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atleion · 3 years
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reblog and make a wish! this was removed from tumbrl due to “violating one or more of Tumblr’s Community Guidelines”, but since my wish came true the first time, I’m putting it back. :)
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atleion · 5 years
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👐The apps on their phone
Situated on Atleion’s datachron are a variety of basic applications, the ones pre-installed on every datachron issued to the Exile’s citizenry, such as a camera function, memo recording, radio, translator, etc. In addition to these basic applications, an Arborian-to-Common dictionary is installed, along with apps designed to scan written text and verbally read it to him. 
Perhaps more interesting, an app by the name of Comic Books of Nexus is installed on his datachron, and contains a collection of digitized comic books, namely of an aurin superhero named The Speedster, and a few lone issues featuring a story about a Vind who protects the forest and other animals from not-so-good-things.
There is one app that holds a rhythm game, where a person taps their fingers on marked points to the beat of a song playing. 
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atleion · 5 years
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🎵The ringtone for Kewn
Atleion’s datachron was a busted model, outdated and cracked in places. Chips pierced the surface, and the backing of the device had been scuffed to the point that whatever had once been placed there as a logo or identifying number had long been sanded away. 
Nestled upon the edge of a table, tossed onto a pillow, or buried within his jacket pocket, whenever a call would come through from Kewn, the datachron would burst to life, singing an instrumental tune jubilantly. It was relaxing and upbeat, the sort of tune that could make hearts soar, and lured those who heard it to dance.(( Likely something like: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MfXndKxfsDI ))
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atleion · 5 years
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Send an Icon for... Phone Edition
📲The last text they received
✏The last text they sent 
🧹An undelivered text
🗝A voicemail they saved
📞The most recent voicemail
🎎The last conversation/voicemail from a parent
✨The last conversation/voicemail from a friend
🎭The last conversation/voicemail from someone they hate
📸The most recent photo they took
🎁A photo they received
📃The contents of their memo/notes
⏰Their alarms
🎵The ringtone for __
💅Their background picture
👐The apps on their phone 
🔨The 3 most recent web pages on their browser
🎞A video/audio recording
🎀+Add your own!
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atleion · 6 years
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(( I’ve been all depresso for the last couple of months, and on top of being sick, it’s just unbelievably miserable. :| Winter hates me. My whinging aside, FFXIV was down for maintenance today, interrupting the flow of my building, so I decided to try and be at least sorta productive and draw some lazy headshots.  Here’s Miqo’te Atleion, with his ridiculous feather braids.  And some screenshots (a few pre-remodeling, as I’ve been remodeling my lower floor / personal home part of the building ) of my Cafe / Home in the Mists on Mateus, the Everstar Grove Cafe, which is open for service on Tuesdays at 5:00 PM PST for anyone who plays FFXIV and wants a tiny place to sit and have some coffee in a garden-themed atmosphere. Atty baristas there with FFXIV’s version of Naero, the old-aurin man from his Arboria stories. ))
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atleion · 6 years
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(( It’s February, and I am still. not. over. it. ))
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atleion · 6 years
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(( I still do Wildstar RP on Discord, but, man, I have been really missing my boy (tm) and running around visual environments with him. Questing in Wildstar was such a pleasure, and I miss imagining what Atleion’s reactions were to everything around him. I played through the game several times, a few times on alt-renditions of Atty in different classes or something, and it was always a treasure to see how I thought his way of handling things would change based on where he was at in character progression. 
For a while, he was unbelievably brutal and unrelenting. Like just mowing things down, but by the last playthrough I did, it felt more in line with his character to avoid confrontation and strategically take down enemies to reach objectives. xD Less random slaughter, way more calculated to fight as little as possible.
I never got to finish that more strategic playthrough, and I’m just pining to do it. Like. I was about to go into Whitevale, and I love Whitevale. 
Beyond that. I just ... Have not found gaming satisfying since. It’s awful. Everything has paled in comparison. Maybe it’s the environments, or the art styles, or maybe I’m just judgmental and picky. 
I play other games, but it’s not the same. I don’t play them the same way I played Wildstar. FFXIV is fun in its own right, but I feel way more detached from things happening in game than I ever did on Nexus. Maybe it’s just pining. 
ffft. Not gonna lie, ya’ll. I just wanted to whine somewhere. It’s January and I’m still not over it. ))
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atleion · 6 years
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It took me a while to finish this up, because it’s looooong~ But, here is part 2, the continuation of THIS STORY HERE .  I was going to do a header for this one, but I spent all day writing and I’m too excited to wait until I finish drawing and coloring the header image. XD So, until then, it’s all text, baby. I’ll post what was the header image for this when I finish it up, though.  So, uhm... For the curious who have been following these. Or to the aether. I’ll throw it out to either, because, AH. I love writing this stuff.
"Where have you two been?"
Like urgent fire, the words found Atleion and Elyia as they emerged from the thick brush of the forest. The sun had nearly fallen, painting the sky a wide array of pastel tones that nearly sang. The soft breeze of the day was crisp, and the symphony of the coming evening sang throughout the air.
Standing before the two Aurin children was another boy. Broad of shoulder and face, he glowered at them with piercing amber eyes. His thick jaw set with an accusatory sneer. Bathed in the light of the setting sun, his red hair shone like wildfire.
The red-headed boy grabbed hold of each of them, tugging them behind the trunk of a nearby tree. His small, pointed ears dropped down flat against his head.
