writeblrbattleroyale
writeblrbattleroyale
let the bodies hit the floor
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the first semi annual writeblr battle royal. hoted by @your-absent father, under construction
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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Round 3 intro
The audience cheers. M smiles, or at least you think he does. The battles finally go to his plan. M gently taps to his mic and the whole audience goes silent like in snap of his fingers. All of the audience just looks at him with a blank stare, half looking at the next battle before them. “Well, that was a round filled with drama, blood and of course, some delicious death.”  The audience screamed in pure happiness, which sounded like screams of pure terror. “Let’s go to round 3. We are so close now to the finish line." Before the round starts, one of the audience members stood up. It was the fortune teller, who was the only one in the audience that looked genuinely worried and scared. “Watch out! M does have a weakness. You can’t hurt M, but you can-“ She tried her best to continue her words, but she was flying across the arena by someone. All the audience just clapped happily. Only a man much older than most of them looked silently at the woman. “Well… after this detour, we can continue. Good luck our competitors.”
Happy next round! Go read the previous fights filled with blood and tragedy and heartache in the #writeblr battler oyale
The new pairs are
Julyren vs Erin
Daiko vs Elyren
Ophelia vs Lyra
Good luck to new pairs. Have fun! Or how much fun you can have
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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A tragic end to a battle most entertaining. Congrats to our semifinalist
M
Writeblr Battle Royale - Round 2 Elyren vs Herschel
Hi, there! I am taking part in @your-absent-father's amazingly fun event, Writeblr Battle Royale, where I and other cool writeblrs choose our most powerful OCs and make them fight in an interdimensional arena. It's chaotic, it's badass, and more importantly, it is FUN (:<
This is also the second round!
Important: These events are not canon to our stories! They're just something very cool we as writers have decided to subject our characters to, for the sake of writing practice and Fun tm, though it is completely unrelated to our projects and the characters' actual experiences in the books.
Check out the rules and other amazing fight scenes at @writeblrbattleroyale!
TWs: guns, blood, gore, graphic depictions of injury, burning/fire, hallucinating about a dead loved one's ghost, suicide, violence, repressed emotions.
In this fight my teenage elven sorcerer Elyren faces off against Herschel (@quisyop's character), in a new, more dangerous arena - a maze filled with deadly monsters.
Herschel’s head was pounding, horrible visions danced at the edges of his eyes. Bodies and death, family and friends burning and screaming. He felt his body shake and swerve, an aura of confusion covering him. His vision went dark. And he woke up to the dark green shades of a vast, vast maze.
Elyren blinked, eyes adjusting to the world around him as a new arena came into view. How great… He thought, before noticing the strange looking woman staring intently at him. She looked like a Fortune Teller, somewhat. He’d meant to ask who she was, but he wasn’t given that time. As she pointed at him, the world around him became blurred, like a strange dark fog. Elyren shook his head. Well, this isn’t ideal. The fog twisted and stretched, spiralling around him. Elyren couldn’t tell where he was, nor could he precisely tell what was happening or where he was going. Until he heard that voice, twisted and filled with hatred, but still painfully familiar.
"You did not save us.” The voice hissed, and Elyren whirled around. “All that happened, was because of you. It’s all your fault - I was foolish enough to believe you could be any different.” Elyren shook his head, speechless, staring at the bloodied ghost, he didn’t know what to say. Memories from that night assaulted his mind, the day that Elyren could never seem to forget playing out vividly before him. “We are dead because of you!”
Elyren bit back the urge to sob, struggling not to look away from the familiar ghost of his brother. “T-that’s not true. You were killed, I tried to save you. I- I am still trying to save you.”
“Liar. You went to that temple. Aeralyn followed you, I followed you. And following you led us straight to that Imperial scout. If you had only listened to me, for once in your stupid life, I would be alive. We would all be alive. But you had to screw that up too, didn't you? You deserved to be exiled.”
Elyren frowned, no longer trying to hold back the tears. He wanted to believe this wasn’t real. Kiran would never say these things, he’d never speak to him with such hatred. But that didn’t matter, because, at the end of the day, Elyren knew the truth. And the truth is that he always screwed things up. Even this. The world began to spin around him viciously, the ghost never once wavering from his accusatory glare. YOUR FAULT. Elyren placed both his hands tightly over his ears as the vision grew in intensity, spinning wildly like a hurricane around him, before it dissipated, fading away just like it appeared. And the winding maze appeared before him. With great effort to stop his hands from shaking, Elyren sighed, wiping away the remaining tears from this horrifying encounter, the rageful voice still screaming at the back of his mind as he steeled himself for the fight to come. Let’s just get this over with.
“Shit.” Herschel’s head pounded as he pushed himself off the grimy floor below him and tried to get a good understanding of where the hell he was. “Shit”. He, still shaking, checked his pockets and supplies. Not much. His gun, a couple of matches, and a small knife. (as well as some cash and things that wouldn’t help) The gun was still missing two bullets. “Shit!” He took a couple of moments to breathe and collect his thoughts. Three things were clear to him.
He was stuck in a maze, presumably by the… thing from the match before.
He would probably kill another at the end of this. Or be killed, a thought that… no, they could work together. He wouldn’t die.
He was having a hell of a bad day.
Herschel stuck his hand out and pressed it against the wall of the maze, ready to follow it to, hopefully, the end. He passed the place he started in 7 minutes.
First, he took a look around, taking in his surroundings. The walls of the maze were high, so climbing them was out of the question. There were multiple pathways he could take, though clearly only one would lead him to where he needed to go - and judging by whatever it was that had trapped them here, those pathways would likely be riddled with traps and gods know what other monstrosities. Elyren shook his head, taking a deep breath. There was no time to be rash or get lost in this place. If he wanted to be out of here, his only option was to get through this as swiftly as possible, face his next opponent and see where this takes him next.
Trying to focus searched his mind for a spell that could help. If he couldn’t go around this thing nor climb up, then his best option was go through. And he knew exactly the spell to guide him to where he needed to be.
With a twist of his hands and a few muttered words, glowing runes appeared before him, flashing a floating mix of purples and greens that lit up the dim maze. Elyren focused his mind at the center of the small glowing ball of light commanding it.
Lead me to the center of this arena, find my opponent. The runes buzzed, small sparks flying from it at the command, and after a small pause, it shot fowards, drawing a glowing line into one specific pathway of the arena and then further. Elyren smirked, and wasted no time following this guiding light towards his opponent. Now it was just a matter of time. Despite focusing on not losing sight of the runes, Elyren knew he should be careful, after all, he did not know what this maze was nor what lurked within it.
So, while running ahead, he kept watchful attention fixed on any signs of threats from his surroundings. That’s why - after what seemed like an eternity of running from corridor to corridor -when he heard that bellowing growl approaching from one of his sides, Elyren was not caught of guard, quickly making a sharp turn on an opposite pathway and pressing himself hidden against the wall, just as a strange looking beast lunged into the corridor he’d been standing moments prior, tracking, ready to strike at any small sound. He peeked over the wall, only ever so slightly.
The monster looked like nothing he'd ever seen before, mutated even. Elyren made himself quiet, controlling his breathing so as not to give away his hiding spot. From the corner of his eye, he could see his guiding spell was still within reach, floating next to one of the doorways, waiting for him. He needs to figure something out. Now.
Herschel had simply accepted that this maze was either
A deeply complex magical construct that shifted and moved with the explorer
Was a circle
He chose to ignore that latter possibility, figuring that he’d just have to explore the good old-fashioned way. With each step on rocky earth that had the texture of smooth marble, he felt his legs shake with more speed and strength. He shouldn’t have been walking so much. But he wasn’t. It was a short walk, probably barely half a mile, but his legs felt weighted down and cramped quickly through his travel. When the texture of the ground turned from slippery marble to a texture like sandpaper, Herschel went cramped up and slowed down, taking more effort in his watchful gaze. Then the headache of the sweetly sick smell of cotton candy found its way to his nose. It made him want to vomit, combined with the heat that he found himself feeling. The noise of a sharp blade on concrete alerted me to the beast that found itself on the corner of a turn. It launched at him, claws like broken shards of glass aimed at my chest. He barely slid out of the way and whipped my cane up in defense. He got a better sight of it, pale skin stretched taut against bones that turned in angles too sharp and pointed to be human. Attached to its body were vague estimations of what limbs should look like, more lumps of flesh stacked on top of each other than neatly designed appendages built from years of evolution. Teeth like freshly molded hot red glassware shined at me in the glaring sunlight from the skies above.
“Oh hell no…”
Herschel charged forward, using his cane as a makeshift staff and swinging it at the leg closest to him. The beast's leg snapped easily, bone poking out of its skin. It reacted in rage, swinging its neck at an inhumane angle and lunging at Herschel, who swiftly shoved the came in its mouth, trapping the teeth shut.
While it whipped its head around trying to free itself, he pulled his revolver out and shot twice in the thing's chest. A thick, viscous liquid burst out of it as if held in by tight pressure, its color remaining Herschel of the dark red of mahogany. Herschel wiped the sludge from his mouth and leaned down to pull the came out of the thing’s open maw. He pulled it out with ease and reached down to break off the teeth of the creature, ready to use it as a replacement weapon. The monstrosity snapped its jaw shut with its final wisps of life, tearing a long wound down his arm as he recoiled his arm.
“FUCK!” It was dead now. But Herschel was close to the same fate. Now without a way to support himself, he found his way to the corpse’s pierced leg, bone still fresh with blood. He steadied himself and pulled on the bone, with as much force as he could with his undamaged right hand (he’s a leftie!) and found himself smothering a cough of vomit as the dripping fragment slid out. So now he had a cane and needed a way to stop the bleeding.
He took an admittedly short glance at the torn skin of the beast before deciding against it. He slid off his glamorous furry coat and pressed it against the open cut. He stifled a cry of pain as the strands of fluff pressed against it and absorbed the pain. After a minute of recovery, he continued onward with his warped bone as a cane and an improvised bandage, deeper into the maze.
With practiced ease, Elyren reached for his runic bow, soundlessly nocking the arrow and pulling the string taut. Peeking behind the thick wall behind him, Elyren could see the beast stalking, mercifully distracted by the glow of his guiding spell - still floating on the other side of the corridor - like a kitten with a ball of yarn.
Carefully, he adjusted his position, placing the arrow on the corner of the wall, taking delicate aim. Elyren narrowed his eyes - the beast just keeps moving. He’d never been a great hunter, but this is ridiculous. Holding back the urge to scoff, Elyren took a cautious step forward, bow string still pulled taut, as he cast flaming blue runes onto the arrow’s tip - as silently as he could manage it, muttering the spell’s words under his breath. After all, there was no telling how good this beast’s hearing was. Once he was sure his aim was somewhat true, pointed carefully to what he assumed was the beast’s heart, he finally let the arrow fly and it lodged itself onto the creature’s thick flesh with a burning hiss. Good, that means the runes worked.
The monster howled, throwing its clawed paws up in the air in pained fury. Elyren was swift to press his back onto the wall once more, hiding himself from the creature’s sight - at least for now. He needed something to hide, and since this terrain provided little in terms of shelter or higher ground, he’d just have to get creative. The invisibility shroud. He’d done it before, in the previous fight, and it worked out well enough. Though there was still no telling whether or not this beast couldn’t track him by smell or hearing, though given it’s inability to find him behind the wall, it was likely that it relied strongly on its sight.
That’s it! He thought, biting back a triumphant laugh. I’ll use the shroud, blind the beast, and then go for the killing blow, whatever that may be. Perfect! As the creature prowled the hallways behind him with increasing fury - the runic spell still burning its necrotic flames inside its flesh driving the beast mad - Elyren knew what to do. It took no time for him to cast his invisibility runes, though he was careful enough to conceal them as well this time. Won’t make that mistake again. He thought, recalling how he amaterishly neglected hiding the runes in his prior fight, and how that cost him dearly. He also carefully placed his now empty bow on his back once more.
Now completely shrouded in invisibility, Elyren moved, steps light as featherfalls on the concrete floor beneath him. Now the tables were turned, he figured, as he was the one stalking the beast that had meant to kill him moment’s prior. That brought a satisfied smirk to his fine features, but he pressed on, reminded of the urgency of this moment as the beast rounded the corner right in front of him. He stopped, and the beast whirled its head from side to side, confusedly looking for the one responsible for the necromantic arrow on its back, but finding nothing.
As fast as he could manage, Elyren quickly got to work on his next spell, the same necrotic flames of the arrow now floated before his hands, hidden by the shroud, ready to blind the beast before him. He just needed the right moment. Unwilling to wait too long, Elyren whistled, loudly bringing the beast’ attention in the direction of the hallway where he was standing, though it still had no clear path to where he was in order to strike. Just as soon as the beast’s sight focused on his path, Elyren struck, blueish green flames flying directly onto the monster’s glowing eyes. And the beast howled, flames searing through it’s flesh like acid burning through paper, melting down it’s eyes closed. For good.
Wasting no time, and taking advantage of the beast’s confusion, Elyren pulled out both of his runic daggers, lunging towards the scrambling beast with a viper’s precision. This, he knew how to do, killing swiftly was second-nature to him after the War.
Aiming for the exposed throat of the thrashing mutated monster, after dodging a lucky strike of the monster’s impossibly sharp claws, Elyren aimed for the bulging veins upon its exposed throat. With another swift sidestep, his daggers plunged onto the waiting neck from both sides. With considerable effort, as the beast continued it’s agonizing thrashing - one of his clawed paws tearing a deep gash on the side of his leg - Elyren was able to sever the monster’s skeletal head from it’s shadowy, lion-like shoulders. As the strange head rolled on the floor, the body went limp, spasming one last time before promptly falling forwards, blood splashing all over his dark robes. Well fuck, this is going to be hells to wash off - Stumbling backwards, Elyren shakily supported himself on a nearby wall as his now-injured leg trembled and gave out, dark arterial blood seeping onto his clothes faster than it should. His invisibility shroud swiftly fell around him, revealing him to any incoming threats. This is not ideal.
Pain shot upwards from the injured leg, and he cried out, hand instinctively reaching out to press onto the wound, and scrunched up eyes going wide as soon as he felt how deep that gash truly was. Looking up at the dead monster’s body, shakily, he confirmed his suspicions. In the monster’s now still claws was a ripped up strip of a familiar cloth, tangled with - Elyren realized with a sudden urge to vomit - strips of his own ripped up flesh. Shivering, Elyren closed his eyes, turning his head away from the gorily unpleasant sight. There were other matters at hand. Like not bleeding to death before the real fight even began.
He knew what he needed to do - he’d done it many times before. It doesn’t mean it is any less horrifying to consider. Before a quick pause, mentally going over the correct spell, Elyren finally made his decision. His left hand glew bright with searing flames - normal ones this time, like what one may find at a campfire - and he moved to hover it above the gaping wound, hesitating for a mere moment. He knew many spells for killing, many more for controlling the dead and causing fatal harm, but he awfully lacked knowledge of how to heal things, especially on himself. I’ll have to work on that, I can’t keep roasting myself everytime I almost die. Gods, I should’ve listened to Kiran when he told me to learn more about alchemy, shouldn’t I?
Gritting his teeth tightly, Elyren decided to be quick about this. The quicker the flame, the quicker the pain. Swiftly, he all but slapped the flaming hand above the wound, beginning to sear it closed. An inhuman howl left him, despite his attempts to bite back his pain, and Elyren barely acknowledge the warm tears sliding down his face, all his thoughts focused on the gash burning closed on his leg.
The godsforsaken smell that rose from it was quickly becoming too much to bear, blood sizzling into evaporation making Elyren want to vomit even more. Swallowing back the bile, as more tears fell from his eyes, it pulled away the hand. Elyren looked down, gasping for air, and examined his handiwork. The wound wasn’t bleeding anymore, and though the burn was one of the most cursed sights he ever saw in his life, his leg was still functional. Good.
Elyren shuddered, taking a moment to steady himself as the white hot pain turned into a dull - equally unbearable - throb upon his leg’s charred skin. After a moment of testing his footing underneath him, Elyren finally felt confident enough to push away from the wall, taking a stumbling step towards the guiding spell still floating next to that strange doorway.
Limping over, Elyren slowly realized how far he was into the maze. The sounds of the cheering audience were distant, but present, and looking up, he could not see the arena’s higher walls anywhere close. He was at the middle of the arena, he realized. And his opponent was likely waiting for him on the other side of this next corridor. Walking slowly became less agonizing, as Elyren forced himself to become used to the insistent pain, pushing it to the back of his mind, determined to win this fight. Quickly.
Crossing this hallway, in his compromised speed as his leg all but dragged behind him, took a long moment, and as he made one final turn left, the spell dissipated. Elyren saw where he was. A wider clearing, in the very center of the arena, or so he assumed. And before him, his strange-looking opponent was waiting. Well, the spell was not wrong, he figured, bracing himself for the fight he knew was coming.
As Herschel’s final gasps of air were about to leave him, he locked eyes with a young… man? His skin was the color of the swirling sea, the undertones a deep indigo. His hair was long and silvery, falling down to his shoulders that were covered in a dark cloak. His leg was torn open and burned from methods that were ambiguous to Herschel. He didn’t know if this thing was another beast, a foe, or a potential friend. But he saw the look in his eye- one he, too, once had. A look of fear, and an urge to strike out at potential danger. He wanted to help this kid.
“Hey! You! You know what I’m saying?”
The strange looking man limping in the arena before him stopped in his tracks, leaning into a short bone for support. Elyren tried not to think where that bone had come from. He was slightly thrown off by this man’s attire, which looked like nothing he’d seen before in Agrannor. Well, he shrugged, still not weirder than all of this. Nothing can be weirder than this fucking situation. He quickly noticed how exhausted his opponent looked, but also did not fail to see how this person seemed to be analyzing him, as if checking to see if he was any threat. Subconsciously, one of his hands reached for the handle of his dagger, but din’t unsheath it. Just placed it next to the blade. Waiting for the man’s next move. Through the ringing of his ears, and the annoying pain shooting up from his blistered leg, he noticed the man was speaking to him. Adjusting himself and his hearing, Elyren finally understood it. “Hey! You! You know what I’m saying?” The man asked, and Elyren tilted his head.
“Yes, I do understand you. Why?” He questions, his sharp accent echoing around the arena. There was deep confusion in his eyes, but curiosity as well.
“I’m guessing you want to kill me? Like all the fucking things here?” Herschel had taken a casual posture, but kept a tight grip on the bone in his hand. “We don’t have to, you know! Violence isn’t the answer, as they say! …you probably don’t know what that means, don’t you… never mind! Just… don’t hit me preferably!”
Elyren narrowed his eyes at the man’s answer. One particular choice of word struck him quite harshly, though he was aware that this might not have been the man’s intention. Thing. “Like all of these fucking things up here?”
He remembered how it was like, in his past. Being hunted for sport, treated like cattle for slaughter. Just another abomination the Temple of Radiance had to eliminate. Just another thing.
Shakily, he shook his head. Now was not the time for this. He needed to think clearly, Elyren told himself, as he awkwardly took a steadying breath in, though it hitched. He didn’t know whether it was at the pain on his leg or the memories the word brought up. What a day.
“... Thing? No. Don’t you ever call me that again!” Elyren said, arms crossing over his chest protectively. “I’m not a thing. I am a person.” He paused, calming himself down and recalling the rest of the man’s response. “And no, I do not want to kill you. But… what choice do we have? How else can I get out of here?”
Despite himself, his lower lip quivered, before he forced his anger to return to his stony facade once again, speaking under his breath. “You’re not the only one afraid here.”
Herschel could feel the sting that his words dealt.
“No, you’re no “thing”, you’re right. You’re a magnificently complex miracle of nature, and whoever has said otherwise is wrong.” He paused when he heard the young man open up, realizing it must have been a hard thing for him to do. Herschel squatted down and placed his weapons on the ground, clearly showing himself to be unarmed. “You need a hug? Because I think I do too.”
Elyren paused, frozen like a statue. “... What?...” The word left his mouth almost without him realizing it. The man had apologized, sincerely in fact, for his slip up. And had offered him a hug. A hug? Elyren thought. What an unusual request for someone trapped in a deadly combat. He frowned slightly, considering if this was a trap or in earnest, eventually realizing it was the latter. A hug would be nice, he figured. No one ever hugged him after Kiran died. Most people just try to kill him on sight, like he is a pest or something disposable. This is new. This is… nice, if it is true. “... A hug would be great, honestly…" He ran a hand through his now tousled hair and shurgged, trying to be nonchalant and not awkward "Sure, why not."
Herschel strides forward, arms outstretched. A look of sad empathy is found in his eyes, but he covers it with a welcoming smile. As he reaches the peak of his stride, the noise a loud howl screeches out into the air. “Fuck.”
Herschel dashes forward and grabs Elyren swiftly, pulling him behind a scenic bush. “I’m sorry for the sudden push, and I’ll get you that hug in a moment, but it looks like we got a bigger problem in our hands right now. You seem like an efficient killer, but please keep yourself safe. If it comes to it, I can kill it. You don’t have to die.
The bellowing roar shrills through the air, chilling his blood within him, as his opponent - or should he call him friend? - drags him to safety behind what looks like a bush, but feels more like metal than anything else. Falling to the ground behind it, it took everything he had to bite back the cry of pain from the impact on his wounded leg, but he managed. In his shock, Elyren listened carefully register the man’s hurried words, as the beast’s footfalls echoed in the arena around him, menacingly.
