The discovery that they were going to be attacking now, alone, instead of in three days with a literal army... well, one might reasonably find this distressing. And it did distress the orkhan Sunsinger, but only somewhat. Mostly, she felt a profound sense of resignation.
Of course we're changing plans. she thought, It's Norani.
Not that she tried to protest any further. She'd seen the shock and horror in the young Elementalist's face when they'd arrived, the tears she'd been biting back at the state of the Tree. No doubt, affairs were a sight sorrier than they'd expected. And for Prince- uh, no, for Arcas to have showed up, that lent a certain weight to Norani's claims. Not that she had figured out what motivated him to show up one way or another, really.
Well, then, no point in trying to talk them out of it. Still, Imogen satisfied her own displeasure by releasing a long, moaning sigh.
The witch let her staff return to her hand, unwilling to dismiss it just yet. Putting her many--many!--misgivings aside, she carefully followed the floating elementalist down the sunfire-rimmed path.
The path down to the Grove was not long, but every moment was just a little harrowing. Arcas' shield of Dawnfire was orders of magnitude larger and more complicated than anything she'd ever seen one of his adherents do, but that didn't really surprise her. She'd seen what he'd done to the shadows in Gel'Grandal when the eclipse was fresh. Whatever nonsense might be contained in the myths about demigods, she didn't doubt that his aether dwarfed any mage's alive.
Still, she understood how the flames worked; they were not an invincible shield. She kept her staff at the ready, fire and light admixing on top to ensure that when the Dawnking's aegis shattered it wouldn't leave her in darkness.
As the three progressed, the state of their surroundings decayed- literally. First coatings of slime, then dripping sludge, then viscous oils pressing up against Arcas' fiery barrier with obvious intent. The Sunsinger watched intently as the sludge tried to press through the fire, recoiling as it burned only to burgeon again. It tickled something in the back of her brain. What was this stu-
Imogen's thoughts were banished by the sudden voices crying through the dark glade, and her head snapped up just in time to see a great amorphous thing of eyes and gelatin coalesce from the sludge surrounding. The voices perambulated through the air, seeming almost to get lost in the darkness before finally reaching her ears, and the rising tide of living sewage flowed strong against the shield of light.
(It was never a good sign, Imogen thought to herself, when the slime started talking.)
The demigod's barrier finally broke, and the living sludge cast itself at the companions victoriously. The sludge launched at them, but hardly had time to cross half the distance before Norani summoned a wind to disperse its attack. Bits of deflected sludge sprayed everywhere, and the witch instinctively summoned her greatshield, burning with silvery nova-fire, to intercept the droplets before they reached her or Destyn. The greyish-black slime boiled off the shield, releasing a greasy smoke.
Norani shouted something about conserving their strength, but Imogen hadn't quite gotten that far yet. Instead, she dipped the flaming head of her staff towards some of the ooze at the side of the path, eyes narrowed as she watched it cook.
"A beast of corrupted life." the witch mused to herself. She couldn't entirely hear Norani's question to the thing, nor did she speak Acherani, but she said nonetheless:
"A broken cycle, I think. Growth into flourishing into wilt into growth without end. Just as Frost chokes the world without, Agst'rasera drowns in a cycle with no cessation." Imogen turned lavender eyes to the path behind them, filling with more of the black sludge, and summoned her flaming sword, driving it back with a few lazy swings. She turned back to the girl floating above. "Norani! Ice! Ice to bind it and stop the growth!"
Of course we're changing plans. she thought, It's Norani.
Not that she tried to protest any further. She'd seen the shock and horror in the young Elementalist's face when they'd arrived, the tears she'd been biting back at the state of the Tree. No doubt, affairs were a sight sorrier than they'd expected. And for Prince- uh, no, for Arcas to have showed up, that lent a certain weight to Norani's claims. Not that she had figured out what motivated him to show up one way or another, really.
Well, then, no point in trying to talk them out of it. Still, Imogen satisfied her own displeasure by releasing a long, moaning sigh.
The witch let her staff return to her hand, unwilling to dismiss it just yet. Putting her many--many!--misgivings aside, she carefully followed the floating elementalist down the sunfire-rimmed path.
~~~
The path down to the Grove was not long, but every moment was just a little harrowing. Arcas' shield of Dawnfire was orders of magnitude larger and more complicated than anything she'd ever seen one of his adherents do, but that didn't really surprise her. She'd seen what he'd done to the shadows in Gel'Grandal when the eclipse was fresh. Whatever nonsense might be contained in the myths about demigods, she didn't doubt that his aether dwarfed any mage's alive.
Still, she understood how the flames worked; they were not an invincible shield. She kept her staff at the ready, fire and light admixing on top to ensure that when the Dawnking's aegis shattered it wouldn't leave her in darkness.
As the three progressed, the state of their surroundings decayed- literally. First coatings of slime, then dripping sludge, then viscous oils pressing up against Arcas' fiery barrier with obvious intent. The Sunsinger watched intently as the sludge tried to press through the fire, recoiling as it burned only to burgeon again. It tickled something in the back of her brain. What was this stu-
Imogen's thoughts were banished by the sudden voices crying through the dark glade, and her head snapped up just in time to see a great amorphous thing of eyes and gelatin coalesce from the sludge surrounding. The voices perambulated through the air, seeming almost to get lost in the darkness before finally reaching her ears, and the rising tide of living sewage flowed strong against the shield of light.
(It was never a good sign, Imogen thought to herself, when the slime started talking.)
The demigod's barrier finally broke, and the living sludge cast itself at the companions victoriously. The sludge launched at them, but hardly had time to cross half the distance before Norani summoned a wind to disperse its attack. Bits of deflected sludge sprayed everywhere, and the witch instinctively summoned her greatshield, burning with silvery nova-fire, to intercept the droplets before they reached her or Destyn. The greyish-black slime boiled off the shield, releasing a greasy smoke.
Norani shouted something about conserving their strength, but Imogen hadn't quite gotten that far yet. Instead, she dipped the flaming head of her staff towards some of the ooze at the side of the path, eyes narrowed as she watched it cook.
"A beast of corrupted life." the witch mused to herself. She couldn't entirely hear Norani's question to the thing, nor did she speak Acherani, but she said nonetheless:
"A broken cycle, I think. Growth into flourishing into wilt into growth without end. Just as Frost chokes the world without, Agst'rasera drowns in a cycle with no cessation." Imogen turned lavender eyes to the path behind them, filling with more of the black sludge, and summoned her flaming sword, driving it back with a few lazy swings. She turned back to the girl floating above. "Norani! Ice! Ice to bind it and stop the growth!"