View Full Version : Observe, Young One, the Stars Above (Open)
Mordelain
02-02-15, 10:43 AM
http://media.moddb.com/images/articles/1/124/123370/auto/desertcity_distant.jpg
Open to one opponent.
Mordelain
02-02-15, 11:05 AM
In the Zaileya Mountains stands an observatory. Cut off from the rest of the desert island of Fallien, it has existed for centuries unnoticed. Its people are a withdrawn cult of tinkerers, engineers, and scientists. Remnants of the pre-Vhadya society that occupied not only the island, but much of the seas around it, and the skies above. When the Cataclysm sundered the verdant lands, those that survived retreated and watched. They waited. They rebuilt a sanctuary that would stand the test of time.
“The view is spectacular,” Mordelain said with admiration. She held her hand against her brow, to shield her gaze against the sun. Even from behind thick peals of grey, dusk-to-come clouds it was blazing. “Suresh, come and see!”
From the central cupola of the observatory’s viewing platform, the tired and dishevelled merchant emerged in a fluster. He practically crawled into the daylight, red faced and sweating as ever. The months of inactivity following their endeavour to free the minds of the Fallieni people had done his girth few favours. Mordelain turned after a few moments, to check that he had not fallen behind.
“Oh, really?” she clucked. She skipped to his side and with a heave ho, helped him upright. He wavered, glaring at her intently. “Come on. You have to see this.”
The look of doubt on his face spoke a thousand words. Reluctantly, he advanced towards the eastern edge of the platform and rested his hands on his hips. Sure enough, the view of the ocean was beautiful. He looked own, examined the sprawl of dockland and market place that seeped out from the tiered structure and nodded with approval.
“A fitting place to get back into shape for the tribal games, yes?” Mordelain called her partisan to her side with a thought, and took it confidently into her left hand. She leant on it like a staff, and trailed a finger along the horizon. “Before the Vhadya, the ocean was some half a mile back. Arid mesas separated the observatory from the sea, and there was much traffic back and forth between the landing bays and the colony.”
“It changed the shape of the island, as well as the temperature?” Suresh raised an eyebrow. Over the last few months, Mordelain had divulged more and more of her history. As he learned about the island from centuries ago, he became increasingly, perhaps too feverishly eager to learn more.
“The island sank, as far as we could tell. The Cataclysm divided the island in two, allowing the Atereyi River to become as wide and powerful as it remains today. The mountains crumbled, the skies burned, and the island became separated from the mainland.” Her history lesson finished, the il’Jhain turned ninety degrees to face the centre of the platform.
The Ai’bron recreated the arena perfectly. Six hundred feet radius of thick sand worn sandstone, four great pillars, and nought but the wind and sun to guide her towards a new uncertain destiny.
“I’m ready!” she roared.
Philomel
02-02-15, 06:12 PM
In her hand was a single copper piece.
In and out she wound it through her fingers, letting it flow head to tail, edge to edge, from one gap the the other, then sliding it around to come to the top of her pinkie, rest a moment and then it ... dove again, right back to loop up, around, through, up, around, through ...
Mesmerised, like a kitten watching a simple pompom dangling limply from the end of a stick, Veridian attended on the coin. Great icterine eyes unblinking, he stared long and hard, following each dip and rise with endless wonder. For her, this was dull; though she followed the coin's journey also, finding it was necessary to keep her eyes upon the darting trick of hers, her expression remained unsatisfied. Eyes half-closed, lips pressed slightly together, ears twitching with unconcious agitation, the faun-whore stood, nearing utter boredom in the archway of the corridor.
Pretty, was the only useful thing Veridian could say.
Philomel just grunted, and tightened the other hand on the antler-made hilt of her mighty weapon. The sun suddenly peered through a high window, and caught the orange-brown of the coin near the edge, sending a dancing shimmer of light across the wooden floorboards. It was abrupt, and piercing, and it made the Earth Spirit all the more excited as he wriggled his behind and chattered loudly, like some cheeky baboon on a sugar-high.
