moonfallmerchant
moonfallmerchant
moonfall merchant
104 posts
[RP blog for LoZRP and Telma's Interdimensional Tavern]
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
He could tell the young man was in pain, despite his best efforts to conceal his anguish, and Azrael felt a tug in the pit of his stomach every time he vocalized his discomfort.  Still, he persisted in his task of changing the stranger’s bandages, noting that though they still looked quite raw and bloody, Rhey’lu was in better shape than he had found him in.  The young man sighed, presumably as the ointment took effect, and Azrael allowed himself to relax, his shoulders sagging.
As he tended to the wound on Rhey’lu’s forehead, he was aware of the stranger’s crimson-flecked eyes falling on his face.  In response, he felt his face grow hot, and he was grateful his work on the bandages gave him an excuse not to look back at the strange young man’s eyes.
There was a break in the silence, the man’s soft voice asking a question, it seemed.  His long, pale fingers gestured to Azrael’s collar, and for a moment Azrael was not entirely certain of what he was referring to – the thick, inked black lines, or the angry violet ones?  Instinctively he tugged upwards on his collar, not knowing if it helped his situation at all.  He was leaning over the bed, hunched as he dabbed at Rhey’lu’s forehead with ointment.
“It is a long story,” Azrael murmured thoughtfully, placing a new layer of gauze on the injury.  “Perhaps I’ll tell you one day, when you’re feeling better.”  Tying the last bandage around the young man’s head, securing the gauze in place, Azrael took a moment to look over his work.
“That should do you for now,” he said quietly, rubbing the back of his neck.  “They… you’re healing well, so I imagine we won’t need quite so many next time.  You should get some rest.  That will help,” he added, gesturing to the mug on the bedside table.  Nodding slowly to himself, Azrael took his leave, rubbing his collar anxiously as he limped through the cabin towards the door.
Azrael appeared discomforted by the attention brought to the markings, quickly adjusting his collar as he continued to tend to Rhey’lu’s injury. His eyes widened slightly the moment he did so however, noticing now the dark ragged lines that cut into his skin. What had happened to him for Azrael to sustain such a scar? The tone of his voice suggested it was a sensitive subject, one that he wasn’t ready to discuss. At least not now.
Once the last bandage was tied and secure, Rhey’lu glanced up at him as Azrael stepped back, looking him over to assess his work. He felt... a little better, admittedly, now that it was done. The ointment was soothing to his marred and inflamed wounds, and the bandages were just snug enough that he wasn’t needlessly uncomfortable, but was sure they wouldn’t come undone. He probably couldn’t have done a better job himself, he mused.
Rhey’lu managed a weary smile, nodding as Azrael spoke.
“Th..” He paused, the words coming to mind tasting just as foreign as they sounded, though he was sure they made sense. “Th-ank you.. again.”
As Azrael left once more, Rhey’lu reached with some effort for the mug on the bedside table. It was warm, comforting as he cradled it in his hands. He stared into the murky liquid for some time before finally taking a sip; he wrinkled his nose instantly, brow furrowing as he choked down a mouthful of the bitter concoction. It wasn’t pleasant, but after a moment he could feel the medicine Azrael had added to it beginning to take affect, and truthfully that was all that mattered.
With some disdain, Rhey’lu took a few more gulps before setting the mug aside and carefully settling back against the mattress. Fatigue was heavy in his bones and he groaned softly, adjusting his position to take the pressure off of the injuries along his back and ribs. As he lie there in silence, his red-speckled eyes settled on the view just beyond the window; from his current vantage he could only make out tree tops and a grey, cloudless sky. It was so different from what he was used to...
His thoughts drifted to memories of home, of crystal spires and the pristine halls he wandered as a child, of the citizens he had met in his excursions beyond the castle walls, of his family, of Vahari... and for the first time since he regained consciousness it occurred to him just how horribly alone he was. Rhey’lu’s chest felt tight, a lump rising in his throat that he couldn’t swallow; he would never see any of them again. He gripped the sheets weakly, hot tears dripping down the side of his face and onto the pillow as his eyes slipped shut.
Was this really worth it?
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
The stranger seemed perturbed by his appearance, a reaction Azrael was all too familiar with.  His voice was fragile, barely above a whisper, and yet he fought to be heard, to be understood.  Azrael nodded solemnly, regarding Rhey’lu where he sat in his bed, each pained cough agitating his injuries.  “I’ll be back,” he promised, standing up with some difficulty.  “I’ll bring… new bandages.  And medicine.”
As he limped out the room, he sighed, exhaling a lungful of frustrations as he made his way to the cabin’s humble kitchen.  He’d spent much of the last few days cleaning up, and the bandages he’d washed the other night were still hanging from every reachable object, quite clean and dry now.  He grabbed several of them, draping them over his arm as he wandered the cabin.
Azrael had boiled water for tea before going into the bedroom to check on Rhey’lu, and he was satisfied to see it was still quite hot.  With some difficulty, he managed to drop a muslin satchel of herbs into an old mug, pouring the steaming water over them.  It wasn’t much, but hopefully it would help with the pain.
As he reentered the room, Azrael carefully placed the mug on the bedside table whilst he juggled the batch of bandages in one arm.  Opening the drawer of the table, he withdrew a small bottle, which he showed to Rhey’lu now.  “It’s safe,” Azrael assured him as he set the bandages down on the bed, opening the bottle to reveal a small dropper.  As if to demonstrate its harmlessness, he opened his mouth to drop some onto his tongue.  “It will make you feel better, and… hopefully you’ll be able to get some more sleep.”  He paused, gauging the young man’s reaction before he added it to the mug.
“Right then, while that cools down… we’d best get started on these bandages.”
As Azrael left his line of sight, Rhey’lu absently looked around the room, his gaze eventually falling on Vahari’s necklace here it sat on the bedside table. With some minor difficulty he reached for it, cradling the tarnished metal in his hands as his thoughts drifted back to her. What had become of her, he wondered.. Had Azrael buried her perhaps? If so, then where? He would have to ask him about it; once he was better, Rhey’lu had every intention of finding her, if only to properly say goodbye.
He flinched suddenly, a clinking noise from beside him causing his heart to skip a beat in alarm. Rhey’lu sighed, settling quickly once he saw it was only Azrael, having returned from elsewhere in the cabin with the drink and and armful of fresh bandages. He rummaged around in a drawer for a moment, producing a small bottle of unknown contents. Rhey’lu blinked up at the other man, regarding him curiously he spoke. It was evidently harmless, perhaps medicine of some sort.. 
