• Graded • Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]

Part III of "Zarik"s journey to Etzos

The Orm'del Sea is an ocean that separates Eastern and Western Idalos. It is said to have many horrors awaiting those that wish to travel through its waters.
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]



Zarik was out and then he was back.

Light flooded his vision, and he found himself in the canvas of a sail. Confused for a trill or so, he accidentally rolled out as the ship rocked from the waves. He hit the deck floor, hard, and felt a new crash of pain through his shoulder. Regardless, he managed to his feet with help of his wings. One of the lower wings had gotten crumpled during the impact against the mast, but already ether straightened it out. He heard shouts and screaming, and still dazed despite the return of his consciousness, he looked to the sea.

The Leviathan seemed to be turning back around… but still, frustratingly, alive.

His eyes narrowed at the sight. He scoffed, then flew up in a darted though more controlled fashion to join Kasoria on the quarterdeck - and apparently, Jorsie had crawled out from the hold to scream an unusual language in the bearded man’s ear. Zarik landed with a slight stumble, then looked to see Graeslin and Hazel. He did not like to see the little girl on the deck during the crash of the waves, and it soon became clear that Jorsie was to blame for this particular approach.

While he observed, ignorant as to what was going on or what Jorsie was doing or what he had Hazel say or any of it, his left eyebrow arched high when the ambassador finally explained.

Father of Becoming, first… Protean? Protreani…

Zarik glanced over the broken railing that’d come apart under his ethereal legs. He snorted in disbelief. The damn Leviathan being the first revealed mage of Becoming? A few different theories flitted about in his mind as the daze wore off, his frustration increased, and he considered the choppy waters.

“Why would anyone want to waste their magic like that?” he spoke without care. “Swimming around, battering up ships? Ancient must also mean senility. That or... yes, that is also possible.”

If he was expected to give respect to a hostile beast of a Protean… well, he wasn’t about to live up to that expectation. He knew only one other Protean, and he respected that one even less. His distaste for his shared domain of Becoming only strengthened in that moment. He wasn’t awed or startled or frightened or… he was only frustrated. The young biqaj rubbed his injured arm and muttered under his breath in Vahanic, “Os magos devem saber quando morrer.”

“So, what? Is your next plan to marry off my daughter to a monster?” he inquired Jorsie with an icy cold tone of voice. He rolled his eyes, ignored Hazel’s fearful look about at the adults. The little girl had returned to his side, and held onto the biqaj’s legging. Zarik glanced over at his initiate, who was quite busy with puking up his guts. At least it was someone else who was retching. Oddly pleasant, almost, to see another lose their insides rather than me. He shook his head, to clear his own thoughts, then winced.

Ax returned to its proper owner, he turned away from the others and faced the railing and the sea. He grabbed the wrist of his arm, slowly pulled his own limb forward and straight, then guided the rounded bone back into its socket. Tears gathered in his crimson eyes, the irises having remained red for the duration since he’d returned to consciousness. He gritted his teeth, but swallowed the pain. It wasn’t the first time he’d managed his shoulder before and he doubted it’d be the last time either. Along his exposed and scarred back, the inky tattoo flared and twisted about in various abstract designs.

Shoulder back in its place, he held onto his arm in a light cradle and turned back to face the others.

“Time to depart, perhaps,” he said in the same restrained tone, though softened. “I apologize, but if it cannot be defeated, then I would be a fool to remain. Nor can I rightly justify placing my wards any longer in such futile danger… that includes you,” he directed his gaze onto Kasoria.

“It is one thing to handle a stubborn Naerikk pirate, and even that, I did not wish to…” he sighed, skipped over that with the slight awareness of Graeslin being present, then concluded, “But this? No, no. This is too risky. I will take you back to Yaralon. Right now.”

He looked at Jorsie. “I assume you don’t care to stay and die? Go collect Oceta and we shall depart.”

word count: 766
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]


The ambassador looked over at the pirate for a moment, his hesitant expression one that might have puzzled Zarik, if he was looking. A moment later any confusion would be dispelled as to why he was hesitant. For herself, Graeslin folded her arms in resignation as Jorsie took a step forward.

"No, I will not be going; and neither should you. I will not deny that the decision to journey to Etzos was not something for which you came to me, hat in hand, begging for inclusion. But that choice WAS your own when the opportunity presented itself. And why did you make that choice? To run from a problematic situation. Now we are faced with another, one which your child may well be the key to saving all our lives. And what are you going to do about this situation? Run? Again? Leave us all far more likely to die?"

He raised his voice to cut off Zarik's protest, "YES, Yes, yes...We all know you've been held against your will. But I was the actual target of the captain's plan. Had you not been trying to slip free of Quacia unseen, you wouldn't be here. Why did you come by way of that method anyway? If you have this Dreamwalking power, why didn't you just use that to get out of Quacia?"

Now Graeslin stepped forward, surprisingly waving off Jorsie's admonishments, "No, forget it ambassador. This is one of those 'Captain-going-down-with-her-ship' things. There's no rules of honor where protecting your children go."

She looked at Zarik with no great sympathy however, as she continued, "But he's right, My Lord. We're all dead if you leave. You may well die if you stay. There's a good chance, I can't deny. But it is an absolute certainty that we die if you leave. Now you owe us nothing, I know. But I could make a play for your kids as hostages right now. Many would say there's no rules where self-preservation are concerned either you know. You're going to see plenty of that where you're going. I've had my share of experience with that city. Best be prepared."

There was a surge of tension as eyes flashed from Zarik, to his kids, to Graeslin, to her crew, to Kas, to Jorsie and back. A tired smile actually warmed the Captain's face, "But I will not stop you. It is no exaggeration for me to say that you are doing nothing short of leaving us to die. But you go right ahead. take the Raggedy Man and your kids with you. I will not survive at the expense of children's lives. But before you go, tell me honestly...Hasn't this been kind of fun?" She looked down at the Hazel's face, "Kind of an adventure?"

Zarik looked to be simply waiting for everyone to finish their bids, so he would only have to say 'No' once. Jorsie had looked to have taken a small bit of offense a moment earlier and now cut back in. "Now with all due respect, Captain, and though this may undercut any reconsideration Lord Venora may be currently entertaining, I have to say, our chances are not totally void if he leaves. You cut me off. I happen to know a great deal more about Protreani's history, and this ploy with the girl was just one of many I can attempt."

Graeslin exhaled profoundly, "And the first one that fails makes all the others tremendously less likely to succeed. I mean, take Lord Zarik here for example. I happen to feel that, ultimately, I have treated him and his kids pretty well overall. But the initial impression colored all our future interactions. He no doubt felt compelled to hold back information about his skills. I then, responded as I think anyone would who has been lied to. And things only got worse from there."

