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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


    Daleans, anyone;
    #11
    Vida was a bit surprised that the stallion addressed her so quickly after she'd arrived. When she'd gotten here, before she spoke up, he had a nervous look about him. It was clear that he was looking for someone, and when Vida had spoken up, she distracted him. The mare berated herself for doing something so careless; really, could she have been any more rude than that? Was she really so desperate for shelter and safety during these times that she was willing to do what she'd done?

    The stallion, despite this, was friendly. He welcomed her to this group of horses - a family, he called it, something Vida didn't really know much about - before introducing himself by the name of Typhon. Vida dipped her head to say hello before she offered a response, "It's... nice to meet you Typhon. I'm... I'm Vida..."


    OOC: Vida's points can be contributed toward the herd too so they can hopefully claim a land.
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    #12

    He is so very cold.
                    
    It is the first thing he notices when he wakes.  The air is like cool spring waters he’d slipped into as an even younger boy, setting his skin to shiver much the same.  There is no sun glinting off the river’s surface to marginally warm him, no mother to pull him against her in the shelter of her embrace.  There is no fire in his belly, either.  The beast that had woven itself in the chambers of his young heart has since taken flight.  The quakes have dislodged it, he thinks, the rumbling and tearing and breaking scaring off even the most steadfast of creatures. 

    He is alone.
                    
    The yearling rises from his place on the rocky mountainside (so like home that his lungs barely expand with added effort).  The large crowds finding their way down do not dissuade him, though the mists curling away in the distance do.  Something about the way they catch the light and turn like milk.  They make him feel uneasy in their ambiguity, like something is waiting to snatch him from their swirling depths, something new to a world they had once mastered.  He knows, instinctually, that this is a Beqanna brand new; they will have to relearn everything.
                    
    Sabrael doesn’t know where he is going once he reaches the bottom of the mountain, but he is reinvigorated by the warmer air.  He runs by the dazed group of horses flowing into the meadow.  A new sort of fire lights in his legs and lungs as he searches the land for a familiar face.  He is in no hurry, really.  The freedom from his family is worth the small bubble of worry that rises in his chest.  Eventually, though, his eyes lock with another pair he’s known his whole life.
                    
    “Mother,” he says easily, as if the world has not shifted around them.  There is worry in the eyes of everyone else but he suddenly finds he doesn’t share it.  Not with his family finding their way together again like a puzzle regaining all of its pieces (he ignores the fact that his father is markedly absent, that his aunts have not yet appeared – surely, it is only a matter of time until they do).  The bay roan looks to his grandparents next, sees their embrace. This is a new world, yes, but it can be their world.  They do not have to sit idly by any longer.
                    
    His dark eyes settle on each mouth that speaks next, watching each declaration form and pass from the lips of strangers and family alike.  When Tiphon reassures the group with his final words, he solemnly nods his head in agreement.  “We are the future-makers.”  It isn’t much, but it gives him strength nonetheless, fills him with some of his old fire.           



    Sabrael

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    #13
    now you're staring at a queen.
    How easily they had found each other: fate.

    Her life is a series of befores and afters -- before and after Scorch’s death; Ramiel; becoming a queen, a mother; the destruction. Before, she never believed in fate. She was in charge of her own future, every step she took along the way mattered.
    But now?
    She can’t help but wonder if she is entirely at the will of Beqanna or Carnage or some other higher power, if everything she does is predetermined.
    They were all meant, from the very beginning, to fall and rebuild.

    “Yes,” she says, to all of them -- to Ashley and Phaedrus, Vida and Tiphon, to herself. “Vida, it’s wonderful to have you,” she says quietly, politely, and then she hears him. Sabrael. She moves to him, even though he is so close to her already, and reaches out, placing her nose gently on his neck. Ea wants to embrace him, to hold him against her body like she did when he was just barely a weanling, but already he seems much older than before.

    “Yes,” she continues, “we will find a new home. Vida, Sabrael, Adalyn --” she directs her attention to the children and the injured, “you stay nearby, somewhere safe. I will find you again when it’s time to go home.”
    She takes another long look at Sabrael, then turns towards the Mountain. And her fate.


    [so I’m just wrapping up this thread to get the timelines all together -- Ea, Ashley, Phaedrus, and Tiphon all went up to the Mountain to petition for a land, were told to be patient and wait, and have now been granted a land on the Island! Just so y’all are all caught up. Please feel free to start posting there, I’ll get an “all” post up soon!]
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