Carefully, he peeked from behind his shelter, seeing a giant monster with a large toothed mouth. It was green, and grey, and looked like a mix between a praying mantis and a dragon. It was horrible, and he hated it already. Frowning, however, as he slipped back down out of side, he mulled over the man's words. “What? No. You’re not fighting that alone. I’m still breathing, that means I can still fight, and I’m not backing out from this. So, let’s kill this thing. Got a plan?” He said, slipping his bow back into his hands, and steadying their shaking as he moved to nock an arrow.
His words were hushed as he kept crouched down behind the “bush” out of the monster’s line of sight. He hoped. Elyren noticed the human’s worried glances to his injury - which admitedly was horryfying to look at - and tried to give him a reassuring smirk, which faltered into a pained grimace. He wasn’t sure at all. “Don’t worry about the leg. I’ve had a lot worse.”
Elyren didn't know if even he himself believed the words he just spoke, but there wasn't time to discuss it.
Herschel grimaces at the cut, but chooses to trust Elyren’s statement. “I left my weapons on the other side of the room, so I’ll join you in a second.”
As Herschel moves to stand up, Elyren stops him with a firm hold on his arm.
"Rule number one of survival: Never part with all your weapons. No one needs to know how many of them you have in the first place." Elyren says, as he gives Herschel one of his many daggers.
“Thanks! Little rusty, but should be good!” Then, Herschel looked at the beast. It was massive, almost double his height, and its limbs resembled jagged stone in their strange shape. Its natural armor was the color of sea glass, and its head jutted out strangely from the neck.
Without thinking twice, Herschel ran to the other side of the creature, swinging away from the stab of its arm and preparing to strike. “The name’s Herschel, by the way!” He yells out as he dashes towards the beasts side and manages to slice into its underbelly.
Elyren narrows his eyes as his new ally runs straight towards the monster, and sighs, shaking his head.
"I don't know why I am doing this, but alright then." He mumbles under his breath as he casts a shield spell, not for himself, but for the reckless human currently right beside the furious creature.
"Good to know your name!" He yells out, standing up fully to take good aim at the beast's neck, unprotected by its back armor. "My name is Elyren Tyrvommira. Just call me Elyren because yes, the surname is terrible for humans to pronounce, so don't worry about it."
On the other side of the arena, face to face with the monster, Herschel frowns, trying to figure out a way to pronounce Elyren's surname even though he was told not to. "Ty-ra-vom-Ira? … You know what, nevermind”
Elyren laughs, "Told you. Just forget it, oh Gods."
Herschel, now holding on the dagger as it pulls through the insect-like monster, quickly darts his eyes Elyren as strange glowing lines and circles appear around his hand. Herschel stares at them as they float around Eylren’s wrist, and is shocked out of it when he flys backward when the creature slams it's leg against his skull. But he feels no pain. Only the energy of the hit seems to transfer, and seconds later, Herschel is back up and grabbing his cane off the floor. “Thanks for whatever the hell that was!”
Elyren smirks. The spell worked - that's good. He rarely ever had to cast a shield for someone else, and it required a bit more concentration than usual, but at least it gave his newfound ally a fighting chance against whatever this monster was.
As the beast threw its head to the side to try and catch Herschel, it left its long, sinewy neck fully exposed. Perfect. Elyren coated his arrow with necromantic flames once more, and let it fly. The sharp tip lodged itself deep onto the thankfully exposed flesh with a gnarly hiss.
As the flames started to consume the skin and flesh of the very-much-still-alive monster, Elyren suddenly felt a jolt of dizziness, struggling to recover his concentration on the shield spell for a brief moment as his leg flared up brutally. Well, the hazards of being a sorcerer He thought, hand hovering over the burn on his leg as the other still clutched the bow.
After a short moment, his focus on the spell returned completely, but opening his eyes revealed an unforeseen reality.
Upon trying to handle both his pain and the spells, he had forgotten to hide himself from sight. And the monster was currently racing it's bug like form towards him, despite the flames currently eating at its neck. No time to think, just run.
"A little help would be nice! Quickly. Like right now!" Elyren screamed, trying his best to limp away from the quickly approaching monster, which was now furious. He didn't have time to nock another arrow, nor to cast another spell with his compromised focus. His only chance now lied in his ability to find a better position to stab this thing. If he could manage to escape it's claws in time
He stumbled, almost falling to the floor, and his injured leg locked in place, refusing to move as a wrong step shoots more pain through his very core. Elyren looked up. The monster was almost upon him. He braced himself for the inevitable. But the bite never came.
Herschel only had a couple of seconds to process whatever the hell was going down with the glowing runes, because the beast was dashing toward his ally at a breakneck pace. Herschel took a swift breath and dashed at the thing, cane in his torn left hand.
He brought the bone down with all the force he could on the thing’s leg, which was already ablaze with madly flowing, flesh-consuming strikes of fire. A sick pop could be heard throughout the maze as it made contact and the thing’s head twisted as if on a swivel. Herschel fell to the ground, clutching his arm, as the beast shakes and twists beside him.
“You… good? Might have some… I can give you my clothing of you’re bleeding."
Elyren pants, out of breath as he puts all his weight on his uninjured leg. He might have miscalculated the damage his previous encounter in the maze had caused him - his leg was all but torn, held together only by the clumsy cauterizing he'd cast. It was... agonizing.
Watching from afar, he saw as the beast stopped in its tracks, his ally tackling its leg with his cane. He shook his head at his ally's question, taking a shaking, rattling breath to try and think through the pain.
Running had only made it worse, he realized that now, but there was no time. "... I'm not bleeding, I think hng I ... made it stop. It just hurts. A lot" He blissfully keeps out the details of how the previous monster had torn away a chunk of his leg, which was now an open wound, and how he had to sear it closed by himself. There was no need for the other to worry more. He positioned himself out of the struggling beast's reach.
It had been deterred but was recovering remarkably fast, climbing onto its remaining legs as it let out a blood-curdling howl. "But we don't have time. We need... to end this." Elyren choked out, forcing his voice to sound even and strong, clutching his dagger as he scrambled in his mind for a plan. "If I... If I can restrain it, can you help kill it?" He called out, drawing the beast's attention onto him with a whistle as he awaited the other's response.
Across from him, Herschel staggers up. “Hell yeah, man.”
He poses his staff above the thing’s neck where the arrow had pierced, ready to slam it in like a hammer and nail. “This is gonna get bloody!”
Elyren nodded. Closing his eyes, glowing purple runes appeared on the arena's floor, as the concrete stone started to rearrange itself onto chains. Focusing on it, Elyren ordered the chains to latch onto the creature's back, restraining it constrictively. Hands stretched out, Elyren made the stony chains tighten around it, all his remaining strength channeled into keeping the thrashing monster held onto the now broken floor from which the chains had sprouted. This wouldn't last for long, but it was the chance they needed it. He met his ally's gaze and nodded again. New runes - another spell - formed around Herschel's staff, marking its end sharper, giving them a greater chance to kill this thing. Out of breath, struggling to hold both spells at once and ignore his growing pain, Elyren ordered, a panicked lilt to his voice.
"... Do it! Now, do it now!"
With his last breaths as blood poured from his open wound, Herschel’s staff was lifted in a high arc above his head and slammed into the creature’s skull. An explosion of blood covered his lower body, and he felt himself kneel to the ground as his body gave up beneath him. But he rose back up, using his bone as a weight to hold himself. He shakily lifted his hand and brought a thumbs up to Elyren. He managed to cough out, “How about that hug?” before collapsing into the stone floor.
Elyren keened, finally able to let go of the spells he'd been holding onto. His head ached like it had been smashed with a hammer, and he could barely feel his feet. All that he could feel was pain, shooting up from his charred, torn leg.
His vision swimmed, for a moment, and Elyren felt as if the ground was moving beneath him, which he knew from experience was a tell-tale sign of being about to pass out. Closing his eyes tightly, he forced his body to steady, breathing through the pain until the dizziness stopped and the ground felt even once again.
He opened his eyes just in time to see his ally collapse. Elyren felt an unexpected surge of worry. Had Herschel been injured? Elyren analysed the other, looking for visible injuries. The monster's blood was dark as tar, which made it incredibly easy to see the growing crimson stain in the other's clothes, around a wound. Oh.
With his leg dragging behind him, insistently numb and agonizing at the same time, Elyren was able to limp over towards Herschel, who was now waiting for him just around the fallen monster between them. Once he reached the other, Elyren paused. "... Yeah, a hug... sounds about nice... right now," He reached out a hand. "Do you want to... get up... or do you prefer to stay sitting down...? Either way it's - it's fine. For me. You helped out... a lot... in the battle. "
Herschel speaks softly. “It’s fine… I can…” He tries to move himself but his body refuses. “Sorry, I… don’t think I can.” He reaches out to hug Elyren.
Elyren notices the other's struggle and nods. "Don't try to.. get up. I'll get .... to you, sorry." Wincing, Elyren lowered himself into a seated position so that the hug was easier to achieve, Elyren responded with an awkward, distant, but gentle hug. He hoped his lack of practice in such things wasn't so apparent, but he knew it was. Gods, I'm pathetic. How can I not remember how to hug?
They stayed like that for a while. It was nice, Elyren realized, leaning a bit more into the hug before letting go. This was his first hug in years, and only now had he realized how much he'd missed it - being hugged. He stiffled a small sob at the thought, before clearing his throat.
After the hug ended, they stayed on the floor, just sitting side by side. Elyren's gaze wandered upwards, towards the tallest wall of the arena. The wall from where M - and likely hundreds of others - were watching these fights. He set his jaw tightly, thinking.
"... What now? I - I mean. How do we get out of this? We were... supposed to fight, but now, I can't do this, I don't want to do this."
I just want to go home. The thought dies in his throat before he can bring himself to say it out loud.
Herschel takes a breath, one loaded with sorrow hidden by years of practice. “Don't worry. I can fix this.” He slips out his gun and presses it into Elyren’s hand. He guides it up as Elyren stares at it, confused. He presses it against his own forehead, as the young elf holds the gun.
"What is this? I don't understand." Elyren asked, confused, trying to pull the gun away from Herschel's grasp, to pull it away from his forehead, but the other did not let go. Despite not knowing what this contraption was, Elyren somehow felt it was nothing good. "W-what does it do? Tell me what does this do, let it go-"
Herschel whispers calmly to Elyren. “It’s a way for both of us to be happy here. When I say so, you’ll pull the trigger- the little thing on the bottom- and it’ll fix the problems. And hey, the next one that comes along, just point this thing at it, using those fun little glowy things from before if you’d like, and it’ll fix the problem too.”
Herschel, strangely, doesn't feel fear or anxiety. At least for himself. He realizes, after a moment, that he has one last message for Elyren.
“Don’t let anyone pretend that you aren’t a person. That you aren’t a sentient being. Because you are, kiddo, and I know with all my heart that you’ll do good. I… believe in you… if that matters.” With that, he makes a gesture with his hand to signify to press the trigger.
Elyren's hands shook. He listened to the other's words, trying to understand what they truly meant. This didn't look like a nice thing. This... this looked like a weapon. Realization hit him faster than a falcon - Herschel was trying to give him a way to kill him without a fight. Whatever this did, it was - he hoped - an easy way out. For the both of them. Despite still not wanting to do this, despite hating this with every fiber of his being, Elyren forced his hands to obey, moving to clutch the weapon with both his hands, holding it more precisely. Tears were falling unbidden from his eyes, Herschel's last comment made Elyren choke up, more tears following suit. He'd waited for so long to hear those words. That he is not a monster. That he can do good. How twisted is the hand of fate that he now has to kill the person who just said the words he'd been waiting for so long. Elyren stammered, trying to breathe through his sobbing but failing. "...Thank you. F-for what you said. I'm so sorry, I'm sorry...!"
All Herschel did in response is clasp his hand on Elyren’s, holding it firm. He nodded in understanding.
Elyren took a deep breath, steadying his hands one last time. Pull the trigger, Herschel had told him. What is a trigger? He thought to himself, carefully leaning over to see within the weapon, and maneuvers his shaking fingers to clumsily but carefully rest upon what he thought was the trigger. I'm so sorry.
He barely presses the mechanism, and a loud, awfully loud sound echoes around the arena. Elyren screams, ears ringing from the unexpected sound. Blood splatters onto his face due to the proximity, and as Herschel falls limply to the floor, a hole upon his forehead, Elyren watches numbly the pool of blood grow.
He's frozen, unable to move. Everything feels too much, and he feels too numb. His hands are still wrapped around the handle of this strange contraption called a gun. He hates this. He hates himself. Shivering, he moves to lower the gun, but his shaking fingers cause him to drop it, clattering onto the bloodied floor before him, like it's accusing him.
Elyren forces himself to look away from the corpse of his ally, the newfound friend he'd been forced to kill, turning his back to what he had to done. Like he always did. People always died because of him. Maybe the illusion of Kiran's ghost was right, after all. And now, he waited. He had won. It doesn't mean he has to like it. Right now, with the distant cheers of the audience echoing around him and the corpse of his ally beside him, Elyren wished he could just not think at all.
At least for a while, before he would be forced to go through these hells again soon.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
Text
Goodbye poor Blair
Writeblr Battle Royale - Round 2 Julyan vs Blair
Hi, there! I am taking part in @your-absent-father's amazingly fun event, Writeblr Battle Royale, where I and other cool writeblrs choose our most powerful OCs and make them fight in an interdimensional arena. It's chaotic, it's badass, and more importantly, it is FUN (:<
This is also the second round!
Important: These events are not canon to our stories! They're just something very cool we as writers have decided to subject our characters to, for the sake of writing practice and Fun tm, though it is completely unrelated to our projects and the characters' actual experiences in the books.
Check out the rules and other amazing fight scenes at @writeblrbattleroyale!
TW: Death, blood, gore, violent hallucinations, depictions of a panic attack, burning/fire, and mentions of vomiting/puking.
In this fight Julyan, my suscryer mageborn, must fight against Blair (@gummybugg's character), who tries to taunt him into fighting against him. And well, things derail from there (:<
The world whirls around him, the old arena fading away as Julyan feels himself being transported, floating as if underwater. To where, that he can’t tell. 
After a mere moment, he feels the ground beneath his feet once again, and hazily blinks open his eyes. It feels like the last time he was brought here. And different all the same. 
As his vision adapts to new lighting, he feels a surge of energy pass through him, as if his body is healing from the ache of his previous opponent’s attacks, exhaustion giving place to full awareness once again, like it would after a full night’s rest. Strange, he frowns, but a welcomed feeling nonetheless. Everything is hazy around him. He can’t see the arena, it’s all, blurred, like his sight isn’t quite right. Julyan closes his eyes, rubbing them, and then opens his eyes again. It wasn’t much help, but that’s when he notices her, standing across from him. Her clothes are strange, but he quickly recognizes her garb as typical of a Fortune Teller. She looks at him, for a moment, he notices her eyes are filled with unspeakable sorrow. 
Maybe she doesn’t want to be here either. Given his recent experiences, that doesn’t seem unlikely.
Is she a new opponent? No, I don’t think so. Something doesn’t seem quite right. But if she is not my opponent, then what is she?
Before Julyan can figure out the answer to that thought, however, the Fortune Teller woman moves. And points to him. Directly. Once again, his surroundings swirl around him, and for a brief moment, Julyan feels like he is falling, fast, towards somewhere he cannot see, spinning like a kite caught in the wind. Before it stops, just as suddenly as it began, and he feels the ground beneath him again. 
Groaning from all the swirling and sudden crash, he stands up, and takes a lot around. He immediately regretted that decision. 
Looking around, at first it seems as if he is back home, in Agrannor. It’s the same snow covered streets of his city, the same stone carven walls. But there is blood upon the snow, and the wall’s ancient stone is marred by the all too familiar fires of war. Everything seems misplaced, destroyed. It’s nothing like what everything looked like when he was first whisked away to this dreadful competition. 
Something is wrong, terribly so.
A shrill scream cuts through the winter air, and Julyan feels as if his blood was frozen inside him, terror filling him. He knows this voice, he knows this voice too well. It can’t be… nonono… Julyan whirls around in the direction of the sound, heart beginning to race within his chest. 
Please no, Gods, anything but this, don’t let it be what I think it is -
The dreadfully familiar sigil of the Secret Court comes into view, as assassins march mercilessly through the ruins of the city around him. Terror follows soon after, the feeling he had wished he’d never feel, the fate he lived to avoid. Their enemies had found them. 
And worst, much worse yet. His siblings were caught in the crossfire. Julyan wanted to scream, or vomit, whatever came first. He felt as if his heart is going to punch a whole through his chest, terror and grief growing as he took in the sight that was standing in front of him. 
A red cloaked assassin smiled, rotten, standing behind his younger sister, a wickedly sharp dagger held dangerously close to her throat. Behind them, there was more blood on the snow, and Julyan wanted to curl up and die when he realized from where it was coming from. Azra, his adoptive brother, lay on top of the growing red stain, alive - but the deep gash at his side told Julyan that it would not be for long. 
Shaking, he finds his voice, looking up at the assassin placatingly. 
“Please, just… let them go, alright? There’s no need to involve them. You need a victim, don’t you? Then take me. Kill me, hurt me, do whatever you want. Just let them both live.”
The assassin tilted their head, glowing eyes a sickening reminder of what Julyan was trying to avoid. They laughed. 
“It’s too late for that, Sunscryer.” The voice echoes around him, like a ghost, sounding more like a snake’s hiss than anything human. “You ran, like a coward. You were too afraid to face your punishment, your fate. Now you pay the price of your freedom.”
The person pulled the dagger closer to Raelen’s neck, drawing a thin line of blood, and she sobbed. “Julyan, help me!”
Julyan tried to move, to take a step closer, do something. But he couldn’t, as if his feet were stuck in place. His eyes flitted between his sister and the assassin holding her at knifepoint. He wished he could comfort her, save her. But there was no time.
With renewed desperation, Julyan struggled against his inability to move, something still holding him stuck in place, as his legs were rooted to the floor. That didn’t stop him from trying - even though it was not working. 
“Stop!” Julyan commanded the assassin, though it came out as a desperate, ragged plea. “Don’t do this -  hey, I’m right here. I won’t fight you if you let them go. A-at all. Kill me now and end this madness, not them, please, leave them both alone. I’ll do whatever you want -”
The shadowy figure of the assassin laughed once more, shaking their head in sadistic glee. Julyan jumped forward, or at least he tried to, attempting to reach the assassin before it was too late. 
But he was helpless to only watch as the figure stabbed his sister in the heart. 
Time seemed to stop as crimson blood gushed out of the fresh wound, staining her robes around the twisting blade. For a moment, Julyan could not find the words to speak, or the air to breath, as he stared down his worst fear. 
Until he fell to his knees, a gut-wrenching scream leaving him and echoing mournfully around him, the realization of what he just witnessed being too much to even bear. “NO!”  Manic desperation filled him, his eyes glued to the corpses on the red snow before him, and the assassin walking away.
The wind picked up pace around him, but despite it, Julyan felt like he was being suffocated. He covered his face, nails digging into his pristine skin as he covered his eyes, unable to move. Unable to think. 
He couldn’t tell if the roaring sound that seemed to surround him was just the wind, or the blood rushing behind his ears. He couldn’t care less right now - he barely realized he was still sobbing, even though he couldn’t find the ability to stop. 
Around him, behind the roaring of the foggy wind, all other sounds seemed muffled, underwater. He didn’t open his eyes. 
But then, the wind stopped, and so did the sounds behind it. Julyan felt numb, despite the hammering of his heart within his chest and the shaking of his hands where they still rested upon his face. 
Faintly, in the back of his mind, Julyan felt a glimmer of recognition. Only slightly. Of where he’d been before all this horror came to be. Despite his mind still spiralling around him, and without caring enough to wipe away his tears, he looked up. 
And as expected his new opponent was standing right before him, a triumphant smile on their face. 
A frantic wind surrounded Blair, who removed his now-clean hands from his face to observe the arena morphing into something unrecognizable. That's right, he had survived. He made it! 
But he didn't feel free. 
Instead of the juxtaposing light and shadows of the old, reflective stadium, an even more vast and desolate field spread out before him. Through a silver mist, an old-timey fortune teller lady stepped forth, her arm outstretched. Her eyes told stories of long, forgotten tragedies. Too bad Blair’s could possibly be next.
Upon opening his eyes, Blair recognized his surroundings matching that of Elijah's apartment. Blair also found himself at gunpoint. At the end of the weapon stood what appeared to be Elijah, whose blurry face twisted in horror. 
"Get away from me, you freak!" Elijah crouched in the corner of the room, clutching his chest. His face was splotchy and his voice was ragged and worn. 
"What are you...?" Blair asked slowly. He took a step forward. 
"Get back, or I'll shoot!" Elijah said, except it didn't sound like he was convinced enough to pull the trigger. 
Shoot me? But I didn't do anything! I don't even know how I got here!
The grip Blair didn't notice he had on his knife tightened. How did that get there? He brought his hands up to his face. Sticky residue clung to his hands and dug dark, red trenches into each fold. He turned the knife over in his hand until he caught a glimpse of his blank expression. 
"I'm not going to hurt you," Blair closed the gap between them, causing Elijah to visibly shake under his shadow. He couldn't seem to release the knife, but kept his hands visible at the very least. "Tell me who did this to you," he demanded. 
"Please, just get out of my apartment!" Elijah choked, "I'll do anything you want, just--just please don't hurt me again!"
"Again...?" Blair's voice trembled. Then he followed Elijah’s gaze. 
Elijah looked down at the red spot on his chest that he had been clutching grow larger, the expression on his face melting into grotesque fear. Blair watched in a dissociative silence as his friend began hacking up blood at the sight of his wound, exacerbating his injury. 