Veridian ... the Nightingale muttered.
He continued to natter, throat not resting until it had gotten over the simple joy of loving this trick of a few practised deft fingers. Boredly, the faun continued her movements, adjusting only to lean onto the other hoof - her left one - for a little variation, until the Ai'brone poked his head out.
"They are ready."
Unwavering in delightful enthusiasm, Veridian leapt to his eager paws, and raced straight to the stone doorway. Behind him, lagging in the only artful, languishing way she could muster, Philomel dwadled, but followed, stepping lightly across the floorboards, making a clack, clack as hooves of keratin met ground of yew. Rolling her shoulders back, she prepared for whatever might lie in store, but did not cease her coin flipping. Coming around the edge of the door, she let the arena wash over her - that with a large platform it seemed, some emptiness beyond, a world with naught in it but sand and a red-haired woman.
Noisily she clicked her tongue behind her teeth, stepping into place beside the Earth Spirit at the very edge of the sandstone dais, and then yawned once more. Her hand rose, waved the Citadel monk away, and her eyes came to focus on those of their enemy before them, all the while that Philomel's coin kept flipping.
Flip, flip, flip.
"Greetings, lover," she said, in a bored tone, "How are you today?"
Mordelain
02-08-15, 03:32 AM
Mordelain expected many things to venture through the entrance, but not this. The creature, unknown to her even in her experience of nine worlds possessed a strange and spurious glamour. Alluring, almost, and yet devilish all the same.
“I’m quite well,” she said, stoic common stolid from parched lips.
Suresh stepped forwards, father-like defence of daughter obvious despite being veiled by a swaddle of sand blasted cloth and brooding eyes. He would have drawn his khaddar blade, had they been anywhere but the Citadel. Instead of swords, he settled for sarcasm.
“But she is no-one’s lover without my say.”
“I’ll speak for myself,” Mordelain rebuked. She disappeared from where she stood, and re-appeared four feet in front of the merchant. Her hair was dishevelled, and leaves protruded from her clothes. A hinting at unspoken adventure. She cocked her head to the left. “It’s too early to say.”
Flirtatiously, the il’Jhain spread her legs and bent her knees. This was the battle stance of the Riya Nomads, a fearsome Bedouin tribe that prided themselves on stave combat and surviving in the desert without Irrakam’s protection. The metaphor for independence and self-reliance would be lost on her observers, but it fuelled Mordelain with pride and certainty and resilience.
“Buy me dinner first, and then let us see,” she said with a smirk.
Suresh scoffed, and then turned away to give partisan and pronged horns space to settle their differences, or carve out nuptials.
“You’re definitely my daughter…,” he grumbled through clenched teeth.
Philomel
04-09-15, 03:32 AM
With the first response spoken from those lips, the copper piece came to a standstill. It rested between forefinger and thumb, hesitating in its circumnavigation of its strange fleshy world.
Philomel's lips pursed, a pouting-imitating form of curiosity, before an eyebrow caught up with her emotions and arched. Grey eyes flicked from male to female, intrigued to see the interraction to this man who claimed to be the other's father. It was clearly the fiery-haired woman who was to be the faun's opponent, but this man was trying to assert himself as far more of an authority over the battle than was necessary and correct. According to the Matriarch's standards.
As the conversation betwixt them climaxed, then fell with a guttral grumble, Philomel flipped the coin casually to the side. She watched as the man moved further to the side, and then was free to focus on the woman. Human in form, tall and oddly determined. As the copper coin landed with a light ping on the sandstone of effortless gravity and soundwaves, the faun decided to match her. Slowly, she drew her mythril blade, then leant forwards slightly, tensing her legs to jump or run, which ever movement was required first.
Behind her Veridian watched as the coin rolled away and fell over the side of the dais. His eyes scoured the area, with the wide expanse of the harbour city achily grappling its way towards the horizon. As the coin was sent heartlessly plummetting down tens, perhaps hundreds, of feet below Veridian found himself pausing for a moment, and reached into Philomel's mind to warn her before all earthly hell broke loose.
