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Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2014 10:33 pm
Once Upon a Dream Word Count: 1383
When the light fades, receding into the watch that reads a countdown from five minutes, Labyrinthite realizes that something about his uniform is off. No, not off, completely and utterly different. There’s a rippling sheen that he deduces to be some sort of magic that shimmers over him.
Upon closer examination, he discovers that his hooded cape is missing completely, the card suit shirt of his uniform replaced by something collared and...lavender. When he shifts, he learns that he does still have a cape, held up by charcoal colored epaulets. Around his waist is a belt, buckle displaying the symbol from the tapestry that called to something deep within him.
Saturn.
Rocket science is not required for him to put two and two together and know that, without a doubt, the knight he dreamt of was himself. Marmoreal’s connection to him makes a little more sense.
He wonders if it’s considered irony to know that his killer in his last life died by his own hand for what appears to be the very same reason. Then, he wonders if the others from Skaikru were linked to him in this life he doesn’t remember but knows is his own.
This is strange in a way that the future memories were not, because this memory is so solid, Labyrinthite can feel the sword piercing his chest and pulling free, like an aftershock. Like he was there.
Getting up is difficult but Labyrinthite finds a way to manage, snapping the pocket watch closed and stuffing it into a pocket. Undeniably, the man is curious about what he looks like fully and sets out to find a mirror of some sorts.
Six doors and three rooms later, Labyrinthite finds himself in a chamber that looks like it’s befitting for royalty. The bed is large, with a canopy set up and worn, tattered, drapings from the top that are pulled towards the posts and tied off by gold rope. The colors of the fabric are a shimmering white to gold and blue and purple.
Cosmos, he thinks immediately, the nagging feeling and thoughts he associates with Hvergelmir pressing against his temples.
Against one of the walls is an ornately carved dresser made of dark wood, the symbols of the various planetary knights crawling up the arch of wood that housed a mirror. The craftsmanship is admirable, undeniably so, because it has stood against the passage of time and the woes of the rift.
With still heavy feet and a throbbing temple, Labyrinthite carries himself over to the mirror. The glass is dusty, as he expects, and a careful swipe of his sleeve against it cleans it enough to give a decent reflection. The man looking back at him looks very much like how he always looks.
His features are gaunt, a telling sign of his exile and lack of proper nourishment, with dark bruising beneath his eyes from his insomnia and lack of sleep, but his hair does not hold the bright pink that it always does. Instead, his hair is starkly black, a solid color that reminds him of his captaincy and the way he had decided to take his duties more seriously.
The main difference is his uniform. If he didn’t know better, if he couldn’t feel the swirl of chaos that coursed through his veins, Labyrinthite would easily mistake himself for a Saturn Knight. Immediately he wonders if his energy signature is still that oppressive dark swirl of energy, the suffocating kind for those unaccustomed or free of Metallia’s influence.
Spending a few more minutes observing his new appearance, Labyrinthite takes a seat upon the canopy bed’s mattress. It’s plush and soft in ways the straw-filled one is not, clearly designed for the noble folk.
When he lies back on it, all six feet of him stretched and sprawled across it, he thinks this is a bed befitting a king.
The echoing thought of I am a rebel made king matches the beating of his heart as his eyes flutter closed and his breathing slows.
Maybe sleep is a good idea...
Dreaming is a foreign concept to General Labyrinthite.
Primarily because he hardly sleeps, insomnia being a wicked thing that’s plagued him since he was a teenager, but also because, after the barrage of memories and nightmares, he has a difficult time discerning what is real and what isn’t.
Not-Labyrinthite, dressed in his lavenders, silvers, and golds, is standing on a platform. The world around him is bleak, full of hopelessness that makes his stomach twist into knots. There’s a flash of another, more distant memory, full of violence and rage and despair, that sits at the forefront of his mind as he stands, large ship at his back. All along the hull are people flitting back and forth, ropes being tossed over sides and anchors drawn up here and there.
Everything is distant, fuzzy at best, like a film that’s been overexposed and poorly developed. There’s a tinge of black that blots everything, inky and spreading trendials like veins, and it leaves a prickling feeling against the back of his neck as though something is wrong.
He cannot tell if it is because of the place or the memory.
Tightly gripped in his gloved hand is a piece of parchment, the sigil of Hvergelmir emblazoned brightly on the back of it. Many creases marr the paper, with Not-Labyrinthite’s grip tight and unforgiving around it and the expression he wears is a sour one, dark brows knit downward and mouth pressed into the line of a frown. While he often looks serious, dangerous even, these days, this is different.
Tension is settling in the spaces of his spine uncomfortably and his crew is on edge because of it.
The port itself is nothing new, he’s been through it several times with cargo and people but this -
Neph has summoned him with a letter so vague he has no idea what to make of it. Everything is poisoned by a heavy fog that clouds his vision and ruins his focus.
“▓▓▓▓▓▓ - “ Neph is calling his name but she sounds so far away… “Please I - “
It takes several shakes of his head before things snap into focus again. Gold eyes blink when they meet a matching set, inches shorter than himself, on the face of a woman he knows all too well. As always, Neph holds herself in a manner that is both firm and malleable, a rare combination he has never seen in anyone else.
She is grateful to see him, but also sorrowful in a way she’s never been before. When her mouth opens, he can see that she’s talking but he cannot hear the words spilling from her lips outside of the hummingbird flutter of his heart as it roars loudly in his ears and thumps along in his throat.
“Neph,” her name spills out scratchy and hoarse, because whatever she’s said to him has dread pooling in his belly. “Of course but - “ He’s agreeing, saying yes to whatever favor she’s asking, but he’s also reaching for her, large hands cupping her face.
“You weren’t supposed to be the foolish one,” he says sorrowfully, feeling the ache of his heart spread through his limbs until every part of him hurts.
“I don’t want to say goodbye.” He murmurs, everything fading to static after.
When he wakes, it’s much more peaceful than the time before. Whiskey-eyes open slowly, blinking owlishly as he pulls free of the dream world that grips him so tightly. His fingers tingle from where they had pressed into the woman’s skin. Nepthys’, or Neph as whomever he once was called her, image burns brightly in his mind as he rolls over, swings his legs over the side of the bed and sits up.
He knew her then and he knows her now. Hvergelmir, as radiant then as she is now, of course. It is then that Labyrinthite decides that if he survives, he will find her.
For now, he must return to the task of finding a way to continue to push forward without burning up. Sleep keeps his limbs heavy, but when they wake, he sets to explore the rest of the building.
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Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2014 10:37 pm
Rise: Numb Word Count: 2,030 Words
Another two of the strange fruits are consumed by the time Labyrinthite has combed through the building for anything of value. Outside of the vial, who’s liquids are still having residual effects, and the pocket watch, which he’s not sure is a result of this place or not, there hasn’t been much of anything. He feels better, slightly rested and with more strength than before, so he figures that counts for something.
While the building has been forgiving, providing him a surprisingly safe space in a place crawling with monsters, he knows that he cannot reside in it forever.
Banishment is a test of his strength and the Rift is his teacher. He will not shy away from the struggles and will, instead, welcome them.
Survival; that is something he knows too well.
Sometimes, his arm still throbs, but not enough to deter him from continuing forward. When he leaves, it is through another door that he has found, this one reaching up to the roof and reacts very similarly to the one that he opened to enter. Cogs and gears twist in places he cannot see, but can still hear, and he watches as the open expanse of the Rift reveals itself to his weary, tired eyes.
Cawing can be heard in the distance, a shiver running down the general’s spine as he reached up and hauls himself out of the hole.