In a blink, Blair found himself ripped away from the mini nightmare. 
This time, his setting appeared like one of the ancient worlds in an old sci-fi or fantasy movie he had seen once. But instead of a bloody man crouched before him, it was a girl Blair couldn't recognize. Behind them, another stranger. The stranger seemed to care a lot about this girl as he wailed in a similar heart-wrenching agony to Elijah's just a moment ago. 
As pitiful as the sight was, this stranger was irrelevant to Blair. In fact, the situation kind of confused him. Although his intuition told him this vision wasn't in any way connected to him, something about the man dressed in that unusually outdated attire struck him as important. But why, he wasn’t sure yet. 
But this was made clear the moment he opened his eyes from the vision: the man he had seen seconds ago in the nightmare resumed his crouched position in real life. The only thing missing was that bleeding girl. 
This was his opponent, the announcement made it clear. 
Blair has begun the battle with the upper hand, it seemed. Well, at least he had a psychological advantage, not much so a physical one...he glanced at the balisong in his hand. No more stabbing people, he promised himself. He didn't like how death felt in his hands the last round. He tried not to think about it too hard. Blair forced his vision that had tried to resurface to the back of his head. No more thoughts. Save that energy for winning the fight. 
He took a deep breath and placed his hands on his hips to steady his shaking. Psychological warfare wasn't his forte, and neither was kicking a wounded animal. But it made Blair more secure in his actions to rile his opponent up rather than kick him while he's down. 
"Hey, are you gonna keep crying or fight?"
Blair wasn't sure what happened after death but thought it couldn't nearly be as shitty as fighting for a self-absorbed, sorry excuse of a circus ringmaster. As far as he could tell, this was no circus, unless Blair and Julyan counted as the clowns. 
"Crying isn't gonna bring your friend back from death, you know." 
The last few words came out of Blair’s throat a bit more unevenly than the rest. Julyan probably already knew why, as Blair’s vision had presumably leaked into his. But it didn't seem like his taunt had much of an effect on Julyan. So he pushed harder. 
"You won't be able to save her in time if you die and M gets to her first."
Julyan glared upwards, steadying himself on the floor. The shaking didn’t seem to stop. Faintly, his mind still foggy from the panic, Julyan grasped what this new person was trying to say. 
They were urging him to fight. No, they were taunting him to fight. Julyan narrowed his eyes, seeing the knife clutched on his opponent’s hand as the man took a step closer. He shook his head, feeling at the same time numb and overwhelmed. Scrambling, Julyan tried to think of what to do. His grip on his powers was fickle as is, but right now, after what he was forced to witness, his connection to the flames felt severed. Using them right now would causing him more harm than it would to his opponent.
New plan then. His arms were still shaking too much to fight, but he had a dagger. Blair - he recalled the name given by the announcer - didn’t have to know Julyan wouldn’t live up to his threats. He just had to buy some time, and then find a way to run away. 
Julyan knew that, if he was to survive this, he needed at least some time to recover. In his current state, he would be an easy mark. 
Shakily, he gathered himself up and rose to his feet, pulling out his dagger from under his overcoat, and pointing it at Blair. 
“... Get away from me.” Julyan ordered, trying to make his words threatening. Unfortunately, they came out as more of a desperate plea than anything else, and the trembling of his hand as he pointed the dagger wasn’t helping. His eyes flitted around, and he saw an entrance to the maze, just a few feet beside him. 
If he could gain distance, and stall his opponent long enough, he could make a run for it. Once inside the maze, he could try to figure this out, to control his powers and … fight. Maybe. but only then. 
Gracelessly but slowly, like a cornered animal, Julyan started making his way towards the pathway, not once looking away from his opponent as he backed away, dagger poised to strike.
Once he was sure his opponent was far away enough, Julyan took off, stumbling as he raced through the maze, trying to find at least a few moments to clear his mind, heart hammering on his chest as the throes of panic refused to leave him. 
"That's right, run! Can't hide forever."
Blair wasn't used to having the upper hand in most, if not all, battles he had ever gotten himself into. He clutched his balisong in his left hand, both his weapon and hand clean and restored. Placing one hand along the wall of the maze and the other, ready for attack, Blair began the search for his opponent. 
It was curious how seemingly easy it was last time--and now this time--for Blair to pursue his opponent, he thought. It was almost like no one else wanted to be here either, and for a moment, the thought of reconciliation with his enemy against M crossed his mind, but was quickly interrupted by the guttural growls from behind the adjacent wall. 
Blair peered around the stone wall at a robot scorpion about the size of a large dog. In the nick of time, he dodged an electrical attack and resumed plastering against the safe side of the wall. A close call. 
There was no other way around it. Continuing straight ahead would result in a dead end. It was now or never. 
Blair recalled the safety procedures from his first day of Robotics 101. Rubber-like material acts as an insulation to electricity! He decided to run full throttle at the scorpion, which bared its claws in blue electric anticipation. Then he went in with a roundhouse kick, knocking both his croc and the claw into a side wall. 
"How do you like that, you bastard?" 
He hurried to pick up his shoe and new-found weapon. Now, Blair had no clue how to use this claw thing that doubled as a taser and a laser gun (which he endearingly called a tlaser), but aimed it at his mini-opponent, nonetheless. It must have weighed at least four babies, but it was nothing he couldn't handle. 
The scorpion from across the enclosure crawled its way closer, snapping its remaining claw at Blair, clearly looking to make things even. 
"Come on, do something!" He shook the claw, as one does when trying to get the last good piece of meat out from a crab's claw, "Piece of shit..." 
As if on command, a blinding beam fired from the disembodied claw, melting a hole straight through the scorpion's head. The recoil was enough to smack him shitless against the wall, knocking the wind out of him. That would take some getting used to. Blair’s eyes widened at the reality of owning a BFG (big fucking gun), and he clutched on to it as if his life depended on it (which, I mean, it did).
The scorpion squirmed from its last few bursts of energy for a couple more seconds, then stilled.
It wasn't like he wanted to do this. To be forced to kill more strangers, that is. He didn't take the idea of being another person's pawn--in this case, M's--too lightly. If he had it his way, no one would be killed except for that M guy. But it wasn't up to Blair what could be done. He was just as powerless as he was against the government back at home. 
Blair reasoned that since both he and Julyan were murderers since they had made it this far, that it probably wasn't worth mulling over ethics. Besides, the sooner he got to uncovering the mysterious M and his lackeys, the sooner he could get out of here and resume his mission. 
He began to wonder where the real Elijah was, since he had been nothing more than a figment of his imagination in the last round. Nothing and no one was to be trusted. 
Blair was going to proceed to the next round and the next round and however long it took until he got his ass out of this nightmare. Not just for his own sanity, but for Elijah’s, as well. Getting revenge for the person he cared for most severely outweighed the numerous bloodbaths it'd take to get there. He had somehow gotten himself into this mess and he knew there was no one helping him out of this. So, Blair proceeded deeper into the winding maze to seek out his worthy opponent. 
Julyan scrambled as he made yet another sharp turn, his boots sliding on the smooth concrete floor of the maze. He looked over his shoulder once more, at least his opponent was long behind him. Stumbling behind a particularly sturdy wall, Julyan let himself fall to his knees, back pressed against the coarse wall for support as he slid to the floor. Gasping for breath, Julyan placed one hand over his chest, clawing at the fabric of his linen shirt as if it might give him a semblance of a grasp on reality. Gods, he felt as if his heart wanted to beat out of his chest, and the screams from the illusion still echoed in his mind, haunting him. He really wanted to vomit right now, but could not find it in himself to pull away from the wall supporting his back. 
Okay, okay. Breathe. Julyan told himself, shakily as he stifled what he thought was another sob. You need to do this. Gods. Okay, what do I know right now? I am still in the arena. But it’s a maze now. That means that … what I saw it’s… not real. It’s not real, Julyan, get that? Not real. This is just like another nightmare, you had plenty of those before. Stop crying. Stop. O-okay. What else? There’s someone chasing me. Yes. He taunted me. He has a knife. Okay, not so bad, okay, I can… work with this.
Julyan thought’s were frantic, but at least he knew what to do. Somewhat. That’s a start. He tried to focus on just breathing, as his hands slowly stopped their desperate shaking.
As his mind became clearer, another thought - no a memory, he realized - resurfaced in his mind. A recent one, words spoken with a voice that was not his, but his opponent’s.
"Crying isn't gonna bring your friend back from death, you know." 
"You won't be able to save her in time if you die and M gets to her first."
The words replayed over and over in the back of his mind, and the more Julyan thought about them, the more they seemed to fill him with rage. As his mind became ever clearer, Julyan could not help the mix of disgust and fury that seemed to now fuel him, a desire to defeat his opponent rising in his chest, replacing the terror completely. This person tried to use his fears against him. Well, they messed with the wrong guy. Julyan slowly brought himself to his feet, no longer unsteady, clutching his runic dagger in one hand, as he closed the other in a fist, markings glowing bright red, like molten iron, as his grasp over his powers returned tenfold. 
As Julyan turned around, another sound echoed behind him. A howl. A strange howl. Quickly, despite how blood-chilling the sound was, Julyan waste no time in moving, trying to find the corridor where the sound came from, instead of waiting it to come to him. The howls grew louder the more he walked, closer, and Julyan followed them deeper into the maze, until, eventually, he saw it. Or well, a glimpse of it. 
It looked like some sort of bull, but had all the long six legs of a spider. As if my day could not get any worse. Julyan could feel it had noticed him, as the monster stopped in its tracks, head tilted. Listening. It’s legs clacked on the stone floor, echoing like hooves as it skittered around, despite it’s abnormal size.
Just get close enough already! Julyan wanted to scream, his nerves getting the better of him, but managed to calm down. The monster was clumsy, he could see that from the way the creature struggled to maneuver itself on the tight hallway. That gives him more advantage. He waited. 
And just when the monster managed to fully turn itself around, he striked. A beam of sunfire filled the corridor, charring the monster’s closest legs, causing it to make a terrible screech, but it did not cause it to stop. 
The monster bellowed, focusing it’s blazing eyes onto him as it’s nostrils flared, furious, like a charging ox. Julyan knew that sight all to well. 
“Uh…” He made to go back to the other corridor, but as if on cue, all the doors behind and around him slid closed with a clank. The only remaining door stood behind the furious spider-ox now aiming at him. The only way out is through. 
“Fucking hells, fine!”
The monster charged, footfalls echoing on the long hallway. Julyan stepped backwards, until his back hit the wall. The spell, I need a spell, what’s the name… Gods dammnit, yeah, Intangible Transportation. At the last moment, before the monster could smash him through its horns, Julyan cast the spell, and appeared on the other side of the corridor, the monster passing harmlessly through him and slamming its horns on the wall. 
It was momentarily disoriented, and Julyan did not waste a second to use that opportunity. Focusing, Julyan’s hands were engulfed in glowing red flames, and he cast two large bolts of fire on either side of the monster. It would take a lot to disintegrate such a large creature, so taking out both sets of legs should do the trick. It was swift, and Julyan was quick to walk around it, swiftly finishing the killing blow - plunging the dagger onto the beast’s heart, and twisting. It went blissfully limp, and Julyan pulled out the weapon, stunned as if breaking free from a trance.
For a moment, he paused, looking around in horror. At what he’d done. The walls around him were charred like coal, but that did not compare in the slightest to the mangled, charred corpse of this creature. This living creature which he had killed. With no remorse. Like an Imperial soldier would.
What did I do?!
There was so much blood, and the smell… Oh Gods the smell. It hit him like a ton of bricks, the scent of melted flesh burnt to a crisp. Julyan scrambled away, tripping in one of the beast’s severed legs and falling over it with a sickening crunch, as the charred remains dissolved into nothing but floating pieces of coal. The smell of burnt skin hit him tenfold, now that he had fallen upon it. 
Before he realized what he was doing, Julyan rolled onto his side, facing away from the sight and the godforsaken smell, bile rising to his throat. And puked. 
Chest heaving, there was little in his stomach that could be thrown up - he hadn’t eaten in a while, even before being brought here - and that absence only made this feel worse. It hurt a lot. When there was nothing more, he coughed, trying to catch his breath as he scrambled to his feet once more, walking away from the charred corpse behind him. 
Wiping away some unbidden tears, he spared the dead creature one last glance, once he was far away enough that the burnt smell wouldn’t just make him sick again. Taking in the damage he was forced to cause, Julyan felt a sense of rage overpower his sorrow, stronger than before. 
This wouldn’t have happened if he wasn’t forced to fight in this arena. This wouldn’t have happened if his opponent didn’t taunt him during a moment of panic. 
This wasn’t himself, Julyan knew it. He hoped. He would never kill another creature like this. His mind wandered to his previous opponent from the prior fight. She hadn’t meant to harm him, not truly, and yet he was forced to kill her. And now he was forced to kill again.
Julyan seethed.
His anger twisted and turned, as he headed towards the only remaining open door in this hallway, dagger held tightly in his hand, Julyan walked out of the corridor and into the next room. It looked like a small arena. Good, this means his opponent might be near, this means he can end this quickly. 
Blair wandered into a large clearing, probably another corner of the maze. It was there he caught the glance of his opponent from just a few feet away. 
"You!" Blair had gone from dragging the pincer on the rocky ground to pointing it at Julyan. 
Now that he had gotten a better look, he noticed how tall Julyan really was. He had strawberry blond hair tied up in a ponytail, a ruffled white shirt, a fancy overcoat, and boots. Honestly pretty intimidating, but Blair was used to having a taller opponent by now. 
A pirate? Blair thought. 
Well, that didn't matter. Cosplay or not, he was going to win this match. He planted both feet firmly on the ground. This will end here, once and for all. Blair smacked the side of the BFG, charging its laser up. It would only take a single shot to annihilate his opponent, but he also wasn’t exactly sure how much juice was left. This could be his final shot. 
“I’m tired of you running. Let’s finally finish this so, in a way, both of us can get out of here,” Blair chuckled. But Julyan wasn’t laughing. Blair wondered if he was good at parties. 
"You're rather insistent, aren't you? Just back off already!" Julyan told Blair, a twinge of impatience to his usually collected voice. This was his last warning. His opponent had better heed it. 
"Look, I'd like to, but then that'd mean you'd win the match. And I didn't endure that acid trip nightmare for nothing." 
Julyan dodged Blair’s poor attempt at jabbing him with the sizzling metal prongs. The metal whirred past his head, just barely scraping his shoulder. Julyan saw the strange contraption, then the meager cut it had managed to cause, which barely hurt, then looked back up at his fuming opponent. It took all he had not to burst out laughing.
"Well aren't you a brutish one?"Julyan gave a twisty smirk filled with vitriol. "Your tactics are rather senseless, don't you think? Oh yeah, of course, you don't think, at all."
"Did you just call me stupid?" 
“Maybe.” Julyan chuckled, a dangerous, victoriously angry sound, filled with hatred as seamlessly sidestepped one of Blair’s hits. “Wow, I’m honestly surprised you realized that by yourself.”
“People like you deserve no remorse.” A spark in Blair’s eyes. Was it a glint? Probably just from the claw that resumed its humming and zappy duties. 
It didn't take much to rile Blair up especially given the circumstances. He focused more intently on his target. But it was difficult when all he could see was red. It fueled him to keep going despite the hole he had dug for himself. There was no backing out now, the only way now was up. He had to win this at any cost. 
Blair tried repositioning the laser the more Julyan danced about with his attacks, to which Blair found more irritating than anything. It was no easy task to dodge while holding a large weapon. The more he used it as a shield, the more it degraded, so Blair had a single chance to get things just right before…
A wall of fire shot right past him burning the side of his arm before Blair barely had time to dodge. In front of him, Julyan stalked closer, golden eyes burning hotter than the flames at his hands. 
“Who’s running now?” Julyan questioned, rhetorically, tilting his head as he watched a beam of his fire shoot outwards towards his opponent, who dodged in the last second, leaving a pit of melted ground where he’d just been standing. Julyan scoffed, walking closer, his flames burning white hot in his hands. He laughed, bordering on hysterics, feeling manic after all he just went through - his voice was sickeningly sweet, provoking, though it slowly derailed into rage as he finished his sentence “Weren’t you the guy taunting me when I couldn’t fight back? Well now I can. Step up to the challenge, you bastard!”
“Oh, I’m not going anywhere. I said what I said,” Blair spat out a bloody tooth for no discernible reason. Maybe to assert dominance in his culture…? Not even M knew. 
Julyan shot another blast of sunfire, cornering Blair as the other tried to run back into the maze. For a moment, Julyan watched his opponent dodge flame after flame, as he made the burning spiral chase Blair no matter how far he tried to run. For a moment he wondered how on earth that man had the energy to dodge his attacks while carrying such a large scorpion claw. Until he could see his opponent becoming weary. Good, now that guy can’t taunt anyone. 
Lifting both his hands up he cast a wall of fire just as tall as him, and threw it towards Blair, who barely had time to run, rolling away - a faint singed smell seemed to permeate the maze, but Julyan forced himself to ignore it, momentarily losing focus on his flames, with shoot out haphazardly before he controlled them again. Not now, I can’t get sick again, not now. 
“You singed my hair off, you bastard!” Blair panted, hand against the wall for support. “Do you have any idea how long it took to grow that out?”
His opponent was insistent, Julyan had to give him that. It was difficult to pin down and hit this guy, he was fast, but Julyan’s anger more than compensated for that. At this point, he didn’t have to aim. Walls of fire were enough to trap Blair in every direction. And his opponent slowly realized it. Slow and steady, but with a brutality he usually found appalling, Julyan was breaking his opponent down. Now it was a matter of time. 
His power’s instability, however, seemed to grow the more angry he got. Which was, right now, a problem. Julyan was starting to feel dizzy again, like he’d been thrown into a pot of boiling water or a fiery lava field, but he forced himself to ignore the growing ache or how numb his fingers were getting. Winning was more important today.
Reality began sinking in like quick sand, Blair squirming in response. 
He dodged another attack, which grazed past his ear. In a single hit, he too, could be dead. And he could tell Julyan wasn’t going easy on him. This wasn’t like the last round at all. Burning hatred glinted in Julyan’s eyes, a look that Blair had only ever seen one other time. 
If he failed to survive this round, he would never have the chance to tell Elijah goodbye. Well, at least he wouldn’t be here to see me die, Blair thought to himself. This isn’t any of his business, and maybe it’s for the best I stay out of his hair. Maybe I deserve this. I am no better than Julyan and definitely not deserving of a happy ending. 
Blair’s vision was overcome with tears. Blinking had no effect on the oncoming of tears in remembrance of his best friend. That’s right, he never got to tell him how he felt about him. Well, that wouldn't matter. It wasn’t like anyone could love someone like Blair. His opponent was basically doing the world a service by exterminating people like him, right? 
I just hope that whatever happens…that at least Elijah gets his happy ending. 
Julyan spun around as Blair dodged yet another one of his strikes. He couldn’t feel anything, just the fire, burning inside of him, through him. And anger. He was never this angry before. Never. He hated anger. It was sick. Julyan realized, with a momentary pang, that this ‘anger’ was actually fear. Deathly fear. He shook his head, and his thoughts dissipated in the searing burn of his sunfire, his own skin aching at the overheating of the flames as he shaped it into a fiery spear, and took aim. 
And this time, he aimed to kill. 
A sudden gust of fiery wind shot through Blair’s chest– an instant kill. He fell to his knees, then collapsed to the ground with a solid thud. Through the gaping hole in his chest, the scorpion claw that had yet to fire its target shot. Abruptly, it began cooking the lifeless body with its laser, setting it aflame. Within seconds, Blair had been reduced to a pile of ash. 
Julyan watched, with growing terror, as his opponent burnt to ash, a gaping hole seared into the young man’s chest. His rage bubbled up, mixing with all the pain, terror and grief he was forced to endure today, his flames disobeying his own commands, spiralling around him in growing distress.
Julyan stared emptily at the corpse. He just killed someone again. Julyan felt his hands reaching to pull at his long hair, fire swirling around him like a searing hurricane. And he screamed, falling brokenly to the floor as the fire around him exploded outwards, flames finally stopping as he realized what he was being forced to become. 
A monster. 
As much as he wanted to go home, as much as he needed to go home and keep his siblings safe, a treasonous part of his mind asked one dangerous question. 
What if I lose myself?
Because that, oh that, was a terrible thing. And right now, it was a reality that felt far too real to ignore.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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and that's how the poor Blair dies, but congratulations Julyan. We'll see you in the next round
M
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⚔️Writeblr Battle Royale Round 2: The Crispy Treatment🔥
Excited to reveal what @mysticstarlightduck and I have collaborated on for the battle scene between her oc Julyan (from The Last Wrath) and my oc Blair (from Crater City)! Thanks @writeblrbattleroyale for hosting this event! Please check out the other battles, they are quite spicy!
Are you excited for blood and gore? Well, Blair and Julyan sure aren’t :’D
warning: mention of death, gore, fire/burning, vomit, hallucinations, and panic attack
The world whirls around him, the old arena fading away as Julyan feels himself being transported, floating as if underwater. To where, that he can’t tell. 
After a mere moment, he feels the ground beneath his feet once again, and hazily blinks open his eyes. It feels like the last time he was brought here. And different all the same. 
As his vision adapts to new lighting, he feels a surge of energy pass through him, as if his body is healing from the ache of his previous opponent’s attacks, exhaustion giving place to full awareness once again, like it would after a full night’s rest. Strange, he frowns, but a welcomed feeling nonetheless. Everything is hazy around him. He can’t see the arena, it’s all, blurred, like his sight isn’t quite right. Julyan closes his eyes, rubbing them, and then opens his eyes again. It wasn’t much help, but that’s when he notices her, standing across from him. Her clothes are strange, but he quickly recognizes her garb as typical of a Fortune Teller. She looks at him, for a moment, he notices her eyes are filled with unspeakable sorrow. 
