by C S » Mon Nov 21, 2016 7:51 pm
Natalie was inside the church that morning. She was listening to the voices of vikings and was being blown away by the power of their combined voices raised in song. Solaurn had been passing by on her way to meet Gwenviere, who had been made busy by the patients of yesterday's vitriol at the Gateside Clinic. She was given pause, the unexpected surprise a pleasant one. It reminded her of home, listening to these songs. Tiny bodies, large voices that seemed to move the world. Tiny hands that very much did so. And Solaurn herself, who had become interested in the power of the spoken word when combined with magic.
As she went on her way, a less pleasant surprise awaited Desrium. He was meditating in his quarters on things that had been done, and things that were yet to be done. Legs crossed, metal knuckles bracing against one another. In the process, visions of dark came to him inexplicably. A shadowed vale, the blackest shadows against stark silvery highlights. A large, pale moon rose over the treetops, only to have a shadow creep across the surface from one end. The passing of months and seasons encapsulated in a fleeting moment of time.
Desrium had seen these events over the centuries. Even then, it had only been a handful of times. The nights where the silver moon was made a subdued scarlet, and the craters and valleys upon its face slipped into the darkest of dark. The images were not foreboding. This blood moon... this eclipse. It was soothing. It reminded him of the Adumbration, cloaked warriors of the evening hours.
But why?
Dusk, mother of Dawn. Master of Shadows. Desrium was caught in the middle. The Fang, and the imperceptible shadows captured within the blade. Concealing, protecting.
Desrium was pulled from these machinations by the rough knocking at his door. He rose and opened it. He was greeted by the sight of Melok, imperious and huffing.
"Desrium," he growled. "The example of the previous day has been a blatant disregard of my work and my authority as guard captain. You have circumvented my input and have commanded my units, and I would like a formal apology and assurance of this not happening again."
"Melok." Desrium said the name as he said everything else. "You may think of yesterday's events as a culmination of 'executive action'."
"Executive action, you say?" Melok laughed in disbelief. "Do you mean to be this city's executive, then?"
"No."
"Then you would do best to stay away from executive actions, benefactor."
"Let us be frank with one another," Desrium began, "In the course of safegaurding every citizen in this city, I will do what I deem necessary with the council of my advisors to certify the wisdom of these actions. I cannot stand to be blocked by bureaucracy and convention when lives are at stake."
"Oh. Well, with this said, can I expect you to enact executive action against the subversives who have been targeting our fringe demographic in the city?"
"Elves, Melok," Desrium responded. "And I already have."
Melok stepped back, his mouth slightly agape. After the shock subsided, he reluctantly nodded. "Yes. Of course."
"Is there anything else you wish to discuss?" Desrium inquired.
"No. Allow me to take my leave."
"By all means."
Melok turned without ceremony. Desrium, in return, stepped back and closed his door, and that was that.
Desrium resumed his introspection, although dedicated to a matter other than the twists and turns that awaited Brodudika. One thing he had yet to do was delve into the implications of his sword's attributes, and it appeared that it would not wait any longer. It was calling to him. Desrium had known that there was something imbued within the metal of the toothed blade for some time. It was not a will, or a presence, as he had detected in Septimus' wood sword all that time ago on the eve of war. Desrium drew the blue tinted sword over a shoulder and held it up to inspect it.
It was as he knew it for hundreds of years, and yet it was not. What he was positive of to date was that the thing attached to the sword was in reality many separate things. The memories of Eredar. The extent of these memories were unclear. "I will have to rectify this."
"I will have to rectify this very soon."
Desrium settled his mind and reinforced his vigor, then plunged into the echoes of a lost divine.
Images of a world that bore the tumultuous scars of war came to the Stalwart Paladin. The lands were verdant with grass and trees, but had patches of gray and black. Volcanic brimstone and paths of ash left in the wake of wildfires. Canyons divided acres, claw marks of a staggering scale. Irregular dips in the earth where the subterranean was made to cave in on itself, and craters where the strata along the sides were blasted upwards rather than downwards. That was to say nothing of the craters that had been driven deep into the ground by titanic battles.
This was the world in the age of Cleotaire's so-called youth after fire had been deposed as primordial ruler. Desrium's vantage point was impossibly high, and yet not completely alien to him. He had seen the world like this before, in the age of the present. After he was banished from heaven.
And this must have been what Eredar had seen upon first encountering Leyuna far above its clouds, the world upon which a chaotic system of elemental entities had finally ran itself into order. What Eredar had seen was not what Desrium recalled seeing as he fell from Leyuna's highest heights. The landmasses were clustered together, a few of them completely severed by tiny seas, but otherwise they were jammed right next to one another. A time when it took months to reach each sprawling continent by land rather than the vast oceans of the present. A time when there was only one ocean that spanned the entire world, a journey into nothing under blue days and starry nights.
The Eight came and made Leyuna their grand gambit. The one that made them fear for themselves and everything else that was, was locked away in the depths of this world. They spread their ley lines to complete their prison, the passage of time that accompanied this period so immense that there had been unforeseen consequences of their actions.
They were aware of the elementals. There were a number that had "matured" enough and sought out these other worldly beings with healthy, yearning minds. The gods obliged them, and imparted wisdom and notions of virtues, the preservation of which that would go on to give rise to that of the Life Bringer, and the thunderbird atop the eventual Boldrim. They were born of a latent magic that the Progenitor permeated throughout existence.
However, the Eight found that they too were responsible for life. Life spawned from their mana, and intrinsically linked to the ley line prison they had constructed. The elementals began their retreat into reclusiveness, starting with those that had been enlightened. Among them were those that did not mirror the world they were apart of. Among them, was Tzeentch.
