01-28-2017, 08:20 PM
covet and myrina's creation |
Beqanna
Assailant -- Year 226
"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
brennen;
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01-28-2017, 08:20 PM
01-28-2017, 09:42 PM
hold me in this wild, wild world 'cause in your warmth I forget how cold it can be Though he certainly has yet to see the whole land, Brennen thinks he has seen enough from the air, and then from a short tour with Djinni, to get a good feel for it. The grey sand underfoot is not unlike the sand of the Deserts, though it does not radiate head and golden warmth. And the scent of the ocean, while it is not the scent of his beloved Tundra, is sharp and refreshing, like the ice and snow. He thinks perhaps he could grow to like it. The sound of the waves crashing on the rocks isn’t the same sound as the Falls, but it is a loud water sound and he supposes he might like that eventually also. Brennen never knew his mother, but like any true Tundra stallion, it had been his father he had strived to emulate anyway. Texas hadn’t given him family (though Brennen knows, in some abstract way that there must be many siblings wandering around), or a childhood; the only thing Texas had given his son was the Tundra, and to a lesser extent the Falls. And he had served the Tundra faithfully from the day he stepped foot within its chilly borders, and the Falls in his own personal way. But they are gone, and Brennen does not know how to bring them back. And at some point, he has to move forward. He is ground-bound when she finds him, but with his wings partially extended, eyes half-closed, enjoying the feel of the sea breeze ruffling through the inky black feathers. Too long he had been without his wings, and he felt like twice the man he had been just after the reckoning since Djinni had restored them for him. The fact that the fae had also seen fit to give him his ice control back – perhaps as a reward for getting off of his lazy butt and starting to find his place in the new world – doesn’t hurt either. When it becomes clear that the approaching mare is coming for him, he slits his eyes open a little wider to watch. She’s striking, her colors bold, and moves with grace and authority. Of course, he’s met few Amazons who didn’t. The stranger strikes him as one of those who probably populated Nerine from the Jungle, and he wonders as she gets closer if she’s one who favors or does not favor the addition of stallions to their ranks. Brennen assumes there must be some detractors amongst them. His question is answered with her first word – her name – because Djinni had told him that their Queen intended to continue to allow mares and stallions. She’d also said something along the lines of “separate but equal”, which he is not sure is exactly what Nayl has in mind after she calls it a matriarchal society. Still. He had agreed to come knowing it was the new Jungle, and he can’t say he’s surprised if they’re not really equal. He’d settle for partially equal, at least for now. “Your majesty,” he responds, casually, straightening and pulling his wings in to his sides, though he does not bow or offer any other obeisance. He has never been overly formal with any monarchs; the closest he had ever come was a true respect for Errant, but even then, he had never been the type to be deferential. “I’m Brennen.” The stallion watches her as she speaks, finding her iciness amusing. He brings out the most interesting responses in the Jungle women, and finds them endlessly fascinating. “Well,” he muses, swishing his tail casually, “I believe it was described to me as ‘separate but equal’. Is that not true?” He didn’t really answer her question, and he knows that, but it’s been too long since he bantered with an Amazon, friendly or not-so-friendly, and he can’t quite help himself. hold me in this wild, wild world and in your heat I feel how cold it can get BRENNEN
02-03-2017, 09:32 PM
02-06-2017, 12:57 AM
hold me in this wild, wild world 'cause in your warmth I forget how cold it can be The honorary title drops off his tongue without thought, though he would be interested in her avid response, if it was obvious. To him, it is simply the correct address; he comes from a time and a people when it was more common and sometimes necessary. The title itself does not confer the respect some might think; that must be earned from him. But a little courtesy never hurts anyone. He smiles blithely through her scrutiny, unconcerned, and flicks ears forward to catch her words. The smile lingers through his name and then fades, something else flashing in his honey-brown eyes when she says ‘You were in the Brotherhood once’; he pauses a moment but then words flow from him almost unbidden, that dark loss deep in his gaze, undeniable. “I was always in the Brotherhood. I am here because there is no more Brotherhood.” He doesn’t want to do any of this under false pretenses – he will not have her thinking that he would be here