Maybe she doesn’t want to be here either. Given his recent experiences, that doesn’t seem unlikely.
Is she a new opponent? No, I don’t think so. Something doesn’t seem quite right. But if she is not my opponent, then what is she?
Before Julyan can figure out the answer to that thought, however, the Fortune Teller woman moves. And points to him. Directly. Once again, his surroundings swirl around him, and for a brief moment, Julyan feels like he is falling, fast, towards somewhere he cannot see, spinning like a kite caught in the wind. Before it stops, just as suddenly as it began, and he feels the ground beneath him again. 
Groaning from all the swirling and sudden crash, he stands up, and takes a lot around. He immediately regretted that decision. 
Looking around, at first it seems as if he is back home, in Agrannor. It’s the same snow covered streets of his city, the same stone carven walls. But there is blood upon the snow, and the wall’s ancient stone is marred by the all too familiar fires of war. Everything seems misplaced, destroyed. It’s nothing like what everything looked like when he was first whisked away to this dreadful competition. 
Something is wrong, terribly so.
A shrill scream cuts through the winter air, and Julyan feels as if his blood was frozen inside him, terror filling him. He knows this voice, he knows this voice too well. It can’t be… nonono… Julyan whirls around in the direction of the sound, heart beginning to race within his chest. 
Please no, Gods, anything but this, don’t let it be what I think it is -
The dreadfully familiar sigil of the Secret Court comes into view, as assassins march mercilessly through the ruins of the city around him. Terror follows soon after, the feeling he had wished he’d never feel, the fate he lived to avoid. Their enemies had found them. 
And worst, much worse yet. His siblings were caught in the crossfire. Julyan wanted to scream, or vomit, whatever came first. He felt as if his heart is going to punch a whole through his chest, terror and grief growing as he took in the sight that was standing in front of him. 
A red cloaked assassin smiled, rotten, standing behind his younger sister, a wickedly sharp dagger held dangerously close to her throat. Behind them, there was more blood on the snow, and Julyan wanted to curl up and die when he realized from where it was coming from. Azra, his adoptive brother, lay on top of the growing red stain, alive - but the deep gash at his side told Julyan that it would not be for long. 
Shaking, he finds his voice, looking up at the assassin placatingly. 
“Please, just… let them go, alright? There’s no need to involve them. You need a victim, don’t you? Then take me. Kill me, hurt me, do whatever you want. Just let them both live.”
The assassin tilted their head, glowing eyes a sickening reminder of what Julyan was trying to avoid. They laughed. 
“It’s too late for that, Sunscryer.” The voice echoes around him, like a ghost, sounding more like a snake’s hiss than anything human. “You ran, like a coward. You were too afraid to face your punishment, your fate. Now you pay the price of your freedom.”
The person pulled the dagger closer to Raelen’s neck, drawing a thin line of blood, and she sobbed. “Julyan, help me!”
Julyan tried to move, to take a step closer, do something. But he couldn’t, as if his feet were stuck in place. His eyes flitted between his sister and the assassin holding her at knifepoint. He wished he could comfort her, save her. But there was no time.
With renewed desperation, Julyan struggled against his inability to move, something still holding him stuck in place, as his legs were rooted to the floor. That didn’t stop him from trying - even though it was not working. 
“Stop!” Julyan commanded the assassin, though it came out as a desperate, ragged plea. “Don’t do this -  hey, I’m right here. I won’t fight you if you let them go. A-at all. Kill me now and end this madness, not them, please, leave them both alone. I’ll do whatever you want -”
The shadowy figure of the assassin laughed once more, shaking their head in sadistic glee. Julyan jumped forward, or at least he tried to, attempting to reach the assassin before it was too late. 
But he was helpless to only watch as the figure stabbed his sister in the heart. 
Time seemed to stop as crimson blood gushed out of the fresh wound, staining her robes around the twisting blade. For a moment, Julyan could not find the words to speak, or the air to breath, as he stared down his worst fear. 
Until he fell to his knees, a gut-wrenching scream leaving him and echoing mournfully around him, the realization of what he just witnessed being too much to even bear. “NO!”  Manic desperation filled him, his eyes glued to the corpses on the red snow before him, and the assassin walking away.
The wind picked up pace around him, but despite it, Julyan felt like he was being suffocated. He covered his face, nails digging into his pristine skin as he covered his eyes, unable to move. Unable to think. 
He couldn’t tell if the roaring sound that seemed to surround him was just the wind, or the blood rushing behind his ears. He couldn’t care less right now - he barely realized he was still sobbing, even though he couldn’t find the ability to stop. 
Around him, behind the roaring of the foggy wind, all other sounds seemed muffled, underwater. He didn’t open his eyes. 
But then, the wind stopped, and so did the sounds behind it. Julyan felt numb, despite the hammering of his heart within his chest and the shaking of his hands where they still rested upon his face. 
Faintly, in the back of his mind, Julyan felt a glimmer of recognition. Only slightly. Of where he’d been before all this horror came to be. Despite his mind still spiralling around him, and without caring enough to wipe away his tears, he looked up. 
And as expected his new opponent was standing right before him, a triumphant smile on their face. 
A frantic wind surrounded Blair, who removed his now-clean hands from his face to observe the arena morphing into something unrecognizable. That's right, he had survived. He made it! 
But he didn't feel free. 
Instead of the juxtaposing light and shadows of the old, reflective stadium, an even more vast and desolate field spread out before him. Through a silver mist, an old-timey fortune teller lady stepped forth, her arm outstretched. Her eyes told stories of long, forgotten tragedies. Too bad Blair’s could possibly be next.
Upon opening his eyes, Blair recognized his surroundings matching that of Elijah's apartment. Blair also found himself at gunpoint. At the end of the weapon stood what appeared to be Elijah, whose blurry face twisted in horror. 
"Get away from me, you freak!" Elijah crouched in the corner of the room, clutching his chest. His face was splotchy and his voice was ragged and worn. 
"What are you...?" Blair asked slowly. He took a step forward. 
"Get back, or I'll shoot!" Elijah said, except it didn't sound like he was convinced enough to pull the trigger. 
Shoot me? But I didn't do anything! I don't even know how I got here!
The grip Blair didn't notice he had on his knife tightened. How did that get there? He brought his hands up to his face. Sticky residue clung to his hands and dug dark, red trenches into each fold. He turned the knife over in his hand until he caught a glimpse of his blank expression. 
"I'm not going to hurt you," Blair closed the gap between them, causing Elijah to visibly shake under his shadow. He couldn't seem to release the knife, but kept his hands visible at the very least. "Tell me who did this to you," he demanded. 
"Please, just get out of my apartment!" Elijah choked, "I'll do anything you want, just--just please don't hurt me again!"
"Again...?" Blair's voice trembled. Then he followed Elijah’s gaze. 
Elijah looked down at the red spot on his chest that he had been clutching grow larger, the expression on his face melting into grotesque fear. Blair watched in a dissociative silence as his friend began hacking up blood at the sight of his wound, exacerbating his injury. 
In a blink, Blair found himself ripped away from the mini nightmare. 
This time, his setting appeared like one of the ancient worlds in an old sci-fi or fantasy movie he had seen once. But instead of a bloody man crouched before him, it was a girl Blair couldn't recognize. Behind them, another stranger. The stranger seemed to care a lot about this girl as he wailed in a similar heart-wrenching agony to Elijah's just a moment ago. 
As pitiful as the sight was, this stranger was irrelevant to Blair. In fact, the situation kind of confused him. Although his intuition told him this vision wasn't in any way connected to him, something about the man dressed in that unusually outdated attire struck him as important. But why, he wasn’t sure yet. 
But this was made clear the moment he opened his eyes from the vision: the man he had seen seconds ago in the nightmare resumed his crouched position in real life. The only thing missing was that bleeding girl. 
This was his opponent, the announcement made it clear. 
Blair has begun the battle with the upper hand, it seemed. Well, at least he had a psychological advantage, not much so a physical one...he glanced at the balisong in his hand. No more stabbing people, he promised himself. He didn't like how death felt in his hands the last round. He tried not to think about it too hard. Blair forced his vision that had tried to resurface to the back of his head. No more thoughts. Save that energy for winning the fight. 
He took a deep breath and placed his hands on his hips to steady his shaking. Psychological warfare wasn't his forte, and neither was kicking a wounded animal. But it made Blair more secure in his actions to rile his opponent up rather than kick him while he's down. 
"Hey, are you gonna keep crying or fight?"
Blair wasn't sure what happened after death but thought it couldn't nearly be as shitty as fighting for a self-absorbed, sorry excuse of a circus ringmaster. As far as he could tell, this was no circus, unless Blair and Julyan counted as the clowns. 
"Crying isn't gonna bring your friend back from death, you know." 
The last few words came out of Blair’s throat a bit more unevenly than the rest. Julyan probably already knew why, as Blair’s vision had presumably leaked into his. But it didn't seem like his taunt had much of an effect on Julyan. So he pushed harder. 
"You won't be able to save her in time if you die and M gets to her first."
Julyan glared upwards, steadying himself on the floor. The shaking didn’t seem to stop. Faintly, his mind still foggy from the panic, Julyan grasped what this new person was trying to say. 
They were urging him to fight. No, they were taunting him to fight. Julyan narrowed his eyes, seeing the knife clutched on his opponent’s hand as the man took a step closer. He shook his head, feeling at the same time numb and overwhelmed. Scrambling, Julyan tried to think of what to do. His grip on his powers was fickle as is, but right now, after what he was forced to witness, his connection to the flames felt severed. Using them right now would causing him more harm than it would to his opponent.
New plan then. His arms were still shaking too much to fight, but he had a dagger. Blair - he recalled the name given by the announcer - didn’t have to know Julyan wouldn’t live up to his threats. He just had to buy some time, and then find a way to run away. 
Julyan knew that, if he was to survive this, he needed at least some time to recover. In his current state, he would be an easy mark. 
Shakily, he gathered himself up and rose to his feet, pulling out his dagger from under his overcoat, and pointing it at Blair. 
“... Get away from me.” Julyan ordered, trying to make his words threatening. Unfortunately, they came out as more of a desperate plea than anything else, and the trembling of his hand as he pointed the dagger wasn’t helping. His eyes flitted around, and he saw an entrance to the maze, just a few feet beside him. 
If he could gain distance, and stall his opponent long enough, he could make a run for it. Once inside the maze, he could try to figure this out, to control his powers and … fight. Maybe. but only then. 
Gracelessly but slowly, like a cornered animal, Julyan started making his way towards the pathway, not once looking away from his opponent as he backed away, dagger poised to strike.
Once he was sure his opponent was far away enough, Julyan took off, stumbling as he raced through the maze, trying to find at least a few moments to clear his mind, heart hammering on his chest as the throes of panic refused to leave him. 
"That's right, run! Can't hide forever."
Blair wasn't used to having the upper hand in most, if not all, battles he had ever gotten himself into. He clutched his balisong in his left hand, both his weapon and hand clean and restored. Placing one hand along the wall of the maze and the other, ready for attack, Blair began the search for his opponent. 
It was curious how seemingly easy it was last time--and now this time--for Blair to pursue his opponent, he thought. It was almost like no one else wanted to be here either, and for a moment, the thought of reconciliation with his enemy against M crossed his mind, but was quickly interrupted by the guttural growls from behind the adjacent wall. 
Blair peered around the stone wall at a robot scorpion about the size of a large dog. In the nick of time, he dodged an electrical attack and resumed plastering against the safe side of the wall. A close call. 
There was no other way around it. Continuing straight ahead would result in a dead end. It was now or never. 
Blair recalled the safety procedures from his first day of Robotics 101. Rubber-like material acts as an insulation to electricity! He decided to run full throttle at the scorpion, which bared its claws in blue electric anticipation. Then he went in with a roundhouse kick, knocking both his croc and the claw into a side wall. 
"How do you like that, you bastard?" 
He hurried to pick up his shoe and new-found weapon. Now, Blair had no clue how to use this claw thing that doubled as a taser and a laser gun (which he endearingly called a tlaser), but aimed it at his mini-opponent, nonetheless. It must have weighed at least four babies, but it was nothing he couldn't handle. 
The scorpion from across the enclosure crawled its way closer, snapping its remaining claw at Blair, clearly looking to make things even. 
"Come on, do something!" He shook the claw, as one does when trying to get the last good piece of meat out from a crab's claw, "Piece of shit..." 
As if on command, a blinding beam fired from the disembodied claw, melting a hole straight through the scorpion's head. The recoil was enough to smack him shitless against the wall, knocking the wind out of him. That would take some getting used to. Blair’s eyes widened at the reality of owning a BFG (big fucking gun), and he clutched on to it as if his life depended on it (which, I mean, it did).
The scorpion squirmed from its last few bursts of energy for a couple more seconds, then stilled.
It wasn't like he wanted to do this. To be forced to kill more strangers, that is. He didn't take the idea of being another person's pawn--in this case, M's--too lightly. If he had it his way, no one would be killed except for that M guy. But it wasn't up to Blair what could be done. He was just as powerless as he was against the government back at home. 
Blair reasoned that since both he and Julyan were murderers since they had made it this far, that it probably wasn't worth mulling over ethics. Besides, the sooner he got to uncovering the mysterious M and his lackeys, the sooner he could get out of here and resume his mission. 
He began to wonder where the real Elijah was, since he had been nothing more than a figment of his imagination in the last round. Nothing and no one was to be trusted. 
Blair was going to proceed to the next round and the next round and however long it took until he got his ass out of this nightmare. Not just for his own sanity, but for Elijah’s, as well. Getting revenge for the person he cared for most severely outweighed the numerous bloodbaths it'd take to get there. He had somehow gotten himself into this mess and he knew there was no one helping him out of this. So, Blair proceeded deeper into the winding maze to seek out his worthy opponent. 
Julyan scrambled as he made yet another sharp turn, his boots sliding on the smooth concrete floor of the maze. He looked over his shoulder once more, at least his opponent was long behind him. Stumbling behind a particularly sturdy wall, Julyan let himself fall to his knees, back pressed against the coarse wall for support as he slid to the floor. Gasping for breath, Julyan placed one hand over his chest, clawing at the fabric of his linen shirt as if it might give him a semblance of a grasp on reality. Gods, he felt as if his heart wanted to beat out of his chest, and the screams from the illusion still echoed in his mind, haunting him. He really wanted to vomit right now, but could not find it in himself to pull away from the wall supporting his back. 
Okay, okay. Breathe. Julyan told himself, shakily as he stifled what he thought was another sob. You need to do this. Gods. Okay, what do I know right now? I am still in the arena. But it’s a maze now. That means that … what I saw it’s… not real. It’s not real, Julyan, get that? Not real. This is just like another nightmare, you had plenty of those before. Stop crying. Stop. O-okay. What else? There’s someone chasing me. Yes. He taunted me. He has a knife. Okay, not so bad, okay, I can… work with this.
Julyan thought’s were frantic, but at least he knew what to do. Somewhat. That’s a start. He tried to focus on just breathing, as his hands slowly stopped their desperate shaking.
As his mind became clearer, another thought - no a memory, he realized - resurfaced in his mind. A recent one, words spoken with a voice that was not his, but his opponent’s.
"Crying isn't gonna bring your friend back from death, you know." 
"You won't be able to save her in time if you die and M gets to her first."
The words replayed over and over in the back of his mind, and the more Julyan thought about them, the more they seemed to fill him with rage. As his mind became ever clearer, Julyan could not help the mix of disgust and fury that seemed to now fuel him, a desire to defeat his opponent rising in his chest, replacing the terror completely. This person tried to use his fears against him. Well, they messed with the wrong guy. Julyan slowly brought himself to his feet, no longer unsteady, clutching his runic dagger in one hand, as he closed the other in a fist, markings glowing bright red, like molten iron, as his grasp over his powers returned tenfold. 
As Julyan turned around, another sound echoed behind him. A howl. A strange howl. Quickly, despite how blood-chilling the sound was, Julyan waste no time in moving, trying to find the corridor where the sound came from, instead of waiting it to come to him. The howls grew louder the more he walked, closer, and Julyan followed them deeper into the maze, until, eventually, he saw it. Or well, a glimpse of it. 
It looked like some sort of bull, but had all the long six legs of a spider. As if my day could not get any worse. Julyan could feel it had noticed him, as the monster stopped in its tracks, head tilted. Listening. It’s legs clacked on the stone floor, echoing like hooves as it skittered around, despite it’s abnormal size.
Just get close enough already! Julyan wanted to scream, his nerves getting the better of him, but managed to calm down. The monster was clumsy, he could see that from the way the creature struggled to maneuver itself on the tight hallway. That gives him more advantage. He waited. 
And just when the monster managed to fully turn itself around, he striked. A beam of sunfire filled the corridor, charring the monster’s closest legs, causing it to make a terrible screech, but it did not cause it to stop. 
The monster bellowed, focusing it’s blazing eyes onto him as it’s nostrils flared, furious, like a charging ox. Julyan knew that sight all to well. 
“Uh…” He made to go back to the other corridor, but as if on cue, all the doors behind and around him slid closed with a clank. The only remaining door stood behind the furious spider-ox now aiming at him. The only way out is through. 
“Fucking hells, fine!”
The monster charged, footfalls echoing on the long hallway. Julyan stepped backwards, until his back hit the wall. The spell, I need a spell, what’s the name… Gods dammnit, yeah, Intangible Transportation. At the last moment, before the monster could smash him through its horns, Julyan cast the spell, and appeared on the other side of the corridor, the monster passing harmlessly through him and slamming its horns on the wall. 
It was momentarily disoriented, and Julyan did not waste a second to use that opportunity. Focusing, Julyan’s hands were engulfed in glowing red flames, and he cast two large bolts of fire on either side of the monster. It would take a lot to disintegrate such a large creature, so taking out both sets of legs should do the trick. It was swift, and Julyan was quick to walk around it, swiftly finishing the killing blow - plunging the dagger onto the beast’s heart, and twisting. It went blissfully limp, and Julyan pulled out the weapon, stunned as if breaking free from a trance.
For a moment, he paused, looking around in horror. At what he’d done. The walls around him were charred like coal, but that did not compare in the slightest to the mangled, charred corpse of this creature. This living creature which he had killed. With no remorse. Like an Imperial soldier would.
What did I do?!
There was so much blood, and the smell… Oh Gods the smell. It hit him like a ton of bricks, the scent of melted flesh burnt to a crisp. Julyan scrambled away, tripping in one of the beast’s severed legs and falling over it with a sickening crunch, as the charred remains dissolved into nothing but floating pieces of coal. The smell of burnt skin hit him tenfold, now that he had fallen upon it. 
Before he realized what he was doing, Julyan rolled onto his side, facing away from the sight and the godforsaken smell, bile rising to his throat. And puked. 
Chest heaving, there was little in his stomach that could be thrown up - he hadn’t eaten in a while, even before being brought here - and that absence only made this feel worse. It hurt a lot. When there was nothing more, he coughed, trying to catch his breath as he scrambled to his feet once more, walking away from the charred corpse behind him. 
Wiping away some unbidden tears, he spared the dead creature one last glance, once he was far away enough that the burnt smell wouldn’t just make him sick again. Taking in the damage he was forced to cause, Julyan felt a sense of rage overpower his sorrow, stronger than before. 
This wouldn’t have happened if he wasn’t forced to fight in this arena. This wouldn’t have happened if his opponent didn’t taunt him during a moment of panic. 
This wasn’t himself, Julyan knew it. He hoped. He would never kill another creature like this. His mind wandered to his previous opponent from the prior fight. She hadn’t meant to harm him, not truly, and yet he was forced to kill her. And now he was forced to kill again.
Julyan seethed.
His anger twisted and turned, as he headed towards the only remaining open door in this hallway, dagger held tightly in his hand, Julyan walked out of the corridor and into the next room. It looked like a small arena. Good, this means his opponent might be near, this means he can end this quickly. 
Blair wandered into a large clearing, probably another corner of the maze. It was there he caught the glance of his opponent from just a few feet away. 
"You!" Blair had gone from dragging the pincer on the rocky ground to pointing it at Julyan. 
Now that he had gotten a better look, he noticed how tall Julyan really was. He had strawberry blond hair tied up in a ponytail, a ruffled white shirt, a fancy overcoat, and boots. Honestly pretty intimidating, but Blair was used to having a taller opponent by now. 
A pirate? Blair thought. 
Well, that didn't matter. Cosplay or not, he was going to win this match. He planted both feet firmly on the ground. This will end here, once and for all. Blair smacked the side of the BFG, charging its laser up. It would only take a single shot to annihilate his opponent, but he also wasn’t exactly sure how much juice was left. This could be his final shot. 
“I’m tired of you running. Let’s finally finish this so, in a way, both of us can get out of here,” Blair chuckled. But Julyan wasn’t laughing. Blair wondered if he was good at parties. 
"You're rather insistent, aren't you? Just back off already!" Julyan told Blair, a twinge of impatience to his usually collected voice. This was his last warning. His opponent had better heed it. 
"Look, I'd like to, but then that'd mean you'd win the match. And I didn't endure that acid trip nightmare for nothing." 
Julyan dodged Blair’s poor attempt at jabbing him with the sizzling metal prongs. The metal whirred past his head, just barely scraping his shoulder. Julyan saw the strange contraption, then the meager cut it had managed to cause, which barely hurt, then looked back up at his fuming opponent. It took all he had not to burst out laughing.
