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Nequus
Captain

PostPosted: Tue Aug 21, 2007 1:40 pm


Welcome to the original birthplace of Fawkes

This journal is maintained by TawnyAngel

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Height: 15h 3"

Fawkes' Stats
Skill level: 60
Power: 6 pts
Strength: 7 pts
Intelligence: 15 pts
Wisdom: 10 pts
Courage: 14 pts
Luck: 7 pts
Speed: 12 pts
Agility: 10 pts
Adaptability: 8 pts
Stamina: 8 pts


Personality: Fawkes has lived an incredibly long life thanks to his power of reincarnation by fire and, over the years, he had become increasingly disillusioned with the world and its people. In his youth he was a crusader for the defenceless. Today he lives solely for himself and feels little if anything but scorn for those that he once protected.

Location: Fawkes does not restrict himself to one area; he travels where he wants when he wants to without care for any who think they have claim to a given piece of dirt.

Fawkes' Tree is located in the Northern Quadrant

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 13, 2007 9:03 am


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Life is a Lemon – Meatloaf

Introduction
It’s all or nothing, and nothing’s all I ever get
Every time I turn it on, I burn it up and burn it out
There’s always something, there’s always something going wrong
That’s the only guarantee, that’s what this is all about
It’s a never-ending attack, everything’s a lie and that’s a fact
Life is a lemon and I want my money back

And all the morons, and all the stooges with their coins
They’re the ones who make the rules, it’s not a game it’s just a rout
There’s desperation, there’s desperation in the air
It leaves a stain on all your clothes, and no detergent gets it out
And we’re always slipping through the cracks, then the movie’s over fade to black
Life is a Lemon and I want my money back

I want my money back
I want my money back

What about love?
It’s defective,
It’s always breaking in half

What about sex?
It’s defective,
It’s never built to really last

What about your family?
It’s defective,
All the batteries are shot

What about your friends?
They’re defective,
All the parts are out of stock

What about hope?
It’s defective,
It’s corroded and decayed

What about faith?
It’s defective,
It’s tattered and it’s frayed

What about your Gods?
They’re defective,
They forgot the warranty

What about your town?
It’s defective,
It’s a dead-end street to me

What about your school?
It’s defective,
It’s a pack of useless lies

What about your work?
It’s defective,
It’s a crock and then you die

What about your childhood?
It’s defective,
It’s dead and buried in the past

What about your future?
It’s defective,
You can shove it up your a**

I want my money back
I want my money back

It’s all or nothing, and nothings all I ever get
Every time I turn it on I burn it up and burn it out
It’s a never-ending attack, everything’s a lie, and that’s a fact
Life is a lemon and I want my money back
And we’re always slipping through the cracks, then the movie’s over, fade to black
Life is a lemon and I want my money back

TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor


TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor

PostPosted: Sat Oct 13, 2007 9:05 am


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The tree

Deep in Shrilal among long dead fruit trees sprouts a towering column of ash grey. Its limbs are many, long and straight and its crown is of orange, yellow, red and gold leaves that seem to glow in the darkness of night. These leaves are present all year, dying in small bursts of flame and dropping to the earth below as ash. Every once in a while however, every leaf on the tree dies at once and after the brilliant flash of fire, which leaves the tree unmarred. The ashes then coalesce on the largest branch in the form of a fruit with fiery plumes.

Some weeks after this event, the fruit falls to earth and bursts in a cloud of soot leaving a small grey foal to clamber back to his feet and set off for the edges of the fruitlands. As he grows the tree regains its fiery foliage, ready to burn up and start the phoenix's life over once more.


Physicality


Fawkes is fairly tall for one of his kind and as thin as any of them. His tendril wings are wide and strong, his vibrant coat gleams with good health and his red eyes often glow with fiery malevolence. The curling forelock that falls between his ears disguises the stump of his broken horn but, even without this weapon, he could not be mistaken for a soft target.

The stallion’s stride is proud and he carries himself with supreme confidence but it is not this which compensates for his lost horn. When threatened, annoyed or simply at his whim; Fawkes’ hooves and legs wreath themselves in flame and the glowing of his eyes intensifies so as to be noticeable even in daylight.

When he reincarnates however he begins his foalhood a dull ash grey. As days pass the rich oranges and golds of his adult coat begin to grow in at his lower legs, the tips of his wings, mane and tail, and on his muzzle. As he grows taller, the colour spreads across his body creating a roan-like effect through his adolescence. When he finally returns to adulthood, his richly coloured coat is restored to its usual lustrous glory.


Mentality

This fiery stallion is proud, intelligent and almost entirely selfish. He looks down on most other life, especially the overly trusting, the stupid and the blithely optimistic. Disillusioned to the highest degree, he is thoroughly disgusted with life, and with himself for the years he spent trying to make it a better place. The passion for justice that burned in him in his first lives has burned out, leaving behind a charred husk which takes pleasure in outwitting others and in planting burning hooves on the backside of anyone he thinks a little too full of themselves.

