D A E M O N
66 Ash 122 Steel
He was nervous. More than nervous, he was fucking terrified. This was all way over his head but he would be damned if he turned away from the task he had been given. He knew the stakes. It was not going to be an easy road but after spending as much time as he had with Daemon, he was not going to turn away from it now. They had been over the plan a dozen, a hundred, maybe a thousand times. He still wasn’t entirely sure any of it would work but they had to try. He knew that there were still some parts of it that were being kept from him but he had to trust that it was for his own good. By now he had gotten used to Daemon’s disposition where he withheld some parts of the whole picture. The man had never given him a reason to not trust him. He wouldn’t start now. He rubbed the back of his neck where the dual marks of two gods now rested on his body. That was going to take some getting used to but it certainly made the eclipse easier to deal with.
Nightfall was upon them and the inky tendrils of darkness were spreading across the skies. Ahead of him, a Lysanrin was gathering the strange lunicite that had cropped up in the aftermath of the eclipse. Like glittering pearls, the dragon gems could be found dispersed all across the world. In the trek from Solunarium to Kalzasi, Mathias had seen people desperately searching for them in order to have some sort of protection from the shadows. He did not carry any himself. Daemon had shown him that he did not need it. Not as long as he had faith and Mathias had faith. He had mountains of it. Letting out a slow, steady breath, that was all he allowed himself before he sprinted forward. Dagger in hand, he darted forward out of the shadows and made a beeline straight for the Lysanrin. He willed himself to move faster, to be swifter, to be stronger. He felt the corresponding answer in the mark of Eminence that graced the back of his neck. As quick as he could, he slashed the pouch hanging from the Lysanrin’s belt, ducked down, rolled to the side, caught the pouch and dove away from the man.
Thank fuck I spent my life as a thief.
As he rolled to his feet, Mathias was surprised to find that he did not feel overly taxed by the maneuver. That was good. He was going to need to run like hell in order to make a getaway. Enough to remain in sight but out of reach.
“Thanks for saving me the trouble!” He held up the pouch and shook it, the gems jingling slightly as he did so. With that, Mathias turned on his heel and darted off deeper into the wilderness.
Please chase. Please chase. Please chase.
Mathias glanced over his shoulder, went a bit wide eyed, then ran faster. In the back of his mind, he could almost feel Daemon urging him onward. Vitality threaded its way into his muscles lending him the strength to keep running. There was another presence too, but he didn’t drift near that one too closely. Even if it seemed like that particular presence was looming a bit closer than he liked. He ran, he ran until darkness had fallen in full around them and the area became illuminated with an aura. He ran until he made it past the edge of a treeline only to come face to face with the rising wall of a rocky cliff face. Ebony stone like jagged obsidian glittered at him. It was, by all accounts, a dead end.
Mathias whirled around to face the Lysanrin that had been giving chase a tense smirk on his face.
“Heh, good to know you don’t give up easily.”
He was nervous. More than nervous, he was fucking terrified. This was all way over his head but he would be damned if he turned away from the task he had been given. He knew the stakes. It was not going to be an easy road but after spending as much time as he had with Daemon, he was not going to turn away from it now. They had been over the plan a dozen, a hundred, maybe a thousand times. He still wasn’t entirely sure any of it would work but they had to try. He knew that there were still some parts of it that were being kept from him but he had to trust that it was for his own good. By now he had gotten used to Daemon’s disposition where he withheld some parts of the whole picture. The man had never given him a reason to not trust him. He wouldn’t start now. He rubbed the back of his neck where the dual marks of two gods now rested on his body. That was going to take some getting used to but it certainly made the eclipse easier to deal with.
Nightfall was upon them and the inky tendrils of darkness were spreading across the skies. Ahead of him, a Lysanrin was gathering the strange lunicite that had cropped up in the aftermath of the eclipse. Like glittering pearls, the dragon gems could be found dispersed all across the world. In the trek from Solunarium to Kalzasi, Mathias had seen people desperately searching for them in order to have some sort of protection from the shadows. He did not carry any himself. Daemon had shown him that he did not need it. Not as long as he had faith and Mathias had faith. He had mountains of it. Letting out a slow, steady breath, that was all he allowed himself before he sprinted forward. Dagger in hand, he darted forward out of the shadows and made a beeline straight for the Lysanrin. He willed himself to move faster, to be swifter, to be stronger. He felt the corresponding answer in the mark of Eminence that graced the back of his neck. As quick as he could, he slashed the pouch hanging from the Lysanrin’s belt, ducked down, rolled to the side, caught the pouch and dove away from the man.
Thank fuck I spent my life as a thief.
As he rolled to his feet, Mathias was surprised to find that he did not feel overly taxed by the maneuver. That was good. He was going to need to run like hell in order to make a getaway. Enough to remain in sight but out of reach.
“Thanks for saving me the trouble!” He held up the pouch and shook it, the gems jingling slightly as he did so. With that, Mathias turned on his heel and darted off deeper into the wilderness.
Please chase. Please chase. Please chase.
Mathias glanced over his shoulder, went a bit wide eyed, then ran faster. In the back of his mind, he could almost feel Daemon urging him onward. Vitality threaded its way into his muscles lending him the strength to keep running. There was another presence too, but he didn’t drift near that one too closely. Even if it seemed like that particular presence was looming a bit closer than he liked. He ran, he ran until darkness had fallen in full around them and the area became illuminated with an aura. He ran until he made it past the edge of a treeline only to come face to face with the rising wall of a rocky cliff face. Ebony stone like jagged obsidian glittered at him. It was, by all accounts, a dead end.
Mathias whirled around to face the Lysanrin that had been giving chase a tense smirk on his face.
“Heh, good to know you don’t give up easily.”