“Reeeeeaper~” A sing-song voice calls to him, followed by the chatter of many beaks and the caws of several chattering birds. “What did you find down your rabbit hole~” The bird asks, eyes blinking in a sequence that is, as always, unnerving.
A head it twisting and the raven is staring at him upside down, with all eyes trained on him and it’s beak twisted open in what he thinks is a ghoulish smile. Metallia’s monsters will never cease to surprise him. “Come on reaaaaper,” it chatters, beak clacking sharply as it’s head rights itself. “Tell us what you found.”
Labyrinthite’s jaw ticks, while his biceps strain to pull him out of the sunken building, the door sliding shut with a loud BOOM the moment his feet are free. For a moment he sits, body rigid with tension as he stares back at the youma and the man eyes that litter the foresty section of the Rift he cannot seem to escape.
Ravens are not crows, but when he sees all those bird shadows and the six-eyed creature staring at him with disturbing interest all he can thing is, this is a gathering for a murder.
Carefully, he picks his answer. “I found what I was meant to,” he says at least, with something as cryptic as anything the youma has given him while he’s traveled through this twisted wonderland he’d rather leave behind him.
“Did you find what you were missing?” Questions the bird.
“One must be aware of a loss to miss it and I miss nothing,” he replies, sharp and jagged like the rest of him. An image of his mother flashes in his mind and his heart aches in a way he thought he’d long outgrown.
As always, Lara is the last of them to entice any sort of painful emotion like love from him.
Then, because the almost memory is still fresh in his mind, he things of Hvergelmir - or rather, Nephthys.
I don’t want to say good-bye, echoes against his temples, rattles back and forth in his brain. His chest is constricting, a rare sense of longing filling him as he sees flashes of eyes that match his own staring back at him with too many things he does not deserve.
It’s startling to remember what it’s like to have someone believe wholeheartedly in him.
He hates it.
“The trial’s not yet over,” the bird cooes, a resounding chorus of trail’s not over echoing from the trees and the birds he cannot see. “Carry on reaper, carry on! Deeper and deeper down the rabbit hole! Where will it take you! Where will you go? What path will you chose?”
It’s not until he’s back on his feet again that he snarls, “I chose the path I carve for myself.”
Labyrinthite does not know how long he’s been walking, but his feet carry him forward and his body is not yet weary. Along the way he has found another fruit tree and had collected enough to sustain him for a time, though he is still weary of how much he can reasonably ingest before ill-effects begin to take hold, if there are any.
At some point, he has left the forest behind, the cawing of birds an ever present reminder of what he is leaving behind as he trudges forward. The powerful tugging in his chest has dissipated, the same way the magical Saturn knight-cloak had melted away and he’s feeling a little bit aimless, but there’s a hum - a pulse beneath his feet that calls to him in a different way, like there’s a leyline beneath his feet that he’s compelled to follow.
Instincts urge him forward and Labyrinthite has never been one to suppress them, so he listens, and he follows.
The only interruption to his travels is a skirmish.
A swarm of youma attack; a mix of two-legged human reminiscent creatures and mutated animals, with their insectoid wings and broken forms. Despite how rested he feels, he has not recovered from the onslaughts from before and his movements are more sluggish than he would like.
Circumstances worsen when he begins to hallucinate.
Out of the corner of his eye, he swears he can see the unruly wolf, with his sneer and wild eyes but he blinks and the image is gone. From behind one of the humanoid youma’s he thinks he sees his mother reaching for him, sad eyes and his name shaping her mouth - it is but a youma who’s hand wraps around his throat and squeezes.
The scythe drops, dry and cracked ground splintering beneath it with a cloud of dirt and dust rising and choking all of them.
Labyrinthite frees himself with a risen leg and a kick to the youma’s stomach when it’s stickly arms hold him too far out and above. It turns to dust when he snaps it’s neck before reclaiming his weapon, blade glistening as he hacks and slashes through the remaining.
But -
One is still standing and it’s teeth and claws bite into the skin of his back, tear open the fabric protecting the flesh of his shoulder. The weight is suffocating, pressing down on his limbs until he is toppling over, tumbling, falling -
Down, down, down….
Into the rabbit hole you go...
His head cracks on something and his vision goes spotty. Everything aches and his weapon is still gripped in his hand, youma nowhere to be seen. Labyrinthite struggles to rise, head swimming and stars spotting his vision.
Before him, is the image of Nephthys surrounded by a white-gold light with an outstretched hand and that smile - oh he hates that smile.
“Don’t look at me like that Hvergelmir - “ he snaps, more sharp words like knives on his tongue but the world spins and his vision goes black.
”I need safe passage through the Bleeding Vein,” someone says and the voice is familiar but he cannot place it, vision fuzzy and gray as he tries to come to.
“What's a lady like you doing wanting to go through Bleeding Vein?” He can hear himself asking while he blinks and tries to orient himself.
“Well, a lady’s entitled to her secrets--” Everythings shifting, a whirl of smoke and fog that permeates his thoughts, makes thinking remembering more difficult…
There’s a chime of laughter, something bright and beautiful that he wishes he could bottle up and save for later, when the days are gray and the nights are lonely. Long, long strands of white - is there blue….purple…? - tickle his skin, chest exposed and pants discarded.
Oh, he’s smiling...when was the last time he smiled?
“You must leave,” the woman is telling him, gentle hands cupping his face, a thumb gliding across his mouth. “They are coming for you.”
And he laughs, not-Labyrinthite laughs like a man made of mischief and confidence. “Who comes?” He asks, one hand on a hip and the other sliding across a slender, exposed back.
“The Martians,” she answers, lips pressing against his forehead before she’s untangling herself and he’s left alone to collect his things.
“With you, I am one step ahead of the game,” he counters even as he’s gathering his things, turning his away from her and exposing his back, it’s rippling muscles and the tattoos he’s gotten as reminders of the people who are and will always remain important to him.
A rainbow rests in the center of his spine, beneath it, rests Denebola’s dragonfly, and on his left shoulder blade is Thrymr’s sigil painted artistically over the senshi’s colors. On his right shoulder is Neph’s sigil, something that does not get as much exposure as he would like but his uniform covers him from nearly head to toe.
His shirt is half way on, with Not-Labyrinthite pulling on his jacket before she is back, fingers pressing against the mark they both share. The look on her face is that gentle concern she always seems to wear and he looks up at her with confusion in his whiskey eyes.
“Troubled?” He asks, catching her hand in his and pressing his lips to her knuckles.
Her smile is strained and he can tell that there is so much she isn’t telling him, but he has learned to stop asking questions by now.
“You must go, we are not as far as head in the moves as we thought.”
Ah, there it is.
“May we meet again,” he says in lieu of a good-bye, pressing lips to a cheek while the jacket slides over his shoulders.
The fog swirls, swallowing them both.
Slowly, golden eyes flutter open, the dark dim lighting of this part of the Rift some how too bright and harsh for his eyes. Labyrinthite’s head throbs, starting from a spot at the back of his head, where he cracked it against something, and pushing forward, pressing his brain against his temples, eyes.
This time, he manages to sit up, spine cracking as he shifts and his mouth is dusty, dry.
A fit of coughing gets the better of him and breathing is harder than he would like.
Somewhere, Labyrinthite can hear distant laughter and the too familiar caw of a bird while his shoulder bleeds. A low hiss slips from his lips when he presses his glove against the wound, fingers coming away sticky with red. It stings, but it is but a flesh wound. Minor.
He has survived worse.
Something shimmers in the edge of his senses and when he turns, he swears that he can see that flowing white dress, pooling at her feet with the colors of the universe, blues and purples and every shade and star of the universe at her feet - ready for her to welcome them home.