She stopped the third person references to the man standing right there and turned back to Jorsie. "You see, once this creature, this 'Protreenee', who you say has the intellect of a man...once he realizes the first hint of deceit, it will make him all the more ready to assume the worst. It is in our nature to do so."

Jorsie was nodding as she said this, "I know. I will have to be very careful. But part of that can be covered by the changes that even the Ancient Tongue underwent in past centuries. I can chalk up a great deal to mistranslations."

"IF he gives you chance to even make that excuse." The Captain countered. She turned back to Zarik. "No. You should go. Jorsie seems to want to stay. I guess he wants to be the guy that tricks the big, bad, ancient mage. As for me, I would like you to remember me not as an enemy, but as a...worthy adversary?...perhaps? The recurring villain in a grand tale."

She grimaced suddenly with recall of the situation, "Then again, I don't think I'll be recurring much after this."
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]

"I say you grab yer kid an' we fuck off back through the way we arrived."

A row of heads swiveled round to the profanity-riddled voice that didn't so much cut the air as gurgled through it. Kasoria swilling sea water around in his mouth then spat it out, green and brown bile mixing with the water. Fates, but it still tasted like a dead donkey's ballsack. He looked around at watching figures and saw many expressions. Shock. Annoyance. Disgust. Wry surprise. But no one emotion was enough to stir anything but the bleak, bitter chuckle he gave afterwards.

"What? Thinkin' the Raggedy Man'd stay fer a fuckin' last stand, like inna fuckin' histories? Dun be fuckin' soft. Cap'n over there said it 'erself: we're dead if we stay here."

"I had heard," Ambassador Jorsie said with as much disdain as his breeding could manage. "That the Raggedy Man of Etzos was a killer of rare skill and-"

"Killer, yer lordship," Kasoria snapped, managing one swaying step forwards, still using his ax like a walking stick. "That's the important fuckin' word. Noda warrior, noda soldier, noda fuckin' hero. A killer. Killer's stay yeh in the back an' fuck off back to the shadows 'fore the guards come runnin'. An' even if I was one, there's brave an' then there's fuckin' stupid."

He spread his arm as wide as he dared. One sweep from this distance still didn't manage to cover even half of the vast, blubbery mass that was idly circling them. Swells the height of houses were pouring from the creature, shrinking down by the time they reached the ship but still enough to rock them all.

"That ain't a buncha' scallies or bandits I got the nod t'cut apart fer coin. That's one thing. That is a fucking' mountain that can heal itself.. and has a fuckin' brain behind it!" Something resembling fear crossed his face as he recalled the scant, hideous moments when he joined minds with the creature. Were those even the right words? Mind, or magics? Creature, or man? Just two more questions he'd never have answered. He shook his head. "You... Youse didn't see what was in there. This ain't somethin' mindless. It's been killin' folk comin' t'kill it fer centuries. You used yer neat little trick and aye, it bought us a moment or two. But that... thing won't be fooled forever. An' the moment it works that out, we're dead."

The Raggedy Man straightened up to his full... less than impressive height. He snapped out a dirty fingernail as he counted off each point.

"So! We can't kill it, not before it kills us. We can't reason wiv' it, cuz believe me, it's fuckin' starkers as it is. Trick it? Aye, that's worked. Once. An' as soon as it realizes we don't have its fuckin' woman. We can't run from it, cuz as fast as this tub a' shite is, this cunt can outrun it in a heartbeat."

He shrugged his shoulders. It almost looked as if he were trying to convince them, not just justify his own choice... then he wondered why he was even bothering to try and do either. Almost as an answer to the thought, he looked at Zarik.

"Can't fight, or sail away, or bargain, or trick it. That means if we stay, we die. You, mean, yer kids, the fuckin' lot of us. Ain't no point t'that, boy. An' there're few things worse than dyin' fer fuck all."

"You coward," Jorsie managed to hiss, affront to all the nobility of his upbringing unable to keep his voice in check. Kasoria turned slowly to face the grimacing Ambassador. "I can do this! I know I can! My knowledge, my mastery of lore and languages, this could work! And you want to-"

"Aye! I fuckin' do!" Kasoria snarled back, and suffice to say, he had quite a lot more growl in his voice than the Citadel-raised highborn. "An' a break from now? I'll still be a coward, but one on dry fuckin' land. You, on the other hand, will be in that thing's guts, slowly turning into its next fuckin' dump!"

Kasoria turned to Graeslin. He shrugged, the glimmer of an apology in his eyes. He owed her naught but of them all, it was her life he had the most kinship for. He didn't see anything... too personal in her expression. She knew the game. She knew sellswords. Fighting overwhelming odds was not in their nature. He lowered his voice a touch when he spoke to her.

"C'mon. Youse can get another ship. Fer fucks'ake, woman-"

"Just in case you're going deaf," Captain Graeslin said with cold, deliberate slowness. "I said that this is one of those 'Captain-going-down-with-her-ship' things. You think me the kind of woman to change my mind?"

Kasoria did not, and his silence spoke to that. He turned to Zarik and shook his head. His Spark was bubbling within him, bruised and battered but... still usable. Fates, but he didn't want to do that again. It was like communing with an ocean or chatting with the suns, being joined to that monstrosity. He had an awful feeling that if they tried again, to maintain this charade, the Leviathan would crush him like a giant would a china cup. Not really meaning to, but unable to stop itself, too. And he had a worse feeling that if they did try this insane fucking idea, it would be him they'd be using as the mouthpiece.

"Time t'go, mate."
word count: 968

Appearance

  • Habitually dressed in boots, breeches, tunic, and cloak.
  • Long hair down to the shoulders, usually swept back or in a rough ponytail
  • Prefers a trimmed beard and mustache

Mutations

  • Star-shaped scar on each palm.
  • Air around him seems to thicken and become more turbulent the closer a person gets to him.
  • Pitch black eyes, from tear ducts to the pupils.
  • Arms from shoulder to palms appear as if heavy chains are wrapped around them.
  • Wisps of black smoke constantly drifts around his body, forming the rough outline of a cloak. The more agitated he becomes, the thicker the layers get.
    Note: the torch-motif medallion Kasoria wears negates the visible effects of this mutation.
  • Roughly circular pattern across breastbone, constantly transforming, and resettling
  • Sunken, closed eyes in the back of hands; they open when stared at
  • Skin takes on the tone and quality of whatever material he's just Transmuted
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Llyr Llywelyn
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]



From the ambassador to the captain to the killer to the child… Zarik looked to each of them and though he did not entirely want to, he did hear each with little interruption. His shoulder hurt, it ached terribly, but so did the sting of Jorsie’s needling reminders. He bowed his head, as if slapped, rather than confront the ambassador head-on about the matter. Meekly, he said, “This isn’t the same thing…”

But wasn’t it eerily similar? He’d left behind three revealed mages, all who knew his face and name… well, what was adding the Father of Becoming to that lot? Jorsie’s attempts to shame him landed in certain vulnerable spots that Zarik hadn’t attended to yet. He still felt acute heartache and immense worry that he hadn’t made the right choice. Perhaps he should’ve stayed in Quacia. Tried to work things out. Maybe he’d overreacted and… no, no… he couldn’t allow himself to go down that line of thought again. He knew it wasn’t that. There was no reasoning with the revealed mind, so detached from the reality of Idalos… and yet, Jorsie thought he could reason with - if the legend was true - the eldest revealed of them all. A bestial monster...