"Well aren't you a brutish one?"Julyan gave a twisty smirk filled with vitriol. "Your tactics are rather senseless, don't you think? Oh yeah, of course, you don't think, at all."
"Did you just call me stupid?" 
“Maybe.” Julyan chuckled, a dangerous, victoriously angry sound, filled with hatred as seamlessly sidestepped one of Blair’s hits. “Wow, I’m honestly surprised you realized that by yourself.”
“People like you deserve no remorse.” A spark in Blair’s eyes. Was it a glint? Probably just from the claw that resumed its humming and zappy duties. 
It didn't take much to rile Blair up especially given the circumstances. He focused more intently on his target. But it was difficult when all he could see was red. It fueled him to keep going despite the hole he had dug for himself. There was no backing out now, the only way now was up. He had to win this at any cost. 
Blair tried repositioning the laser the more Julyan danced about with his attacks, to which Blair found more irritating than anything. It was no easy task to dodge while holding a large weapon. The more he used it as a shield, the more it degraded, so Blair had a single chance to get things just right before…
A wall of fire shot right past him burning the side of his arm before Blair barely had time to dodge. In front of him, Julyan stalked closer, golden eyes burning hotter than the flames at his hands. 
“Who’s running now?” Julyan questioned, rhetorically, tilting his head as he watched a beam of his fire shoot outwards towards his opponent, who dodged in the last second, leaving a pit of melted ground where he’d just been standing. Julyan scoffed, walking closer, his flames burning white hot in his hands. He laughed, bordering on hysterics, feeling manic after all he just went through - his voice was sickeningly sweet, provoking, though it slowly derailed into rage as he finished his sentence “Weren’t you the guy taunting me when I couldn’t fight back? Well now I can. Step up to the challenge, you bastard!”
“Oh, I’m not going anywhere. I said what I said,” Blair spat out a bloody tooth for no discernible reason. Maybe to assert dominance in his culture…? Not even M knew. 
Julyan shot another blast of sunfire, cornering Blair as the other tried to run back into the maze. For a moment, Julyan watched his opponent dodge flame after flame, as he made the burning spiral chase Blair no matter how far he tried to run. For a moment he wondered how on earth that man had the energy to dodge his attacks while carrying such a large scorpion claw. Until he could see his opponent becoming weary. Good, now that guy can’t taunt anyone. 
Lifting both his hands up he cast a wall of fire just as tall as him, and threw it towards Blair, who barely had time to run, rolling away - a faint singed smell seemed to permeate the maze, but Julyan forced himself to ignore it, momentarily losing focus on his flames, with shoot out haphazardly before he controlled them again. Not now, I can’t get sick again, not now. 
“You singed my hair off, you bastard!” Blair panted, hand against the wall for support. “Do you have any idea how long it took to grow that out?”
His opponent was insistent, Julyan had to give him that. It was difficult to pin down and hit this guy, he was fast, but Julyan’s anger more than compensated for that. At this point, he didn’t have to aim. Walls of fire were enough to trap Blair in every direction. And his opponent slowly realized it. Slow and steady, but with a brutality he usually found appalling, Julyan was breaking his opponent down. Now it was a matter of time. 
His power’s instability, however, seemed to grow the more angry he got. Which was, right now, a problem. Julyan was starting to feel dizzy again, like he’d been thrown into a pot of boiling water or a fiery lava field, but he forced himself to ignore the growing ache or how numb his fingers were getting. Winning was more important today.
Reality began sinking in like quick sand, Blair squirming in response. 
He dodged another attack, which grazed past his ear. In a single hit, he too, could be dead. And he could tell Julyan wasn’t going easy on him. This wasn’t like the last round at all. Burning hatred glinted in Julyan’s eyes, a look that Blair had only ever seen one other time. 
If he failed to survive this round, he would never have the chance to tell Elijah goodbye. Well, at least he wouldn’t be here to see me die, Blair thought to himself. This isn’t any of his business, and maybe it’s for the best I stay out of his hair. Maybe I deserve this. I am no better than Julyan and definitely not deserving of a happy ending. 
Blair’s vision was overcome with tears. Blinking had no effect on the oncoming of tears in remembrance of his best friend. That’s right, he never got to tell him how he felt about him. Well, that wouldn't matter. It wasn’t like anyone could love someone like Blair. His opponent was basically doing the world a service by exterminating people like him, right? 
I just hope that whatever happens…that at least Elijah gets his happy ending. 
Julyan spun around as Blair dodged yet another one of his strikes. He couldn’t feel anything, just the fire, burning inside of him, through him. And anger. He was never this angry before. Never. He hated anger. It was sick. Julyan realized, with a momentary pang, that this ‘anger’ was actually fear. Deathly fear. He shook his head, and his thoughts dissipated in the searing burn of his sunfire, his own skin aching at the overheating of the flames as he shaped it into a fiery spear, and took aim. 
And this time, he aimed to kill. 
A sudden gust of fiery wind shot through Blair’s chest– an instant kill. He fell to his knees, then collapsed to the ground with a solid thud. Through the gaping hole in his chest, the scorpion claw that had yet to fire its target shot. Abruptly, it began cooking the lifeless body with its laser, setting it aflame. Within seconds, Blair had been reduced to a pile of ash. 
Julyan watched, with growing terror, as his opponent burnt to ash, a gaping hole seared into the young man’s chest. His rage bubbled up, mixing with all the pain, terror and grief he was forced to endure today, his flames disobeying his own commands, spiralling around him in growing distress.
Julyan stared emptily at the corpse. He just killed someone again. Julyan felt his hands reaching to pull at his long hair, fire swirling around him like a searing hurricane. And he screamed, falling brokenly to the floor as the fire around him exploded outwards, flames finally stopping as he realized what he was being forced to become. 
A monster. 
As much as he wanted to go home, as much as he needed to go home and keep his siblings safe, a treasonous part of his mind asked one dangerous question. 
What if I lose myself?
Because that, oh that, was a terrible thing. And right now, it was a reality that felt far too real to ignore.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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Writeblr Battle Royale Fight 2
Content warning for needles, blood, and death by electrocution. This is the second (and last) fight for Chess! Thanks to @saltysupercomputer for Daiko, and good luck in the future battles! This event is from @writeblrbattleroyale! Also tagging: @ratracechronicler, @maple-writes, @pen-of-roses, and @drabbleitout!
I glared up at M as he spoke again. “And now the round 1 has ended. Unfortunately for me, some of you players tried to go against me, but I give you the benefit of the doubt. I haven’t introduced myself. People call me M. I don’t know if it’s my real name. I really don’t remember anything. I once was a full person that was cursed to roam the world, without being able to go beyond. I do have two goals I remember: I am the bringer of entertainment, and I am a bringer of death. This place really is the tight combination of both. You are my freak show now that my own freak was taken for me. I just need to make sure now you don’t try to escape.”
A woman appeared in the middle of the arena. She had fancy clothes on, and her eyes seemed to look into my very soul. “I am so sorry.” She points at me and someone else, and I blinked, and I was strapped down on a table.
Faceless scientists were standing over me, holding needles and knives, and I tried to get out of the straps, even trying to use my magic, but it was gone. I screamed at them, but they just laughed and injected things in me that made me nauseous, and as I was reeling from that, they flipped me over and cut at my back, and I screamed as my blood ran hot over my skin and over the table. I was trapped. I was helpless. I could never escape. I was just an experiment, nothing more.
I blinked, and I was back in the arena, with M standing over us still. There was a woman standing across from me, but I could barely make her out from the tears streaking hot down my cheeks.
M spoke again. “My fancy little crew here are all my helpers whose soul is in their own little dimension. I won’t mind putting you with my little collection.” I looked up, and the audience appeared almost out of nowhere. Some of them are real people that have no idea what’s going on. Some though, some people are dressed in old timely clothes, and smiling like someone has forced them to do so. “So, now it’s time for round 2”.
I glared at my opponent and activated my magic, letting the fire cover my skin to protect me. I had to survive. No matter what. I had to get back to my friends. “Fuck all of you.” I dashed toward the woman, clenching my fists as the memories still flashed through my mind. I would never be an experiment again!
The woman dodged, but I followed through, punching for her, but it barely bothered her. She just clutched her arm and grimaced. Fuck. I didn’t have time for this! I summoned a fire to my hand, fully ready to just give her a fire that would never go out and would burn her to death quickly, but she ran off, towards a pole.
“Hey, kid!” She climbed up the pole and looked down at me, her eyes glowing. “Come on, catch me!”
She was planning something, so of fucking course I wouldn’t follow her. I snarled and walked to the pole, melting it. “No, you’re gonna come down to me.”
I froze as a memory flashed through my mind, of someone leaning over me with a grin. “You’re my weapon, and that’s all you’ll ever be, sweetheart. You think anyone would ever care about a monster like you?”
A sharp pain brought me out of the memory. My leg and arm were most likely broken from the pole crushing me, but I still tried to push the pole off of me with my prosthetic. The other woman had to have not fared any better, right?
“Just…die already, you little pest!” I gasped, but she shoved a sparking wire at my arm prosthetic, and I screamed as the pain climaxed until I fell into the darkness.
I…I had died. I hadn’t been strong enough. I was really as useless and helpless as they had always said. I would never see my friends again. It was all my fault…
“…Chess? Chess! What happened?”
I blinked open my eyes, and…I was back on my world, with Vesper, Thorne, Jude, and Creed standing over me with worried expressions. I looked up at them and immediately started sobbing, and they hugged me as I grasped at them desperately. “There…there was this arena where I had to fight, and I didn’t want to, and I was so fucking scared.”
Vesper ran a hand over my head, and I buried my face in her shoulder. “You’re safe now. We’ll go to Killian’s. He’s been worried sick about you too. He’ll make some soup. Everything’s okay now.”
I nodded and let my friends lead me away. I was…safe. But what about the others?
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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And now the our little cat creature is down. Congrats to our Erin. Love always wins
- M
Writeblr Battle Royale: Erin vs Tuan Tangyuan
WC: 1823, TW: death, blood, suicide
interlude ♦ Erin's fight ♦ Tangyuan's fight ♦ @writeblrbattleroyale
I had the pleasure to write this with @the-arigen! Their way with words is just immaculate.
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Tuan Tangyuan could not remember when the last time he had a nightmare that devastating was. When he woke up, he was even relieved that he was still in the arena and had an opponent right before his eyes. Dealing with some killing sounded much nicer than dwelling in his emotional issues.
Looking from a corner of an eye on the opponent, he was figuring out how long it will take him to cut her throat. But he couldn't focus. That woman - she looked intriguing. Or actually, her gadgets looked intriguing. Tuan Tangyuan’s hands itched to touch them, to test them out and see what they did. He took a step towards her, then stopped. Something was a bit weird, weirder than the arena... maybe just as weird as a sentient teddy bear from the first round. Her scent. Under a coat of human stench, there was something else... Smell of a deciduous woodland, maybe an ash tree? No, an oak tree. Interesting...
He presented a bow, just deep enough for it to own its name. "My name is Tuan Tangyuan." He paused, trying to calm down his excitement. "I am but a simple wanderer. Still, may I have your name?"
Erin stared ahead for a moment, then shook herself back to awareness as her opponent spoke. The nightmare was an old one, the memory intentionally preserved just like all the others, crystallized in the form it had taken just moments after the experience. Across this time, a young man. With...
"Not to keep, of course, but you may call me Erin Duchesne. It has been quite a while since I've seen a cat-person. Are you natural or acquired?"
That was the first time he heard about acquiring magical powers, which made him even more curious. At this point his puffy tail was already wiggling, making his emotions more obvious than he’d like.
"I was born a demon. Can I ask you a question?"
Erin nodded, pulling herself together more. "Of course."
Should he ask about the gadgets, the smell or power? The gadgets, the smell, the power? He went with what he thought was the safest option. "You... have a curious scent. Why do you smell like an oak tree? Are you a... tree-person...?" he tried to guess.
Erin froze in place, the sound of her own stuttered breathing too loud in her ears, heartbeat tearing under her skin like it was attempting to escape her body. The wound was not always so fresh, but the nightmare had brought it directly to the surface, just waiting for the right moment to strike her again. With a voice more fragile than she preferred, Erin started her response. "It... My wife is. She... well. Rightfully doesn't talk to me much, anymore. But some years ago, she lent me her power, and has not taken it back. It makes me part... tree-person, in many ways."
Part of her wanted to cry, but Erin had had far too much experience with that to allow it to affect her that much. A reaction could be excused. A reaction that blurred her vision, slowed her response time? That could be lethal.
That... wasn't expected. Tuan Tangyuan approached her slowly and silently. There was something in how she was acting, what she was saying, that he couldn't ignore. She had a wife. A wife that left her. And yet, she still loved her. He knew that feeling of becoming stray again all too well, yet he knew no way of making the pain bearable.
"I'm sorry," he murmured. "It is also... It is a beautiful aroma. It probably reminds... I also have things like this. Things that make me remember about abandonment and people... I still... still love."
Erin laughed, the tears unshed but present all the same. "In some ways, it's lucky. In others... unbearably painful. But... we aren't in the best situation for that at the moment, unfortunately. And there's someone here who's planning to spread it. But... you. What are you going to be doing when you get out of here? And what's your plan for killing that power-tripping maniac who dragged us into this mess?"
The sudden change in her tone caught Tuan Tangyuan off guard. "I don't know yet," he blurted out. "I mean... after getting out of there I will be celebrating my triumph, I guess. I have no plan or intention of killing M, why would I?" He looked at her just as suspiciously as surprised. "Do you have one? Why the hell?"
"This is hardly my first time. Trapped away from the world, in a place that doesn't make sense, given an impossible situation by something akin to a god with no physical form and less moral integrity for the entertainment of beings I neither know nor understand. I may not manage it, but-" she changed to a yell, flaring her wings out to their full extent, flickering off the enchantment that dulled their glamour and letting the wave of iridescence crash over the entire arena. "I hope you understand, audience, but I will make sure someone kills him, whether I die in the process or no."
She turned back to Tangyuan, summoning her focus to her hand and flickering through the options and summoning two swords into existence, then dropped the focus, picked up the swords, and tossed one to him. "First rule of killing gods. Follow the rules." As soon as he looked prepared, Erin ran at him, making a show of her attack so that he knew what was coming. His skill level would be important in what was to come.
Tuan Tangyuan had barely enough time to pick up a sword, shove it under his belt and duck. He jumped back to get some distance. His claws went out, sharp and shiny. If she wanted a fight, he was more than happy to give her a fight - especially since she gave him something as precious as a sword! Tuan Tangyuan leaped again, this time to attack.
The return strike was fast, well-aimed... He knew how to fight at least. Erin could tell that she would be able to completely avoid it, though.
She didn't. Tuan Tangyuan's strike drew a trickle of blood from her left arm as it grazed her, and she launched into an offensive series of wide, showy strikes intended to keep her opponent away. "Conceptual beings must follow rules. If you break them, they can often retaliate, but they won't hit first."
She paused in her strikes, pulling to a defensive position to catch her breath more effectively, staring him down. "Rule two."
Tuan Tangyuan gripped her intentions - to present the fanciest, not the most effective moves. He  didn't know many of those but tried his best, using his agility to the maximum. He dove under her arm and wing, left hand landing on the ground. He turned on it and aimed at her lower back, his legs high up for extra flare.
The catlike strike from behind would have been difficult to respond to at the best of times, and as distracted as she was Erin barely managed to dismiss her wings and shift over to the side, letting Tangyuan's kick spin her around partway before she brought the wings back to slow her spin, stabbing down at him. "Anything the rules don't cover, exploit to the breaking point. Change them, and never let your enemy be on their home turf."
As she said that, Erin swept low, presenting a jump into the air as the evasion of choice.
His attention was shifted to the wings - they amazed him. He had to touch them. "The theory sounds firm, but do you have any practical ideas?" he asked, running towards the wall. He jumped straight at it, leaping back to fly towards her wings.
Noting his direction, Erin leaned forward to swing her wing at him, trusting the enchantments on it to keep it whole even in combat. "There's a curse involved here. Every curse has a counter, though sometimes nigh-impossible to manage. But that just means we cheat."
He got swept by the wing but managed to land on two feet. Tuan Tangyuan smiled despite himself. "Just cheat," he repeated. His fingers caressed the hilt of the sword with no intention of grabbing it. He knew nothing about curses, about magic. He couldn't even come up with an idea for cheating! His old habits were holding him on a leash, not allowing him to disobey the higher power of other people. While he was pathetic like this, Erin tried to cooperate with him on an equal footing. To triumph, to stay alive, to feed the audience? What kind of wishes were those? Erin wanted to rescue others, so her life... Her life meant more than his.
Tuan Tangyuan stepped back a bit. His eyebrows met in a frown while his body was trembling. He was so determined and so unsure at the same time.
Erin readied herself again. Tuan Tangyuan was holding back now, and she watched him carefully, ready for any attack she could think of. "Rule three. Always let them know you're coming. Never let them know how. Let them know that terrible mortal experience of being afraid of the wrong thing."
There was a single feather in his ponytail. He took it out. A face of his closest friend... former friend flashed before his eyes. He said both to the friend and to Erin: "I was ungrateful for your teachings, let me thank you now." Using only tips of his fingers, he laid the feather before him on the ground and touched the floor with his forehead. After a moment of silence, he got up to sitting on his legs.
He was no longer scared. Tuan Tangyuan looked Erin straight in the eye and asked in unusually decisive voice: "I do not want to doubt it even a bit so tell me, do you wish to rescue everyone? Even me?"
Erin thought for a moment, but the answer had not been in question since the moment she'd married Aileen. "Were I able, nothing less would be acceptable."
"Then you will need time to come up with a plan. Do not throw your life away too easily, it is valuable jade."
His claws disappeared again. He gripped the sword so tightly, his fingers turned white. The blade sung as he removed it from its place on the belt, weighing the balance point in his hand. It was farther from him than was comfortable. Tuan Tangyuan grabbed the base of the blade with his left hand, tainting it with blood.
"Please, my friend, take that feather and forget neither me, nor your wife. I beg you, remember." The sword touched his throat, gently as the sea surf - but he asked to be drowned. Then there was nothing but the scent of the ocean, home of the dead.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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And that was quite of a comeback with our Ophelia. Congratulations!
-M
Writeblr Battle Royale - Kashi vs Ophelia!
Yes! That's right! Round 2 of the event @writeblrbattleroyale put on by @your-absent-father! It's time for my grumpy growly shapeshifter Kashi to face off with the resurrected-by-voter-fraud? Ophelia (OC created by @the-arigen) [sidenote: some of you just really wanted to see Kashi die "again", didn't you...What did she ever do to you???]
You can read Kashi's round 1 here and Ophelia's round 1 here! Thanks, enjoy, and remember you can follow all the action here OR by following #writeblrbattleroyale ! Follow some awesome fellow authors and watch our OCs beat the shit out of each other (when they behave and do what they're supposed to do instead of things like trying to escape or have a pleasant conversation)
WC: 3,101 Tw: death, blood, bleeding, stabbing...you know the drill
Kashi sniffed at the one across from her to get a better idea of who she was facing down. Smelled…oddly sweet, and mostly not human. She let out a growl and reached for the handle of her knife, pulling it free as she began to pace. “Non-human,” she called out in a growl, “my name is Kashi.”
"I tend to prefer 'formerly human,'" Ophelia said, watching carefully. "Ophelia. I was... not expecting to wake up. At the very least, not with any knowledge of this arena." And not in the form that looked even cursorily so. It didn't help that she was absolutely certain she'd been fully incinerated, but it wasn't exactly surprising that there was magic she didn't know about; new things were being discovered all the time.
"Apologies," Kashi grunted, continuing to pace. Glancing around at the walls and the floor, noting the hole was gone and the walls unmarked. "I wasn't expecting to wake up either." She was fairly sure she'd died. But here she was. Which meant...Casper...Kashi shook her head. "Fight or die. I tried to die. Didn't catch. Doesn't sound like yours caught either."
"The experience is troubling, even if not the first time." Ophelia said, nodding. "In the past, I've been awoken from a piece of me that my... that one of my teammates keeps, which meant catching up on memories was a greater priority. This situation is somewhat atypical."
Kashi let out a laugh. "No kidding there." She hesitated. "Not the first time..." Her pacing slowed and she sniffed again. "You don't smell like an immortal. Or a vampire or anything from home. But I guess there's more than one way for death not to stick." Kashi flipped the knife in her hand and resumed her pacing before asking, "your teammates. They here with a piece of you?"
"After a fashion," Ophelia said, momentarily splitting herself down the middle into two copies, then stepping back into herself and merging back into one. "I do hope they are not. Neither of them has much of a way to recover from being slain in combat in case one does eventually stick."
The use of "vampire" was interesting to Ophelia. a bit of pre-Nihilus legend that had mostly made its way out of the lexicon when the invasion had swung up. I suppose you don't need false monster stories much when true ones are destroying cities. 
"I do have something of a suspicion, if you'd like to hear it."
More time for Kashi to observe her opponent and decide if she wanted to engage. If it would be smart to do so. She nodded. "Go for it."
The way Kashi was watching her, Ophelia was fairly certain that she either had training or experience, though it wasn't clear to her which. It would be nice to get an example of her powers before they fought, but likely not necessary. Just like last time... either she could be injured or not. Very little in between. "The last one was strange to me. Strange in a different way that you seem to be, especially regarding clothing. Given that, and the ramping-up of Nihilus activity... We've been selected. From different worlds. For what, other than this tournament, I have no idea. But I suspect that our friends and family are either fine, or this tournament is immense to a degree I hesitate to even comment on."
