by C S » Fri Sep 23, 2016 9:50 pm
Trudging through the deep snow that piled high over the subsequent hours meant that Desrium had time to think while he maintained his scarlet vigil. He thought about motivations: what divisive cause was worth braving such an inhospitable night? The steadfast watch that would have been prowling the rooftops and perched on the supports of awnings and balconies alike on any other night had been beaten back by the whims of the seasons that gave no quarter to the intents of man and things that shared the silhouette. If they could not tread the dangers of their unsung duty to force back against the hate that coiled its way through the city streets, then how could their foes be any more dedicated to their foolhardy ends.
After some time, the armored being conceded that there were some facets of humanity -- and elf, dwarf, orc, goblin and so on -- that he would never grasp if he could not understand them as he was. The same hurdles that stopped the sapient races from understanding each other at times would be insurmountable to one who existed just outside of their realm. It was that basic root of conflict that created these foes, who might not have been foes had any number of things in their lives been different. It was that core which the likes of Morrelie drew her greatest strength, irrational and unstable though it was. It was the type of toxic influence that drove a nation to stand against all others, in the name of a god that would have extinguished it outright had he not decided he could not be bothered with carrying out his own extermination.
For that, Desrium came to ponder balance for Draxon. It was overtaken by such senseless hostility, and it had committed much crimes against its own people as well. As his greaves broke up and pushed aside snow, the Paladin thought,
"Perhaps this is to be expected when a backwards mentality is suddenly, perhaps too abruptly, sent forward. Like a structure pushed past its limits: things will fall, and break. I have seen as much when the Keep was thrown down to Tyrbenetus along with the mountains that held it aloft. I have also seen how a structure can be maintained, repaired, and expanded, no matter the duress."
Desrium continued walking through the snow, reflecting on the snowflakes in contrast to the grains of sand that sprawled across that wasteland across the Jade Sea. He thought it a splendored thing, past the bloodshed on both fronts. He had the honor of walking upon such a large, moving world, one with places he was unlikely to go, and things he was unlikely to see. He wondered if there were any like him on some far-flung shore, contemplating a future where all of Leyuna was aware of each other, and willing to move as a whole to a greater age. It was for this new vision, that he kept walking while Leyuna turned underneath his heavy boots. The Stalwart Paladin counted the hours away with his footsteps.
He had scoured the city with his eyes and greater senses, and still silence was all he had detected.
The night had been too cold, and too rough for the war of good and evil, evidently. An uneasy armistice brokered by the world itself.
Desrium felt this was best as he stood outside the doors of Septimus place, as he knew it was a hallowed day for many across Aster that had come. Doors he had dug out with his own metal hands. His eyes were burning away into the darkness of the pre-dawn. He would sense Viho long before he actually saw the elf. If only he could just send his greetings and cautions across distance.
Greetings. Beware the ice. Do not fall.
The viking and her present company moved through the city gates, some having an easier time than others. Bouldron's bulkiness gave him trouble still. The rocky ogre's shoulders rattled the metal sheets and portcullises held up by ropes and chains, prompting him to grunt and growl in mild annoyance while he tucked his substantial forearms in, literally dragging his knuckles to some extent. His smaller brethren were careful to give him a lot of space in cramped confines, choosing either to stick to Evisa's side as she swaggered confidently along, or to shorten their stride and keep some distance behind the earthen elemental.
"It looks like Faafengar came all the way from the north-stream to here," Evisa commented on the other side of the incomplete and snow-ridden wall, ignoring or oblivious to the anxieties of being crushed by a wayward stone limb. She looked the outskirts of the city up and down. In the blue gloom of the early hour, the snow seemed to give off its own haunting light. It reminded her utterly of home, in as many good ways as bad. Lots of snow was great to have around. It also meant shoveling. Lots of shoveling. Feeling like the helpful sort, Evisa gathered up a band of what should be her most potent snow-movers. Should be. They were still getting used to their abilities, but either way it was going to be a good learning experience.
"If I didn't know any better, I'd say he was calling me out, the viseghandiis." Evisa looked back at her small group and wagged a finger. "That's a bad word. Only I can say it because I'm older."
One spindly translucent figure turned her head over and made a series of tones akin to the sound of cracking glaciers. Sharp and striking, surprising of such a relatively small thing.
"No, I'm not going to tell you what it means." Evisa crossed her arms. "Maybe when you're older. Or taller, at least."
That got a bunch of indignant crackles and the small icy elemental stalked forward a few paces. Down the grooves in the shards that produced from her back like spines, a blue tinted light began to emanate. Soon, with each step the elemental took, the bigger she seemed to get. It was no illusion. The surrounding snow was drawn to her, possessed by her supernatural powers. Clumps of white ran up her legs and built up her bulk like a figurative snowball, and what a snowball it was.
Evisa whistled through her helmet, which echoed and sounded like a chirp. Learning experience was right. The exercise promised to display how the young elementals were developing their skills. The formerly-small one that Evisa decided to nickname 'Snowball' as she watched her grow was a notable sort. Snowball was the kind that didn't show the cards she was playing with. She was the kind that did not make it obvious she was even playing the game. With an ample supply of snow to work with, she was building herself a tall body that shared her spindly frame. Soon, she would be a stick-figure compliment to Bouldron, whose dark earthen tones were a stark contrast to the roaming ice.
"That's gonna freak some people out, probably. I'll handle it when it needs handling," Evisa told herself, hands on her hips. She then glanced over to the others.
"Alright, Bouldron, do your big-guy thing. Anekai, now's the time to put your fire to work. Oedon, go ahead and..."