Atleion and Elyia staggered as they were pulled forward. Each of them tripped over their feet, tails lashing and eyes wide. They shared a look with one another, and Atleion set his eyes on the ground.
"Don't be like that, Firethorn. We made it back in time." Elyia huffed. She nudged him away with each of her hands, then straightened her simple tunic.
Atleion's fingers curled about the base of his blue poncho, feeling the fringes and the texture of the woven garment. His tall ears drooped down, briefly bumping into the flowers left braided within his hair.
"Whatever." The red-headed boy, Firethorn, rolled his eyes. He peered around the base of the tree, taking in the surroundings with a keen precision. "Everyone's already gathering by the Olders burrow. If we go around, I think we can get by unseen."
He crouched down low to the ground. His ears pricked up, one flickering to the slightest noise of a cracking twig. "You owe me big time, Elyia."
A soft smile dawned upon Elyia's face. She brushed a few strands of her snowy white hair from her face and crouched low to the ground herself, settling next to Firethorn. Her long tail swayed over the soft grasses of the forest floor. "When we're all hunters, I'll let you take the first game. How is that?"
She turned her head briefly, motioning for Atleion to crouch down with each of them. He did, settling between them. His long, wavy hair swayed out with the motion, but the flowers held firm. He was smaller than each of his companions, delicate and soft. His wide eyes, a deep shade of charcoal, stared out from their hiding space at the village grounds before them.
"Flowers. Really?" Firethorn quirked his brows. He gave a shake of his head and a sigh. Before he even thought to say another word, Elyia's bestial glare set him right and he bristled. "W-what?" He asked of her.
Elyia left her gaze on him until she felt her thoughts were suitability conveyed. Without a word to the red-headed boy, she reached over to grasp one of Atleion's hands and give it a tight squeeze. "You look fine. Ready to run?"
Atleion's face painted red, washing out the array of freckles dappled from his cheeks to his nose. He held Elyia's hand tightly within his hand and gave a silent nod, tight-lipped as he'd been since their return to the village's outer perimeter. He had not even been able to bring himself to protest Firethorn's jostling and scowling face.
"I'll go first and signal. Just be careful. Olders are still around." Firethorn held a hand up before dashing from their hiding space. He moved with all the certainty and force of a raging bull, barreling from the security of the tree trunk 's shade to a nearby hedge. A short while after he entered the distant overgrowth, he was motioning for the other two children to follow his steps.
"You'll do great, Rainsong. I promise." Elyia gave her small, purple-haired companion another reassuring squeeze of the hand. Without another word, she tugged him along, bounding through the thick grass that led from the tree trunk to the dense foliage across the way. Every motion was smooth and practiced; her nimble feet stepped over twigs and pebbles, and as she entered the brush, she did so without hesitation or struggle.
Atleion followed after the graceful girl. His bare feet dug into the soft dirt beneath his toes. The feeling of old pine, grass, and earth flooded his senses each brief moment his feet collided with the ground. He ran as swiftly as he could, tripping and stumbling through the tall grass with all the grace of a wounded gazelle. By the time he reached the brush, he tumbled forward, crashing into Elyia.
She caught him quickly, brushing foliage from his soft poncho, and then the trek throughout their village, the Sea of Stars as it was often called, continued in necessitated silence.
For one who had never set foot within their quiet home, navigating their way through was an arduous task. The trees of the forest blended with those roaming throughout the village, and the grass grew tall, untamed as the wilds beyond its borders. To the undiscerning eye, there was no village to be found amidst the verdant green wood. Yet, to those who knew where to look, signs remained everywhere.
Nestled close to the trunks of several trees were holes that burrowed down beneath the roots. They followed at an angle, creating runs for those would-be settlers to travel in or out. Resting over each was a colorful awning propped up on sticks, each burrow marked by a different color, and each burrow neatly adorned.
Fortunately, the three children knew their way around such a hidden locale. The sound of wooden wind chimes filled the air as they passed from tree to tree, bush to bush, watching the procession of colorful awnings and burrow runs with an alert care. All three of them paused at every subtle sound too close to a footstep. Their ears, thickly furred, stood tall as they could; they were alert, like small animals treading cautiously into an open meadow.
One final run bore them to their destination on the far side of the burrow run, where the trees began to grow close to one another and vast. Their trunks were as the legs of mountains, with dark wood that spread out for what felt a great distance to small Aurin. Moss and vines worked their way up the tree bodies, and the grasses filled to the brim with radiant flora.
As Atleion moved through the ocean of grass, it tickled his face. It combed through his hair, laying gentle stalks over the waves of purple and lavender, dappled with the ornate white flowers that made the boy their home for the time. He released Elyia's hand, peering at the tall blossoms of white, and yellow, and blue all about them. His heart was pattering so quickly that he thought it might burst from his chest and bathe the plants in his life.
When he turned his head to his companions once more, they had arrived. The Olders' tree stood before them, distinct from all those throughout their forest. Flowers crawled up its trunk, all the way to its spire-like top, evergreen and ancient. It stretched higher into the sky than any before it, and, as such, cast a blanket of shadow down over the ground below.
Gathered in front of the tree, before the tall, soft white awning adorned in feathers, bone, and flowers that dangled from thin twine, were dozens upon dozens of Aurin. The crowd was neatly segmented, with older adults crowding about the back of the cluster, chattering amongst themselves with jovial whispers. More than one turned their gaze to the three children slipping from the grass to join the gathering, greeting them with smiles and the gentle stroking of their hair.
