Into The Wild Blue

In which two are westward bound

Filled with people both proud and poor, the Imperium is a land of ambition, glory and a belief in the power of the mortal spirit.

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Imogen
Posts: 531
Joined: Mon Dec 06, 2021 9:21 pm
Title: Most Unemployed Janitor In The World
Location: Ecith
Character Sheet: https://ransera.com/viewtopic.php?f=43&t=2673
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It went pretty much exactly as she'd thought it would.

For one shimmering instant, her Pact shield was outlined against the great incandescent expansion like the moon before the sun, casting a shadow backwards over the entire proceeding. In the hazy slow-time, she watched shimmering cracks run through it, spreading like frost on a pane of glass. Incomprehensible force met with her soulforged plane, and it yielded with no more resistance than a shield of spun-sugar candy would offer a hurricane. Were it not for the eldritch untime surrounding the rude void, perhaps she would not even have been able to see that before it disintegrated.

Then it broke.

There were three kinds of pain which hit Imogen Ward in that moment. The first was an ordinary suffering; her skin split in a hundred places, fire erupted across her flesh, erupting pustules of mad aether crystalized on the storm and were driven into her skin and muscle. The lacerations were agonizing, indisputably so, but it was a very mundane kind of suffering. A young aspirant to the Sunsingers would endure pain regularly; an initiate, even more so as they struggled to wield their own spirit offensively. True, it was not usually on this level, not spread to every part of the flesh in a single instant, as though a giant had just slapped her with an eight-foot long pillowcase full of razors. Still, it was just pain, endurable as any other.

Next was regret, a creeping thing of dark roots which spread through her mind in the same pattern as the cracks which tore apart her weapon. The shield had been a relatively recent pact, to be sure, but it had saved her from insects and giant lizards, from giant mist-mutant plants and shadowy dream monsters and monkeys with flaming poop and enormous cats, and now it was gone in the space of a handful of seconds. Even now, she could picture herself and her shield, sitting on the beach, laughing into the sunrise.

Lastly, of course, was the broken pact.

Breaking a pact weapon wasn't unheard of among the Sunsingers, of course, but neither was it very common. Swords break less often than swordsmen die, after all. Anything which could sunder a Sunsinger's weapon would, in all probability, slay the mage along with it. Still, it happened, and she'd read the accounts... but it was all broken prose, groping towards understanding, illumination. It was one thing to write that breaking a Pact weapon cracked the wielder's soul, but the words failed to quite signify. It was a deep, dark, primal revulsion, like the terror a condemned man must feel as he is helped into the guillotine's brace. It was wrong for a Pact weapon to shatter, wrong in a way which would never be righted.

She could feel the breaking. It was there... then gone. A shield-shaped hole in her soul.

(In this case the shape was a circle, since it was a circular shield)

“A prisoner does not choose the bars of his cage. The only trap, young Orakai, is the one you made for yourself. Still, I am a keeper of my word, for at least one of you accepts aid when offered. You will not die, Orakai. Your sun shall yet sing its song. At least, for one more sunrise.”

Her beautiful inner agony was interrupted once more by the words of some snide asshole, and she tore herself away from self-reflection to focus on the world around her. Imogen's vision swam as she opened up her eyes, the all-consuming sphere of expanding light still superimposed upon her vision, all the more distracting for the fact that it was suddenly very dark. She blinked rapidly, breathing hard, but it didn't help much in the short term.

Somehow, she'd ended up on the floor, though she couldn't tell exactly when or how she'd fallen. Every surface of her body hurt as she pushed herself into an upright position, but the burning sensation was a welcome one. If every limb hurt, that meant all of them were still attached!

"Achgkl." Imogen vocalized experimentally, then coughed as the random syllables dislodged bloody phlegm from her throat.

The world slowly began to resolve itself in a gloomier aspect than she was really accustomed to. If she'd been in a right state of mind, she might have adjusted her eyes to improve her night vision- but perhaps it was luckier for her that she didn't think of it in that moment, given the amount of aetheryte currently stuck into her skin. One by one, she saw Mr. Aoren, looking shocked. Hector and Mr. Vergil stood just beyond him, looking entirely unharmed, and past them...

One of the elves, the one she thought was a captain of some sort, was in dire straits. Something was wrong with her face, her eyes sunken and dark as though they weren't even there at all. The human woman who had come with them seemed just as badly-off, her arms appearing terribly blackened and charred. Two of the other elves were missing entirely.

The Ork staggered to her feet, dizzy and burning, but determined to take stock of the situation. She tried speaking again:

"Fuck-" oh yes, that was much better, "Mr. Vergil, there's wounded back there!"


word count: 934
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Hector
Posts: 355
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Location: Gel'Grandel, Gelerian Imperium
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The shade would speak naught before the brief resumption of time; the catastrophically loud sounds of shattering stone and screeching metal almost deafened Hector as the structure around them buckled and was fully destroyed, yet the boy could not bring himself to care. The aether that roiled through his blood felt nothing short of divine and beyond the electrifying ecstasy thereof, his mind found no focus. Vergil was about to move, but time slowed, yet again, to a crawl.

Hector’s hands balled into fists, as if frustrated that the burn of aether had once more faded. He’d only the chance to gather his senses before the voidcast man stepped forward, repeating that which previously he’d requested, and to that, the boy pouted, but said nothing. The counter-offer he’d suggested had not been accepted, yet even he could tell that in a scenario like this, complaining would win him no favors. He stood still as stone as the shade claimed his quarry; that singular drop of blood.

