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Khaian Memory
08-28-11, 07:12 AM
Where am I?

The black. It was his prison, and it was the singularity of his existence, towards which all other senses converged, squashed into obscurity by the wall of darkness. The rain, the wind, the sun..none of nature's assets could penetrate this sombre fortress. The black wall sealed him from the sustaining radiance outside.

Where am I?

In the beginning, the shadows were his blanket. He was devoid of sensation and embraced by a slumber without boundary. There was no awareness of the impending day, or evening, or night. There was no time. This limbo was a reality wherein nothing dwelled to bring Khaia to himself. His being slowly assembled in fragments, piecing together like a jigsaw of sentience painfully slowly. His sensations, his hearing, his sense of smell and taste, his orientation, and at length his own thoughts occurred randomly, at intervals, and never in synchronisation.

Am I alive?

Being the first priority of any waking being to assess itself, Khaia vainly strove to peer into the abyss. Thwarted by the endless black, he sought his other senses, something to grasp, something real. A windy howl filled one ear. A tough, grainy texture scratched the surface of his cold skin. A fine dirt powdered his parched lips and tickled his nose, bringing into effect his first notion of movement. As his body convulsed with a sneeze he discovered his restrictions, and in these he startled himself. A tangle of wooden limbs suspended him in their clutches, grasping him, clawing at him.

As if his stirring had roused a vicious beast, the branches tensed while vines snaked around his body and tightened their coil. A fit of claustrophobia seized him as the fiends squeezed away his fickle breath and threatened to crush his ribs. Deep in panic, he struggled against a dark sea of nightmares, with every stroke conjuring another rope to restrict him. His wild thrashing yielded no greater results than they would in a lake of quicksand. Suddenly he found himself exasperated and overwhelmed, the idea of escape fading into the black void in which he existed. Once completely submerged, his precious consciousness began to wane, and by the next moment the dark wave subdued him once more. Only the spectre of a voice haunted his last waking moment.

Kneel, know your own helplessness, know despair, for I will show you the decimation of Saosi, wrought from the very servitude you tried to escape.

He approached the dim light of consciousness with tamed reflexes, assessed himself for the final time, and quieted his movements.

Know that I am the one who guides you.

He waited patiently, silently. Waited for the imminent. Waited for those vindictive tendrils to rise from the murky black and strangle him senseless again. Waited for them to exact the excrutiating judgement his body expected.

Know my name, Khaia. For I am not one man, nor ten, nor ten thousand. I am beyond numbers, beyond reason. I am...

Nothing happened.

Nothing. Then silence.

Relief cued him to start breathing again when he noticed that he had neglected it. He was trembling, but as long as he could keep himself calm, his mind was at last free to roam about and speculate.

The obvious question came first. When his eyes slowly opened, they awoke to dim grey. Khaia's habitat was no haven for light, that much was certain. He found that there was little to feel, smell, or hear that would clue him towards any useful idea of where he might be. It smelt like scrub, foilage, dirt...and those dreaded vines, as dry and itchy as ever against his skin, held clasped to every limb. Oddly, a faint sting gnawed at the base of his back, a thorny, penetrating throb. His senses coagulated together to present to him the leafy surroundings of Concordia Forest and, with that, the grim reality he now faced.

He didn't know it yet, but he had arrived on the planet of Althanas.

Khaian Memory
08-30-11, 01:40 PM
Artinian Plains, Saosi. Twenty four hours prior.

When Kenzei, a Saosian magic catagory similar in craft to white magic and one of four cornerstones of the Saosian arts, was mastered and practiced by a high ranking Saosian, it was renowned for the ability to heal any ailment or trauma short of death. It defied the most complex advances in chemical medicine with a few enchantments, a wink and a prayer. However, unmastered Kenzei had only simple, temporary pain relieving effects.

As Khaia tightened the black sash around his waist, adjusted his white greatcoat, and flicked his hair for effect, turning to face a gentle summer day's breeze and the kiss of a low lying sun against his cheeks, he cast his mind back to early lessons about the four arts and, in particular, healing. A strong Kenzei incantation could last a few hours hours before it's power faded, leaving its host with recurring aches and wounds anew. Kenzei magic, Khaia was taught at the academy, was best used to seal lacerations and set broken bones while more permanent remedies were sought.