Towards the front of the mass of Aurin sat the youngest. Small before the mighty giant of the Olders' tree, they barely registered. There were not many of them, perhaps no more than thirteen of a similar age, with much younger children crowded about in front of the adults. Only those twelve or so moons of age sat separated from the pack of Aurin, directly in front of the burrow... And before them, standing vigilant sentry, was a fierce man.
His silver eyes firmly planted upon Firethorn, Atleion, and Elyia as they drifted to the segmented off group of twelve-moon old children to take a seat in the back. He furrowed his brows at them, bushy, thick, and unyielding. Amidst the shadows of the great tree, he was barely visible with his dark blue skin, only the white speckles that lined it glimmering when they caught the light of the falling sun.
Atleion shrank beneath the harsh gaze. He bunched the base of his poncho into his hands, grasping it tight enough the claws of his fingertips worked between the knitted fabric.
Elyia sat beside him, calmly wrapping her tail about the two of them. She kept her eyes forward, her face glimmering with a building excitement.
Firethorn, or Olyro, as he was often called, joined each of them, returning the gesture in turn as his tail too wrapped about the smallest of their group. It was a sign of silent solidarity, for this night ... Was the night their lives would change forever.
"Friends!"
The man standing next to the burrow stepped forward. Thick furs dangled from his body, covering him in a robe of beasts great and small, dark and light. He spread his arms out wide and shook his head to dispatch the long, straight hair within his face.
"Another year, another moon and season, has come and gone." He began. His voice was deep like a canyon, tender like the spring air to surround them.
"We have seen much. From the quelling of the angry Bark Bears, to the harsh cold of the snows. But as the spring does thaw the ice of winter, so too did we persevere, as our Olders before us, and theirs before theirs, and the great Old Ones before us all."
The man turned his head to the group of children separated from the crowd. With the motion, glittering stones attached to thin twine jingled, clattering with one another about his neck.
"Before us sit seeds within the soil long yet sown."
He placed his eyes on Atleion, and the boy squeaked, quickly hiding his gaze. As such was done, the blue skin man's face softened. He inhaled a deep breath, once more looking to the gathered crowd of Aurin, a sea of faces in near every color.
"As too does the year pass, so shall we one day join those before us in the Weave, in all that is life, here and gone. These kits, though small, are our futures."
He closed his eyes. "The Old One's flowers stir this night that they might bloom when the moon is high, and as they shall, so too may these seeds before us begin to grow under their guidance."
The man cleared his throat. He stepped to the side of the awning and burrow, peering at the shadowy blackness leading down, far beneath the ground.
"Before the Oldest of those yet living. Before the Ancestors long since gone on this hallowed evening. May they speak their promises unto the Weave that their paths be marked, their callings known, and their journeys begun."
Hushed whispers filled the crowd, only to soon fall silent. A hundred eyes bore down upon the children, watching them with equally as many emotions. Pride, wistfulness, love, even disdain found them within their space before the great tree.
"My Kits." The man's tone softened as he turned to the children to speak. His eyes grew easy, and his tall ears pointed forward attentively. He looked to each of them in fond hope. "Who among you would speak first?"
The small group of children huddled close together. Each of their eyes sat wide, staring up at the fur adorned man with a mixture of fear and awe. Not one stirred from their place upon the ground.
All about them, the world seemed to condense. Atleion could feel the myriad of emotions permeating the air. His heart roared. The fur upon his ears and tail rose to their very tips, and he breathed a stilted breath, certain the answer to the man, Shaderoot's, question was not he.
Amidst the silence, a pressure in his shoulder captured his attention. He turned his head towards it, only to see Olyro, Firethorn as he was sometimes called, using him to leverage rising to his feet.
The red-headed boy straightened his back as he stepped around the huddled group of children, walking to the very front. His tail flicked back, the sharp white tip snapping as if to punctuate a silent answer.
The man in furs, Shaderoot, set one hand upon the boy's shoulder, urging him towards the run that would lead into the deep burrow.
"Then so it is... Firethorn. Go. They await you before the Matria's council."
Olyro did not look back at his friends. He took slow steps, breathing in and out equally as slow, until he came to the run. Quickly, he slid down and disappeared from view.
The crowd stood in utter silence. Only the howl of the breeze, the call of far off beasts, and the tender tone of wooden wind chimes filled the air about the village of Aurin.
"It'll be okay. I'm here." Elyia whispered. She leaned against Atleion, wrapping her arm defensively into his. She did not look to him, however, focused intently on the burrow's entrance.
Atleion swallowed a lump in his throat. He had not realized he were trembling until Elyia's arm steadied his own.
The silence continued as the sun passed below the horizon, birthing the night. Stars twinkled high within the blue and black sky, and the moons of Arboria showered them all in their pale beauty.
It was that moment Olyro emerged from the burrow. He paused next to Shaderoot at the entryway, grasping something firmly within his hand. It was a knife of polished bone, its handle fine wood wrapped in neatly tanned leather. He held it high, a smile on his face. His eyes lit up with prideful fire as the gathered crowd cheered and cooed, for this day, and this knife, marked his journey to becoming a hunter.
With the cheers still in the air, Olyro took his place with the standing crowd, soaking in the hugs, pets, and ruffled hair that came as he surrounded himself with the village's grown Aurin. The younger children, not part of this ceremony, clamoured to crowd him, tails earnestly swaying and voices mewling.