Love is not a factor in his life, so far as he is concerned it is simply a means of ensuring that Nequus make more Nequus, or a way for one Nequus to manipulate another. This said, he is not especially averse to the idea of foals of his own, though it is likely that unless they had a very positive minded dam he would instill in them his own bleak view of the world.
PostPosted: Sat Oct 13, 2007 11:07 am


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I, Fawkes, am a tall, strong stallion and I intend to use this strength to make the world a little better wherever I go. My horn is sharp, my mind is quick and I am no coward. May evil tremble at the sound of my name and flee before my charge. I shall not suffer innocents to be harmed while I yet draw breath; where things go wrong there I shall be to put them right.


The vivid young stallion nuzzled first his mother and then his father, a slightly sad smile upon his lips. “I’ll miss you both,” he told the couple, taking a pace back and pawing lightly at the ground. It was hard to leave them, yet what choice did he have if he was to do as he had sworn? Evil wasn’t about to come to him, he had to go to it.

“We know,” his damn said after exchanging a glance with her mate, “and we understand. You’re a good boy, Fawkes, and Gods know the world at large needs you more than we do. Just promise you’ll be back to see us from time to time, alright?”

The gold-flecked Ichsa smiled again and bobbed his head. “Of course I will mother, father. I’ll have so many stories to tell you both and I’ll be stronger than ever. I’ll make you proud.” He would. He would die before disappointing these two who had raised and loved him.

“Well, you’d better get on hadn’t you lad?” the young stallion’s father said after a moment, a proud smile pulling at his lips. “Before we change our minds, humm?” he added with a chuckle and a toss of his head to the horizon.

Fawkes took in a deep breath and let it out again slowly. “Yes,” he agreed, “I should get some distance in before nightfall I think… thank you, both of you. For everything.” It would be strange not to see them every day, to be unable to ask their advice when he was unsure. Still, he had to learn to stand on his own now. He’d get used to it soon enough, he was sure; they’d taught him well.

“It’s been our pleasure,” his dam assured him, giving the long-limbed stallion another nuzzling. “Now go on,” she said, nipping her son lightly on the neck, “get moving.”

The blue-eyed stallion laughed and nipped her back before wheeling about and setting off at the gallop. For some minutes he ran as fast as his hooves would carry him until, eventually, he stood at the top of the rise that marked the end of his herd’s territory. In recognition of the enormity of this step in life, the speckle-coated Ichsa slowed to a halt and turned about to look over his homeland.

Two specks, just about identifiable as his parents caught his eyes; so far as he could tell they hadn’t moved since he’d set off. Were they looking at him? Probably. Trying to hold down the lump in his throat, the tall young stallion rose up on his hind legs and struck at the air in a farewell salute, a loud whinny escaping his throat as he did so.

As he dropped back down onto all fours, Fawkes could swear that the tiny shapes of his sire and dam reared up in return and, a moment later, he thought he heard them return his cry.

Fawkes grinned to himself, still fighting back tears, and spun about once more to thunder away down the rise, towards whatever challenges lay ahead of him.

*****


The Ichsa’s scream of pain as his rival’s horn added a streak of red to the orange and gold of his flank tore through the night. This wasn’t going quite as well as it could have been. Gritting his teeth, the blue-eyed stallion pranced backwards and struck out with his forehooves.

He’d spent nearly a full turn of seasons hunting this Ichsa down, day in and out he’d followed the bloody trail left by a bloodied white horn. Now that he’d finally caught up, in the home of the two-legs, he wasn’t sure he was up to the challenge. The silver beast had spent the last three years hunting and killing foals of Aeri or Reya blood, and the foals of the two legs. What his argument with the leather-winged Nequus and the inhabitants of Ryuten was Fawkes did not know, nor did he much care. Right now the only thing he had time for was not dying.

“Upstart!” the red-eyed stallion snarled as the younger creature’s hooves found his shoulder. “You really think you stand a chance against me?”

The gold-flecked Ichsa danced backwards, eyes locked firmly on his foe. “I think that I will die before I allow your rampage to go on,” he replied, lowering his horn ready for another charge and trying not to think too hard about the question. Never before had he faced a foe with such battle skill and, in all honesty, Fawkes wasn’t sure if he stood a chance or not. Could this be it? His last battle? Is first seemed such a short time ago although, in reality, it had been several winters ago now.

“Ha!” The white-maned stallion made a lunge, which the ruddy Ichsa narrowly evaded. “You will die then, little warrior,” he growled as he circled the other Nequus, tendril wings twitching in anticipation. “Look into my eyes and see your end!

For a moment, Fawkes did but only a heartbeat later he tore his attention from the blood red orbs to twist aside from another charge. As the older creature shot by him, the blue-eyed Ichsa made a riposte with his golden horn, scoring a good hit on silver hindquaters and extracting an enraged bellow from the stallion’s throat.

“You little b*****d,” the white-hooved Nequus cried, spinning around and trying to catch the slightly smaller Ichsa’s throat with his horn.

The blue-eyed warrior twisted away frown the attack and took the risk of turning his back in order to put a little distance between himself and the mad thing. The two-legs had all fled in panic when the two of them had clashed and a large structure beckoned to the rapidly tiring station; it was made of wood and had but one entrance. Heart in his mouth, Fawkes thundered towards it and as he shot inside, he spun around expecting to see the silver beast on his heels.