Nodding in understanding, he managed a soft, “Thank you..”
His attention then fell on the strips of clean cloth that had been set on the bed, absently thumbing the necklace in his hands. The idea of irritating his injuries further when they were already causing him a great deal of discomfort was not a fond one, but they needed tending to if he was going to heal properly. His mouth set in a muted scowl, he nodded once more, mentally preparing himself for what his bandages concealed. 
The wrappings on the arm Azrael had checked earlier were removed first, and Rhey’lu grimaced in pain in spite of the great care he took in pealing them away from his damaged flesh. The burns were raw, blistered and weeping, several layers of skin having been seared away by raging flames. A variety of colorfully blooming bruises, multiple scrapes, and lacerations accompanied them, the worst ones having been dutifully stitched shut.
Rhey’lu sat as still as he was able while Azrael cleaned his wounds of the grime and dried blood, though every hiss and wince earned him a cautious glance from his rescuer. Once he was done, he gently applied a layer of ointment; a cool, numbing sensation quickly seeped through his skin, dulling the pain considerably, and Rhey’lu let out a trembling sigh of relief as Azrael redressed the injuries with fresh bandages.
After a brief moment of reprieve, they were at it again. The bandage securing the gauze to Rhey’lu’s temple was untied and tossed into the pile of soiled cloth, and he pushed a few locks of silver hair from his face, tucking them behind his ear. He turned towards Azrael as best he could, and as the other man dabbed away at the wound on his forehead, Rhey’lu found himself idly admiring the sharp angles of his face, the slope of his nose, the intense and focused look in his eyes. He hadn’t noticed before, but in such close proximity, it was hard to deny that despite looking like he hadn’t slept recently, Azrael was a rather handsome individual...
Realizing he was staring, Rhey’lu averted his gaze, feeling warmth gathering in his cheeks. He blinked then, a sliver of black peeking out from the edges of Azrael’s collar snagging his attention. A tattoo?
“What.. is that?” he asked softly, gesturing to it.
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
The moment Rhey’lu exhibited distress at attempting to sit up, Azrael’s immediate response was to stop him, to prevent him from injuring himself.  Instead, he ended up hovering nervously, unsure of where best to touch the strange young man in order to assist him.  By the time he decided on a safe place to position his hands, the young man was more or less sitting upright in bed.  He continued to hover there, gently holding the mirror, hoping he might account for the bulk of the weight.
It was abnormal, unexpected.  Had there been any hope that perhaps Rhey’lu knew what was happening to him, it had been dashed by the startled expression in his eyes.  Azrael sighed, biting his lip as the stranger spoke, his panicked words entirely foreign to him.  He could guess their meaning… and his name, of course.  But what could he possibly attempt to explain to him, this phenomenon of which he had no knowledge?
Shaking his head, Azrael sighed again.  “I don’t know,” he admitted, holding Rhey’lu’s gaze.  “You’re okay – you’re safe here.  But… I don’t know.  I’ve never seen this before, I don’t know why this is happening.”  He didn’t like not knowing.  He didn’t like not having an answer for this poor young stranger.  Answers were the very least he could give him, after all he had lost.
Gesturing towards the bandages, Azrael gently pried the mirror from Rhey’lu’s hands.  “How are you feeling?” he asked softly.  “Good?  Bad?  Are you in pain?  I … expect your bandages will need changing soon.”  He touched the edge of the fabric on the young man’s arm, feeling it was slightly damp against his fingers.
His regretful reply caused Rhey’lu’s hold on Azrael to grow slack, and slowly he released his arm, shoulders sagging as he sat numbly with the mirror in his lap. Somehow, he understood.. Not so much the words themselves, but the meaning of them. His rescuer, while trying to be reassuring, had no idea what was happening to him either.
With trembling hands, the injured young man held the mirror up, peering at his reflection once more. The discoloring of his eyes and hair aside, he looked positively ghastly... Never in all his years had he ever known himself to look so physically worn. Rhey’lu scowled softly, his heart heavy in his chest as his thoughts drifted to Vahari. Was this happening to her as well, he wondered. He bit his lip, his grip on the mirror tightening; he would never know the answer.
Azrael took the mirror from him then, careful as he coaxed the object from his grasp. Rhey’lu turned his head away from him as he hurriedly rubbed at his eyes with the back of a bandaged hand. He was asking him something, checking the bandages on his arm.
“I.. I am.. okay,” he replied, displeased with how brittle his voice sounded around the unfamiliar words. He coughed as he cleared his throat, wincing as the action irritated the burns along his neck and shoulder, the fractures in his ribs. The longer he was conscious, the more his body rejected any sort of movement, and his injuries flared and throbbed painfully beneath their wrappings. With shaky sigh, he wearily met Azrael’s gaze again, instinctively clutching his side as he exhaled.
“I am okay,” he repeated. He knew what those words meant now, but he was unsure how to articulate the rest of what he wanted to say just yet. Instead, he simply nodded, gesturing to the bandages. “There is pain, but... I can manage for now.”
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
The stranger’s eyes opened slowly, and Azrael could see the visible energy it took to look up at him.  He forced his expression to remain neutral, even as Rhey’lu’s eyes were also victim to this strange phenomenon, crimson patches blooming in his irises, the first impossible flowers of spring.  He had no answer to offer, no explanation amidst the knowledge he had collected over the years that could attempt to understand what was at play here.
Blinking, Azrael realized with some embarrassment the close proximity he kept with the strange young man.  Clearing his throat, he leaned back quickly.  “Sorry–I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to startle you,” he said slowly, carefully enunciating his words.  He was only too aware of the fact that his accent likely made it difficult to learn from him.  “I was… here, perhaps you should see this.”
Reaching for the first drawer in the bedside table, Azrael withdrew an old looking glass, dusty with misuse.  Cursing quietly under his breath, he quickly rubbed at the filthy surface with the edge of his sleeve, the fabric dragging against the dirt and grime.  Taking a deep breath, Azrael offered the stranger the mirror, gauging his expression.
“It’s okay,” he assured him.  “There’s no blood, no wound… I don’t know what’s happening, but… you seem to be fine.”  But whatever could be causing it?