if there was still a Tundra or a Brotherhood to go home to. Nayl might not want to be second choice, but surely as a woman who has lost her own Jungle, she will understand at least some of what lurks in the dark of his silence. When she lightens, Brennen allows himself to slide back into congeniality, his half-smile returning to his face, the darkness pushed to the very back of his being for later contemplation. He listens to what she says and what she doesn’t say, and wonders where the other stallions have gone. Kicked out for lack of usefulness, or gone on their way willingly? When he leaves, for a part of thinks that outcome will someday (maybe a long time from now, but someday) be inevitable, how will he depart? Contemplating these things, listening to her words, he doesn’t speak again until she addresses him with a direct question. Then, the smile remains but takes on a slightly predatory edge, just a hint of the Brennen who is dangerous. “I’m a warrior.” he states it plainly, shifting and mantling his wings a little, the black feathers nearly shimmering in the way the light hits them as he carefully folds each one. “I have been a warrior, and advisor, a father, and a grandfather in the Tundra. What do you see me doing for Nerine, Nayl?” hold me in this wild, wild world and in your heat I feel how cold it can get BRENNEN
02-11-2017, 10:08 PM
02-14-2017, 07:59 PM
hold me in this wild, wild world 'cause in your warmth I forget how cold it can be It would be easy to say age had mellowed him, but the truth is, Brennen was born an old soul in many respects. There are, of course, a few things that he is staunchly loyal too, and his fury when those few things are violated is a beautiful (if dangerous) sight to behold. His Tundra, his family, his trusted friends – for them, he would move heaven and earth. But about most issues, he is ambivalent; or, if not ambivalent, at least not prone to fits of passion about it. She drops the words casually in response to his query, and he watches her, a different gravity to the weight of his gaze. “I don’t offer that kind of trust easily,” he finally says, “but neither would I betray my sovereign or my home without quite a bit of advanced warning.” A hint of a smile in his eyes, just the sliver of humor on his face when he says: “I can assure you I will always tell you what I am thinking.” He had assigned personal loyalty to few of his Kings on their own merit, but always he had been loyal to them insofar as they were the ruling monarchs of the Tundra. Brennen was also not totally above participating in the changing of Kings, through force, mutiny, or neglect, but never on a whim, and never without a very good reason. He cannot guarantee any sort of allegiance to a monarch forever, not without the ability to see all the things they might do in the future, but his personal loyalties, once earned, are quite hard to lose. Too hard, some might say; his loyalty to a mare who had once swapped their son for his daughter with another mare and told none of them was testament to that. (Even then, he had been angry beyond words with Neraza but he understood, he loved her, and he forgave her). The other task she sets is easier, and he smiles broadly at the thought of teaching would-be warriors once more, at the remembrance of the satisfaction of physical exertion and the sweet burn of wounds acquired in battles both friendly and antagonistic. “That I can do,” he promises with a laugh, “As fighting was my first love, and my attachment to it lingers still.” She looks away from him, but he waits patiently, feeling that she is not done speaking. Something else brews inside her pretty head and fire-bright eyes, and Brennen will patiently wait for it. For a moment while silence reigns he breaths in the salty air, considers the way the wind tangles his hair and teases his feathers, leaving behind remnants of salt and sand instead of the once-familiar ice and snow. But at her next words, when she finally turns curious eyes on him again, Brennen goes very still (perfectly still), the only sign that he still lives for a long minute of heartbeats is the longing in his eyes. (He can tell himself he will grow fond of Nerine, but it is a stopgap, nothing more; the Brotherhood is more than just a vanished piece of land). “I would give much and more for the return of the Brotherhood.” he says finally, voice so cool it would seem to burn like fire. At this point, he thinks that she reads him quite well, and he speaks no more. Brennen doesn’t think he needs to explain that there are types of loyalties, and that while personal loyalties can be built brick by brick on respect and affection and trust, they can also be bought. Everyone has a price, even ageless stoic ice-warriors, and he thinks that she has found his even in this singular conversation. hold me in this wild, wild world and in your heat I feel how cold it can get BRENNEN | |||||||||
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