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He Who Remained

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Xarkly

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A soul of a bygone era yearned to intervene, to comfort Villorik as she had in life. 

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Leagues away, there sat an elf of lavender skin and dark messy locks of hair that veiled over scarlet eyes that rarely knew the peace of slumber.  In her palm was a black feather, that of a crows.  It’s been years, droned a voice from within.  We are so close, yet so far. . . is it hopeless?

 

The eyes of Ilaria were near sightless in her solemn reflection, and she curled her fingers over that feather.  “You’re falling back into your old ways, Ro,” she uttered in return to that soundless voice.  “You’d best not infect me with that thinking.”  Gently, she sought to settle that feather along her windowsill that looked out over one of the streets of Caurost.  Even in the small hours of the night, figures roamed in the shadows; they always did for her.


“You saw the same as I,” she continued as her harrowed gaze traced over those listlessly roaming souls of the night.  “He persists, even if buried beneath corruption.  There is hope.  We simply need to find the right people to help us.”

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This was an awesome read. I wish more people would take time to write about their characters like this. Stuff like this captures what it means to roleplay.

 

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How is this dude a mod and not a ******* author? Jesus christ, beautiful read bro!!!

 

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Amongst a silent valley of honourable and grizzly souls one proved older in death than most, it's dim light was present and visible throughout that dead realm of warriors of fallen eras.


For amongst its greatest woes, was bitterness overcome by mistrust and hatred of the shadow. It crept the darkness closer as the soul transcended in careful watch over the mortal plane.


The soul lived and died as creed commanded yet failed to foresee the pain of those persisting in woven tapestries of destiny, glory and fate.


Within the realm of the Templars of Malchediael did this lost soul of combat lamented in grief, and used all of it's paralytic powers to pray for a better tomorrow.

"Light everlasting, light everlasting, protect those who stand against an ocean of darkness..."

A light in the high halls at the Basilica of Whitespire grew brighter for a moment, then dimmed. Wishful blessing.

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An aurum blade of Raevir make would rest at the hip of a traveller, scriptures of Providence lining its fuller. As she traversed the realm with newfound freedom, the wind seemed to sing for her. 

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Sat on a bridge, well out of the way of others, was a young devil. Dark, rust skin covered him - but red is what most saw. His lower arms, often hidden, were on full display: a pale orange which faded into a dapple up his arms. Deep, sable feathers covered the back of each, apart from one where a mangled, ugly burn-like scar laced his skin. It was even paler than the rest of him, and those downy feathers left the area barren. The white shirt he usually wore rested over the edge of the bridge, along with his right glove, as they caught the breeze that blew by; for both were still wet, though now cleaned to some satisfaction, and both, in varying capacities, were shadowed in what remained of his ichorous blood. A sublety now, for his glove merely had odd, slightly darker patches and his shirt one smudgy, grey cuff.

Ink, thought most people. It's why he hadn't bothered to clean it before. A cry, too, though he would never admit it: help.

Uncovered, his pale right hand, tipped in ashen claws came to scratch at his cheeks. He pulled the feathers there, until they were loosed with a wince and drifted to sail away on the current below. Raw, off-coloured scratches remained in their place - another piece of patchwork to the darkened bruising on his face, and the hidden discolouring of his back. 

He struck a match, and lit a cigarette, and set it between his lips, and drew from it. Craning his neck down, his forehead came to rest on the back of his hand as smoke filed out from his lips, and the world gradually came to seem a little calmer. He was worn and tired, scarred and tattered, and only fourteen. More than ever, the world was confusing. It was easier when he was littler, and he didn't question what he knew; he didn't question even though he was running and hiding from the moment he was born. He was too little to be called a Darkspawn Sympathiser, at least then. But he was never too little to be mangled, or killed. At no greater time had he understood what that truly meant for him than in the past few years, as The Light continually revealled itself as one with the Dark.


"See, the world isn't that bad." 

The words rang in his battish, scabby ears like echoes: quiet and fleeting.

Everyone was bad. They were tangled in vices of honour and pride and valour. People were liars, and greedy; he himself had become a liar.


"Choose."

Weightily, did Reinhard's pale, green eyes come to be half-lidded. The thought gave him a repulsion that he couldn't place, a dread of the future; everything just seemed wrong. Those same eyes pulled up to focus on the city of Nau Valdev. The home that reviled him, the home that wanted to forget him, the home that wanted him dead. The home he thought could save him. A stupid, stupid thought. 
His hand drew up and over his head, both the gloved and ungloved interlocking behind as his eyelids squeezed tightly shut and he craned his neck low.

"Everything has a cost." 

A truth amidst everything else. The cost of home grew each attempt he made, and no longer was it worth it; yet, he had already paid. Perhaps the mistake of his mother was no longer such a inconceivable thing, when he truly thought about it. He had shackled his father to that lonely, mountain-top priest. He had done so for no return. No different was that man than the creature that tainted his soul; the boy was a simple piece of leverage to both. He had been cursed for a false deal; he had endangered his father for a false deal.

The Dark and The Light were of the same cloth.





 

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Great read +1

 

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Half a world away, Deia sits by the hearth. Sleep has escaped her. For all her contentment, it has for some time.

 

Yes or no, she mouths to herself, lost to memory. The breath is lost beneath the crackle of fire, and the ghost that haunts her is only for her to see. If she closes her eyes, she can watch it as though through tinted glass- murky and dream-like.

 

"You are dreaming," something whispers in the back of her mind.

 

"That's alright," she whispers back. She remembers what it was like to wake. The agony of being torn apart, friend turned enemy-

 

"-A glimpse of white flame," it reminds her.

 

Grief yawns wide in her heart; it aches fiercely, so fiercely that her hand comes up as though she might pull the pieces back together.

 

Tiny footsteps creak against the floorboards and she turns her head, breath ragged. At the base of the stairs is a child, rubbing at the monstrous horn fused to his eye with one malflame-tinted fist. "Miss Deia?" she can barely hear him sniff, and that's enough to make her stand. As she murmurs soft nothings to soothe him- a nightmare, this time- she cannot bring herself to regret her fateful choice.

 

And yet that phantom ache has yet to leave. And yet she tries to imagine it, even now.

 

"And yet, and yet, and yet," something echoes, urging. She does not let herself reply.

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