Philomel. The drop below is vast.
"Hmmm," she replied, with one sound and a short sharp nod. "I know. Steady feet."
Casually she straightened a little, then copied what the red head had done not moments ago. Philomel let the earth open beneath her, calling on the powers of the faun-mother and tree-mother Drys. Disppearing from being opposite her, to then being behind her, the faun inacted the start of the fight with a mighty suprise attack. Down the rabbit hole, and up again, she jumped via the portal in an instant of time stolen from no-one, and launched her sword strike at this woman so fair.
Mordelain
04-15-15, 04:36 AM
It was difficult to surprise Mordelain Saythrou. Living in Irrakam on its dusty, thief crowded streets meant you had to keep your wits about you. In the momentary idyll afforded by her trip abroad, a brief holiday in her busy academic timetable, she forgot what it felt like - paid the cost for ignorance.
"Oh dear," Suresh mumbled.
He turned away from the viewing orb in time to miss the faun's blade nick his protégée's hip. He opened them again to see Mordelain jump ten feet forwards, out of harm's way, and re-appear facing her opponent with a partisan gripped tightly in her right hand. She held it over her head, tip down and forward like a scorpion's tail.
"Good form," he complimented.
Several of the crowd watching alongside the merchant muttered under their breath. Gold exchanged hands as the fickle nature of the wagering halls made men waver in their resolve and fates and outcomes defy the odds.
"Come on!" he roared. Too much date wine was beginning to get to him, and the more he wanted Mordelain to triumph, the more he drank. Everyone in Irrakam had their vice, and everyone in Irrakam had their price.
"Tell me," Mordelain began with a whimper. "How did you do that?" She tried to ignore the pain shooting up her back for as long as she could. "I don't cross paths with another like me..." She wanted to say ever, but giving the creature a stone to throw back at her was ill advised.
Their lofty battleground continued to dance with flecks of sand and dust devils. Mordelain raised her feet, so that she stood on her tippy toes, and narrowed her gaze on her opponent's midriff. She calculated the distance. She calculates the likely outcomes. She calculated the wind speed and the sun's virulent glare.
Her question posed the planes walker darted forwards. A gobbet of blood trailed after her, a streak of crimson flashing into view down her lack. Her partisan, enchanted and poisoned, trusted at the last moment towards the faun's belly button. The scorpion, tense and coiled, lashed out.
Philomel
04-15-15, 03:37 PM
A gasp, as fresh as blossom buds in the first spring warmth, was released with her exhale. The spear-like pole arm was thrust towards her belly at an unmerciful speed, something which Philomel, for all her Drys-blessed agility, found she could not avoid. So precise was the blow, so neat and perfect, that the faun barely had time to think before she realised where the blade was headed.
Desperately, she attempted to sweep to the side, the idea of portal-jumping now so soon after the last queasy to the stomach. The partisan, however, was too keen a weapon, and it pierced her just at the curve of her ash tree tattoo. Moving with the wind Philomel changed it from a gut stab into a shallow streaking wound, however the pain was still excruciating.
Picking up speed with her legs and entire being, she pulled her sword out from its sheath, letting the snow white blade whisper to the brilliant sunlight. Veridian yelped as the injury passed on through their mental link to him, now some distance away - but Philomel bade him not to enter yet. She wanted to truly compose a fiendish duet with this new opponent, before he showed his fiery nature and added bonus to their battle.
Later, she simply relayed to him, and then took a leap back.
As much as her hooves could carry her with the wound, she sailed through the air away from the red-haired maiden. Landing around seven feet backwards within the space of a second, Philomel found herself well placed enough away to prepare for the next assault. Or indeed, prepared to bring on the next assault. When she touched earth she stumbled slightly, the agony of the belly slash grounding her down. At the previous site of fighting the opponent seemed to be gearing up to either chase or wait, Philomel could not tell which, but action would take place soon nevertheless. Therefore the Nightingale had little time to react.
Seconds. Less than this, perhaps.