Rhey’lu eyed the stranger with muted curiosity as he quickly moved away. He was apologizing, rather sheepishly at that, but there was something in the uncertain way he was looking at him that made Rhey’lu uncomfortable. He watched as Azrael retrieved a mirror, wiping it clean with his sleeve before holding it out to him. His eyes flickered warily between the two, wondering what exactly the reasoning for this could possibly be. It was then that Azrael spoke up again, his tone mostly reassuring despite the careful look on his face.
Mustering what little strength he had, Rhey’lu grit his teeth, wincing heavily as he struggled to lift himself into a sitting position. His wounds protested in his movement, the bandages irritating his burnt flesh, bruised muscle and fractured bone causing spasms of pain to shoot through his arm and bloom across his rib cage. Silver locks of hair spilled over his shoulders and hung loosely around his face as Rhey’lu finally managed to sit upright, and he took a moment to catch his breath before looking to the mirror Azrael had presented him.
He was surprised by how heavy it was, the mirror nearly slipping from his grasp as it passed from Azrael’s hand to his own. Clutching it tightly, Rhey’lu hesitantly lifted it to his face to peer into the reflective surface.. and nearly dropped it again in shock.
There were a few minor nicks and scratches on his cheeks, a bandage wrapped around his head to secure the gauze at his temple, but it was his eyes that had startled him so severely. Where he had once known them to be a pale silver, his irises were now splotched with bright red. He brought a shaking hand to his face, fingertips resting just at the corner of his right eye as he stared at his reflection. What in the name of... It was then that he noticed his hair, and he turned his head just enough to get a better view at a patch of red that bled out from beneath the otherwise white strands. The mirror fell to his lap and Rhey’lu reached for the scarlet locks, his eyes wide with alarm as he examined the ends.
After a brief pause, his attention fell on Azrael once more, and at once he understood why he had seemed so uncertain before. 
“What is this?” he asked, forgetting himself as he reached for the other man. He gripped his arm tightly, searching his face as the words tumbled forth in a panicked stream. “What happened to my eyes? My hair? Is this normal on this world? Azrael, please, what is happening to me?”
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
After his brief period of consciousness, the stranger did not wake for many days afterwards.  At times, he would murmur in his sleep, causing Azrael some alarm, but otherwise he remained quite still.  Occasionally, Azrael found himself checking to ensure the young man was still breathing, still alive in spite of the horrific tragedy he had endured.  Every time, Rhey’lu surprised him, assuring him that he was very much alive, somehow.
He had ventured out once or twice to examine the grave he had dug for Vahari; he couldn’t remember how many times, truthfully.  Both times, he had found her grave undisturbed, tiny flowers beginning to blossom from the damp earth.  The crater itself was filling with water and moss and the beginning buds of new growth.  Soon, he wondered if it would be visible at all.
Some time later, he had the shock of his life when he went in to check on Rhey’lu and found the young men’s hair was turning red.  He had thought he was bleeding out at first, and immediately Azrael was at his side, trying to find the wound beneath his silvery hair.  “Damn it all, Rhey’lu – don’t you die on me, not you too.”
As he frantically searched for a bleed, Azrael became aware that there was no blood at all… no wound to be seen.  In fact, it seemed Rhey’lu’s hair was merely turning red of its own volition, silvery strands fading into vermillion.  Azrael paused, his hands still in the stranger’s hair.  How very curious.  He wondered, for perhaps the umpteenth time that month, just who Rhey’lu was… and why Vahari had been so adamant that he survive.
It was a voice that woke him, frantic and colorfully accented. He had heard it before... Who did it belong to? Rhey’lu groaned softly as he was jostled, brow creasing as something touched his head, combed through his hair. It took him a moment to register that they were hands, fingers brushing against his scalp. Why? Who was touching him?
Dazed and vaguely confused, he drew in a deep, shaking breath. The weight on his chest had lessened a bit, the burning sensation in his lungs now a stinging irritation, and he was relieved to find that he could breathe a little easier now. As he gradually became more alert, Rhey’lu slowly opened his eyes, blinking groggily as he turned his head. He winced in the action, the burns along his neck and collarbones twinging painfully beneath their bandages.
“Wh...” He frowned softly, searching the face of the stranger at his side. His name.. What was his name again? “Az..rial? What a-re you.. doing?”
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
There was a lump in his throat, a pain in the young man’s eyes that Azrael could not swallow, could not ignore.  The stranger struggled to speak, and half of what he said Azrael was able to understand.  He was unable to marvel at how quickly he learned, when the first conversation Rhey’lu was having in this language was the news of the death of his friend.
As the injured stranger’s thin, pale fingers clutched the necklace, as if he were still grasping for dear life.  There were tears in his eyes as he evidently struggled to breathe, and for a moment Azrael could ignore his emotional distress as he became concerned for the integrity of his bandages.  For a moment.
He picked up the glass of water, offering it to the young man.  He seemed to have some understanding, so he spoke slowly, hopeful of Rhey’lu’s ability to interpret the foreign words he spoke to him.  “You were badly injured,” Azrael explained.  “Please, I know you are upset… but I must ask you to be gentle with yourself.  You mustn’t pull your stitches, it will take time to recover your strength.”
Sighing, Azrael pinched the bridge of his nose once more.  The lump in his throat remained still.  “Vahari… she…” He could not bring himself to say it.  Why?  “She was the one who told me your name.  But her injuries were… much worse than yours.”  His voice waned and died in his throat, and he coughed nonchalantly in an attempt to clear it.
“I am sorry.”
Gingerly lifting his head from the pillow, Rhey’lu held the glass to his mouth, but in his eagerness to quell the horrible burning in his throat, he choked. He pushed the glass - and Azrael’s hands - away, water sputtering from his lips and dribbling down his chin as he coughed. The action caused him far more pain than he had imagined possible, his injuries flaring angrily in response to the way his body convulsed as he struggled to breathe again.
He clutched at his chest, gasping painfully as Azrael continued to speak to him. Rhey’lu’s brow furrowed, his eyes glossy as he struggled to focus on the stranger’s face in an effort to comprehend what he was saying as the room began to spin. His voice was deeper than his own and colorfully accented, the sound of it soothing despite the unfamiliarity. The more he spoke, however, the easier it was for Rhey’lu to decipher his words. If only they brought him such comfort as well.
The tears flowed freely and silently from his eyes now as he lie there, the pain of loss gripping him tightly. His friend was gone... and he was alone now, burned and broken and alone, and the tragedy of it hardly seemed fair at all. They had come to this strange new world together... Why her, and not him?
