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=EC 2019= Fountain Arena

 
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7/14/2019 0:00:13   
  Starflame13
Moderator



With preparations complete, the city welcomed the horde of travelers that descended into its midst. From strangers to old friends, from visiting dignitaries to lowly cutpurses, from lone fighters to entire families, hundreds answered the arena’s siren call. The crowds swelled, the magic in the air catching at emotions and drawing forth excitement and anticipation. Children ran about underfoot while city guards attempted to maintain some semblance of order. Coins clinked merrily as people pointed out potential competitors, debating this one's skill or that one's survival.

Then the sun climbed high enough to illuminate the doors of the complex itself - the rays creating a dazzling radiance that caught the eyes of all mingling below - and people surged forward.

Through the twisted streets of shops and inns. Past the delicate courtyards and grimy alleyways tucked between the houses. Up and over the final bridge, across the cobblestones of Supplicant’s Way, feet treading upon the same path that thousands of others had before them. Between the grand doors set at the gateway into the complex - a single entrance for spectators and hopefuls alike.

But the entrants never remained with the crowds for long. Even those watching closely could not spot the exact moment when the chosen combatants vanished, as if by magic, led into darkened hallways towards their fate. Most knew better than to attempt to follow. All knew better than to question the strength, the sorcery, the power that hummed in the stones at their feet and caused sparkles to dance in the corners of their eyes. No one who entered the tournament - no one who passed through the gates at all - did so without accepting its authority.

The Arena welcomed all, chose few, and spared none.



Faint curtains of mist separated these halls from the rest of the complex, trailing delicate and damp fingers along the competitors as they passed through to the cool air beyond. Airy orbs of light hung suspended along the ceiling, casting a ephemeral glow on the glittering quartz embedded in the walls. Small rivulets of water traced fleeting patterns along the stone - leading onward until they reached what appeared to be a wall of water before them, glowing faintly with promise.

Illusion. Enchantment. Wonder. Despair. Danger lurks beneath the beauty of Fountain.


With a soft breath, the curtain of water parted to reveal the room beyond. Cool air met the fighters’ faces as they stepped across the threshold into the same gentle light, cast from a single immense orb that hung at the peak of the vaulted ceiling. A constant murmur brought attention to the outer edges - where water cascaded gently downward, forming a ring about the arena. For all the rushing water, the smooth dark gray stone of the floor remained surprisingly dry.

For a single breath, the room remained empty. Then, with a series of delicate chimes, a myriad of bubbles appeared out of thin air. Each orb a different hue, a veritable rainbow locked in an intricate dance. They drifted harmlessly through the waterfalls, bouncing delicately as they occasionally collided with one another until the arena was filled with movement and color.

A single pearly bubble floated downwards, gleaming in the light. It hesitated, almost playful, before colliding into the floor. With a nearly inaudible *pop*, it broke - sending a spray of liquid across the cool stone. A slippery trap on what had moments before been solid ground.

A whispering filled the room, as many different tones of voice as there were colors in the floating spheres.
“And so begins the Trial of Mystique. Fight with honor, or else die with glory!”

AQ DF MQ AQW  Post #: 1
7/15/2019 17:30:51   
theZOMBIEis_aLIE
Member

spoiler:

This is a collaboration post between myself and TitanDragonLord, who plays Aidan. I have his permission to post his portion.



Hearthforge, a few weeks ago

"So, what do you think?"

A panting dragonkin stood from his crouch, allowing Nadia to revel in the destruction that her cousin had wrought with only a couple of their their training bearings. She'd brought him to this clearing halfway down the mountain for this express purpose, but the number of felled trees and scarred rock was still impressive. Without the cover of trees, the stiff mountain breeze whistled past the pair, bringing rise to a touch of colour to Nadia's cheeks. Slowly, the female Shieldforged smiled, with the spark of amusement in her golden gaze.

"I think you're ready, Aspen."

The whoop of joy from her cousin inspired a quiet chuckle from Nadia, whom had turned to ascend the slopes. She had been waiting for this moment for what seemed like an eternity; now that another Mage had matured, the mountain would be safe if she made her pilgrimage to the Arena. Finally, she could take a shot at earning the honor of having a Paragon in the family, and the fame that came with it.

Shieldforged dragonkin made a living from selling their master-crafted wares, but the problem was that not many knew of their existence. If her name became known to the realm, many would flock to Hearthforge, seeking weapons of utmost quality, forged by the Paragon of Earth and her family... or, that was the dream. At the very least, she could return to the Slumbering Elder with the title under her belt, and a sense of pride to match the feat. Either way, this was the opportunity of a lifetime, and she was honored to have been selected to undertake the task.
Finally, her path found the wide archway carved into the stone, adorned with images of dragons in flight. This entrance served as the main passage to the caverns that she called home, and was lit by dozens of torches at all hours. Her steps seemed a touch lighter, as the weight of responsibility had slipped from her shoulders. 'Finally,' she thought, practically skipping to her family's sector beneath the earth, barely paying any mind to the various familiar districts she passed. 'I can prove the worth of the Shieldforged on a grand stage. I can do this. I will return Paragon.'

"I'm home!" Nadia exclaimed, bursting through the doorway with enough force to make the strong wooden door shudder a tad on its hinges. It was telling of how many times such an entrance had been made that the vibration carried at all. "But I'll be packing if you need me!"

As Nadia's form whizzed by, a groggy male peeked up from his afternoon couch-nap. It took him a few moments, but eventually a grin widened over his visage. "Aspen passed, then?" Nadia's father - Edgar, - inquired, slowly rising.

"With flying colours!" Came Nadia's voice from the other room, along with the clinking of weapons carefully being bundled with utmost care.

Despite the joy that radiated from both parent and daughter, there was one in that room who was less enthused by the news. In the corner, the sound of a whetstone being continually run up and down the gleaming metal of a masterfully crafted blade soon gave way to silence, as Nadia's brother Aidan cast a pained glance towards their father. He too had lofty dreams of participating in the Championships and bringing honour to their family by returning as Paragon, but found it impossible to get the permission he needed to leave without finding a suitable replacement to take his place in Hearthforge's defensive line, of which there were none. After all, there was seemingly no end to those who sought the family's well-kept trade secrets, and the two siblings had been the first line of defence against those who came willing to take said secrets by force.

"Nadia, don't you think we should be sending our strongest warrior to represent the clan in this tournament?" he said, breaking the silence with a halfhearted laugh and rising to his feet to poke his head through her bedroom door. "I'd hate to see you put in harm's way, by all means let me go in your stead."

While otherwise his jest had been ignored, Nadia lifted one hand from her work at carefully folding cloth over her prized chakram to maneuver the hilt of her brother's newest work to a collision course with the family jewels with merely a thought. A sack-tap ought to set the younger sibling straight.

"We are sending the strongest. Mind the forge while I'm gone, will you?"

It was fortunate for Aidan that he'd grown up getting used to his sister's antics, already pivoting as he saw her reach for the chakram and catching the weapon mere moments before it collided with him. Taking a moment to take in a small sigh of relief, and another to admire his own reflexes, he turned back towards his sister and began twirl the blade (which was far too short for the 7 foot goliath to use in real combat) in his fingers.

"If I remember rightly dear sister, you only had me by a hair's breadth last we fought, and even then that just means you've now beaten me just as much as you haven't," he said with a small smile, before quietly closing the door behind him and speaking in a hushed whisper. "Or you could speak to father, convince him to let me come with you. Two contestants are better than one."

The reward for conspiracy was little more than a huff as she continued to pack. She couldn't so much look at him. As much as she loved her brother, they'd been over this multiple times, since the day that she had been summoned to the Chamber of the Dragon to receive her quest. Though the Shieldforged were strong, they were only one part of this mountain. Every family unit had to put forth a warrior, lest they appear before the Slumbering Elder to provide an answer for the lack of participation in Hearthforge's militia. There was no way that she would put her father in that position, not when he was the best smith they had. There was no reason to risk his skill in routine combat.

"Absolutely not."

With a clenched a jaw and a huff of his own, Aidan stood there for a moment before bringing himself to speak. "Well then, I wish you good fortune in the tournament," he said, not wishing her any good fortune at all, before swiftly retreating to stew in his own company far from the watchful gaze of his fellow clansmen.

Their mental link was coloured with a brief moment of regret, but Nadia did not speak anything of the sort out loud. Her sense of duty was far too strong to allow her younger brother to come along, especially since he carried with him potential for Shieldforged heirs. Her father had not had any brothers, even though their bloodline was strong. She hated to say it, but careful breeding was the only way their kind had survived so long. Matches had to be made through careful calculations of how far two individuals were removed from eachother, and the Shieldforged were especially prized for their small number. While some others bred like rabbits, their line had carefully produced only two children from each marriage, limiting potential for inbreeding. Aidan was essential for the future of their bloodline, should... Should Nadia not come home.

Shouldering her pack, Nadia strode from the caverns with her chin held high. She would be victorious. She would return. For she had the heart and strength of a Dragon.




Bren
Nadia arrived in Bren a few weeks before the tournament, and as such, she had time enough to explore the city. After living in the organized chaos of Hearthforge, the human city was underwhelming, but acceptable. The events leading up to her entrance were uneventful... But when she arrived amongst the crowd? Not so much.

"Nadia!"

Was that the voice she thought it was? No way. It couldn't be.

"AIDAN?!"

It was a good thing that the crowd was so loud, for the profanities that left Nadia's lips spewed forth with much vigor, and abandon. One lady looked as if she were going to strike the source of such vulgarity, but upon viewing Nadia's six foot frame, clad in silk, gold and scales, she seemed to think better of it. After a few moments of shoving and shouting, the elder sibling finally made it to her much taller brother.

"What in the name of the Elder are you doing here?!"

"I'm here in the name of the Elder!" he yelled back, trying his best to push his way through the crowd but making little headway at getting any closer to his sibling. Whilst individually each member of the crowd could rather easily be shoved aside, as a unit it was far too dense for him to move forwards. Briefly he tried to explain over the volume of the arena what had happened when he'd confronted the dragon, but realised rather quickly it was a fool's errand. Especially when he finally put some effort into lip reading to see what she was saying.

It was then, at that very moment, as Aidan's lips parted to hurl his own insults towards his sister that the crowd seemed to melt away, piece by piece. The noise faded to a faded whisper, and the myriad of colour that was the spectators gave way to a damp darkness. Around her was unfamiliar stone, wet with trickles of moisture and speckled with smooth quartz. Nadia reached out, feeling for the familiar song of the earth... Yet found none. With a frown, she realized that this was illusion, or some sort of magical fusion to present a realistic image.

The faint glow of the arena prompted her to ready her weapons, even as she strode toward it. Her chakram freed itself first, the touch of the smooth metal to her back making setting its close orbit nothing more than a thought. It circled her like a jealous guardian, swinging a smooth ellipse around her form, suspended by nothing else than a magnetic current. As it swung though the air, Nadia added a slithering belt of bearings to her arsenal with a gentle tipping of the leather pouch at her waist. The smooth spheres seemed to lock together as nothing more than a fashion statement, each one in contact with her bare midriff for easy activation.
A brief sniff at the dripping opening gave her no hints toward the magics that made it so. The water was clear, and blissfully fresh. At least she wouldn't have to worry about rust eating her precious blades. Steel whispered in her personal corridor as she peeked around the edge of the rock that separated her from the other competitors. So far, no one had entered the ring... But Nadia was never afraid to be the one in the spotlight.

With a nimble hop, she entered the arena, careful to dodge a shimmering bubble crossing her path. She had no intention of falling prey to the slick substance it produced.

"Come on, then!" She called with smug satisfaction, noting several faces peering from their respective glooms. Apparently, she had recovered rather well from her shouting match with her stubborn sibling. In fact, it may have even served to boost her adrenaline. "Afraid of getting your feet wet?"
Post #: 2
7/15/2019 18:37:11   
deathlord45
Member

Crowing roosters heralded the approach of dawn, call all the peoples of Bren to wake for the coming contest of strength. The crowing however did not call to Metelsio he had been awake for quite some time laying in the bed he had rented the night before, enjoying the feeling of a soft bed beneath himself and a comfortable blanket to lay beneath. Rousing himself from the bed using the call of dawn’s light as a signal to get ready and move towards the event he had been called to compete in.

Taking his time to don his armor taking patient care to double check all the straps and little bits so that his defenses were as solid as they could be today. Moving deftly under the familiar weight he made his way outside of the inn where he was staying, a weight that had long served him well through his many campaigns in centuries since his birth, death and rebirth. Walking the waking city as it slowly roused itself into the common hustle and bustle related to these Elemental Championships was quite nostalgic for the old devil, harkening back to a life long considered lost to him.

Though his introspection was not as long lived as brief movement in the corner of his eye caught his attention; turning to look he saw quite the sight and a quick survey of the crowd he wasn’t the only one to notice. A clash of two acrobatic fighters in the early morning air on top of a building was quite intriguing as well as a worthy distraction. The duo of an older monkey like humanoid and a relatively youthful looking human woman was clearly a battle of skill though not of malice at least to a trained eye. Listening to the other gawkers he noted that none mention one particular thing that he was sure others would mention, the woman appeared to not be wearing pants.

Quite a bold choice for one’s appearance, not one I would make but good for her to be that self confident.

The gurgling of his stomach, brought Metelsio out of his watching and onto a quest for a light breakfast. Taking quite a few minutes to find a suitable and active food vendor near the arena he found that the woman who had been fighting was already there. After placing his order for his meal he sat himself close enough to her to easily have a conversation.

“Hello I am Metelsio. I saw your fight with the monkey man earlier you seem quite skilled though I have one question; why are not wearing pants?”

“Oh, uh, it is quite hot otherwise, really. Though admittedly, I am used to this attire,” she said, laughing a tad nervously.

“Are you here as a competitor or a spectator?”

“Here to fight of course. Otherwise my friend Hideyoshi wouldn’t have helped me train. Says it is asking for death so he was preparing me up.” She tapped her foot. “That said. What is with all the spikes?”


“They’re for better grappling of an opponent especially those of the less armored variety. I have the maces for the armored ones. I do wonder what kind of people are also competing this year besides us. Care to have a drink after the competition if we both survive?”

Xiuyang rubbed her chin at the idea. She nodded however in confidence, with a bright smile. “Would love to have a drink with a fellow competitor! Oh, my name is Zhao Xiuyang, by the by.”

The monkey man sauntered up, looking down as well. “Ohoho, I see you found a new friend in Spiky over there.” The monkey gave a hard pat on the wanderer’s back, almost causing her to careen over the roof. “Now, get along. Time for me to explore the city once more. Been a number of years.”

“Good to know. I’ll see you after the championships then, Zhao.”

Metelsio then went off towards the arena to do his last bits of prep work before the competition began. Sitting in his antechamber before entering the arena he was assigned, thinking back to the moment he had heard the call and what his master had told him.

“Win at any cost. Bring us more power for our war so that we may win and take the rest as our right.”


Upon the call to enter the arena a heavy sigh fell from between Metelsio’s lips. An arena of water and soapy liquid, most decidedly not an arena for someone like him and his skill set. Though his resignation quickly turned to mirth as he started laughing as looked to his right.

“Looks like I was wrong about this being after the competition, Zhao. Feel like a health bout with an old soldier?”

Metelsio then took up a passive stance waiting and watching.

“Absolutely, my friend.” Spear hung to the side with the spearhead touching the ground. The gleeful wanderer leaned forward, surging forward spear sparking as she brushed against the ground. “Let’s go, hopefully no one barges in!”