Knowing that Veridian was not within the vacinty, Philomel placed her spare hand over her belly and began to enchant it with the simple skin-healing magic, her hand already dusty from the mere environment. Her hoof, however, acted in defense of her own body, for she needed time for the patchwork healing to take place. Launching down as hard as she could through the circumstances, Philomel threw a earthquake - a tremour that ripped the blocks of the sandstone dais out of place - right at red-head.
Mordelain
05-06-15, 06:18 PM
Expecting steel, not a sundering, Mordelain’s defensive stance did her little good. She fell backwards the moment Philomel’s roil struck. Beneath her, the flagstones shook apart. All around her the very air trembled. Though the sun continued to scorch the dead leaves and the dirty ground, waves and maelstroms churned the battlefield.
“Oh.”
Suresh could only flinch at his daughter’s discomfort. All the same, there was a wry sense of satisfaction in the merchant when the planes walker slammed into the rock, flat on her back, and bereft of a retort.
“Well, gentlemen,” he said softly. He stopped speaking to begin returning the coin he had wagered in Mordelain’s defence. He felt bad for his daughter, but worse for his pockets. They would be much lighter by day’s end.
With a grunt, she pushed herself upright even as the ruin trembled. She had to admire the faun’s gall. There was more to her than meets the eye. She spat a gobbet of sand and spit and desperation, then looked the faun dead in the eyes.
“I see I under-estimated you.”
Her eyes sparkled with the crystal radiance of her long destroyed home world. Sorrow filled them, and then madness. She adjusted her attire, losing cloth from butt cheeks and ribbons from hair. In that moment, Mordelain gave up on elegance, and resorted to a more primal urge. Survival.
“So. When I say this, I mean it in earnest.” She parsed her legs and gestured for Philomel to advance. “Let’s dance.”
Philomel
06-10-15, 09:18 AM
As if all the light of the world was converging into one single space, Philomel gorgeously smiled. Her cinereal eyes sparkled like stars as they watched the other girl get to her feet, and gather her sword. The wound beneath her bare hand stopped bleeding as flesh knitted smoothly back together, as words slipped into the air.
"I see I under-estimated you ..."
Red hair swayed in a new soft breeze, as the speaker lowered herself into a traditional fighting crouch.
"When I say this, I mean it in earnest ... Let's dance."
Behind Philomel, at a point now in his moving, sitting, moving again and sitting again, Veridian watched the opposition with curious golden eyes. His white claws dug a little into the sandy dais, scratching at the grains that had been loosened over time via fight and flight, and he tilted his head to the side. As the comment from the girl they still did not know the name of came to his ears he relayed his thoughts to his beloved faun, and found their minds to be of like consideration.
Dance ... he said.
Philomel's smile blossomed into a wondrous grin, curling from ear to ear. Entirely, she agreed.
"Oh honey," were her words to the other woman as she tugged her sword close to her body. Beneath the crimson of her half breastplate her belly, waist and hips soundlessly waved into a sensuous rhythm that spoke of uncountable seditious meetings. "I think you and I likely dance in a very different way ...
"But I am willing to waltz with your defintion in mind."
Mirroring the opposition the faun bent down, hooves scraping across the golden ground. A glorious blue sky over head and a playful wind to their east, she took up a similar stance, readiness thrumming through her veins. Two hands now on her sword, wound healed at least at the skin, she placed aside her flirtation and deemed the other girl as equal a partner.
"But first," she tickled the air between them with the white tip of her blade, "You come to me."
Mordelain
06-24-15, 04:56 AM
“Oh fine,” Mordelain hissed.
Until that singular moment, she had been analysing her opponent. Had she the gall to be honest with the faun, the Troubadour would have commended her for her gall, strength, and determination. Here, before her, was a woman with a backbone as strong as stone.
“Centuries ago I was a young girl in a faraway land.” To be precise, it was six hundred light years. She stepped forwards, upright, stalwart, and defiant. “We learnt three things.”
“I said dance, not recant,” Philomel said through grit teeth.