The gods reached out to those they had unwittingly created in safeguarding all that was and was to be. The earliest sapients developed during the time the gods were present on Leyuna, and the ones that honed sapience into intelligence came to know these divines as more than forces of nature that they could appease for good favor. They came to know the divines as paragons of truth and justice, the ultimate good that they could only aspire to emulate in their mortal capacities.
Just as time had passed enough for intelligent life to arise on Leyuna, that much time had driven the connected landmass apart. Desrium saw innumerable snippets of Eredar's perspective. Pieced together in his mind, he surmised the world looked a little more recognizable, in that now the continents were spaced apart. It would take millions more years for them to drift to where they currently were. However, Tyrbenetus was already burning in demonic fire, and the origins of the Justicars and The Adumbration were set in history. What a result it was that fickle elementals of magic and beings that would become the djinn rose up to stand beside the ones who had begun civilization on the Dawnmother's land. Thus was the influence of that vision of good.
Good.
Eredar was appointed warden of the Progenitor. It was thought that the gods had done all they could have done for Leyuna's inhabitants, and now it was up to them to shape what they would become. That Stygian being deep within the world had to be watched over, to keep it pacified and ensure its captivity. This was how it had to be, for the good of everything.
But such a burden was too great for even a god.
Desrium felt that resonating anger. And despair. The Heart of Darkness, the name he earned for his betrayal. Traitor God. Dark God. It was not a lust for even greater power that led Eredar astray. It was not a conniving nature. It was suffering. It was the suffering of a brother facing the inevitability that some time into the eternal existence of his life, eons to mortal witnesses, his siblings would leave him alone to scour the stars for other forms of life like the peculiar elementals.
Eredar did not want to be abandoned on a celestial vessel. Desrium saw it: that cosmic expanse. Many more stars than Moria's. Many more worlds like Leyuna. Larger. Smaller. With many more moons, and those worlds without. Skies of blue. Skies of every other color. It was crushing to him and the former god; understanding every nuance of being left to watch over this force of creation for all time, aware of everything else that was and unable to do a single thing about it. Even his divine powers were to be restrained for eternity, for it was not his place to intervene with the beings of flesh that had come about.
"Am I not a god?" Eredar wondered. "Am I not worshiped as one?"
For why else would there be a cathedral constructed in his honor upon Aster? For why else would he have those pledged faithful to him?
"Why should I be made to suffer alone?"
This was how Eredar fell from grace.
Desrium wanted to howl. He wanted to let loose his voice of titans and let it shred city hall's foundations; let it shatter the windows of cities miles away. There was a compulsion to let himself free, and see if his strength was truly limitless. Fell the towers with a single punch! Split the crust of the world with a single kick! Show all that what the world knew of the Blood Omen was nothing compared to what he really was.
"Horrible," was his single thought in response to these feelings.
Desrium did not do these things. His eyes were blazing, turning all around him red, shining through the seams in the doorframe and out of the attic window like some kind of bizarre beacon.
"Horrible," was his single thought in response to the plight of the ailing god.
Eredar's transcending wrath... it was given form in the fusion of Eredar and Jiier... and it lived on in the Fang. Desrium finally understood it. He would not face it alone. Or, so it felt. It was as if Jiier were right next to him, over one shoulder. It was as if Septimus was by the other. It was as if Ithra were behind him. It was as if Syria was in front of him.
“Never act out of wrath again. Not against even a demon. With that power in your sword, it could mean disaster.”
The Life Bringer, unsurprisingly, was correct in her appraisal of this unknown power. Desrium, to his surprise, found a hidden strength in her words. A patient form of magic that activated when the time was right. Perhaps it too, grew tired of waiting. The new promise. The presence of his friends.
This was what he stood to lose, should he lose his way now.
"I will not allow it."
Jiier took Desrium's arm in his clawed hand and lowered the sword to his side. Septimus held his other arm in a show of support. Syria and Ithra clasped their hands together, lending him their magic.
That's how it felt.
Thus, the wrath of a god was quelled.
Some time had passed after Desrium came to his senses. His eyes were no longer blazing plumes of light. In fact, he sensed something different.
He looked down to his sword, the tip of it held centimeters over the brick-tiled floor. The imperceptible darkness was quite perceptible now. It was fluid and gaseous at the same time, rippling along the length of the jagged blade, conforming to its shape and wafting off into a dissipating vapor.
Hesitantly, Desrium raised the sword and put the fingers of his other gauntlet onto its side. He ran them down the Fang experimentally. He did not expect to find that this shadow clung to his metal fingers. When he pulled them off of the end of the sword, the darkness remained in a mimicry of a substance.
That substance then morphed. As though by instinct, Desrium turned his hand into a grip, and in that grip the shadow turned into another toothed blade.
"The Blood Dragon's Fang," Desrium said, looking to his signature weapon. Then, looking to the double, he said, "The Shadow of the Fang." The second sword had the exact same qualities of the first, weight and all, despite intuition dictating that it shouldn't.
The Blood Dragon's Fang was wreathed in shadow past the hilt. The Shadow of the Fang was entirely so, obscuring some of the gauntlet holding it.
Desrium let go of the shadow, and just like that, it was gone in a puff. Likewise, the shadow around his sword faded, leaving behind the Fang as he had known it thus far.
Dusk, mother of Dawn. Master of Shadows.
Desrium was in the middle.
He knew he had one more thing to add to the list of things he needed to do.
"I must hone this power, and use it with discipline."
At least he was not a stranger to using two swords at once.
Last edited by
C S on Fri Nov 25, 2016 9:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.