Disoriented and overwhelmed, Rhey’lu swallowed hard. A gnawing sense of panic crept over him as his vision darkened around the edges, and he opened his mouth to speak, to question Azrael further, but no words formed. His white-knuckle hold on Vahari’s necklace grew slack, and soon it, and consciousness itself, slipped from his grasp.
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
He almost smiled as the young man in the bed tested his name on his tongue, succeeding on only his second attempt.  Perhaps he might be able to teach him this language as he healed, to help better prepare him for this wild and strange landscape.
The stranger, Rhey’lu, gestured to the bandages, his tone a questioning one.  Azrael nodded slowly, wary of answering a question he only partially understood.  “You… suffered many injuries,” he explained, gesturing to the bandages.  “I…” I was worried you wouldn’t pull through.
It was as if, at the same moment, they had both remembered that Rhey’lu had not been alone in the crater.  Azrael’s heart sank at the small, almost whispered, “Vahari”.  He knew almost instantly who the name referred to; there was only really one who it could refer to.
Sighing, he stood with some effort, slowly approaching the bedside once more.  The necklace felt heavier than the sky itself as he withdrew it from his pocket, hating himself for the news he was about to give.
“Vahari… I am sorry, Rhey’lu,” he said quietly, gently offering the little necklace to the bandaged young man.  “I am so, so sorry.”
An unspeakable dread bloomed within him as Azrael’s expression changed then, carefully standing from his seat and closing the distance between him and the bed. He reached into his pocket, and Rhey’lu felt his heart stutter behind his ribs. He barely registered the other man’s words as he stared at the necklace he had retrieved.
Numbly, Rhey’lu reached for it, trembling pale fingers brushing against the calloused skin of Azrael’s palm. Upon inspection, the once pristine metal was scorched, the chain broken at the clasp.. but there was no mistaking the swirling yet simple design of the golden pendant. It had been a gift, a token bestowed upon his childhood friend the day she had been granted the title of knight. Why did he have this?
“I... I do not--” Rheylu swallowed hard, his throat dry as he struggled to speak. Azrael.. He had said it earlier. His temple throbbed as he tried to make sense of the words that now came to him, sluggishly shaking his head. “I do not... understand.”
“Where.. i-s Vahari?” he asked again, though in his heart, he feared he already knew the answer. The injuries he had sustained were heavily taking their toll on him, and Rhey’lu gasped raggedly, sweat dripping down the side of his ashen face with exerted effort to breathe, to remain conscious. Gripping the necklace as tightly as he was able, he looked up at Azrael, tears threatening to spill from the corners of his eyes.
“She.. she was with me, and.. S-She can’t be-- Vahari--”
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
The stranger attempted to speak to him, but the words flew by Azrael as quickly as his companion’s had.  Some words sounded almost familiar to him, a half-known word he could connect to another, equally foreign language, but he could not understand most of what had flowed so eloquently from the man’s tongue.  He could gather from the tone the young man took that he was confused, and understandably so.  Sighing, he pinched the bridge of his nose, unsure of how to respond.  Was there even an appropriate response, one this young man would understand?
“I don’t understand,” Azrael offered simply, hoping his notably different dialect would communicate his ignorance of the language.  “I’m sorry.  I… I only know that–Rhey’lu, that is you, isn’t it?”  He gestured towards the stranger as he repeated the name, hoping his body language might convey some meaning where his words could not.
He sighed again, feeling frustrated by his own inability to converse with the stranger he had rescued.  Feeling the strain on his knee, Azrael pulled the wooden chair from the nearby desk and sat down near the end of the bed, regarding the young man in the bandages.  “Azrael,” he said, gesturing to himself.  “My name is Azrael.”
Rhey’lu scowled softly as the stranger spoke again, finding he was unable to understand anything he had said. From his tone and expression, he seemed frustrated, uncertain.. Was he asking if he was Rhey’lu?
After a moment, the broken prince nodded, watching as the man pulled up a chair. His vision burred, shifting in and out of focus as Rhey’lu struggled to comprehend what he was saying. He had gestured to himself... An introduction?
“As.. rial?” he asked, attempting to repeat the name. No. “Az.. Azrael.”
Rhey’lu felt a new question forming on his tongue as he searched his weary face. Gesturing weakly to Azrael, and then to the bandages that now covered his body, he asked, “Did you.. do this? Did you find us?”
Us. That’s right he, wasn’t alone. Rhey’lu swallowed hard, sweat starting to form along his brow as he glanced around the room once more. His eyes settled on the door way. How had Azrael known his name at all?
“Vahari...” he rasped, his throat tight as he looked to his apparent rescuer in feverish alarm. He motioned to himself, shakily tapping his chest. “The one who was with me.. Her name is Vahari. Where.. where is she?”
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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ratherformidable:
secretprophet:
As the little girl took her hand, leading her through the immediate area, Farore could only assume that she had lived here all her life.  She knew the bends in the road and the undulations of the canyon as well as she knew the back of her own hand, and she navigated them with ease.  It was admittedly impressive, but deep down inside Farore felt uneasy at the thought of a child so young having such knowledge of a place as terrible as this.  She realized, as Pamela helped her over a particularly uneven patch of rocky terrain, that there was an unusual sense of irony to this uneasiness.
“Goodness, you’re much more nimble than I am!” Farore exclaimed, letting go of Pamela’s hand to dust off her skirts.  She expected everything she was wearing today would need a thorough cleaning when she got back to the tavern… whenever that would be.  “Does your daddy often let you explore alone?  It must be awfully frightening, out here all by yourself.”
Pamela was quiet for a moment, fidgeting with the sleeves of her dress.  “Sometimes,” she admitted.  “But it is scary, especially after what happened to Daddy.”
Keep reading
At the first mention of gibdos, Shad felt a shiver flutter down his spine. He rubbed his shoulders with his arms as they descended through the murky stairwell to the scientist’s lab. He knew that music often had an affect on enraged animals and often served to placate them…but appeasing the dead?
He shook his head. He couldn’t imagine the nightly anxiety he would bear, knowing the haunting melody floating above their heads was the sole defense between his home and child and the terrors out of doors.
While the strange man went on, Shad digested his words and gnawed the inside of his cheek. His explanation did little to comfort the scholar. In fact, as he described the re-awakening spirits, a sense of foreboding swelled in his chest and caused him to tap his fingers against crossed arms.
“Just a moment,” Shad interjected. He removed his glasses to wipe them on his shirttail. “Am I correct to understand that the gibdo have risen and once again pose a threat to your property? That is…are they returning to your doorstep and seeking you out here?”