He wasn’t there, and that was somehow more worrying than the blood lust in those ruddy eyes.

Fast, ragged breaths tore from Fawkes’ throat and his heart hammered like the hooves of a thousand herds. Cautiously, the long-horned Nequus crept towards the entrance of his haven and peered out. What he saw made his blood run cold.

The silver station, horn and face stained with blood, was walking slowly towards him through the night. He held a flickering torch in his mouth.

His own mouth going dry Fawkes backed away, back into the shadows of the building. It seemed to be for storage, he noted vaguely. Fire. He’d always been wary of fire, of its power, its hunger. He’d always wondered, too, what would happen if it was allowed to run wild. He was about to find out first hand.

As the curly-maned Ichsa tried to take another pace backwards, he felt his hindquarters fetch up against the back wall of the two-legs’ wooden building. Trapped. He ought to have made a dash for it when he spotted the fire his foe carried but somehow the sight of dancing flames had stolen his sense. He knew his mistake now, now that the silver brute was stalking in with the smoking torch. What chance did he stand against fire? There had been little rain this year; the building would burn quickly and doubtless the red-eyed stallion would stand in the entrance to keep him from escaping.

Fawkes tried to back through the wall. This was it, this was really it. He should have visited his parents more often. He should have taken a mate and had foals he should-

The torch was tossed onto a pile of wicker baskets and the flames took almost immediately.

“Well then, blue-eyes,” the white-maned Icha purred. “This is it, humm? You think you can kill me before you either burn or choke to death?”

Fawkes forced his legs to still and searched for courage. “I…” He ought to be saying something brash, brave and confident but the words wouldn’t come. The silver had been right; he could see his death in those eyes and in the fire that was running from basket to basket and reflecting in the merciless red orbs.

“Lost for words, boy?” the powerful Nequus sneered. “Just think what your sire and dam would think if they could see you cowering like a little foal. You coward.”

The gold-horned stallion blinked. What would they think of him. He’d promised to make them proud, he’d promised. One way or another, even if they would never know of it, it had to keep that promise.

“Well?”

Fawkes lowered his head and bared his teeth. “They would think, silver, that you made a big mistake in reminding me of them.” So saying, the dappled Ichsa bunched his muscles and charged through the burning baskets and the plumes of smoke towards the now slightly less smug stallion who stood between him and freedom.

When he was about half way through his charge, the white-maned Ichsa gave a bellow and lowered his own horn, beginning a charge of his own.

Mere heartbeats later, the two stallions met.

Fawkes gritted his teeth as he felt the other’s Ichsa’s horn slice along his shoulder, but his expression soon turned to a grim smile of satisfaction as his own weapon struck home managing a deep puncture rather than a cut along the surface.

He didn’t have long to dwell on the satisfaction of his blow; no sooner had he drawn his horn out than his opponent was seeking to return the favor by putting a hole through Fawkes’ throat. The ruddy-coated Ichsa grimaced as the white point shot towards him and brought his forehooves up to head level, striking out with them in the hopes of warding the larger Ichsa off.

The tactic succeeded; the silver bodied stallion was forced to twist his neck awkwardly aside to avoid having his skull kicked in but once again it wasn’t long before he was back on the offensive, rising up on his hindlegs to strike back at Fawkes in kind.

The blue-eyed Ichsa winced as a white hoof caught him on the knee and unbalanced him, forcing him to drop back onto all fours for a moment. This was all the time that the other stallion needed to stamp down on his withers. Fawkes grunted in pain as his legs buckled but forced himself to ignore it and roll aside to avoid whatever the silver stallion had lined up for him next.

Pale hooves thudded into the hard-packed earth mere inches away from him and the blue-eyed Ichsa forced himself upright once more, coughing as he took smoke deep into his lungs; the building was burning in earnest now it seemed.

“Give it up blue-eyes,” the silver brute laughed, “you can’t hope to beat me; just lie down and die won’t you? Lie down and die.”

Fawkes managed to stop couching for long enough to choke out, “never!” before falling back into the clutches of the smoke.

The tendril-winged Nequus gave another laugh but was cut off before he really got into the swing of it with coughs of his own. “Damn this smoke,” he growled once he had managed to still himself, “I’ll have to deal with you quickly.” So saying, the silver stallion struck out at his choking opponent, knocking the smaller Ichsa to the ground. “This ends now,” he hissed, slamming his forehooves down on the struggling Nequus and trying to get his horn in position to puncture Fawkes’ throat.

The world was blurry to Fawkes now, the other stallion’s words seemed to come from far away but he forced himself to fight against the pressing hooves, to twist away whenever he felt the p***k of a horn at his neck. He couldn’t fail now, couldn’t let this monster back out into the world to harm more innocents. Yet what could he do?

“You really are a pest, you know that?” asked the cold, distant voice of the silver stallion. “Why won’t you just-”

A loud crack interrupted the tall Ichsa’s words and Fawkes felt the stallion’s hooves lift. Looking up to see what had caused the noise and his good fortune, Fawkes saw the main ceiling beam dropping towards him. Before he could even cry out in fear, it had slammed down on his ribcage, pinning him in place.

“Well this is nice, isn’t it?”

