"Force & Fire"
42 Searing 122
The Palatium Umbrarum
The room into which Arry was led was simple, spartan, austere. There were no windows, fake or otherwise- Just stone. In the centre a slab carved of the same stone as the tile the composed the floors and walls was raised and covered loosely by a thin, white satin sheet. 42 Searing 122
The Palatium Umbrarum
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"Well, at least it's clean..." He observed aloud, casting a glance over his the shoulder of his silken, black and gold tunic to regard his mother's face- Cool as the stone all around them appeared to be.
"Disrobe." She prompted, turning to close the heavy, wooden door behind them. "The environs may seem unwelcoming, but this room was prepared with purpose." She placed a hand upon the nearest wall and, though the grey bricks were cold and unmoving, they emanated a placating energy.
"I don't hate it." Arry replied, unfastening his golden braid belt, "It's just..." He paused, considering. "Well, actually it isn't properly cold, is it?" He bit his lip, contemplating as he placed the belt down on the slab. "Is that the warmth of the volcano?"
"No." She replied, with no further clarification and turned to help him pull the tunic over his head. "The shoes, as well." She instructed as she folded up his garment and collected the belt.
He sat down on the slab to loosen the straps of his sandals. If the stone beneath his bottom was cold, the satin sheet was enough of a buffer that it felt as lukewarm as the air around him. He noticed belatedly that, even though it was a mere, bed of stone it didn't feel rigid or uncomfortable. Without feeling anything like a mattress, it was no less comfortable. Cithæra knelt to collect his shoes.
"It's odd to see you gathering up my discarded clothes." He noted, forcing a smile in hopes of easing the awkwardness of being an adult man standing nude before a mother who likely hadn't seen him in this state since the day she laboured him to life. "Almost... motherly."
Cithæra sniggered,
"Had you been raised here, there'd have been servants enough to pick up after you." She placed the folded items on the floor in front of the exit, and turned back to face her youngest son. Arry smiled faintly as he reached to fondle the simple, wooden charm that hung just above his sternum from a string of twine.
"I still wear the necklace you gave me last time you bequeathed me with a Cardinal Rune..." He offered, "No matter how angry with you, I haven't taken it off."
"I'd have noticed ere now if you had, sweeting." She replied, her tone softening slightly. "I'm sure you'd have preferred a more dazzling piece, but know that it was out of practicality not frugality that you came to be adorned so subtly."
"Heh." Arry glanced down at his hands, now fidgeting in his naked lap, "Well, no one tried to rob me of it, at least... Not even in the poorest slums of Antiris. Not once."
"And thus a little part of your mother and your motherland was with you all the while." She smiled, and Arry returned it in earnest. Perhaps whatever magicks had been plied upon this little corner of the Palatium Umbrarum were even enough to soothe the friction that lingered between the long estranged mother and son. It felt nice.
"When I got my Masquerade Rune, you seemed cross..." Arry noted, "I've been meaning to ask what that was about. It sounded as though I'd thwarted some grand plan you devised, but that perplexed me at the time... the suggestion that you were concerned enough about my future to have designs for it."
"Well, I hope at this point you realise that you were, indeed, heavily and frequently upon my mind and ever in my heart." She sat beside him on the slab, "Turn toward me, Arvælyn." Arry lifted one leg up onto the slab with them, letting the other dangle, so he could turn his torso toward his mum, as she produced a small vial of crimson and a brush.
"Aurin used a knife when he gave me this one..." He raised his wrist and Cithæra let out a soft sigh.
"I see that. And marked you with more than your own magic in so doing." The Master Sembler removed the cork from the vial, "There is a piece of him in your Aura, like a claim staked." She dipped the brush into the vial, "Alas, 'tis a feral thing." She began to paint his golden chest red.
"What is that? Blood?"
"Aye." She replied, though her focus was fixed upon her work. "Your grandfather's." Arry arched a brow. The sanguine paint felt warm against his skin, as she went about her work. "One thing you were wise to do was to balance your Mesmer with your Masquerade. They are complementary Runes." She knitted her brow as she concentrated on the work at hand.
"It is little discussed how pivotal the placement of a Cardinal Rune can be. You are tapping into yourself as much as, if not more, than you are the Aether. Wrists are good for sharp, sudden movements, but they are weak and slender. I am placing this Rune on your sternum, because it requires more than instant access. It requires force. It is, after all, the manipulation thereof."
"This was meant to be my Rune before Masquerade?" Arry inquired,
"Masquerade was never a priority to me, but I was, at the first, a Sembler. Ours is to see through façades, so their usefulness is lost on us." She grimaced at herself, "I say this not to criticise your choice. In the role you held... as a performer? Gods, Masquerade is incalculably beneficial. It is an absolute staple of the Solunarian arts, but amongst the scions of the Varværyn Founders, there are two Runes which are almost a requirement. For those of the Unbroken Line, to live without being marked by both of these Runes is to renounce one's position in the line of succession." She withdrew her brush and regarded her handiwork.
"Hic vetus sanguis novas suscitat vires." She whispered the words into her palm, and then blew into her hand toward his chest- a glitter of silver-gold stardust seemed to burst forth and leap into the marking on his chest, as it sunk into his flesh and bubbled into perfect symmetry, where before it had only been very close.
Arry winced at the pressure he felt beneath the light wooden charm of his necklace.
"So..." He rasped, "Now I am a Kineticist?"
"If you are worthy." She nodded, placing a kiss in the centre of his new Rune. "If not? You die."She rose, stroking his face and hair as she stepped backward. "I will send servi with food and drink, but you should try to rest. The walls of this room will assuage the pressure of the threshold." She looked at him a bit sadly. This would not be his final visit to this particular threshold, and the next time would go harder by far. All of his Runes would come for their reckoning. She made for the door, but Arry's voice from behind halted her gait.
"But wait..." He furrowed his brow, "Kinetics is one of the royal requirements. What is the other?"
She cracked a crooked smile.
"We are all of us children of the Volcano, Phædryn. Deus Aværys, He of Fire and Fury, lost his firstborn to the maw of Sorokyn, but never shall he lose another heir to flame. We are Kineticists and Elementalists." She tilted her head, "Pyromancers, to be exact." With that, she crouched down to collect his clothes.
"Kinetics and Elementalism." Arry considered the implications, with a faint smile. "Force and Fire."
"First the force." Cithæra's wan smile faded as she opened the heavy wooden door, "Soon the fire."