He looked at Haeyin, searching his face for affirmation. “After all, spiders dwell in the shadows of cellar corners, but their existence doesn’t justify my seeking them out.” 
“I suppose…” He faced the scientist again. “I suppose I must know–from one researcher to another, my good fellow–what do you believe you stand to gain from this expedition?” He swallowed hard, both out of guilt for dragging Farore and Haeyin across time and space after this wild goose chase, and…something else.
Haeyin glanced up from the map of the ancient kingdom as Shad voiced his concerns, nodding once in solemn agreement. It was strange, certainly, for the dead to be so restless after seemingly finding peace... There was an uneasy fluttering in his chest as his thoughts tentatively returned to the harrowing events that had previously caused such an upset. While he was certain that no such forces were at work here, Haeyin couldn’t shake the prickling sensation that crept up his spine, his fingers slowly curling into fists against the table top.
“What do I gain?” the scientist repeated incredulously, as if the answer to such a question should have been obvious. “If the gibdos have risen once more, then it’s only a matter of time before other spirits and ghouls begin to stir as well, if they’ve not already. If we can uncover what it is that has done such a thing, then perhaps I can reverse it! Maybe even harness it! Could you imagine?”
To this, Haeyin felt his jaw clench. He didn’t like the edge of giddiness that accompanied the scientist’s tone. Harness a power that raises the dead?
“Unfortunately, I can imagine all too well,” he said, his expression fixed into a mask of stiff politeness. “I may not be a man of science, such as yourself, but I do know no good can come from disturbing the dead.”
The scientist appeared momentarily taken aback. “Rest assured, I have no ill intentions here, sir, and I am willing to compensate you for your participation. I merely mean to understand the cause--”
Haeyin’s smile did not falter, though it wasn’t very friendly as he interjected, “Such forces should not be meddled with, no matter the intent.”
There was a brief pause as an uncomfortable silence filled the space between the two of them. Haeyin sighed, clasping his hands tightly in front of him. “That being said, the nature of this expedition into Ikana does have my interest.. If there are restless spirits there, then I believe it is owed to them that they find peace. I will assist you only in uncovering what has caused this disturbance, but nothing more.”
“Of course, I only speak for myself in this instance.” He looked to Shad as he continued, “What say you, my friend?” 
A Haunted Expedition
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
After he had finished washing and bandaging the stranger, Azrael was exhausted.  With every tattered scrap of clothing he removed, he found more burnt and blackened flesh, more blood and more debris.  Eventually, after what had felt like a week of medical aid, the strange young man slept soundly in Azrael’s bed, much of him covered in linen and ointment.
He hadn’t rested yet.  Only once he was certain the man he had rescued was no longer in immediate danger did he venture outside again.  A passing storm had extinguished the flames, and the pit Azrael had found him and his companion in was reduced to an inky, muddy mess.  The young woman lay quite still amongst the ashes, almost too stiff for Azrael to close her eyes as he gently pulled her from the wreckage.
She was so very small, burying her hadn’t taken much time at all.  There was little on her person to salvage, but Azrael had retained a simple golden necklace.  Whoever this young woman was, she and the man he had rescued had obviously been close.  Once he broke the news to him… perhaps he might find solace in having something of his friend.  Perhaps.
Keep reading
Finding he was unable to move without causing himself pain, Rhey’lu stared vacantly out the window as he struggled to breathe evenly. It was raining... He’d never seen rain before.
Movement out of the corner of his eye caught his attention, and slowly he turned his gaze to see what it had been, only to find that there was nothing there at all. A shadow, perhaps? He didn’t know how long he had closed his eyes for, but the sound of knocking caused him to open them again.
A man entered the room, heavily favoring his left leg, and Rhey’lu regarded him with a cautious stare as he approached. He was a bit dirty and his clothes were damp, appearing to have just been outside not long ago, and exhaustion was clear on his face. He set a glass of water down next to him and Rhey’lu’s eyes widened when he finally spoke.
“How do.. you know my name?” he wheezed, his voice alarmingly brittle to his own ears. He searched his face, trying to focus through the disorienting haze that muddled his thoughts. “Who are you?”
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
Every fibre of his being protested as he left the woman to die – it felt wrong, he felt wrong as he turned away from her, yet still he urged himself forward.  The young man was in poor condition himself, but despite being unconscious he seemed to have suffered less physical damage than his friend had.  Maybe there was hope for him yet.
Azrael knelt behind him, pulling the stranger into a sitting position and reaching beneath his arms to support him, holding the young man tightly against his chest.  An odd numbness in his knee protested, a pain that felt only partially connected to him, but Azrael persisted, dragging himself and the injured stranger from the blaze.  The other man’s still-burning hair was smothered by Azrael’s cloak, and the scent and the smoke made his eyes water.
As he dragged the man’s limp body out of the fires, he reached out around him for shade, for anything large enough to slip inside and bring him back to the safety of his cabin.  The longer he dawdled, the greater risk of infection… Azrael found shelter in the shadow of a tree and, still gripping the stranger tightly against him, slipped inside it, away from the roaring flames and the falling ashes.
It was the weight on his chest that eventually woke him. Rhey’lu struggled to take a breath, rasping softly as his eyelids fluttered and then cracked open. Why did he feel so heavy? Why did his lungs ache so? It wasn’t just his lungs, he soon found, but a pain that had set into his very skin, spanning most of his body. He felt hot, feverish, gasping weakly as he slowly attempted to lift his arm to rid himself whatever was preventing his ability to take deeper breaths. But there was nothing there. Nothing but bandages and gauze.
Rhey’lu’s brow furrowed and he winced with the action, a new pain shooting across the right side of his forehead. His chest felt so horribly tight as he struggled to take another breath, and another, light headed and confused as he blearily looked around.
Where.. Where was he? He was in bed, he soon realized, but he didn’t recognize the room around him. It was small, scarcely furnished, a single window just over the bed next to him. There was a table covered in papers and books and bottles and rolls of bandages nearby, and a chair with a bowl of water and a rag on the seat. He was otherwise alone.
And it was this fact troubled him most of all.
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow: 
Her wailing cry halted him, and he hovered above her once more.  He had no way of knowing what she was attempting to say to him; these words were foreign, their intentions unknown to him.  As the injured woman attempted to swat him, however, Azrael had a feeling he could gauge her meaning well enough.