The blue-eyed stallion tried to think through the renewed pain enough to focus on the words floating down to him.

“You know,” the voice said quietly, right into his ear, “I think I’ll just leave you to burn to death. Won’t that be nice?”

Fawkes forced himself to focus on the hated countenance before him. “This,” he stopped, coughing again, “this isn’t over.” Wasn’t over? What had possessed him to say that? He was dying. He’d promised to make his parents proud. He was failing them.

A hoarse chuckle greeted his assertion. “Of course it isn’t boy, my only regret in that is that I won’t be around for the finale. Goodbye, blue-eyes.”

With these words, the silver Ichsa turned away and thundered out of the rapidly collapsing building.

As he vanished from sight, Fawkes allowed his eyes to slide closed and made one last effort to move his battered body but the weight of the burning beam was too great. He could feel the fire spreading to his weakened form now, could feel it catching on his coat.

He’d made a promise, he considered as the roof continued to fall in around him. He’d promised to make his sire and his dam proud. They wouldn’t be proud to think of him dying like this. He’d promised to destroy all the evil he came across unto his last breath. His last breath would be taken alone, the one he had tried to rid the world of would go on and kill again and again.

“This isn’t over.”

Fawkes blinked blearily; he was sure that hadn’t been his own thought.

“Take the fire into your heart and live forever.”

Fawkes blinked again and tried to raise his head. What was that supposed to mean anyway? Was he just hallucinating?

“Don’t fight it, phoenix, let the fire take you.”

Phoenix? The gold-dappled stallion opened his eyes and blinked about blearily. Fire. The fire was everywhere; orange and red and gold.

Like himself.

He didn’t look like either of his parents. He looked like fire. He grinned foolishly and closed his eyes for a moment before opening them once more to look around with pure red orbs. He had nothing to fear from the fire. It was him and he was it.

Laying his head peacefully down on the hot earth, Fawkes closed his eyes once more and opened his heart.

There was a brilliant flash of fire and the ceiling beam dropped the rest of the way to the ground, stirring up a small pile of ashes.

The building burned on.

TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor


TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor

PostPosted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 11:53 am


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I, Fawkes, am a tall, strong stallion and I have been given a great gift to help me on my quest to help the world. My horn is sharp, flames are hot and I am no coward. May evil tremble at the sound of my name and flee before my power. I shall not suffer innocents to be harmed this day or on any to come, that is my guarantee.


A warm velvet night had settled itself comfortably over Shrilal and, for several hours, it was an unremarkable one. As the moon reached the top of the sky however, something changed. A tree, which had until now been brown-trunked and orange leaved, burst into flame sending the few Nequus nearby who had come to visit their own trees scattering for safety. An observer would have noticed something odd about the fire if they had lingered to watch. Though the flames enveloped the brown-trunked tree utterly, they did not spread to its neighbours.

For some minutes the flames crackled about the tree and the strangeness went on, for they seemed to wreath the wooden tower rather than to harm it. Eventually, the orange and gold tongues began to climb the tree, pulling away from the roots and trunk to rise up to the branches. In their wake, the tree was changed; where once rough brown bark had grown, a smooth coating of ash grey showed itself.

A few braver Nequus began to creep back towards the strange happening at this point, peering fearfully at the changing tree and its strange fire. Under their gaze, flames scrambled along branches until only the leaves of the tree seemed to burn on and the watchers crept a little closer.

A moment later there was an almightily explosion of fire which incinerated the leaves and sent the Nequus galloping in fear once more.

Had any of them remained behind, they would have seen the resulting ashes coalesce into the shape of a fruit with orange and gold plumes. As it was however, they did not and indeed none of them returned to see their trees for quite some time.

So it was that not a single living soul witnessed the first rebirth of Fawkes the Phoenix.

*****


It was some weeks later and the ash-born fruit had grown appreciably. As the sun clambered laboriously through a grey sky, the fruit began to twitch and as the fiery orb reached its zenith the strange thing dropped to the ground. It burst into a cloud of grey particles on impact and, as the ashes settled, a small colt sneezed and peered about at his surroundings with confused red eyes.

“What in the name of- gaah!” the foal exclaimed as he heard his high pitched voice and spotted his tiny legs folded awkwardly to the side. His tiny grey legs. Fawkes blinked and tried to remember what could have happened to put him in such an inexplicable situation.

The silver stallion. The falling beam. The fire… had the fire spoken to him?

“Phoenix,” he muttered aloud, “what in the name of the Gods is a phoenix?” Apparently it was something to do with fire, and to do with not dying when one ought. The fire… he’d felt as though… as though he’d gone into and then there had been a period of nothingness. Apparently he had spent that time inside a fruit.

The short-maned colt shook himself mentally and clambered to his hooves. He took a few paces, wobbled and keeled over again. He cursed softly to himself; apparently being a phoenix meant you had to learn to walk again. Oh great, he was going to have to deal with that horrible hormonal period when the only thing he could think about was mares too, wasn’t he?

These small thoughts, and his struggles to get back to his hooves, kept the young Ichsa’s mind from bigger questions. He did not consider, for example, how exactly he had ‘gone into the fire’ and ended up attached to his tree once more. Nor did he consider what on earth he was to tell his parents when he found them.