Mordelain bowed. The faun recognised the coy step as a start to a courtly dance all too common in noble households. Stale. Uppity. Bold.
“We learned to lead,” Mordelain continue, unthawed by the turbulent environment that howled and wailed at their presence. She rose, stared straight, and smiled. “We learned to manipulate time and space,” she added, non chalant. Most important of all, the third lesson taught on Junkyo rolled off her tongue slowly. It enticed. It scintillated. “We learnt to dance.”
Dance she did across the cracked stone. Though her injuries and her body pained her, she drew close to the faun. Naturalistically, they stood face to face at the tail end of dual pirouettes. Mordelain pressed both palms against Philomel's, as though they were reflections. They bowed with a delicate tuck of the knee.
"Ready, then?" Mordelain asked.
Philomel smirked. "Yes. Absolutely."
The sun cusped the horizon, finally confident to break through the ochre clouds. The women danced.
Philomel
08-14-15, 08:57 AM
It was pirouetting to the classic of the theatre.
It was a sashay to the thumping beat in a square dance hall.
It was a left-two in the swaying motion of a wild, faunish country swing, a dance of glory, a dance of beauty, a dance of absolute joy.
Blade against blade, they scraped earth and sky, sandstone and cloud. With the sun beating down harsh, as it peeked from behind the cumulus and the stratocumulus, the two forms of the beautiful women merged together into one blur. There was a moment of sychronisation as, truly, they actually echoed the steps of a formal dance, and then there was the rage of perfect battle.
The white curve of Philomel's sword scratched air, carved the world around her in twain. She found that her opponent was a wonder in the art of swordplay, a master. Barely ever did an entry open, there was little to no chink in her armour, apart from those that were so minute that as soon as Philomel noticed it, it clsoed again.
Whistling through her teeth in not so much anger as admiration, Philomel allowed the waltz to continue for some time, before she new it was time to end. Time to give the final bow, to wave to the audience, to love the band and send gratitude flowers to the mages who operated the sound effects. A smile curved at the corner of her mouth, a musing tense. It became a giggle, a laugh of some happy kind, before she left her partner there, alone, and vanished into the earth.
And at the same time Veridian launched his foxy self from behind the red-haired opponent, right where he had been serrupticiously pacing, waiting, hiding for the right time. He threw his body, now the time ripe and beautiful, at the exposed back leg, jaws open, teeth long and sharp as little daggers, ready to turn this ballet into a tragedy.
Mordelain
08-23-15, 11:58 AM
Suresh knew better than to forewarn his daughter of the threat as it lunged. He watched, in abject horror, as teeth met with skin and undid the beauty found in the women’s mirrored symmetry. He let his hands fall to his sides, deflated, and advanced across the broken flagstones.
“That is enough!” His voice boomed over the whip of the wind as it continued to kick sand to the sky and erode the illusory tower from existence.
Mordelain did not scream at first. She simply dropped to her knees, as though struck by fatigue. Veridian let its jaw tear flesh before it retreated to the faun’s side. It slinked and slid, bloodied maw a snarl of victory and deceit. Only when free of her attacker did she register the pain. It spread up her leg and engulfed her.
“Sand worm’s guts!” she whelped. She winced. She dropped onto her back and twisted uncomfortably to set her eyes on the wound. She did not like what she saw.
“We are done here.” The merchant’s tone left no question about his sincerity. He pointed politely to the door that appeared on the far side of the tower’s viewing platform. “You are victorious.”
Mordelain, torn between frustration with Suresh and agony could only cradle her leg. When she realised that blood less would soon be her undoing, she yanked the sash from around her waist and made a hasty tourniquet. Whilst it would only buy time, it would be spent scolding her mentor.
Philomel
08-24-15, 03:34 PM
Heart hammering wildly in her chest, Philomel immediately lowered her blade and stepped back, bowing to her worthy adversary.
