Necro-Knight -> RE: =EC 2022= Forge Arena (7/20/2022 20:24:22)
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‘This ash… falling around us, it is like when we first met. Do you remember, my child…?’ “I couldn’t forget if I tried.” --------------------------------------- Where pale ash fell around them now, it had been black snow then. Weightless flakes of obsidian that clung to every surface as it fell from a blood-red sky. Eryx had been imprisoned at the Rose checkpoint leading to the nearby town of Falconreach, being shackled and incarcerated on grounds of the smuggling of magical weapons and “meeting up with magic conspirators”. He’d looked around at the other inmates lining the narrow halls of the Rose headquarters and wondered how long these crimes would matter when the sky turned red, black snow clung to the window of his cell and the stale stench of death was carried on the wind. The apprentice Soul Weaver had expected Rose reinforcements from the western town of Oaklore when the sky fell dark, but judging from the pale faces of the soldiers on duty, Eryx realized his assumptions were incorrect. The Cult of Valtrith rolled in like a black tide of fog a few hours later. Necromancers that followed a twisted amalgamation of some of Lore’s worst monsters, their only goals to crush or corrupt all resistance to their dark master. Eryx had heard of the Cult’s activities near Falconreach during his travels and heard many warnings that despite the freezing cold of the winter, the signs of their coming darkness was unhindered. Sitting in the corner of his cell furthest from the black-specked window, he made the same futile mistake of asking every Rose guard during the duty swap if they had a plan. “I know hunting evil magic users is part of your job but it’s a numbers game now and unless you let us all out of these cells, it’s a game you’re going to lose,” he’d said and every time, he received the same answer. “Silence, criminal. For all we know, you and your ilk summoned these creatures to aid you.” He wanted to argue the absolute lunacy of such a train of thought but the threat of being gagged for the remainder of his imprisonment killed those words in his throat. In spiteful silence, he watched and listened as the Rose soldiers fought off the seemingly endless undead monstrosities that appeared from the obsidian blizzard. Every wave, the Rose returned with less and less of their own forces, before the Weaver awoke one bitterly cold evening to find no one on-guard. The cries of battle drifted, muffled, through the thin walls of the headquarters and Eryx noted how few of them sounded human. The thought of a possible escape while still shackled with the magic-neutralizing chains had just barely begun to form in his mind when the double-doors of the headquarters were blown open and the mangled form of a Rose soldier crashed into the bars of his cell. While the body crumpled on impact, a gleaming object clattered to the floor through the enchanted bars of Eryx’s cell, its aura radiating with the same crimson color that had overcast the sky. The apprentice weaver stood motionless for what felt like hours, staring at the double-ended dagger as if it would leap from the floor and impale him. When it failed to do so and Eryx’s body forced him to release a breath he hadn’t realized he’d been holding, thoughts of escape and safety rushed to the forefront of his mind once again. The dagger was tainted, cursed, that much was clear… but would avoiding such corruption be worth sitting here to await the undead horde to come and break him like they had the Rose? Trained soldiers, veterans of past magical wars, were falling to these monstrosities. What chance did he stand, a Soul Weaver apprentice who had done nothing more than fail his Edelia exams and dream of adventuring? Eryx didn’t need the answer. He reached for the dagger, choosing to ignore the tremble in his left hand as he did so, and clasped his fingers around the icy-cold grip. He’d expected pain, agony, some form of assault from a cursed thing that rejected his advances… instead, a cool voice purred in his ear, as if someone had appeared in the cell next to him. “By the eternal abyss… I thought I would never be free of such barbaric abuse… Greetings, my child.” The voice was feminine, as much as Eryx could tell through the echoes and whispers that seemed to dance at the edges of the sound. He frowned, looking down at the weapon. Nothing visibly had changed and the sudden cry of battle outside again drew his eyes up, though he couldn’t see anything through the blizzard of shadow. “Ahh, yes… you hear them too. My siblings, being forced into walking prisons and made to dance against their will. You can relate, child, I feel it… trapped in your own prison by your own kind.” “Who… are you?” “My name is Eleftheria. I am a Spirit of Darkness, or I was before I sought a mortal host on this plane of existence and instead