Art of Blade -> RE: =EC= Elemental Championship Finals (10/28/2006 15:47:45)
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Nimra blinked. She was, once again, standing in total and complete whiteness when she was, in fact, supposed to be unconscious. Staring, she found the crying girl again. This time, however, her wounds from the exploding glass were covered in bandages, but her face was clearly smiling as she hugged another person. This other person was a woman, who looked like she could be the child's mother. After seconds of staring, blinking, and further acts staring, something in Nimra's mind clicked, and she gawked. If that girl was me, then is that... mom? Suddenly, the little girl turned her head towards Nimra, and she felt... pain. Looking down, she saw that she was bleeding in exactly the same way the little girl was cut up by the flying glass. Nimra fell to her knees, as she slowly realised what this all meant. She knew well enough that this was the first time in years that she saw the image of herself as a little girl, or even her mother, even in memories. Those memories were gone for the longest time. But they were gone for a reason! Nimra shouted, there was nothing but pain and self-loathing from those memories! If I wanted to do what I need to do, I don't need unnessecary memories dragging me back! I don't need these memories to remind me of my cowardice as I watched you all... as I watched you all die... --- Running after the disc, Berdin ran, making sure to keep a few paces behind it; if the foe reacted quickly to the disc, he didn't want to be taken out at the same time. The foe would deal with the disc, and would have to have quick reflexes to turn his attention to a puncing tiger. On the other hand, if Berdin was too late with his attack, then the foe would have plenty of time to react and the disc would be irrelevant. With that thought, Berdin quickened to pace slightly, but then something very sudden happened. Three walls popped up around him as the armored man slammed his hand on his beach drawings! He was halfway into the 'box' when he realized that he had to stop running, and Berdin covered the ground beneath into ice and clawed himself into a halt. The ice was a sticky sort of ice, not at all like the slippery ice that Nimra employed earlier, and made stopping a lot easier than using his feet as brakes on the sand. Did I just think he was making beach drawings? Or drawing a plan of some sort on the ground? No, of course, he wouldn't do something so useless. That... was transmutation, Berdin thought, disgusted at himself for not recognizing it sooner. But he felt, no, knew that he didn't have much time until his foe makes the next move, and to avoid the next attack meant getting out of the three-sided box. He melted part of the ice he was standing on to make it more slippery, and started to slide himself backwards when, suddenly, the wall in front of him fell apart. Damn! I have to react quickly! I have to... In a quick, desperate sort of panic, the tiger shone brightly for a second as a second layer of ice was formed around the upper parts of his body, thick enough not to be ineffectual yet thin enough to be summoned in such short amount of time. The Champion of Earth jumped through the debris and his axe fell down. And then there was a healthy, rather worrisome 'thunk'. Berdin stared as he saw that the axe made its way into his icy snout, the tip of the axe reaching all the way up to Berdin's eyes. And past the tip of the axe, one could see the effects of the sharp blade being wedged into the ice, cracks webbing all the way past Berdin's head and neck and going back as far as his tail, the cracks becoming smaller as it went further back. Small pieces of ice dropped off in small chunks randomly, and blood seeped through the cracks. Despite the fact that he now had an axe through his snout and head, Berdin grinned. The axe had not gone all the way through his face and lower jaw, he noted, it's still there in my face... if the Champion was a lumberjack, then I must be a very tough tree. Heh. The strength of the Ice Lord is nothing to laugh at... Blood dropped from every small opening on Berdin's body, mostly from where the axe had struck. ... but even the Ice Lord's strength doesn't stop this pain from coursing through my body. This... almost foreign pain that I have never felt before... it is a bad feeling... As he stared at the small puddle of blood on the ground, his head forced to bow due to the weight of the axe that was wedged in his head, Berdin thought he could see Nimra in its reflection. Hah... --- Nimra kept staring, hugging her knees. Why am I bleeding now? These were her wounds, not mine... what is this supposed to show me? Those memories... they're gone. They're in the past. They don't concern me. They should not be effecting me! Pause. Is this meant to prove me wrong? She frowned as the little girl continued to hug her mother. ... keep hugging her, little Nimra... she'll be gone soon. She'll be gone and she's never coming back and it's all your fault because all you did was hide and cry, hide and cry... Nimra sniffed. See? This is why... this is why I don't care for memories, this is why I... I forgot the past. All it causes is pain... She touched her wounds, the bleeding cuts... But forgetting the past doesn't stop the pain, does it? It only makes