She had re-appeared, come from the other side of the rabbit-hole so to speak, to the side of their opponent. Pausing there, she had waited until Veridian made his lunge, and then was to sweep in in a stroke in an attempt to finish the fiery girl off. But then - well then, the voice had roared over the dias, causing the very sand beneath their toes to shake.
"Enough," he said, "That is enough ... We are done here."
Better for them to bow out politely than to extend the pain. And Philomel, if anything, was perfectly honourable. Despite perhaps others not believing this particular suggestion to the Matriarch's personality, she was in her opinion, and in the opinion of many of her followers. Therefore she bent at the waist, not lowering herself enough to take her eyesight from the assemblage of the red-head but being genteel and respectful all the same.
Veridian slipped around, blood still dripping from his maw. Paws were silent as the grave as they brought his body around to be beside his companion's hoof. Together they stood as a symbol of respect, facing not the man but their combatant, honouring her for she was undoubtably worthy to be honoured.
"We thank you for the fight," Philomel said, her eyes sparkling, rising out of her bow. Eyes only for Mordelain.
"... Would you allow me to heal you?"
Mordelain
09-16-15, 04:26 AM
Kindness was not often the guest of the Ai’bron. Yet, despite convention, here in the unlikeliest of beings there was mercy. For centuries, before she settled on Althanas, Mordelain would have expected a trap. A cruel trick played by tyrants and sycophants. Though the faun was a strange beast, the Troubadour doubted she was as worse as some of the enemies she had on the other worlds of the Khalithrism.
“I…,” she hesitated. Pain spiked and made her wince. “I think I’d be okay with that.”
She straightened her leg as much as she could and set her palms flat against the dry stone behind her to steady herself. Even the most potent healing magic would require bolstering her nerves and readying for things to get worse before they got better.
“That’s quite the companion you have,” she added, gesturing to her bite and to the fox-like creature. “Friends like that are hard to come by on a world like this.”
The wind howled. Effervescent trails of sand, whipped straight from the rock of the ancient, illusory tower drifted into the setting sun’s glare. The landscape, from the vantage point of heaven itself set ablaze. Orange, red, gold, yellow, every shade of citrus and inferno began to seep through the bland sand backdrop that coloured their battle.
Philomel
09-18-15, 10:01 AM
Under a shaft of rose sunlight, powered and directed through a hole in the thinning clouds, the companions stood as one. Philomel took a short time as the red-haired opponent, of whom they still did not know the name of, looked at the ankle wound. Using a piece of fabric from the many folds that made up her belt she wiped her white blade before sliding it back into its sheath. Now weaponless, with nothing but her dignity to keep her there, and her genuine concern, she paused and considered leaving, before the woman spoke again.
"Quite a companion you have ... Friends like that are hard to come by."
Veridian was in current process of cleaning his muzzle. He blinked at the comment, and then twisted his head towards Philomel. Slowly he lowered his paw as he made his thoughts known.
Did we ever introduce ourselves? he asked.
A smile that was beginning to already form at Philomel's mouth grew. No, we did not, she replied in kind, in mind.
The fox-formed spirit sneezed once before rising, as elegant as a jaguar. Padding over to where Mordelain was, he faced her directly, lifting up his eyes to directly stare into hers. Into this gaze, lit into starlight by his brilliant golden irises, he poured in his intelligence, his understanding, his vast compassion and person. As he tried to make her see and not just speak to his gorgeous companion-for-life, his small mouth opened as if desiring nothing more than to speak - except all that came out was a small howling whine.
"May I introduce Veridian Ryuusan," Philomel translated. She laughed lightly, a bell in the summer breeze. "He says, 'It is a pleasure to meet you, hair of red. This is my companion Philomel van der Terra, and together we are a force to be reckoned with.'" After a pause, Philomel kept grinning and continued, "He is an earth-spirit, a type of spiritual creature ... And we both are honoured to have fought with you-"
"Might we have the pleasure of your name?"
Mordelain
01-07-16, 02:13 PM
“I am Mordelain Saythrou. I am Tama, though my home world was long ago destroyed.” Her description sounded less grandiose than theirs, but she was mortal, corporeal, and growing tired beyond measure.