“Agreed!”
AQ DF MQ AQW  Post #: 3
7/15/2019 18:48:28   
Caststarter
Member

Fire roared into the nightly abyss. Wood blistered as it turned to mere cinders. The moon, an orb of flame, loomed over the once pristine tower. Story by story succumbed to demonic flames, as souls cried out into the sky for a reprieve. Intermingled with coarse laughter, swords clashed against wicked claws as blood splatters against the stone ground. However, they were but a faint whisper to the maddening, grotesque leonine roar crippling the ancient city.

With a push, doors shut as a young girl barred herself and a bloodied boy inside an untouched temple. The adolescent girl, donned in singed simple robes, ran to the downed boy, tears racing across her cheeks. “Brother, brother, come on!” The brother lifted his head meekly, a simple blade in hand, as his body was practically swallowed by blood and lamellar armor. Eyes opened and closed, hands unable to even twitch. “Brother, please!” the sister cried out, as she grasped her brother’s head, looking into his bloodshot eyes.

“Sister, leave,” the boy stumbled, as eyes slowly rolled inward. “I’ll fight. Must fight.” His sister placed her forehead against his sundered chest, black hair soaked in red. The girl shook, back against the wall. Her head trembled as eyes darted about. The screams from the world beyond grew and grew, as the door buckled against a sudden forceful smash. As caked hands reached out to mask her face, her eye caught a trail of dimly lit candles that ascended to an altar.

She wrapped her hands around her brother’s shoulders, dragging the two of them up the altar. The door cracked and splintered, invasive hisses spewed forth. Spindly claws reached through as the girl desperately climbed. She pulled her brother over the altar’s ledge, unwilling to look back. Grasping for salvation, fingers laid against embroidered wood. Glinting from the moon across a window, decorated with a blue and green tassel, a spear rested in silence.

Wood exploded as supernatural growls and hisses poured into the room. Eyes drifted from the bloodied body to the immaculate weapon. The brother looked on with pleading eyes, as the sister took hold of the spear. Candles succumbed to darkness, where upon a fiery white light bloomed within.

---

Swipe. Click. Clack. At rapid speed, staves swung wide and swirled around as the morning sun cast a silhouette on the rooftops of Bren. Using his bo stave as leverage, a strange white-furred gi donned monkey jumped high over a low swing. Xiuyang darted forward, thrusting her stave, hands slipping closer to her body, as the monkey man landed. The mythical creature, without pause, twisted his body, stave rising upward as it struck the opposing strike. Xiuyang’s weapon twirled overhead as it flew.

The monkey twisted once more, only for the determined wanderer to rush forward and vault over her opponent. She soared from the monkey’s shoulders for a brief moment before the former bodyguard caught her stave in mid-air. The stave slammed down to the ground as it caught the creature’s swing to a halt.

Without hesitation, the monkey kicked high with blinding speed. Xiuyang pivoted to the side, weapon rising up for a quick thwack. However, the monkey man caught the quick counter with just two fingers. The wanderer jerked before another kicked landed straight into her abdomen. She flew back, crash landed face down, coughing as her weapon dropped down from the roof. Sweat beads dripped from her face, where her hair started to unravel. “Perhaps that is enough for now, Ashy.” The monkey man spoke out, with a smile on his face.

The strange monkey crouched and reached a hand out. Xiuyang clasped, being lifted up off from the roof. “Could've held that back you know,” she coughed out. “I might've got a bruise within me there, Hideyoshi.” The wanderer leaned her head back, tying back hair once more.

“Oh, but it is difficult to brace for pain when you know not how it feels, Ashy.” Hideyoshi spoke softly, with a hint of enthusiasm. “Besides! You still did quite well there!” The monkey giggled as he pushed his stave down, reducing it to the size of a rod.

“Of course, I know. I’m well acquainted with pain,” Xiuyang gasped out. “Meanwhile, you are at the level of a demigod.”

Hideyoshi moaned at the remark. “Ashy, you know I’m not at a stage of godhood.” The monkey man then leaped up, face chipper once more. “Now now, if you think I am at a demigod, that means you can fight demigods as well! Master fighter, you are!”

“I still have much to learn outside of fighting.” Xiuyang looked down to the streets of Bren, with a solemn even with a forced smile. “My ideals of justice are fickle after all. Especially when I consider who I used to serve.”

Hideyoshi scratched at his chin as he looked up inquisitively. “I remember Sparky. Hopeful one she was. You too were hopeful. She wanted to help the land. You wanted to help the land.” A large smile grew on his face. “Only natural that the two of you came together.”

“But she was hated by the people! And I failed to do my duty as a bodyguard for her that one day.” A large thump ringed out as she stomped. “It really seemed like that bandit leader truly just wanted to get rid of tyrants and she helped to get rid of his people.”

“Did you really fail though? That was also a dreadful battle. Not to mention Bardy was only just one person out in the world that radiated justice. Sparky did too.”

Xiuyang scratched at the back of her head, eyes closed, when a man from below heralded her.

“Hello I am Metelsio. I saw your fight with the monkey man earlier you seem quite skilled though I have one question; why are not wearing pants?”

The wanderer blinked, considering what Metelsio was wearing. An armor of spikes. Spikes, spikes, and more spikes.

“Oh, uh, it is quite hot otherwise, really. Though admittedly, I am used to this attire,” she said, laughing a tad nervously.

“Are you here as a competitor or a spectator?”

“Here to fight of course. Otherwise my friend Hideyoshi wouldn’t have helped me train. Says it is asking for death so he was prepping me up.” She tapped her foot. “That said. What is with all the spikes?”

“They’re for better grappling of an opponent especially those of the less armored variety. I have the maces for the armored ones. I do wonder what kind of people are also competing this year besides us. Care to have a drink after the competition if we both survive?”

Xiuyang rubbed her chin at the idea. She nodded however in confidence, with a bright smile. “Would love to have a drink with a fellow competitor! Oh, my name is Zhao Xiuyang, by the by.”

Hideyoshi sauntered up, looking down as well. “Ohoho, I see you found a new friend in Spiky over there.” The monkey gave a hard pat on the wanderer’s back, almost causing her to careen over the roof. “Now, get along. Time for me to explore the city once more. Been a number of years.”

“Good to know. I’ll see you after the championships then, Zhao.”

Hideyoshi hopped from roof to roof, as Metelsio wandered off. Xiuyang sighed, it’s going to be a grand time if he is also in the same arena.

The former bodyguard leaned over the roof, window just below. She stepped off whereupon she grasped the edge of the roof, somersaulting back into her room. Quickly she donned her breastplate and slung her great spear around her. Once set, Xiuyang dropped down from the window, closing it as she went down. As she neared the ground, she kicked from the wall where her fall softened as momentum rushed forward into a roll. With a modest sprint, she rushed towards the arena known as Fountain. I must win. I must fix everything done by that horrid beast.

~~

Rushing through tranquil hallways, the wanderer darted from one passerby and the next. Cool air brushed her face, akin to the soft winters of her homeland. For a moment, time seemed to freeze to a chill before she darted into a darkened hallway. Within a moment, a gentle light shined into her eyes, into a strange tranquil land of mystical hope. Until playful bubbles popped into existence.

This. Is strangely childish for an arena of death.

She spun her spear into her two hands, as sparks flared as the side scraped across the stone.

“Looks like I was wrong about this being after the competition, Zhao. Feel like a health bout with an old soldier?”

Her eyes darted to her left, as the familiar spike-covered Metelsio called out. A great grin rushed across her face. “Absolutely, my friend.” Spear hung to the side with the spearhead touching the ground. The gleeful wanderer leaned forward, surging forward, spear sparking as she brushed against the ground. “Let’s go, hopefully no one barges in!”

“Agreed!”
DF  Post #: 4
7/16/2019 6:54:41   
Fionnes
Member

Sera was bewildered.

Not only had she not heard of the city of Bren before, she had never been to a place with so many other people. Or things to do. A city was a whole new concept to learn and understand.

For only a few days ago Sera was still in the secluded village of Ives, living a calm, quiet and relatively simple life. With her adopted sister in tow, all she asked for was a little bit of peace and serenity. Obscuring her identity as a synthetic being was already hard enough; taking care of an orphaned child in addition to that, was only more difficult. But, more than any other emotion or thought, Sera wanted to know who she was meant to be.

“What are you thinking about, Sera?” the little girl asked.

“O-oh?” She placed the teacup down, retracing her thoughts. “There’s a tournament that’s going on, in a few days’ time. In Bren, I think.”

“Weren’t you thinking about going?” The little girl leaned close, tugging gently at Sera’s shirt, “Are you going to beat all the bad guys?”

“N-no, Char, no, they’re not all bad,” Sera said as she held the little girl’s hand, “They’re just like me, trying to find a purpose in life. And I need to find mine.”

“What do you think it’ll be?” the little girl asked quizzically, tilting her head.

“I don’t know, I don’t know. But…” she paused, “But it’ll be all right. I’ll be back before you know it.”

And having left Char in the care of their neighbours, Sera packed her bags and headed for the big city, the weight of her gear heavy on her shoulders. It was not the physical weight of everything that brought back the memories, no, the weight of her past was what felt heaviest.

Sera gave a short sigh, took a deep breath. Then she looked around. Things started to become hazy as her vision faded.

Then Bren slowly came back into view. The hustle and bustle, the noise, the sheer volume of people, all came rushing back, folding her memories back into place as Sera realised she was starting to crowd in with everyone. As everyone started to huddle into the arena, her senses heightened: she noticed things that she never noticed before, as if some of these people were, different. The short, white-winged angel ahead of her, another lady in winter boots, a small blue furry creature, and even the barefoot lady with the white bandanna and the small backpack: they were all standing out. This was indeed strange. Unexpected. What was this feeling, she thought?

She shook her head, ridding her mind of those thoughts, and by the time she opened her eyes again, she found herself next to a waterfall, surrounded by bubbles, their soft warm glow accompanied with the heavy humidity, which she felt all over her body. No one was to be seen.

This must be the arena, she thought to herself. This is it.

And as pretty as this place looked, it was too quiet to be normal.

The other combatants would also be here.

It was time to be ready.
DF  Post #: 5
7/17/2019 15:24:14   
  Lorekeeper
And Pun-isher

 

— Power received must be earned and honed, even if one does not desire it. A passion withheld may in time take the reins, when one is least prepared for it. —



There was little that the constables could do to conceal their reluctance in shielding their bound charge from the surrounding citizens. It was only what respect remained for their office, and the scant, grim satisfaction of the affair’s finality, that kept the crowd from devolving into a mob, and lower still than that.

The defiant demand was made, nonetheless. Some amid tears, others in undiluted outrage, were not content with simply seeing the man escorted up the hill. They demanded to see the entire proceeding, belligerently proclaiming their right to witness the restitution of the horrors wrought upon their town.

A stone narrowly missed its mark and scraped past a constable’s face, eliciting her frighteningly fierce gaze of reproach. Before the culprit’s censure could be issued, however, a commanding voice called to order from beyond the fence that barred access to the top of the hill.

“Justice-” cried the man whose title was taken from that very word “is not entertainment. The crown bids us to abandon such barbarism as taking joy in the death of anyone, no matter how wicked. If any here should take justice into their own hands, that punishment be reduced to a common spectacle for the masses, I invite you to follow this man.”

The crowd was cowed into silence by the compounding weight of the moment: None dared test the implication of the Justice’s words, nor cast another stone while the constables halted their march and defiantly held formation. And all were confused by the fact that the doomed man continued to walk on his own, chains pulling taut in their holders’ hands. Even through the mire of hatred, the sight was so odd as to be perturbing. His head was neither held upright nor downcast. There was no defiance as he crossed the threshold, and yet the Justice also saw no resignation in the eyes of the doomed.

At the gate, the chains were passed on to two soldiers while their prior holders turned their attention to the crowd. Beyond it lay a forked stone path: Immaculate tiles led to a stand from which the Justice and, when necessary, a jury, led the proceedings and made all due proclamations. Opposite of them, tall steps of rough stone led to a worn yet strangely well-maintained wooden platform. All pretense of care ended beyond that point, with a thin trail stretching from the platform to a solitary home beyond it - Not a planned path, but one worn into the grass.

Though no less severe than before, there was a subtle frustration and confusion to the Justice’s words as he took his place across from the platform.

“Son, you were accused of more ghastly deeds than I believe any single man, woman, beast or even demon could accomplish in one night. In fact, at least one citizen reports seeing more than one culprit, mortal or otherwise, involved in the carnage. And all of this happened in but a fraction of the night that you spent in Redholme. And yet you plead guilty.”

Expression lines crowded into wrinkles as if straining to give way to a moment’s sigh. An entire evening spent reviewing an utterly grisly crime, another in disbelief at the speed of the proceedings, and the baffling behavior before him, did not make the deed any less unpleasant.

“However it is that you alone remain after that ordeal, I hope for the sake of both of our consciences that you truly are the last one standing, and that you understand the decision you’ve made.”

The condemned man simply nodded, whereupon the judge’s voice regained all formality and the restraining soldiers resumed their duty of leading him up the steps.

“Very well. For the murders of Brother Olias...”

“You’re going to be fine. They missed your heart, the artery’s fine, just hang in there - keep resisting! You are not the beast! SILVER! Someone get me the man’s silver!”


“...Dame Jeanne of Greenguard...”

“Get that cart ready before the door gives! We can lose these knaves in Darkovia, but if they surround us in this town- NO!”


“...Emancipator Nika...”

“They’re through! Sun and Thunder, just leave the wretch! Him and I can handle this-”


“...and Leon Fairne of the Guard...”

“...Demons. Why would hunters have... Olias, RUN! They’re not here for that man!”


“...as well as the slaughter of multiple other outsiders and the destruction of the Fairne estate...”

“...It’s too late. I’m sorry, kid.I wish I’d realized.”


I should have saved them. Fought at their side.


“You are hereby sentenced to death. Per your claim to the Maradan name, you will be executed by beheading.”

The executioner appeared as inexpressive as the man he bid to kneel, but there was a certain familiar sorrow to his mien. The years wore on his rugged frame in a way that the doomed man was unable to experience. Fitting, that his end would be delivered by someone who could display such burdens. One could swear that it was a mountain and not a sword that the headsman carried while muttering the prayer engraved on its flat.

I did nothing. Nothing but curl up and fight you.


“Vance Maradan, do you have any final words to record?”

The Moon-Broken stared ahead, finally mustering the effort to push his own exhaustion aside and make an overt gesture. The view from the hill was simply breath-taking, almost making its purpose an insult. And yet, it was alarming all the same. Even with the sun blazing overhead, the moon’s pallor had begun to stand out in the clear blue sky, rising over the lavender-covered valley. It was beginning to pull already, as if grasping for the tides far to the east.

Stop pushing. It’s only right that we share their fate.



It was with an apologetic little smile that he simply said:

“Make it quick.”

The executioner hefted his blade.

NO


He would never move it again.





The cold air was beginning to tear at its chest as each heaving inhalation threatened to scrape it raw. Its muscles ached, a small menagerie of minuscule tears racing against the fibers’ effort to knit themselves back together. Still, it refused to stop. Billowing trails drew lines behind its maw and nostrils as it charged. The dry numbness of a battle desperately won finally faded.

Though a coppery aftertaste remained, the bitterly burning scent that had awoken it was finally fading. Deep within veins of stone and soil, where a light shone as verdant as the grass in its memories of far away, it was that smell which awoke the sprinting predator. It was complex and painful, in the same way as the charged air around those figures who hurled fire and pulled storms from their fingers. To its mind, its approach felt like the searing sting of their moon-glinting metal, and the very air around it seemed to grasp and twist at its blood.

It could not grasp what it was, but it sufficed to make one thing clear. The Man was bent on doom once again.

The Man was a fool. He did not know his own mind, even as he filled so much of it with noise. He sought to make a whole by drawing halves and carving one away.