To refresh his vision, he would blink, yet when his eyes reopened, the sight before him wasn’t at all what he’d expected. Time flowed once more, but Hector stood now not in the ruins of a fallen city, but in a gilded hall composed of ornate, carved stone. Dazzled, his gaze darted to scan the walls and their myriad patterns– he paid little regard, for the moment, to present company around him.

On the other hand, the moment Vergil recovered from the whiplash of being transported, his sight snapped immediately to Hector, moving to embrace the boy in a gesture borne of his overwhelming relief that he- that both of them- were unharmed. The elf’s body tensed for a moment, but he offered no resistance before softening, almost melting into the larger figure; he’d always found the heavy force of the other’s arms to be calming, and especially so now, given the overwhelming array of stimuli he’d just been subjected to. Vergil pulled back, though not away, cupping Hector’s face in his hands for a moment, as if in disbelief that the boy bore not even a scratch. When his gaze moved from his lover to those around them, it appeared that the others had not fared as well as the two of them.

The Necromancer blinked at the state of them. Imogen, the only one of the group he knew, was now bleeding and disfigured, parts of her flesh crystallized into aetherite. The armored elven woman apparently had her eyes burned away, and the Vastian girl’s hands looked beyond repair. Aoren looked as if he’d weathered a storm, which, objectively, he had. The state of them made the man ever the more glad that something had protected both him and his companion.

When Vergil’s hands fell away, Hector stepped back, eyes going wide at the sight of the others. He was fine, so why weren’t they? Unless…unless he was the only one who’d accepted the shade’s offer. Before he could speak, the now lone elf directed her hollow gaze towards the scaled fellow, ire in her voice, and Imogen had managed to pull herself to her feet, shredded as she was.

To the eyeless elf’s outburst, Hector…laughed; it was a loud, boyish sort of giggle. The scaled one only appeared to be fine by virtue of his reinforced anatomy, and perhaps advanced warding? To Hector’s perception, at least, none of this had been wrought by the half-dragon, but it wasn’t as if he knew the circumstances of their relationship. The two had arrived together, and he’d nary an idea why that was. Nonetheless, putting blame on the half-dragon came across as little more than nonsense, laughably so.

Vergil heaved a sigh at Hector’s outburst, but otherwise ignored it, turning his head to face Imogen, as she’d opted to get his attention. To her, he nodded.

“For those who desire triage, I offer my services. I’ve an array of Necromantic tools, the skill to use them, and Vitalis– I am full well capable of repairing your physical wounds, though anything more…magical? Given the source of your injuries, results may vary.” The compulsion to help came from his natural inclination to heal. Blunted as such a thing had become over the years, his voice carried little compassion; he sounded cold, clinical.

The stony vampyr would make that offer only once– any who accepted he’d happily help, and any who declined would be met with a dismissive shrug. In that event, their further suffering wasn’t his to concern himself with.

While Hector, too, possessed consummate skill of Vitalis, he held his tongue instead of offering to assist. The boy was no healer, had no desire to be, and if one tried to compel him to use his talents restoratively, he’d likely make the process an extremely unpleasant one for any patient other than himself– or Vergil, for that matter. His abstinence in this regard was likely for the better of everyone involved.
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Aidolon Speech
"Kathalan Tongue/Speech"
"Vallenor Tongue/Speech"
"Common Tongue/Speech"
"Mythrasi Tongue/Speech"
word count: 963
"And as you lay down your grace to me,
the skies begin to bleach red,
and the stars begin to fall,
I feel myself changing,
as my world starts dividing–"
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Hilana Chenzira
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She couldn’t. As sweet as such a deal might have been to take… the evidence of empty promises was in her backpack. It was a risk Hilana wasn’t about to take. Further, they were doubtless aligned with those that had coaxed Æros to his death, and nearly did her in if it had not been for Lykos. Giving them something that could likely be further used against her home and the people within was not high on the Vastiana’s agenda, and as such, she was going to have to live with the fallout. Under ordinary circumstances, she might have agreed. A healthy dose of cynicism was good, but she knew she was being very cynical indeed.

When she could see again, they were no longer in the shelter. They were in exquisite surroundings that she would have liked to have sat and studied, and wrote down and drew and sketched as much as she could. But there was no time for that. She felt the agony of her hands, looking down at them, inhaling sharply with the breath that she drew as she sought to steady herself. She hadn’t experienced anything like this in her life, though the closest might well have been that horrific re-initiation that she had gone through mere weeks ago when she had gone to investigate the Tree. Athalia wasn’t here to help her now, and neither was Lykos, as she tried to flex her petrified fingers. She could see the blood underneath, seeping at the edges. But try as she did, her hands would not obey her brain. She touched them to her skirts as she got to her feet, taking stock of everyone around her. There was no sensation in her skin, and as such, she knew that if she made it home, she was going to need a surgery that was going to ruin her very busy schedule. This wasn’t acceptable. She needed her hands. Not these excruciating wannabe sculptures…If she got out of this, necromantic surgery was going to kill her by virtue of the healing time. Unacceptable. Finn, after all, was taking seasons to recover from an arm. Both hands? Not in this lifetime was Hilana going to tolerate it.

