Two Stories
Posted: Wed May 27, 2020 1:27 pm
42nd of Glade, Year 120
First Bloom
First Bloom
Patrick had brought him to sit against the length of a tree, the Siltori's back somewhat uncomfortably leaning into the thick bark, though the support did help. He wondered if there were any of those... paper trees, as he used to call them in Daravin, with the soft bark that could be peeled off so easily. Something like that would've been nice to lean against -- though he doubted there were any even remotely nearby.
Taelian's eyes occasionally glanced to Patrick, though for the most part he kept them largely shut. He was going through the ringer of magical feedback, backlash from his overexpenditure. As he had told the other man earlier, though, his lowest point was the initial reaction: after that, he would only get better. Luckily, none of the mental effects had come. Unluckily, he was likely being subjected to spectral waste, a side-effect of overstepping through Summoning. The Marghozad wasn't near him anymore -- it was off collecting branches. When it got closer, though, some more side effects were prone to occur. It was likely why his body hadn't done more, despite his moderate overstepping; Summoning's threshold sickness worked in unique and different ways.
"Questions?" he asked the other man. Taelian opened his eyes for a moment, but he began to feel his consciousness fading. He shook his head. "It'll have to wait for a while," the Silver Elf replied. "Just for a moment. I need to..."
The weight of his lids grew too severe. Taelian yawned, though partway through doing so he broke into a fit of coughing. "I need to rest," he finally said, breathing.
And he did. At least an hour passed, though it began to verge on two. Whatever Patrick did during that time, Taelian was not aware of it. After around ten minutes into his rest, the Marghozad returned with a large bundle of branches, more than enough. Shortly afterwards, it quite literally told Patrick in the common tongue that it would go to hunt for them. The creature had nothing else to do, and Taelian's vulnerability to spectral pollution meant it was best that they kept their distance from one another, even if one Vrannik alongside a man whose severity was barely moderate wouldn't be significant.
Finally, after the elapsed time, he woke. The sun would likely begin to set soon, he thought, and then he would have his opportunity to rest again. Already after his eyes opened and he lazily stretched, he noticed that he felt significantly better. Not incredible, but the tension had been relieved enough to where he felt he could move. That was something.
"Patrick," he called to the other man. Taelian softly smiled at him; if there was any point during their meeting where he recognized that he'd warmed up to him, it was this one. He was glad that he was still there -- and hadn't taken advantage of his rest to steal from him, or worse. Though the man was a stranger, he acted like a friend. Taelian took such deeds seriously.
"I just realized that I'm more of a fool than I thought," he said. "I can make flame that doesn't go out -- not for days. For no aether. It's called Shrivenflame, or Sigilfire, a part of one of my magics. It's just... I'm so used to hiding it, I didn't even think to use it. We didn't have to collect branches at all," the Siltori laughed. He had always been told not to show his Black Sigil before others, before the unknown -- the Dranoch were cunning. They heard the songs of the birds. They were natural spymasters, and the skilled night hunters they were, Pyromancers like him were prone to be gripped by their nape at night and culled.
But he was safe here; he knew that. The bundles wouldn't be necessary, but they could at least compliment the fire. "What did you want to ask?" he questioned. "I can't promise I'll be able to answer everything, whether for lack of knowledge or trust. But you've been kind. So if there's a curiosity of yours, expand on it. I'm all ears."