Even now it could feel the weight of his grasp on its mind, desperately pulling it downward through the wall he himself had erected. But his weight was hardly a burden here, where the ever-present moon held it aloft in its frenzy.

Its jaws left the neck of another hunter, one that could have made prey of it with but a moment’s advantage, and its flight resumed. The danger was enthralling, but distracting. Exhaustion weakened the walls, let his gaze through.

His thoughts burned with more words than it cared to entertain, demanding to be returned to his own body, his own life.

The Man was a fool. He did not know his own life. He did not know life at all. And the Beast despaired of how such a simple truth always escaped him.

This was life. The Beast didn’t need words to understand it. To be alive was to be strong, yet vulnerable. Powerful, yet ever in danger. Flawed, cowering one moment and howling the next, stealing from life’s own teeth... Free. Free to let passions wax, wane and run their course, not carving a canyon nor building a dam to hold them at bay. Because if its life could be taken as easily as it could take others, then it was to be lived without restraint.

Until the Man understood, the Beast would always rise whenever he came so close to breaking them both in his folly.





Ever-changing yet with an essence that was unmistakable even to strangers, Bren awaited at the end of an arduous journey. One that could have been cut shorter by no less than two weeks if every stretch of it had not been traversed on foot and across scenic routes. However, there was a purpose to it all, and the precise day of arrival was carefully planned: This was the time of each month that Van looked forward to the most.

It was not strictly a matter of control. After all, Bren was one of the places where he could count on being... handled, if the moon and his misfortune waxed full. Through fortune and restraint, albeit often being forced to seek out a secluded place to... let loose, for lack of a word he was more willing to use, Van had lived without unfortunate incidents for years. Although the night of the new moon did offer him safety through the absence of the pull hefting at the wilder recesses of his fractured mind, there was something simpler to that day. When the comforting darkness poured from the sky unto the world below, Van could truly enjoy the beauty of it all.

The majesty of the stars. The cool breeze. The music of the world. Company.

Without the moon’s influence drawing the Beast closer, Van hardly needed to spare an effort to push it back. In fact, on that night, he didn’t need to. Whether what lay within slumbered or didn’t bother to struggle at a disadvantage — it truly let him be. For one night each month, he could breathe.

That was the real reason why Van chose that day to finally enter Bren. While he could see Supplicant’s Way, the path to his destination, this one day would be about everything but the Arena. He would give the great complex the respect it was due. But the Moon-Broken had walked on Lore for many years, too many to be innocent about what was to come. A long life would change irrevocably, one way or another. And if this could be his very last moonless night... Why not enjoy it? Just this once, he could live a little.

Often, the first step in having a good day was deciding to have one. Perhaps that was why Van had a peculiar ease feeling young again, and even laughed at the bittersweet irony of being referred to a tavern and lodging dubbed the ‘Old Fang’.






‘Crowded’ and ‘welcoming’ were words that normally felt mutually exclusive to Van, even on the night of the new moon. The Old Fang, however, was... something else. Its warm ambiance bore a simple aesthetic: Well-treated walnut bearing mounted trophies, plaques honoring past Champions, tables that seemed to be carved from great logs, and replica (He assumed) weapons that some blacksmith ought to be particularly proud of hanging behind a deliberately humble bar.

There was little waste to the place, both in decor and behavior. Filled to the brim with people that expected to be seizing each other up for the slaughter in mere days, and yet not a moment’s hostility. An ebbing and flowing air of jovial camaraderie moved everyone at different speeds, like the waves in the bar’s worn timber.

In retrospect, the newcomer shouldn’t have been so surprised that his presence broke the flow enough to be singled out mere moments after taking in the sights. A hand that was clearly intimate with fire and hard work was pressed onto his chest, stopping Van in his tracks with what seemed like shocking ease to him... Although for a moment, the same surprise could be glimpsed on the clear green gaze that the sight of the muscular arm led his own to meet.

Rising well over six feet, the blacksmith stood eye to eye with him. After seeming to sniff the air, she grinned from eye to eye, a set of white pearls neatly gleaming in contrast to the unkempt, rebellious strands of red framing her expression.

“Easy there, handsome. I can tell it’s your first time here, so let me give you a warning before someone less magnanimous comes along: We know how it gets with all the excitement and rushing blood around these parts, but... “

Her tone lowered just enough slip the attention of the surrounding bustle of merrymakers.

“...Keep your fangs to yourself, will you? We don’t want to have to show ours.”

She winked, ever so briefly, and Van could have sworn that the open eye was suddenly as yellow as the insignia on her black smock.

“Oh! And if you’re going to sign up, get it out of the way before midnight! Don’t wait until it’s so late that you can’t find a registrar!”

Before Van could comment, however, the blacksmith was already moving on and making an afterthought out of yelling:

Don’t die! Not before spending some serious coin here!”

The revelers and hopefuls didn’t take long at all to sweep up their awkward visitor into a number of activities that tested the mounting rust in his ability to remain personable for long. Yet for all his taciturn demeanor, these moments were precisely what he had sought out. The revelry. The fleeting bonds. The tall tales and wild stories, from the boastful and jocular to the forlorn journeys that had the entire tavern cheering the name of some fallen hero. Yet in the Old Fang, a difficulty in reciprocating with his own stories proved to be a critical weakness. The reluctance was surprisingly well accommodated, but Van was soon rushed to the nearest opportunity to make stories that could be shared over a meal that one might be smacked for doubting the worth of: An arena registrar who seemed inexhaustible in her gesturing, fresh out of an argument with what appeared to be another hopeful. Upon merely arriving to her desk, Van had a scroll and a quill slapped on his chest with exceptional speed.

“Good! See, I’m actually getting more than one person signed up per day now! I told you the story about the guy who was liquified wasn’t putting them off- Hang on. Just a moment, ah...” A quick flash of amber as her eyes darted to the form Van was trying to fill. “Vance. Right.”

Waving maroon strands snapped as the registrar’s head whipped back and forth between Van and another man.

“No illusions on this one, right?”

Rather than look up from his book, the long-haired man closed his eyes and replied:

“No active magic at all.”

This seemed to disappoint the registrar, who was soon walking around Van with an inquisitive squint.

“Seriously? Huh. Well, mister Maradan, here’s to hoping you’ve fought more recently than these puny little scars are telling me you have. So neatly healed, too. You’ve got a good healer- Or hey, maybe you’re one of those that actually gets out of the way when sharp things come a-swinging.”

The reading man cleared his throat in a way that made Van suspect that there was an inside joke grisly enough for him to be perfectly happy not being privy to it. One look through the hanging strands of chestnut brown hair was enough to give it away, however.

“Right! The form. You haven’t filled in your age.”

Van frowned, not out of distaste but consideration. This was an often inevitable question that he tended to dodge or lie about, but there was hardly a point in dishonesty given the circumstances. He genuinely tried to discern the answer, as he had many times, but some fog banks had long since settled permanently in the psion’s memory. That a mind mind so honed to turn thoughts into power could be so strongly affected by the blurring of time constituted an unpleasant irony. The question begat more doubts, but he elected to relent rather than waste any more time.

“I’m afraid I don’t actually know. Not precisely.”

“Good grief, not another of those types. Can you give me an estimate? How far back do you remember your local history?”

“There are some gaps before then, but I remember thirteen crowns before the calamity to the West.”

“Which one? Wait, nevermind. Either way, that would add up to... More than three hundred years at least. Wow.”

“Is that so impressive here of all places? The patrons tell stories of much older entrants.”

“Well, no. Not really. But this does mean that we broke a new record for how old someone can be while my boyfriend still acts older than them. Seriously, would you believe he's not signing up this year?”

This time, the reader twitched and closed his book, sounding vaguely surprised when remarking:

“Cerise, we’ve gone out twice.

“That’s a point. Well, do you want to get dinner tonight?”

“...I wouldn’t mind.”

Completely satisfied, the registrar turned back to Van with the smug bemusement of someone who had thoroughly demonstrated a point, and simply stated:

“He’s my boyfriend.”

“...There. I signed.”

“Alright! Don’t die before putting on a good show!”

The Moon-Broken was quick to leave the desk, not remotely eager to risk getting caught between those two. For the first time in what could generously be estimated as decades, Van felt like he was in far over his head. If he survived the coming trials, trying to keep up with Bren’s social mores would be... an interesting experience.

But would it be worth surviving without succeeding...?





The morning caught Van having woken fairly early, following a hearty breakfast with just enough practice to assure himself that he had not neglected to work on his footwork. While one might expect much more impressive practice from a fencer of his inordinately vast experience, he had found time and time again that it was the endless repetition of the very basics that aided him most commonly. Being difficult to surprise meant little if one allowed rust to slow down the necessary reactions. Just as importantly, he didn’t know what to expect from the Arena; it was essential to remain sharp on performing such movements with and without psionic enhancement.

To his surprise, Van’s exercise had drawn the attention of both the publican and blacksmith of the Old Fang. While he expected that they might have objected to his use of their rear yard, he was instead met with pleasant regard and perhaps overly familiar expressions of pride over the fact that he was on his best behavior. That they expected otherwise was telling, but there was once again no time to elucidate on the matter. The hour approached.

Clad in leathers from coat to boots, Van wore steel upon only his torso, forearms and forelegs. Part of him still doubted the wisdom of eschewing heavy plate in favor of this lighter suit, but sticking to his strengths seemed wisest in the face of uncertainty. Daggers safely secured at his sides, a broad back-scabbard strapped around his body, he finally set out onto the streets with overdue purpose.

The sights were no less interesting in broad daylight. Even through the throng of the swarming crowds, some were difficult to miss. Sorcerers who spoke in fire and thunder, bidding their chosen elements to compose symphonies of carefully contained destruction for the entertainment of their future audience. Scaled, horned warriors parting the crowds with a screaming argument that had as much fury as it did raw mirth. He even spotted fighters that rivaled his agility and exceeded his unaided balance making an enticing spectacle out of their roof-bound display of prowess.

Still, there was little time for distractions. His mind and course were set on the bridge seen days ago...

...and yet he never noticed the moment he crossed it. Had he done so at all? One instant, he was slipping between the shoulders of two towering fellows, tall enough to block the light as he ducked into an alley. The next, he was walking down a misty hallway, leaving a slowly fading trail as the moment and its stage drew him closer.

Before long, Van could feel another unbidden change: The stirrings of the very same overpowering urge that grew into a rampaging conscience and thwarted him every time an end to his curse was nigh. But as familiar as it was, even as the anxiety of its possibility grew undeniable, there was something just as unmistakably wrong.

The wakeful growling came from without. Something was clearly pressing into the Moon-Broken’s mind. Man and Beast knew every corner of that battlefield, every brick of the wall that divided it, even if only one realized the depth of this wall’s spreading roots. And this influence did not belong. By the time the intrusion ended, a measure of paranoia had nonetheless already set in. He knew it to have been an external influence, but an intrusive doubt did rise of its own bidding: Was his determination to win without... it... a matter of integrity, or was he waxing naïve, arrogant even?

He simply walked onward, at first. If some manner of ambush awaited, perhaps some preemptive culling of the competition, he could not tip his hand before identifying the source. The surrounding quartz ornaments reflected a pulsing light now and then, but its source was never there at the turn of his eyes. When the veil of water made his location more obvious still, Van had yet to identify his stalker. Nothing left to do but to cross and be ready.

Beyond the cascading entrance awaited... Anything but what he might have expected from an arena where challengers stake their lives for dreams that they are willing to kill and die in the pursuit of. The Trial of Mystique, as the voices presented it, offered no shortage of beauty and delivered just that. The popping bubbles would, however, make matters... interesting.

When a charming Dragonkin leapt into the arena, making a stage of it in her entrance, Van immediately noted her advantage: Built for strength and agility, while perhaps able to walk in both plantigrade and digitigrade styles, and a tail that could provide much more than just a counterbalance.

She drew his attention when issuing a challenge, but delivered more than a taunt. While he lacked her advantage, he could emulate it. Perhaps he could even go further... He slid his feet back and forward in place for a moment, seeming to encounter little to no friction as his mind’s grasp enveloped his body. A haze akin to that of heat built up over his head, then surged forward toward the middle of the arena - Not toward the challenger, but through the biggest line of bubbles that the bolt could catch at a moment’s notice.

A moment later, Van launched himself through the slippery trail and... allowed himself to slide forward, twirling wide in a semicircle around the challenger. Manipulating the momentum of his limbs with a barely visible shimmer, the warrior slid low before coming to a halt.

“I most certainly am not...” he responded to Nadia’s challenge with a degree of mirth that was initially difficult to contain, but soon soured into a grim, threatening expression. The maneuver, while seeming purely like a feat of remarkable grace, had provided him with an interesting view: The interplay of light and shadows woven by the glowing orbs and bubble-cast rainbows. In particular, the difference between the Dragonkin’s and his own, which had briefly stretched across the remaining distance to the wall opposite of his entrance.

The grin offered to his challenger could have passed for the face of an entirely different man compared to the gaze that now stopped well before her legs. His movement came to an end with the drawing of the sword at his back, pointed at the faint glow of his shadow with undeniable menace.

“Are you?

It was a peculiar weapon, with little in the way of a thrusting tip and greater mass than should be practical to wield with such lightness. Despite its positively wicked edge, it had no tapering along the distal plane. A specialist’s weapon, to be sure. And along its plane, an engraving faced the sunken target left between the Dragonkin and the Moon-broken.

Whosoever feels the weight of this blade, may the Lords have mercy on their soul.



< Message edited by Cray -- 7/18/2019 19:35:45 >
Post #: 6
7/18/2019 5:16:18   
Sanctus
Member

Twilight

Pain

Hunger

First thought, then feeling.

Slowly. Flesh screamed, born once, then torn again, building. Breaking. Time stretched, every second, minute, hour, all pain, all life. Not a moment lost. Just.

Pain

....

Here again. Alive. Born a murderer.

Hate. Not mine. His.
The old one.
He was mine until he was rank alone.

A Sergeant.

WHY WON’T HE FORGIVE ME

He’s wrong. The world needs structure. The kind a child could never understand. Worlds are not built on mercy. So how could mercy fix one?

Touch.

The grit of dirt. No copper. Just.

Dryness.
Death.


This time I knew the darkness was slumber.

I WILL WAKE

I strode forth. Was this blood on my hands? I felt.

Satisfied. I am on a journey of peace. I am Order.
There is no blood on my hands. There can’t be.

A figure ahead in the hallway. A champion. I need quiet. I need the shelter trailing behind him. There must be an end to this twilight.
To his questions, his accusations.

Where is the Stairway? One step below.

Comfort. Peace in the shade.

I am Order. And I require.

FOCUS

Dark again, by choice, by will. I am in his shadow.

‘Welcome’ the light beyond says.

‘And so begins the Trial of Mystique’

‘Die with Glory’

I died with glory once before.
No.
The child did.

I am here for a wish.

‘Are you?’ my shade says.

I climb out of the dark. Rising before this mortal who smells of beasts and broken things.

Do they all toy with the tools of gods now? Or were we only gods when no one else could play?

My voice, it says,
I AM HERE FOR PEACE

There will be no blood on my hands.

Only peace.
Post #: 7
7/18/2019 23:55:55   
Caststarter
Member

With a glint from the moonlight, the brilliant spear struck through the boned monster. A cacophony roared as bone and flesh cracked, rippling throughout the street. Black ichor poured out from the clawed, bone-protruding demon. The monster, inured to pain, almost cackled in joy. It grasped the mighty spear as it pushed itself through it to swipe at its prey. The sister swiftly pulled out the brother’s sword, furiously bisecting the monster. With a soft kick, the impaled torso fell to the ground. The monster began to dissolve in foul ichor, as a wretched scent more putrid than a mound of rotten corpses filled the air.