Kashi’s ears pricked up. Or they would have, if she were in her four-legged form. She twirled the knife in her hand once more. "Well that is an interesting suspicion," she said, half to herself. "Given the fight or die mantra...And the way this little game master seems to be conducting things..." Kashi looked around once more. Stands of people. But all unrecognizable. She looked back at her opponent. "...I'd gamble that if any relations were actually on the line, they'd be put in the stands right in front of us. A way to collar us, so to speak." And if that were the case...she had very little friends and no family to speak of.
"Keep working on that suspicion," she finally said, tossing her knife to the ground and reaching up for her face. Running her hands along the lines that looked like scars. "And if you win, I hope you figure out a way to beat the little ghosty man senseless. Because if I win that's sure as hell what I'm gonna do."
Singing the spell for transformation, Kashi began to peel the hidden mask away from her face. Her body pained itself as it went down to all fours, pain quickly vanishing as she steadied herself. "I suppose," she growled, "we should get this started before he tries to kill one of us himself."
Ophelia stared. "Didn't know he would do that. Given this, I thought it would be less... hands-on."
With that, Kashi took off running to the side, directly for one of the walls.
Ophelia shook her head momentarily, then dropped the guise, duplicating herself out a dozen times, forming those indistinguishable silver shadows that often led people to think they were simple drones. She took a moment to realize that she hadn't bothered to make a plan for which of her would continue speaking, and heard as all of her started speaking at the same time. "But I'm sure we will be coming to some sort of conclusion."
"Came down and tried to kill me before when I didn't behave," Kashi answered, doing her best to keep away from all the silver copies. "Don't think I'm super special either!" She built up enough momentum to hurl herself at the wall, and thankfully this time a large crack ran directly up the side and split. She grinned and spun, digging on the spot to fling dirt in the direction of any nearby silver before darting out and away again, keeping her eye on the crack she'd made.
It was strange that the... werewolf? The antlers were odd, but Ophelia supposed she'd never seen a werewolf before... that the werewolf was choosing not to engage with her, if that was the case. Throwing dirt? Hitting the walls? Neither made much sense. She was coordinating, though, so she shot small fragments out at five of the copies of herself, giving them the signal and plan of attack. The rest, uncommanded, spread out over the arena, trying to cut down on Kashi's ability to move around. 
Kashi did her best to continue to duck and weave. Kept her eye on the crack she'd made, flinging dirt at a few the got close enough. The dirt made little impact, but Ophelia seemed more intent on containment at the moment. That couldn't be good, but she could try and make it work.
A few of the shadows in the back spoke again. "To some degree I suppose I'm used to being chosen. It would almost be interesting to see how he did it."
"You and me both, sister," Kashi panted as she moved. "Although I personally could use a day-- off!" She angled herself towards one of the silver copies, ran directly at it and ducked away at the last second to see how it would react. If it was sentient or not. If it would try to injure her or just grab at her. She could work it either way, but she needed to see how they moved and reacted to know if her plan had a chance of working.
"Couldn't we all?" The run at her was unexpected, after tearing off in the other direction, and she chose not to react at all to it in the moment, hoping Kashi would go through with it, allowing Ophelia to morph around her and restrict her movements from direct contact instead of just boxing her in. The girl’s choice to abort the rush left her in a somewhat difficult position, though, and she decided to give up at least one of her advantages.
The copy that had been rushed dropped its human form entirely, turning into a grasping net of silver threads that launched itself at the werewolf.
Kashi couldn't help the yip that came out of her mouth as the copy changed. She dug her heels into the dirt to make a sharp turn, hoping the net wouldn't be quite as nimble. If these things could do that then swapping back to her two-legged form wouldn't be an advantage. In dexterity, maybe. Then again, she was faster like this. Probably didn't have much time to make the change anyway. She glanced behind to see if the net had followed her.
The quick dodge had surprised her somewhat, but it wasn't entirely unexpected. Pure speed was not Ophelia's domain, made up for by coverage. As the copy landed, reforming from net to humanoid, the one in the center whistled. Low-high, high.
Kashi timed her dodges as best she could, suddenly more copies filling the arena. They only seemed as fast as a normal person, but it would only take one lucky strike for that to no longer matter. An ear twisted and identified the whistle coming from the center. If she was going to gamble, she was going to gamble in that direction.
Kashi managed to dodge enough and get up enough momentum to slam into the wall again, making sure she leapt this time and rammed her entire strength into her blow. The crack split and the wall groaned, chunks starting to fall. Kashi dodged around a few and leapt into the air, snatching one in her mouth and heaving with everything she had, flinging a chunk of the wall into the most condensed mass of copies she could see before spinning and grabbing up another chunk, copying the same process and flinging what had fallen, keeping it up until there was nothing left to throw.
The shadows hit by Kashi's projectiles splashed, exploding into sprays of silvery semifluid that clumped in the air, splattering the walls of the arena and the other duplicates, annihilating their humanoid forms... momentarily.
All over the arena, the surviving copies flattened, spreading out over the floor and grabbing on to all the fragments, picking the mass back up and reintegrating it into their forms, a single flat mirror expanding to cover almost the entire floor of the arena. Losing the coordinator-Ophelia would be one thing. Having the coordinator's mind and thoughts spread out over the entire arena was another thing entirely. They reshaped again, taking on an three distinct near-mirrors of Kashi's own form to run at her, now much stronger and faster than they had been. Two humanoid forms stayed back, taking on the now-vacant coordination role.
Kashi took off at a dead run around the edge of the arena as her mind raced, copies on her heels. Wouldn't be beyond reason to suspect anything she could do, they could do as well. Ability to reform. Smash again and they'd likely respond the same. She didn't have anything to fight the reforming process and she knew it. And the copies of herself were keeping pace. She knew that moment she was caught out by someone with a skillset she ultimately wouldn't be able to win against. And she grinned.
She spun on her heel and made her final pass, what she was sure would be her last attempt at the fight. Eyed the humanoid forms and ran right for them with a howl.
With the direct rush, Ophelia had to be careful, to wait until Kashi had fully committed to the strike. Targeting the humanoid forms would make sense, if there was any difference between them and the others. At the last second, the one Kashi had rushed directly changed from a person into a barbed spear and launched herself at one of Kashi's hind legs from underneath her field of vision.
Pain. Kashi let out a scream as the pain shot through her, back leg stumbling as searing pain shot up her limb. It meant one thing, really; silver. A silver edge could pierce her skin and make a wound stick. She could feel her healing start to try and work at the pain, but the time it had taken to kick in was telling. Probably wouldn't be able to save her from a fatal blow, not this time. When she turned to try and get a better look at what happened, she saw the edges of what looked like barbs. That's what happened, the copy transformed like last time, only this time it was a spear. If this was how Ophelia fought, she was going to be done faster than she anticipated.
There were worse things than being taken down in battle.
Kashi bit back the pain and pushed herself at the closest figment of the enemy, attempting to latch her teeth around it and pull it the ground.
Ophelia felt the jaws latch around her and pulled her body in, compacting part of herself inside of Kashi's mouth for a moment while the copies came up from behind. She was wracked by a moment of hesitation as she let herself be borne to the ground, then decided. If she'd come back from the dead, there was a decent chance Kashi would too. and that, she could be okay with.
The piece of her in Kashi's mouth exploded, sharpened fragments firing themselves out through the muzzle and teeth.
Kashi let out a howling scream as she opened her mouth as wide as she could, swinging her head as hard as possible as she backed away from the pain. That hurt like hell and her healing was slow to answer, making it even more disorienting than her leg, still on fire from the wound there. She opened her mouth as wide as possible and rammed it into the ground, scraping her teeth against the dirt to get a mouthful in the hopes that the rough nature would help scrub any remainders of Ophelia from between her teeth.
Letting out another growl, Kashi spun and bolted directly for where she planted her knife. Biting was out. Clawing was out. So far the best she’d managed was when she tried to smash the copies…so she bolted for where her mask still lay on the ground as fast as she could go, her mouth and leg throbbing despite the healing magic starting to finally try and handle the leg.
Kashi's backing away had bought time, and the copies were almost directly on her heels as the wolf ran away. Two kept pace as they ran, trying to limit Kashi's options, while the third tried to outpace her, legs growing and contracting to try to lengthen their stride enough to cut her off. Two snaps at Kashi's flanks were met by one miss and one graze- the form was interesting, but not one Ophelia was accustomed to.
Kashi ignored the graze as best she could, teeth scraping at her hindquarters and causing her to push harder. She began to pant. She needed a minute for her healing to kick in more fully, if it could. Kashi saw one of her copies gaining ground on her to cut her off and ducked to one side as best she could. She managed to reach the place where her mask was and shoved her face down into it, scooping it up against her face and singing the song of transformation, just enough of the magic to make it stick as she ducked away from the snapping jaws of her copies and continued trying to weave her way to the arena's wall.
The faster copy slowed for a moment, then turned into a barrage of knife-shards. Kashi made the choice, for good or bad, to finish the song of transformation as the knife-shards shot towards her, a slim hope in her mind that a sudden shift from wolfen mass to humanoid would help her dodge at least some of the blows. Pain was a constant when shifting, but the added barrage of blades added to it. Her instinct was to pull herself in as she ran to try and protect what she could as the blades pierced and cut, several finding their mark. Enough of them to slow her down, the cuts and slashes causing her to lose focus along with blood. Her healing wouldn't catch up to this many wounds, not with silver. She lifted her head and tried to focus. If only she could get to the wall...
Ophelia had noticed by now that every wound she'd dealt was regeneration, and internally winced.
This is not going to be pretty.
Reaching out to her other self to combine, one mind in two bodies connected by a bridge, she prepared herself even as Kashi made it to the wall. A final form- one large net, spear in the center to pin the target, with a dozen smaller spikes around the outside to dig into the wall. From behind, the last humanoid walked up, reshaping herself into the human form and color for one question. "Any last words? Messages?"
Kashi reached the wall, fingers starting to try and dig into to the stone. Too slippery. Too weak. When she heard the question, she spun and took in what lay in front of her. Took a breath.
"Rekneaio," she stated. "It means...this death is a gift. And it is a good one. Thank you, Ophelia. My family is dead, and now I may join them. I..." Another shaky breath. Steady. It was not the first time she'd face what she thought was sure to be death. "...I hope your teammates are and remain safe. If I had a last request...A message...it would be that you kill him that put us here." Kashi gave Ophelia a salute from her homeland. "It was an honor to fight."
Ophelia nodded. "Lest the Refuge fail." 
The words were a signal as much as a confirmation. The spear in the net shot forward, taking Kashi in the gut, and tiny tendrils crawled out of it, following the arteries and veins as they came in contact and tracing out Kashi's circulatory system. "I only wish we had met under better circumstances. Break!"
The tendrils, now in the hundreds or thousands as they crept down limbs, across the torso, in the heart and head, pulsed with growth for an instant, then turned into blades, shredding every part of Kashi's body simultaneously. 
Ophelia walked up, placing her hand on the remnants of the net, and waited for her self to drip out with Kashi's blood.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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And good night to Ametrine.
-M
Writeblr Battle Royale, Lyra vs Ametrine (Ametrine POV)
Hello everyone! It's part two of my participation in @writeblrbattleroyale! This time I've been paired up with the wonderful @forthesanityofsome (it wouldn't let me at your writeblr, apologies). You can read Lyra's point of view for this fight here! Please check out the event page here if you want to see more oc fights!
Content warning for death!
You are not home. You are not where you are supposed to be. You killed that woman for what, exactly, then? 
The ringmaster is speaking. He’s disappointed. It seems that you weren’t the only ones fighting. 
“I haven’t introduced myself,” he says. “People call me M. I don’t know if it’s my real name. I really don’t remember anything.” That sounds familiar. An urban legend, perhaps? 
“I once was a full person that was cursed to roam the world, without being able to go beyond. I do have two goals I remember: I am the bringer of entertainment, and I am a bringer of death.” He is almost certainly a legend. You’re sure of it. 
“This place really is the tight combination of both. You are my freak show now that my own freak was taken for me. I just need to make sure now you don’t try to escape.”
You will escape, one way or another. Through causing or receiving death, you will be free. 
A woman appears in the ring. She points to the person standing on the other side of the ring, your next opponent, you presume. Then she points at you. 
All goes dark. 
Then you wake up. 
Patience is lying beside you, cold. Dead. You failed.
Patience’s cold, dead body sits up. The smile sits wrong on their face, since it isn’t theirs. 
They reach out a hand towards your face. You’re frozen, you can’t move. 
They lift your sunglasses, and you see them clearly. They see you. Eyes are a window to the soul, and the thing wearing Patience’s skin has access to yours. You can feel it taking root inside you. 
“My fancy little crew here are all my helpers whose soul is in their own little dimension. I won’t mind putting you with my little collection. So, now it’s time for round 2”. The ringmaster says. 
You’re standing in the arena. None of that was real. Not yet, anyway. You still have time to fix things. You just have to get out of here fast enough. 
The woman standing on the far side of the arena is not the same person as before. 
The most noticeable thing about her is her ears, which are long and pointed, and move to press against the sides of her head as if to shy away from the noise of the crowd. 
The second most noticeable thing about her is her bow. A long range fighter… it’s not likely you will win this fight. 
But… Perhaps you’ll get lucky like last time, and your opponent will be confused and out of her element enough that you can win. 
“I don’t want to fight you, how much do you want to fight me?” the woman calls out. 
You consider it. You’ve already got innocent blood on your hands. And for no true guarantee of salvation. But. The only way out of anything is through. 
“It depends on if fighting will get me home faster than not,” you say. 
The woman stiffens as you begin to approach. 
Ah, she’s on her guard. Unfortunate. 
“I don’t know if fighting will get us home. But I do know it will end with one of us dead,” the archer says. You don’t let that stop you. Death is the only constant, you cannot allow yourself to fear it. 
The woman sighs and fires what you assume is a warning shot, the arrow digging into the ground just before the tip of your boot. 
“I don’t want to fight…but I will if I must,” she says, resigned. 
It’s a shame you have to do this again. You sigh. 
“I have to try, there’s something I need to do,” you say. You pluck the arrow out of the ground as you pick up your pace. Not an ideal weapon, but perhaps if you can get close enough… 
The woman seems unhappy with your choice, but you pay that no mind. Happiness has no place in a fight like this. 
“Then I’m sorry as well, good luck, adversary,” the woman says. 
You decide to speed things up. You can recall Patience’s annoyance at watching people run straight into gunfire during movies. “You’re supposed to zig-zag! Running straight ahead makes you easier to hit!,” they’d say, throwing their hands up in the air. They cut you a look like they’re trying to say ‘what is wrong with some people?’. 
You assume the principle is the same for arrows as it is bullets, so as you run you take care to weave around. 
It works well to keep you from getting shot, but it doesn’t help you get any closer to the woman. 
She lowers her bow to focus on keeping away from you. 
She’s quite good at it. 
Frustratingly good at it. 
There’s a seemingly endless period of time where no ground is gained or lost between you. 
You’re losing time. You need to get home as soon as you can, and this is not the way to do it. 
You’ll have to take a chance. 
Bolting straight ahead, a spark of hope catches in the air when you see the woman’s back hit the wall. 
You’ve got the arrow firmly in your grasp, ready to attack. 
You were not expecting her to have wings. 
You’re familiar with the concept of elves from Patience’s movies, but none of them could ever fly. 
She uses the wall as leverage as she pushes herself aloft. 
You can only watch her as she takes aim and fires. 
There’s no dodging an arrow from this range. 
It hurts when it pierces your skull, but not for long. 
If this death is true, then your path ends here. You cannot become a ghost, not even for Patience’s sake. 
But if this death is just a dream, perhaps you will wake up soon. Wake up and continue your quest, save your friend. 
For now, it is time to rest. 
Good night. 
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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Second round has started with a bang! Amazing victory of our Lyra. Good luck in round 3
- M
Writeblr Battle Royale - Ametrine Versus Lyra! (Lyra POV)
Yes! That's right! Round 2 of the event @writeblrbattleroyale put on by @your-absent-father! This time my alien elf Lyra is going up against the ghost-fighting Ametrine (OC that belongs to @moonluringfrost)! And this time she actually does fight! You can read Lyra's round 1 here and Ametrine's round 1 here! Thanks, enjoy, and remember you can follow all the action here OR by following #writeblrbattleroyale !
Follow some awesome fellow authors and watch our OCs beat the shit out of each other (when they behave and do what they're supposed to do instead of things like trying to escape or have a pleasant conversation)
WC: 1,240 Tw: death
“And now the round 1 has ended. Unfortunately for me, some of you players tried to go against me, but I give you the benefit of the doubt. I haven’t introduced myself. People call me M. I don’t know if it’s my real name. I really don’t remember anything. I once was a full person that was cursed to roam the world, without being able to go beyond. I do have two goals I remember: I am the bringer of entertainment, and I am a bringer of death. This place really is the tight combination of both. You are my freak show now that my own freak was taken for me. I just need to make sure now you don’t try to escape.” 
A woman appears in the middle of the arena in clothes that are almost stereotypical of a fortune teller. She’s south American, with a beautiful straight nose and eyes that seem to know everything you deeply want to know. “I am so sorry.” She points at Lyra and the new opponent, and the world shifted.
Flashes of her home. Devastated. Crushed and burnt plant matter, the giant carved pillars now broken and laying at her feet. Someone far away was laughing among the eerie quiet. A flash of dark and Lyra was running. Heading to the laughing. She emerged into the light and blinked. Her home, the island of her parents…it was all gone. Broken. Destroyed.
“Hail the queen!” A voice from beyond sight called.
Bodies began to move under the rubble, and Lyra glanced down. She was wearing the outfit of the highest noble. Queen. The stone fragments of all the clans were embedded into the leather wrapped around her wrist. A mark of what was never supposed to be.
“Queen of all!!” someone called. “Death-bringer!!”
The bodies revealed themselves, and turned to her with faces of shame, fear, anger and hopelessness.
“Queen of Elkien, conqueror and destroyer of the lands!!”
“My fancy little crew here are all my helpers whose soul is in their own little dimension. I won’t mind putting you with my little collection. So, now it’s time for round 2”.
Lyra blinked back into reality standing in an arena, a cold sweat covering every inch of her skin. That…so that wasn’t real, then. It was one of her greatest fears…and it had been brought to her mind by this ‘M’ character.
She wanted to draw an arrow and shoot it directly into the sky, directly to the place where M had been moments ago. But the sounds of people shuffling around, starting to murmur and talk and shout all distracted her. She pinned her ears to her head, giving it a shake. Focused on her opponent.
The sooner she could finish this, the sooner she could get to M and make him pay. For this game of death, for making them participate…for making her live the nightmare that haunted her like a shadow.
She took a breath to steady herself, facing the one opposite her. Pale skin, light hair, blue eyes. Petit build. But she knew enough to know that a size and shape were only minor factors in a fight. She couldn’t afford to take her opponent lightly.
Even so, she did not want to fight if she did not have to.
Taking a deep breath, Lyra called out, “Adversary! I don’t want to fight you. How much do you want to fight me?”
The response came. “Depends on if fighting will get me home faster than not.” The woman began walking towards Lyra, causing her back to stiffen just a bit. She began backing away. Keep the same distance between them. She didn’t know what her opponent could do and didn’t want to find out by letting her get too close.
“I don’t know if fighting will get us home. But I do know it will end with one of us dead.” The woman didn’t seem to change based on words alone, continuing to advance. Lyra let out a breath and fired a warning shot directly into her path, the arrow digging into the ground at her feet. “I don’t want to fight…but I will if I must.”
The woman across from her sighed as Lyra knocked another arrow into place. She seemed tired, and Lyra couldn’t blame her. “I have to try,” she called back. “There’s something I need to do. I’m sorry.”
She reached down and plucked Lyra’s arrow from the ground, keeping it with her as she began advancing faster.
Lyra grit her teeth. “Then I’m sorry as well. Good luck, adversary.”
The woman increased her speed to a near-run, Lyra keeping her arrow tight as she began to back up faster. Lyra tried to track her, but the woman’s evasive movements made for little opening. Eventually Lyra had to lower her arrow and focus on moving, on keeping up the distance and matching her speed to her opponent’s.
This was the best tactic Lyra had at the moment, not wanting to use her earth magic unless it was absolutely needed. The cost was high, and while she’d used it on the last little one it was simply because it seemed an easier way to end the fight than blood. From the way this new opponent moved, she would have to be more careful with her magic…something she was not prepared to do. Not yet.
And her reward was a sudden change in tactic, the woman suddenly changing course and speed, charging directly at Lyra. Lyra moved until her back was against the wall, waited until her opponent was nearly on top of her before stretching out her wings and flying into the air. Feet now against the wall, Lyra kept herself aloft while pushing off.
She looked.
Aimed.
Fired.
She tucked her wings and tucked herself into a ball as she landed, rolling with momentum and getting her feet under her as fast as possible, leaping into a crouch and spinning around to identify where her opponent was.
A body was collapsed by the wall.
Lyra waited for movement as the crowd around her seemed to hold their breath. A few began talking. Whispers among the specters watching. Then…
Cheering.
Lyra risked a glance up at the ones in the stands. A few looked genuinely shocked. A few looked genuinely pleased. Several looked as if they were forced into cheering, like puppets but ones that she could not spot the strings.