He did however consider what he would do to that silver Ichsa when their paths crossed again.

The foal smiled grimly to himself, there would be a reckoning; nobody killed him and got away with it. Apparently. The murderous b*****d was probably out there right now gloating and coating his horn in the blood of yet more innocents. As the hate for the other Ichsa resurfaced, Fawkes felt a tingling in his legs. When he looked down at them, he cried out in alarm, stumbled backwards and landed on his rump, staring down at himself once more.

The flames that had momentarily wrapped themselves about him were gone.

Fawkes gulped. “Oh my.”

Apparently there was a little more to being a phoenix than he’d hitherto realised.

*****


The young Ichsa slowed as he approached the pair beside the stream. They were unchanged, utterly unchanged so far as his eyes could tell him. What else had he expected? It hadn’t been so very long since he’d seen them last, more or less two turns of the seasons now he thought about it. Yet so much had changed. He was young again; not young as in a stallion in the prime of life, young as in not yet full grown and still with flecks of grey in his coat.

He’d thought about what to tell them ever since that first day but two years on he still had no idea. What was there to say? That he’d died, but not died? The changes in his body could not be denied, though he might have been tempted to wait for his coat to be fully orange gold again had it not been for his eyes. Those, he thought, were here to stay so he might as well have evidence to show his parents, to show that he really had been reborn by his fire not just gone crazy with the new power.

Well, best to get it over with then.

Fawkes cleared his throat and said “hello,” which under the circumstances was pretty much the only thing he could say no matter how silly it sounded to his ears.

The adult Nequus turned as one creature to regard him. For a moment their faces were still. Then his father’s jaw dropped and his mother fainted into a pretty heap in the fragrant grass.

Some minutes later, when the mare had been revived, she joined her mate in staring like a codfish.

Fawkes coughed uncomfortably. “So… I umm… I apologise for being away for so long,” he mumbled, “there were… issues.”

“Fawkes,” the phoenix’s sire managed after a moment, “you… you’re young and your eyes are… are…”

“Red,” the tendril-winged Nequus supplied helpfully, “I know. Scared myself half to death when I first saw them in a stream… I have a lot of explaining to do here, don’t I?”

Both Ichsa nodded dumbly.

Fawkes took a deep breath and nodded. “Right, here goes then…”


The sun had nearly set by the time the young Nequus had told his story twice over, gone back to clarify various details and answered his parents’ questions as best he was able.

“So, naturally I’m going after him,” the golden-horned youth said into the silence that signified the digestion of much confusing information.

The silence was ended abruptly by his parents shouting, “what?” in stereo.

The red-eyed Ichsa sighed; he’d just known they’d react like this. “Look,” he said hurriedly, “a monster like that can’t be allowed to live on and who better than me to go after him? I’ve fought him so I know his tactics, he thinks I’m dead so the sight of me will put him off balance, I’ve got power others don’t and if I get into trouble I can just… err… do whatever it was I did last time and come back.”

It made sense, he knew it did but somehow he doubted his sire and dam would see it the same way. They were his parents, their instincts told them to protect him. Gods knew they’d been worried enough about what he did before he’d got himself killed doing it, what would they be like now?

“I think you’re right Fawkes.”

Fawkes and his father exchanged glances before turning to stare at the mare who had just spoken, waiting for clarification.

The elegantly built Nequus smiled over at her son before turning to her mate. “Listen my love,” she said softly, leaning over to nuzzle his face, “our son has made several very good points. He’ll be safer doing this than anyone else in the world and if we keep him from this task who knows how many parents will lose foals to the silver menace? Besides, I suspect that he’ll go ahead with his plans with or without our permission, won’t you Fawkes-love?”

The grey-flecked Ichsa smiled ruefully; much as his mother was dim at times, she was good at reading people. “Yes mother, I shall. I’ve been given a great gift and I want to use it to make the world a better place for everyone to live in. If that hurts you I’m sorry but I must put the greater good first. I hope you understand.”

Fawkes' sire gave a weary sigh and nodded his head slowly. “Alright,” he muttered, “you always were the idealist. I know you could never be happy letting a brute like that run around unchecked. When do you leave?”

Fawkes’ eyes hardened and he turned the red orbs to the north, to Ryuten and the site of his first death. “Tomorrow at down. I’ve no time to waste.”

*****


It was spring, the same time of year, but the cold of winter had come and gone twice since the phoenix had bid farewell to his parents. The Silver Reaper, as he had become known, had proved hard to track down. Many places and people bore the scars of his passage but nobody ever seemed to know which way the stallion had gone as he sped out of their shattered lives.

The gold-flecked stallion had all but given up his search a month ago, probably would have given up had it not been for the red-speckled Aeri stallion who stood by his side half way up the mountains of fire.

“There,” the massive Nequus rumbled, tossing his great head at the cavern they faced, “he’s made his home in there for near half the season. This is as far as I can take you, though. For all my size I am no warrior, not like you young Fawkes. Your horn holds the hope of us all, farewell for the present and good fortune.”