Around the sister, fire roared in the surrounding buildings. From beyond, the hisses and howls began to shimmer down. A group of peasants, armed with makeshift spears, ran across in a stumbling formation. “We will kill the monsters!” “We will save our families!” They boasted.

“Don’t!” The sister cried out. The peasants tripped to a halt. “The monsters are leaving.” Her eyes trailed back to her brother, a mere dried husk. “They had already got what they came for.”

The group walked up, weapons held tightly to their chests. One commoner—one of priestly, pure white robes—shuffled closer, in practical awe of what the sister held. “What, what happened here, my lady?”

The surviving sibling looked up to the man, eyes peering from beneath ashy white hair. “I don’t know.” Her heart swelled as she spoke, tears trickling down from her face. “All I know is that my family is no more.” Hands clenched into the mythical spear; tassel a brilliant white and black, both it and the blade still immaculate.

The holy man looked at the sister, the latter’s lips curled down, with distant eyes. He leaned closer and offered a comforting hand. From a torn robe lined with blood, red dripped onto the man’s fingers. “I know not what your family once was. But you must be treated. Let’s all go inside and sit through the rest of the chaos.” The sister almost paid no heed as she stared into the fiery void, merely allowing the man to guide her back inside. “We will give him a proper burial.” The brother's sword slipped out the girl's grasp, clanging against the ground, a mere distant memory.

---

With light steps, Xiuyang darted between the prismatic collective of watery orbs. As she approached Metelsio, beyond the veil of water was the distorted image of a strange shadow. Four limbs. Tall. Monstrous. Slightly blurred and distant, a sharp grimace formed as a harsh memory flared from within.

The wanderer grasped the mythical weapon with two hands and swiftly stabbed through the orb, bursting it over the floor and the spearhead. Steam emanated from the weapon, as it crackled with disdain. After her spiteful indignation, she snapped herself back to Metelsio. She rushed forward, whereupon the wanderer stepped to the side.

With a huff, Xiuyang twirled her spear down near her spiked opponent, crashing the spearhead against the dry floor. The blade flared, as a burst of forceful, white-blue flame rushed forward. The explosion resonated throughout the arena, faint ripples across the nearby childish bubbles.

At blitzing speed, she thrust her spear skyward through the momentary flames. Bizarrely, her body surged forward, weapon now in the mighty hands of her opponent. Gritting her teeth, the steadfast warrior planted her feet before the distance shrunk any further.

Swiftly, but firmly, Metelsio reached back and threw his right elbow left and upward. Xiuyang pulled her head back, spikes flying inches away from her face. The wanderer forced her weight downward on her spear, loosening her opponent’s grip.

With a steady tug, the weapon flew out of the iron-clasped grip. In the same motion, the tip of her spear brushed against the stone for a split moment. Sparks flew as a momentary white wall of purging fire roared between her and Metelsio. “Strong and firm, you are.” The spearmaster hung her spear to the side, allowing the spearhead to hover just above the floor.

Even in a friendly battle, she was to give her all. Everyone was watching. Listening. Judging. She had already lost family. Yet, the wanderer still had more to lose.
DF  Post #: 8
7/19/2019 11:51:03   
deathlord45
Member

He could hear the other competitors in the arena taunting and calling out to each other, sounding far enough away that Metelsio didn’t feel the need to pay them too much mind -- they would likely keep each other busy. He only needed to pay attention to his opponent and his immediate area for now.

That was a rather childish taunt though, do they really allow children to compete in these? What being in their right mind would do as such? Either way, I will seize victory and then my freedom.

A sudden shift in Zhao’s countenance fully brought Metelsio out of his mind, the sudden look of wrath that crossed the human’s face intrigued the devil. Was it her psyching herself up, or did something far behind him draw her ire? He would’ve gone for quick peek over his shoulder, however Zhao had decided to pop one of those accursed bubbles and then rush at him.

Really. You just had to go and pop one of those blasted things. Gotta make maneuvering that much harder for the full plate wearer.

Zhao had brought her spear down near him to create a sudden and violent burst of flame, heat and sound. Metelsio grimaced at the sudden burst of sound reverberating throughout his helmet, although the heat and flame only registered as annoyances in their fleeting flash upon his eyes.. Though he was thankful, as it had slightly change the trajectories of the nearby bubbles. A welcome reprieve from having to worry about them.

I’d thank you, Zhao, but that would probably give you ideas that aren’t easily countered.

She followed up with an upward thrust, a blue, sparking flow of flame trailing the blade, this had just been what Metelsio was waiting for. Grabbing the haft of the spear with his left hand and wrenching it forward, he pulled Zhao within reach and brought his right elbow upwards in an attempt to stun the human with a blow to the head, his second life as a hellish knight granting him the resilience and resistance to endure even some of the most grave heat and flames.

The woman tilted her head and put her whole body into a downward motion, escaping his elbow and attaining the momentum to wrest the spear from his grip. Zhao scraped the speartip across the stone floor between them, flaring sparks into life as a wall of white-hot flame between the two combatants.

“Strong and firm, you are.”


At that Metelsio had to chuckle, as he shook his left hand for effect of feeling the heat and flame more than he had.

“You don’t live as long as I have by being weak and soft. Though I must say you are making it a rather cozy heat here.”
AQ DF MQ AQW  Post #: 9
7/19/2019 15:25:36   
theZOMBIEis_aLIE
Member

To a less seasoned warrior, the arena may have seemed a chaotic. To a practiced ear, this particular battlefield was near-still. Each click of weapon on stone, blade against mail, or whispered cloth against the caress of the wind betrayed a specific action. The competitors had chosen their foes, and Nadia was thrilled to finally be able to showcase her skills.

With a scoff, the smile that had reached Nadia’s eyes upon the smooth gap-closing of a wild man suddenly crumbled to the weight of disappointment, for the tip of his sword dipped toward a multi-armed shade, rather than her.

“You know,” she called, slowly turning to face the offending creature that had robbed her of her intended opponent, “you can’t sue for peace after violating someone’s personal space. Hitchhikers suck.”

Nadia’s quip was directed toward Exsecratus, as she was seemingly unphased by his melting from shadow to peer into the arena. Dwarven mages, in their quest to seize Hearthforge, had been known to magic their clansmen through the very earth to ambush Shieldforged in the outer tunnels, where the heart of the mountain could not offer its protection. An enemy appearing from nothing was a clichéd approach in her eyes, a repeated technique overdone to the point of tears. And she would treat it as such; little more than a joke.

As she addressed the strange creature, she witnessed a careful repositioning from Van, whose shadow had stretched momentarily to unnatural proportions to accommodate the aforementioned hitchhiker’s attempt. A wordless glance from Nadia and a sly smile from Van conveyed a shaky truce, viable for the duration of Exsecratus’ shenanigans. With the pair of warriors as a unified front, those didn’t seem likely to last long… But she still wouldn’t rely on Van any more than she had to; Nadia couldn’t trust a stranger any farther than she could throw them (which, if they were wearing armor? Could be pretty darn far).

Thinking of throwing people made her think of her brother. In her mind, she reached for the link they had shared since birth, only to find a bleak expanse of silence.

‘I hate magic. I love it, but I hate it.’

Concluding that the magic of the arena was interfering with her telepathy, Nadia briefly felt a surge of frustration, but she was already moving. The best therapy for an angry soul was the bittersweet surge of combat.

Pacing away from Van to appear as a lesser target, Nadia flicked her wrist to send two bearings flying from her waist to a similar position on her chosen foe. As the twin balls of metal flew, they elongated widthwise as their masses merged to emulate a single bar. The ends of this came to sharp, pointed hooks, destined to sink into flesh and find purchase as it bent into the body of its intended target. Ripping out the barbs would be painful, but not at all impossible. The bar would bend when it met either Exsecratus’ waist, as intended, or one of his multiple arms as he sought to swat the projectile from the air. While anchoring would be painful, Nadia was all about scoring first blood.

Whether this projectile met flesh or not, Nadia would reverse its polarity to either yank Exsecratus out of hiding and into the arena properly or to collect the weaponized ball bearings for reuse in a different attack. She couldn’t waste momentum.

Her bare-footed talons clicked over the stone floor in a leap that would propel her over the slippery patch of liquid in the center of the arena. Mid-air, she mentally pushed against her chakram as it reached the lowest point in its orbit around her, using the newly generated reverse polarity to allow herself room to clear the hazard. Just before landing, her palms found the hilts of the daggers at her thighs, which she unsheathed just in time for her feet to find purchase again. Should her barbed pull have worked, she was now in range to swipe at an off-balance Exsecratus with two swift (and poisoned!) cuts to the smooth white portion of an unprotected bicep… But she dared not linger. Her back was to other pair of competitors locked in combat, which was not ideal; the heat at her back from the wall of flames was reminder enough of that fact. Being dragonkin, flame would not harm her unless it was imbued with additional magical qualities, but it never hurt to be cautious.

A quick, but short hop was enough of a disengage to keep her nimble and reactionary. Her keen golden gaze sought another opening in Exsecratus’ guard, while wary of counterattack. Her chakram had tightened its orbit around her, acting as both shield and potential blade at a moment’s notice, its lethal edge gleaming in the arena’s prismatic light.

Passively, her perception of the metallic objects in the arena gave her a fuzzy idea of the positioning of the competitors in the arena from the way her core was attracted or repulsed in the most minute ways. At least she would have a brief moment of warning if someone took a swing at her half-exposed back...
Post #: 10
7/19/2019 20:34:32   
Fionnes
Member

One blink. And within that short frame of time, the combat had commenced.

The cacophony of metal against metal and the popping of bubbles resonated throughout the arena, and although those two sounds rarely coincide with each other, they both sounded imposing and purposeful.

She quickly lowered the palm of her hand and felt the cold surface. “Yes, just the right amount of friction,” she thought to herself. She could also use the soapy surface to her advantage by sliding along the surfaces, if needed. But because all of the other fighters were already seemingly engaged in battle, she took the time to survey the arena; the dampness of it, the smoothness of the surface. She could feel the condensation trickle down her skin.

She felt the need to do something. Good or not. But at this point in time, no one seemed to notice her. This was the perfect opportunity to watch their every move and learn a little more.

Sera unsheathed Serendipity from her back and slowly walked in a large circle around the arena, the sword dragging against the floor but surprisingly not leaving a trace of its path. She watched as the other five were still fighting until she stepped on a long line of soapy water, then stopped to observe. Whilst Nadia was fighting Exsecratus, her back was completely exposed.

“This could be an opportunity,” she thought to herself. But she held off the thought, as she watched the condensation trickle down the hem and blade of Serendipity, “I don’t know who is right or wrong here. I could be fighting for the wrong cause.”

She hesitated and tightened her grip on her blade. And then kept looking.

Zhao and Metelsio seemed to be locked in intense one-on-one combat, and were isolated from the other fight. It was as if those two knew each other very well, and Sera, well, she saw no need to interfere there.

She turned her head the other way, observing Van’s actions. Van was planning something but… it was unwise for Sera to strike until the moment is right. She had to watch, and wait.

She shook her head gently, blinking her reflective golden eyes, feeling more condensation gather on her synthetic locks. The water slipped quickly along them, before forming small puddles along where she stood. Sera gripped onto her sword tighter, waiting to attack or defend if necessary, but for now, she stayed still as a statue, watching and collecting the environmental data around her.
DF  Post #: 11
7/20/2019 21:03:44   
  Lorekeeper
And Pun-isher

 

Thunder without, and thunder within. Its heart insistently pumped within its chest as if to compete with the storm overhead. Long since devoid of the light of the eternal moon, the Beast was left with naught but one overriding impulse to keep focused. The long struggle weakened the walls, thinned the veil between their gazes. They both knew well who would truly fall if it fell inward here of all places. Yet still he gripped at its mind...

Sunset drew near, not yet preceded by any sign of the turning moon. Even footing. What a disgusting sensation, to feel his words and weight so clearly and constantly. The falsehood, the astounding ability to be willfully and unwittingly weak at once. The desperate urge to cripple himself to spite it. It was distracting, enervating, and it would spell the end of its long escape the moment its focus was finally stolen by this enfeebling influence.

Only the thrill of the hunt kept the wild torrent of its mind aloft.

Fortunately, danger was plentiful where it had fled. Far into the land where the sun hid, near where the very sands bore ancient scars carved by each element, the prey was not complacent. A lone hunter could hardly call the lumbering behemoths prey at all, yet the Beast found itself in a peculiar predicament. It did not hunt alone.

The worth of a pack was not beyond the Beast’s understanding. Its ability to remain in one was another matter. Simpler creatures often fell in line behind it, but knew to drift away. Those like it were wary, or worse - In time, they started using his words. She was... different. She spoke like the others, but was no less sharp for it. It was the Beast that was wary this time. Yet while it had cause to fear an eventual betrayal, they would be a pack for as long as common prey united them. Treachery among one’s pack was a folly of man. It was always the turncoat that fell first.

And so when a lashing of scale and spine fell upon the Huntress’s blind spot, the Beast hurled itself into the limb to absorb the hit before it could gather its full speed. The battle grew wearying, and the Man drew close. Pain renewed its focus.

A low and guttural growl echoed forth from its chest, defying the pull of the words within.






The implied alliance did little to fill Van with any sudden sense of trust. While the whispers that commenced the Trial of Mystique bid them to fight with honor, the Moon-Broken nonetheless found it difficult to expect. While others might naturally experience a degree of skepticism, he knew there was nonetheless a place for it when many were willing to die for their dreams. But the stains of time covered much of his soul, and memories well in excess of what he might have once been able to retain told tale after tale of treachery on the battlefield. In a land of rising evil, deceit was never far.

While in truth, betrayal wasn’t so common a currency as to be expected at every turn, it created a nigh-indelible bias. To one who lived for one day each moon, and fought for many times that over an exceptionally long life, those times when the dagger plunged from behind were particularly... memorable.

For a few moments, he merely watched as he young Dragonkin woman charged off with a stone-scraping rush of clicking talons.

Metal shaping? ... I should count my fortunes that she elected to be on my side. I would be lucky if all she could do with that was keep my mind’s grasp busy and at bay. And she can do yet more.

We are to fight with honor... But I would be wise to repay her enthusiasm. Perhaps these goals can yet combine.


Turning slightly, he recognized one of the warriors that had so impressed him with their rooftop display carving fire from the very stones as she locked in combat with an opponent in menacing armor. A further blessing, he thought, for one could force him to completely alter his approach while the other was likely more than his match in sheer acrobatic prowess.

To his left, a young woman of delicate features observed much as he did, while drawing a broad weapon of her own. While distance still favored him, her present inaction made it difficult for Van to evaluate precisely what manner of threat she posed. It was all he could do to surmise that her use of a large weapon with a seemingly distant center of mass, coupled with her lack of armor implied any of a number of yet unseen advantages: Exceptional alacrity, durability well in excess of his own, magical prowess aiding or stemming from its use... Too many possibilities to make an educated assumption, and not enough time before the answer could catch him off guard if he continued to wait.

A light-distorting shimmer gathered before Van’s feet, and he sent it soaring high over his ally’s charge. This second bolt was hardly as fortunate as the first so far as popping bubbles went, but the low starting point allowed it to catch several of those drifting through his planned path. A mere portion of the intended result, but he could make do.

The ideal moment arrived sooner than expected: The shape of his shadow’s stalker made it difficult to read its footwork or decipher any of its movements, especially when obscured by the Dragonkin’s approach. Worse, when his proposed ally withdrew her weapons, he expected a committed close quarters engagement... but as her knees and ankles bent to open distance, Van could finally make a confident prediction. There was no time to waste.