With the excitement in the air, those children on the ground, awaiting their turn, began to clamour over one another. One after the other, they would descend into the burrow, only to re-emerged to the sound of cheers and praise. Some carried knives like Olyro's, others carried small sticks adorned in leaves, holding them high above their heads when they emerged as if to declare something to those all around them. Each was met with the same, cooing, hugs, kisses, ruffles. Hands fell over them, or lifted them up, engulfing them in a sea of affection and pride.
Soon... Only two children remained in the former, separated pile of twelve-moon old youth. Elyia and Atleion.
Elyia held onto Atleion's arm. Her tall ears, slender and rabbit-like, pointed towards Shaderoot as if she dared to challenge he make her move before she was ready.
Shaderoot stared back at her. His eyes drifted between the two of them, waiting, watching each move.
"You'll do great."
Elyia whispered. She gradually released Atleion's arm. Her fingers stroked his hair, carefully dodging the flowers she'd braided into its length. A smile fell upon her face as she rose to her feet, for it was her time.
She left him there, passing Shaderoot on her way to the burrow run. Calm and graceful as the wind itself could be, she descended ... And Atleion was alone.
Atleion instinctively reached to hold the edge of his poncho. His doeish eyes were wide with terror, and he felt the weight of a hundred or more eyes upon him. He did not dare look to the crowd of his gathered village, trembling from his seat upon the ground. His woolen ears drooped down far as they could, and he felt tears welling up in his eyes as he dwelt on the pressure that was soon to come on this night ...
Elyia emerged from the burrow. Her genial features were sweet like the flowers of spring as she held a polished bone knife up over her head. Her long white hair caught in the wind, fanning out. Like those before her, she joined the crowd, tail eagerly swaying and laughter ringing. She turned her eyes to Atleion and pressed her hand to her heart. There was no more she could do for him this night.
Atleion hunched into his clothing in an attempt to make himself as small as he possibly could. He could hear quiet whispers on the breeze, only for them to cease when a shadow fell over him. His head turned up, and his gaze met with that of Shaderoot's. Try as he did not to stare, Atleion gaped at the silver eyes, familiar to him, but not in such a state. He could not read them as the man knelt down before him, setting his hands on his shoulders.
Shaderoot leaned forward, setting his face near Atleion's ears before he whispered something inaudible to those around them.
But Atleion heard it, clear as he could hear anything.
Listen, and you will know what to say.
Atleion swallowed a lump in his throat. He rose to his feet; his legs buckled beneath him, trembling like a newborn fawn taking their first steps through the forest. He did not loosen the grip on his poncho as he walked towards the pale white awning. The wooden wind chimes caught in his ears, and the world seemed to fall away from him. His eyes were fixated on the hole in the ground, padded down with dried grass and soft leaves to line the slope leading inward. He could see tiny golden lights, like fireflies, filling the night air around him, around the Olders' great and sturdy tree...
Atleion held his breath. He placed one foot in front of the other, crouching down near the burrow's entry way. Slow and anxious, he scooted down it, sliding through the brush until he no longer could hear or see the world outside of the dark underground.
It was nearly black, and the heady smell of earth filled his lungs. Still the fireflies danced, all along the tunnel, to the very base where it opened to a grand room supported by the roots of the tree itself. Vines hung from the ceiling of the burrow, each holding an array of adornments. Animal bones, dried blossoms, carved wood, and leaves, all mingled as one, dangling from their twine as the fireflies danced about the cavernous space.
Atleion hunched down as he passed beneath them. His toes curled into the dirt, only to find there was not dirt. Piles of warm furs stretched out over the ground. Every step he took was like walking upon a woolen beast's back. It was warm, almost comforting, until he set his eyes upon those few souls who named this burrow theirs.
There were four of them. Old, grey, and weary, they sat against the far wall of the burrow. The fragrant scent of tea, and herb, swirled about them, rising to the very height of the cavernous burrow. There were three women, and a single man, each with thickly furred ears and tails, and each covered in warming furs as Shaderoot himself had been. Glittering stones, or bones, sat about their necks on twine. Some held long sticks upon their laps, unused canes, and others still held hollow, thin bowls filled with tea.
Before them sat two baskets, a polished bone knife in one, a stick decorated with leaves and blossoms in the other.
Atleion paused within the center of the room, keeping his distance. Not a word left him as he shivered in his spot.
"Ah. Little Rainsong. You've grown bigger, haven't you?" One of the women, thin, lithe, and bony cooed. She shifted upon her seat, leaning forward as if to take a closer look at him.
"How would you know, you old coot! You're blind as a newborn Moss Mole!" Another of the old women howled with laughter, plump and round of face. She patted her knees with her hand and waved once through the air.
"Hush, the both of you." The old man seated with them spoke with a voice sharp as a spear. His face was obscured by the mass of white hair atop his head, stretching far to the ground. His patchy tail, grey and partially missing, curled about him.
The final woman, with hair neatly braided, and rosy red cheeks, rose to her feet. She balanced against her walking stick, and her very joints seemed to struggle with the motion of standing. More than one bone creaked as she rose.
"Come closer, my child. Closer." She gestured with her bony hands, beckoning him nearer to them. "Let me see you, now. My. You have grown taller, and your ears no longer fall."
Atleion remained rooted in place, staring forward with wider eyes than before. His lip quivered.
"Bah! There's always one, I tell you. Like a little leaf. The wind will just carry him away." The old man huffed. The statement triggered a cough, and, soon, he were doubling over, seeking his shallow bowl of tea.