The red-eyed stallion bowed deeply to the leather-winged giant. “You have my thanks Redfleck,” he said as he rose, “I shall not fail in this task.” He felt a little guilty, the Ichsa considered as he strode towards the cave, for not mentioning his powers to the Aeri but some instinct had bid him keep his silence on the matter. Not everyone looked kindly upon magic.

As he drew closer to the cave, Fawkes became increasingly aware of the sound of his hooves, of his breath, of the beat of his heart and of the little puffs of red dust caused by his passage. This was it, justice for all those this beast had ever harmed and an end to his reign of terror.

”Reaper!” the young stallion bellowed as he stepped into the entry way. “Come out and pay for your deeds! Face me!”

For a moment or two there was silence. Then came the chuckle. It was not a very nice chuckle at all and Fawkes felt his ears set themselves back and his eyes widen at the sound of it. That was not the laugh of anything with a beating heart, surely.

“Well, well, well; another challenger? Alright, I suppose I can take a minute or two out of my busy schedule to kill you.”

The gold-dappled stallion gritted his teeth at the hated voice and brought a forehoof down on the hard rock with a resounding crack. “Your past returns to haunt you, Reaper,” he called as he saw a shape moving towards him out of the depths of the cave. “Look into my eyes and see your end!”

“See my…” the silver stallion paused some little way away from the other Ichsa and squinted into the sun, “…end? I’ve seen you somewhere before, haven’t I?” the white-maned stallion muttered rhetorically.

Fawkes watched him intently, waiting for the beast to remember the night when he himself had ordered another to see death in red eyes.

“Hu,” the silver said eventually, cocking his head and grinning. “Hello there blue-eyes. So, either you didn’t die then. How very disappointing, I suppose I’ll just have to finish he job now… though I must say I’m interested to hear how you survived.”

“Simple,” the phoenix flared his nostrils and gave another stamp, summoning fire to wreath his legs as he did so, “I didn’t.”

As the other Ichsa’s eyes widened in disbelief, Fawkes lowered his head and charged, wrapping flame about his horn as he drew near his target. The seasoned silver warrior’s shock was such that he dodged too late and took the burning lance squarely in his left shoulder.

The orange-coated stallion pulled his horn back swiftly and rose up on his hind legs, focusing his power on his forehooves as he did so and slamming them down on the withers of his stunned foe before the elder stallion could react.

The Reaper was not staggered for long however, even as he cried out in pain at the twin burns he had just received he swung his head up and around to slash Fawkes painfully on the forearm.

The phoenix snarled furiously as the more skilled stallion forced him backward out of the cave. “You will pay for your black deeds, Reaper,” he bellowed, his eyes beginning to glow and flicker like the fire that still danced about the young Ichsa’s legs.

“One day, perhaps,” the white-maned stallion agreed, making another stab with his horn which forced his opponent further out of his home, “but not today.”

Fawkes wheeled aside from another blow, responding with a slash of his burning weapon to the other Ichsa’s shoulder. The time for talk, so far as he was concerned, was over. They’d traded insults and both of them seemed sure that they would be the victor; there was nothing else important to be said, and Fawkes had no intention of distracting himself for frivolous speech with a monster of a Nequus.

Bellowing and screaming at one another, the stallions fought on.


It was some time later and the silver Ichsa was bleeding most satisfactorily, not that he seemed to have noticed. Indeed, his attacks were as sure as ever; one moment he might seem to be going for the throat only to twist his head at the last moment and use the less experienced fighter’s dodge to slash his horn down the gold-dappled Ichsa’s barrel.

Fawkes gritted his teeth at the latest in a long line of cuts, this one to the side of his neck, and leapt awkwardly backwards to avoid the follow through; he was not doing quite so well at ignoring the pain of his injuries. A chance glimpse of the sky revealed blackness; they must have been fighting for hours and he for one was tiring. The fire around his hooves and horn had run out quite some time ago, robbing him of his main advantage over the stronger and more skilled Ichsa.

At least he couldn't die...

Now that he thought of it, he hadn’t actually died in the two-legs’ building. He’d… well he’d done the fiery thing before his last breath. If he actually died would that be that? The young stallion gave an internal shudder at the thought and redoubled his efforts, rearing upright and prancing backwards, hooves striking of viciously and catching the Reaper squarely on the muzzle. Fawkes grinned and took advantage of the other stallion’s stagger; this was the first thing that had gone his way in quite a while.

“b*****d!” the bloodied silver spluttered indistinctly, “you’ll pay for that insult.”

The bloodlust in the white-maned Nequus’ red eyes made Fawkes gulp and he decided to make use of the only thing he had over the other Ichsa, namely speed, to make a tactical withdrawal. A glance over his shoulder made Fawkes redouble his efforts; the beast was coming at him like an avalanche.

As he turned his gaze forwards once more, the richly coloured stallion was just in time to see the world swing wildly in front of him. The young stallion tried to recover from the stumble but succeeded only in ploughing along the ground on his knees. A yelp of surprise came from behind him and the phoenix swung his head around to see the Reaper trying, and failing, to stop.

White hooves slammed into his backside and the larger Ichsa pitched clean over the top of him.

A moment later, there was another anguished cry and the white-winged stallion vanished from view.