Exertion of mind and muscle alike propelled the Moon-Broken’s body forward with a grace that ill-fit the rough appearance of his rushing form. In adding his mind’s grip to his acrobatic talents, Van turned the slippery hazard to his advantage and launched from puddle to puddle, gliding along their surfaces and building momentum in what initially seemed to be a direct charge of his own, leading directly for his ally’s back.

Finally speaking loudly, he called out in a firm voice:

“Red! Lend me your tail!”

Hardly the most serious way to address the Dragonkin, but they had skipped the introductions. The young woman’s voice quickly snapped back with indignant surprise, meeting his forward demand with a sharp cry of her own.

"What?!"

Given the fact that he was hardly slowing down, Van was bereft of the time for a more eloquent clarification. Instead, he dove into a leap that raised his trajectory over his ally’s tail and proceeded to yell again:”

“Just hit me!”

The response was swift, a pleasant surprise in sheer coordination. The notion that this may well be the opponent capable of giving him the most grief was reinforced by just how suddenly and precisely she could use her tail. Her amused snorting at what the maneuver turned out to be even betrayed a certain confidence that a smirk beyond Van’s view would more than confirm. Curling his legs over the upward swing, Van stretched them again to kick off from the Dragonkin’s tail and springboard onto an even higher trajectory over her body.

Now looming even higher above the bizarre creature she assaulted, he hefted Mercy along his form so as to begin turning with the change to his center of mass. Its edge met bubble after bubble, splattering the slick substance contained within into droplets that veiled his form with a rainbow constellation of light and moisture.

His mind reached downward before gravity fully terminated his ascent, projecting a panel of torrential force at an angle over his intended landing spot: Directly in front of the being that emerged from his shadow. Spanning a square plane of two meters at each side, it directed its force directly downwards so as to hopefully slow down any retaliation before his swing was completed, yet with a hidden purpose: When Van’s own form met the wall, it proved to be no solid projection. Rather, given its direction, crossing the diagonal threshold further accelerated his descent and thus provided a last moment burst of speed to the perturbingly well-balanced mass of the executioner’s sword.

The liquid likewise accelerated, splattering against parts of Van himself while raining upon his surroundings.

It was a harsh fall, as even enhanced alacrity allowed him to manage only so much speed when landing. But it was in starting to push his abilities close to the edge of safety that he truly began to feel the heavy strain - Not merely in the false-weight of erecting the wall of force that now stood behind him, but in devoting his attention to multiple applications of his power while something that lay deeper was all too eager to exploit his thinning focus.

A low and guttural growl echoed forth from his chest, betraying the draw of the Beast within.

His pupils grew brighter for a moment, cast forward from wide-open eyes that proffered an unhinged glare from underneath strands of soaked hair. It took a moment to tame the growling that betrayed a larger creature and shape it into a smoother voice:

“You’d best watch your tail, Red. Someone else is already doing it. I’ve got an edge against this one, so what say we keep them off each other’s backs? We can save beating each other up for after that.”

Daggers swiftly thrust into the sheaths at the Dragonkin’s thighs, a gaze flicked in the angelic wanderer’s direction marking the young woman’s decision after a moment’s regard for the peculiar change in his voice.

"Deal. That bastard's trying to rust me up. Careful, Manbeast."

Alliance properly formalized, she then attempted to withdraw her rusting bearing by separating the middle and pushing the barbs out through their mark’s palm in a small spray of blood and flesh. The barbs were bid to return to her skipping form, weapons and Dragonkin alike realigned to a better position to react to the angel.
Post #: 12
7/22/2019 7:11:42   
Caststarter
Member

Soft moonlight radiated onto the land below. The small town, blanketed by snow, lulled itself to a steady sleep. Bright red lamps hung from between houses and stores alike. The wanderer peered down to the street below. Restless souls wandered about, cheering softly as bottles flew high above them. She tilted her head back at the moon, ragged scarf drifting with the wind. The sister grew still, without enthusiasm, without invigoration.

Night by night, the moon rose with its hypnotizing light. For many a minute, the wanderer gazed right at the source of light, unable to be lulled into slumber. Standing up, she lifted her spear over her shoulder, gently hopping from roof to roof.

Stoically, the sister looked upon one heavily clothed woman flanked by ten armored soldiers, chest-plates emblazoned with harsh winds and mountains. The affluent individual, whose bright yellow scarf that too drifted with the wind, held a package of some kind, moving opposite. The wanderer merely watched as the woman was the sole person of any interest.

Wood slid against wood, as the sister’s hold on her weapon tightened. Within a swift moment, the woman fell back, arm over her shoulder. Chaos followed in the soldier’s ranks, as the wanderer’s eyes darted about across the rooftops. A callous man, armed with bow and arrow, looked on with a gleeful smile.

The sister rushed forth, sprinting across a wire from which the lamps hung from. Once her feet touched base with the opposite roof, she leapt up, with the man looking on, eyes wide. The assassin reached for his shortsword, all for naught as the wanderer swung her spear with great downward force. The blade flashed as it tore asunder the despicable man’s torso. He flew off of the roof, a large crash of wood splintering upon impact.

Swords scraped across metal from below, with men shouting and screaming. The sister, without hesitation, rushed to another wire. She swung down below it, where one end snapped from her weight. She flew down to the ground, one hand still clutching her weapon. The tip of her precious spear scraped against the ground, begetting protective white fire between her, the assailants and the affluent woman. She rolled across the ground, inured to the cold. In a quick second, she stood up, twirled around slicing down two assailants.

As the fire died , the sister glanced behind. The assaulted individual, arming sword held forward, stared at her savior. The shouts died, as the remaining assailants fled to the shadows. The woman took off her white cap, decorated with a yellow feather. The wanderer shook, breathing heavily. She spun and prepared to dash away. “Stop!” She froze to a standstill. “Who are you? Do you realize that you have just rescued a prefect? Why are you so afraid to acknowledge such a feat?” Her breathing stopped, her mind blanked.

“Zhao, Zhao Xiuyang, my lady,” faintly and meekly. The world stopped. One voice carried through.

“My name is Prota Wavis. Please now, no need to be afraid.”

---

“You don’t live as long as I have by being weak and soft. Though I must say you are making it a rather cozy heat here.” For but a moment, time stopped. Foes before winced at the great fire before them. Yet, the opposing opponent before her shook his arm, merely mildly affected by the flames. Despite it all, a soft chuckle let loose.

“Well. If you find it cozy, let’s make this all the more rambunctious!” Suddenly, Xiuyang surged with invigoration, determined why she is go on. The spearmaster lifted her spear overhead as the fire died. She raised one foot in before the mighty weapon swung downward. As the spearhead reached the apex of its height, Xiuyang hopped and spun her entire body, arms tucked in, allowing the weapon to reach out farther. A cascade of water followed suit, popping every bubble within the spear’s path. Steam perpetuated across the air far and wide.

As the weapon whirled around, Metelsio merely jumped over the spear as it came for his legs. More soapy water splashed against the ground. Her tenacious opponent, fists raised, stepped forward cautiously. Whirls, pops, bits of conversation and declarations, all erupting from behind the wanderer. Her eyes remained forward however, at Metelsio. Everything else was merely a whisper.
DF  Post #: 13
7/23/2019 6:25:45   
Fionnes
Member

Sera kept watching the three fighting, finding ways in which she could effectively turn the tide of battle to her advantage: the Dragonkin’s attacks were fast and strong, and the way she handled her metallic weaponry made her a force to be reckoned with; the young man seemed equally powerful, and with him looking as if he was partnering with the Dragonkin made the duo seem like a mighty adversary. The large beast, who looked as though it was trapped, was clearly hiding substantial power underneath its surface, and if left volatile and given time to erupt, could cause havoc to Sera’s plans. To add to the difficulty, the water hazards would add to the unpredictability of the fighting.

This would not be easy, Sera thought to herself.

And then, for a moment, Sera closed her eyes, and in that split second, her memories expanded into view.

“Sera?” a little girl said, “Sera! Look over here!”

She lifted her head and glanced. The little girl waved her hand, as if in excitement.

“Char?”

“What are you waiting for? Come over here!” she exclaimed happily, waving and jumping with her arms out wide.

She then slowly walked towards the little girl, and then knelt down beside her. “What was the matter?” Sera asked.

The little girl then held onto her hand. “Your hands feel warm, you know? You’re no robot, Sera: to me, you’ll always be the best human there is.” And she looked deep into Sera’s eyes, and Sera back to hers. Yes, there was warmth, and yes, at that short span of time, Sera felt… human.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

That brief moment of peace, like how it appeared, suddenly vanished without a trace. The trickle of cold water against her body brought Sera straight back to reality. Her eyes focused back on the three figures closest to her. Standing here doing nothing won’t finish the fight, she thought to herself: it was time.

Slowly, Sera made her way towards the trio, dragging Serendipity slowly across the arena floor, making the faintest scraping sound as she walked. Enough hiding, she thought; hiding won’t do any good.

Stopping at around two metres away from the Dragonkin, Sera swung her sword, smashing it against the ground, causing the arena to resonate a little.

“Maybe one of you would like to spar?” She tapped her foot impatiently against a small puddle of soapy water on the stone-cold surface, before gesturing the three of them to come over, “Let’s make things a little more… interesting, shall we?”
DF  Post #: 14
7/23/2019 9:33:09   
deathlord45
Member

“Well. If you find it cozy, let’s make this all the more rambunctious!"

How can someone make a battle more rambunctious?

Metelsio’s vision darkened as his eyes adjusted to the removal of the bright flame light as the wall diminished to nothingness, leaving all but his immediate vicinity a dark haze. Zhao had been moving and twisting on the other side of the fire wall, spinning herself and the spear in a large arc sundering as many bubbles as possible.

Just gotta keep an eye on her and the bubble liquid. Don’t want to end toppling over and sliding away.

The trajectory of the spear would bring it into his legs, bracing himself and waiting for the last possible moment Metelsio leapt up into the air and over the spear as it came for his legs. Using the moment to survey the surrounding bubble carnage, he shifted his feet just enough to avoid the soapy liquid upon landing.

Pulling his fist back the armored devil stepped forwards with slow and deliberate foot placement to avoid a shameful display of falling on his rear. The dark haze of his unadjusted eyes lifted as he near Zhao and he finally got to see the madness that had been behind him moments before.

A tall bipedal four armed bestial thing stood resolute against two smaller foes, one release a barrage at the thing and the other using the first as a springboard to leap over to the thing. It was the madness that could be found on a battlefield, a madness the devil was all too familiar with one that he reveled in. The faint sound of metal on stone reached his ears as he saw the fourth and finally addition to the madness engage with the non-airborne of the attacking duo.

“Looks like things are going to be interesting.”
AQ DF MQ AQW  Post #: 15
7/23/2019 15:20:45   
theZOMBIEis_aLIE
Member

Moments Ago

While Nadia stood opposite the strange mass that was Exsecratus, she noticed a particular blankness in his eyes. Did the creature even want to fight? Why would he enter the arena if peace was what he sought? The very nature of a challenge was struggle, and to further extent, combat. Her weapons of choice were nonlethal for the most part today, but Nadia could not say that she had never killed. Dwarf, animal, human; if it was to provide or defend, she would be viewed as righteous by those she valued, and cared to protect. But to those that opposed her kind? Perhaps she was seen as an overly aggressive villain, who took lives without mercy. History was often written by the victors, after all.

"Red! Lend me your tail!"

The call snapped her from her thoughts with enough strength to leave her bewildered. It seemed her temporary new ally needed... her tail?

"What?!" One did not simply touch the tail of a dragonkin on a whim, and especially not on the field of battle. Just what was this pervert thinking? Her indignation at the request was fully justified, in her mind; she wouldn't ask such a thing of anyone, let alone a stranger.

Of course, in his headlong rush, Van did not have the time to fully clarify. But, to give him points, he did try.

"Just hit me!" He barked, much closer now. Nadia had a choice to make; did she follow along with this inappropriate plan, or did she give him a good piece of her mind like he deserved?

'Ah, to hell with it,' Nadia mused internally. At the very least, she would put a lot of power into the strike, and hopefully ward off inappropriate advances in the future.

As Van leapt through the air after using her tail as a springboard, Nadia was sure to smoothly sidestep out of the range of accidental friendly fire. In doing so, she made a mental adjustment, dragging Exsecratus' pierced hand downward to expose him to the strike without lessening Van's effectiveness. She could feel that the strange being was trying to rust through her bearings, and his doing so made her furious. She had only traveled with a set number of the Forge's Dozen, and his compromising of the set would mean that she would need to likely to make a whole new set when she got home. Bearings that were not forged of the same stock often merged strangely, and tended to protest at different points. If Nadia had to focus on the tensile strength of every single bearing individually as she replaced portions of the Dozen, she would just about be driven insane. A hiss reached her throat as she thought of the inconvenience.

Tearing her eyes away from Van's strike, she turned her attention to the lone competitor circling the edge of the arena, wary of an attempted surprise attack while the duo focused on their target. She couldn't quite sense this one as she moved like she often could with living beings, but the movement of her steel weapon did allow Nadia to passively follow Sera's movement. Could it be that there was no blood pulsing through her veins, and therefore no trace iron in her form? The dragonkin found this fascinating, narrowing her eyes against the shimmering light of the arena in an attempt to piece together the puzzle. 'Ah, there. What are those eyes? They play with light like glass...' She wondered, mentally measuring each perfect step of the Sera with suspicion. 'Whatever she is, she ain't normal.'

Van landed from his attack, but not without a guttural growl. She had sensed something bestial just beneath the surface of the man, just as plainly as anyone could see the dragon in her blood. What was more curious, however, was the fact that he seemed to shy away from the noise, wrestling with his voice until he was able to form something that resembled human speech.

"You’d best watch your tail, Red. Someone else is already doing it." Van managed after a brief moment. Nadia noticed a slight shift in his gaze toward Exsecratus as if he expected the creature to recover at any moment from the blow he'd been delivered. "I’ve got an edge against this one, so what say we keep them off each other’s backs? We can save beating each other up for after that."

He must have noticed Sera's gaze on his charge; it figured, as he would have been rushing past her mere moments ago. Bemused, Nadia gave him a nod while she sheathed her daggers. Against a non-living opponent, they wouldn't be much good, besides blocking a blade. For that, she could utilize her chakram. The fact that it had not been seen in action by her competitors gave her a mild edge.

"Deal. That bastard's trying to rust me up. Careful, Manbeast." Nadia included that last bit as a nod toward how she genuinely valued having found an unexpected ally today, in the arena of all places. Van had proved himself reliable thus far, and she intended to reciprocate in kind… But she couldn’t exactly watch his back if Van was flat on the floor before she returned to him.

Beginning to follow the dry edge of the slippery puddle to her right, Nadia mentally commanded the two bearings that held Exsecratus in thrall to separate to their original masses. The middle of the bearings instantly parted, and began to push themselves through his palm to a positively ear-splitting proclamation of rage. She winced, knowing how painful the extraction of barbs would be, but she could not see the metal to change its shape until it emerged. Both barbs burst free of Exsecratus' palm in a spray of gore, flesh still ragged at the edges of the wounds. The rusty, blood-slicked rods smoothed into orbs as they flew back to Nadia, who kept them in orbit as gruesome reminders of what she was capable of as she turned toward her next opponent.




Now.