The bony woman who beckoned Atleion hummed softly. She took one step, then another, the beautiful stones about her neck shining in the light of the fireflies and sparsely placed, thin-leather lanterns.
"Hush, Whisperfoot." She spoke firmly. Her eyes, blue as a clear day, settled upon Atleion as she drew closer.
"My little Rainsong. Have you your words to speak?"
Atleion stared at the old woman. He nearly tore his poncho with the force of his grip. His mouth opened, then shut. His lips drew into a thin line.
"Is that so?" Said the plump woman in the back of the room. She laughed once more, wheezing and chortling. "A man of words he will be, I am sure!"
Atleion's tail curled between his legs, wrapping about his ankle. He inhaled a deep breath. "I... I... I'm... I want to... I..."
He stammered every part of his statement.
The bony woman reached over with one hand, pressing it to his freckled cheek. She held his face firm, setting her eyes on his even as he tried to shift them away. When she release him, she looked back to her three companions and smiled gingerly.
"If you would be so kind..." Her ears, shaggy and tall, leaned forward towards them.
The three stared back at her, then shared a look with one another.
"Of course, Softleaf." The plump woman said as she rose to her feet, assisting her companions. Their bodies ached and groaned as they moved, passing by Atleion and the bony old woman. As each of the old Aurin passed, they brushed their hands over the small boy's hair with a tender sweetness, even the gruff old man with his partially missing tail.
The bony woman, Softleaf, returned her focus to Atleion. "Thank you, my friends... Enjoy the flowers above."
She smiled, waiting patiently until the three old Aurin left the burrow. She stood alone with Atleion, amidst the cavernous burrow, and the soft warm glow of the thin-leather lanterns.
"What troubles you, my little one?" Softleaf grasped her walking stick, weakly drawing herself close to the ground. Her long tail, bushy and covered in fur so thick it sagged, curled about her feet. "Your eyes sing of fear."
Atleion released his hold on the edge of his poncho. The fringed garment dropped down, over sized and large upon him. He folded his arms around himself as if to hold himself tightly, only for the old woman to pull him close and wrap hers about him.
"There is nothing to fear." Softleaf cooed, stroking his long hair. She placed a soft kiss atop his head. "Tell me. Why do you hesitate so?"
Atleion unfolded his arms, sinking into the hug. He grabbed hold of the thick furs over the old woman, burying his face into them. "I don't know what to say."
His shoulders shook and he sobbed. His little body tensed up. "If I say something wrong, then... Then..."
The old woman smiled. She ran her fingers through his hair once more, mindful of the flowers braided within. "There is no right or wrong path to take, or promise to make. Listen. And you will know what to say."
She held him, cradling the small boy as the fireflies gathered around.
In a hushed whisper, Atleion spoke. His voice rested, muffled against the furs he pressed his face into. "I can't."
Softleaf hummed. She pulled one small flower from his hair, holding it within her shaky hand. It tumbled to the floor, sitting among the animal furs.
"Is that so?" She asked him sweetly. She leaned back, seating herself upon the ground in front of him. A tiny laugh erupted from her throat, and she pulled him down to sit with her.
She listened to the empty sound of the room, humming quietly as she continued to pluck flowers from his hair. Each flower she plucked, she gently placed upon the floor around them.
"Tell me, my sweet boy. What shall we do about that?" She tipped his head upward to meet her eyes.
Atleion's own eyes filled with tears. They wandered frantically, unsure of what to say. Barely audible, he spoke. "I don't know."
She chuckled warmly, placing another flower on the ground. "Mm. So it would seem you do not know a great deal." She paused, tracing her fingers upon the petals. "Beautiful, are they not? That you might wander so far to find them, these little blossoms. Many are afraid of the forest."
Atleion rested his head against the old woman, still holding onto the furs. "I like it..."
The old woman plucked another flower, placing this one upon Atleion's tail. She hummed once more. "It is both dangerous and kind to those who might follow it." She closed her blue eyes and her tall ears drooped forward beneath their own weight. "I like it as well. Its songs, and voice..."
Atleion's tense posture eased. He uncurled his hands from the furs over the old woman. "I do too."
Softleaf paused. Her eyes thoughtfully sat upon the young boy nestled on the ground with her. Her tail wrapped about the two of them and she set her walking stick on the hard ground. Without a word, she reached to the back of her neck, pulling one of the twine string necklaces up over her head. Dangling from it, neatly tied, was a stone clear as glass, reflecting everything that stood before it in fragments.
She leaned forward, setting the necklace over Atleion's head. She worked it over his curly mass of hair, settling it calmly around his neck. Once placed, she straightened it, and her quaint smile only grew. Her blue eyes twinkled with fondness and certitude.
"Repeat after me, little one."
Atleion looked up at her. His ears drooped down. His fingers grasped the stone, and he turned his gaze to it, catching sight of his own reflection within it.
"Guide my hand, winds of old." Softleaf began. Her voice remained a hushed whisper. "Fill my heart as the rivers. Clear my mind as the skies. Shine light that I might see."
She reached over with each of her hands, cupping Atleion's cheeks as he spoke, repeating her words after each phrase with confusion. "That I might walk among a sea of stars... And know the way."
Atleion exhaled as he said the last word. He could feel a chill creeping across his skin, reaching down to the very bones within his body. His ears leaned up tall and he murmured something yet indistinguishable. He wasn't sure what the word meant, but as he uttered it, Softleaf placed a kiss upon his forehead.