Fawkes blinked dazedly and staggered back to his hooves, trying to work out what had just happened. As he regained his balance, he spotted the cause of his foe’s sudden disappearance. Mere inches in front of him the world dropped away and, leaning forward, the battered young Ichsa was just able to make out the body of the Silver Reaper broken across sharp rocks far below.

“Remarkable,” rumbled a deep voice from behind him.

Fawkes started and stumbled about to see who had spoken. As he made out a massive shape through the gloom however, his smiled. “Hail Redfleck, it seems my task is complete.”

The massive Aeri chuckled and began to approach the smaller Nequus. “Indeed it does,” he said with a nod. “A most admirable effort,” he went on as he drew level with the fine-boned Ichsa.

The red-eyed stallion smiled and bowed his head low, trying to calm his breathing and heartbeat. “My thanks sir.”

“Almost makes this a shame,” the leather-winged creature murmured as though Fawkes had not spoken.

The young stallion raised his head, a frown of confusion overtaking his face. “Almost makes what a shame?” he quizzed.

The red-speckled Aeri smirked. “This.” And with that single word, he rose up to his full height and brought his colossal forehooves down on the other stallion’s horn.

The golden spike snapped at the base and Fawkes’ roar of shock and pain masked the clatter it must have made as it struck the rock underhoof.

“Now, I’ll admit you did some good work here,” Redfleck said, casually kicking the severed thing over the edge of the cliff. “But see you were never intended to win. All I wanted you to do was soften him up for me but, since things haven’t turned out that way, it looks as though I have a loose end to tidy up.”

The tendril-winged stallion struggled to keep on his hooves, and to focus on the now suddenly menacing Aeri who had guided him so far. “Why?” he croaked as the immense stallion loomed closer.

“Why?” the stallion looked bemused. Stories of course, couldn’t have an Ichsa killing the Reaper off; that wouldn’t make a good story in the slightest. He killed my kind you see, my kind and the Reya and two-leggers so it has to be one of us that finally vanquished him. That’s how stories go, and I do dislike people who spoil my stories. So, this is how it will be told,” he stepped still closer to the weaving Ichsa. “You made a brave effort, but the Reaper threw you from the cliff to your death. As he gloated over your pathetic form, Redfleck entered the scene. Redfleck, marked by the blood the Silver Reaper once spilled from my unborn siblings. Redfleck of mighty hoof. I charged at him as he sneered over the poor dead youth and the two of us did battle. It was a clash the like of which has never been seen and we fought under a stormy sky with thunder and lightning and torrential rain crying out for the death of a murderer. Eventually, good won out and as he tried to stab out my eyes I threw him from the cliff to break as you broke. Thus justice was done; this is the truth as the world shall know it. Goodbye, Fawkes.”

As he spoke these final words, Redfleck rose up again to slam his hooves against Fawkes’ flank, sending the now hornless Ichsa pitching over the edge.

Had the Aeri not turned away immediately to thunder away and tell his tale, he might have heard a desperate mutter, might have seen a hint of the brilliant flash of fire that erupted out of the red-eyed Ichsa a moment before he would have struck the sharp rocks at the base of the cliff.

As it was though, he did not pause and so it was that none ever saw the small cloud of ashes that drifted away on the night’s breeze.
PostPosted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 9:54 am


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I, Fawkes, am a tall, strong stallion the word isn’t as good as I thought it was. Though my horn is gone I still have my hooves and my fire to fight with. Evil seems to be everywhere and I don’t know if I can fight it much longer. It’s a never-ending attack; no matter what I do innocents either die anyway or turn out not to be so innocent after all. Sometimes I wonder why I bother.

TawnyAngel
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Predestined Inquisitor


TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor

PostPosted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 9:56 am


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I, Fawkes, am a tall, strong stallion the word can go hang. Damn horns to hell, I’ve got far more power than any brute with a spike between his eyes ever had. I’ve come to see that good and evil are both rather stupid ideas, I doubt anybody is really either of them; most people are just selfish opportunists or bloody stupid. I could fight for ‘innocents’ if I wanted but I just can’t seem to see any these days and I really can’t be bothered with the fuss anyway. Everything and everyone is defective, a joke, myself quite firmly included. Life is a lemon, and I want my ignorance of that fact back.
PostPosted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 9:58 am


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All the morons

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Udi the half witted Jala. What an annoying little twerp. First he flirts with me, then goes on to say I’m not really as attractive as all that just because I agreed that I was attractive rather than shrinking away or blushing. I hope to see him again some day when he’s had a while to stew on my threat, that or I hope so find and maim some of his family; that’d be a lark.

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Ignatius. Freak of a bull-headed Reya. He’d be on my hitlist, but Utena decided to trade her get-out-of-a-beating free pass for his scaly hide. Makes little odds to me, but I hope not to run into him again any time soon.


All the people who are vaguely interesting

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Utena. No wings, very strange. Told me about a school that is somewhere in the forests of Casa Tiner. This has given me something fresh to investigate, and that along with her physical abnormality earns her a place here.

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A mare I had two foals with, she’s madder than a Carris b***h in heat but she’s pretty to look at and different enough to be entertaining. I imagine I’ll see her around the place.