was dragged into a conflict I had no say in. I, like my siblings, seek to find a physical form of our own but not when it is shoved upon us… it is monstrous, the host must be… perfect.” The apprentice weaver frowned again and lifted the dagger up to peer at it, the skull on its hand-guard almost peering back, despite its empty sockets remaining dull. “So you are elemental parasites?” “Some of my kind would wear such a title, yes, but… they would also settle for an improper host. Breaking the form to suit their needs the best they can, like this wretched thing I was forced into… But you are different.” “You want to use me.” “I want us to be free. I can feel the magical chains weighing on you, smothering what little talent you have, child. I was shackled in that flesh prison the same way, but together… we can be free of both our chains and bring vengeance down upon those who would use us as tools or discard us like waste…” As if drawn out by destiny, the victorious cries of the few remaining Rose troops rang out over the howling snow, the moan of the undead having finally fallen silent. Eryx frowned, a combination of frustration and resentment settling into his chest. They should’ve died… been ripped apart by the undead and he could’ve made his escape. It didn’t matter where, anywhere was better than dying in this cell. Now, they would return, take away the only social interaction he’d had that wasn’t verbally abusive in weeks and slap on more chains. The weaver’s knuckles turned white around the dagger as his lips curled with rage. They were the criminals, the monsters, yet destiny allowed them to live while innocents like himself and the other inmates were forced to suffer for choosing their desired path. It was sickening. “You do understand, child… I feel it in your soul. This rage takes a part of you, burns it in the fires of revenge… but I can take its place. I can set us free,” Eleftheria purred, like an icy-cold spear of reason piercing the inferno that burned in his blood. Looking down at the pearlescent shackles of blue-violet metal that made his wrists ache and had nearly cracked the dormant Soul Loom gauntlet on his right arm with its tension, Eryx let a primal growl bubble from his throat and rose the sentient dagger in his left hand. The shackles prevented a wide range of movement, but as he let loose with a desperate cry and brought the dagger down on his right wrist, he saw it did not matter. The dagger bit into the Rose-forged metal and split it like a woodman’s axe falling on a log, runes along its surface flickering and starting to fail as he felt his body’s natural magical flow rushing through the cracks. As he brought the dagger down again, he caught the sight of the three remaining Rose soldiers rushing back into the headquarters, drawn by the cries of terror and rage from the cells. The other inmates had recoiled away from Eryx as crimson energy sparked from the dagger with each strike against his shackles, but he didn’t care. Freedom was within his grasp. “Yes, child, free yourself from these shackles! Your wardens come and after them, likely mine! Release us both so we may carve our vengeance into their souls!” The sounds of the Rose men yelling at him to stop were drowned out by a sudden explosion of pain that sent spots flashing across the young man’s eyes. The dagger’s bite had finally broken the shackle on his right wrist and sunk to the hilt in his forearm. The metal of his training Loom was never designed for the abuse of combat and cracked without resistance as the cursed weapon seemed to carved its way deeper with each agonized scream. He didn’t realize he’d ended up on the floor of his cell, darkness creeping its way into the edges of his vision as his body aimed to shut down rather than endure the tortuous invader now reshaping his right forearm. Again, Eleftheria’s voice pierced the haze, having moved from a purr to a razor-edged hiss. “No, child, do not break as so many others have! The spark of your life is a small price to pay for freedom and revenge against those who have wronged you. Wronged US!” The howls of pain were slowly stifled behind gritted teeth, feeling returning to his right hand just as a Rose soldier threw open the gate to his cell and brought a blade falling towards the contorting form. Snapping out with speed that nearly sent another jolt of pain down his right arm, Eryx caught the blade in armored fingers, the bone-white plating protecting his aching flesh from the weapon’s edge. Where Eleftheria had carved her way into his body, a horned skull now sat over the wound on his forearm, a vibrant red energy pulsing like a heartbeat from its eyes. With a roar of defiance that bordered on feral, Eryx lept from the floor and swung his free hand towards the Rose soldier’s face, connecting with a sickening crunch as the man’s nose shattered. Eryx echoed the man’s cry of pain, albeit it far less extreme as his recoiled, the