She patted him on the back. "Go now. Before you miss this year's bloom. I am sure your friends are waiting, my little one."
Atleion blinked. He stood up, hands still clutching the stone attached to the necklace around his neck. "But I didn't choose---"
The old woman raised a single hand. Her eyes shone with a knowing fondness. "Your words are spoken, and they are known."
She reached for her walking stick, settling it over her lap.
Atleion did not understand. One ear raised higher than the other. He turned to head back up the burrow run, pausing at the base of it to look back. As Softleaf smiled at him, he too smiled, hurrying up the run to join his village at long last.
He emerged from the burrow hole, the crowd still gathered, even the three old Aurin who lived within the burrow with Softleaf. They all waited, a hundred eyes upon him, expecting something... That never came.
Atleion did not let go of the necklace around his neck, staring at the group with wide eyes. A few quiet murmurs caused his ears to flicker.
From the crowd, Elyia looked to him. She held her hand above her head shortly, mouthing something to him.
Atleion hesitated. He did not have a knife, or a stick, to hold over his head. He had nothing.
... Or did he?
He inhaled a deep breath. Nervously, he pulled the necklace over his head, holding it up where the crowd of Aurin could see.
He was not met with cheers or joyous coos. There was no clapping, or clamoring. There was only forward ears, soft whispers, and the sound of wooden wind chimes on the evening breeze.
Atleion looked to Elyia, who smiled. She tucked her hands behind her back and her tail began to sway.
As Atleion stood still, the weight of a hand on his back caught his attention. He turned his gaze upward, peering at a dark blue face, dappled in white specks, and home to silver eyes. They met his own, and for a moment, Atleion was unsure if he may have done something wrong.
Then it came. The little crowd of Aurin erupted into cheers and coos. They didn't wait for him to come to them. Rather, they crowded around, ruffling his hair, pulling him close. Atleion squirmed within the grasp of adults and peers, smothered in a sea of praise and fondness, until he felt Elyia nearly tackle him into the ground.
"What is it?" She asked him, laughing and hooting.
Atleion's ears fell flat. He held the necklace close to his heart.
"I don't... I don't know."
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atleion · 6 years
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(( I’ve wanted this top forever, and now it’s mine. Ho-ho! 
I’d also like to take a moment to appreciate that sleek Aurin Idle Animation, because that casual look to the side an alert prey-animal posture just melts my little ol’ heart.))
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atleion · 6 years
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(( I finally did it, guys, I finished something! Bad jokes aside, I learned some new coloring shortcuts that cut my workload in half and make me a happy man. and here’s Atleion with his now super-crazy-long-hair. Originally I did the thing I always do and shifted his eyes to the side, because, fft. But his eyes don’t work so good anymore and he spends more time staring forward than in any particular direction, so this felt more accurate to current events.
And my incomplete line-art and rough-shadows for his reference sheet I’m working on. He’s overdue for a new one. It’ll show up ... Soon (tm) ))
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atleion · 6 years
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(( I made an FCON shirt, because that FCON Circle life, yo. It's very comfortable. XD ))
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atleion · 6 years
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As some people were interesting in this x) ❄ RULES: ❄
followers only (new followers are welcomed but don’t just follow for giveaway)
both likes and reblogs are count
reblog as muсh as you want (but don’t spam your followers)
no giveaway blogs pls
when winners are announced, I’ll contact them (so have your askbox open!), and if they doesn’t respond for 3 days, I’ll pick another winner
❄ PRIZES: ❄
I’ll randomly pick 2 winners who will receive full body image (detail design, lines + flat colors) of their character redesigned or designed (if the character don’t have any visuals) by me
OCs only, no canon characters. OCs from different fandoms are ok too
I’ll draw only human or humanoid (fantasy races or human-like aliens) art, so no creatures, fully mechanical or furry characters. Also it’ll be more interesting to design someone from interesting setting, not just a guy in t-shirt and jeans Х)
Of course I’ll keep main features of your characters (race, body type, skin/hair color and so on), but be ready for some changes :D
❄❄ THE WINNERS WILL BE CHOSEN ON THE 1ST OF DECEMBER!! ❄❄ (And it’s kind of Christmas/New Year giveaway so the winners will get their art by Holidays x))
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atleion · 6 years
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(( Some of the last minute gifs I took in Wildstar.
I don’t really have more to add to what I’ve already said on the matter. I’ll be continuing things at my pace, RPing on Discord, or wherever, really. Aurin are important to me and will continue to be.
I originally parked Atleion by Elyia’s monument and his Starchaser flowers, but decided instead to spend the last few minutes inside of his burrow with his pet jabbit, Twigs. 
His hair has gotten long for r e a s o n s in RP, so I’d changed it over a few days ago, and, ahhhh... Bambi’s becoming the Prince of the Forest, alright. This boy has changed so much since his first RP.
 While I’m continuing Wildstar RPs 5ever, I’m scattered across different AUs in other games as well --- in particular FFXIV if anyone plays and wants to poke me. I’m Atleion Rainsong there as well, because, fft, Atleion exists in, like, 5 universes at this point. ))
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atleion · 6 years
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This is rather random since we've never interacted much, but I just want to say I absolutely love Attie's design and he seems like such a fun character. I love seeing art of him every time it pops up on my dash.