From what Kasoria described, it sounded as if the Leviathan hosted nothing but primal insanity mixed with arcane intelligence. Was that what revelation was? He felt his guts writhe and now it was his turn to move to the railing. He felt Hazel grab onto his leg, but he retched over the side of the ship anyway. There wasn’t any food in his stomach, but he expelled a sickly bile all the same. Quick and done, barely long enough for a few blinks, then he wiped his mouth off with the back of his hand and returned to the… negotiation.

For it seemed as if Jorsie was trying to make a deal with the others, those he couldn’t guilt into it… a deal to convince them that they wouldn't all die. That they would not all perish under the Leviathan’s bloodthirst. He heard the momentary mention of the dreamwalking and winced.

“I… it is complicated… Y-you don’t understand,” his voice trailed off when Graeslin, of all people, stepped in to speak with Jorsie. She subtly suggested that if she wanted, she could use the children to her advantage. Though she framed it that she wouldn't, he felt the same grate of annoyance at her angle.

No matter how much he disliked the shame that Jorsie drew forth or the annoyance that Graeslin managed to coax, could he truly leave an entire ship’s worth of people to assuredly die? No. No, he couldn’t. But he didn’t want Hazel to die either… nor Kasoria, who he’d only just gotten to trust him enough for something like crossing from Yaralon through the Veil.

He considered what he could do… he thought about it while Kasoria spoke with the others. Zarik bit at his nails, chewing away at his thumbnail. He looked at Hazel, stopped chewing on his nails. Graeslin tried to speak to Hazel in such an auntly fashion. Hazel, however, whimpered and hid behind Zarik’s leg. She was far too young, and sheltered from her island life in a fishing village, to understand how the pirate queen could consider it fun.

Zarik felt a wave of exhaustion. He blocked Graeslin from his adopted daughter in a protective stance. He closed his eyes, while Jorsie talked with the Captain. Fates, how he wanted to tell them both to shut up and let him think. Just a moment of quiet… that’s all he wanted. He almost longed for the suffocation of his senses from a while ago.

“For your trickery, do you not require my…” he paused and looked at Kasoria. Everyone kept calling him The Raggedy Man, though he didn't know why. His exhaustion showed in his pale face and the dark circles under his eyes. It’d been hardly a break ago that he’d shed both tears and blood in that small room in Yaralon, in his vulnerable request for his initiate’s help. “…him to speak with the beast again?”

He didn’t bother to defend or fight against either ambassador or captain.

“I say you grab yer kid an' we fuck off back through the way we arrived.”

A hint of a bemused smile glanced on Zarik’s lips. It only remained as he observed the diminutive, bearded man tell off Jorsie with all the grace of a drunken Lair crawler. As vicariously as he enjoyed the crass man’s response to the ambassador, his smile faded when the subject turned to what Kasoria had linked with - what he’d seen.

Hope dwindled as Kasoria listed off that the leviathan had no reason, as suspected but now confirmed. Zarik ran a hand over his wet hair and then covered his eyes to shade himself from the others while he returned to his thoughts.

So, the tall blond mage was busy hiding behind his own hand when Kasoria actually looked at him.

He got the feeling of eyes on him soon though, lowered his hand and listened to the “Raggedy Man” who sounded the most sensible of the lot. Well, of course he was. He was Zarik’s chosen initiate, after all. He wouldn’t have chosen any old putz out in Emea. He knew, as intimately as walking around in someone’s mind, that the Etzori man was a clever sort. Though certainly, he had no idea about the reputation from how Jorsie and Graeslin spoke toward him, but he’d suspected enough from before that he didn’t bother to feel as surprised as he might’ve otherwise in a peaceful time.

Zarik turned away from the three, held Hazel’s hand, and went to the quarterdeck’s railing. His wings flitted, as if to rid themselves of excess water, the one still working its ether to fix the crunched gossamer from when he’d collided with the mast. Zarik watched the waves churn past, still affected by the Leviathan’s massive motions through the water.

He remained, almost as if in contrast to the sea, completely motionless. The inky tattoo on his back gathered in abstract designs that fluidly changed in chaotic splotches of patterns - the hint of his thoughts as they buzzed through his exhausted mind. Tears gathered in his eyes. A couple droplets rolled along his cheeks. He near trembled, and likely would have if it weren’t for the little girl’s hand in his. It seemed more she was holding his hand than the other way around.

"Time t'go, mate."

“I…” he grimaced and whispered a couple swear words in Vahanic under his breath. “I can’t.”

The biqaj turned around to face them again, then said, “I can’t… leave them all to die. Can’t do it.” He shrugged and then rubbed his forefinger and thumb roughly against his eyes to dry the tears of exhaustion. His voice weakened. “It w-wouldn’t be… right.”

“I promised you I'd give you three tries,” added Zarik with a look toward Graeslin. “You've got two more. If those both fail, then...”

He looked at Kasoria and nodded. “We'll go. You might be a killer, but I'm not. We didn't seek out the Leviathan, and perhaps we might use that somehow if it aims to destroy those who hunt it... if we made it clear that we're not hunting them? Unless you have yet another secret that would shed light as to why it is your ship being attacked, Captain Graeslin?”

word count: 1303
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]


The trials passed with the sense that the correct choices had been made. Graeslin raised everyone's spirits with the assurance that they would be in sight of the coast within 5 trials. This went far towards reducing the lingering hostilities among those aboard.

Jorsie appeared to be acquitting himself well, as he'd had two more "conversations" with the Leviathan, apparently providing satisfactory responses to each puzzle or inquiry posed him. Graeslin had come out of her brooding funk, which stemmed from the confrontation with Zarik's question as to why the beast seemed to have a grudge against her.

