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Futsuriai
08-26-06, 07:58 PM
… stopped so. When was he? He could barely move yet felt no pain, he could see himself, almost, as if detached from his body. Perhaps he was. He could not know. A vague recollection of the events leading up to the crippled black form, no, to his being in the too-pristine meadow in . . . he could not have said where. Flashes of light, a sinister magical presence whose depth he had been unable to fathom, a laugh so malevolent as to cause fear in the fearless. Unbalance? No, that was not it, it was smaller and less worrying, yet worrying and larger. Thinking was useless. It was dark, too dark. He could not see a thing.

Was it time?

How long had he waited in the barren cliffs? He could not know. His black figure lay unmoving yet there was nothing odd about that, nothing was moving. Nothing? The idea was odd, where was it? It could not have found him there, not again. Yet he wondered if it mattered if it had. It would have, he knew, or thought, it was hard to tell, thinking was almost a futile endeavor. The light was overwhelming, he could not see a thing.

No.

Memory, it was there but not there. He knew that, however something else was missing not of days before days and places without distances, something where recent made sense and where nearby could. It was still muddled and hard to truly grasp, the empty void utterly surrounding him, enveloping him, but, no, the void cannot envelop as it is naught. Naught? Where? He could not turn around to see, of course, yet it was not there. How could he have when movement was not there and things were both eternal and instantaneous? Yet the idea of a powerful nothing haunted his oddly conscious mind, how could a nothing be more powerful than another? He could no longer see himself. But that was normal, there was no light, no dark, he could not see a thing.

Was it time?

A breeze, he thought he felt, yet how could that be? Questions were more numerous than thoughts, he realized, yet questions were thoughts, were they not? Something was wrong, that much was apparent in his disjointed mind. Though even of this he was not sure maybe this was his mind. Yet he was. Light. No, not light. Movement, perhaps? No that was ridiculous, movement needed time, implied change. Change was impossible. Yet his thoughts moved, evolved and changed, did they not? So many questions. He could not find the answers but how could he? He could not see a thing.

No. Not yet.

It was absurd to be think when time was not there but it made sense, somehow. Around him there was not nothing yet not something for nothing is, in a very real way, a something. Paradoxes. Yes, that was where he was but he did not care for the where’s, where’s were irrelevant. When’s, he needed when’s. Most mortals could not easily think in when’s, when’s being less pivotal than where’s since they could change their where’s more easily than their when’s which by design were forever shifting forward. In that instant he saw himself, he had been moved sideways, what was an instant in a timeless place? It was, then, no wonder he could barely see a thing.

Was it time?

The questions cycled yet they kept going back to that one. Meaningless. Something was wrong, he knew. He knew he had known, too, but not realized it before. Before? In the memories, he corrected. Now, with time (no, not time) to think he had finally felt it deeply. It hurt though he felt no pain. He needed to fix this. Need could not exist without time, as time made need. Tautological? Yes but what isn’t? He needed need. Ironic. Was it time? Many things made sense without a dimension of space, few without that of time. Were there other dimensions of time? Somewheres. In the same way sometimes had more than one of space. Yet almost always mind prioritized space and forgot time until it betrayed them.

It was time to awaken. But he could still not see a thing. When was he? He was finally now, he realized. Where did not matter any more. Gray eyes opened to a world of stars. Why was he? Thought. Futsuriai. He knew that was who he was, who he would always be yet that hardly mattered when his why was so vague. Fix. Fix what? Himself, yes, but something else. Magic, his magic was odd. Reacting to nothing? No, never to nothing. He was awake yet still perplexed. Disorganized as his thoughts were he was slowly putting them back together. So many questions and few certainties. One above all the others urged him, however.

It was time.

It was cool, he felt wind against the ragged cloak; it felt neither good nor bad. It was black as the sky, he noted. Beneath lay an outfit just as dark, elegant but functional. He let out air as he got up, his spry body feeling lighter than an odd weight on his left. A glossy black sheath, yes, inlays of silver reflected the dim starlight; almost mesmerizing save for the need. His mind was still thinking too abruptly. It was unavoidable yet he was unable to mend it faster. Again. His thoughts ended and began. They did not seem to meld together very often.