Aoren seemed somewhat okay. Shocked, but okay. She didn’t remember him having scales before the blast, but who knew? The Imperial Vampires seemed to have suffered no damage at all, contrary to what she had seen in that vision for the younger-looking one. The Orcana showed the signs of a Shattered Pact, and the girl knew that that had to be devastating. Treatment would be cruel, but necessary. She had her kits that she could probably use, if she could get her digits moving… she checked in on the Sentinels, almost terrified for Princess Valaera if the vision had come true for her, too. Oh, Founders. And there was only her, and it was to her that Hilana would go to first to try to help. At her words, she looked over to Aoren, then back to Valaera. Those who had refused paid the price, it seemed.

She had to do something. She steeled herself, forcing herself to breathe with the pain, and started to shrug off her rucksack. She could use her teeth to get into it, surely... When the Orcana spoke, Hilana looked from the Vigilia to her. “You are also wounded,” she spoke in barely accented Common. “A Shattered Pact is no small matter. I have potions in my bag to help with the symptoms and recovery, but the aetherite will need to be removed before your skin can heal beneath it.” That wasn’t her first foray into seeing such things, it seemed.

When Vergil spoke, Hilana looked over to him, holding up her arms. “I would be grateful if you could,” she wasn’t about to decline that offer. She knew full well that she was going to need her hands going forward, if only to be able to assist and treat, and get her things out of her rucksack. One didn’t realize how vital they were until you had them taken from you. “I think that this is all connected,” the Vastiana added. “The structures at each end of the compass points... Trees and Towers... I think that those we fought at the Crystal Tree to the North are connected with the one who made the offer here and now. It wanted a chance to build their world anew and return to Ransera... and that seems connected with those who were there at the Crystal Tree. They said that ‘He cannot be stopped... never again’, and spoke of a beautiful ending that would take a little longer due to the interference of someone last time... and I think that that was the Gods and Dragons that we saw before the blast.” She exhaled. “And perhaps includes the voidspawn that have been gathering and harvesting aether.”


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Paragon
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Title: Chief Author of Ransera

P A R A G O N


Aoren was on one knee, arm resting upon his thigh as he heaved for breath. He could feel fine tremors in his muscles as the scene had played out before him over and over and over again. In that moment, in that sliver of time that had been frozen before him, a memory had resurfaced. Spurred on by the mark of Defiance that forced him to deal with his trauma’s, no matter how buried they were, in that moment he had realized that this had not been the first time he had encountered the Sundering. That singular revelation had filled him with so much horror and dread that it had served as an explanation for many things that had followed in his life afterward. He stared, lost in his own thoughts, sightlessly at their surroundings as he processed what had unfolded and the deal he had made. It was a moment before he realized that Valaera’s was talking to him. Even then, it took him a moment longer to process her question. He hauled himself to his feet, unsteady but appearing physically unharmed.

Gave us a chance to finish this.” He ran a shaking hand through his hair, concentrating on calming himself. His infernal eyes roamed from person to person, from the burned holes in Valaera’s skull, to Hilana’s petrified hands, to Imogen’s wounds and the apparent lack of wounds on both of the Imperials. It appeared he was not the only one who had accepted the bargain for safety. How long that would last? There would be no telling. He doubted that they would get the chance to survive another such blast. At Imogen’s calling, one of the Imperials was named, Vergil.

Those who need help, I suggest it be taken.” He rolled his shoulders. Physically he felt fine. Tired, but fine. It was only as he was brushing a hand over his face that he realized his scales were manifested. He took a moment to concentrate and draw them back so that they receded back into his skin.

They all stood within the antechamber of what appeared to be a great hall. Tall obsidian columns rose high to support tiered floors that were lined with golden amber. The small runic symbols etched into every surface were never-ending. Roughly one-hundred feet ahead of them was a spiral staircase that wound its way up to the higher floors of the tower. Within the center of the spiral staircase was a column of golden-red energy trapped within amber crystal that rose with the height of the tower. Curiously, there were no breaks in the architecture of the tower, meaning that every column, every stair, every archway or window was without seams, leading one to the conclusion that the entirety of the tower had been carved from a single solid structure. That was a mind-boggling prospect.

The group, faced with the revelation that they were alive, would be aware of a strange ordered tranquility in the environment around them. For those attuned to the natural flow of energy, all forms of it were in absolute order and all of it was being managed by the very structure they found themselves in. For Valaera, an unfathomable amount of power was flowing through the black obsidian and amber crystal of the structure, perfectly balanced, and masterfully regulated in a way that made any modern feats of sorcery seem paltry by comparison. With two notable exceptions, the first being that of the column of energy that crackled and writhed within the confines of the spiraling amber at the center of the staircase and the other? Was the smaller of the two Imperials whose aether was alight with chaotic brilliance.

For Hector, the artificial and manufactured order that was present in the environment around him would be unsettling. That swell of power that had seeped into his veins resonated with the chaotic energy burning at the heart of the amber spire at that staircase. It was chaos, chaos that sang to him like a blissful melody. Chaos that begged to be released. There was a throb on the back of Hector’s right hand. Upon inspection, a symbol could be found there. It was a symbol that made those feelings of chaos spike ever higher.

What did he ask of each of you? It might be a little late, but introductions might be in order.” Aoren thought on the request that had been made of him. He considered Valaera’s eyes, Hilana’s hands, the wounds that Imogen had suffered, it was only himself and the two Imperials who did not appear injured. Any further speculation was interrupted by the sound of whirring, mechanical ticking. Aoren turned, on the alert. His eyes came to settle upon a figure that was descending the stairs. As it drew nearer, the whirring and ticking became clearer. When the figure was on the last step, it came fully into view.