However, being absolutely useless at Kenzei, Khaia had not even reached a basic understanding of healing. This was unusual for a captain of his standing, and rather than remedy the situation with study, he opted for more practical approaches towards first aid.

"Do you want me to fix this or what? I'm about to do it whether you're ready or not."

"Seriously Captain, I'm alright. Captain Hotoku is back at the court, and I can wait until we get back for her to sort it."

Lanopiel, a researcher from the Saosian court and the son of Nohor, Saosi's leader, himself, insisted against using the healing elixirs issued by the first division at this stage in the journey and was prepared to wait until he got back to his own squad for some effective treatment. He had been attacked by an Ana Boko, a vicious, dragonlike flying creature with a bone exoskeleton, when the squad had happened upon its nest. Lanopiel had taken a kick to the shoulder from the Ana Boko's massive talons and had dislocated his arm. He wanted to save the medicine because he had a feeling they were going to need every last one before their mission to the Ki-Gate was fulfilled, although he wouldn't share that slight doubt with anyone but Khaia, his temporary charge.

Khaia, sighing heavily, said he was being senselessly stubborn, proud and vain, and was going to do it anyway. With one heavily booted foot braced against the base of Lanopiel's back, Khaia wrenched his right arm into it's socket with an alarming, sickly crack, yanking as if he were trying to tear it off.

Lanopiel spat out a string of curses into his free left hand that would've turned the devil's ears red.

The tenth division, consisting of Khaia's men and Lanopiel's small research team, had been on the road together for some time now, each one of the headstrong party looking to draw their own experiences and lessons from the mission handed down to them from Division Zero, Nohor's commanding platoon. Khaia Escocar only knew what he needed to know - that Nohor had asked him and his squad to accompany a team of researchers lead by Lanopiel to a place in the southern rural areas of Saosi known as Artinia, where they would try to find a malfunctioning Ki-Gate. He had not been given specifics by Nohor, but he summised that the task must have been pretty important if Lanopiel had been called in to observe it's behaviour, or whatever it was that Lanopiel had been asked to do.

Lanopiel himself knew more than he was letting on. He and his team had been following a trail of leaked Ki-Gate particles that would hopefully lead him and his team to unearth a massive, and dangerous, integrity breach in the portal in the valleys to the south. He felt it his duty to ensure that any energy still leaking from such a powerful source was contained and sealed as soon as possible, fearing the consequences of such a large spillage of radiation into their realm would be more than they alone could handle.

In the meantime, the division camped just clear of the peaked woods that shrouded the Artinian border, three moons bright and steady over the neatly organised rows of little tents. Lanopiel's personal bodyguard Mo, a silent, courteous wall of muscle with blue hair and fists like anvils, and Khaia's vice captain Chikara Grim, a walking tower of a man with long silver hair and biceps the size of small buildings, alternated the turning in of the guard, depending on which mistrusted the other more by the time the sun had set.

Khaia stayed with Lanopiel. The division ten captain wished this was the first and last night he'd be stuck nursing his comrade's minor injuries, but it was hardly either case. They were both eating around the campfire when he ribbed Lanopiel with some lewd joke about Mo's sudden disappearance whenever any hostility reared it's ugly head, something usually directed at the more...sensitive...of his subordinates and hotly thwarted by his vice captain. If Mo hadn't caught the insistent glance between the lines, he would've throttled Khaia right there and wrapped up the evening early.

"I didn't want to bother anyone else with this," Lanopiel finally admitted, and Khaia was at once both flattered and annoyed that he chose to bother him, of all candidates. The scientist rolled up one pant leg to show a livid, swollen ankle wrapped in a blood-soaked sock and asked, "You wouldn't happen to have something for Ana Boko venom, would you?"

Khaian Memory
09-08-11, 09:02 AM
((OOC: I'm actually on holiday for a short time and am rewriting this thread top to bottom. Placeholder posts will be updated as and when))

Khaian Memory
09-16-11, 05:31 AM
Placeholder post