The dragonkin wasn't about to let Sera close the distance without challenge. To do so would be allowing a potential adversary to potentially get a hit on Van while he was distracted with Exsecratus. It was about the middle of the arena that they met, and Nadia drew her daggers as she sauntered forward. This portion was blissfully free of soap puddles, and the click of her talons went unhindered... for the moment, at least. About 20 feet from the curious, golden-eyed beauty, she sunk into a battle-ready crouch, dagger blades naked, glistening, and tinged red. They matched the hovering orbs, lightly rusted and gently dripping with gore over her shoulders. All in all, Nadia was a sight to behold, the vivid red of her scales blending with twin drips of dark ichor that splashed over her chest as makeshift war paint. To dance with dragonkin was to dance on the brink of death... and she wasn't quite sure that this dainty-looking creature understood that. Behind her, the giant that Exsecratus wailed in agony as one of his four arms crashed to the ground with an barely-audible thud. Van had delivered a strike that nearly severed the limb in one swing; it was only a jerk of the torso that had delayed the fall by mere moments.

"Are you sure you want to?" Nadia growled, the tip of her tail flicking in mild annoyance. All the while, her chakram span in a lazy ellipse around her. She was loathe to display exactly how strong her bond with the soul-forged object was just yet; there was still plenty more fighting to be done and without an ace up her sleeve, it would be akin to wandering into battle without a keen edge to one's blade. In other words? Foolish.

Nadia's gaze broiled with liquid gold, lit with adrenaline from the fight, forming a sharp contrast with Sera's glassy stare. Despite her impressive appearance, Nadia's question had been out of genuine concern, however strange it might seem in their current setting. A veteran of many failed attacks on her home, Nadia had found many that fought were not fully committed to their cause. Oftentimes, young dwarves and men had been conscripted, forced into a fight they didn't understand. Their hearts protested a little bit more with each step, and made each swing of an axe just slightly clumsy. Unlike the stories they had heard, Nadia was not some merciless monster, hellbent on their destruction. She had even earned sway with now-peaceful Dwarven elders whom had once rebelled in their youth, just by sparing the lives of sons and daughters whom had stumbled away from the Path in some attempt to snatch misbegotten glory.

Earning bloody battle-paint was unavoidable when passion drove each strike, but its amount could always be lessened with reason.

Sera seemed out of place here, even if she did wield an impressive weapon. She reminded Nadia of the stories of angelic beings, whom were much more suited to dancing the skies than mingling with mere mortals. What could she possibly hope to maintain from a bloody brawl with potentially lethal consequences? It would be better to dissuade the half-baked notion before Sera got herself hurt, or worse - killed.
Post #: 16
7/23/2019 20:07:30   
  Lorekeeper
And Pun-isher

 

The Beast had no place for pride. Through the almost ceaseless pressure of the words beyond the wall, it knew of it, but the emotion found no purchase in a creature so committed to living moment to moment. Despite its better efforts, however, it could understand the notion enough to recognize what was so stubbornly displayed before its eyes.

Pride was the only reason it was still breathing.

It was being toyed with. Having arrived from the sky, its adversary could just as easily ascend beyond reach and put an agonizing end to the hunt. Instead, the Beast found this enemy content to simply destroy any cover it tried to find, mocking it with words only the Man would care to hear. His voice was like a forest fire; a deep, dry rustle that oddly turned even stronger when it cracked — And try as the Beast might, it could not outrun that encroaching, laughing danger.

“You have given in. Like so many of my kin. You could be so much... And you decide to be vermin.

There it was. Pride. For reasons the Beast could not comprehend, its hunter put only a portion of his attention on the fight.

While sluggish in comparison, the dragon’s raw strength was such that merely turning to face the Beast’s attacks ensured that its claws made little headway through the mesh of carmine scales. Only the neck bore any significant damage, a rending injury just deep enough to glow when its deadly breath billowed forth. As of the Beast, the scorched and torn hide made it clear that the merest strike from its foe would fell it. And such was perilously likely, when the weight of the words from beyond the wall...

...was absent. This burden was normally only lifted once every moon. When the night bore only stars, it was as if the Man understood it. Even if he seemed to forget again before long, for that single day, it could rest. It could almost be whole.





A red-scaled limb lay motionless between the two combatants, fingers strewn open by the force with which it was severed at the elbow. The fleeting rainbow of burst bubbles and crashing droplets was interrupted by a gushing spray of blood when the remaining scaled arm released its reflexive vice grip on the stump, and a composition of violence soon eradicated any semblance of silence from the moments in between the bursts of grinding metal, clicking talons and dancing flames.

Its first instrument was an unnatural sound straddling the line between a screaming voice and the wail of something beyond the capacity of any humanoid torso. Boots and elongated nails alike produced a discordant mix of wet trailing and sharp dragging as the combatants righted themselves, followed by further splashing as metallic bearings forcefully flew out from their embedded points within pale flesh. His eyes locked with a mask that would not flinch even after letting out such a bloodcurdling noise, the tempo escalating.

Van released one hand from Mercy’s grip, intending to force the demonic figure before him into the projected wall of force opposite of its charge. The very idea proved to be an underestimation of the speed and reach of such elongated claws. With its severed stump firmly clenched by its pierced counterpart, it only needed to lean forward to close the gap and cut into the leather surrounding what metal protected the offending arm.

Blood sprung from cuts that hardened sleeves only robbed of depth, not opportunity. Both of their hands were drenched now, a fact that appeared to only annoy Van while visibly throwing the pale creature before him into a thrashing frenzy. Although one of the clawed arms bore an elongated gash from the cut that severed the limb above it, Van nonetheless found it difficult to retain both his footing against the continuous barrage and the focus necessary to find an opening to counterattack.

The oppressive symphony abruptly took on a different rhythm, as did the pressure exerted upon his mind. Its sudden shift to lunging tactics proved easier to avoid, but only after an initial hit scraped past Van’s right armguard and collided with the steel protecting his chest. While his foe may have transitioned to a more predictable style, the very makeup of its body and shape of its claws in particular altered in such a way that they forced him to adapt. When both the alignment and reach of the enemy’s limbs shifted every few strikes, making predictions was next to impossible.

While no further attacks would connect, the moment it took to adjust was not without cost. A black residue was spreading through the once polished steel, spiderweb patterns of minute cracks splintering the metal at the points of impact. Several similar punctures connected directly with Van’s right shoulder, boring deep enough that an instant of hesitation could easily see them pushing into muscle and bone.

It was now evident that his mental advantage was offset by the physical disadvantage of fighting an opponent with more limbs. Still, a clear edge remained in Van’s ability to keep thinking on his feet. He could see its hips twisting to a side, and when its clawed left foot receded, the Moon-Broken warrior knew that a clockwise tail strike was imminent.

The demonic figure spun, its now blunted tail swinging for Van and... connecting. The man launched himself along the strike’s direction to avoid the worst of the impact, but otherwise let it shunt him towards the force wall. The pale tail swung back around, retreating into a coiled position. When the protrusion sharpened from a blunt shape into a wickedly sharp barb, Van allowed himself a small grin.

There’s only one direction that’s going to be moving in... Perfect.

The pale demon issued another mental assault, aiming to impair his ability to react to the elongating stinger. Van felt an intrusive cold reducing the pain of the cuts along his left arm, its creeping bite inching towards the rest of his body.

Feigning frailty, he let the arm hang limp while he crashed into the psionic wall projected at the beginning of his assault. Resisting its push by applying upward force to his body, Van gave off the appearance of struggling to remain standing. The façade was not perfect, however, faced with the growing tension of an unbidden sense of surging adrenaline.

Before long, the stinger surged forward just as expected. When the wicked barb approached his chest, Van abruptly reversed the direction of the telekinetic force applied to his body. Now pushing in the same direction as the wall, he swiftly dropped below the incoming strike and overstepped with his right foot. Thusly coiled, he needed only to follow the natural angle of his hips to slice upwards with tremendous force and sever the incoming limb. Far from done, however, he continued to manage the momentum of his own extremities to avoid slipping on the incongruous pool of fluids and instead bring his strike around for a complete turn.





There was no pressure anymore. And yet, the words were still there. The walls stood tall, and their roots still drew ever deeper into a world they threatened to split at the middle, but the weight from beyond was strangely reversed. The Man wasn’t resisting. He was fighting as well. There was naught the words could do to direct it, but now the Beast knew how it recognized pride so quickly. How it understood that here, where there was no chance to escape, it offered a chance of survival.

And as the sun-like glow seared through the wounds along the dragon’s neck, another word came unbidden, but for once accepted.

Now.

The hunter drew its head back in preparation. Its prey leapt forward instead of dodging. Fangs closed around the exposed flesh, and an explosive surge soon wrenched the foes away from each other.

The Beast was badly burned and would take a long time to recover. But where once there was a voice like wildfire, only a seared gap and a frightful memory remained.





Worlds are not built on mercy. Perhaps it was true that mercy could not fix this one.

Even now, at the very end, it was Mercy that ended the dream of one. Only a swiftly narrowing range of perceptions remained, soon enough to count with the fingers on one hand.

The grit of stone.

The copper-like feeling of spreading blood.

Rushing water.

An end to the twilight.

Death.


Down to one knee, Van supported his weight on the executioner’s sword while taking a deep breath that had been postponed for too long, finally free of the constant intrusions upon his mind. Resistant as he may be to such influences, one that changed so rapidly while steadily intensifying was nonetheless enough to cause a lingering sense of strain that compounded that of his powers.

Van turned towards the fallen enemy, eyes falling upon its severed head. Rolling as little as its horns would allow, it had turned at the right angle to stare at him. He’d scarcely begun to consider such a strange coincidence before a renewed sense of pressure proved him wrong on two accounts.

This was no coincidence.

The head — Nay, the mask, was staring directly at him.

Far from unflinching, it was shifting in ways beyond sight and conscious thought. The power was not a hostile presence this time. Far from any lingering animosity, it mustered what strength remained to gently beckon Van’s mind. The mask itself was no longer so much an object as it was a fact. An invitation. An offer to be so much more, if only the bindings of a pawn and their multifarious dream were accepted.

Something lurked deeper than sight, twisting the patterns on the mask into the appearance of steps stretching into a darkness that offered an ambition of peace, yet felt disturbingly unlike the darkness that Van found comfort in.

Whether out of waning restraint or a passion shared at both sides of the wall, the response was swift, and as intensely feral as the growl that heralded this moment.

No.

Post #: 17
7/24/2019 7:08:24   
Fionnes
Member

“You know, I’m not sure,” Sera replied to the Dragonkin, “but I am here to… learn, I suppose.” She turned her head to the left slightly, glancing down at the ruined mess that once used to be a great beast, the floor around it tinged with smears of crimson. “Maybe I’ll end up like that… creature there, who knows.”

Sera had been eyeing the chakram since she moved within close vicinity of the trio, her glassy eyes tracing the path the Dragonkin’s unique weapon took around her. Interesting, Sera thought to herself, as she rotated Serendipity in the firm grip of her right hand; it was not a weapon she had really seen before, and the way it moved told her that, quite definitely, this Dragonkin could manipulate her weapons a lot more than just with plain strength and dexterity.

“Yes, this is an arena after all. We are destined to fight each other, although…” Sera took a moment to pause, “I am hoping that what I learn from all this brash chaos is perhaps, worthwhile.” She was keeping a lot of words to herself: not only was she confused as to her purpose in life; she felt as if this Dragonkin was somewhat approachable: maybe perhaps even friendly, despite the sharpness of her previous words.

Being careful as to not step any closer to the Dragonkin, Sera walked a small circumference around to meet the fallen creature, kneeling down to observe it. She had a glimpse at the corner of her eye of the young man, whose gaze seemed fixated towards the creature’s face… or more accurately, its mask, though she saw no particular reason why he would do such a thing. Sera placed her hands on a piece of unbloodied torso, and felt the coldness of the flesh to her touch, before letting out a soft sigh.

“What a shame, there was some good in you. Somewhere locked up, yes, but it was there. And now it’s gone.”

Sera stepped back up, and then walked back to stand between the young man and the Dragonkin, her footwear now completely soaked in soapy water. She cleared her throat, with an almost metallic ring resonating from the cough, before saying her next words:

“Where were my manners before? My name is Sera, what are yours? I should at least know my combatants before I engage with them.” Sera set her sword down on the ground, hand over the hilt, waiting for her new potential adversaries to respond.

I don’t want to fight, but if they force me to, then I will have no choice but to retaliate.
DF  Post #: 18
7/25/2019 3:03:47   
Caststarter
Member

Water dripped from her drenched coat and ran along her spear. The mythical weapon leaned to the side, teetering. Her tenacious opponent drew near, the ground far too slippery for even Xiuyang to dance away. However, the spearmaster’s gaze remained resolute. Metelsio’s steps betrayed a caution of the very ground, a sign to turn everything around.

The wanderer took a couple of slow and slight steps back. Her off-hand reached and drew the gifted sword. As the blade was exposed, a blue hue emanated into the surroundings, bubbles sparkling from the light.

With one last step back, Xiuyang surged forward as she brought herself low to the ground. Boots railed across the ground, water parting. The spearhead birthed sparks and steam in its wake. As a mighty armored hand rushed forth at the wanderer, she swung her sword in swift retaliation.

It arced towards Metelsio’s inner elbow, dissuading any more grapples. The imposing warrior shifted his arm, hand obstructing the blade. Fingers gripped against the burning sword, as the wanderer continued to rush past Metelsio. The tenacious warrior loosened his grip, allowing the sword and Xiuyang freedom once more.

As she drew closer to the waterfall, Xiuyang swirled around and halted, allowing the tip of the spear to slide against the ground briefly. The wanderer sheathed her blade as a wall of protective fire erupted along the ground. No rest was to be had however, for the spearmaster knew no bounds.

With the opposite end of the mythical weapon, Xiuyang launched herself over the wall of flames. The soaring wanderer brought down her spear, slamming it into the ground. The spearhead smashed against the floor, a foot away from her armored opponent, fiery wisps gathering around it. With a sudden flare, fire and force exploded out as the head visibly cracked. A cacophony bounced and ringed throughout the arena. Bubbles burst whereupon water spewed forth.

Metelsio braced for the impact, hands and feet firm, yet was hurled back all the same. Even Xiuyang was thrown back, skidding back a short distance, just short of the dying wall of fire. She lifted her head cautiously, amazed by the strength of her own explosion. The wanderer’s body ached briefly, recovering from the aftermath. Her eyes grew wide for the first time when she saw what had transpired behind her. A strange demonic being had already been slain presumably by a man using a sword two unwieldy for his size. Meanwhile, a bizarre winged human conversed with a scaled humanoid, still battle-ready. Since when had all that happened?! Some great fight had unraveled without her looking.

Xiuyang then suddenly realized a baffling issue, a grimace forming as she did. Swiftly, Metelsio slid towards the other competitors as if he was a stray missile. “No no no, come back here!” the bodyguard exasperated. Xiuyang hurried up, nearly falling face first from the soapy floor. “Out of the way everyone, that one is mine!”

None shall interfere with her duel; her blade would drive through the heart of anyone who dared to get in her way. Xiuyang’s spear railed against the ground, sparks flying once more. The bodyguard had more to lose and she wasn't going to allow some half-wit ruin her chances to proceed. Her body and soul were in turmoil; peace wretched away long ago. If she could win, hope could very well shine once more.
DF  Post #: 19
7/26/2019 19:31:33   
deathlord45
Member

Zhao danced back a few steps drawing her blade before bursting towards Metelsio though the angle was off a bit, it didn’t both the devil too much he could easily grasp her arm. As he reached out towards his opponent she swung her blue glowing sword towards the inside of his outstretched arm.

This is probably actually going to sting a bit. Small price to pay to keep the arm at a hundred percent.

Adjusting the trajectory of his grasping hand he latched onto the blade to hold it in place as Zhao slid past him. He could feel the searing burning heat through his gauntlet had he not be wearing the piece of armor it would have done a number on the devil’s hand.Once she was safely past him and he was at less risk of a blade to the arm Metelsio relinquished his grip.

