Apocalypse
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A deviant to the last, the coxcomb managed to spout out one last flirtation as the cocoon of frost encased the two paragons in its perverse embrace. The Windsgraced responded by tightening her grip around his throat. The nobleman sputtered and choked as his air supply was cut off. Pale flesh turned blue as he struggled within her grasp. And still the ice climbed. Shard by shard, the cocoon enveloped the monk’s limbs and spread to encase her torso. The biting sensation of cold took her chest, and she gasped as the air was forced from her lungs. Arro’s body shuddered, her heart pounding. “Control your breath, and the rest will come. Only death awaits her. notlikethispleasenotlikethisI-” From the edge of the monk’s vision came motion. Arro craned her neck in its direction before the ice could restrict its movement . Bassareus Laverne would not be leaving anytime soon, and the monk was grateful for an excuse to not look at his pompous face. Lumbering towards them was the old wolf, rustic spear in hand. Cold vengeance hung in his gem-eye while violent passion burned in his left. “You ignored him, and now you shall fall by him. We Were A Little Busy, If You Couldn’t Tell. ...like a sitting duck… Bah! Should have left me at the helm." Sark Ynet’s guttural howl broke through the wailing of the Whispers. The roar lacked in volume and ferocity compared to the screams of the tempest, but the sheer primality captured within had no equal. A chill unrelated to the enclosing ice swept along Arro’s exposed skin, leaving a spattering of goosebumps in its wake. With no regard for his own wounds, the Paragon of Darkness charged. Every step must have wracked his body with pain, yet he showed no sign of hesitation. His was an old soul that had weathered great and terrible storms. “And he shall end this one. That Old Sag Of Skin!? dosomethingdosomethingohpleasedo- Don’t lose faith. Not yet. Please.” Six whispers cried out, drowning out her own thoughts with their own dissensions. She was lost. She still had hope. She was foolish for ever coming here. She was the bravest soul to journey out from the temple. She had brought shame to the Stormfather. Arro shut her eyes to the world around her. And what if she had? Arro the Windsgraced, Arro the Unyielding, Arro of the Ruinous Tempests. Titles not bestowed upon her but earned. Earned every sunrise and sunset in the Howling Pits with the Zephyr. Earned with each trial atop the temple in the Skies’ Theater. In the face of buffeting winds and roaring gales, she had emerged victorious over the seekers who dared to challenge the Stormfather’s honor. She could see their faces in the recesses of her mind - those she had cast down but of whom she never had truly been free. The Coward. The Vain. The Humble. The Slayer. They pestered her at every waking hour, demanding to be heard. Arro’s eyes snapped open. But why lend her ear? Deaf to the Whisper’s call to action, the Windsgraced remained still. Above the old wolf readied to bring his archaic spear crashing down. Below, Bassareus Laverne did not stir. Within, her heart pounded to the beat of a war drum, as if it alone would be enough to shatter the encroaching ice. Without? No flicker of emotion disturbed her eyes. No sweat disturbed her brow. As the steel cut through the air and the Whispers roared, Arro took but a single action. She breathed. Ice cracked and splintered beneath the weight of the blow, but the spear was robbed of its strength when it kissed her skin. The power behind it surged through her, coursing through her veins and scouring for any outlet for its wrath. Such a technique was meant to nullify blows into the surrounding air but there was no air surrounding Arro. Only ice. It struck point after point in the coat of frost, unleashing all the rage of the old wolf into the prison created by the bladedancer. Crystalline shards erupted in a flurry of freezing razors. Sark staggered back, unbalanced by the sudden assault. “Winged- Tranq - Temp-” But Arro was already moving, leaping off her remaining good leg and towards the old wolf. He had tried to strike her down when he thought her helpless. It seemed only fitting to do the same. She pulled back her hand, intending to strike the paragon’s throat for a quick takedown when a flash of silver caught her eye. The spearhead . Between the impact and the Breath, it had broken off and now tumbled end over end in the space between the two combatants. A chance for a decisive victory. Instead of jabbing with extended fingers, Arro struck forward with an open palm. One true strike while the enemy is distracted. The splintered end of the broken shaft dug into the flesh of her hand as she propelled it forward. Arro grimaced at the new source of pain but remained focused on her goal. Her breath fell in an even cadence as the spearhead pierced through the air towards its once master. Sark raised an arm to ward off the blow but was off his mark. Old and broken yet still sharp, the steel punctured through his palm and pinned it to the throat behind. Arro stepped back, wincing as fresh sand rubbed into the wounds on her feet. She had endured worse, but that did not lessen the stinging she felt now. She allowed herself a breath as Sark Ynet stumbled in place, a look of confusion crossing his eyes as he went to move a hand that could not obey; the look of a man who was already dead but did not yet know it. Crimson bled freely and the old wolf collapsed first to one knee and then the next. Cracked lips moved but only delivered a sputtering of red - his last words would die with him. He snarled and glared at his slayer with that inhuman gaze, holding onto his fury with