The wound on her ankle congealed quickly, and by the time introductions were over, the clot had stuck. This gave the il’Jhain small relief, but without aid, she would be unable to leave the Citadel’s fighting dome on her own volition. She gestured to Veridian.
“Might that offer of aid be fulfilled?” Her smile, bright as the sun and the flame-lick of her hair showed she meant them no harm.
To support her request she sent her weapons into the ether, reeling through time and space and distances few on Althanas could quantify. The partisan dropped to the floor of a long forgotten bedchamber on the world of Petra, one of Mordelain’s homes from homes when she fell into reflective periods in Althanas’s winter months.
The kukri re-appeared in its sheath in Suresh, her father’s, city residence. It hung on the back of her chair on the sunroof, where they often partook in thick, date syrup coffee and pitta at first light. Thinking of both places made her feel homesick, and thus, in her current state, meek and afraid. She hoped her trust in the duo was not misplaced.
“Perhaps, when I am well again, I can show the ruins of that world to you.” Her lips curled into a feeble smile, eyes glistening, cheeks flush with signs of encroaching unconsciousness from bloodloss.
Philomel
02-05-16, 01:46 PM
Philomel and her darling exchanged a short and concise look. Veridian grinned, showing his teeth and showed the world that he approved of their opponent for this day.
Taking a further step back, the faun-whore lowered herself into a gesture that she never usually did. In times gone by she had considered herself far too above the individuals who demanded the respect, in terms of power and greatness. But this - this time was different. Now it was an oppurtunity for honour and equality. She curtseyed in a way no faun could, then rose again. As she rose she began to stride forwards, her hand swaying out to the side and then into that hand gathering all the scatterings of dust and soil that were nearby enough to be at her aid.
She stopped opposite the woman, perhaps five feet. In her palm was pooled dirt an inch high and glistening like tiny shards of starlight. This, she proferred forwards.
"By the blessings of Drys I would touch your wound," she said in a warm voice. "With their power I can close and heal it," she smiled, genuinely, and lowered herself onto one knee to present the blessed dirt.
Shinsou Vaan Osiris
02-05-16, 02:58 PM
"Quite the performance."
A heavily distorted voice crackled through the wall of the time and space continuum. The cylindrical wall of the interior of the Citadel’s portal rippled and crackled as the plasma like substance comprising it bent to Shinsou's every whim. Anomalies morphed and swirled in front of his face before screaming into a whirling orbit of white orbs. As this acidic, liquefied existence began to congeal into something resembling reality, the Golden King stood, arms folded, his eyes locked firmly onto the two shapes ahead of him. At first the figures in front of Shinsou were no more than a shimmer of mist that diffused through air ahead of him, in front of the looming, crumbling tower. As his portal snapped shut and his eyes adjusted, they drifted closer towards him and became slightly out of focus, like a poorly taken photograph, before finally sharpening into existence.
For a moment all was silent. It wasn’t long before Shinsou got to the crux of why he had materialised into the arena. Flitting his golden eyes towards the hunched form of the faun, he paced forward slowly and stopped a few feet away.
“I am Shinsou Vaan Osiris of Telgradia. I presume you are Philomel van der Aart?”
Staring back at him were a pair of confused grey eyes. Though murky in colour, they seemed tempered and wild, seemingly piercing through Shinsou’s skin to his very core. They were truly a stark contrast to the former emperor’s own calm and subtle gaze. In truth, she was more beautiful than the premonition had foretold, but a dangerous premonition it had been indeed.
“This is going to be difficult to ask of you, but I need your assistance once your business here is concluded. I can offer gold, and you can name your price.”
Shinsou Vaan Osiris
03-17-16, 06:25 AM
Congratulations!
Mordelain receives 960 EXP and 100 GP!
Philomel receives 1300 EXP and 110 GP!
Please note I will not be claiming any rewards for my cameo.
Rayleigh
04-07-16, 02:02 PM
All EXP and GP have been added!
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