It was an automaton made of white and gold plating with golden gears and tubes plainly visible all over its form. It stood at what could have been considered average height for a human with an overall sleek appearance. Its face plate was devoid of any remotely human features, possessing only a slit for where its mouth should be and two glowing amber eyes. When the automaton was roughly three or four paces away, it stopped. It folded an arm across its waist and gave a slight bow.

Image


Greetings. I am Servitor 117. You are expected here at Kyr’Kaitaven.” Though it spoke in Common, the name it uttered was in a language foreign to the countries each group member hailed from.

Assessment indicates that you are in need of respite. Shall I arrange for accommodations?






.

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Pharaoh
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Valæra’s appraisal of the surroundings was compromised. Ironically little of this pertained to the loss of her eyes, which had been inferior to her ætheric senses for her entire adult life. Rather, it was the focus she needed to exert to control the flames that danced unbidden upon her flesh that detracted from her puissant skills of assessment.

“You are no mere mortal, Aoren Princeps. It is not what you gave to us that concerns me, but what you bequeathed unto him.” The Sentinel rasped in a voice both physically weary and world weary. Contrary to how she’d come across to at least one of their party, she bore no anger over what she deemed a grave obstacle to her mission. Her teeth were clenched in strain, not in rage, and even under the present stress she could reason that these were not trained Sentinels sworn to Sacrifice all for a greater purpose than themselves. They were mortals with foreign mores and the original sin thereof, which the Founders strove to extinguish. Moreover, they were all of them strangers who’d come here for their own reasons.

Valæra had embarked on this mission with the full understanding that, on this mission decreed by the Draconic Crown to which she was pledged, her life was altogether expendable. Given the choice between endowing even a mote of her formidable power to a foreign variable and dying a dutiful death, she was bounden to brook the latter. The increasingly familiar figure hadn’t offered a detailed covenant, but a request so vague as to invite fates far more fell than fatality. In this cryptic compact, she could easily conceive of dooms that might afflict all the world in direct counter to the mission she’d been sent to execute. She only hoped, for to her vexation she could not peel back the veil to view unvarnished veracity, that those who’d refused to willingly forfeit pieces of themselves to save their skins were enough to forestall the fate the obliging others had likely accelerated.

To that end, she shifted her empty gaze from Aoren, reflexively turning her phantom eyes toward that which she regarded, even as her ætheric appraisal spread all about her. She took in the breadth of power and was reminded why she’d been both harrowed and enticed by the notion of standing before the potency of this place. It was beyond what she’d been capable of imagining and so much of it was arrayed with a symmetry that she imagined would have pleased both the Founders and their draconic allies who ruled the Umbrium. But then, there was aught else… emanating from that strange column and from the one Imperial whose outburst of manic laughter in the midst of all this felt near as chaotic as the energy residing within him.

There was much to process and she’d been drained of her usual processing power. Aoren’s question was, after a fashion, a relief. It was a simpler thing to recount what had transpired than to plot a course for next steps, when the potential obstacles were so sundry. She replied to the strapped red-head, shifting her face halfway back toward him and thinking to don her veil once more, lest her dearth of eyes unsettle or mislead her companions into the belief that she would welcome aid or sympathy for her Sacrifice.

“Of me, he requested a glimpse of the world through mine eyes.” At that, she chuckled darkly: A shadow of the laughter emitting from the high— albeit short— sighted Imperial stripling.

“That which was not freely given was ta’en perforce, little boon may it accord him.” Her eyes, her heart and all of Valæra belonged to the Founders of Solunarium. Ocular flesh was a pittance next to what she’d have willingly Sacrificed to Them. A pittance next to what all of them ought to have Sacrificed in her reckoning, rather than writing a blank cheque to one she respected enough to know none of them should delight at his return.

She felt something had awoken before she heard the sounds of churning gears or heavy steps, and stood upright, turning her veiled visage to face the automaton. She willed the fires on her flesh and armour to fade and they did, though they were not extinguished.

“Hail, Servitor 117.” She inclined her head, appearing at ease in her posture even as she was smouldering and very much on edge and poised to move at a moment’s notice. “For what purpose are we expected?” She inquired, ignoring the offer and shirking accommodation in favour of answers.
word count: 780
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Imogen
Posts: 531
Joined: Mon Dec 06, 2021 9:21 pm
Title: Most Unemployed Janitor In The World
Location: Ecith
Character Sheet: https://ransera.com/viewtopic.php?f=43&t=2673
Character Secrets: https://ransera.com/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=2704


The Ork's head hurt as she tried to process the sudden input of the survivors- perhaps a sign of a slow mind, but mostly due to the burns and lacerations.

“You can check me last, Mr. Vergil, I-”

The human with charred hands was suddenly speaking, lecturing her about the Shattered Pact. Imogen blinked, taken aback- it was, after all, a somewhat esoteric kind of wound. She supposed that there would have to be physicians trained on the details, perhaps among the elite of the Houses of Kalzasi, or in Ailos before it fell.

"I appreciate that-" Imogen interjected, "-but the Pact strikes me as a problem for later."

It did seem like a good idea to start getting the rocks out, though. Imogen was no medical professional (or even a medical amateur, really) but she had vivid recollections of the assorted abominations which she'd seen in Zaichaer after the High City's fall. Hideous amalgams of flesh and glowing rocks, teased out of madness and mist, but just reminiscent of the people they had once been... well, best to avoid that kind of corruption.