The took a couple steps forward before spinning around to confront his current opponent, first seeing another wall of fire had come to life between the duo, then seeing Zhao leaping over it illuminated underneath by the wall. Had this not been a battle but rather a stage or street performance the devil would have considered it quite amazing, however this was battle and a contest too boot so there was no time to gawk like a mind addled fool.

He watched Zhao bring her spear’s head down into the stone floor again, Metelsio tensed his body to see how big this explosion was going to be and then blinding light and then almost completely nothingness. He saw nothing, heard nothing and felt nothing more than his momentum.

What in the name of my second homeland just happened?

First came sound as a cacophonous ringing in both ears that seemed to fill the devil’s mind, then came sight as his vision filled with bright white spots and afterimages he could fully blink away, and finally came pain as his body slammed into the hardened stone floor. He could still feel himself moving, probably sliding on some splotches of bubble residue. Though the ringing did clear enough that he could faintly make out the unmistakable sound of metal grinding on stone.

His vision cleared quickly after his momentum had been arrested; the first proper thing he saw other than the ceiling was the previously airborne warrior that had been battling the large bestial being.

“Thank you, young man. Now, could you-”


Before the devil could even finish his request he felt momentum return just now it was in the opposite direction.

It could be worse. I could be spinning.
AQ DF MQ AQW  Post #: 20
7/26/2019 21:24:47   
  Lorekeeper
And Pun-isher

 

The Beast was not in the habit of keeping the time. It was plainly not a creature of habit at all. There was night, day, and the breath remaining to keep the words at bay throughout. It only needed this simple truth to understand that it had chased as many sunsets as the pressure building within would allow.

There was a fading charge in the air, slowly losing its cold rush as the damp, earthy motes overtook the sensation. The clouds overhead gradually brightened. Dawn had broken.

Still, it had run far enough. The Man could not possibly return to that pungent spring of flowing madness before losing his advantage. All that it needed to do now was find a good enough shelter to hide from the storm and finally rest.

The desolate, ruined town offered little in the way of cover. Wood and stone alike bore scraping marks that did not entirely escape its notice in their sheer familiarity, but the actual destruction appeared wrought by something else. A stampede of some sort? Numerous enemies of its size thrashing and pulling in different directions, scattering the pieces in their wake. Carrion feeders were rarely so bold, and never so... overwhelming. The Beast began to question the safety of lingering, but the moss on the splintered beams reassured it enough to press onward to the relatively untouched shelter beyond the hill.

“You’re going to be fine.”


Claws met stone as the Beast’s paws sank into the hill’s softer mud. Coming to an abrupt halt, it shook its head roughly. The walls were abruptly overflowing with something more intense than mere words, lancing its mind with flashes of vivid memories.

Bald, yet densely bearded, the one hunched over the Man wore robes that hid a stronger body than his advanced age would suggest. From beyond the wall, even the Beast could tell that there was something strange about him. And there it was - A light stronger than flesh, bright and primal. Did the light come from the robed one, or did the robed one belong to it?

“You are not the beast!”


No. No, don’t-

The Beast trudged onward, now struggling to stand as each word threatened to strike it off-balance. Grasping the truncated beam of a collapsed platform, it looked toward the lone cottage beyond it and saw-

Hairless, yet with hide nearly as thick as scale, the lumbering creatures charged at the single-voiced command of those who unleashed them. The Beast had encountered them before, farther to the West. They came from a burning land through frightening tears in the air itself, yet took naturally to commanding the very wind they spited...

But something was wrong. The faces framed by their four horns were rarely so limp and silent. They merely thrashed with claw, blade and tail... And an unfamiliar darkness filled their hollowed out chests. Where mocking voices once laughed at their prey, a shrill grinding noise was now all that escaped their throats. Barely heard through the ear-splitting noise, the Light one spoke one last time:

“...It’s too late.”


The memories finally overwhelmed the Beast. As its strength finally faded, and its eyes slowly became those of the Man, its falling head came to an abrupt halt next to a familiar steel. Next to familiar words. The very blade once meant for its neck.





Van’s gaze finally parted from the mask as the regained his breath and rose to his feet. A dull ache continued to dance around the corner of his thoughts; equal parts consequence of and warning about maintaining a barrier during an extended engagement. As well as it had paid off, he would be wiser to be certain of their lasting usefulness before dividing his efforts like that again. Even if the effort covered his back, he paid for it with a number of shallow injuries that could easily be aggravated by a perceptive combatant.

He was wary as the seemingly dainty young lady approached, and on guard as she opened her distance again. Given his own style, he would have been remiss to ignore the possibility of a swift reversal and assault from her heavy weapon - Especially as she strode so lightly over slippery terrain.

...And yet, there was no menace to be found her. In fact, her words offered precisely the opposite. Perhaps she could indeed be particularly dangerous. But whether it was her strange voice, her inscrutable, glassy gaze, or simply the lack of any overt hostility, Van felt no threat from her.

Far from such, there was even a comforting quality to her. Above all, it was that detail in particular that he found exasperating. In a world where conflict seemed to rise more frequently than the tides, he had long since learned that there was absolutely a place for such a presence on the battlefield. War took a monstrous toll on hope itself, and those able to keep the candle burning amid the violent gale of rage and loss were as angels to the weary soldier.

The arena... This had no such place for kindness, especially hesitant. Even as searing memories vividly echoed their fragmented horrors, recalling a time of beating wings and smoldering homes, Van knew well that this was vastly unlike war. The bright flashes eliciting such reminiscence even had a certain beauty to them, once he turned his head to...

...be completely soaked from head to toe by the wave of bursting bubbles and hot water that an explosion expanded through a wide area of the arena. Beyond having the presence of mind to cover his eyes, such was the force of the water that he quickly thought that not even forewarning would have kept him from being drenched from at least one direction.

After sputtering and throwing back a rain of droplets along with what was now a darker brown mane of hair, Van then noticed a further chance to the cacophony that the blast interrupted. A moment of silence, then a prolonged grinding that was almost perturbingly familiar in its shrill, ungodly, irritatingly high frequency...

Oh, burn me.

Clad in crimson plate and menacing with enough spikes to make Van wonder if an eccentric dwarf had designed the suit in a fever dream of surprisingly effective results, one of the combatants who had engaged in a friendly duel was screeching along the ground towards him.

Behind the heavy projectile of a man charged the white-haired warrior who had impressed the Moon-Broken with her dextrous display.

“Out of the way everyone, that one is mine!”

Her words were firm and passionate, if tinged by a measure of frustration. Compounding how the sheer intensity of her hazel eyes would normally elicit approval or even a smile from Van, one wouldn’t be far from the truth if assuming it was out of respect that he spun Mercy into the scabbard at his back rather than show any hostility toward her sliding opponent.

However, there was a simpler truth to his reasons for raising a foot to stop the trajectory and dampen the momentum through the application of a directly opposite force to himself.

The soaked fighter most definitely did not want to be near another of those explosions while other combatants commanded his attention. And while the incoming spear-wielder, who now sneered at Van’s apparent intent, was certainly impressive, the nature of his reaction was further clarified in the expression and tone employed while wiping the water trailing down his face.

Echoing from within the finally still helmet, a strong voice began to call out:

“Thank you, young man. Now, could you-”

Unfortunately for the man in the armor, ‘kindness’ was not the expression in question. Rather, it was raw, plain frustration. The young lady could certainly keep her opponent.

“By all means. Have him back.”

Countering the low grip on the ground with the same focus that saw him turning the slippery surfaces to his advantage, Van leaned into a forceful shove of the same foot that halted the impromptu living projectile. The charge broke pace and almost devolved into slipping as the impending push became apparent. At that point, the air and remaining steam around the corresponding leg waved with a blurring distortion. The building force was promptly released into a surge of force to return that particular package to its sender, who was now herself frustrated in having to reorient herself to keep pursuing her mark.

It was with a grimace of his own that Van realized how inaccurate the act of shoving a moving, uneven load would truly be, being somewhat off the mark and potentially too forceful in his... courtesy. Somewhat uncharacteristically, he sputtered a quick:

“Ah, bother. Sorry.”

A taste of his own frustration was offered right back with the warrior’s response.

“It’s no problem.”

She said as much, but it did not take a psion’s peculiarly expanded mind to surmise that she very much had a problem with having to abruptly turn left in such slippery conditions to try and catch the sliding man with her spear. Either way, it was finally not Van’s problem anymore. Even if he did suspect that this might come back to bite him should the armored man prevail.

Finally given the chance to compose himself, Van shot a wary glance at the other two warriors as if expecting something else to crash into him. When it was clear that nothing would smack him in the face quite yet, he released an almost exaggerated exhalation and advanced. A single extended step propelled him forward toward them as if gliding his way out of the puddle before hopping onto the others to halt a prudent distance to the left of the hesitant woman.

“You can call me Van. You said yourself that you have your doubts - So please, listen to me.”

Though Van’s expression was severe beyond his apparent years, there was a particular blend of frustration and genuine worry to his words.

“You’re not... forced to kill your opponents. Not by the Arena, only by choice — Yours or theirs. But this is still the stage where people shed blood for the attention of the Lords and the entertainment of the masses. If you aren’t here with conviction, with a dream that you would be willing to risk killing or dying for, realizing that you are inevitably denying other dreams to pursue yours... Then I’m begging you. Forfeit. Leave. You have a life to return to. No one will hurt you on your way out without having to go through me.”

From compassion to further severity, he adds one final emphasis:

“Otherwise, find the wish you would be willing to kill for and strike.”
Post #: 21
7/27/2019 7:17:34   
Fionnes
Member

A loud and thunderous crash echoed through the arena as torrents of soapy water splashed down from above, although conveniently around where Sera stood. Sera had felt the heat of the spear-wielding lady brush against her back, a surge of warmth that brought along a moment of comfort amidst the tremendous humidity. It was a moment of relaxation, masking the true ferocity of the fire-manipulator. Another potential threat, Sera thought to herself.

As the arena cleared up, with all five standing competitors in clear view of each other, Sera watched the strange event unfold: as two human projectiles started lunging towards the young man who had vanquished the beast prior, in what looked like some strange curious attack formation.

“Out of the way everyone, that one is mine!” the crimson-plated lady exclaimed, in what could only be described as sheer anger.

Sera watched as the front-most flying object, completely soaked from head to toe, and kept his trajectory towards the young man.

“Thank you, young man. Now could you-“

“By all means; have him back,” the young man replied as he applied a forceful push onto the flying target. Sera watched as he applied his rather strong shove and as a result, had dissipated the remaining energy right back into the former living missile, who was now laying rather still on the arena floor. Still, but alive. Not bad, Sera thought to herself, not bad at all.

As the young man got back up and composed himself after the strange turn of events, she noticed him slowly approaching her. Sera gulped, feeling a sense of dread for some reason.

“You can call me Van,” he said, “You said yourself that you have your doubts. So please, listen to me.”

Sera stared back at Van, looking deep into his eyes. He spoke vehemently, with great frustration and power in his voice. It shook Sera to her core for a brief moment.

“You’re not… forced to kill your opponents. Not by the Arena, only by choice – yours or theirs. But this is still the stage where people shed blood for the attention of the Lords and the entertainment of the masses. If you aren’t here with conviction, with a dream that you would be willing to risk killing or dying for, realising that you are inevitably denying other dreams to pursue yours… then I’m begging you. Forfeit. Leave. You have a life to return to. No one will hurt you on your way out without having to go through me.”

He took a deep breath, and then spoke his closing sentence:

“Otherwise, find the wish you would be willing to kill for and strike.”

There was a pause, whilst Sera kept her eyes right at Van’s.

“Thank you… for reminding me of what I was here to do.”

At that moment, Sera eyes glowed bright, the golden hues sparkling and growing in intensity as she activated her Overclocking mode, sending a five-metre shockwave around her vicinity. The room, glowing bright with the sudden burst of light energy, illuminated and was accompanied by the cacophony of bursting bubbles in close proximity. Fine cracks on her skin were eminent from the golden glow that radiated from them, but those were only a small price to pay for the temporary power boost she had.

Using the wet floor to her advantage, Sera focused her centre of gravity on the left side of her body, lowering herself and swinging her right leg at Van’s feet, hoping to knock him off balance. Whilst holding onto Serendipity tightly, she swung it in a full arc, and with the blade facing backwards, she was ready to sprint towards her next enemy. She was wary that in that short moment, two seconds had already passed, so she had only eight more seconds before her short-term power surge came to an end. She had to act fast.
DF  Post #: 22
7/27/2019 15:28:10   
theZOMBIEis_aLIE
Member

Whilst others fell prey to slick sluds, Nadia remained still. She’d allowed her gaze to follow the peculiar creature that was Sera as she passed, noting that her temporary ally had felled the demonic beast without mercy. In a way, she had always suspected that would be the case, as it seemed misaligned with reason; any attempt at mercy would fall flat so long as Exsecratus still drew breath.

The dragonkin, covered in blood that didn’t belong to her… laughed. How could one find anything other than mirth in what was essentially a toddler’s dream? Shimmering bubbles and a slippery playground, ringed by gorgeous waterfalls and a total lack of the outside world.




27 Years Ago, Hearthforge

A small form tumbled down the side of the mountain, knocked breathless by the fall. Shock kept her stable, but only just barely. She could practically hear her mother’s voice, calling her back from the rock’s edge like she always did.

”Come back here, little goat. You’ll tumble to your death!”

This was it. It was happening.

Her claws reached out in a feeble attempt to catch the trunk of a passing tree, but the saplings were too thin this close to the snowline. The spry young wood snapped in her hands as she tumbled past.

‘I’m going to die…? No, no no!’

With the last of her strength, she gathered what little breath was in her belly, and screeched an echoing cry to the slopes. Wordless, it should have been enough to carry. Shrill, it gave birds a reason to take wing, but was cut short too soon by a sharp crack. Too young to have developed proper horns and the reinforced skull to go with them, the dragonling’s forehead was struck square by the first evergreen too old to be cowed by her weight.

The world faded to first curtains, then a sheet of black as the child spun, landing at a gruesome, twisted angle.


’Cold… So cold.’

The feeling permeated even her fitful unconsciousness. A blanket of snow had fallen in the night, inadvertently controlling the worst of the dragonling’s swelling. When she peeled open her eyes, it felt as though grains of sand were scraping against the backs of her eyelids. Her first attempt to move ended early in a whimper, and she was forced to settle for licking a couple scrapes of snow from her frigid cocoon. She could hear only the most muffled sounds of the outside world, but could make nothing out. Too weak to cry for help, she retreated to the depths of her mind, seeking the warm, comforting blanket of sleep.


“Astra… We’ve done all we can.”

“Some dragon you are. Run home with your tail between your legs, coward.”

The snarl that erupted from the dragoness was something to behold. While Astra herself was disheveled and shimmering with a sheen of sweat in the moonlight, she refused to return to the safety of the ‘Forge with the rest of the search party. Couldn’t they understand? It was her daughter on these slopes. It didn’t matter what sort of beasts roamed these blustering peaks under the stars; hope was not yet lost. She’d get back her Nadia, help be damned.

“I can’t let you continue alone, you know that. Edgar wouldn’t want you to kill yourself out here!” The pleading in the voice of her sister was plain as day, but Astra pushed past.

“If he hadn’t been such an idiot, he’d be out here with me. Go home, Liz.”

The younger dragoness was fuming at this point, exasperated to no end. She’d sat by her brother-in-law’s bedside for the past week as he recovered from a wound from a dwarven blade to his unprotected flank so Astra could nurse their new son. Hopefully, his father-in-law, the Chief of Defense, would recognize that Edgar was far too valuable to waste his talents in an attempt to pad the ranks with bodies. They needed capable fighters, not cannon fodder; pulling smiths from the Forge was not the right path, but they were desperate. The dwarven warbands were pushing their advantage, knowing that half the dragonkin would stay at home with their young for this breeding season. Each child was too precious to leave unguarded… and yet that had been exactly what happened.