“I am not ready,” he snaps, voice hoarse and gravelly, words sounding grated and painful to his ears.
But when? The image asks, even when Labyrinthite turns his back on it - her.
“When death comes knocking,” he spits.
Labyrinthite doesn’t need to look behind him to know that the image is gone, that what he saw was not there and instead, trudges forward, bone staff grasped tightly in one hand. He does not heft the weapon up, slinging it over his shoulder as he might have but instead allows it to drag behind him, leaving a long line in the dirt, with his heart rattling about in his chest and his thoughts wild and astray.
May we meet again, he thinks, angry and bitter, the compulsive desire to turn around and look for the woman he knows isn’t there hot and strong in his veins, when there is something worth meeting.
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Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2014 10:38 pm
Rise: Shifting Sands Word Count: 2,147
Days tick on, time inches forward, and Labyrinthite still doesn’t know how long he’s been in the Rift, if the ticking hands of his banishment have reached their end.
He wonders if the point of this punishment is to watch him crawl back on his belly to the General-Sovereigns and their Queen. His Queen, he supposes, though he doesn’t think he respects her as such.
(Labyrinthite vividly remembers bending his knee to the newly minted Queen, kneeling side by side with Alkaid, two of Metallia’s most loyal he thinks - he is biased of course - but that was different. That was before.)
But what is a knight without his queen and sovereign?
He mulls over the concept as he walks, bird skull scraping across the hard packed dirt and leaving a groove in it’s wake. This is a stretch of land, an expanse that seems to go for miles that he is familiar with. Or, that seems familiar like the Rift he grew up knowing. At least here, the nature of the Rift does not confuse him.
It does not rain and the area seems empty, abandoned, for the most part.
It’s peculiar, eerie, even though he can hear the cackling laughter of the raven that perpetually follows him.
His arm aches from the weight of his scythe and he has been lugging it behind him for an unknown amount of time, the grooves it leaves behind angry and deep. Red dirt stains the gray skull and looks to dull the blade, but the general knows it still houses it’s sharpness just like him.
Outwardly, he may look weary and defeated, but inside he is a fierce and determined creature who’s teeth gnaw at his skin and demand to be free.
I’m hungry, his monster cries, a coiling whisper that feels like smoke in his lung; suffocating and ashy. Why don’t you feed me? It asks as he trudges forward, shoulders and spine as straight as he can manage, though his shoulders hunch over anyway because he can’t quite find the strength to be as defiant as he wants.
“Because it is not time,” he snaps, feeling the beast inside him stir restlessly.
Timing is never right for you is it? His father’s voice laughs somewhere off to the left. He can see a shimmering shadow of what looks like Samuel. Unruly and rebellious. What a disappointment, the voice sneers.
“When have I ever not been to you?” He asks his father’s ghost, who’s form is creeping up on him, walking in his shadow.
The more important question is, when will you stop being one? His father laughs and his image bursts into a flock of birds that fade out.
Labyrinthite grits his teeth and forces himself to carry on. Even after death, Samuel manages to crawl beneath his skin and be an ever present reminder of all his failures.
A youma find him. At first, he thinks it to be one of the wild dogs that assisted the large beetle when they were searching for Metallia’s treasures, but as it approaches he finds that it looks more like a hyena, if the creature was decaying. It’s face is hardly a face, more of a skull with decaying flesh that drips from it’s skeletal cheek. There are no eyes, just empty sockets and the ribcage is exposed, chest cavity filled with dust and the maw is twisted open in something manic and twisted.
“Reaaaaper,” the hyena greets all bared teeth and wild grins. “A little birdy told me you were lost,” it says, shaking its head and tail, feathers fluttering.
“I am not lost,” he spits, grip tightening around the bone staff when he stops walking and turns towards the youma, muscles tense and ready to react.
“Do you feel it calling you?” The hyena asks, laughing loud and maniac in a way that sends chills into his spine. “Because it calls you, us. It’s time to wake up, reaper! Wake up!” The creature is laughing, laughter so loud and resounding that it brings him to his knees.
Labyrinthite is paralyzed, rooted in place and yet -
The youma does not attack.
“There’s no rest for the truly wicked,” it says, before disappearing back into the shifting sands.
Once he can feel his limbs again, Labyrinthite falls forward catching his palms on the rough rock and sand mixture that he sits on. Impact sends a jarring spike of pain through his once-broken arm - it is healed but not enough - and the rest of his body careens forward.
He is weary, unable to push himself back to his feet and so he does the only thing he can. He rests.
Swirling fog wraps around his feet, crawls up his legs and pulls on his cloak. This dream is more vivid yet vaguer than the last one but, as they all have, it warps his uniform all the same. Dark blue fades to lavender and his cloak is gone replaced by the capelet that hangs off of one shoulder.
There’s sand everywhere, that’s undeniable, but he’s not resting on it no -
Heavy stacks of blankets have been laid out beneath a gazebo and he’s leaning back on them, elbows propping him up from behind as he looks up at the star speckled sky stretching out before them.
“Have you ever been to the Hydra circuit Kes?” He asks, fully aware that the answer is a no. Kestrel does not leave her wonder, she’s not like him. She cares for the trials of the place and the duties she seeks to uphold. She is better than he is, she wouldn’t abandon Zoji La the way he abandoned Crims.
“Where’s it at?” She says instead, wriggling on the blankets so that she’s closer.
Not-Labyrinthite points out area, a cluster of stars that burn brightly.
“Nah,” she says, almost wistfully. “I haven’t been anywhere but here and...Mars.” Her voice is softer, the change surprising enough that he turns, whiskey-eyes sad and questioning.
She’s telling him a story, but there’s a buzzing in his ear he can’t quite fliter out. It sounds like the rush of wind through sails and the adrenaline roar of his heart. There’s something about being born on Mars, never thinking that -
Oh, he can’t understand. What is she saying -
“I never thought I’d be here,” she admits, with a sadness he can’t stand in her voice.
“If you weren’t here, I wouldn’t be Kes,” he reminds her, arm slinking across her shoulder and pulling her against his chest. “I never wanted it, the title you know but - “
Fog pools around their blankets, seeping into his skin and clouding his vision. Everything is shifting; stop, wait, no --
"It's traditional to go through the trials before seeking an audience," a girl stammers.
There he is, with a s**t eating grin on his face. "That's what I did isn't it? I made it to the end I just--" He looked thoughtful, gloved hand running through dark hair. "I just skipped straight to the end, there are no rules about how you get to the oasis right?"
Always finding a way around the rules, wasn’t he?
"I mean…” The girl is clearly stumped, had no one done what he had before? No...of course not, he was always doing things in an unorthodox manner, tearing into new territories with desperate claws and biting teeth.
“...No, not technically, you just have to make it through the gates and into the courtyard to be received,” she concedes and Not-Labyrinthite is beaming at her.
His mouth is open, rebuttal on the tip of his tongue words dancing and ready but -
Ah, there is the fog. He welcomes it this time.
Labyrinthite wakes to a mouthful of sand. He sputters, coughing and tongue scraping against the roof of his mouth in a poor attempt to rid himself of the fine grains that litter it. Sitting up his hard with his bones creaking and aching as he pushes himself up and up until he’s on his knees. Bile churns in his stomach, crawling up his throat and spewing across the sand. It tastes like stomach acid and fruit.
Vomiting is never pleasant, nor does it leave a good taste in his mouth, but at least the sand has been expunged and he can be grateful for that. Another dry heavy or two before his body realizes there’s nothing left to come up and stops. His sides ache and his mouth tastes like sand and dirt and trash, but he wipes it with the back of his hand and climbs to his feet.