every shred of will left within him. But as his lifeblood flowed into the sands below, the gaze grew more and more distant until he fell a husk of broken rage. The Whispers offered neither guidance nor hindrance, and as the crowds remained still an overwhelming silence permeated the arena… Before breaking into an uproar. Cheers and screams poured forth from spectators on end. They had demanded blood, and Arro had supplied. She rolled an aching shoulder, gaze idly passing over the vibrant masses. The shouting continued unabated as mages rushed onto the field. The ones approaching Sark Ynet slowed down as they approached, realizing their mission was retrieval, not recovery. They each grabbed an arm and began to drag the corpse away. His head fell to one side, that yellow cat’s eye staring as if fixated on the monk. “Good Riddance. A worthy foe. WEDIDITWEAREALIVEOHTHANKYOUTHANKYOUOHTHANKTHESTORM- Not enough fun by half.” A series of grunts caught Arro’s ear, and she turned to see the other mages struggling with their patient. Bassareus Laverne had survived the ordeal and, judging from the flailing of his limbs and his rather colorful language, was not content to give up his chance at victory. An intimidating tirade had he not been in the process of being forcibly dragged from the arena, kicking up clouds of sand all along the way. Arro spared him a glance but looked away before he could make eye contact with her - she would not be taking any challenges for this title, but she was not above adding another mark to her victories this day. Fortunately for the nobleman, the mages seemed to have dealt with his petty kind before and demonstrated acute knowledge of their holds on him. Even now one of their number was attempting to apply aid to him. A few moments later he and the mages disappeared into one of the exits, leaving Arro alone. Alone with her Whispers. Their praises and congratulations fell into murmurs as they argued for what to choose, as if they had climbed their way to become Champion. Arro let out a long, slow sigh. And to think it had taken her until today to realize what she wanted - what she needed from the Lord of Storms. Not her father back, not her brother back, not even her mother. A soft breeze fell across Arro’s exposed skin, causing the hairs to stand on end. A howl tore through the center of the arena as a typhoon was given birth. It whipped and roared, scattering sands in all directions. People in the crowd reached for their hats and those in the front row latched onto the divider as the winds buffeted them. Yet no grain of sand flew in Arro’s direction, and the tempest of this storm fell like a soft breath across her. She could feel the lingering pain in her wounds fade away. The winds called to her, beckoning her into their embrace. And as she stepped forward, she gasped. For in the center of the tempest, there were no Whispers. Only Arro and the one she called lord. A presence unseen yet felt, overpowering yet undetectable. A voice that thundered not through her mind but crashed upon her entire being. FOUGHT WITH FURY, WEATHERED THROUGH TRIALS, I GIVE WITNESS TO YOUR RISE AS CHAMPION. Arro let out her breath, not realizing she had been holding it. She looked up into the skies above her. Even here - in this crowded city surrounded by hills and plains - the heavens above remained vast and infinite. The earth and oceans sprawled beneath it, yet neither could hope to match the depths of the skies. Day and night rose in its domain, energy and ice were but fractions of its storms, and fire could never hope to reach its heights. Of all the elements, it was the Ruinous Tempest that encompassed and overwhelmed all. Of all Lords, there was only one that stood above the others. She had been taught to believe it all her life, but now she could see it. Hear it. Experience it. WITH VICTORY COMES LAURELS AND GLORY . SPEAK YOUR HEART’S DESIRE, AND YOUR WISH SHALL BE GIVEN LIFE AND BREATH. She shuddered. But she did not hesitate. “Let me be free. Let me strike my own path.” SO YOU HAVE SPOKEN, SO IT SHALL BE DONE. YOU NOW CARRY MY FAVOR FOR ALL THE WORLD TO SEE. GO FORTH, CHAMPION. THE WINDS SHALL ALWAYS RIDE AT YOUR BACK As quick as it had come, the tempest dispersed. Arro took in a long breath to quell her beating heart. She waited for the Whispers to come, to batter her with her foolishness. What would the Windsgraced be without the Whispers of the Winds? And yet none came. She took in a second breath. And a third. And then laughed. Tears streamed from her eyes as she stared up into the skies that seemed so much less bounded than they had a moment ago. I am blessed, Lord of Storms. Thank you. She brushed the tears from her cheeks, noticing as she cleared them a dark strand billowing by the side of her head. She snatched it only to grimace as a sharp pain pulled at her scalp. Arro let the strand slip through her fingers where it was joined by a half dozen more from just outside her vision. Hair. My hair. The many strands drifted and wavered as if a gentle wind blew upon them. The monk allowed herself to smile. To be crowned by the Stormlord himself...no, to be blessed by none other than the Lord of Storms. No longer would she be called Windsgraced based on Whispers interpreted by others who could not hear them - no, her favor was shown by the mark left upon her brow, not in the chambers of her mind. This day she would be known as Stormblessed. “Arro the Stormblessed!”, she called out to neither the roaring crowds nor unfathomable skies above. “Do you hear? This path, this life, I claim as my own. Today, I live.” And as Arro took her leave of the coliseum, no Whisper answered her call.
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