This makes me all blushie-faced and smiling, honestly. I’m really happy to hear he’s appealing. I enjoy sharing him where and when I can. C: Truly, thank you. In light of today, hearing this really boosted my mood.Plus it’s coming from THE SEEKER, and you, you are a legend~
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atleion · 6 years
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<3 I still love it~ Ahhhhhhhh!
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Sketch for @atty-of-the-stars of Atleion Rainsong C:
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atleion · 6 years
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My feels exactly. :I 
Im so mad all over again. Why didn’t this game get the chance it deserved. Why do shitty soulless games with no vision get to continue being shitty and soulless while this game has to be snuffed out long before its time
i hate it. i hate it so much.
i hate that there’s so much potential there that’ll never get realized. it’s just …. not fair LOL
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atleion · 6 years
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(( Now that I’ve done my mourning for Wildstar and feel productive again: I’m still quietly working on finishing these memory sequences about Atleion’s childhood leading up to the Ravaging of Arboria, because I am still a nerd, and I like exploring his upbringing. This is Story #3, and part 1 of 2 of a particular story. The next one coming up continues directly off of this one, for anyone who likes to read these~ I’ve been writing relevant memories in order. It’s a loose narrative structure, I know, but they all connect. C’:
I’ll finish a picture someday ... Someday. *wistfully looks into the distance of sketches and lined pictures yet uncolored*. In the meantime, a quick sketch of Atleion when he wasn’t an incredibly troubled boy putting himself in too many dangerous situations. I’ll save the proper story header for next time~ ))
The gentle tickle of grass against his skin was like a warm embrace. He could feel each tiny gust of wind drifting through the forest. Like some great beast's breath, it washed over him in steady waves, always carrying the fragrant scent of the woods.
Atleion could have laid upon the ground forever, basking in the glow of the sun peaking through the branches. It was calm, quiet, as the forest often was. The serenade of distant animal calls, and the dabble of the river rushing from the far off mountains, lulled him to a drowsy near-slumber.
He may well have fallen asleep had it not been for a sudden weight dropped onto his small body. It knocked the breath from his lungs, eliciting a sharp wheeze.
"Come on, lazy! If we don't keep moving, we're never going to get back before Shaderoot notices."
Atleion's eyes, dark as soot, opened up wide. The world around him was a brightened blur of spire-like trees stretching up into a patchwork canopy. However, placed squarely within his view, was something quite different from a tree.
It was Elyia, adorned in her snowy white shawl, and her finely knit tunic. Her dusky skin caught the shadows of the branches, and her silvery gaze twinkled with the light of adventure.
The weight upon his stomach returned, more forceful and insistent, as Elyia shook him with her foot. She waved a hand above his face for good measure, then took a step back. Like a clock's pendulum, her woolen white tail swayed to a steady, unheard beat.
"It's not much further. Promise!" She beamed. Without another word, she spun on her heels and disappeared from his field of view.
Atleion caught his breath. With a smile spread over his face, he sat up and adjusted his thick poncho over his small frame. Blue, white, and elaborate, it carried the swirling patterns of old decorative symbols common to his people.
"It was only a minute!", Atleion called out. On his feet, he dusted grass off of his knees. He shook his head, sending the unruly mop of curls upon it into a frenzy. His lush purple hair tangled up, right to the tip of his ponytail. With one forceful swing, his tail dislodged the rest of the loose grass clinging to his fur, and he scampered off after his companion.
"A minute! You almost fell asleep." Elyia protested. She paused by the edge of the slow moving river in front of them. Her bare toes touched the water, curling against the soft dirt.
Though Atleion opened his mouth to protest such an assertion, he knew her to be right. It was all he could do to offer her a sheepish smile when she looked back to him, for he had delayed their journey long enough.
"Got you~" Elyia chirped. Her voice carried like a lofty bird's.
Without further warning, she grasped his hand within her own and set off once more. Her feet nimbly touched the large stones protruding from the river's currents. One after the other, she hopped along them, tugging Atleion in tow, until they safely reached the banks of the other side. Even as Atleion stumbled, sliding into the water, she never once relinquished him to the currents.
His fingers wrapped about Elyia's hand, holding it tightly. He could feel the racing of his heart within his chest. It rose like a leaf on the wind, carried higher the faster the two of them moved through the forest's dense depths.
Before long, the two young Aurin came to a stop. Each of their ears rose high, pointed forward at the silence to surround them. Not even the call of beasts rang within this part of the forest, nor the howl of the wind. It was as if the world had frozen in time.
Stretched before them was a tunnel of foliage and stone. The thicket appeared to go on forever, shadowy, dark, and foreboding. The branches of the brush reached down like monstrous teeth, gnashing at the moss ridden boulders to crowd their roots.
Atleion's toes dug into the pine mould and dirt beneath them. The claw like nails at the ends of his toes raked the ground. His grip on Elyia's hand grew tighter, in a vain attempt to mask the tremble of his limbs.
Elyia's fingers laced with Atleion's. She offered him a warm smile. Her long white tail swung behind her, brushing into his playfully.
Her eyes bore a certitude matched only by the fluidity of her steps. She hesitated not a moment longer before beginning down the thicket encased pathway. All the while, she gently herded Atleion forward, guiding him silently into the belly of the beastly path.
Atleion's thickly furred ears pressed against his head. His tail had ceased any semblance of motion, dragging limply behind him and along the ground. One step after the other, he felt his feet sinking into the layers of old pine needles blended with cool dirt. As he looked down, he could see the trail the two of them left; it was a line of small footprints, overlapping every few beats.