Keep moving forward, he instructs, knees bending when he reaches for the curving spinal staff. His stomach rumbles with upsetment, but he pushes forward anyway.
Once he thinks his stomach is settled enough he eats two more of the fruit he collected. The taste nearly makes him gag or want to vomit again as food does when it comes back up that way, but he forces it down because the juice is soothing against his raw throat and his stomach rumbling with hunger.
When he gets out, he’s swearing off sweet things if he can manage, though he suspects a diet of any kind will prove taxing after this.
At some point, he finds a bend in the road that leads upward, a stretch of something like a mountain coaxing and calling his name. Labyrinthite chooses not to think too much about it as his feet lead him forward, up and up.
Unlike the heat of the desert, this is something cold and biting like frost against the skin. Not often is he grateful for his many layers, as tattered and torn as some of his uniform is, but this is a time where he is. Cold bites at his shoulder, from where the youma’s claw had torn the fabric open, and it stings his face but, as always, he pushes on.
Up ahead he sees the shimmering image of a woman, cropped hair and goggles with a sour expression. His heart, which runs on blood and adrenaline and no emotions except -
No, it’s not -
But what if -
He’s hallucinating again.
You abandoned us, Fake-Zircon snaps at him, eyes angry and wild. She’s never been insubordinate before and that’s what tells him this isn’t real.
Labyrinthite does not answer the captain’s angry snarl and continues on his way.
You promised to protect me. To keep them from making me like her. You promised Zircon hisses, small hands balled into fists and her arms shake from her fury. She has no prosthetic and instead...something scaley stands in it’s place. They forced a youma to take the place of my leg. There’s so much bitterness in her voice and her image is shifting, melting into Suri instead of Zircon.
Now she looks frightened and there’s something wrong with her eyes.
You were gone and they took everything from me when I resisted. There’s scarring across her face and the image shifts and she’s -
General Zircon with her youma leg and -
Her cape is a youma with eyes that blink at him from beneath the way it drapes.
You left. This is your fault. Youmaed Zircon spits as he passes her, the cloak glaring in accusation.
“What else is new,” he sighs in return, a hint of defeat stretching across his shoulders as he continues to climb.
At the top of the hill - cliff, he realizes it’s a cliff that overhangs the area that he had just left, melting back into some sort of forest - there is a lone tree. Oak tree, to be specific, with thick and leafy branches that provide a wide birth of shade. If he were in Destiny City and not this prison, he would find it quaint in the way that college students who wanted to sit outside as they studied would. His hand is halfway to pressing against the trunk of the three when a snake drops from above and lunges at him.
His scythe flies from his hand, toppling over the edge of the cliff as Labyrinthite stumbles back. The snake is all skeleton with its snapping jaws and rattling tail.
“Reaaaaper,” it hisses and he thinks that if it had a tongue it would flicker out at him. “Down the hole you mussssst go.” His reaction time is slow, his body is still weary and Not-Zircon has managed to shake something within him, but he’s stumbling back, arms lifting automatically expecting a bite -
His heel goes over the edge.
No, no -
Labyrinthite falls with the bone snake grinning like a cheshire cat as it peers over the edge at him.
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Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2014 10:40 pm
Believer Word Count: 5,022
The fall is long, with Labyrinthite having resigned himself to the fact that he’s going to hit and he’s going to hit the ground hard. Teleporting costs more energy than he has, he can’t stop the velocity that grows as he drops and he can barely shift enough to curl into himself for a smaller point of impact.
He does, however, reach for any part of the cliff that he can grab and slow him down. As expected, it goes poorly, jarring his arm out of socket, tearing up the fabric of his glove, and does little halt momentum.
When he hits the ground, there’s not a part of him that doesn’t feel every inch of impact.
Labyrinthite finds himself to be lucky in that nothing seems broken, even if his shoulder screams with pain that he bites back with a hiss. Managing to sit up partially on his knees, one arm braced against the ground, Labyrinthite’s head swims, vision spotty from the pain. In moving, the general realizes that his shoulder has dislocated and he will, at some point, have to push it back into place.
Something else distracts him.
Before him is what feels like a swirling oppressive, choking, swarm of chaos that permeates his skin and the air, making it hard to breath. Bright eyes of gold stare unblinkingly at the object half buried in the ground before him. Oppressive chaos aura nearly blinds him while compelling him forward, less wounded arm reaching, the other, more pained one, dragging him closer and he’s stretching, reaching -
Fingertips press against the hard, cold bone of the skull and something - power, he thinks - shooting through his arm and slamming into those slots of space between the bones of his spine. Labyrinthite is gasping, choking on the air he’s trying to breathe as too much strikes through him eyes widening even as his vision begins to fade out.
Electric, that’s what his body feels like and it’s so different than the last time he touched a greater youma fossil...he cannot keep his eyes open of his consciousness alive.
Labyrinthite fades out, hand dragging across the bone until his arm slaps against the dirt.
When he finally comes through, there’s a thrumming beneath his skin; that ever present chaos itch alive beneath his skin reminding him of who he is, General Labyrinthite, Knight of Metallia, and he feels stronger than he has in days. The rush of power and chaos and everything that wraps around his core feels him with a reviving rush that allows him to climb to his feet.
His shoulder throbs, still resting just out of place, but with his newfound strength he presses the flat of his palm against the joint and braces himself while he pushes it back into place. It hurts, of course it hurts, but with that dark and soothing energy swirling in his veins it’s nothing more than a dull ache, a lingering throb that he feels but is capable of ignoring.
There is a pop as the joint is forced back into place and Labyrinthite hisses in pain, but climbs to his feet anyway.
When he touches the skull again, he’s not flooded like he was before. Instead, he feels calmer than before, the pulse of his heart steady and serene. On the other side of the skull he can see white hair and the flutter of long, dark blue fabric.
“Adamantine?” He calls, brows furrowing as he attempts to peer around the large bird skull to no avail.
Alex, he can hear Regan’s soft voice call him from the other side. No, wait. It’s closer, inside the skull…? You promised you’d stay and you left. Emotions aren’t something his little star displays, but he can hear anger hot in her voice. What happened to being a ‘safe space’, she accuses and he can see the blue of her eyes in the darkness of the cavern created by bone and dust.
“I didn’t have a choice.” Labyrinthite tries to defend, voice hollow and empty. He knows that he’s lying even though there’s some truth to his statement. He had a choice and he chose to go against proper conduct, violated policy. He rebelled, in the way that only he knew how, and now he, and his loyal wolves, threaten to pay the price. “When I get back,” he starts, because there is no if anymore. He’s come too far to fail now. “Things will be different.”
He’s just not sure how yet.
You left us to suffer, his little senshi is snarling, imagine climbing across the rough, rocky ground to grasp at the smooth bone of the carved out eye hole. There are bruises on her face, much like the time he took her to the hospital, with blood trickling down her chin from her mouth.
“Yes,” he says, quietly. Reaching for the images face, he does his best to caress the cheek his fingers go right through, “and I have suffered in return.” Labyrinthite looks at the youma skull, flashes of it’s pieces burning hot and bright in his mind from when it’s power shifted through him. “But we will be stronger for it,” he states with utter confidence as she fades away.
Because what is strength without suffering?
It takes many days, four at least if he’s able to judge the time correctly, for him to dig the skull out but when he is done, he is triumphant and proud.
“Reaper,” the youma call to him, the snake in it’s tree above and the hyena off in the deserty distance. “Reaaaaper,” the raven’s chorus chirps, “it’s almost time to finish the puzzle!”
