Kellehendros
Eternal Wanderer
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Micha watched the stone sail through the air, but before the missile made it more than halfway to her target, something shifted. The misty cloud above the Arena pulsed, and the stately dance of shadow and light became a sudden frenetic whirl, as if the beams of light and dark had tired of their partnership and now struggled for dominion. It was a disorienting effect only magnified by the sudden appearance of waves of glittering sprites in every hue imaginable. The Enkeli staggered, her vision momentarily overwhelmed by the sudden influx of magic; the flights of sprites burst apart and beelined for several of the competitors. One of those streams was heading for her. The Kissa made no move to step aside, however, for she knew from the stories what was happening. This was Choice, this was Calling, the selection of the Paragons who would stand in the Grand Arena before the eyes of gods and men. Like a swarm of ravening locusts, the sprites descended upon her in the thousand hues of flame. They were amber and yellow, rose and red, umber and orange, and a million subtle shades for which she had no name. Micha flung open her arms as though to embrace the swarm like a long-lost friend, rocking a half-step forward as she overbalanced, bracing herself for a physical impact that never came. The sprites buzzed and roiled over her; they were pouring into her, inundating her being with energy and light. Her ears were filled with the snapping crackle of campfires; her nose was overwhelmed with the scent of burning pine, burning grass, burning flesh; her eyes were dazzled by the light of a wildfire streaking across a tinder-dry field. The Enkeli was unaware of the fact she was rising, her body lifted off the planks by the otherworldly messengers. Micha was glowing, a sheath of flesh wrapped about a core of blazing flame… And then she was gone. She was walking through a forest. It was dark, some time before dawn, but the Kissa was not worried. These woods were as much a home to her as the village had ever been. The forest unfolded around her like a memory, and at the back of the Enkeli’s mind something began to stir. An errant shadow slipped across the edge of her vision, distracting her for a moment. Uneasy now, she picked up her pace, padded feet silent on the loam of the forest floor. Ghost-like, the Kissa passed between the trees. They were giants stretching into the night sky, girded with scrub brush and thicker undergrowth. Her hand reached out of its own accord, fingers running along the bark of a slender ash to parallel a quartet of marks slashed into that sentinel’s arboreal armor. Feline ears pricked up, catching the sound of water plashing and rilling softly somewhere ahead. A river… A shiver rippled down her spine, and the Enkeli stepped up her pace again, casting a nervous glance over her shoulder. Something was out there, some… thing… that was following her. She could feel the presence, the regard, of some vague and indefinite entity. Anxiety gnawed at the back of her mind. The presence was familiar somehow; Micha had felt it before but could not place it. Memory and recollection slipped through her fingers, leaving her only with the growing feeling of impending disaster. She was all but running now, stumbling through undergrowth that had sprawled its way over ground that had taken on a sudden and unfamiliar pitch. The Enkeli staggered, her left foot catching on an exposed root and sending her tumbling gracelessly to the ground. Gasping, she scrabbled up. Now she was running, pelting through the forest as thorns and brambles tore at her clothing and fur, tail low as she fled the encroaching sense of presence. It was dark, but not the dark of the predawn hours; her feline eyes could have dealt with that. No, this dark was the smothering dark of a dungeon, the endless abyss of the void betwixt the stars. “Perhaps you are ready to... talk... then?” Polemaetus’ whispery voice sent a scorching panic lashing through the Enkeli’s veins. Panic ripped through the Kissa like fire through a tinder-dry forest. Micha’s ears were filled with the sound of beating wings and rushing blood. A bellows pumped, stoking the fire higher, heating implements of cruelly hooked iron. A torch was cast, and dancing tongues licked at timber, crackling greedily. An inferno roared, flame chewing hungrily through the walls and rafters, shattering stone with its heat and fury. Micha burst through the restraining undergrowth and almost tripped again; eyes narrowing to slits from the sudden, dazzling sunlight of the clearing. A river flowed through dawnlit space, and