Initially, she shrugged, chalking it up to a best guess that being the only ship that had repeatedly escaped it, she was now marked prey. Zarik understandably wanted to know why she had not given this detail up. She responded with some heat, asking why she owed him some obligation to wrack her brains about such rarely important details for someone who was nothing more than a glorified stowaway.

It was not a detail that was to be consistently at the forefront of her thought, she snapped. And after all, she had advised him to leave anyway. But there was some way in which she avoided eye contact as she said it that prompted further pressure. Finally, she acknowledged that it was the orb that Oberan had stolen from her. It had allowed her artifact to enable them to escape the creature several times. She'd been able to empty its charge to accomplish a 'blink" of a good fifty miles over such a flat surface.

But without the compounding orb, now in the possession of Oberan, the ship would be lucky to get five ship lengths out of it. Certainly not enough to escape. Zarik was not convinced, and she could tell, and continued to avoid his stare. He pointed out that this was not adding anything to the overall proposal that this was all nothing more than a contest between the beast and her ship, and that the beast was not being a "good sport" about it.

Jorsie seemed to suddenly awaken to the conversation and began asking probing questions about the orb and what accompanying artifice it was aligned to. He seemed to have some historical knowledge about such an item, and did not bode for good news. The captain finally broke down and acknowledged that the entire Rupturing artifact had been stolen from a cache of such things bound for an arcanum in Ne'Haer, and that the story was that it had actually belonged to this Protreani originally. But that she couldn't give it back without the portion Oberan had stolen.

She swore up and down that she did not know its origins when she got hold of it, only that it was either powerful magic or powerful riches. Either way, she was not going to let such an opportunity pass her by. It was what had started her on her path, and she had no regrets for herself, though her eyes held an unmistakable hint of guilt when they looked at anyone else on board. This had blown over now several trials ago, but everyone understood a little better just what all was at work here.


They say the third time's the charm. This does not state what manner of charm is involved. is there such a thing as a Bad Luck charm?

Jorsie was again assaulted mentally with Protreani's insistence that he account for some discrepancy in his declaration of the child Hazel being the beast's reincarnated love. This time things did not go his way. He battled with responses in the Ancient tongue. He was clearly well versed in whatever he was saying, but the look on his face showed that the Leviathan was not accepting it this time.

Back and forth they roared, the man shouting down the storm. But this time the storm did not abate. The ship rocked as the the beast swelled the surface alongside, a tentacle forming suddenly and slashing across the railing to wrap Jorsie in its coils.

It was to the ambassador's credit that he did not crumple in terror, but he stiffened oddly and his voice changed in accent. It was an odd accent, as the beast spoke his dialect through the voice box and mouth not normally used to such inflections.

Jorsie's eyes stared blankly as his voice cried out involuntarily, his words those of the Leviathan, "Liars! I have known all along. You have given the accounts found only in the history books. Found in the documents and records of the great Historian Pollard. You assumed them all to be true. But one who truly knew my love would know them false!"

Jorsie took a pose of one berating an idiot, "Who do you think Pollard sat with as he recorded them? Who do you think he interviewed for his verification of truly ancient history? Who would he go to that he would know had seen events transpire? And who do you think might put small discrepancies in his account to reveal future liars?"

Laughter shook both Jorsie from within and the ship from without as the beast raged, "There is more to history than what is in the books. History is written by the victors, who will color all to their honor and reputation. You learn your lesson too late!"

But this time, instead of battering the ship, which had already adopted its metallic sheath, he dispersed into thousands of rays. The water boiled around the ship, then smoothed in an massive oval which completely surrounded and encased the area where it floated. The water rose and washed over a new-forming wall of something which gave definition to the boundaries of the oval. The ship was trapped within its midst.

The crew went into what defensive posture they could, but again the damage they could do was of such insignificance that many fell to despair. The walls of the boundary began to build higher and higher as the rays flew from the surface to bond and assimilate the flesh of the beast being assembled around the vessel. The best efforts of the crew could only eliminate one ray in a thousand as the beast assembled itself.

Jorsie was released by the tentacle and got hold of himself long enough to accost the captain, "I don't get it...What is this? Why do this? This isn't going to kill any of us. If it achieves its full shape, there will be many trials' worth of air inside. We'll have time to think of something."

Graeslin spun in sneering fury, tears shimmering in her eyes, "And what great ideas have we come up with so far, Hmm?! What do we do when it completes its form around us and dives? Did you think of that? What do we do when we're a thousand feet below the surface and it opens its fucking mouth, huh? What kills us first, eh? Water pressure or drowning? Which do you prefer, ambassador?"

Realization struck the diplomat as she spoke and he paled visibly, staggering to grasp the rail, the slow assembly of the beast's form suddenly taking on the sense of a tomb.

word count: 1219
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]

Kasoria was awoken by the floor smashing into his face. This was, all things considered, not a bad way to start the day.

"Fuckin' cuntspawn shitheaded..."

Which wasn't to say it didn't prompt him to vomit oaths for a few moments as he righted himself. Graeslin's ship rocked and swayed under his feet, in a way not natural even for a ship in stormy seas. By the time he'd got back up and found his weapon belt, he knew what was causing such chaos. He worked his way out his cabin and down the hallway, trying to match his steps to the swaying of the ship. Crewmen were running around him, either ignoring or scowling at the little man... but not directly touching him. He made a note of that, with some hidden satisfaction. Then he got to the deck, and heard words come from Jorsie's throat that were not his own, and felt far less confident.

Fuck. Jig's up.

Few had been treated to the sight of the Raggedy Man showing unabashed fear. Mainly because few things could inspire it. But the sight of Jorsie used as a puppet, less even than a messenger, before being tossed aside by a tentacle as tall as a townhouse... that would do it. The Leviathan, Protreani , whatever the fuck this creature was nowatrials, made its position clear. It had been tricking them the whole time they thought they'd been doing the same. Laying traps in its own histories, questions and details that could alert it to any mischief attempted against it. Mayhap it had drawn out their voyage together for so many trials simply out of whimsy, before finally crushing their hopes along with their vessel and bodies?

Possibly. Must get boring, living forever.

"I ain't gonna say it," he said to Zarik, as he rushed up to the commotion with everyone else of note... and his fucking brats. "But... y'know."

Told you so.

Kasoria listened in silence as Ambassador and Captain traded words. Listened, but did not watch. His eyes were fixed on the sea around them, and how it was rapidly not sea anymore. It was a thick sludge of spasming creatures, countless thousands of manta rays, covering the surface like an oil slick. But they were not mindless, nor idle. They seemed to be all squirming together. Knitting together in an oval around the ship. Becoming more solid and, even as he watched, taller. Broader. Growing sides. As if Protreani was forming himself into a massive bowl around and above the ship, like trapping a spider under a cup.