He was walking, he realized. It was a powerful gait yet not heavy, light, lithe, liquid yet solid. A good poise. A swordsman’s poise. He, Futsuriai, noticed. He walked towards nothing, never nothing, he was nowhere so it made sense. He entered the ruins, he then realized there were ruins nearby. The horse at his side neighed softly, a horse was with him he took all these things in stride. He knew how little he knew and yet he also knew things were ultimately logical. Knowing this he got on the horse, it was what he should do.

He let his steed weave a path, an instinctive path, through the ruins. He could, he realized, have woven through them blindfolded yet it seemed Anemos, his horse’s name, was similarly attuned. Above, he saw, a storm frozen by the tundra watched them approach its center without a single drop falling, more a marker than a storm yet he had the feeling a storm would break soon. Soon, the word made sense again. When hadn’t it? Before, no, yes, before he moved sideways.

He turned back once more, beyond the ruins; beyond the tundra’s white and grey. The reserve of magic within him was aligned, like a magnet aligned iron fillings, to what lay at an almost palpable distance. Magic. It must have been the cause of his timeless prison. As he neared the epicenter of so much power he softly began to hum to himself, ‘Horizon’s End’, a soft and bleak tune. A tune he had never heard.

He was paralyzed atop Anemos, the horse oddly serene as if he could feel only a gentle ocean lapping his toes with every wave in a placid shore while Futsuriai stood beneath every glorious crest of a storm he realized was breaking invisibly. The ruins pulsed with every wave, pulses of extraordinary power, power beyond comprehension. It was beyond sight but brutal, powerful enough, even, to move someone sideways. He was someone, he was Futsuriai but he did not know why he was.

As if walking into the eye of a storm it all stopped, the inner storm, the outer storm still looming in repressed magnificence and below them all the insignificant moving creatures amidst the forsaken grandeur of ruins. He had shuddered when the sensation left and he looked straight towards the ruins’ center almost instinctively. It was gone, he did not know why nor why it had started so it did not matter except it did. It mattered more than anything. Timelessly he had had questions but not answers, now, perhaps, he could seek answers.

It was time, but for what?

Futsuriai
11-24-06, 07:19 PM
Vague memories, a song, a word. Flashes of knowledge lost, it was hard to make sense of them. The breeze grew stronger yet it caused him no discomfort, who he was was not altered by it, his why likely unaffected rendering it a mere detail to take into account. He had no need to shield himself from the elements, his cloak was dry – the cold barely afflicted him but this had not always been so. His mind was also different, odd that he could tell, but not odd. Things made sense. Few mortals believed that but that was because they lived in where's, nothing forced things to make sense in the now, most of them only made sense at either end of eternity. He could wait.

A storm? It was still there unbroken, the light of stars illuminating from its periphery. He had a horse, he knew that this time and it was walking towards the center. There were ruins near him, he remembered, not knew spontaneously. The buildings were ravaged by time but pristine in their death throes, white marble, dark marble, unblemished smooth stones preserved without dulling their appearance. Weather. It had worn everything down yet it all stood, waiting, waiting for millennia. For him? He knew the truth of that without evidence to support it save the thought, the thought was evidence enough for a being of his nature. He was no man. He was Futsuriai. He still did not know why he was.

There was no darkness though too little light came from the sky, it did not trouble him. Things made sense. His eyes pierced the ruins searching for what they sought, objects, a dead creature, a being. No, that is not what they sought. It was standing there, watching, him? But that being could not be what he sought, no. His eyes glazed over the being, it did not interest him; it could offer no insight into why he was. He paused. He had been wrong, it was wrong to say it could not do this, he amended: it could or could not offer insight. He had no problem accepting that he did not know a fact, no problem accepting certain facts he could not know and that facts could cause a shift in perception. At a timelike infinity he would know everything, was that his why? Perhaps.

Another why came to him, he did not know the now's why; a much less important why,f surely, but another unanswered one. He looked around once more, he knew the ruins, he knew the world. He knew the prison had not faltered due to chance, the being's presence could not be discounted as such. His gaze shifted towards it. Odd. The thought came unbidden, true but of unknown origin.