the Enkeli staggered towards the water, the stench of burning filling her nostrils. She would not go back there, never again. The knives, the questions, Polemaetus’ filmy, corpselike eyes. All his promises were lies, and the lies had burned with all the rest when Micha had set fire to the Kotka’s laboratory. The Kissa dropped to her knees before the stream, panting and reaching out for the water. She was what she was. That was the truth. The Enkeli had learned through fire and pain that there was nothing else she could be. But she recoiled from the river just as swiftly, a scream tearing itself from her throat as she toppled backwards and the Markis burst from the water. The water lion was a dark reflection of the Kissa, a quadrupedal hunter left behind when Micha’s people climbed upright from the ancient seas to dance on moonlit shores to the strains of Danae’s music. Markis were ambush hunters, their bodies armored with scales. Their manes were not fur, but ruffs of heavy quills that flexed and rattled about their necks. Webbed paws tipped with wicked claws let them slice into their prey and drag it back into the water for kill and consumption. It was useless to try and flee. The beast was at the apex of its arc; a halo of water droplets flashed in the air around predator and prey like a thousand shattered crystal shards. In a moment it would be upon her, claws rending and hooking into flesh before she was pulled back into the river. There was no way Micha could escape before the Markis caught her, but she tried nonetheless. Rolling over and gathering her legs under her with a desperate speed she hardly knew she was capable of, the Kissa exploded up in a frantic leap back towards the dark forest. Unable to stop herself from casting a desperate, fearful glance over her shoulder, the Enkeli cried out as she ran headlong into something. The breath blew out of her in a gasp and she flailed wildly at the figure before her, fingers crooking into reflexive claws to rake at eyes. Micha felt arms, strong arms, banding around her with crushing strength, and she hissed and yowled as she struggled wildly. It took a moment for the sound to reach her, and another for the sense of it to become clear to her ears. Laughter, a deep-chested laughter, the sound of a man enjoying himself to the fullest. It was not just that which gave the Enkeli pause, however, it was the voice, the intonation. She knew that laugh. The Kissa’s eyes opened and she drew back ever so slightly. Holding her was another Kissa, this one broader and thicker, and patterned in the unmistakable orange and black stripes of the Kissa Ty. Micha stared at the familiar figure, her mouth working, though it took several attempts before she could speak. “K-Ke… K-K… Kedron?” He nodded, smiling gently. “It’s me, Micha.” She sobbed, throwing her arms around him. The Enkeli leaned against Kedron’s broad chest, shaking as he held her and gently stroked head. “Shhh, Micha, shhhh. It’s okay. I’m here, it’s okay.” “I-I can hear you.” She looked up at him, fingers curling through his fur. It was more than being able to hear him. Micha could see him, touch him. The realization struck the Enkeli like one of the lightning caller’s bolts. Kedron was dead. He had died years ago. Whatever this was, whatever place of dreams or echoes, this was not real. “It’s as real as you are, Micha.” Kedron grinned, finally releasing her so he could step back himself and inspect her. He laughed as she peered at him suspiciously. “Oh, Micha, I can’t read your mind anymore now than I could then. I just know how you think, that’s all.” Micha swallowed through a lump in her throat. She reached out and rested a hand against Kedron’s chest gently, afraid that he might melt away into the ether before her eyes. “Where are we?” The Kissa Ty shrugged eloquently, one hand turning over in a vague gesture. “We’re here. It’s that simple, that complicated. It doesn’t have a name, so far as I know. It’s just a place, a place where possibilities are… stronger.” “How long do we have?” She whispered, leaning against him again. Kedron hugged her gently, letting out a soft sigh. “Long enough.” For a long moment the pair stood there, holding one another. Micha could find nothing to say, no words for a reunion she had uselessly imagined for years. Finally, Kedron drew back, smiling gently. “Turn around.” “Ked?” The Enkeli looked up at him, confused. “Please, Micha, for me.” Micha sighed, turning back towards the river. The Markis was still there, suspended in the air amidst a glittering constellation of water droplets. Even knowing now that this was not real, the sight sent a shudder down the Enkeli’s spine. Kedron