impact sending fractures of pain down his left arm now to accompany the aches of his right. “Careful, my child,” Eleftheria echoed in his mind again, somehow closer than before, “I needed sustenance to bond with you properly. Your body alone is weakened, but together… we are everything you’ve ever wanted.” “A weapon would make this easier, Eleftheria! It seems like I’m doing all the-!” As if to contradict him on principle, Eryx and the Rose soldiers watched as threads of crimson-black light poured from the mouth of the skull on his new gauntlet, weaving themselves into a row of interlocked vertebrae. Each spinal disc featured a curved edge protruding from its back and the final link formed a crude blade with a tip almost sharper than the dagger he’d previously held. “Ask… and thou shall wield the abyss itself, my child.” “By the Avatars-!” The soldier with the broken nose cried, scrambling to recover and counter the blow he’d suffered, but the twisted weaver refused to give the worm the chance. In a flash of motion, Eryx lept from the floor and knocked the man’s plain-steel blade aside, impaling him to the floor with his newly-woven weapon of doom. With a snarl, Eryx cast his eyes a-glow with the same crimson energy up to the two remaining soldiers, already exhausted and trembling from their previous battle for their lives, only to rush into another. Pathetic creatures. With a burst of darkness, Eryx withdrew his blade from the first soldier’s chest and traded an idea with Eleftheria, who silently complied. As his arm rose, the threads between each wicked disc of his blade extended and loosen, allowing the weapon to curve mid-air as he brought it over his head. Too stunned to react, the soldiers simply watched in wide-eyed horror as the weaver of shadow brought the bladed whip around to meet their throats. They fell to the floor without another word to spit his way. At anyone. For a time, only the terrified whimpers of the other inmates, Eryx’s labored breathing and the howling darkness blizzard reigned. Eventually, Eleftheria’ voice returned to the comforting purr, like that of a proud parent praising her child. “Yesssss… you see? Life and death can co-exist. This is a lesson even the most ancient of my kind fail to understand, yet here we stand, an embodiment of such an ideal. Together, we shall teach both our worlds.” “I… I sense your hunger, you want the other inmates’ souls as well… but as you just said, Ele. We need balance. They go free, just as we have.” There was silence for a few moments before the threads of his bladed whip retracted into his gauntlet, Eleftheria somehow sighing within his mind. “As you wish, my child, but I will require sustenance if you do not wish for your form to decay any further. Secluding myself to your arm in order to preserve what remains of your soul is exhausting…” “I appreciate your sacrifice. I’m sure the Rose have patrols out on the edges of Oaklore due to the attacks… We can start there once everyone here is free and safe.” --------------------------------------- So much time had passed since then, but the falling ash and localized lightning storm around them brought the bloody memory back without pause. The Doom Weaver had made a name for himself, carving out entire platoons of the Rose and foolish necromancers seeking power by shackling dark spirits alike. When he crossed a pamphlet for an elemental competition hosted by elemental lords, they agreed almost immediately. The best way to end the abuse of both their species, magic wielders and darkness spirits alike, was to earn the favor of the creators themselves. Together, they would rid Lore of such hate and abuse, at the simple cost of whoever stood before them here in this humid forge. “Eryx… is that-” “-a humanoid Zard? I saw it… Do you think it is here to compete, or-” ‘-perhaps someone let it in as a stadium beast? I can’t say, child… but I sense the natural fear in your soul.’ The Doom Weaver snorted, eyes flicking about the arena for only a second as he ignored her comment. Some headless creature, a being who seemed to carry the kiss of flame with her, the Zard curiosity, a brute garbed in black and golden armor and finally, a woman with a stocky figure and armor that seemed too heavy for her frame at first glance. Everyone besides the lizard-man was some form of sentient, but as he directed his gaze back to the white-skinned being, Eryx found himself growing less and less fond of the idea of being jumped by a natural predator amid another duel. “We take it out first. Perhaps even-” ‘-get the element of surprise, yes, child, I understand. I am ready to feast.’ Smiling for a moment beneath the veil of crimson light he wore under his hood, the Doom Weaver bent down to a crouch, following the curve of the arena’s wall as he approached the lizard-man, each cautious step bringing him closer to the creature’s back.
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