The Ork prised one of the larger chunks of crystal out of the back of one hand, wincing as it worried at her wound and tore her skin. She flexed her hand, allowing the unburnt skin to rise into fish-like opaline scales, pushing the flesh around the cut together and holding it closed. Imogen glanced away from that wound to the dozens of others across her body. Perhaps this, too, was going to take more time than they had.

The human woman was still talking, though she was only half-listening. Crystal tree? Presumably the one which had appeared in the north. Perhaps this group had been trying to... do... something... to address those ominous markers of the Great Eclipse? Voidspawn harvesting aether? Certainly sounded bad.

"Doubtless the shadows of those who tried to halt the end of the Old World." the Ork commented, distractedly. Her throat was a little raspy and raw, still- perhaps she had breathed in superheated air before the blast narrowly failed to hit? Or maybe it was simply the Pact. "A shame we couldn't see them more clearly. Would have been a tremendous honor."

Mr. Aoren finally stirred, and he was curiously untouched. She knew he was more powerful than he seemed, but doubted altogether that it had anything to do with mere puissance. The strange elf's anger confirmed the budding theory- he must have made some agreement in that flash of darkness.

But that was his business, and not her concern. In response to his question, she freely admitted:

"It wanted a body from me. Told it I'd have given one up for a song, but not in trade for my life, no. I'm Imogen, by the way, for the two I haven't met."

She meant to go on, but two things distracted her- first, she finally got a good look at the human woman, and realized with shock that her hands were not burnt, but were rather entirely obsidian. The surprise nearly distracted her from the aches and sores all over.

The next thing, of course, was the appearance of the construct. It was clockwork, of course, keeping with the theme, but of an incredibly elegant craftsmanship. She stood dumbfounded as it announced itself.

Accommodations? Was the ominous figure putting them up for the night?


word count: 596
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Hector
Posts: 355
Joined: Thu Jun 02, 2022 4:19 pm
Location: Gel'Grandel, Gelerian Imperium
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Special

TIMESTAMP: -
NOTES: -
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As the elven woman continued with a line that offered more of an explanation for her exasperation, Hector found himself rapidly losing interest in her as well as the rest of those around him. The one called ‘Aoren’ spoke after the human girl, as well, and though all of their words were heard and understood, the boy’s gaze flitted ‘round the room before landing on the crackling pillar of aether ‘round which the stairs twined. Something about it called to him, something about it was–

Though Hector’s Aidolon was as yet still a separate entity from him, the two were indelibly bound by contract. The miasma that composed him, at this point, was near omnipresent, lurking within Hector’s shadow, always subtly licking at his form, and it was he who was the first to notice the eldritch mark now upon the back of the boy’s right hand. Between the two of them, words needn’t be exchanged to communicate, and with the spirit’s suggestion, Hector lifted his hand to look. The mark was drawn in an ink as black as night, though it glinted in an array of color when light struck it– the symbol, however, he did not recognize.

The elf blinked in confusion, surprised as he was. His immediate compulsion was to push aether through and attempt to cast with it…but would such a course of action truly be wise? And was wisdom something he really ought to care about? His gaze drifted from the newly granted mark to that entropic pillar of energy again. Part of him wanted to approach it, rip aether from it using himself as a catalyst, and then let the chips fall as they would. This calm, this almost manufactured-feeling order was…boring. Unsettling.

While Hector contemplated his next course of action, Vergil listened to those around him. Aoren’s words were wise, but it would appear the blinded elven woman cared not about the state of her health. Given what it was that’d apparently been asked of her and the punishment for declining, part of him doubted that restoring her eyes would give her sight back. Nevertheless, choosing to continue to exist with sockets like that was a markedly bizarre decision, even only regarding risk of infection and comfort. However, that was, apparently, not his problem…and so he would let her be.

Rather, his attention would be given to the two from whom it was requested. When Imogen opted to pry free a bit of the aetherite herself, he grimaced. “Imogen, I’d suggest not messing much with that yourself lest you…aggravate the wounds overmuch.”

But along with those words, he cut his own palm briefly, drawing out some of his own blood and infusing it with aether. With a flick of his wrist, he sent it flying through the air in Imogen’s direction, and once in contact with her, his blood would be absorbed through her skin. The point of this was to infuse her system with his vitale, and having done that, the wounds on her body that weren’t presently obstructed by crystal would rapidly heal by his subsequent cast of innervate. The ambient aether in the air was just as dense as before and made casting this even less effort than it otherwise would have been– the notable difference being that it at least felt far more stable here than in the ruins.

To Imogen, again, “I’ve two options for you. One, I force your body to ‘push’ out all of the crystals at once. This method is much faster but would be very painful and carries with it greater risk. The other would be that I carefully excise each crystalline mass. For now, I’ve stabilized you, so feel free to think on it– or opt to wait for…however long you’d like. You know how to contact me, even after this all ends.”

He’d give her a moment to decide, but for now, helping the girl whose hands had turned to stone was more pressing. As he moved to approach her, however, a clockwork automaton approached the group, labeling itself ‘Servitor 117.’ Vergil looked at the construct, his eyes briefly narrowing, but otherwise expressed little as he turned his gaze back to Hilana. Holding a hand out to her, he asked if he had her permission to examine her hands. Though he’d been a doctor for the majority of his life at this point in time, he’d not encountered a malady quite like this before.

And, apparently, the girl herself hadn’t either, saying as much as she presented her hands before him. Taking one of her petrified hands in his, he would at first attempt to innervate the condition away, regenerating flesh in place of the stony petrification– but to his surprise, this did not work. Even with the ease with which his magic came to him here, no push of his aether resulted in stone turning back to skin.