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Seems to come as a free gift with Colleen. She’s quite intelligent conversation but very... nice where her charge is concerned.

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My two daughters; they’re alright really and I’m sure they’ll do fine as slaves.


All the people who are decent company

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Storm the half-breed seer. I still think she's a smug little b***h, but we are allies now. She is good company, I suppose, intelligent and not too nice. Congratulations to her for making it into this section.

TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor


TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor

PostPosted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 9:59 am


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PostPosted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 10:02 am


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Eh, nothing too special to do really. I don’t have to hang be a responsible parent anymore, and I don’t have to be keeping and eye on Colleen either. I suppose they made life a bit interesting in some respects but in others they were a complete drag. So, off to find different kinds of intrigue now, possibly involving pretty mares again seen as that bit was rather good fun. Don’t think I’d bother to help with any resulting foals this time though; I’d probably get attached to them and then something awful would happen. At least the girls will live out their short little lives in relative safety; I doubt the Katilenuck would harm such fine slaves as they must be making.

TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor


TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor

PostPosted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 10:03 am


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PostPosted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 10:05 am


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The Phoenix and the Seer - Today a met a half-breed, a Seer called Storm, whilst out in D'ob looking for something decent to eat. She told me about her plan to go off and beat up some Reya, then I found out she was a Seer and she left. I went back to eating and pondered her a little.

Where all things meet - Met an odd wingless Ichsa girl today. Calls herself a prince, and is as I once was. She seems to be coming to her senses, though, and she has given me a new thing to think about so I suppose it was a good encounter.

Flaming encounters - Stupid Jala with stupid mismatched tail bothered me today. Not much to say about the meeting other than he’s made it onto my list, along with any family of his that I find.

Alliances - Well well, seems Storm is still alive and kicking. Her little mission, it seems, is going well and we have forged an alliance which considering what she can do can only be a good thing.

Dragons, Phoenixes and Princes - I was having a lovely little fight with some idiot Reya freak when Utena the wingless wonder decided to show up and butt in. She got him off my hitlist, Gods alone know why she bothered, and then fortunately both she and he left.

Just perfect - Wandering around D’ob bored, I ran into a pretty mare and her Carris friend who were going to Quirne. I decided to go with them.

TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor


TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor

PostPosted: Sat Dec 08, 2007 10:07 am


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The Phoenix and the Seer

Well, that was Special. A Seer in the world again, and one who seems to have taken it upon herself to protect a Reya by fighting for the Katilenuck. The full explanation makes a bit more sense than that does; apparently she’ll be going after a Reya herd who have something against her Reya girl who, apparently, ‘has to live’. Sounds to me like Seer-Storm has a little thing for this Reya of her’s. Still, interesting though the meeting was I find myself a little disquieted. Seers. Can’t stand them, the idea of people sneaking into my head is most unpleasant; how am I to fight somebody who knows my mind?

Still, luckily we didn’t come to blows, soon after I found out she was a Seer she was off into the night with a swish of her pretty white tail.

Maybe one day I’ll find out a bit more about her. Maybe one day I’ll burn her. Maybe one day I’ll burn her Reya girl. Then again, maybe that’s the last I’ll see or hear of her; she might just get herself killed in this fight she’s decided needs fighting.
PostPosted: Wed Jan 30, 2008 2:34 pm


Where all things meet

A school within Casa Tiner, accessible only to those who are invited. A wingless mare seeking to fight for something, or someone, who is still there. Sounds like a story told to foals, but I see no reason to disbelieve it. The pink-maned creature seemed stable enough, and she had nothing to gain by lying to me. She was a sorry creature, though. A ‘prince’ still fighting ‘the good fight’. I wonder at the fact that I ever thought in similar ways, that I ever strove to better the world and myself.

Still, the mare aside she has given me something interesting to do, which I suppose I think her for. Life really has been dull since I met the mare named Storm. Ha! Maybe I should hunt her down and find out if she knows anything of it. I doubt she would, but you never know; I’ve no doubt Seers pick up all sorts of information with their power. Still, for now I have no real aims but to wander near the edge of the forest and find out if anyone knows anything about this school place.

TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor


TawnyAngel
Crew

Predestined Inquisitor

PostPosted: Tue Feb 19, 2008 10:40 am


Flaming encounters

I think there should be some kind of law against that level of idiocy. Even after seeing that I can manipulate fire the little purple twerp with his mismatched gold tail still got down to insulting me. He also recommended that I go to meet a Bae with blade wings. Blade wings. I suppose it could be interesting to see such a thing, but I’ve never heard of it happening before and honestly I doubt his words more than a little. He did seem rather stupid, as I say. It is people like him that make me despair at the world, it really is. All nice and sweet to start off with but within a few heartbeats all venom and insults.

Well, I soon left him to find some other pretty stallion to come onto, and I added him to my list of people to pay a visit to some time in the future. I have also decided to discover whether or not he has any family, and if he does I might have to track one or two of them down and give them a maiming. Well, even if I don’t get around to it it is a thought that keeps me entertained a little and takes my mind off how much he made me want to scream in frustration. Still, it’s over now in any case and I suppose I shall continue my hunt for information on that school the wingless girl talked of.
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