one confused about where the pain came from. And so we carry the wounds of our pasts, and we turn to the future to heal them. Heh. Of course... and to think, I used the moment I met Berdin as an excuse to forget my past. I came to him for power, desperate, not wanting to hide and cry any more... and then I was frightened, frightened that despite how much power I'd get, I'd still be that little girl, chickening out at the last minute, hiding and crying. And when the ritual that was to bind our souls was complete, there was a moment of empty-headedness as I adjusted myself with the spirit within me, and in that moment I disregarded the past, threw it to the back of my mind, and locked it away, keeping only the memory of intent, the memory of purpose, going forward like a mindless soldier not knowing why he's fighting, as emotionless as a machine. I stopped caring for the reason of my goal, I stopped caring about human life in general, thinking... thinking that, it didn't matter what one did, it didn't matter who he knew, when the time came their strength will be measured and if he fails, he will die. And for a while, I called my family weak for this reason, and thought of them as nothing more than seconds that have already passed from my life. The only sign of me ever loving them is the fact that I am still going after the person, that blind-folded killer with the torn cape. And for a while, I used this way of thinking to justify the kills I've commited and to comfort myself, in case I die before I succeed. There was a faint blue light, and Nimra stared as the cuts were healing, being covered with... ice? She turned her head quickly, and stared as Berdin stood with her. A minute passed, the image of the little girl with her mother resembling that of Nimra and Berdin. Nimra smiled. Heh... Berdin... my accomplice, my companion, my... friend... Maybe you will help heal the wounds of the past... --- The ancient magic of bonding one's spirit with another was considered by many to be forbidden. There was a very sensible reason for this, of course. Most practioneers of this magic went mad with the power of the other spirit, and sometimes the other spirit goes mad with the capabilities of the first. They fail to cooperate, and turn into what is considered by many to be an evil, mindless being, bickering with itself while mindlessly slaughtering hundreds of innocents. Nimra should have been one of these people, going to Berdin for more power, more strength, she needed more, she needed more so she can kill someone... but, somehow, her road down life was different from the others. Their bond was stemmed from the seed of anger and vengeance, yet it managed to bloom into a bond of trust and faith. And, as several sub-par television shows will be quick to remind you, such a bond is stronger than diamond... --- Berdin grinned. He had forced himself to cover the wounds around his face with ice. He didn't do this to heal him, no, but to form the ice around a certain axe and cause it to be... ... stuck to my tough-as-ice face, Berdin thought. You're strong, Earth Champion, you're powerful... but me? I'm just desperate... I'm out here, enduring this pain for just one person... even though, yes, I need to save that person to protect my own hide, that's no longer the case. I'm ready to push myself and to know the full and total meaning of pain if it means that I save that one person who restored my faith in my own existence... It's unfortunante, but one of us must die, and I'd rather that I kill you instead of the other way around... Berdin gripped the iced ground, which was sticky once more. Ice formed its way up the axe which was embedded into Berdin's head, like lines upon lines of snakes slithering up the blade and around the handle. When it reached where the Crusher was gripping the axe, it sensed the heat of blood that was radiating through his armor and his skin and the ice became knife-like spikes, thrusting upwards regardless of whether the Champion had decided to let go of his weapon or not. At the very end of the axe's handle, there was a single, jagged spike of ice, like a spear. Berdin winced. Blood continued to trickle down where the axe had made contact with his face, and the multitude of cracks along his body made it easier for him to melt. He was approaching his final moments. He lifted his axed-down head, ignoring its mighty weight, ignoring his cracking shoulders and how he's falling apart like a fragile ice sculpture, and looked at the Earth Champion. He had a small wound where the disc hit him. But it might be enough. Gritting his teeth, Berdin made one final leap, attempting to use the handle-side of the axe to stab through the wound. There were many ways I could fail, Berdin thought, as he found himself leaping towards the enemy. The man could be so immensly strong, he could force the axe out of my head, causing the ice on the axe to melt... I'm at the end of my rope, I need contact with that axe to keep the ice there... the man could be quicker than I thought... heck, maybe I'll miss my target completely and stab his armor instead, who knows how tough that is... and maybe I'll be attacked from behind by the other man... hell, maybe my ice's as fragile as a pile of sugar and I never even noticed... So many maybes... but... I have to at least try.
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