Then we go down, like she says... and he lets the water in.

He thought furiously. He would not allow himself to die here. Not after surviving so much, from mages and mortal enemies to pirates and the Fates themselves. He screwed shut his eyes and thought. They couldn't move. That was the biggest problem. So, they had to escape. The Orb! He'd heard them arguing about it for trials. Some sort of device that could... Rupture the ship, basically. Send the whole massive wooden lot flying through a portal and land miles away. Only it couldn't anymore. Only a few hundred feet. Fates, but that would be enough.

And then what? It'll reform into a monster, start chasing, and we'll be fucked all over again.

We need more distance. And a shield.

"I've got it... I've got it!"

Graeslin, Jorsie, and a few others turned to him as he exclaimed the words. More than a few looked doubtful. Kasoria was not a thinker, he was a swinger. Of steel and iron, that is. He was given a job, and he accomplished it. His skills with mortal instruments were superior to everyone on that boat, to be sure, but he was... a rather linear fellow. This was mages and monsters and magic and shite that even an Abrogator of his level couldn't think his way around. Raw magical might wouldn't be enough, here. Then again, he seemed to know that.

"You-" he jabbed a finger at Graeslin "-yeh got that Orb, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know it's only good few hundred feet, but that'd be enough t'get us outta this oval, right? Kay. So..." He paused again gathering his thoughts. "We wait until the... bowl thing, is nearly done. That's when it'll have had t'use most of its strength an'... I dunno, body. Then we activate the Orb. Rupture right outta here, onto the sea, pointed towards land."

Graeslin opened her mouth t'speak, and Kasoria's hand shot up. He wasn't done, and needed to get it out before his mind sputtered entirely.

"Yeah, I know, it'll follow us. That's... that's where I'll come in." Again, he looked briefly afraid. Not of what was out there, but what he would have to do. "I can use me magic, make an Exill... Exit... whatever, it's a big fuckin' barrier! Youse get us out, an' I'll put it up around that fuckin' thing as best I can. I'll hold it there, while you fill that orb back up."

He pointed at Zarik now, who looked as shocked as everyone else.

"I dunno how the thing works. Don't have time t'learn, either. But I know it's missin' something. A'right, so find somethin' new t'put in it, an' sharpish! We're in sight a' the coast but we're still most of a trial away. We need to get there sooner. I can hold that Exxy Barrier thing few a few breaks, keep the creature from gettin' to the boat. Any longer than that an it'll kill me. So, youse lot need t'bang yer fuckin' clever heads together an' get it workin'!"

There was a heavy silence that fell across the group like mud. Broken only by chattering crewman readying useless ballistae and the hideous, sucking sounds of thousands of slick animals mashing into fresh forms. Kasoria swallowed and kept looking at Zarik.

"An' if yeh can't? We need t'fuckin' go. Use yer magic, yer Dreamwalking, an' get us out. Cuz that thing ain't gonna stop 'til we're dead. No more tricks, no more games. We either outrun it, or we vanish." He laughed bleakly and paused to squint at the smudge of dark land Protreani's living wall was rapidly covering up. "Personally, I'll see if I can swim fer it, if youse wanna be all fuckin' noble an' go down wi' the ship..."

Hope it don't come to that, he thought, then mentally sighed and remembered what he'd just offered to do. But even if it don't... this is gonna leave a mark on you, old man.
word count: 1154

Appearance

  • Habitually dressed in boots, breeches, tunic, and cloak.
  • Long hair down to the shoulders, usually swept back or in a rough ponytail
  • Prefers a trimmed beard and mustache

Mutations

  • Star-shaped scar on each palm.
  • Air around him seems to thicken and become more turbulent the closer a person gets to him.
  • Pitch black eyes, from tear ducts to the pupils.
  • Arms from shoulder to palms appear as if heavy chains are wrapped around them.
  • Wisps of black smoke constantly drifts around his body, forming the rough outline of a cloak. The more agitated he becomes, the thicker the layers get.
    Note: the torch-motif medallion Kasoria wears negates the visible effects of this mutation.
  • Roughly circular pattern across breastbone, constantly transforming, and resettling
  • Sunken, closed eyes in the back of hands; they open when stared at
  • Skin takes on the tone and quality of whatever material he's just Transmuted
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Llyr Llywelyn
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]



The trials passed, and Jorsie’s plans seemed to be working. Graeslin assured everyone that they were close to harbor. Zarik, however, barely managed to keep a polite façade. He fell into a quiet, brooding attitude as soon as he’d made the decision to remain on the ship… but while Graeslin had eventually come out of her own brooding funk, the young man hadn’t lifted from his. Whenever he wasn’t asleep, he kept near Hazel and refused to be separated from her. If Jorsie required her for his trickery, then Zarik was right beside her.

He wasn’t hostile, in any sense of the word, but he was detached. It was obvious to anyone who had an inkling of psychological understanding that Zarik was preparing himself. Fostered apathy for the possible moment when he might need to abandon the ship and all on it. Thus, the reason why he kept himself stuck to Hazel’s side was clearly so he could bring her with.

Graeslin sharing the full story about the artifact that this Oberan had stolen from her didn't help much. The whole thing put Zarik in an even worse slump of mood. Several trials later, he still was no closer to what felt like a possible solution if it came to it. Only Jorsie’s trickery kept things stabilized and hopeful.

Zarik despised few other things as much as he scorned the internal feeling of helplessness.

And he felt it acutely in those trials.

On the third attempt of Jorsie’s to speak with the Leviathan, things took a turn for the worse. He’d been near for the other two and noticed the difference in the ambassador’s expressions though he didn’t understand the ancient language… although he’d picked up a few words in the past several trials by listening and a brief conversation with Jorsie in which he had tried to find amends but only ended up frustrated by the Etzori ambassador by the end of it.

The storm worsened, the ship rocked, and a tentacle assaulted with a grab of Jorsie.

Zarik immediately took hold of Hazel, lifted her in his arms, and retreated from the ship railing. He went to press his back against the nearest hold that led elsewhere to the ship quarters. His wings fluttered. Hazel buried her face against his shoulder, scared by the sight of Jorsie as it was. Breath shallow, Zarik tried to comfort Hazel as he smoothed her hair out.

A false history? False accounts? Zarik realized what the Leviathan was saying. His eyes, lit up with crimson hue, widened from the realization. Historian records about legends couldn’t be counted on, how would they have gotten their information? What were their references? How much did history get warped by the passage of time and transfer of events into tales. He understood this from his brief dabbling when he’d started the spread of propaganda among the islands for advantage of the populace.