The look he gave her was a serious one, though it wasn’t grave, and his words would sound reassuring. “Hm…given you’ve knowledge of a shattered pact, I assume you’re a healer, too? I’m sure you’ve also come across scenarios where a limb simply cannot be saved…as your hands can’t be, even with my skill with Vitalis– but don’t worry, that only prolongs the journey. The end result will be the same– you’ll have functioning hands.”

Vergil would move to slip the bag he carried from his shoulders, but he’d pause, ears picking up the sound of footsteps as Hector had begun to walk towards the crackling pillar of red aether. Vergil, of course, knew not the origins or function of such a thing, but what he did know was that allowing Hector anywhere near it would probably usher in disaster of some sort. The man raised a hand and Hector would find his system briefly seized by the other’s rhabdomancy. This wasn’t meant to control him, since realistically, Hector’s own mastery of Vitalis would be able to wrest control back should he choose the path of resistance– the gesture was little more than a silent command to the boy, letting him know he ought to cease his path.

Hector sighed, but he would listen, knowing that the other possessed far more common sense than he did, and through experience, most things ended far better when he listened than not. Vexed as he was, he did turn back…he was just…so bored, and so bothered, for that matter, by the relative tranquility that had fallen ‘round them. Mayhaps he could bother the dragon? Imogen? The elven woman seemed as if she were no fun at all and the human girl was busy, so he’d opt to leave them alone– for now.

Hector turned away from the aether that roiled now behind him, tempting as it was. One thing that’d stuck out to him earlier was the use of the word ‘princeps’ when addressing the scaled giant earlier…was he a prince of a sort? He had a rudimentary knowledge of Solunarian customs, so he knew the title, beat over the head as he had been in recent days and months with whatever the Imperium had on foreign policy, affairs, culture, diplomacy, the like– which did include that gem in the desert, unlikely as it was that Hector would be sent there in the near future.

When the boy returned to the group, he would look first to Imogen, then Aoren, and then addressing those two, he’d show them the back of his hand– the new mark he bore. “Do the two of you have any idea what this is? I’ve half a mind to cast with it…but I’ve been told I should ask those around me more before taking risks,” the boy said with an impish sort of smile. “I didn’t have it before we arrived here– the aether of the blast, or maybe that voidcast man? appears to have bestowed it upon me.”

A spark of recollection appeared in the boy's eyes as he jolted for a moment, remembering something. “Ah, but you asked what the shade had requested of each of us?” He nodded to Aoren. “He asked for my blood– only one drop of it. Personally, it seemed like a markedly cheap deal, given that I don’t consider myself to be that special…my vampirism does render me a touch beyond merely mortal, but not by much, no?” Hector shrugged, then blinked. “...unless my blood carries with it more power than I realize?” He tilted his head in consideration, then laughed. “Nevertheless, it wasn’t much of a price to pay to buy us more time.”

Vergil’s concern about Hector’s interest in the chaotic aether waned as the boy’s mouth opened to speak to the others. Hector could talk about nothing for ages, provided those he conversed with put even the smallest amount of effort into engaging him. It was just that he was easily bored; he’d only be concerned if the boy was ignored. Assuming the others wouldn’t do that, he set his own focus back on the task at hand– fixing Hilana’s hands.

He drew what was, ostensibly, a bonesaw from his bag, though the design was different than what one might be used to. It was smaller and the serration almost appeared smooth with how impossibly fine it was. Keeping such a thing sharp would be exceptionally difficult if one couldn’t manipulate the material of the device at will, but a keen observer might note that the material from which it was made looked to be the same as the metallic blood Hector had wielded in an attempt to reinforce the shelter they’d searched for.

Tool in hand, Vergil would look Hilana in the eyes, “...offer little resistance and this will be quick. I promise you, your best interest is mine, too.”

With that, he held her right hand in his, and would lock her body in place with rhabdomancy. It might induce panic to lose control of one’s faculties, but this was more so for stability than anything else. In the same moment, he’d weave in pheromancy, taking control of her body’s release of adrenaline, cortisol, endorphins, dopamine, and serotonin. He’d alter the levels of each to keep the girl at peace, lower her pain levels, and keep her stress level at a minimum.

In his left hand he held the small bonesaw, and without fanfare, he’d raise it to her arm, just above the end of the petrification. Normally, one would want to rest the arm against a hard surface, but given there didn’t appear to be any tables nearby, he’d rely on the fact that he’d locked her body in place, the sharpness of his tool, and his own strength. Holding her arm tightly in place with his other hand, he would press down and begin to cut through tissue– skin, muscle, and bone all tore like paper beneath the force he was capable of applying, and it all broke cleanly from the blade’s sharpness.

Once amputated, he’d unceremoniously drop the arm, and swiftly innervated the stump, tendrils of flesh and blood weaving together to close the wound before moving onto her other arm. “Both will come off first, then I’ll go about getting you new hands,” he offered in clarification.

His words came quick, though his movements quicker– by the time he’d said that, he’d already readied the blade again at her other arm, and intent on repeating the same process, lined the blade up just above the petrification and cut through. Both of her arms discarded on the ground and maintaining consummate control of her body’s systems through his magic, he held her upper left arm with his left hand and spoke again: “...regrowth is a strange sensation, so brace yourself.”

