Art of Blade -> RE: =EC= Elemental Championship Finals (10/26/2006 5:29:51)
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Rain, violent rain, fell down from the heavens. Not being a big fan of rain -especially the needly sort that cut through skin like that of the more-or-less dead man in front of her- she ducked and grabbed the standing corpse in front of her, using his body as a meatshield. Unfortunantly, it was not the most effective shield; several individual drops had cut through the thinner parts of the corpse, striking and pricking at Nimra. As each cut came upon her person, a small piece of ice had automatically covered over the small wound. When the rain stopped, Nimra gasped as she threw away the meatshield and looked up. A giant water serpent had just crashed into the sands of the ground. She breathed heavily as she attempted to take this all in as quick as she could, the cold and painful rain sobering her up slightly. She was now in a very painful state, as anyone who went to a mediterannean wedding would know. Her mind was trying to tell her such things as "Run!" or "Concentrate!" or "Notice the pattern" or anything else she has been doing for the last few years. On the other hand, her body was telling her to "Relax!" or "You don't need this!" or "You don't need the contents of your stomach right now, do you?" She had answered to the last request by vomitting. There was so much going on with the alcohol and the battle, she could barely keep up. As she vomitted the alcohol out of her system, she also coughed a bit of blood. Wiping her mouth from all the sudden exits, she tried to stand up as her mind had attempted to drive away the headache and replace it with thoughts that she actually needed. A serpent of water made a lot of rain and then crashed into the ground. Probably from the Water Champion. Because it was made of water, mostly. She couldn't tell much else, otherwise, from all the blackness of the cloud. Realizing this, Nimra did her best to run, or at least slide briskly, out of her little makeshift "ice arena" and out of the cloud, stepping on the sandy ground. She frowned as she wiped away the sweat and the blood and the vomit from her face, and attempted to look into the arena. There was a great geyser. And it was really, really big. Well, Nimra thought... that's very... pretty... She then remembered the water serpent's crashing descent, and realized that it was probably a second part of some grand spell. Gasping in shock, she attempted to create a large wall of ice in front of her, and as the particles and magic energies started to combine in its efforts to create a barrier, Nimra soon found that it was too late. The geyser... exploded. A large wave, nay, a tsunami crashed in all directions, which unfortunantly included Nimra's. She tried to think quickly, to think through the painful cloud that covered her mind, but by the time she had thought up a beginning of a plan, the waves had crashed into her, sending her flying in its rough path of destruction. As she rode the waves- not in the traditional, comfortable sense of the phrase, mind- she reached out for the Pillar of Ice with her free hand and managed to hold on to it. It then proved to be futile as she lost her grip and slammed into the wall before being sent backwards. Her bones felt broken, and she had many bruises on her body. She let go of the two weapons with her, the ball and the jai alai cesta, and crossed her arms in a sort of 'X'-guard position. The waves dragged her back, as it would, and Nimra once again tried to reach for the Ice Pillar. She suceeded this time, using both her arms, as injured as they may be, before the waves had a chance to pull her under it and crush her with its weight. She knew that her muscles ached. She knew that her bones cracked silently. She knew she could no longer move. She recalled the events of the Spike Arena, when the firey man... he made a very good shot at her, she remembered, impaling her at the side. The pain she felt from the ice that clumsily covered her large wound made her submit to Berdin's power, but apparantly, he didn't have much of a chance to do anything. Smiling, she coughed as ice flowed from the Ice Pillar, binding it to her as ice swiftly covered her entire body. The water had continued to mercilessly crash into her, but she was safe in the knowledge that the ice was far stronger than it. It was, afterall, the ice of blood. All of her blood. In the name of the Ice Lord, Nimra... what the hell was happening back then? I could barely even feel you... I'm sorry, Berdin, I was just a little bit... drunk. So... that's why... Oh yes. You were very... unconcentrated. Ice spikes everywhere. But how did you get drunk? I... have no idea... but... I understand. We must act now, lest it is revealed that our destiny is death. I defy destiny. I am unique like that. ... Berdin, you know I trust you, right? ... All or nothing, life or death, heaven or hell, potatoes or curry... As she blacked out, she thought she saw a mirror. And in that mirror was a small girl, crying over dead bodies. She felt a pang of disgust. She was no longer that little crying girl. Frowning, she tapped the mirror in her attempt to get the girl's attention, but no response was made. In anger, she clenched her fist and smashed it through the mirror, which suddenly exploded in both directions, cutting both Nimra and the little girl with several sharp shards of glass. The little girl was bleeding. Nimra wasn't. Nimra stood up. The girl didn't move. And the image, fading away, disappeared. It was, Nimra thought, very confusing... heh... if I get the chance, I'll have to think about what that meant... ... let's rock! Berdin, unleash! The ice covered Nimra was totally and completely caccooned in her icy shell. She was a lot... bluer, if one attempted to look through the ice, but at the moment anyone who was looking at her direction would be staring at the top of the Ice Pillar. There seemed to be a bright light, shining dramatically as a shape formed. It was tiger-like, only bigger, somewhat. Icy winds fluttered around him as he elegantly balanced at the top of the Pillar, his tail swinging back and forth. "Hi," he said, his slightly rusty voice blowing through the winds to no one in particular. Despite his, excuse the pun, cool demeanor, the physical form of Berdin, Spirit of the Ice, was uncomfortable. He discreetly attempted to test all of his limbs without making it too obvious that he was, in fact, feeling strange in this rarely-visited form. He wanted to look impressive for the first few seconds of his arrival. His paws were almost magnetised to the icy pillar below him as he stepped down it in a vertical walk. He gingerly tested the large body of water with a single paw, ice forming around it. Satisfied, he almost jumped in, if not for the platform of ice that materialized beneath him. It would have been very useful, however, if not for the fact that it wasn't anchored to anything. The waves swept him back, forcing Berdin to leap off his platform (which proceeded to crash into the arena wall) and form another platform beneath him. Jumping from makeshift platform to makeshift platform, quickly and without giving the rough waves the chance to send him away. On a hunch which involved the logical thinking that the water was rushing from the center like a fountain and a sort of 'safe place' that the caster would be hiding in, Berdin sucked in as much air as possible and dived his way through the water, manipulating with some sharp, solid ice which cut through the strong, forceful water, and dropped down into the safe source of the waves, among the other two competitors. As he landed, he felt a strong pain in his legs. He growled, being unfamiliar with pain; Nimra usually took it for him. Its feline face was gasping heavily; it wasn't easy to fight the waves like a salmon. Licking himself, he saw that the Earth Champion and the Water Champion were, more or less, alive. Nimra's blood was flowing through him so that he could fight... all of Nimra's blood, actually. If he couldn't kill someone before Nimra freezes to death in her icy shell, then... they would both... It was better if he didn't think about it. Licking himself, he also saw that he was starting to melt. He had only a limited time to kill one, or even both, of the competitiors. "Hi," he said again. He would, normally, say more, but the combined effects of the drop's uncomfortable force and the fact that any other word would require more than one easy syllable stopped him from doing so.
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