How could Jorsie had been so careless?

Not only that, but Zarik also realized – in those fleeting trills of his mind working while he listened to the puppeted speech of Jorsie – that the Leviathan had planted such discrepancies. He’d planned to live this long?! For the first time since Kasoria had made mention of the intelligence of the Protean… Zarik believed it.

He got mesmerized by his realization and the laughter. If it weren’t for Hazel squeezing the air out of him with her arms around his neck, he might’ve been totally dazed in awed observation.

It was a lesson. Zarik absorbed it, almost greedily. The threat of the comment flew past him. He wanted to learn more from this ancient being, now.

Momentarily easing Hazel’s arms, he gasped a breath and watched as the rays started around the ship. His eyes went from crimson to amber in color, though lit in the entire orbs with trails of light that flickered around his dark lashes. He stepped away from the safety of the wall, and levitated a few inches. Hazel still in his arms, he looked up to the sky where the rays were headed toward.

He didn’t appear afraid. He didn’t feel afraid. This time, Zarik was too fascinated.

Something walled them in, trapped them, and a slight smile hinted at the corners of Zarik’s chapped lips.

He heard the shouts of the crew, the rush to do anything they could, the rising panic when it seemed there weren’t many options – if any.

Then he heard Kasoria, “I ain’t gonna say it, but… y’know.”

Zarik barely acknowledged him. Other than a swift glance in consideration whether to hand Hazel to the Raggedy Man or not… he decided not to. Instead, he flitted back to the wall and set Hazel down. He handed her a rope, tied to a sturdy iron loop attached to the wall. The biqaj told his adopted daughter to keep a hold on it, but he didn’t leash her to it – knowing full well how that was a recipe for disaster if the ship jerked the child too forcibly. Better for her to let go and fall overboard than to get her spine snapped.

Nearby, he heard the confusion of Jorsie and the anger of Graeslin.

He left Hazel's side then. The biqaj had started to raise, leaving the ground of the deck, but he paused when he heard his initiate give an uncharacteristically enthusiastic shout:

“I’ve got it… I’ve got it!”

Zarik hovered in the air, looked at the older man, and stared at him. Though he only extended a sliver of patience for the abrogant to explain, due to the pressing nature of time, he didn’t have any doubt that something of worth might be said. The biqaj believed Kasoria to be clever, and he extended confidence for his initiate’s ability to have sincerely come up with a strategy without a hint of sarcasm about it.

The Orb to rupture… and… put up a barrier?

Zarik lowered a couple inches, closer to the deck near Kasoria. He hummed in a thoughtful sound. The blond kept his tongue still, however, until he was certain that the man was finished speaking – only for the Etzori to point directly at him. He blinked, his expression more of demure patience than shock or confusion, though a slight furrow of concern deepened on his dark brows.

It was becoming increasingly difficult to keep from speaking. Mage to mage, he didn’t like the possibility for his dreamwalking initiate. Even if it worked and got everyone else out safe.

“A few breaks?!” There was the shock, in an upset tremor to his southern-accented voice. Zarik’s eyes lost their warmth and a cool ice blue gathered in his irises while he stared at Kasoria and ignored the chaos that occurred around them. He spoke in a tone as if chiding a reckless child. “You cannot hold something like that for a few breaks, against a Protean! Let alone the first Protean! Forget death, you’ll overstep and might lose yourself because of it!”

Zarik shook his head. He rubbed his scarred forehead, then said, “I could maybe help channel the ether? I don’t know if it’s possible, but I was able to with… maybe I could with you too. If we could establish some sort of link to one another, maybe between our sparks…”

“Or… I can… I could try to transfer the Protean’s ether…” he realized as he looked at the rays suddenly. He insisted, “I don’t know what to do with artifacts! I can’t whip up a second orb or fragment or… It doesn’t work like that! Ma-maybe… well, if anything, I can distract possible attention from you while you prepare the first charge, Graeslin, and you prepare for the barrier, and then… then I’ll try to help regulate your ether, Kas, if you need it.”

It wasn’t a trick. It wasn’t a game. But Zarik turned to Jorsie next. He clapped a hand on the ambassador’s shoulder and said, “Tell me how to say in the language to the Leviathan that I am a Becomer, that I am hunted… hunted by another Protean. One who might be even stronger than him, with greater totems. Tell me the words, now.”

He winced, uncertain if such a thing would appeal to the revealed mage – difficult to discern the ambitions of such things, especially one that was so old – but Zarik had realized during the puppeted speech just how lucid the Leviathan truly was. Far more than he’d wagered from what Kasoria had said and the other conversations, for it had seemed easy to trick the beast and as such, Zarik assumed the beast was small-minded and the intelligence eroded by many eras rather than expanded. Now he realized it was the latter, and he felt foolish to fall for something he knew plenty about – acting dumb.

As soon as he got the correct words of the ancient language from Jorsie, he repeated them in his head, then flew up to the crow’s nest of the ship. The young mage held onto the wooden mast, and he shouted over the crash of the waves and the commotion of the sailors, in the ancient tongue. He could only hope he said it well enough to be understood by the creature. He repeated the words, if only to focus attention away from the others while they followed their strategies.

His mutated ether-laden legs slid out from his spine, through the back of his tunic with ease, shaped similar to a beetle. He used the sharp points to skitter up to the very top of the mast. He placed his actual feet at the top, close enough to touch the Leviathan.

With just a jump and flight of his wings, he could grab the creature, take a bite from it... devour and unleash and attempt to become whatever the Protean was. He could, but he wasn't sure if he should...

word count: 1702
Please — consider me a dream.
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]


The die had been cast; "snake-eyes" the result. Though the expenditure of ether must be monumental, the Leviathan did not show any signs of concern over completing its task. Jorsie and Graeslin did not bother with any further bickering; resignation of their coming end made pointless the crowning of a victor in their debate. Ideas proposed by anyone were heard out, but there was always a point where stammering over the inability to overcome some aspect of it, derailed the notion.

Zarik's expressed idea regarding Kasoria's plan was shared by most everyone, with varying degrees of wild insistence that it was all they had, as well as promises to raise a pint in his honor; for it was given that he would die in the process. These same folks had little knowledge of why he would make this sacrifice for them - people that at best were to be considered antagonists, if not outright enemies - but they were all too ready to accept it nonetheless.

Zarik's counter-proposal raised a few eyebrows, and nodded a number of heads, in desperate hope. Jorsie did not veil his skepticism, but like everyone else, he had no better idea. As he recited the ancient terminology, Zarik did his best to copy it. It was clearly going to take a number of tries to get it down. It would not be realized by most of those present right away, but they had been given a crash course in the Ancient Tongue these last several trials. Not the rudiments that a textbook would explore first, but enough that those rudiments would be more easily grasped if they were to survive to take a formal course in some academy.