At this point, Labyrinthite is uncertain if completing the puzzle is key to his banishment or if merely managing to claw his way out of it is how he’s supposed to prove he’s worth enough to return. It doesn’t matter, he muses, because there’s blood on his hands and his skin is tainted with his sin. This is another test, that he thinks himself capable of passing.
There is a map in his head, transmitted there by the greater youma who calls and demands that he collect it’s parts and return it to him. Bring me to life once more and I will reward you General, it’s disembodied voice promises him, pressing it’s desires and needs against his shoulders until it rests in the base of his neck.
His path leads him away from the desert, into what appears to be an expanse of mountains shrouded in fog so thick that visibility is nearly impossible. Of all the areas he has travelled into, the general thinks this might be the most dangerous and he treats it as such. He is stronger than before, feeling more rested and capable than he has since he was first banished, from the gift bestowed upon him by the flush of chaotic power that chants, remember who you are along to the rhythm of his steadily beating heart.
“I am Chase Black,” he says beneath his breath, eyes bright and wild as he descends deeper into the foggy that swirls and threatens to wrap about his limbs and keep him locked in place. “Son of Samuel and Laralee Bradford.” His grip tightens on the spine of his blade, shoulder pulsing with that dull ache. “But first and foremost…” A shaky, audible breath as he spots movement out of the corner of his eye, the chatter of snapping claws loud in his ears as his heart beats louder in his chest. “I am General Labyrinthite of Metallia’s army.”
And what do you believe in Labyrinth? He can hear Alkaid’s gentle, soft voice of their teens asking. Who do you serve? What is your purpose? What guided path do you follow? Her image is bright against the fog, glowing cracks in her skin as bright as they would be back on her star. There is a ball of light in her hands, reminiscent of the time she led him to the edge of a cliff and made him jump.
He doesn’t fear her, but he knows her strength and how his own waxes and wanes.
“I believe in the cause. Metallia has never led me astray even as her servants do.” Labyrinthite answers with a low and raspy voice. He talks often, to his ghosts and to the youma that seem to track his every move for reasons he is incapable of understanding, but this is different. Here he must lay his conviction out before him. “I serve Metallia as our sovereign and the queen she has appointed. “
Alkaid’s image seems pleased with his answer, the painted smile on her lips obviously forced because no one forgets how to feel quite like the ascendant general.
I never meant to lead you down into the darkness, she sighs, pushing off a bog tree to stand before him, palm open as her ball of light shines brightly against her pale skin.
“We talk tandem paths, Kai,” Labyrinthite replies, ghost of a smirk on his lips as he looks into eyes shades darker than his own. “This was inevitable.”
Alkaid laughs, bursting into a flurry of shattering images; of which he thinks are shards of memories they once shared but they’re too fleeting for him to make much of anything. Left behind is her ball of light which darts just out of reach when he tries.
She is the senshi of guidance and hallucination or not, he trusts her not to lead him astray, so he follows the light deeper into the mist.
Something rises from the swamp when he finds the greater youma’s spine half submerged in murky, dangerous, waters. The creature is massive, covered in scales and...fish-like. The mouth opens and closes, loud gasping sounds emitting from it’s swollen mouth. It stares at him with unblinking eyes, approaching him at a slow pace, more of it’s body -
Oh. Guts rot out from beneath it’s belly, insect legs replace it’s lower half but still it manages to keep itself together as it climbs up up and out of swamp water. “Reap - Reaper” The fish-thing’s voice rasps, audible gasps between attempted words like breathing is too hard out of the comfort of it’s realm. “Do...you...hear the mu...music?”
Clapping claws and rattling bones shake and move and he can piece together the melody they create.
“Yes,” he says firmly, inching closer to the spine and ribs that he sees protruding from the water.
“Follow the white...rabbit….” The youma says, then sinks back into the bog.
Labyrinthite swallows, hair on his neck and arms standing on edge. Everything here is a complex puzzle and he’s being pushed in one direction and he wants to resists but can hear the greater youma’s voice in his head. Fix me and you shall be rewarded.
“I will do what I must,” he answers, uncertain if the creature even hears him.
This time, when he touches the youma fossil he does not blackout. Instead, he is imbued. Strengthened.
The spine is heavier than his scythe, which he has dismissed back into subspace because he cannot carry both. Dragging it behind him leaves deep grooves in the ground that fills with swamp water as he moves until there’s no more water left to cling to the soft dirt and it’s just a bare trickle that follows him out of the bog. Shake. Clap. Rattle. That’s the combination that he follows, because Alkaid’s light had faded when he found the spine. It seems foolish to trust the advice of a youma but...they haven’t led him astray yet.
Besides, what has he got to lose?
(Outside of his life, there’s not much more they can take from him. His wolves, perhaps, but he refuses to believe that they wouldn’t stand a fighting chance. )
Labyrinthite stops to rest, arms weary from hauling the spine along with him because it is large; four or five times the length of him. Wherever the melody has led him is cold, a chill seeping through his bog-damp clothing and into his skin. Chaos gives him strength, rejuvenates him but he is still human and his weary bones need rest.
Leaning up against the spine, Labyrinthite dozes.
When he wakes, Labyrinthite is startled, body coming alive in a jerk with his weapon in his hand before he can register where he is and what is going on. Before him is a youma. A bird skull makes up the face, feathers protruding from the base, with an exposed ribcage and skeletal arms that form claws at the end. Their spine meets what he think are hip bones and crab legs seem to protrude from bone. Of all the youma he’s seen up close and personal as of late, this is the weirdest one yet.
“Reaper,” their beak chatters, bright orange pupils loling in their eye sockets. “There is no time to rest, we’re late! We’re late!” They jump on their legs, claws snapping in his face. “Must hurry, we’re late!” The youma is turning away from him and Labyrinthite sighs, weapon fading back into subspace.
“Late for what?”
“Late for the execution.” It chirps, the shake, clap, and rattle starting up again.
Labyrinthite doesn’t understand, but he grips the spine and follows anyway.
The crab has led him back to the youma skull, which is confusing in itself because Labyrinthite does not recognize the path they have come from but here they are, with the skull waiting for it’s spine and ribs.
“You said there was a beheading,” the general states, eyeing the youma from the corner of his eye, wary and untrusting.
“Beheading?!” It shrieks, with a clattering jaw. “No. Re-heading!” It’s claws are urging him forward and it doesn’t take much to know that they want him to return the spine to it’s rightful place.
So he does, even if it takes him longer than he would like.
He feels stronger than he has in a long time, but he’s still weary.
There’s no rest for the wicked, his mother’s quiet voice says behind him and he feels a lump form in his throat. Wear your sins proudly, Chase, because you have suffered and you have become stronger for it.
He does not look behind him, because he cannot face his mother’s ghost when he can still feel the shards of her soul lodged in his throat, and busies his hands with pressing spine against skull.
The light is blinding.
The greater youma is not yet alive, too many pieces still missing, but it’s voice is loud in his head.
Go on Reaper, there’s still more for you to do.
Labyrinthite wants to spit defiantly in response.
There’s always more to do.
Finding the rest of the pieces isn’t as daunting, the impression of the youma and their winding map vibrant in his memory, as the first piece. Youma flicker in and out of his presence. Some attack and he fights for his life and for the respect he knows he’s re-earned. Others, they aid him. Why? He cannot say, but he is grateful.
Still, he is haunted by ghosts.
General Zircon and her youma cape, cloth wrapped around her eyes and a monster in place of a leg always seems to rattle him. You promised you’d stop this! Where were you! She likes to shriek at him.
It gets easier to ignore the more he continues, with the fluttering power of chaos from each fossil he retrieves keeping him grounded and strong.
What he sees is not real, he knows.