had told her this place was as real as she was, but that had not been what he meant. He meant merely that this place was not solely the creation of her mind, a fabrication of her subconscious. This… This place of possibilities was real, a creation of some higher power or entity; it had a purpose, even if Micha could not grasp it yet. The slender Kissa Mar shook her head, starting to turn back towards Kedron, only to be halted as he placed his hands on her shoulders, keeping her attention on the Markis. “You can’t keep running away from your problems, Micha.” “It was going to kill me!” She flared in response, turning back towards Kedron and pulling herself out of his grasp. “I’m just the messenger, Micha, and that isn’t what I meant.” Kedron motioned back towards the river, and Micha turned to look again. Kahana was there. But no, it was not really her, just an image, unmoving and static, oddly flat to the Enkeli’s sight. The female Kissa Ty was everything that the Kissa Mar was not. Tall and statuesque, Kahana was beautiful, strong, confident. She had been Micha’s oldest friend, until Kedron had come between them. They had parted on poor terms after… after Kedron’s death. Kahana blamed Micha for what had happened. Micha blamed herself as well, and… Kedron was right. She had run away. Micha had fled Kahana’s scorn, fled Kedron’s death, done everything she could to not be Kissa Mar, to not be Enkeli. And that had lead her to the Kotka, and his promises. “I didn’t run from Polemaetus.” “No, I suppose that you didn’t run from him.” Kedron admitted, running a hand along his muzzle with a sigh. “What you did was hard, Micha, hard but necessary. Polemaetus wasn’t the only one. It’s time to go home, Micha.” The Enkeli shifted, frowning. “What are you talking about, Kedron?” “Responsibility, Micha.” “But that’s what I’m doing, Ked.” The Enkeli stomped her foot, tail flicking back and forth in annoyance. “I’m taking responsibility for what I did. I am making this right!” Kedron shook his head. “That isn’t what this is about, Micha. I understand what you’re doing. I appreciate it, I do, but I never wanted this for you. I never asked you for this.” “You were dead! You couldn’t say anything!” Micha stormed away from Kedron, marching to the riverbank and glaring into the flowing water as though it was somehow responsible for all of this. “That doesn’t mean I didn’t try.” The Enkeli shivered, hugging herself. “I know. I ran from you, whenever I saw you.” “You can’t always run from your problems, Micha. They need you, back home.” “Why, for what possible reason? There is no one left back home who needs me. No one back there wants me.” “The Dream Breaker.” Micha whirled around, golden eyes going wide. Her fur bristled up on end. “No.” Kedron smiled sadly. “Yes, Micha. Polemaetus was only the beginning.” The Kissa Ty moved forward slowly, reaching out and framing the Enkeli’s face with his hands. “That’s why you have to survive. That’s why you have to go back. This isn’t about Kahana, or you, or even me. It’s about home, about everyone.” Still hugging herself, Micha shivered. “I… I still have to do this, for you, for Kahana.” She looked up at Kedron. “I told her… what you said.” “You didn’t…” Kedron blinked, and the world seemed to shudder. “No, no, you said there would be time!” The Kissa Ty growled, spinning about and shouting as the ground began to buckle and heave. “You said I could explain it to her!” Micha staggered, looking around in alarm. “Ked, Ked, what’s going on?” She reached for him, but her grasping hand passed through his as though he was nothing more than smoke. “Micha, listen to me. I asked you to apologize to Kahana because…” Kedron roared, or seemed to. His voice was gone, drowned in the grinding of rock shattering and wood groaning as the clearing came apart. “Kedron, Kedron, no!” Everything was burning. Flames chewed through the crowns of the trees. The river hissed away in a blast of searing steam. Speech was swallowed by the fury of the fire. Ash choked her nostrils, coated her fur. Her last thought was how odd it was that she had never realized how much the courtyard of Polemaetus’ keep resembled the clearing where Kedron had died… She all but staggered into the world, crimson grains of sand grating between the pads of her feet; her tail lashed as she righted herself with an effort more mechanical than conscious. Micha knew this place. The Grand Arena. This was where all the stories ended, in the oldest and most celebrated of the sprawling complex’s structures. Amber eyes ran across sand rumored to have been dyed crimson by the blood of countless entrants, and the Enkeli let out a low moan. The