This became far more doubtful as the Leviathan again gave voice to his boastful promise of doom. From a half-torso of a mer-like figure, some totem from long ago, risen out of the still-assembling flesh, his voice cut through the air with unnatural ease. "Do not sully the old tongue with your lies. Stronger than ME? You expect me to believe that? Oh dear, a Protean comes to strike me down!" Even for such an ancient beast, the tones of sarcasm were unmistakable.

The mer avatar laughed wrathfully, "I was a mere 'Protean' five hundred ARCS ago, boy! And I have grown since then! I have been over every last league of these oceans an hundred times, and I can assure you there are no Proteans that do not FLEE from me, land or sea! Still, for one so young, it was a worthy try, one that might have fooled a coral-brained idiot with no backlog of the whole world's cultural treacheries to look back on. Yes, indeed, a very worthy ploy." What seemed at first to be a display of some measure of respect sank quickly to sneering disdain.

Jorsie suddenly sagged in realization of what this Mer form suggested, "He must have the Mer telepathy. He clearly has a Mer as a totem. He's probably been reading our thoughts this whole time!" The half-torso of the Mer figure, extending from the not-yet-complete wall of assembling flesh, smirked in response.

"Why lower myself to read the gibberish frothing at the mouths of such brains?" the beast boomed. "Now accept your death, and give Vri my greeting when you see him."

Graeslin suddenly cried out for mercy to be granted to her crew and passengers, swearing that she would ask for none herself, and that she would gladly give up the artifact even now had not the key orb been stolen by Oberan. The beast deafened her to silence with a reminders of opportunities she had had in the past. Her head hung low as she sank to her knees in tears. "Bother me no more with your excuses and your begging. There are far worse ways to die!"

The Mer figure sank back into the ever-rising wall of flesh, which was now beyond the strictly vertical point, beginning to build in overhead. The crew were hugging and slapping each other in last gestures of tearful camaraderie, some kicking open casks of ale and indulging as if there was no tomorrow. Which there was not likely to be.

The wind took on some odd tones as it whistled across a steadily closing hole above the masts. A few men had already tried to climb the mast in hopes of jumping out onto the flesh above. But tentacles sprang from the inner face and struck them down to hit the deck once again. The light grew steadily dimmer inside as less and less sunlight was able to find its way in. Everyone looked at each other in hopeless resignation, a few promising to cut their way out once the beastie completed its self-construction.

As an Abrogator, Kasoria may have had an odd sense of activating his replicating powers without knowledge of doing so. Yet everyone else felt it to. But the Raggedy Man would know an instant later that it was not his magic that was in effect. All others as well felt an indescribable sense of being overlaid by a second reality that matched the current situation, then having the original reality stripped away and dispersed.

Eyes blinked, and brows furrowed in curiosity. People looked at each other with the question in their eyes for a several trills before someone actually asked, "Did you feel that?" They did not know that the effects of the collapse of Emea had just washed over them. More puzzled expressions formed on faces as some yet-unnoticed change had clearly occurred. They looked around, uncertain.

Another nameless crewman suddenly broke the befuddlement. He pointed up in wonder, "It's stopped! The beast has stopped...building...itself!" A excited surge of hope was tempered by the thought that it might be some sick mockery by the Leviathan. The bits passed. More and more of the crew started to celebrate with wild cheering and dancing. No further assembly went on. There were even some indications of bleeding coming from the edges of the construction. The rays still leaped up, but there was no further assimilation into the flesh of the Leviathan.

A shudder ran through the gargantuan form, shaking the ship along with it. "What is this? What have you done?" The beast roared. "How have you blocked me from the ether. Tell me and I will let you live. Do not forget, I can still dive and drown you all." But there was new tone in the beast's voice. The unmistakable quaver of fear.

Jorsie made a silent wave to bring everyone to the rail. He pointed down to show where a few organs were visible, one of them pulsing in massive, steady throbs. "He can not finish constructing himself! Something has blocked him from further use of his magic. He might yet kill us with a dive, but I think we can kill him too!"
word count: 1169
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Kasoria
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]

He would remember that moment, arcs afterwards. As if it were mere moments ago, like a wound cut fresh and never scarring. The world did not tilt on its axis. The sky did not fall, nor the sea boil, nor sound and fury deafen them all. But everyone on the vessel felt it; beyond them, all in the world were stirred by the... passing. The magically-inclined, of course, felt it far more keenly. Especially those using their gifts.

Kasoria gasped as what felt like a wave washed over him. When it swept on, he felt his Spark go with it. At least, the sound of it. The touch under his muscles, the caress of it against the base of his skull. A well of power, always there, always ready to be used. But with that wave, with that sudden, unseen drenching, that vanished. There was no other word for it. The mage staggered against the side of the vessel, thoughts of imminent destruction forgotten for a moment. Not only would he die here, he would die... well... as he had been before, it seemed.

Where... What was that?

Then the creature bellowed again, only it was not threats and sneering arrogance soaking its words. Kasoria blinked as he heard something he recognized immediately. As only a man like him could, who had heard it from a thousand lips across his life. He looked over the railing and into the mass of churning flesh, now seeming to bleed the rays away from it. The tiny beasts frolicked and leaped and swam but did not join the Leviathan. The gargantuan creature was holed in places, gouges ripped out of its flesh. Wet, pulsing things quivered in those holes, and Kasoria's eyes hardened.

Fear. Man or beast, you don't forget how that sounds. You only fear if you're vulnerable. If you're weak, and faced with something stronger.

"Wh... What the fuck're youse waitin' for?!" He turned to the men celebrating or frozen or just staring on the deck, and raised his voice so they could all hear him. "Man those fuckin' shooters an' kill this fuckin' thing!"

He would supposed, after the events of that trial had become yet another page in the saga of his life, that it was his recent initiation into magic that enabled him to react quickly. A mage who had been practicing, casting, studying, bound to his Spark for a lifetime... they might have been driven mad with it suddenly ripped away, no warning or consolation. To have such a constant companion fall silent would be shattering to many. Kasoria felt a twinge of mourning, even panic, as this power he'd been growing for seasons vanished, but then... he moved on.

Improvise. Keep moving. Keep living. You won't get a chance like this again.

"Fer fuck's... move!"

He decided to lead by example. Storming over to the nearest ballistae and shoving the gawking crewman out of the way. It was already loaded, four-foot projectile tipped with cruel barbs. He swung the mechanism around and aimed through the pig metal circle atop the vast, crossbow-like device. He'd never even touched something like this before, but he understood the principle. It was like every other bow he'd used. Rest the tip of the bolt just above where you wanted it, to compensate for the way it would drop in the air.