“Hey!  Easy, easy–enough of that,” he hissed, easily avoiding her limp attacks.  “You will die here if I don’t get you to safety.”  He decided against adding that, given her condition, she would die anyway.  He hadn’t quite accepted that reality himself yet.
She was not looking at him.  She was looking beyond him, and for a moment Azrael feared she was already gone.  However, as he turned around, he caught the object of her attention; the other fallen figure, forgotten in his attempts to save the young woman.  Still unmoving… though in significantly better condition, now that he had assessed the woman’s injuries.
Rhey’lu… He wasn’t sure what it meant, but it was clear from the despair in her eyes that whoever the stranger was, he was important to her.  If he couldn’t save both of them…
He froze for half a second.  Everything he knew, everything he was trained in, told him to save the person who was conscious… but in his heart, Azrael knew she could not be saved.  The longer he waited, the more likely the possibility he would be burying two bodies that evening.  He bit his lip.
“Rhey’lu,” he repeated softly, hoping that whatever meaning it held for the young woman might bring her solace.  “Rhey’lu.  I will save your friend.”  He touched her uninjured temple, whispering the softest of uttered prayers for her sake.  Azrael stood as quickly as his body would allow, making his way through the flames to the other injured stranger.  He owed it to the young woman, and to himself, to save this one.
Unable to understand the stranger, she continued swat and shove at him, “No, stop! Leave me, can’t you see he’s--” 
She called out to her friend once more, her own words forced and nearly drowned out by the crackling of flames around them, “Rhey’lu, wake up! Rhey’lu! Rhey’lu, please, can you hear me? Rhey--”
She gasped, wheezing and coughing with the effort her lungs simply couldn’t expend as she cradled her broken arm against her chest. Vahari growled from the pain of her injuries, spitting a mouthful of blood and saliva into the dirt.
The stranger spoke again, a single word, a name - her prince’s name - and she looked up at him with wide, bloodshot eyes. Uncertainty gripped her tightly as she searched his face, and again he spoke. His tone was soft, resolute as he once more said Rhey’lu’s name and... She didn’t understand the words, but somehow, somehow she knew his meaning, and Vahari allowed herself to feel a momentary sense of relief.
She closed her eyes as he reached to touch her face, murmuring what she could only assume was a prayer before he drew away again. When she opened them again, the edges of her vision were blurred more than ever, and with a heavy heart she watched the stranger struggle to his feet and turn away from her.
Several feet away, Rhey’lu continued to lie motionless, burned and bleeding from the impact of their fall.
“Please,” Vahari whispered, blinking back tears. “Rhey’lu.. you h-have.. to live.”
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
Against his better nature, against all notions of self-preservation and distrust of strangers and strange situations, Azrael found himself moving forward.  Gripping his staff with a white-knuckled hand, he forced his way through the raw earth, the blistering air.  His free arm lifted to shield his eyes, he struggled to assess the view before him.
They were humanoid, whomever they were.  It seemed one of them was moving, and instinctively Azrael prioritized her in his mind; the other one was motionless.
As he approached her, he could see she was in poor condition.  What was left of her was broken, bleeding, and burnt by the ranging fires, and yet still she struggled to move, grasping for dear life.  Dropping to his knees, he pulled his cloak around her, shielding her from the still-roaring flames around them.
“Can you hear me?” Azrael asked her, his voice very nearly drowned out with the sound around them.  “I’m going to try to get you out of here.”
He realized the nigh impossibility of the task the moment the words left his lips.  His hand hovered over her, unsure of where best to hold her, to carry her to safety.  He eventually decided she had to be moved, regardless of the pain he might cause her in doing so… but as he reached to support the back of her neck, Azrael noticed the blood collecting at the corners of her mouth.
“I’m going to get you out of here,” he said quietly, far less certain in his decision than he was before.
It was then that Vahari heard it, the muffled sound of uneven footsteps and shifting earth quickly approaching. Clenching her fist, she braced herself in the event she would have to somehow defend herself, only to be mildly surprised when a rather tall man knelt beside her, hurriedly shielding her from the heat and flames around them with his cloak. He said something to her, the words foreign and strange as they reached her ears, and she scowled in confusion - and then hissed from the pain it caused her. As his hands hovered over her, something behind him caught her attention, and Vahari turned her head.
Her clouded gaze finally fell on a familiar form lying a short distance from her, and through the haze and flickering flames she recognized him instantly as her childhood friend, her prince. Rhey’lu.. Her eyes widened, seeing that he was in just as bad a shape as she was. While she couldn’t see his face, his clothes were dirty and burnt and bloodstained as he lie broken in the pit they shared. He wasn’t moving, he.. Was he..?
The stranger at Vahari’s side reached to support her neck, preparing to lift her off the ground, and she swung at him, angry tears brimming at the corners of her eyes as she shouted, “No!”
No, no - Vahari struggled to lift herself as she fought through the pain that wracked her body. She would not leave him, not here. She just had to get to him, she had to-- She collapsed once more, coughing wetly as her shattered ribs continued to restrict her ability to breathe. The scorching heat of the air didn’t help, but more than that, Vahari felt heavy.. So unbearably heavy, as if there was an unseen force keeping her weighed to the ground.
A grating sound tore from her throat in her frustration as she looked to her fallen prince once more, anxiety and rage bubbling in her gut. Her voice was hoarse and cracked as she called out to him, “Rhey’lu!” 
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
The sky was ablaze with a flash of light, and even from a good mile away Azrael found himself squinting from within his cabin.  The brightness of the flare was matched only by the sudden almighty thunder that rolled through the earth, and he gripped the door frame he stood beneath to steady himself.  His first thoughts were of warfare, the explosive wildfire that tore through the air and shredded stone as if it were silk.  His first thoughts were that somehow, he had been discovered, even in a place as remote as this.
Limping towards the front door, Azrael grasped for the long wooden staff propped up against the wall.  Though he might be able to shadow-step most of the way towards the blast, in order to investigate it thoroughly he would need to be able to stand on his own – a skill he was presently lacking.  He had managed to heal from most of his injuries during his time as prisoner, but it seemed his body had finally reached its limits in some ways.
Gripping the wooden pole tightly in his hand, Azrael focused on the darkened corners of the room, easily slipping within one of them and racing towards the source of the flare.  He reached his destination in seconds, crashing against a nearby tree haphazardly as he steadied himself, surveying the scene.  He was hardly sure he believed his eyes as he looked around.
