. Too naive to know it was being used as a weapon.

Hand met flesh as the Spider slammed her open palm into the Fox’s neck. The little daisy instantly crushed between the two, unable even to take a last breath; Spider Lily felt its Life Force flee, and her eyes caught the burning orange as she forced her will onto it. The small flame lasted a fraction of a second, contained between her hand and the Fox’s strong neck. Heat spread like needles across her palm. She flinched, but took comfort in the knowledge her opponent was feeling the same harsh pain.

And now for you, Musca. Hand still on the Fox, Spider Lily swallowed the jealous taste that tainted her mouth watching the dark clouds of Life that leaked from Musca’s pale neck. That should have been my blade. My cut across your skin. Not hers. A clenching of her fist, and the night sky became a burning, curling daisy; open faced, fully bloomed, swirling with life. It flashed its shape for only a moment before splitting apart, arching upwards towards the faces of both her opponents. Spider Lily would not be ignored.
Post #: 25
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