Kasoria's face twisted into a grin. Not of fatalism or even foolish bravery. Enjoyment. Relish. Moments ago, they'd all been dead men, heads on the block, necks bared. Now, at a great cost, they were on their feet, executioner was staggering... and the ax was right there, on the ground between them.

Should have killed us yesterday, wanker.

"Fire, you fuckin' seagulls! I dun' wanna die on this tub wiv' the likes a' youse!"

Kasoria's hand tightened on the trigger, the scorpion shuddered, and he hoped enough of the crew were following his lead.
word count: 671

Appearance

  • Habitually dressed in boots, breeches, tunic, and cloak.
  • Long hair down to the shoulders, usually swept back or in a rough ponytail
  • Prefers a trimmed beard and mustache

Mutations

  • Star-shaped scar on each palm.
  • Air around him seems to thicken and become more turbulent the closer a person gets to him.
  • Pitch black eyes, from tear ducts to the pupils.
  • Arms from shoulder to palms appear as if heavy chains are wrapped around them.
  • Wisps of black smoke constantly drifts around his body, forming the rough outline of a cloak. The more agitated he becomes, the thicker the layers get.
    Note: the torch-motif medallion Kasoria wears negates the visible effects of this mutation.
  • Roughly circular pattern across breastbone, constantly transforming, and resettling
  • Sunken, closed eyes in the back of hands; they open when stared at
  • Skin takes on the tone and quality of whatever material he's just Transmuted
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Llyr Llywelyn
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Re: Some Assembly Required [Llyr, Kas]



Zarik had tried to make clear his message, for the sake of distraction on the part of Graeslin to ready the Rupturing artifact, but his words got jumbled. His inflections were off. He winced, as he knew but wasn’t sure how to correct it exactly to mean what he wanted to say. Hope was all he had that his rough use of the Ancient Tongue would get through to the beast enough to distract.

It did. Though it seemed that his garbled attempt had resulted in the switch of possession or some such minute grammar. The Leviathan mistook what he said as to mean he was the Protean. An odd idea, but as Zarik’s ether-laden insectile legs wrapped around his body to rest in wait, he supposed it wasn’t that far off from a reasonable one.

Arrogance rang true, and Zarik listened with nods to the mer avatar… as long as he kept talking, kept proclaiming, it was all okay… though he realized what it meant – biqaj and mer speaking to one another. His legs unfurled and he lowered down from the top of the mast to the crow’s nest when the beast turned its attention to Graeslin and their warring conflict that had led to this moment.

He considered many things, in that moment, freely in his mind while the mer vanished back into the flesh. Zarik wondered if the Leviathan cared about anything beyond the destruction of foes. If this truly was how it spent its time, even after five-hundred arcs, the young mage felt a slight tinge of disappointment but also disbelief. It couldn’t be true. It was only because Graeslin had wronged him so badly that all this was required. That had to be it.

Though he was on the highest point of the entire ship, in the crow’s nest, some men tried to climb past on the other masts… it would have been likely that he could if he wanted to. Simply jump, climb with his ethereal legs, and then flit with his wings the rest of the way out. But Zarik didn’t. He looked down at the others, and at Hazel who held onto the rope with the round wide eyes of a child who trusted him to make it all right.

Zarik quietly sighed. He looked back up and watched the tentacles strike down those who tried to escape. He felt… almost drowsy… he felt… asleep almost, but that meant a host of complexity for a young dreamwalker such as himself… and he saw things in the layered visions of Emea and Idalos, he saw what the Immortals wished to be seen by all.

Whether the others on the ship, distracted by the futility of their fate, realized what had happened… Zarik knew. He did more than feel the collapse of Emea as his two sparks lost their connection. His ethereal limbs retracted back into his spine, vanished from sight. He saw and heard and knew of what had occurred to the Nightmare King. His heart wrenched at this knowledge. He immediately tried to open a door to Emea, to attempt to help and right things, but he found himself unable. He found himself… unable to return to the Veil.

“No,” he whispered. “No, no…”

He couldn’t cross into Emea anymore. Couldn’t escape. That meant… he looked at Hazel again, then Kasoria. Dizziness washed over him. He held tightly to the edge of the crow’s nest, face ashen pale. Fear gave way to anger, then, guided by the youth of the reckless mage.

The pale of his face turned silvery-blue with blush as his blood grew hot. His fingers dug into the wooden rail. He watched the crew beneath on the decks as a few sailors danced about in a jigs, and cheers rippled through the filthy pirates. Zarik’s breath shortened. His wings folded behind him, limp and unable to flutter anymore but remaining formed in a crystallized state. His halo flickered, dimmed, then vanished from sight.

He was so angry, at the disconnect and severed relation to Emea, and at why it had occurred, that he could barely form words.

Kasoria managed first. His shouts jarred Zarik out of his anger just enough to find something to say. The biqaj gritted his teeth, then shouted, “Wait!”

But it wasn’t enough. For the scorpions shuddered, and ballistae were shot. He swore, then tried to wave to get Kasoria's or Jorsie's attention. “Don’t kill him! Don’t!”

He winced at how unlikely a single other person on the ship would heed his words. Zarik grabbed onto the mast, shut his eyes, and felt a rush of fury through his mind and body. He shouted, no longer talking to any of the crew or likewise, but at the Leviathan instead. “I know! Do you hear me? I know why you no longer have ether. But what else can I do for you? Can you not see what your rightful arrogance toward your enemies will now cost you? Why would they grant mercy when you wield death over them with the cruelty of a cat playing with an injured mouse? I don’t understand the minds of those such as yourself! If you are so great and powerful, why do you murder without care like any thief with a dagger, or noble with a few hundred soldiers at his beck and call?! What is death to you? Why kill? After five hundred arcs of claimed superiority, why bother?!”

Zarik didn’t expect much of a response. He wasn’t even sure if he was talking to the Leviathan at certain points, or just shouting the questions that roused in his angered mind. He pressed his back against the mast, then sunk down to hide beneath the wall of the crow’s nest so the others below could no longer see him. The blond settled there, covered his face with his hands, and listened to the twang of the scorpions, and the enthusiastic shouts of the sailors who were overjoyed by the change of fate.

The young mage cried behind his hands, then. Aware of far too much for him to handle, mourning the loss of so much in that moment, and he hid alone – from on high – where no one else could reach him. Among the din, he recognized the call of a familiar voice: Hazel, who kept shouting Zarik’s name, likely concerned that she could no longer see him from the angle of the lookout structure.
word count: 1100
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