“Astra, I swear, I only turned my back for a moment. You know Firenze, he -”

“Yes, dear sister,” Astra snarled, even turning back to expose a curled upper lip to the moonlight. “I know you’re desperate to bat an eyelash at whatever walks your way. I know you pine for a family more keenly than a sow at her prime. But that does not excuse the fact that YOU lost MY child to this fate. If you don’t march right back to the ‘Forge, I will rip your throat out where you stand.”

The pair stood there for a moment, the tension thick as it hung in the air between them. Finally, Liza’s anger melted away to tears, and Astra was free to continue along the path down the slopes. A pang of sadness weighed against her heart, but it could not hold a candle to the fury and desperation that kept her body moving after all these hours. Once again, she called out to Nadia, praying that just once she would hear an answer.




Present Day. The Arena.

Nadia straightened from her crouch, gesturing with her wrist to send out the two rusted bearings to form anchor points near the edge of the waterfall by Van. She wasn’t too concerned about these becoming further damaged by moisture, as the rust was already pushed to the edge of the sphere and was flaking away under careful mental guidance. While they would never be wholly sound without some good grinding, they would be serviceable enough to last through the day. The points hovered just out of reach of someone who would be standing upon the ground, but not totally out of range if someone were to jump up and attempt to touch them. This was performed as Sera crouched by the ground, as Nadia fully prepared for the angel’s surrender.

’Finally, I can have a go at the Manbeast. It’s about time.’

Before Sera straightened, four more bearings orbited a fixed distance from Nadia at about 30 feet, trailing away from the main pack a ways behind her to come to a stop at regular intervals. Nadia now had control of a set of magnetic leylines, allowing her footing to become a null issue. Now, the force of her movements would come from within, and her magnetic abilities, rather than the strength of her legs. She didn’t want to slip and make a fool of herself, after all; such a clumsy display would not resonate with the crowd.

Another flick of her tail betrayed her impatience, waiting for the Angel’s withdrawal. Did she honestly think she could stall for any more time? The other (already battling) duo, a storm of fire and the steadfast tank of a man, slid into her proper view while Van continued to study the thoughtful Sera, words not yet passing between the two. The female seemed quite intent on battering the beleaguered party to a plump, and would not yield even as her bubble-slick path thundered toward Van and the Angel.

It was with a curse that Nadia surged forward, already reaching for the armor-clad figure with the depths of her abilities. His hulking form obscured the majority of Van from view, concealing how he had already moved to counter the body flying his way. Nadia’s bearings did not contain enough magnetic pull on their own, but she, herself, certainly did. From her core, she mustered the strength to attract the armoured figure with the strongest base pull she could summon, seeking to pull Metelsio away from her temporary ally from the side whence he came, or at the very least arrest his momentum to minimize the damage that Van would take from the collision. She had leapt just past where Zhao and Metelsio had earlier battled, and upon landing, she felt her toepads grow slick with the soapy liquid from an earlier crazed bubble-popping spree. Thankfully, Nadia was held firmly upright by her magnetic (and invisible!) leylines.

Unfortunately, Van had already put force into a kick that was sending Metelsio right back toward her, making the devil rocket toward Nadia like a shot from the barrel. With how slick her surroundings were, Nadia had to leap in place over his form as he was forcibly sped past. She unraveled her pull to the devil the moment he drew near, but the damage was done. The momentum had been effectively tripled from the initial value, and the devil now had to watch out for the waterfall that loomed before him at the edge of the arena. Would he be able to stop in time? Or would he slip right off the edge?

“Whoops?”

She couldn’t help but snicker at the chaos such a slick arena had caused, and the way that everyone seemed so hellbent on worsening the suds. Sure, poor footing could be hellish on the battlefield, but popping the bubbles was a double-edged sword. Everyone would suffer equally from the suds… Well, unless you were Nadia, and could create an invisible safety net.

Skipping back with a tug at her set bearings to increase distance traveled, Nadia allowed Zhao to return to her prey without further interference, just in time to view Sera’s cheap sweep of the leg. Without time to warn Van, she settled instead for skating their way, sending her chakram ahead at considerable speed. The Angel was glowing now, stress fractures bleeding light against her pale skin. Was this some form of overload? It would be interesting to see exactly what capabilities such a form introduced.

The chakram sped to Sera’s right in an ellipse that would aim to clip her arm with a wicked edge before looping back to Nadia. Anticipating a block, the circular weapon flipped to fly parallel to an outstretched blade, adjusting the angle of its blade without warning. A risky play, as Sera could lose an arm with the wrong gesture, but such was not Nadia’s intent. Rather, her aim was just to disable Sera’s weapon arm at the shoulder and remove the wicked-looking sword from the equation. It did seem to be her primary weapon at the current time.

Sera was charging Nadia now, which prompted a raising of the dragonkin’s daggers as she sunk into a battle-ready crouch. The hits her chakram could score might just decide the outcome of this little skirmish before it really got started. How intriguing.
Post #: 23
7/28/2019 20:11:16   
Caststarter
Member

Rain poured down the stone street, thunder roaring throughout the sky. The sister’s soaked coat and scarfed weighed her down. Prota, umbrella in hand, attempted to shield both herself and her bodyguard from the rain. Before them, a grand castle pierced the sky. The castle was decorated with imposing statues of dragons native to Vascole, all made more menacing by the occasional flash of lightning. Prota looked up, stopped for a moment, and then proceeded onward.

“Emperor Nicholas’ castle is up ahead. Please be on your best behavior.” She then shifted her attention to her protector. “Now, Xiuyang, may I ask you about that spear of yours?” the prefect suddenly inquired.

The bodyguard looked away, clutching the weapon all the tighter. “Uh, yes, my master.”

“What is it?” Prota asked stoically. “Does it do anything extraordinary? You seem very attached to it.”

The sister swallowed hard. “It’s merely a mythical weapon. Indeed, I know it as the Qiang Fénghuáng.”

Prota raised an eyebrow, puzzled. “Merely?”

“I am sorry! Not sure how to put it.” The bodyguard’s cheeks grew red as she spoke waverly.

“A weapon of myth is not an object of happenstance.”

“Of course. I, oh, was a priestess over at the temple that housed it.”

“Is that why you are able to harness the latent power within it?”

“No, my brother trained me a bit before my town was razed,” the sister said, distantly.

Shortly after answering, guards stationed at the castle gate halted the duo. “Stop. State your business.”

“I am Prota Wavis, prefect of Furrowsbyrn. I was called by the Emperor himself to discuss matters on the warfront across the ocean, against Umbris.” Prota produced a writ, marked with a distinct silhouette of a dragon’s head. A guard beckoned to his fellow compatriots, motioning his hand down. The towering castle gate lowered, chains and gears grinding as it opened.

Within the castle, halls were lined with chandeliers, pristine suits of armor and tapestries decorated with the Vascole coat of arms. The sister marveled at the scenery before her, a sight utterly unimaginable to those of lower station. “Now, please continue. What are the weapon’s powers?”

The bodyguard snapped her attention back to Prota. “Oh, the power to change destiny.” The prefect halted, closing her umbrella in the process.

“The power to change destiny. Are you sure your religious activities hadn't blinded you to hyperbole? That is a godly power, thought to be only unique to Tyrfing.”

“No, it is true! It is why I am alive today!” The bodyguard held the weapon tight against her, flustered.

“Yet your brother perished.”

“Please, it’s true. It...” the sister blanked momentarily. “It changes one thing, the soul itself.”

Prota relaxed her gaze, looking onward to the path ahead the two of them. “Now changing the soul sounds more reasonable. I believe I have heard enough. We must not dawdle.”

“Yes, master,” the sister said meekly. The duo took a sharp turn left. At the end of the hallway, an enclosed spiral of stairs rose up.

“Xiuyang,” Prota suddenly spoke as she and her bodyguard climbed up, isolated within the stairwell.

“Yes, master?”

“First, just call me Prota. I am not one for such dignities. You have been with me for seven months and already eliminated many a would-be assassin. Be proud of yourself.” The prefect sighed, with nearly indiscernible hesitation.

“Secondly, you are free to leave, for what is about to happen,” Prota whispered.

The sister stared, unable to comprehend the mere thought of just being allowed to leave. Such a luxury, from a government official at that. “Why are you allowing such a thing?”

Still moving up, Prota’s stoic expression remained. “Hellfire. Hellfire on injustice itself. If you want to avoid the crossfire, please leave.”

“I wouldn't think of doing so. How else could I continue to repay you for what you have done for me? You,” the sister breathed heavily. “You educated me, including on how to be a proper lady such as yourself.” She looked up, in awe of her benefactor. “If, if you want to bring down villains, I want to help.”

“Then know now that you are to steel yourself for the times ahead. I shall turn the path of this empire for the better.”

Those words filled the sister’s mind, as a soft smile formed. A truly just leader was before her. Perhaps Prota shall be the one to set everything right. A world where everyone can truly be in peace.

---

You just had to be a big lug, didn't you. Xiuyang burned with exasperation and adrenaline like the sparks birthed from her spear. Metelsio screeched across the ground towards the man with the unwieldy weapon. Upon noticing the living projectile, he stowed his sword, placing a foot on her opponent. The wanderer sneered lividly, frustration reaching to its peak. “By all means. Have him back,” the bystander spoke with great indignation.

Frustration then transformed into mild surprise and gratitude, albeit with a near slip down to her face. The man began to push the stray Metelsio as steam started to distort around his leg. The spiked warrior was then launched as though from a catapult.

Gratitude morphed into further exasperation as the trajectory was off-kilter. “Ah, bother. Sorry.” The spearmaster swung her spear around, with great pains not to pratfall onto the ground.

“It’s no problem,” Xiuyang muttered with little enthusiasm. The entire scenario was very much a problem. She brought the butt end of her spear down to where Metelsio should slide by with a guaranteed-. Clack. No impact. Her opponent screeched on by, with hardly any signs of stopping. The livid wanderer looked to her side, twitching with raw indignation. The scaled humanoid leapt over the dangerous missile, uttering a disgraceful, nonchalant response.

“Whoops?”

Xiuyang then stared at where Metelsio was headed, moving so fast that she couldn't reach him. Her hands gripped the mythical spear tightly. “Metelsio, when you stop. Come over here, please. We have something to settle.” The spearmaster marched her way to the interferer who merely skated about. She threw a chakram at the now-winged and glowing woman, who was also fighting the courteous warrior. You love interrupting everyone’s fights, don'tcha?

The wanderer scraped her spear across the ground, as molten lines formed over the cracks. She had a lot of fire to burn inside her, in contrast to her spear. The interfering skater looked as if she had done nothing to Metelsio. Yet the spiked warrior went far faster than he should've, conveniently towards the nonchalant fighter. As far as Xiuyang was concerned, she was a dishonorable telekinetic.

Once she had gotten close enough, Xiuyang twirled her spear in her hands. She slid them as close as she could to her body and thrust at the halfwit. Tight. Quick. Precise. If the wanderer was to slide once more, so be it. She was going to make this as swift and embarrassing possible, all for karmic retribution. The fire roared within and it demanded release. And I bet you look down on everyone as fools. Get lost.
DF  Post #: 24
7/29/2019 0:30:32   
  Lorekeeper
And Pun-isher

 

Although the Beast was without pride, it had a thorough grasp of its capabilities. Instinct honed through experience elevated this awareness so that not a muscle tensed or an eyelid batted without purpose. If ever it hesitated, it was caution and not self doubt that interrupted the rhythm of its movements.

While on the hunt, it was therefore able to very quickly realize whether or not pursuing a given prey was worth the energy. Those that ran were the easiest to judge — It was rarely a matter of their strength or speed, but rather how they used it in the moments when death stalked them. Did they immediately run through rough terrain? Did they stun the Beast, or injure it outright, before escaping? Or did they simply try to show menace and run? Those who merely ran, it found, were the most enticing.

For while it knew its strength and speed to exceed the Man’s, it was precisely this lack of pride that kept it perfectly willing to capitalize on the advantage the two had in common: Endurance. Much as its smaller kin, the Beast did not easily give up pursuit. Many could outrun it, but few could maintain the requisite speed for long enough to outlast it.

There it was.

A ragged breath. A faltering step. Sinking claws. Silence.





“Thank you… for reminding me of what I was here to do.”

Light filled Van’s his vision so rapidly that he lacked the time to reply or cover his eyes. The radiant blast threw him back as it expanded, sending him sliding along the slick floor in so disorienting a manner that even his psionic control could not immediately stabilize his footing.

Although this hurled Van out of reach of the angel’s follow-up attack, that small fortune escaped his notice amid the momentary blindness . Yet even a kick that could have dealt significant damage and knocked him flat on his back might have drawn a more... amenable expression from the Moon-Broken than what would follow.

As the painful brightness cleared, what he saw between his crossed arms was not the follow-up attack that he had braced for, but... his assailant’s back. What shreds of kindness remained in Van’s expression promptly evaporated. In place of this wasted sentiment, a seething indignation now tensed his face and appeared to add a rumbling weight to his every breath and word.

“...What is this mockery?”

A heavy step forward. Another, lighter, yet more driven in its purpose. His entire figure seemed wilder now — Wide eyes, narrow pupils, bone-white knuckles and a generally coarse appearance beginning at the intense stare framed by back-swept locks of wet hair, carried down every foot of his body by a more aggressive stance.

With parted arms, speaking as much for the crowd’s attention as for his own catharsis, Van called out in an increasingly commanding tone:

“Is this the manner of prospective champion I am to face? Is this someone’s idea of honor!?”

Reluctant as it seemed to part, the clenched grip of his bared teeth relinquished its pressure to show canines that menaced just enough to seem out of place in a human.

“Just who are you turning your back on?”

While powers of the mind were generally not guided by the body, Van was beyond containing that urge as he gave chase. He threw a hand upwards and clenched it into a fist, manifesting a translucent wall before the woman whose body seemed splintered by a light from within. There was no subtlety to this clear plane, however, for the sheer force it applied in the fracturing angel’s direction gave it a very visible haze. It was hardly going to stop someone with her enhanced leg power in her tracks, but a collision would nonetheless hurt like the kind of impact that would, while subsequently reducing her speed.

“This is a time of gods and monsters. Of heroes and horrors. Whichever you aspire to...”

The barrage of questions was not close to letting up, and neither was the indignant tone that propelled it.

“What dream do you take so lightly that you would provoke a foe and then offer your back?”

In spite of this, Van did not seem like he would soon welcome an answer. Certainly not as he swept his hand back down, unleashing another distortion in the direction of the fleeing woman’s center of mass. His body slacked for a moment, sufficiently released from his mental grip to let the damaged pieces of leather hang.


What body language alone didn’t convey, the rough state of his now severely damaged armor certainly added to: The black marks had caved in entirely, splintered by the wave of light, and the surrounding leather, already cut and punctured at times, had entire bands missing along his arms and shoulders. These gaps now gathered what remained of the slick, floating liquid, adding a glistening tone to the canvas of peculiarly thin scars that lay exposed.

“If you have yet to learn to take battle seriously...

Livid eyes sized his opponent up as he approached. He was a breath away from the reach of her legs and blade, and thus he prepared to react to either. Drawing his own weapon preemptively would take precious time away, but there was purpose in keeping it sheathed. Once he halted, his voice reached the height of a growling crescendo. At its peak, it was punctuated by minute puffs of steam rising from glints of gleaming metal, now barely showing underneath the torn leather coat.

Then it falls on me to teach you.
Post #: 25
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