It wouldn’t exactly be painful, per se, but profoundly uncomfortable, more akin to a nauseating sort of ‘pressure’ sensation at points. From the stump of her arm, her flesh would open, though it would not bleed; everything was held at bay by the mage as the bones in her forearm extended forward, bone tissue rapidly growing forward alongside the most basic of ligaments, muscle, and other connective tissues to hold her new skeletal hands together. Next, he’d regenerate each system in the limb one at a time, doing it this way so he could focus on making sure each one was correct– vascular, muscular, integumentary, lymphatic, and finally, nervous. The worst part would be when he restored her nervous system, as the crawl of new nerves through her flesh would feel electric in the worst way.

Vergil offered her a soft smile, something meant to be reassuring, “..onto the next, then,” before repeating the process with her other hand. He could tell from the way he’d been actively managing her hormones that this process would’ve been infinitely more excruciating without his meddling in that regard, and that even though he’d done so, the girl would still feel a tired sort of malaise and be covered in a thin film of sweat by the end. The energy expended was, gracefully, softened by Vergil making use of the aether in the air around them to galvanize his spells, so in the end, both of them expended far less energy that this would’ve normally required.

With both of her hands restored, Vergil nodded to her, let go of her arms, freed her from his magicked control, and then stepped back. “I…could still feel traces of the Sundering’s magic in you when I did that…I can’t tell how much of a hindrance that will end up being over time, but your hands are, physically, pristine. Unfortunately, it’s not within my power to purge magic of that potency from your system,” he clarified, the faintest hints of disappointment within himself at the end.

With that he would turn and nod to the others, indicating she was fine. "Imogen, if you'd like me to do anything for you next, you need only say the word."
- - -

Aidolon Speech
"Kathalan Tongue/Speech"
"Vallenor Tongue/Speech"
"Common Tongue/Speech"
"Mythrasi Tongue/Speech"
word count: 2513
"And as you lay down your grace to me,
the skies begin to bleach red,
and the stars begin to fall,
I feel myself changing,
as my world starts dividing–"
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Hilana Chenzira
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Location: Solunarium
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When Imogen suggested that the Shattered Pact was a lesser problem, and then proceeded to start prying aetherite from her flesh made the Vastiana grimace. She’d cut enough out on the Guards that trained with reaving to have experience with it, but she’d used more specialized tools than fingers. “When I have working hands again, I will help with removing the aetherite. Please don’t do that, it will lead to further trauma.” While normally Hilana would not have minded Orcani suffering trauma, they did have a common cause at the moment and she’d rather see them through this ordeal.

With Valaera drawing her veil, Hilana let it go. She knew that the Princess was a Grandmaster Sembler and if something was wrong in those sockets, she would notice it. But the Vastiana had the star thistle to help with the fact she was surely relying on Semblance fully now for a form of vision, and the blast had surely taken something out of most of them… if it was denied, it was denied. But the least she could do was offer. 

At Aoren’s question, she listened to the answers that came forth. Vision from Valaera’s eyes. A body from the Orcana who said that her name was Imogen. A drop of blood from the smaller vampyre who was definitely more squirrelly than his much larger companion. Three of them seemed to reference their Arcane crafts, too, in what they were insinuating - Semblance from Valaera, Vitalis from the younger Vampyre, and Reaving from Imogen. But where did her own Elementalism come in? He was a bit specific in that regard, but she supposed one could use the allegory that the elements are the root of life... But...

“He wanted the gift of life. He asked for my ability to conceive and carry life,” the girl said sombrely. “But considering the last time one of my friends trusted a void shade it ended with his throat cut…” she wasn’t inclined to assist the beings that had been responsible for harming her friends. Trusting these powers had led to disaster before, and Hilana was deeply concerned about seeing it repeated. It wasn’t that the price was too much to pay - it was simply that she didn’t trust someone who was at the very least aligned with the ones she had fought before. But from the way he had spoken about his world that he wanted to create… he was the master of the tattooed elves that had been in the black monolith at the Crystal Tree. Had it been the Founders that asked it of her, she would have given without question. But a Voidshade dead set on returning to the world? That was deeply concerning. “I am called Hilana, and she can be called Sentinel,” she nodded at Valaera. Sentinel seemed easier than teaching everyone ‘Vigilia’, and while perhaps the Princess had left off giving any sort of name for anyone to talk to her, being able to say something to her might turn out to be useful later.

Vergil’s bedside manner was quite calming, and there was also the fact that Hilana was steeling herself for this and forcing her energy and emotions to calm down. She knew as he did - the more she resisted, the more she strained, the harder it was for the surgeon to do his job. The girl breathed, and smiled up at him. What he asked for, be it for her hands to be presented, or shifted a different way, she complied with the patience of one who was used to being on the other end of this. “I am familiar, yes. There’s no movement and no feeling within them, and attempting to manipulate the obsidian such as it is with Elementalism is failing... so in the worst case, they must be amputated, and if that’s the case, then so be it.” She was quite calm about it. She knew from meeting Dreyfus that Vampyres could shape with flesh, and this one knew what he was doing, to judge by his conversation with Imogen, and the steady, knowledgeable confidence that he was presenting.

It was that, or be hands-less and trying desperately with Elementalism to move things with Wind... and face a grueling necromantic-kinetic surgery later that would take seasons to heal. No, she would put her faith in Vergil, as he had been called, and when his Innervation failed and it was time for amputation, the girl nodded her assent, steeling herself, and murmuring the Waking Prayer, and then the Waning Prayer, in her own tongue, barely audible as it was. Surprisingly, there was very little pain, but she realized that with the way he had locked her, he was likely managing her nervous system to minimize the trauma. 