The earth had been torn asunder, a crater formed from the impact.  Fire still burned within it, the remnants of trees and grass crumbling into molten embers – and amidst it all, two figures.  Definitely human, and definitely in dire need of aid.
The first thing Vahari was aware of was the pain; never in her life had she ever experienced an agony such as this. She felt raw, exposed, every nerve set aflame as she lie in the cold, jagged earth. What..? Slowly, she opened her eyes - or tried to, as only her left seemed to do her bidding. The other side of her face stung white hot. She groaned, soon realizing that most of her body felt that way. It only worsened when she tried to move. What happened?
I have to do this.
Vahari winced heavily, a strangled cry leaking out as she rolled onto her back as pain shot through her body. Her legs, her arm, several ribs.. she didn’t have to look to know they were certainly broken. Her head pounded, the pressure building behind her right eye as pain spread across the side of her face, down her neck. 
Then I’m going with you.
No, Vahari, you-
Where you go, I go, remember?
Where was...
What’s happening?
I can’t keep this up..!
She gasped raggedly, choking as her lungs burned with effort, a searing heat piercing through her side with every labored breath. It hurt, it hurt to move, to breathe, as if every gulp of air was scorching flame that coated her throat and lungs. The scent of burning flesh and dirt and iron washed over her in nauseating waves. Carefully, she opened her eye again and through the fog she saw the moon against a darkened sky.
Hold onto me!
Fire. It had swallowed them whole as they rapidly descended towards the earth below. She trembled as the lie there in the dirt, the fear and confusion distorting her thoughts as she struggled to turn her head. Had.. had they crashed? There was fire and embers, ash and smoke, blackened and crumbling trees and.. a crater. She was in a crater but where... Vahari grit her teeth, the taste of blood on her tongue nearly making her gag.
Where was he? Where was the prince?
Where was Rhey’lu?
Icarus
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
cientheshadowassassin:
“No you didn’t.” Came from the shadows, as Cien stepped out with a big smirk on his face.
He hadn’t arrived much long ago, at most five seconds, but his trip through the shades was a rush of excitement he hadn’t felt in quite some time. The queazyness that came with dimentional displacement had subsided with the years, but it still sat almost unnoticeable at the bottom of his stomach. ‘Forgot breakfast’ he thought, as he stood next to Az in the shadow of the alley, and patted the taller man on the shoulder. “Yours is getting sloppy, buddy. What, sagging with the years?”
He chuckled, and now that he was in stable ground and not floating through unexistance, he could get back into gear. The glamour faded as he turned his cape inside out back to it midnight blue side, pulling his hood up once it was securely closed with the metal pin.
He gave Az a glance as he pulled something out of his bag. It was a mask, white and red with a dull gold disk in the eye design drawn on it. He slipped it on like it was second nature. He recognized the now otherwordly technicolor apearance of Az through the eye of the mask, but focused on more important things. His friend hated when the sight of the mask lingered.
“No traps or enchantments, there’s at least that…” The sheikah said, slightly muffled as he looked towards the house. “Didn’t expect him to know anyone willing to defend him though. Imagine that.”
His gaze never left the single, soft light emanating from the first floor of the house.  Waving dismissively at Cien’s remark, he merely grunted quietly.  “Maybe so,” Azrael muttered irritably.  Truthfully, he wasn’t entirely certain he’d eaten that morning – likely the cause of his sudden fatigue.  He stretched his shoulders, feeling a satisfying dull crack towards the top of his spine as he prepared himself.
Cien withdrew his enchanted mask from his satchel, and Azrael felt himself tense up unconsciously.  Though he trusted the man, there was something deeply disconcerting about a mask that revealed his true form.  It was different when he let down his glamour around Haeyin.  This felt as if Cien were staring directly through him, and his own inability to hide made him uneasy.
Regarding the two guards stationed across the street, Azrael felt his hand instinctively come to a rest at the hilt of the blade strapped to his hip.  “Haeyin, I don’t suppose you have any tricks up your sleeve that might come in useful?” he murmured.  They were already tasked with killing one man tonight; he would rather avoid killing any more.
“Damn it all,” Haeyin grumbled, clicking his tongue against his teeth as Cien emerged from the shadows.
Stepping closer to his companions, Haeyin’s eyebrows rose in surprise as he watched Cien withdraw a mask the he instantly recognized. Evidently, Azrael was as familiar with it as he was, tensing out of the corner of his eye as the sheikah donned the mask.
“A Mask of Truth... Well, I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised,” Haeyin mused, leaning back against the cool stone wall of the alley. “I have one myself, interestingly enough.”
He nodded absently as Cien informed them of the lack of additional security measures besides the guards posted out front. That certainly made things a bit easier.
“Our Sir Gala is a knight after all,” he said quietly, peering at the guards in question. “With influence such as his, there’s bound to be a few who would defend him. Whether that influence is loyalty or coin, however, I suppose we will have to see.”
Azrael’s tense words earned him a careful glance from Haeyin, but after a moment of searching his face, he nodded.
“Don’t I always?” Pushing away from the wall, he positioned himself just out of sight at the mouth of the alleyway and placed the stone mask back on his face. “Do not move, nor make a sound.”
And with that, he stepped out into the street, within clear sight of the two guards that stood outside the knight’s home. As he approached them, however, the appeared to show no signs of knowing that he was there at all. From beneath the mask, Haeyin’s eyes gleamed as he channeled the magic in his veins. The opalescent glow of it encompassed him in wisps, and as he reached out his hand, the winds died down, and suddenly the street was plunged into deafening silence. The two guards shared an uneasy glance.
“Oh, who was it I saw? Oh, who?” Haeyin spoke, his melodic voice echoing as it reached their ears. They looked around, at one another, clearly startled by a voice who’s speaker they could not see. “Was it a rat I saw?”
The guards looked at the ground and one of them scoffed, kicking at what appeared to be... nothing. Haeyin smirked. “Was it a bat I saw?”
The second guard ducked suddenly in alarm, swatting at the air just above his head, though again, nothing was there.
“One?” Haeyin slowly began to turn his outstretched hand in a clockwise motion. “No. We panic in a pew.”
In a matter of moments, the pair of guards were shouting and kicking and swatting at things that flew and screeched and things that skittered and crawled and bit, but were unseen by anyone other than themselves. There was disgust and confusion on their faces, fear in their eyes, and Haeyin knew it wouldn’t take much more to get them to flee.