Standing, Lyra walked cautiously over to the body. The woman, her adversary, was dead. She rolled the body onto her back, removed the arrow, and closed her eyes, making a gesture that marked blessings for the dead. “I am sorry you did not complete what you needed to do,” she said softly. “But, if you have a next life, I hope you are able to find peace in it.”She stood and turned to face M. Took a deep breath and yelled up, “mxmuzacimo!!!” You are a bag of dicks!! before stalking back to her original spot. He was going to pay for making her – for making them – participate. She wasn’t sure how yet, not as well versed in life and death magic from her home and unsure if it would work in this place. But she was going to make sure she tried if she won her way to the top. And if not? She was going to try before she was taken out.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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Interlude and the group fighting in round 2
Now you have won. You suddenly have every scar and blow erased from your skin. You look around and hear the voice again that you can’t describe. “And now the round 1 has ended. Unfortunately for me, some of you players tried to go against me, but I give you the benefit of the doubt. I haven’t introduced myself. People call me M. I don’t know if it’s my real name. I really don’t remember anything. I once was a full person that was cursed to roam the world, without being able to go beyond. I do have two goals I remember: I am the bringer of entertainment, and I am a bringer of death. This place really is the tight combination of both. You are my freak show now that my own freak was taken for me. I just need to make sure now you don’t try to escape.” A woman appears in the middle of the arena in clothes that are almost stereotypical of a fortune teller. She’s south American, with a beautiful straight nose and eyes that seem to know everything you deeply want to know. “I am so sorry.” She points at you and your new opponent, and you are transported into your deepest nightmare for just a few minutes, which almost feel like an eternity. “My fancy little crew here are all my helpers whose soul is in their own little dimension. I won’t mind putting you with my little collection.” You finally have sense on the audience around you. Some of them are real people that have no idea what’s going on. Some though, some people are dressed in old timely clothes, and smiling like someone has forced them to do so. “So, now it’s time for round 2”.
welcome to the second round of Writeblr battle royale! Hopefully you have followed the fighting and now you are ready for the round two. The pairs in the second round are:
Erin vs Tuan Tangyuan
Chess vs Daiko
Amertrine vs Lyra
Herchel vs Elyren
Blair vs Julyan
Kashi vs Ophelia who has been chosen for round 2
The deadline will be till the end of Sunday. The links to previous fights are in the name.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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Hello! The second round is just around the corner. There's just one thing left. There are 11 winner, so someone needs to get a new one. Now it's your choice.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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Hello! The second round is just around the corner. There's just one thing left. There are 11 winner, so someone needs to get a new one. Now it's your choice.
26 notes · View notes
writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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Hello! The second round is just around the corner. There's just one thing left. There are 11 winner, so someone needs to get a new one. Now it's your choice.
26 notes · View notes
writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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Congratulations Daiko. This will hopefully not be the last person you slay.
-M
Side Story: It’s Gonna Get Bloody! (Jen ver.) (TMoJ&J)
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Author’s Note: So, I decided to take part in this event called the Writeblr Battle Royale (@writeblrbattleroyale) which basically pits people’s original characters against each other. I supplied two characters – Jen and Jackson! Here is the battle that took place between Jen and Daiko (created by the lovely @saltysupercomputer) I hope you enjoy, make sure you give lots of love to the event and to my partner!
This piece was written with saltysupercomputer!
━━━━━━༻❀༺━━━━━━
Jen’s brow furrowed as her eyes fluttered open, staring up at a stone ceiling. The area was damp and smelled of mold, making her nose itch. As she slowly pushed herself into a sitting position, a sharp pain shot through her skull, making her wince.
“What the fuck?” she muttered, bringing a hand to the back of her skull. “The hell am I?”
She slowly pulled herself to her feet, glancing around her. She was in a small cell made of stone with a cell door against the back wall. Bright light filtered in through the bars and she could faintly hear the sound of a crowd cheering and laughing. Her fingers curled around the cold metal, squinting at the bright light outside.
A loud, booming voice echoed throughout the arena, silencing those that were watching. “Welcome to the battle my dear audience. Welcome to the bloodshed. I am M, your humble game master. In front of me are our contenders. Their weapons are in front of them. The enemy on their opposite. Their only way out is either killing their opponent or dying. These two are a very interesting duo. I just can’t wait for the show.”
“Show?” she repeated with a scoff.
The sound of metal scraping against metal filled the cell as the door was slowly lifted upward. She ducked under it, stepping out into the bright light. It wasn’t warm like sunlight and it felt artificial, like fluorescents.
Daiko awoke in a small, dusty cell. Confused and disoriented, she rubbed over her eyes. Wasn’t she just taking a nap in her classroom, waiting for next period to begin?
No, this was definitely not where she remembered falling asleep. The walls were dark and only faint light glistened through them. Even more curiously so, she found a rapier lying next to her. Odd enough, she hadn’t seen these things since college.
Careful, as not to cause the frail blade of the sword to burst, she weighed it out in her hands and carefully slid her index finger across the blade only to find out that – Yes! Ouch! A lot sharper than the blades the fencing club in her college used!
It was then that a voice boomed through a small speaker in the corner of the cell: “Welcome to the battle my dear audience. Welcome to the bloodshed. I am M, your humble game master. In front of me are our contenders. Their weapons are in front of them. The enemy on their opposite. Their only way out is either killing their opponent or dying. These two are a very interesting duo. I just can’t wait for the show.”,
It said, loud and annoying, like that of a… sports commentator? Oh, no.
Before Daiko could object anything, the metal gate in front of her swung open. She didn’t really feel like going out of there. Whatever lie before her seemed like trouble – and she wasn’t quite the type of woman for trouble. 
However, seeing as the cell she was in clearly lacked an exit, she stepped into what faintly looked like a colosseum from the old Romans. She squinted her eyes at the bright spotlight that gleamed from the closed roof.
Before her stood the figure of a young woman who seemed just as disoriented as her. Daiko could barely make out any details through the glaring spots.
“Hello!”,
Daiko said, calling out to her as friendly as she possibly could.
“What the fuck? Who the hell are you?”,
The young woman responded.
Daiko peered around the Arena again, looking into the faces of the roaring crowd.
“I believe I am your opponent.”,
She said and straightened her shoulders in order to appear more diplomatic.
There was a way out of this. There just had to be.
“I am Daiko Shimanouichi, but you may call me Daiko. I work as an English teacher at Shoreline High near Seattle and…”
She glared along the ranks again, looking for the figure of the Host or any emergency exit, really. But alas, nothing.
This day way going horrible so far and it wasn’t even tea time yet – though really, she had no idea if it had tea time yet or if it had already long passed.
“I’m Jen. Jen Winchester. And you’re a teacher, huh?”
The young woman scoffed. As Daiko’s eyes finally started to adjust to the bright spotlights, the figure of her opponent became much clearer: She was a little shorter than her and had short, black hair as well as piercing, green eyes that made Daiko shudder for a moment.
“Indeed, I am!”
Jen started approaching her with slow steps.
“Ah, but fear not! I am certain that we can find a way to exit this competition without-”,
At this moment, Jen landed a clear uppercut against Daikos Chin, making her tumble backwards and instantly drop the rapier she had been holding before, which Jen immediately kicked away.
Daiko hissed and grabbed the bridge of her nose, which felt sticky and warm. Bloody. 
Her glasses were still intact, at least. With her wrist she swiped away the blood from her nose.
So there really was no other way to this, huh? Fine.
As Jen dashed towards Daiko to land another strike, Daiko ducked away as best as she could, only to thrash her elbow into Jen’s abdomen. She gasped, seemingly almost surprised, but was back on her feet quickly – almost too quickly.
Daiko mentally attributed it to youthful energy, which she truthfully lacked.
Absorbed by her own train of thought, she reacted too late to Jen grabbing her tie and janking her to the ground to land another hard punch in her face. Daiko grasped for air.
Jen had a tight grip on her collar and was ready to punch her again, but Daiko – in an admittedly stupid flash of idea – put all her force into headbutting her opponent to escape her grasp and roll away through the dirt in order to grab her rapier.
Both women were in sour moods now, ready to take out their frustrations on each other. Jen dashed forward, fist clenched tightly as she released a war cry. Daiko just barely managed to dodge the punch, stumbling backward in her haste to escape. The younger girl was relentless in her pursuit, seeming to have no qualms about fighting someone she didn’t even know. Daiko was barely able to get her footing before another punch was launched toward her.
Jen managed to grab ahold of the front of her shirt, punching her in the gut. Daiko’s foot gave out beneath her and she cried out in both surprise and pain as the two tumbled back against the hard earth. Her back collided with the ground, knocking the wind from her lungs. Jen took this opportunity to attack once more, punching the woman in the face.
‘She’s not going to stop,’ thought Daiko, feeling panic rise within her. She struggled to get the younger girl off of her, her free hand frantically trying to grab a hold of the sword she had dropped.
Jen clicked her tongue in annoyance. “Just die already, will ya? I wanna win this thing and get outta here. It’s free taco day, you know!”
Daiko couldn’t believe what she was hearing. Not only did this girl not have any problem attacking a stranger on the orders of some mysterious gamemaster, but she was actually going on about tacos during a fight? She had to wonder what was wrong with this girl. Either way, Daiko wasn’t willing to go down without a fight.
Her fingers finally grasped the metal and with an angry cry, she brought the sword down against Jen’s shoulder. The teen winced in pain, releasing her grip to reach for the wound. Daiko used this chance to shove the girl away, scrambling to her feet and holding the sword out in front of her protectively.
“Don’t come any closer!”
Jen just scoffed, rolling her neck before charging at her.
Daiko pretended to strike left before switching at the last second, catching the girl off guard and plunging the blade through her chest. For a moment, silence filled the arena, the two just looking at each other.
Jen slowly looked down at the blade sticking through her chest, blood soaking the white tank top she wore. “Well, shit…”
Daiko wasn’t sure how to feel, an apology forming on the tip of her tongue but she swallowed it. She had nothing to apologize for! This girl was going to kill her, it was purely self defense!
Jen slowly stepped backward, wincing as the blade slid out of her, leaving more room for blood to gush from the wound. “Jackson’s never gonna let me… live this… down…” 
The arena started to spin, the sounds of the crowd becoming muffled in her ears as she struggled to stay upright. Gravity wouldn’t allow it, pulling her hard to the ground.
She coughed up blood, glaring up at the domed, white ceiling above her. “My only regret… is not… eating more… tacos…” The light slowly faded from her eyes, head lolling to the side.
The crowd cheered loudly but Daiko could barely hear them over the sound of her own racing heart. She wiped the blood from her split lip, hand trembling. 
“Congratulations, Daiko. You’ve advanced to the next round.” The gamemaster smirked down at her, patting his powdered wig with his hand. “That was quite the good show, wouldn’t you agree? Hahaha!”
The crowd roared louder, stomping their feet loudly in the stands.
Daiko felt sick to her stomach, but she could only watch as the gamemaster turned and walked away. 
━━━━━━༻❀༺━━━━━━
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
Text
Yess, pure blood shead. I am proud of you Erin. I hope to see more next time.
-M
Writeblr Battle Royale - Cooper and Erin
Took part in the @writeblrbattleroyale event by @your-absent-father!
This round, my favorite punching bag Cooper, going against's @the-arigen's Erin.
Naturally, a trigger warning for death, as is customary on this blog.
Nothing. Cooper awoke surrounded by sheer nothing once more. No sky, nor land, just the sterile white of nothing. Her heart pounded in her chest - she still had one of those, at least - hammering against its ivory cage in an irregular thud stop thud thud thud stop that had plagued her since her first real death.  But no God met her now. If she had slept, if she had died, she did not remember. She supposed it didn't matter - it would come soon enough. She felt her side for her sword, gripping its hilt and pulling it from its sheath. It wasn't the familiar blade she carried, the one that had killed her the last time. No magic thrummed though its core, but it made no difference. That magic had never - could never - save her.
"What is this?" she snarled, coating fear with anger. That was a safe emotion. "What's going on?" She growled, as if she hadn't had the situation explained to her already.
She squared her shoulders, facing off against her opponent - who she was very sure was not any of her Gods - defensive and wary. 
"Who are you?" she asked, voice low as she tried to appear more threatening than the very tired brick of a woman she was, "do you have anything to do with this?"
Erin’s check was complete. No gear, her connection to Aileen attenuated to almost nothing, access to her focus as normal, magic operating at full strength, and the spells she’d designed into her skull operating well enough to tell her that this was not, in fact, an illusion.
“Except insofar as I have been dragged in here with you, no.” She looked around, finding the empty void much more strange than any of the disjointed vistas she’d seen in Faerie. “I’m not entirely sure where this is, exactly, which is… worrying. Are you a super?”
"A what?" asked Cooper, "No, I'm - I'm just Cooper. Alek Cooper. Marwaid, I guess - the Gods hate me."
Her words came out like a babble. She was not prepared for real conversation - that had never happened before. Always being talked at and never to.
"I'm not dead, am I? Like, again. I'm not dead again. You aren't… fuck - you aren't Omera or something messing with me?"
"Given my complete lack of knowledge on who Omera is, I'm going to suppose we're from very different places. I can't speak much for Gods- never much been a fan, though the Godslayers take it perhaps too far. As far as I can tell, neither of us are dead." Erin looked around, remembering the voice she had heard while going reviewing their location, and winced. "Yet, at least. Though I don't know the enforcement mechanism."
"Somehow, that makes me feel worse about this." Cooper relaxed somewhat, despite this. "So! A fight to the death. That seems normal enough, unless there's a trick somewhere."
Erin watched the other woman carefully, then shook her head slightly. "If you'll give me a moment to cast, I can see if that's something I can get us out of. I swear on my magic, nothing that would do harm to you."
Despite herself, Cooper nodded, stepping back in order to give her space. She knew magic, and knew how dangerous it was - as least back in her world. Her eyes glowed a soft blue, sensing what was to come, her only magical ability absolutely useless in the situation.
"I'll trust you, for now." she said, as if she had a choice.
Erin flicked her hand, summoning the electronic tablet she used as a focus to it and rapidly selecting options on it, then flipped it over, placed her hand on the back, and pushed a tiny fragment of magic into it, activating the ritual within. 
All around her, the lines and nodes of magic blinked into existence, bits of knowledge about their purpose and direction flowing into her mind as fast as she could process it. "For... Damn. I hate curse magic. Hate it so much. Such a stupid tool. Fools and maniacs, the lot of them."
"I'll take your word for it." Cooper had never cared about magic, and she wasn't about to start now. Dying be damned. "I suppose this means we have to fight?"
She readied her blade one more, curious more than anything. This was different to fighting at the temple, from fighting someone she would have called a friend, or fighting a God - though, technically she didn't fight a God, just bit one in a hell similar to this one. She couldn't consider that last one a win, she was already dead. 
"Y'know, I'm getting real sick of things like this."
Erin gave her a lopsided smile, watching for a sign of actual hostility and not finding one. Part of her wanted to treat the situation with the gravity it deserved, but it was more than overcome by too-similar situations she'd been in before. "It happens all too quickly, doesn't it? I can see you've got your own experience with curses. I'm a subject of this greater working, and it's defended from me, but yours..."
"Mine is frankly the worst family heirloom," she said, letting out a dry laugh. "All it took was one ancestor I never knew about to mess with the local witch, and here we are. Undying, mostly." 
She almost shuddered thinking about how she became when this first started, lying broken in the woods filled with carrion grubs. Maggots. She hated them, but had yet to have another encounter. 
"I don't know how exactly it works, if it's magic or God stuff or both, I just know that I'm stuck."
Erin paused, looking over it to make sure she was reading it right. "Well, there's some God stuff in there. It links to something I can't see, but it doesn't look functional. It looks like someone smacked you with all the worst features of the vampire curse and left most of the good threads hanging. Cursewrights are quite awful like that. It... I can't take it off you. But I might be able to reconnect some of those strings."
"What, to make me powerful or something? That doesn't seem like it would benefit you in this situation." Cooper swallowed, before regretfully adding, "I've killed enough without it. Would you risk that?"
"Powerful? No. But some idiot screwed with the healing. I might be able to make the next time you die..." Erin thought for a moment. There wasn't much that would make dying a pleasant experience. "Not quite so terrible."
"I think I'd rather you didn't. If I'm dumb enough to die again, that's on me." Cooper rolled her shoulders. "Besides, this has been in my bloodline for four centuries, do you really think you can tweak something that ingrained?"
Erin shook her head. "I understand. Notably, for you in the future... except in cases like the Oracle, a single successor selected by appropriateness,  generations typically loosen the grip of magic, not tighten it. As of now, though, are we to fight?"
"You say that like we have a choice." Cooper smiled, jagged canines glistening in the white light. "For what it's worth, you seem alright."
At the comment, Erin's face fell. "I'm sorry to give you that impression, nice to hear though it is. And I suppose we don't."
Erin released the magic on her back, letting her wings, five meters across and iridescent, fade into reality behind her. "I do apologize, but I will be trying to win. I don't know how long it will take to get back, or if an opportunity to end it will appear in the future."
Cooper stared, not quite in awe, not quite in fear, but something she couldn't yet describe. Dread. "Oh."
She swallowed and steeled herself, readying her blade once more. "Don't worry, I won't hold back. I do not want to die again."
"Good luck." Erin gauged the distance between them. Without a Light-boosting ritual in place, it was going to be much harder than usual to do any appreciable damage at all. Not that it was impossible.
She opened with two beams of light, firing from her left hand while navigating the screens of her focus with her right, trying to get to the spell that would summon a weapon before Cooper had made up the distance between them.
Cooper winced, dodging awkwardly, then ran. She was not especially fast by any means, not like the rest of her ilk, but she hoped it was enough. She had relied too much on her war dog, Idris, for most of her combat, but he was not here now. Neither was her squadron. Internally she cursed whatever force brought her here, and pulled back her arm to ready a swing as she made her way across the arena.
The other woman's normal running was slow enough to keep the beams fairly steady on her body, beginning to burn skin they were held on even as Erin managed to summon a weapon in the air above her head. Tossing her focus to the side to let it disappear, Erin grabbed the weapon and prepared to receive the charge. Cooper's weapon didn't look magical, but she still watched it carefully, wary of being tricked.
Cooper didn't let magic deter her; she closed the distance with gritted teeth and swung. The lack of her typical dog aided height was jarring, but her aim was true.
Erin blocked the blow as close to the base of the sword as she could manage, stopping it before it managed to cut into her skin. The other woman's extra near-foot of height worked against her, but the strength enhancements were just enough to keep it from being overwhelming. 
From so close, the burning of the beams intensified, starting to actually melt flesh as Erin kept the focus narrowed onto Cooper's stomach.
Fighting through the pain, she let out a low growl before pushing against the blade before retreating back a few steps. She felt at her front with a shaking hand, before grunting and lunging forward once more. Relying on strength, she swung her sword in a wide arc, back and forth, hoping to parry or at hit the blade with enough force it would be jarring.
Noticing Cooper's change in strategy when it clipped her arm, Erin leaped back, relying on her wings to extend the distance while she kept the beams focused. As soon as she landed, barely avoiding stumbling back, she added the two beams from her wings. It wasn't the cheapest way she had to fight, but caught without any of her magic items and with a non-magical opponent,  it was the best she could manage. Still, that miniscule bit of flight cost more than the light. "Dangerous, that. Helps that you're so much taller than me."
"If one of us has to die, I'm not leaving it up to chance." Cooper already felt gross from the little battle she had fought. Her shirt stuck to her skin and her face resembled more of a waterfall. She squared herself in case of impact, staring up. "You gonna come back down or what?"
Erin stared. It was possible for her to fight from up close, but it would largely be giving up all of her advantages... She shook her head, dropping the beams and dagger to summon her focus, flipping through the options to summon a spear, instead. "I suppose that would be fair."
Erin advanced carefully, on guard against a sudden rush in case the other woman suddenly decided to change her mind. In her head, she started preparing one of her more complex disabling spells- she knew enough about melee combat to not die in it, but it was hardly something she considered herself good at.
Cooper began to walk in a wide circle, slowly and with purpose, like a sheepdog to it's flock. She twirled her sword in her palm, before gripping it tightly once more. Being a show off was in her blood, wound nearly as tight as her curse. Live or die, she knew how to make a spectacle, she knew how to draw out fights to her benefit. With her free hand, she wiped the sweat from her brow, baring her teeth in a grimace. 
Her eyes darted quickly, looking for openings. To attack, to flee, the feint. Finally, after making a wide semi-circle, she closed in. She darted forward, sword held low behind her, almost dragging across the ground. Then, suddenly, she brought her sword arm up into a wide, diagonal arc, ending with a block in front of her face and chest, backing away once more.
Being on the attack was uncomfortable for Erin, a position she'd gone to great lengths not to be in recently. Striking out at Cooper was about finding the balance: far enough away that she couldn't get on the inside of the guard, close enough that she had control over the weapon and a single missed strike wouldn't mean losing it.
The spell finished in her head, she just needed an opportunity to release it. She couldn't guarantee it would end the fight if she did, but unless Cooper had some sort of resistance to it, it was the strongest, though short-lived, non-lethal measure she wouldn't have to invent on the spot.
Cooper was very aware that she was toying, and that she should probably stop. Knowing this, she gave another two quick swipes, and backed away once more, pushing her luck, pressing forward to see what exactly would happen. 
It was a game she played out of curiosity, the same kind as a child ripping the wings off of flies. Cutting forward, swiping, staying just out of reach. She began circling once more, eyeing for any real weaknesses so she wasn't just jabbing at random. It was not how she was taught, but it was how she survived.
Erin could see in the way Cooper was fighting that she was looking for weaknesses, now. Trying to find a way to deal with her specifically instead of just using natural advantages like before. She found herself conflicted for a moment: she knew that Cooper had to get in close, but she wouldn't do so unless she saw a weakness. 