"Do you know why I am?" he asked without speaking. The horse had paused, Futsuriai did not know the reason for this but the Anemos, its name, did – that was enough. He did not speak, he could speak, but saw no use in doing so. Communicating between minds was more practical, he knew – though the knowledge came too late – that many beings found it unsettling. His mind was too discontinuous still, after this thought came the further realization that his wording was too direct for most. Mortals enjoyed padding conversation with useless formalities and conventions, he knew this but had not then.

He recognized the objects it held, highly peculiar ones given the circumstances. Yes, he was sure of that. He walked towards the object like the one it sat on, a chair. His steed paused, unsure, but Futsuriai no longer felt such things. Dismounting deliberately he paused before the sitting creature. Odd. Another why to be discovered. He blinked and the man with his tables was no longer there. Blink. The man was back. Odd. He recalled that such an occurrence should not happen. Breathing in the chilly air, Futsuriai sat down.

The being in the snow, in the chair. Lapses in his thoughts were empty, the lapses shortened and lengthened unpredictably, not unpredictably but presently so. Glimmers of gold struck him not from the buildings around him, not from the sky, its eyes. His eyes met them with a cool intensity. Grey on gold, unblinkingly. The ruins had called him forth once, it stood to reason the call had been heard by others. Another why he did not know, few had enough magic to call him back as few had had to banish him. He knew who had cast him sideways (but who had returned him?); he knew but did not seek revenge, he knew but did not fear. He feared nothing. Nothing? Where, when? Grey on gold.

Futsuriai
05-06-07, 01:38 AM
Light.

Blinding light. A beacon was lit, not figuratively. Whoever was waiting would know. Futsuriai knew this. At a time and place far away a mind would be acting, to what end he could not fathom yet. It could be detrimental, it could not. Again the absence of information plagued him, without it he was forced to assume ill-will, it was safer to act according to that assumption no matter what the actual reasons were.

Blue eyes were already waiting inside. Odd, perhaps, but to be expected. Its figure was slightly hunched over, the height of the chamber seemed fit to Futsuriai's. Most would have been in shock at now being inside by going through an isolated doorway, even looking back he saw nothing but an empty doorway, no trace of the chilly Salvar remained. Futsuriai was not surprised, he couldn't be. The presence which had lingered behind him and now stared at him from within was similarly treated, an unexpected occurrence but hardly important by itself. It was only in the context of the situation it mattered as it told him great powers were still at play.

Looking around he saw the same script as the fallen walls had held. He understood this time, however:


Listen, now, to the story of our city of heaven,
Where knowledge was ever present,
Balance reverberated in all peoples,
While the universe’s fate came ever close.

It was written on a wall ringed with columns, upon some he saw the carved figures of men and women, in a state of bliss. The top of each was composed of a quasi-floral design. Through their gaps he saw only more marble. It reminded him of the fallen city outside.

“It is.”

He turned towards the mental voice, the blue eyes seemed disinterested. His own gray might have seemed so as well, but they weren't, they could hardly be. This was something to consider. The city could well have isolated itself magically leaving only an unmaintained physical reality behind.

“No.”

The blue-eyed thoughts did not offer a solution. Would they? No response. In the middle of the windowless room lay a circle bathed in unnatural light. The air inside was crisp, not stale even though nowhere did there seem to be an entrance for it, it was a perfectly hermetic room. Save for the doorway but nothing went through it. He moved towards it, moving his hand through it. No change. Odd. He passed through the frame completely. The room was still there. Odd. He was trapped, then.

“No.”

There was but one other place in the room which was unlike the others. The center circle. He approached it carefully, it could be a trap but that was pointless, he was already at the power's mercy. Each step echoed as he neared it. He paused before entering the circle of light. No source was discernible even from where he stood. Not a very hard magic. He moved his hand into the circle and felt the air vibrating. He looked back and saw the blue eyes, waiting. Something was different, its face had a smile.

Turning back to the circle, Futsuriai had little choice but to step inside. Right foot. The air vibrated, an acute tone was audible. Left foot. The vibration intensified and became calm, much like the tune which rose and disappeared. Looking forward Futsuriai saw no difference, the columns still ringed the room, the marble was still behind them. It could have been the same room.

“It is not.”

Turning around to face the thoughts Futsuriai's eyes became intent. No. It was not the same room.