Alkaid always comes when he thinks he’s lost. There’s a ghost of a smile on her mouth, matching eyes staring at him with a fondness he thought she’d lost.
Anchoring, that’s what you do Labyrinth, she tells him as they walk in tandem, side by side, with her cape sweeping behind her. There are deeper bonds than just loyalty to the cause. You forge them and they will lead you.
That doesn’t sound much like something the ever loyal senshi would say to him, but he believes that there’s truth to it.
“We do not lead by fear,” he says to her, watching her as the walk. Her arms are folded behind her back, which is straight as always, and she looks ahead, focused on the goal.
She was always better at that.
No, we lead by loyalty, she agrees.
“I suppose now is a good of time as any to forge such things.” He sighs, thinking of the city and the home it once offered him. How many wonder where he’s been?
How many care?
Or better yet, who will still stand beside him if - when he returns?
The loyal will and if not, he will forge new bonds.
Everything is a test and he will be stronger for it.
The hind legs come with a hipbone and it’s one of the hardest pieces to carry. Everything about the beast is large, a creature so much larger than the man who only stands at six feet even. Labyrinthite must settle the bones against his back and pray to the deity he does not believe exists.
This piece has flesh that clings to it and Labyrinthite struggles to keep from wondering how it did not rot away like the rest of it. Then, he wonders if flesh will spring to life around the pieces he collects.
Only time will tell, he muses.
Were it not for the fruit he continues to eat, despite the things they make him see and the ghosts that lay upon his back, and the flush of power that flutters through his frame...Labyrinthite knows he would lack the strength needed for this. His bones ache, but he pushes on regardless.
Laughter rings brightly above him, an imaginary weight pressing skeleton deeper against his flesh. This is the s**t ya’ve been reduced to? Iris’ harsh and gruff voice rings out, hurts his ears. Figures, she snorts and Labyrinthite’s ankle scar stings as it’s prone to when he thinks of the rainbow senshi. Lookit where yer conviction gotcha.
“And look where your refusals left me.” He bites back. He’d begged her once upon a time, to help him break free of the chaos that wrapped tightly around his core and itched beneath his skin. “I asked you for help once and you rebuffed me.”
Labyrinthite hasn’t stopped moving forward, even though his legs feel like lead.
You ALREADY got a chance, ya ********’ piece of s**t!, Iris’ ghost taunts and he can feel her legs swinging from wherever she’s perched. Where’s yer conviction now?
A snarl rips from his throat, nails scratching against the bone he barely manages to hold on his shoulders. “Exactly where it ******** belong.” Serving Metallia hasn’t always done him many favors and it’s cost him both his parents but -
Labyrinthite thinks of Adamantine, the girl who is a kindred spirit. Of Zircon, with whom he has so much history with and so much more to build and create with. Of Dia, who’s nestled herself into bones and carved a space in his heart. Then, there’s Tourmaline who is wild and feisty and fiercely protective of those she finds near and dear. Somewhere, there is Aue, with his bright potential and so much he can offer to Labyrinthite and the sovereign he serves. Elsewhere lies a wolf who is volatile and unpredictable and who knows what has become of him in Labyrinthite’s absence.
But, who is to say what has become of them all these people that he sees slivers and shades of himself? These people who have engrained themselves into the person that makes up the once-reaper king of Metallia’s future.
Reaper, he is undeniably.
It is yet to be seen if he is worthy of any sort of kingly title.
Time ticks on, the steady flow of grains from one end of the hourglass into the other. How much time passes, he is uncertain. It is the ways of the Rift he muses, though he hates that he has no idea how many days, weeks, or months have passed. Labyrinthite doesn’t even know how long his banishment is supposed to laugh.
It doesn’t matter, once he finishes this task he’ll return to the surface world.
He was promised.
Another youma helps him, a mantis looking creature that’s been meshed into a tick that can adjust it’s size. There are snapping pincers that he would hate to have pierce his skin, but he can see the value of the creature.
“One more, reaper, one more!” Mantick chatters at him, prancing forward while he follows it through a winding road filled with rock towers and caverns. “S’the best piece!” Mantick insists.
When he finds it, Labyrinthite’s whiskey eyes widen in surprise. Of all the pieces he has found and collected, none of them are quite like this. Deep in the cavern he’s been lead to lays a living, beating organ - a heart. The way it pulses is sluggish at best, like a heart that’s barely holding on and is about to flatline but it glows softly with each beat.
The kickback when the touches this is nearly overwhelming, quite literally knocking the general off his feet and flat on his back. His body twitches, appears to seize for a moment, limbs thrashing against the stone concrete. A sharp pain settles in the base of his spine and his back arches, eyes fluttering.
Eventually, his body collapses and his consciousness fades.
In the haziness of his mind, the angels come for him.
Oh, ye of so little faith, one of them says. The others chime in with a chorus of don’t doubt it.
From where he lays, Labyrinthite must struggle to his feet. The familiar fog wraps around his feet and the angels circle him, hands pressed together in worship and their eyes blindfolded, but he can feel the weight of their gaze anyway. First, he gets to his knees, with a hand grasping at the air for the weapon that will not form.
There is no scythe staff to help him climb.
Victory is in your veins, the angel’s sing and their voices leave him shivering.
“I doubt that,” he says hoarsely, one foot before him now, as if he’s kneeling before a queen. Leaning forward, he rises.
Don’t doubt it, the sing again, voices twisting into a scream that leaves him wincing. Oh, ye of so little faith, the first one is saying again, head shaking as wings unfold behind them. A bird mask is on this one’s face, hands more like talons and if he could see their mouth, he thinks it would be sneering.
Victory is in your veins, you know.
Labyrinthite, for all his trials and his ability to overcome, cannot help but doubt it.
Rise, Reaper. They demand. Rise.
Labyrinthite sways on his feet, feeling small and gaunt and...frail. His cheeks are hollow and the bags beneath his eyes are dark and unforgiving. He turns in a small circle, taking in each and every one of the angels that stare at him. All of them are grotesque in some manner. One has an alligator maw, another has several eyes along the skin the robe exposes. This one has scales that crawl up and off their form, splitting open and exposing something rotting beneath the flesh.
We break you down, the bird one says and Labyrinthite interrupts it.
“To build me up. To make me a believer.” But he had always been a believer hadn’t he?
Once so firmly rooted in his faith. He has his faith, still, Labyrinthite is sure of that. Metallia has never been the one to lead him astray, even if the leaders she brings leave sour tastes in his mouth.
But is that not the point, that he understands even if he does not agree with the motive and moves?
Be the change you wish to see Reaper, the angels advise him before the disappear into smoke.
Labyrinthite wakes to his heart rattling in his chest. His starseed aches, hurts in a way reminiscent of that time Iris had attempted to change him. At first, he thinks the ghost pains have resurfaced, but quickly realizes that the buzz in his veins remind him of the adrenaline rush that comes with the taste of a starseed on his tongue.
Power he thinks as it flutters through his being. I am stronger for my suffering.
Laurelite sought to teach him a lesson and he has learned.
Gathering up the youma heart, Labyrinthite feels jittery like there was a something from his dream that he was missing or doesn’t understand. Already, a plan is forming in his head of what he wants to demand from the youma he is so close to finishing.
It’s chaotic energy is a steady pulse in his veins.
There are many things he must ask, demand, of it, but he is unafraid. The youma will listen, he has earned it’s favor and likely it’s respect.
He begins the long trek back to the skeleton.
When you’re at the bottom, you’ll follow anyone, that makes you feel like less of a failure. Labyrinthite thinks as he carries the heart back to the youma it belongs to. He cannot count how many times he has felt like he has had to climb his way out from the bottom of a pit. This will be different.