However, she watched with some sort of delighted fascination. She had seen specimens in the flesh before - her beginning surgeries had been not just in observation, but also practicing on cadavers and seeing the anatomy from the inside was markedly different from just looking at it in books. It was stranger still to see that it was her own. The raw sensations of her nerves made her toes twitch and her Wildness sing and scream inside of her. Raw, exposed, sensitive... It was a different sort of sensation, and it reminded her of being around those that Manifested lightning to blend it. But once he was finished, and Vergil’s control was released, Hilana flexed her hands and saw that her molten-gold Rune on her right palm asserting itself once again....

“I thank you,” she folded her hands together before her and bowed slightly to him. That she had traces of the Sundering in her hands was likely better than if it was in her womb. There was no such thing as a free lunch, after all. “I am grateful. Here,” she retrieved a vial from her rucksack, offering it to Vergil. It was a lavender liquid, thick, but fluid enough like a syrup. “For if you are at the threshold of Overstepping, or in its throes... this will help you.” Vials containing the same were offered to Valaera, Imogen, Aoren, and Hector, and she downed one herself before putting the empty tube back in her bag. The taste was mildly herbal, though not unpleasant and tinged with honey, but whatever made the medicine go down better, no? The elixir prepared by the Vastiana would help replenish aether and decrease the symptoms in the meantime. Blessed hands. She would have to build up her calluses again, but she could do that in time. Her mentor would be teasing her about her lady hands when she got back, doubtless. She looked from Valaera to the sleekly crafted robot, and she said nothing. She would let the Vigilia deal with that, but she was not about to let the group be separated if she could help it. Kyr’Kaitaven… she had a sinking suspicion that her gut was right.

word count: 1192
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Paragon
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Title: Chief Author of Ransera

P A R A G O N


Aoren did not answer Valaera but his conflicting emotions were plainly visible to her should she choose to observe them. Instead, he stepped forward, bringing up a hand to lightly touch upon her shoulder. Channeling his own mastery of Elementalism, he worked to assist her in bringing the elemental powers on display across her body into alignment. He did not force, merely channeled his own power to assist hers. If she refused it, he would let it go. He listened as each person revealed what they had been asked of, those who refused and those who had accepted.

I do not regret my decision.” He watched as each person was treated, his eyes narrowing slightly at the various grotesque displays.

The Steward extends greetings to the guests of Kyr’Kaitaven. And also pleasant greetings to those who have chosen to return.” The ticking whirr of machinery announced Servitor 117’s movements. There was the slightest tilting of its head as it answered Valaera’s question. It gestured broadly to the domain around them.

To join the endeavor.” The servitor straightened. “Or to attempt to thwart it. Regardless, your journey to meet with the Steward will be one of either blood or empowerment. The path, is for you to decide.

There was a pause as though the servitor were listening to some silent command. To the gaze of one as powerful as Valaera and to any in possession of the ability to perceive the flow of aether, a ripple went outward from the servitor’s skull casing. A ripple that was answered by one that pinged on one of the walls. There, a crystal illuminated briefly and a thread of aetheric messaging filtered from it and to the servitor. Those familiar with the utilization of lorestone’s as a network of communication, might recognize such an apparatus.

But such a decision shall not need to be made until you pass through the First Gate. Until then, the first and second floors of Kyr’Kaitaven are open to you.” The servitor looked to Valaera and Hilana.

The Sacellum would be fitting for the Children of Varvaeryan Sands.” Servitor 117 then looked to Imogen.

The Brassworks has comfortable accommodations for those hailing from the Northlands of Karnor.” It looked to both Hector and Vergil.

The Sanguinis Imperialis has impeccable comforts available to citizens of Grandal.” Finally, Servitor 117 turned to Aoren. It was silent for a moment as though processing something.

Your rooms are unchanged, Elder. Shall I have them prepared for you?” Aoren stiffened and blinked.

I…what?” The servitor quirked its head.

Your rooms, Elder Auravacis. They are as you left them. Shall I arrange for them to be opened for you?” There was a long, long pause as Aoren looked visibly confused and disturbed. Not only had the servitor addressed him by his Draconic name, it was implying that this was not his first time to this place. A place he had no immediate recollection of.

I have never been here before.” The response from the servitor was immediate.

You will find that once you visit your rooms, that is untrue. For it must be true. The Maelstrom only parts for those who are welcome, and the Elder Red Dragon of Kyr’Calad has been a guest and friend in these halls since their construction.

word count: 583
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Pharaoh
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Valæra sighed with relief at Aoren’s ministrations, though that comfort was cool. There were greater afflictions at hand than those that had lit her form. She did accept the draught from Hilana, drawing it up under her veil and tipping it back with a gloved hand.

To Aoren’s resolute reply she answered:

“May the many abide its consequences.”

And with nothing further to say on the matter, her attentions such as they were, turned fully toward the Servitor. She faced it out of habit, despite her absence of eyes.

She arched a brow at the Servitor’s response to her query, and pursed her lips at the particular affinity afforded Aoren. She did not get the sense that his confusion was deceptive, and yet there were parts to a soul that lay in deep trenches below one’s awareness. It was possible that such a shard of his Draconic spirit had led him to the actions he’d executed without regret earlier.

She inclined her head to the construct and addressed it in Vastian.
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Valæra stood by, statue still with her hands clasped behind her back.
word count: 196
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