And feigning additional weaknesses was something she'd never quite bothered to learn. Erin decided to risk it. All she needed to do was make physical contact. She activated the enchantments on her back, sending the wings away once more, and started advancing, trying to keep her opponent at the end of the spear as much as possible to obscure her actual goal.
Cooper let out a yelp of a laugh, side stepping out of the way and swinging without real purpose. Testing. This was more of the fight she wanted, familiar territory. She held her blade out straight ahead, as much of a taunt as it was to keep some distance. It wasn't enough to rival a spear, but enough to make her feel decently safe.
"You going to hit me?" she grinned, having the time of her undeath.
"It's a bit difficult. I'm accustomed to the defensive, at this point, and it's hard to break that paradigm." Erin moved forward, trying to spin the sword out of the way with her spear before stabbing at Cooper's shoulder.
Cooper stepped back with a wince. "Okay, that was a free shot."
She retaliated with a harsh hack towards the haft of the spear, putting her strength behind it.
Seeing her chance, Erin released the spear entirely, letting Cooper's swing knock it to the floor with no resistance while she dashed into the momentarily off-balance guard and reached in, grabbing Cooper's sword arm around the wrist and finally releasing her spell.
Cooper didn't have the time to look confused. As soon as the hand touched her wrist, she felt as if she was melting from the inside. She fell to the ground in a thud, the breath being knocked from her lungs. Try as she might, she couldn't force her legs - leg - to move, much less to get a grip on the ground below. She was gelatinous, unable to move in anyway that mattered. Jaw slackened, arms folded in an awkward position beneath her that would surely mess her up later. She almost wished for death over this. At least then she wouldn't be awake for it. It was embarrassing. Luckily, no folk from home could see how she had been taken down so quickly in the end. If she could, she would have buried her face in the dirt and simply end it once more, but alas, nothing ever went the way she wanted.
Erin released the arm. The spell would still be in place for ten seconds, so she had a moment to pull her focus out again, finding the spell she wanted. One that would knock Cooper out entirely and could be channeled through a weapon.
She found it quickly, then stood over Cooper's limp form within eyesight. "I know you can hear this, so... I hope next time you come back to life, things go better for you." 
She stabbed down just enough that the spear entered Cooper's skin, knocking the other woman out, then bent down, tracing the still-visible lines of her curse with her eyes and now her fingers, just over the skin. It was a complex curse, one of a type that she hadn't seen before, but she could see many similarities to vampirism- though, the low form of a ghoul instead of the true completion.
It helped that she had that particular curse loaded into her focus. A line shifted here, one or two added there, and a new node attached to the healing... everything she knew about magic told her that the next time Cooper woke up, it would be less damaged than this time. And would continue down that path. It was the least she could do.
Erin grabbed the spear from where she'd dropped it, then lined it up with Cooper's heart. "I hope you would forgive me."
She stabbed down, into both of their hearts.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
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That was an easy win. Would have been bloodier if the doll was a fully creature
-M
"This was late, but hey, at least there isn't a blood warning... because Teddy bear."
Writeblr Battle Royal. Tangyuan versus Teddo.
So on this battle of @writeblrbattleroyale event hosted by @your-absent-father, we have a Teddy bear and a Cat-like being paired together. This is fine.
It's so insanely funny to me that I entered in two protagonists of mine that were very incompetent compared to my other side characters. I expected them both to die horribly. Teddo did get that fate and it was hilarious.
Also also, anyone who know how to science better than me can correct any of this. It's been a while since I reviewed my quantum physics book and I am currently under the sickness, therefore headache, therefore speedrun, therefore so many broken grammar and science rules.
Thank you so much to @flock-from-the-void for keeping this battle alive and giving the funniest responses to Teddo's nonsense. I really enjoyed this and hope Tangyuan gets the teddy bear he deserves.
TW for death.
---------
Teddo thrived with data. Probabilities. Statistics. Conditional statements and expected values. Teddo would even try quantum mechanics if needed, but very rarely. That whole mess of science rubbed Teddo’s fluff the wrong way. There were already too many other stuffies that used blanket lies to explain the unknown. (“The host deserves it” “It’s just nightmares, what’s so weird about it” “You should be worrying more about your playability, you haven’t been chosen by the host for months”) 
Well, Teddo couldn’t understand these lies. They couldn’t play by the other’s rules. THEY MADE NO SENSE. That alone gave them the reasoning that, “If they made a bunch of nonsense that I refuse to follow, then I’ll just find the truth, the actual truth, no shortcuts or dumbing it down.” Teddo would make the unknown known. Find the answers in this mess. 
And the answer? 
For this? 
The only thing - the only possible explanation - for the whole “in the middle of fighting a 97th percentile nightmare” to “bright, bright, bright, when did the sun get so bright?” phenomena… it had to be quantum mechanics. 
Teddo hated quantum mechanics. 
A bunch of unknowns and ‘could never be knowns’ and ‘ha ha good luck you’ll never figure this out because everything contradicts itself’ 
But, as Teddo looked at their surroundings, they could come to no other hypothesis. This was either a quantum leap or a prolonged decoherence according to the many-worlds-interpretation. But… it’s been a while since Teddo’s looked at their notes, what theories… 
Teddo shook their paws. Nope. The scientific method is “do research” first, then “make a hypothesis.” Sure, this was only weird enough to be described by an equally weird branch of science, but Teddo would not go there if they didn’t have to. 
So first, research and take… notes…. 
Where was Teddo’s research tools? 
Teddo swiveled their head around, they had their… oh no was this the “chance of two 13th percentile nightmares” cardboard sword? The only nightmares these were effective against were accidentally calling the teacher “mom” and dying of embarrassment. 
Other than the sword, Teddo had nothing. 
Nothing. 
Teddo was lost in a web of unknowns. A sea of things they couldn’t figure out. Lies. Lies. Lies. Without their records - the files and files of research Teddo had to figure this out, and they were so so close - Teddo might as well be suffocated by the lies and left behind. 
Teddo pressed their paws to their eyes, shielding themself from the blinding light. 
Calm down. There must be… some solution. Think clearly. 
Teddo took a breath. Okay. They had to find some handhold, some… 
Someone else. 
There was someone else in this place. 
—---
Tuan Tangyuan was standing here, in the middle of a white arena, a bit bored. He couldn't focus on a voice - he was occupied with tangling his ginger hair instead and mumbling about the entertainment industry. He wished that anyone would warn him about teleportation the next time around. In the end, reality shows didn't have to be that realistic.
—--
Teddo hoped their breath wasn’t shaky. 
Teddo berated themself for caring what the others thought. They never thought well. But here was the hypothesis - put upon nothing at all - that this creature would believe in them, not like the stuffies back home. This one wouldn’t tell Teddo to stop searching for the truth and instead tell them to participate better in their lies. 
Teddo flicked their ears. “Salutations other - hopefully living - being, do you possess any parchments? Writing utensils? They are of the utmost importance.”
-----
A new voice caught the attention of his fluffy cat ears. The demon listened to the question of a teddy bear, his weaving tail uncovering his curiosity. He went quickly through his pockets, not only looking for something for writing but also making sure that all of his belongings were still there. They were.
Finally, he offered the teddy bear a pencil and a violet crayon. “ Maybe you could write on the floor with the crayon?” he suggested.
—---
Crayon. 
Well, it wouldn’t be as precise as Teddo’s meticulously sharpened pencils, (What they would do for their notes, pencils, some sense of familiarity.), but it would work. 
And that was better than nothing. It was so much better than nothing. 
Teddo snatched the crayon, and wrote down all the knowns, the postulates. A few conditional statements and the logic chain would hopefully result in some useful conclusions, then they could continue with the scientific method, find the absolute truths of this place, and then maybe Teddo’s metaphysical, non-existent heart would stop beating so loud.
Teddo wrote it down in a list, using arrows to different charts with further data and information. The crayon smudged a bit, but Teddo didn’t care. They wrote in a frenzy, the idea of data they could work off of intoxicating. 
They must be in an arena, with the not-people in the stands (1978, give or take five.), and the other crayon giving creature… cat-like, although a definite conclusion on the species would have to wait. (Some thought in the back of Teddo’s head made a joke about Schrödinger's cat.) The host has had enough dreams about owning a cat - and enough nightmares about accidentally killing it - to give Teddo enough information to write out enough stats about their opponent… although they may need information from the cat-like being themself. 
Teddo paused their frantic writing to look at their opponent. “I will need an accurate recollection of all your strengths and weaknesses.”
----
Tuan Tangyuan smirked, showing his sharp teeth. Oh, this timing couldn't go to waste. “Strengths...?”
He grabbed the opponent by the back of their head. He smashed it on the floor. Violet notes got blurry.
—--
A high pitched scream filled the arena. Teddo could scream that loud? The decibel level was astounding. 
Teddo’s stuffing tangled into clumps, metaphysical heart threatening to burst. 
99th percentile. 99th percentile. AND all Teddo had was a freaking 12th percentile sword. Teddo bet the cat-like creature never accidentally called their teacher “mom”. 
Oh, Teddo was trying to buy time from the tangled, half-formed thoughts that screamed one result. One undeniable result. 
They weren’t going to win. 
And, for some reason, that caused all reason to leave Teddo’s head. Like some unicorn stuffie, some pathetic unicorn stuffie, they threw the crayon at the cat’s face. (That wouldn’t do anything, the momentum was miniscule.) 
Well, Teddo had only one weapon. 
They bonked the cat on the head repeatedly. It wouldn’t do any damage, except for the 12.6% chance for a cardboard cu-
The sword nicked the cat’s face, a small red line that held Teddo’s only hope to survive today. And, great Eulicid, it was infinitesimally small. 
—----
Tuan Tangyuan wrinkled his nose and showed his teeth once again, this time not in a smile. His claws went out. With one hand he catched the sword - the other slapped the opponent. Tiny bits of stuffing got stuck in his nails.
—-
Stuffing pooled out from the cuts. It should hurt. It should’ve hurt. Fabric torn. Insides floating to the dust below. 
Teddo wouldn’t just loose. Teddo would cease to exist. 
This wasn’t a nightmare. This was a real, physical fight. Teddo truly was lost. Lost in a world they could never hope to understand. Their only, futile, pathetic hope was their data. 
And if that was all Teddo had, then their chance of death really was 100%. 
It was at this moment that all sense of reason spilled out of Teddo, mixed with the lost stuffing. 
Teddo yanked the sword from the cat’s grip. It tore to a jagged lump, barely 2nd percentile worthy. They proceeded to take this useless piece of cardboard and stab the cat’s foot. 
Teddo couldn’t cry, but they wanted to. “DIE, DIE, DIE, DIE.” 
They only delayed some inevitable result. 
—-----
For a good moment, he was so confused he couldn't move. He was staring and stuffing coming out of the bear. He was expecting blood - but this seemed like more fun! He had to obliterate them. Yet, every time he tried to catch them, they somehow managed to escape. He had to jump and tear, and kick, and generally have the time of his life to finally get them in his hands. Giving it no thought at all, he bit the bear and then laughed with his mouth full of material. This! Was! So! Exciting! Every stitch had to be cut, and every bit of the bear's body had to be covered in holes.
Half an hour later, Tuan Tangyuan was lying on the ground smiling, finally somewhat satisfied. The area was covered in the stuffing. He got up, collected everything he had lost during the ecstasy and bowed. After getting back home, he had to buy one of those teddy bears for himself.
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writeblrbattleroyale · 2 years ago
Text
Escape is futile. It's either win or die.
-M
Writeblr Battle Royale - Casper Vs Kashi!
Joined the @writeblrbattleroyale event put on by @your-absent-father and entered Kashi as one of my OCs to fight to the death!! She was put up against @garthcelyn's Casper and stuff ensued.
TW for death
Wordcount: 2,244
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As the whiteness made way into colour, the outline of an area filling out with greys and browns of concrete, Casper found himself standing on one end. Blinking heavily from the shining light, ears ringing from the speakers above, he had never felt so willing to die on dry land.
Clutching his bow in both hands, wringing them over the polished wood as he took a deep breath in before moving awkwardly across the sand(?).
“Dreadful, isn’t it?” he said, vaguely in his opponent's direction. Any air of superiority he had(or thought he had) had vanished, but it didn’t stop him from pretending. “Not sure how I got here, can’t say I fancy murder but that is what is asked of us, yes? Can’t say I want to get my hands dirty.” He winced, before holding his hand out rather forcefully for a handshake. “Lord Ton Pen Gaumor, but please, call me Casper.”
It slowly dawned on him that this was a strange introduction to a death match, but kept his hand out nevertheless; schooling his expression to be as neutral as possible.
Kashi pulled the knife from her belt and smacked his hand with the flat of her blade with a growl. Sounded like this was supposed to be a death match and she didn’t want any tricks.
She glanced around and started sniffing. The arena, the sky, the land, her opponent. He smelled…different. Odd. Not from her world. Not from a world she’d likely been to, either. But he smelled…like a lycanthrope.
Well at least it was interesting. He wasn’t moving or talking like someone that was going to try and trick her or kill her on the spot…although she’d known plenty of smooth-talking murderers before.
Even so, she pointed the tip of her knife at him, bearing her teeth. “Kashi,” she growled. Glanced at their surroundings. “And right now I’m more concerned with escape than murder. Especially since you’re…” she gestured at him with her knife. “Well, you smell like a wolf at least. And I’m less inclined to kill ones like me. Although I’m not opposed to it if it means I get out of here faster.” She glanced around at the arena for another moment. She hated the idea of someone pulling her strings.
“...what say we try and get out first. Leave the killing each other as a last resort.”
Shoving his hands into his pockets, he gave a stiff nod. “Sounds like a plan. Can’t say I want to die, but I’d rather not kill.”
The idea of the smell of blood made him want to gag but he held back, focusing instead on what he could smell. The air was not at all what he was used to, lighter, not as filled with the salty tang of the sea nor the heaviness of smoke. He couldn’t in the slightest narrow down what it felt like filling his lungs, and that very fact made the hairs of his arms stand on end.
“None of this seems right, I’ll be honest,” he said, barely above a mutter. “Not just the murder thing, I mean. You aren’t - I’m not -” he cut himself off, frustrated. He prided himself on his words, it was the only thing going for him after all, but now that he tried to draw upon them they were nowhere to be found. Finally, after a long hesitation he settled on “this isn’t like anything I’ve seen. Wrote about, maybe, but nothing else. Have - are you familiar at all?”
Let it be known, to any of his Gods that still listened, or to whatever kept him here, that Casper Young was out of his depth.
“With this?” Kashi shook her head, sliding her knife back in place before trotting over to the wall. “Nope. Been pulled into weird things before. Nothing quite like this.”
She gave the wall a sniff before balling a fist and ramming it into the wall. It cracked but not like it should have. She growled and glanced up at they sky. She couldn’t tell if that light was sun, moon, star, or just…white. There was a strange sort of magic around this whole area…and it was like it was trying to pen her in.
“But you’re right,” she grunted, taking out two more reliable knives and making an attempt to dig them into the wall. They went in sure enough, and she started working on handholds. “None of this seems right.”
Kashi climbed up the wall as best she could but halfway through one of her handholds broke and she fell back to the ground with a thud. She got to her feet and kicked at the wall, growling when it made barely a dent.
She’d seen walls like this before. It smelled like simple construction. She should have been able to break it no problem. But it wasn’t giving.
She pulled out another knife and bent it, snapping the metal in half. So her strength was fine. The wall was strange.
“Climbing is out,” she grunted. “Punching is out.” She glanced at the ground. Back at Casper. “Two options left, then. Try and dig our way out…or try and kill each other.”
“Digging is good,” squeaked out the man who had never got his hands dirty in his life. “I can dig. Probably.”
He rubbed at his neck, the collar of his shirt itching his skin. He didn’t think he’s ever sweated so much in his life, but now that his life was on the line his stomach twisted in on itself.
“Ah, if it’s digging I guess I should-” he paused, thinking of the best words. “Dog mode! I should dog mode it. Do you mind turning around though? Can’t do it when I’m watched, it feels… invasive.”
He waited a few beats before unbuttoning his shirt and folding it tidily, and then with his trousers, both finding their place in neat squares on the ground. His shoes were next, and then, with some effort, he began to shift.
Bones cracked audibly as they broke and reformed, a pained grunt left his mouth, one that quickly turned into a low howl. Dark brown fur broke out in patches across his tan skin, filling out until he was just brown fur. Face elongating, and ears lengthening and finding a new place on the top of his head.
All in all, he did not look threatening. More of a dog than a typical lycan. Four legged, with dopey brown eyes and the pattern of some kind of rottweiler on the body of a retriever with the big paws to match.  He whined softly, shaking himself off as the pain resided, and started to dig straight down from where he stood. Dirt flew wildly behind him, but he paid it no mind. It was only his life on the line, after all.
Kashi faced the wall as requested and studied it once more. Thought about trying to punch it again. Thought about trying a sneak attack on her opponent and take him out when he wasn’t expecting it. Thought about the hairs on the back of her neck raising, likely the one that brought them here glaring and thinking they weren’t getting their money’s worth. Or whatever worked for currency in this place.
Oh moons. She hoped it wasn’t blood. She’d played that game before and lost.
She continued staring a the wall and playing with one of her blades. She could probably get away with attacking him. She didn’t mind fighting. She didn’t mind bloodshed. But she’d left her band of merry assassins when they tried to tell her to tone it down because she hated – hated – others telling her what to do.
Finally she swore in her own language, slipped her knife into it’s place and reached up to her face. Began singing in her native tongue, activating the magic that kept her in a two-legged form and feeling the edges of her bone mask start to peel away from her face. It hurt, the pain cascading down her form as her song increased in speed and tone, the magic peeling her two-legged shape away and warping her form into that of her four-legged one. Gnarled, twisted horns began to grow from her head as her ears twisted into place, her nose and mouth stretching into a snout. Her arms were pulled in and her knees were bent as she fell to all fours, fur wrapping around her shape and covering everything. Hard bone-like plates grew from her spine and flattened themselves against her fur, and her newly-made tail thrashed as it grew half the length of her body.
Her paws hit the ground, the long middle one clicking as she shuffled away from her mask, grabbing it in her jaws before she walked over to where Casper had started digging. She was easily 5’ at the shoulder and broad enough to match the height, her form wolfish and alien at the same time. She tilted her head at the shape Casper now had, ears forward. That was…interesting.
Regardless, the dirt was shuffling under his paws and so she joined him. Maybe they could get out of here after all. It would be a hilarious middle finger to the game master if they could manage it.
Casper panted, digging as if his life depended on it - and funnily enough it did. He had never felt so gross in his life, from his dog drool to his paws caked in dry, dusty dirt. 
Digging and digging and digging, until between them a sizable hole sat beneath them, growing ever larger. He whined loudly, body shaking with exertion but he dared not stop for breath. He would prove himself, he had to. To show he was more than the foppish little lordling he was, that he could be more.
Finally it became too much. Casper flopped onto the ground, body cracking as he became human once more. His blonde hair now closer to a brown, every inch of skin covered in a thin sheet of dirt.
“We have to be close,” he panted, “we have to.”
He did not know how many minutes, hours or days he had dug, but it felt like a lifetime for the man who’s hardest work he had ever done was type up local news stories. Both, naturally, could end with a knife at his throat. The wonders of life.
“Do you think we can escape this, truly?” 
Finally he looked at Kashi for the first time since they’d shifted. He raised an eyebrow, but decided against asking. There were stranger things to be concerned with, namely his very probably untimely death.
Kashi had been straining her ears for sounds beyond the dirt. A tunnel system. A waterway. Anything. And she’d heard nothing from their digging but solid earth. They could keep digging, but she doubted they would get anywhere. Plus there was the growing ire of the one watching. The spectral game master wasn’t pleased with this attempt, and she could tell it was getting close to its own call to action. Blood was going to be spilled, one way or another.
She glanced at Casper across from her. Took a breath between her teeth that still held her mask. Dropped it in order to speak better.
“I’m sure escape is possible,” she finally answered, voice rough and grating. “So long as you don’t give in.”
She sniffed a few times and decided upon which impulse she was going to follow. Looked back at him. “Stay here. I’m going to make sure we haven’t been spotted.” She took her mask and dropped it in his hands. “Keep an eye on this.”
Then she turned and leapt her way out. The dirt slid under her paws as she worked towards the surface, finally coming to the top and giving herself a shake to free her fur of the dirt.
The ghostly mirage of a creature stood opposite her.
“The only way out,” it repeated, “is to kill or die.”
She stared him down. “Elo’nekim Mb’ehol,” she growled. Your shadow will rot on the mountain path. She took another long breath before stating, “Absimykrhe.” Death it shall be.
With a roar, she charged the specter. Her jaws snapped around nothing, yet something grabbed at her neck. She swore, struggled, fought with everything she had. She was a wild Onishiki and she would not be controlled. There was no shame in choosing freedom over control, even if it resulted in death. And she was going to do her best to drag this ghost down with her. Even as her world went dark.
There in the hole, Casper fought against his tired body. One heavy arm over other heavy arm, paddling against the dirt before grasping it, dragging himself up wearily. The first day of real work in his life, and he was ready to die. His muscles burned, and he was almost ready to give up again, to do what he was told and stay in the hole, but he was never really one for rules and he didn’t want to die a coward.
Finally, he scrambled to the top, flopping on his front of the ground before rolling over. Staring up at the sky above, the whiteness. The nothingness. The hairs of his arms stood on end, on edge. Pushing through his tiredness, he stood on shaky legs, looking around until he saw what scared him more. 
Nothing.
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