Along the way, Labyrinthite sees the six-eyed raven. It sits among the stone trees that sprout from the ground. “General Labyrinthite,” it rasps, wings settling against it’s large body as it’s head twists and twists until it looks at him upside down. “It appears that you have solved the riddle.”
His gaze is level, face impassive as he stares back, heart strapped against his back by some makeshift veins he had found in his travels. “If the riddle is to how I return, then yes.” What had he said before? That he saw the potential?
Well, now he sees nothing but potential in the things that he wishes to do. Rise, angels had told him.
Rise he will.
“There is more, that awaits you,” his raven says, cryptic as always. It’s head snaps back into it’s proper place and it’s beak opens for a long and loud caw.
Something that looks like a rabbit surfaces from the trees.
“Follow the white rabbit, Reaper.”
Not for the first time, Labyrinthite thinks, what do I have to lose and follows the rabbit into the forest.
He is lead to a cavern that shines and sparkles like a treasure chest. When he touches the wall, which is made up of gems, he feels something dampening. Peculiar.
Flares of ever present youma auras dim when he steps in the cave, which puts every part of him on edge. “What’s this?” He mumbles allowed, breaking off a crystal for closer examination.
It does not take long for logic to catch up to him.
Energy dampeners, the good general thinks. Reasonably, he cannot carry many himself but…
Once the youma is reassembled -
Oh wonderful. Potentials continue to unfold before him and, for the first time since arriving, Labyrinthite feels rejuvenated and certain. No longer does he think if with the bare hints of disbelief that he will outlast his punishment.
What had that Skaikru girl said to him? Get knocked down, get back up.
Now isn’t that a motto that has defined his entire banishment? If he is capable of anything, it is getting back on his feet.
Everything is survivable.
The crystals will just make what he wishes to do more possible.
He takes one when he goes, returning to his original goal. There will be an opportunity to come back, he is certain.
Labyrinthite places the heart in the ribcage he had pulled from the bog. It pulse, strong and fierce, with enough force to push him back and for dust to fly around him.
His back slams against the cliff that he had fallen from, it aches from the reminder but Labyrinthite squares his shoulder and watches as the youma seems to stitch itself back together. Flesh appears to grow from nowhere over the bones, muscles spawning and knitting together against each limb he carefully carried across the vastness.
Well done Reaper, the youma’s old voice says and this time, it’s not just in his head. Legs push off the ground and the newly reconstructed creature stands.
Labyrinthite strides forward and the youma bends so that he may climb on it’s back.
“It’s time to remind Destiny City of what I’m capable of. ” A wicked grin is on his mouth as he stands on the youma’s back. “You can knock me down, but know I will get back up.” The creatures that have helped him are surfacing again, climbing atop the beast’s body and latching on to whatever they can.
This is a ride out they don’t want to miss.
What will you do now, Reaper? his mount asks, muscles shifting beneath it’s new skin.
“Remind the world that the dead are gone, and the living are hungry. I have been without the world for too long. It’s time to remind them that monsters exist in all skins.”
Because that’s what he is, a monster, isn’t he?
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Posted: Fri Feb 21, 2014 10:45 pm
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Posted: Wed Apr 30, 2014 6:52 pm
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Posted: Sat May 03, 2014 3:35 pm
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Posted: Thu Aug 07, 2014 9:36 pm
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Posted: Sun May 17, 2015 7:44 pm
Past Life Solo Roleplay --A Rebel Made King (2683 words featuring past!Iris and past!Denebola)
Tarren’s never been good at being told what to do. A rebel at heart, he’s evolved into a boy who resents authority, desapises orders and craves a life that’s more than what his calling as a knight of saturn has turned him into. He’s never wanted anything that his life has given him, forced upon him; his family is splintered, broken, and his father cruel. His bloodline is tainted by the calling of the wonder Crims and his choices have been stripped from him since he was only three.
Tarren is a born rebel, hard-wired to question authority and demand answers. To live life as he sees it, not how others demand.
He has a tendency to run off from his comrades when the fancy strikes him, never in dire times, but on the rare occasions he could. When the princess they served travels and he takes advantage of the confusion, the planning, that comes with the journey.
Tarren, the boy behind Crims, craves adventure like human lungs crave oxygen. He craves possibility like a dying man craves one more day and he craves freedom above everything else.
Tarren is a boy who resents the hand dealt to him at birth, a boy who desperately wants to make his own choices, and discover who he is and what he wants on himself. He wants to have a say in what destiny has in store with him. He wants a voice and he’ll be damned if the nature of his unwanted knighthood prevents him from getting that.
At three, he’s told that the mantle of Crims would be passed to him because he’s the only male heir in two generations. Because he’s young, he doesn’t understand what it means or what kind of responsibility would rest on his shoulders in the aftermath. He tries to ask, tongue stumbling with the complex words, but his father tells him that he didn’t need to understand because understanding was a matter for adults. Tarren gets told that children are not to ask questions but do as they're told, so he does, until his unanswered questions become too many and he’s brimming with them and ready to burst.
At four, he meets a girl with the bluest eyes he’s ever seen. He’s fascinated with her too red hair and her hardened gaze. He thinks she is too young to look so serious but he see’s the way the adults treat her and the way other children avoid her and he decides, that’s not okay, and climbs into a tree and throws twigs at her until she notices him. She smiles so brightly at him that he loses his balance when his cheeks flare red and he tumbles out of the tree.
At six, he’s isolated from his sisters, taken away from his mother and his heart aches out of want, need for women he can no longer hold on to. He is left in the cold hands of his father, who drills lesson after lesson into him. His father teaches him as many of the tongues as they can find tutors for and he finds himself multilingual by the age of 8. Still, his father is cruel and beats him any time he refuses to study, any time he doesn’t do as he’s told.
By seven, Tarren resents the man who claims he has his son’s best interest at heart. He’s been beaten one too many times, felt the sting of his cheek and the ache of his jaw after a particularly bad backhand more times than he can count. He can speak in many tongues but feigns ignorance when asked to say specific phrases. It’s a small victory, watching his father get red and huffy and to see him scream at the tutors instead, but Tarren will take it. It’s the little rebellions that start to affect the tide.
By eight, he’s learned where his sisters and mother have been hidden away and once a week he sneaks out to see them. He manages to go six months without being caught, until his father discovers the handspun blanket his eldest sister gave him, shoved beneath the floorboards.
It takes him three weeks to properly recover from the beating.
When he is nine, he is taken to see his wonder for the first time. It’s a ornately designed castle that looks as though it erupts from the ground with the way the walls and towers are built. As much as he hates the expectations that come with being associated to Crims the little boy that he is cannot help but stare, open mouthed, at the castle that is to be his.
When he is ten, he gets shipped off to Saturn permanently so he can join the rest of the recently discovered pages in the first stages of training. At first, he thinks that he’ll be going to Castle Crims, to stay at his wonder but, to his disappointment, he finds that he is sequestered away in Princess Saturn’s castle with the rest of them. He never thinks he’d experience homesickness but in the first month away from Earth, he’s retching from it.
When he is twelve he moves up from what he considers the knight version of servant boy to an actual page. He is presented with his signet ring, which fits too snugly and he finds himself wondering how it will fit as he grows. Reactively, his mouth opens to ask, then quickly shuts because his father’s words are ringing in his ears. Children are not to ask questions but to do as their told. So he swallows his question and ignores how bitter it tastes on the way down.
