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  • Beqanna

    COTY

    Assailant -- Year 226

    QOTY

    "But the dream, the echo, slips from him as quickly as he had found it and as consciousness comes to him (a slap and not the gentle waves of oceanic tides), it dissolves entirely. His muscles relax as the cold claims him again, as the numbness sets in, and when his grey eyes open, there’s nothing but the faint after burn of a dream often trod and never remembered." --Brigade, written by Laura


    [private]  Did I mistake you for a sign from God?- Rare
    #1
    Rainbow 
    Very few know about the dangers beyond the world in front of them—about the cruel creatures with the capabilities to slip between time and dimension; the colossal monsters that lurked in the inky nothingness of space between stars and galaxies. The lethality of the beings who called their own oceans home were mostly left to mystery.  Of course, not being privy to particular things such as the Universes’ dirty little secrets was a Good Thing. It was natural—and the Natural Order of Things were sacred.
    Besides, the sheer terror that came with the knowledge of those things existing were mind-breaking. They were more than enough to send even the strongest of individuals spiraling straight down into madness. And that was what happened to Tarnished.
    Once the veil had been lifted, there was no going back—he stared into The Deadlights, dead-eyed. Haunted by all that was and all that would come to be, he should have left when Caw fled—his crow-colored daughter would have never surrendered to him otherwise. Yet he stayed, feeling smug, reveling in a fool’s victory.
    Caw had left him to The Deadlights and she needed to pay, she needed to die, they all needed to die—
    There was a great burst of light across the cosmos, reaching out into the darkness and the nothing and then it died and it was dark once more. Tarnished didn’t feel a thing as he disappeared, he simply slipped off and on to the other side and his energy simply moved on… elsewhere.
    Or had it simply been repurposed?
    There was a bright flash of light across the sky in Beqanna years later, it dulled down into a sad little light that flickered between the clouds and then it disappeared forever.
    Nikolas knew nothing of the Light, he only knows the Fall; graceless, screaming, the boy plummets towards the ground and his body bursts into flames. He spirals, faster and faster, until he collides with the ever-solid earth and creates a crater so generously deep and wide enough that a giant could fit in his place should it see fit.
    He coughs and sputters, desperately trying to suck air into his lungs—his body bare and raw and singed and bloody, his mane, and tail, the hair of his coat having burnt off after entering the atmosphere. Nikolas goes still after a while, staring up at the sky.
    White clouds are drifting lazily across a pretty blue sky, and while his crash silenced the birds earlier, they are now back to battling with each other through their war songs—unbothered. As if this is simply another day.
    It’s one of the prettiest things he has ever heard.
    Actually, it’s one of the only things he has ever heard.
    Nikolas knows very few things besides the horrors of space; he doesn’t know about the joy that comes with living, he knows nothing of a mother, nor a father, nor where he comes from—not exactly—but after spending the first two years of his life counting stars and mapping out constellations, he smiles in spite of it all. While he might know nothing about Good Things and the Natural Order of Things, he knows he has escaped the nightmares  that stalk beyond the pretty blue sky and the clouds and that he has found home.
    Beqanna exists, after all.
    Grimacing, he shifts his weight and tries to get up, only to lay his head back down again when his wounds flare up in protest. The burned boy closes his gray eyes, enjoying the warm, soft rays of sun on his skin and savoring those first few choruses of birdsong he has ever heard—he cannot stay here forever, though.
    Nikolas snorts, and then, rippling like water, his skin starts to shift and pull itself back together. There’s an itch all over his body as the burnt crisps of skin peel and crack and fall away and his hair begins to regrow.
    He shivers, stretching out his neck; his head slithers up the side of the crater like a snake. Peering over the edge, he stares around at the surrounding meadow—his head bobbing around like a dancing cobra—the color of the leaves are simply fascinating. Reds, browns, and oranges of every shade are mixed together along with the rows of deep green pines, Nikolas finds himself simply unable to look away. Slowly, his body begins to crawl up the side of the crater as if it has a mind of its own. His neck begins to slowly recoil until his head finds itself resting back in its proper place and he takes a tentative step forwards—towards the sunrise.
    Snorting again when his forelock grows long enough to cover one of his gray eyes, he sets off. Slinking along the rows of trees and quietly taking in the sights and sounds—and smells, some lovely, others foul—of the Meadow and its inhabitants. “What a dream to dream,” Nikolas murmurs, laying his ears back uncertainly.
    And what if that’s all this is?
    Some sort of dream?
    An imaginary land made up in the mind of a boy drifting through the stars—Nikolas doesn’t even remember where he heard of Beqanna, though he remembers Them whispering about it. So many of them, so many voices, so many lost souls—
    And so what if it is all made up in his head?
    It isn’t as if he had had better things to think about. There isn’t much to wonder or worry about up there. No friends, no family. Nobody but the things nobody should know about. He continues along, quiet as an owl gliding through the night air, mesmerized by nothing and everything all at once—starstruck by life and its pretty little simplicities. Birds, trees, grass, wind, the sky, everything. It’s all new and it’s all wonderful and he hopes he doesn’t ruin it. Hopes, and prays, and wonders, and worries.
    His ilk, the Unfortunate Few Who Know Too Much, have the tendency to destroy whatever they touch.
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    #2
    She isn’t sure how long it has been since she went blind, but it has been long enough that she is no longer afraid.

    There is something painfully poetic about it, she supposes, to have so many stars in your eyes you cannot see past them. That’s what others have told her, at least, as if the very idea of stars is enough to make it all okay. Stars are beautiful, after all, and the bright white must be so much better than darkness, they say. And Rare just nods and agrees, and does not tell them that she actually dreams of the dark; of a starless night sky or the dappled shadows of a forest, anything besides this unforgiving and unflinching silver-white light that has taken over her eyes.

    But maybe her blindness is why she feels a shift in the atmosphere when hardly anyone around her seems to.

    It’s faint, and would have been easy to ignore, if it hadn’t felt like a shock wave rolling over her. Her heart freezes and then leaps, erratic, wondering if this is the beginning of another disaster, another change that Beqanna will have to endure. But the speed at which the world falls back into its normal rhythm — the soft rustle of bird wings, the hum of insects, the distant sound of conversations she will never be a part of — almost allows her to relax.

    Her newfound but hard-fought intuition tells her that something is still amiss, and so she follows that feeling.

    Though she is far more confident than she used to be, there is still a carefulness to her steps, and she is not sure if she will ever move the way she had before she went blind. Her other senses work overtime to fill in the gaps her sight no longer can, guiding her across the meadow until she finds what she thinks is the source of the disturbance.

    The smell of singed hair and fire still lingers, most likely unnoticeable to anyone that did not rely on such a sense, and she can feel the presence of someone so close — his nearly undetectable heartbeat, the softness of his breaths, the subtle shifting of weight. “Was that you?” she asks him, stopped a few feet away. She stares at him with those unnerving, unseeing eyes — once a pretty sky-blue, now star-studded — and though it crosses her mind to be afraid, she is not. “I felt it. Something changed.”
    Rare



    @Nikolas
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