"Ely, we shoul---" Atleion began.
"Shhhh."
Elyia's grasp on his hand tightened. It was faint, but situated just in front of them was a genial glow of light. She followed it as a butterfly drawn to a flower.
Though it lasted only a few minutes, Atleion thought it an eternity. He held his breath until they passed from the shadows.
At once, he was greeted with blinding brightness. His eyes squinted. He reached up to shelter them, blinking several times to adjust to the new visage.
"Isn't it pretty?"
Elyia's voice broke the silence.
Atleion lowered his hand. At a gradual pace, his ears began to rise up, right to the very hairs at their tips.
The thicket the two had traveled through had given birth to a clearing, encircled by centuries old verdune trees that stood guard. They were diligent soldiers, intent on protecting the contents of their station. Like a pond of silk, white flowers rose from the grasses. Some grew taller than others, but they all held in bloom. The sun's light brought a twinkle to them. Perhaps most stunning, however, was the rising stone within the center of the clearing. Its surface was clear as glass, reflecting the scene around it like a steady pond.
Atleion's grip on Elyia's hand loosened. His fingers fell from hers.
"Told you it was cool." Elyia leaned over to whisper in his ear. She bound forward, gently placing her feet between the flowers to avoid crushing them. With the grace of a fawn, she moved upon her toes. Once she reached the reflective stone, she spun back around. Her long white hair caught in the breeze, swaying outward. "You can thank me later."
Atleion held few words. He carefully tried to follow the trail his companion had taken, sliding his small feet into place in spaces the flowers had not taken root. He spun as he walked, twisting to catch every angle within his view.
"How'd you even find this?" Atleion laughed. His gaze whipped towards Elyia, and with it came his hair. The waves of lavender tipped purple dangled within his eyes.
Elyia giggled. She pressed a finger to her lips and winked once. "That would be a secret."
The girl turned to face the reflective stone, peering into it. Her hands touched its surface, fingertips pressed firmly to it.
"Really?" Atleion scoffed. Even as he had, a smile remained on his face. He'd reached the tall stone, and once he looked closely to it, he could see his own reflection, staring back at him with doeish eyes and soft features.
"Mmhm." Elyia made the noise passively. She pulled her hand away from the surface of the stone. "But I thought you should see it. Before tonight. It won't be this easy to sneak out here after ... You know."
Atleion looked towards the ground. His tail came to rest among the flowers, and without a word, he sank down to sit upon his heels. Their days of exploring the forest unfettered were soon to be behind them. This much he knew. They were twelve cycles old, and with that came responsibilities. Their future awaited them within their village, and that night it would be decided.
After inhaling a deep breath, Atleion reached over to touch the glassy stone. His fingers curled against its surface. "Yeah..."
"Have you thought about it?" Elyia crouched down next to him. She smoothed her tunic down before seating herself carefully among the flowers. "What you're going to say?"
Atleion shook his head. He was tight-lipped, and his brows twisted in discomfort.
Silence passed between the two children, the world populated by little more than the carefree wind rustling the flower petals and tree branches.
Atleion opened his mouth to speak, only to stop when he felt something tangling within his hair. His eyes lifted towards Elyia, who had become focused as she messed with his purple locks. Her fingers were nimbly braiding something into his hair, and it was not until she reached for another object that he realized she were braiding flowers into it.
His mouth shut and he eased, shifting as she worked a series of them along the side of his head.
Elyia leaned back and held her fingers in front of her as if to frame Atleion in her view. Her tongue stuck out from the side of her mouth. "Hm."
Her tail gently rolled through the flowers behind her. "There we go."
"What'd you do that for?" Atleion tilted his head upward. One of his ears rose high, and his eyes began searching for an answer not easily found.
She dropped her hands down and flashed a warm grin, enough to shine the sharps of her teeth. "For luck."
With her answer stated, Elyia rose to her feet. She dusted her tunic off, staring down at the small boy next to her. Her hands tucked behind her back, elbows straight. "Nothing to be scared of if the forest is with you. Right?"
Atleion stared up at her with wide eyes. His fingers gently trailed the side of his head, just beneath the flower petals worked into his hair. He smiled wide himself, offering Elyia a firm nod in response.
She coyly slapped his back with her tail, prancing off towards the thicket tunnel they had entered through. Her arms flew up and she called out, loud as she could.
"We should get back! If we're late, even the Old Ones can't save us from Shaderoot's ..." Her fingers pulled her eyelids down from her cheeks, dreary and grim. "Stare of no-fun."
Elyia dropped her hands down and dashed off into the thicket, leaving only a flash of her white hair and tail in view before she disappeared into the shadowy foliage. "Last one there has to tell him where we were!"
Try as Atleion did not to laugh, he could not contain it. His shoulders shook. His face flushed a bright red, and he howled into the quiet, scampering off after Elyia towards the thicket entrance.
His feet clumsily carried him through the flowers. More than once he fell, and his long tail, purple as his hair, with a lavender tip, whipped out to try and maintain his balance. As he reached the thicket's entrance, however, something stopped him dead within his tracks. A whisper.
He stood on his toes. His ears pricked up, twisting each direction his head looked, until he turned to glance back at the glassy stone in the clearing, and the sea of white flowers in bloom.
Nothing was there. As soon as the sensation had washed over him, it had drawn away like the rolling tide.
His ears lowered down. He shook his head... And without giving it a second thought, he bound into the thicket to continue the journey home.
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