When he reaches fourteen, he’s all limbs and no grace. He’s too tall, too thin and no amount of extra exertion, extra training can seem to give him definition or muscle. He’s stronger than he looks but most sneer down at him like he’ll break if they asked him to do any sort of manual labor. It lights a fire inside of him, fuels the harbored rage he has against his father, his trainers, his title, and his wonder, and he rebels in the only way he knows how.
He proves that they are wrong.
By the time he reaches fifteen he is tall and lanky. He looks as though he’s got no muscle to him but beneath the too-big page clothing he is lean, defined however subtle it may be. He sneaks out of his quarters at every chance he gets, determined to explore the planet he’s been forcibly relocated to.
When he is sixteen, he slips out to see the traveling circus that’s set up and meets Iris when he sneaks backstage. He sees her four more times on Saturn, once on her homeworld and then on another's. Something about her fascinates him and he finds himself looking for her familiar tent at each place they go.
When he is sixteen the Knights of Saturn travel to the planet that orbits the star Denebola and he meets that girl with the bluest of blue eyes and enamoured with her all over again. He hopes he'll get a chance to express as much, but the planet is raided, she is kidnapped and he spends the next two years searching the galaxy for her.
When he is seventeen, he acquires the mantel of Knight, despite his young age and his tendency to disappear. He is silver tongued and clever minded, able to manipulate situations in his favor. He knows that he needs the power that comes with progression, because his vendetta is strong and his ambition stronger. He wants to tear his redhead's captors limb from limb.
He knows that such behavior goes against the nature of the Knights, but he does not care because he is young and foolish and wants to do as he wants for once in his life.
When he turns eighteen, Tarren abandons his post and turns his back on his brethren. He slips away in the middle of the night, cloak fastened across his neck, and hood pulled tight over his head. He leaves nothing behind, tucks a knife into his boot, and steals passage on a ship. He's a stowaway for days, slips in and out of docks, on and off of ships until he finds a port who trades secrets like currency.
He fabricates stories of others, so convincing that he nearly fools himself from time to time, in exchange for information on slave ships and their cargo. Asks about a red haired girl with blue eyes and a dragonfly tattoo over and over again until he learns something new. He finds her once, but is too late to save and he curses himself for his poor timing.
By the time he is nineteen, he has boarded four slave ships, freed three and commanded two but has come no closer to finding his blue-eyed girl than he was when he began. All leads are loose ends and each fight leaves scars, but he's determined and angry and doesn't care who he takes it out on.
He wears the symbol of Saturn like a battle scar, powering up and using his privilege as an advantage in fights. He leaves wreckage in his ruins, terrorizes anyone and anything that stands in his way. A man on a warpath, Crims takes the space seas by force.
By the time he is twenty, he's still searching for his fire haired girl, but he's got a star fleet of twenty and he spends his timing running. He’s got a crew around 80 of all different origins, who come to his side because he promises freedom, liberation, protection. Most have someone they’re searching for like him, a loved one, a friend, who’s been taken away that he promises they’ll find (and he almost always does) but there are those who think he’s crazy, yet follow him anyway.
There’s something about the runaway knight that demands authority, that demands people listen and follow his commands. Someone once makes the mistake of telling him his quest is pointless and the whole crew learns to never question him again.
“This girl you’re looking for, you’ll probably never find her,” one of them tells him, a mistake they’ll never make again.
And he’s got this cold, hard look in his eye when he advances on them. “Does that bother you?” He hisses between bared teeth and narrowed eyes. “Are you questioning my leadership, my choices?”
“N-no,” they stammer with their back pressed against the railing on the ship.
“Good,” he snarls, tip of a blade pressed against their jugular. “Because I’m happy to escort you off this ship, let the sharks have at you again.”
“N-no sir, I’m sorry sir,” they mutter, struggling not to swallow and draw blood.
“Good,” he growls gruffly, spinning on his heel and marching off, barking orders at the others who scramble to fall in line.
His crew learns to never mention his fire haired girl, unless they’ve got a new lead, again.
He is twenty-one with wings made of sails and a reputation that has most slave dealers avoiding his ships. He is no closer to finding his blue-eyed girl than he was two years prior but instead finds his blonde haired princess and her travelling circus when he’s sailing through the Hydra constellation. He seeks her attention immediately upon docking his ship, finds her in her circus and begs her company for a night.
When he leaves, he presses kisses to her mouth and whispers a promise in her ear, until next time princess.
He is twenty-two when he finally finds blue-eyed girl, in the company of another world’s knight, looking worse for the wear. She clings to the woman like a lifeline, even as she looks at him with relief, desperation.
“Tarren,” she breathes his name like a prayer, untangling herself from her companion and reaching for him like a thirsty man reaches for water. He grabs a hold of her, sadness seeping through his frame, clings to her like he may never see her again and presses his lips against her forehead. “Crims,” he whispers breathily in her ear. “Call me Crims,” he tells her because he abandoned that name when he abandoned his post.
“Crims,” she murmurs when she presses her lips against his, her kisses hungry and feverish because she’s spent four years in captivity with an ache in her chest, one that’s only dissipated with his appearance.
He is twenty-three when he leaves her in the hands of her she-knight after her pressed kisses into his skin. After he’s whispered promises into her ear. Until next time, huntress, he says when he returns her to her world. He does not stay long enough to see her people welcome her home, instead leaves as quickly as he’s come hellbent on continuing his journey of liberation.
He is twenty-four when he returns to Saturn and reclaims his wonder. It is at Castle Crims when he discovers his summon, a raven-like bird creature who regards him curiously while it picks at it’s feathers. It is about time that you returned home knight, it scolds, cocking it’s head at him.
“I have no home,” he defiantly declares.
Do not be foolish, his summon chastises bristling it’s feathers at him. You are your wonder and your wonder is you. And as much as he argues, Crims knows what the bird says is true.
At twenty-five ,he makes the castle his permanent base and his tried for his treasons. He comes out relatively unscathed, but knows that some of his fellow knights harbor deep routed grudges against him. He is confined to his wonder and relinquishes his ships to his second-in-command, who still reports to him weekly. Who continues his legacy even when
At twenty-six, he fights for his life against another knight and barely survives. If it were not for Iris’s intervention, he might not have survived. His opponent is jaded the outcome of his trial, resents the freedom Crims once had and how he’d managed to go unpunished.
“Liberation of a few meaningless slaves is nothing compared to endangering the lives of everyone in the galaxy,” he hisses as their weapons collide.
“I am more than my wonder,” he growls in return, even as he sinks to his knees from exhaustion. “I am more than my knighthood,” he says when his weapon breaks in his hands.
Iris saves him from what would be a fatal blow and he presses kisses to her lips as thanks. He is twenty-seven when his girl with fire for hair comes to his castle and presses kisses to his jaw line. When she thanks him for his tireless efforts to rescue her from her fate, even though her she-knight saved her first. He thinks of confessing his love to his huntress, but opts otherwise because she is bound her star as he is bound to wonder.
He is twenty-seven when he sees Iris for the last time, when he kisses her one last time and whispers, until next time princess, against her skin. He thinks of telling her that he loves her, but decides against it because what good is a confession such as that when neither can stay together for long? What good is an admission of love, when either party will leave anyway?
He dies at the age of twenty-eight on the front steps of Castle Crims, with a sword buried in his chest falling to his knees before his wonder. His lavender uniform is seeped in blood, his lungs filled with copper liquid, and his tongue thick with it’s metal taste. A hundred thoughts pass through his head as he lurches forward, palms scraping the stone steps, but the strongest thought is, I am a rebel made king followed by a gargled laugh before he falls to the ground with a thud and blood spilling from his mouth.
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Posted: Thu May 21, 2015 10:51 am
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Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2015 1:17 pm
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Posted: Fri Oct 23, 2015 1:19 pm
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