“Now I see bees. I won,” Haeyin said with an amused lit to his voice, and the guards tripped over themselves, continuing to duck and dodge and swat at invisible foes as they hurried away from their post. They continued their screaming as they bolted down the street, far from the knight they had evidently sworn to protect.
The magic that softly radiated from Haeyin’s form began to dissipate, his arm lowering to his side once more as he spoke.
“Now, sir, a war is won.”
Picking Apples
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
exiledoracle:
“Nope, not familiar with it at all. I’m actually new to all of this…mission business. But I can promise you if it’s sailing, I’ll be useful to have around, I’m able to manipulate the weather.” She said, admitting her ability outright. If they were going to work together on something dangerous there wasn’t any point in coy about it.
She leaned forward to look over at Haeyin when he sat down, eyebrows raised in surprise at his combination of hair and eyes. “It’s nice to meet the both of you. I’d shake your hand, Haeyin, but that’d involve reaching over Azrael here.”
Haeyin arriving hadn’t really changed the feeling. Din trusted her memory enough to know that it had to have been something supernatural and not just her forgetting something important…hopefully.
“Is Azrael the kind of person to wrestle sharks?” Din asked with a smile, glancing between the two. 
Telma’s expression seemed to mirror his own as Azrael listened quietly to Haeyin’s polite refusal.  He said nothing, maintaining his focus on the young woman in front of him; it was hardly difficult to maintain eye contact with her, as her startling red eyes were fascinatingly different.  He’d only ever known Haeyin to have so bold a colour… and himself, in a way.
“That was one time,” he insisted, a note of irritation in his voice.  “And to be fair, they did not succeed in devouring me, so I hardly think it counts as ‘being eaten’.”  With a sigh, he pinched the bridge of his nose, adding in a disgruntled tone, “I was trying to rescue Lori, she’d jumped in and tried to befriend the damn things.”
Leaning on his elbows on the bar counter, Azrael eyed the paper absentmindedly.  “If you can manipulate the winds, I’d definitely be inclined to invite you along,” he admitted.  “Our crew is competent, but that place is… well, let us say that forces beyond our imagining dwell beneath those waters, and I would rather not be left to their mercy.”
Turning to face Haeyin for the first time since he’d arrived, Azrael smiled crookedly.  “You should come along too, my friend,” he offered.  “It would be good to have you aboard the Siren again.”
“Well, we can’t let that stop us, now, can we?” Haeyin beamed, leaning back in his seat to reach behind Azrael in order to shake Din’s hand. His grin widened a bit then, eyes crinkling at the corners as he proceeded to teasingly nudge Azrael with his elbow. “It’s one time too many, in my opinion. And for all we know, Lori would have succeeded, being the friendliest drake to ever grace the earth. Or.. ocean, as it were.”
He folded his arms over one another and leaned against the counter, resting his head atop them as he stifled a yawn. Mornings had never quite agreed with him, but it was becoming increasingly difficult as of late to remain alert during the day. His nights were longer now, unable to sleep during the hours he once had. Sighing, he let his eyes drift close for a moment, idly listening as Azrael mulled over the mission notice, and Din’s offer to tag along. Manipulate the winds, she’d said? Haeyin hummed quietly, knowing full well she was capable of far more than just that. Or at least she had been, once.
He opened one eye, glancing up at Azrael as he addressed him now. Sitting up right again, he smiled gently. “I would be glad to. I’ve quite missed the sea, and the crew. It’s been a while since I visited last...”
Haeyin chuckled then, “Besides, I could use a vacation.”
Stolen Ship
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moonfallmerchant · 8 years ago
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insidious-shadow:
cientheshadowassassin:
Much ado about Mr. Gala not being missed, it was almost as if he would be, against all possible odds. Whatever it was he did to get his hands on ruppees to bet with, the sheikah figured it had to do with his position. Surely strongarming the populous would be easy as a knight, but someone might’ve gotten tired of the treatment. It was strange, the least it felt like there’d be loose ends the more it felt like there should be.
And just like that, Az was gone. In the middle of Cien mulling things over, he banished into the shade of the nearby buildings. Luckily, that was one trick Cien could actually replicate! He’d be sure to remove all his glamour once they were all there too.
He turned towards Haeyin in surprise, only to smirk right back as the mage dissapeared after issuing the casual challenge. “I wonder!”
Cien pulled up his hood and retreated into the shadows as well, bouncing from shade to shade, making his way across town through the hidden means of umbramancy.
In the many, many centuries it had been since Azrael had first mastered shadow-stepping, he no longer felt the initial queasiness his younger self had once suffered from.  It was an odd sensation, slipping between dimensions in such a fashion, and though he knew he must have learned the ability slowly, he could not remember a time when it hadn’t been second nature to him.  As with most things, of course.
He was as light as a feather, moving faster than anything he had ever encountered in the surface world, fluid and mobile as the shadows he enveloped himself within.  It was almost addictive, that feeling of euphoric weightlessness; non-existence, if only for a temporary period.  If only it wasn’t so horribly draining.
Arriving at the East Road, Azrael waited in the shadows of the nearest alleyway, sagging against the brick wall beside him.  The house was modest for a knight, he thought.  The guards stationed by the door seemed bored, their polished armour shining in the dim light of the moon.  He would have to wait for Cien’s confirmation of their positioning, in order to determine how far into their rotation they were.
There was a soft, warm glow emanating from one of the windows in the knight’s house.  There would be no better time to carry out the mission.
Zipping through the streets at such speeds was proving more challenging than Haeyin had anticipated, and after nearly clipping himself on a few passing carts and store front signs, he decided to take an alternate route. In an instant he went from cobbled streets to tiled rooftops, running as fast as his legs and magic would carry him. From behind his mask, he grinned, enjoying the feeling of wind through his hair and the energizing light of the moon above him as he leaped to another rooftop. Occasionally he would glance around him, over his shoulder, from shadow to shadow, searching for any sign of Cien as he drew closer to the East Road.
Sensing Azrael nearby, Haeyin stopped short as he came to the overhead opening of the alleyway. Across the street was their target’s home, he assumed, judging by the guards stationed just outside. Quietly, Haeyin blinked from the roof down into the alley, stumbling a bit as he landed. He braced himself against the cool stone wall, removing the mask as he panted in an effort to catch his breath.
“I am not in nearly as good a shape as I thought I was,” he chuckled softly, looking to Azrael with an easy smile. “Did I beat Cien here after all?”
Picking Apples
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