registration had been difficult, Twilight had been arduous, but this… Eight might have been Chosen to do battle here, but to Micha’s eyes the Arena sands were packed with a roiling mass of specters engaged in a thousand battles that played out over and over again. A creature of corruscating blue-white energy fell before a woman robed in heavy furs. The woman’s face twisted in fury and revulsion, and the small shape burst into flames, whimpering weakly as faux-muscle crisped and false-bone cracked until there was nothing but ash remaining. A roar rattled the Kissa to her bones, the hulking figure of an armored Vastaa raising his arms to the sky in victory, blood staining his arms and muzzle. A corpse lay almost forlornly at his ursine feet, throat reduced to a sanguine ruin. A man fell to one knee, a wooden staff held before him in token defense as a wave of liquid fire engulfed him, swallowing a desperate cry that was half-spell half-prayer. Too much! It’s too much! The Enkeli could feel her mind shuddering, trying to handle the staggering concentration of spiritual impressions and emotions. This was the heart of the complex, the heart of the Elemental Championship, the focal point about which it all revolved. It was simply too much to process. Please! Micha had no idea to whom she was praying, but her prayer was as fervent as any she had ever uttered. Help me, please. You chose me, grant me the grace to endure. As she missed a step, subconsciously adjusting her stride to avoid placing a foot on the memory-shadow of a cavorting metallic creature for which she had no name, the Kissa despaired. This was it. She had come so far, and her end would come as she stared unwitting at phantoms only she could see. And then the phantoms began to burn. The ghostly impressions crisped, curling at the edges like charring parchment, and then burning away with swift, pure flames. The Enkeli regained her equilibrium, saving her faltering gait with a shuffled step as she blinked in shock. As the Kissa turned her head left and right, the ghosts of the past seemed to flash-burn away, though if she looked far enough to one side she could see them lurking still upon the edges of her vision. “Thank you,” Micha whispered. It was not perfect, but it was what she had. Her hands went to the belt at her waist without conscious thought, touching, inventorying. She noted that her bolas were back, her pouch of stones was full. No, none of this was perfect, nor what she had wanted, but it was enough. “For you, Micha.” Kedron’s voice was a fleeting whisper, the last hiss of an ember just before it was extinguished. “Now and always…” Gift, boon, whatever it was, because of it she could function, and because of that she caught the names of those who had been Chosen. Golden eyes flicked from one to the next, aware of consideration in turn as the Finalists sized one another up. The Kissa recognized several of the entrants from Twilight. Elysia, the lightning caller, still horsed. That brought a faint smile to Micha’s lips, surprising the Kissa herself. Shud, the jewel-man. The behemoth was one to avoid, if the Enkeli had any choice in the matter. Zane, the black-garb. Holding a defensive stance already, he was perhaps the most unknown quantity of the competitors that the Kissa had seen in Twilight. She knew nothing of the others but their names, and what the Chorus had spoken of them, and the Enkeli was faintly disappointed that Garreth had not been Chosen. Perhaps that was for the best, however. Despite her words in Twilight, Micha had found herself liking the odd little man. Had they both advanced, a conflict would have been inevitable. It was for the best that they had been spared from that necessity. Her hands went to her waist again, drawing the sling and fitting a stone into its cup before starting to twirl it. The Paragon of Ice, a man called Dell Wolf, stalked to the center of the Arena. Loud of mouth and swaggering of gait, he looked at Micha, and the Kissa bristled ever so slightly as she met his eyes. She knew what a hunter looked like, and a popinjay. Wolf wanted to fight, perhaps wanted to fight her specifically. That was interesting, for so far as she could see, Wolf had no weapon drawn, but to her mind, that was as good an invitation as any. The Enkeli saw no reason to delay the commencement of hostilities. In her hand the sling spun and then snapped open, unloading its stone on a sailing arc towards the Ice Paragon’s chest. Almost as soon as the stone was thrown, Micha’s hand was going to her pouch for another stone. There was no time for hesitation. Now was the time for action.
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