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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


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    [private]  Waxing Gibbous
    #1

    And the walls kept tumbling down in the city that we love

    Two years ago Eyas had left Islandres for Icicle Isle and never looked back.
    It’d been strange at first, trading brilliant sunsets and black-sand beaches for below-freezing temperatures, but leaving Gale behind had been the most bitter ending to her brief period of happiness there. She never regretted it though.

    Eyas still remembered leaving that very night, the same day she’d wished her brother five years curse-free instead of two. Santana had helped her take their daughter north and Brash had followed, so together her family had transported their lives because of Eyas’ inability to leave little Ehko behind.

    Ehko.
    One of her twins who’d been made with Santana’s help. A little filly, only a year old when she’d been attacked on the shores of their Island home and left for dead. Dead she might’ve been, too, if it wasn’t for magic.

    Now two years later the little one was encased by a large sphere of translucent ice, stuck fast in the snowdrifts far to the west of Icicle Isle where her mother liked to stand guard. Day by day, week by week, month after month Eyas had watched what’d first been a thick covering of ice crystals transform themselves into a massive, magnificent sculpture. At the epicenter (where she couldn’t quite see her anymore) was Ehko.

    It was obvious to Eyas that some sort of magical response had been triggered by her daughter’s near-death experience. This was Beqanna, after all. Nearly anything and everything was possible. The little buckskin mare just wasn’t quite sure what was going on with the massive sphere of ice. Was it a good thing that her dying foal had this happen to her? Or was it a bad thing? For all she knew it could’ve been a spell. Maybe her daughter’s “ice sphere” captivity needed a fire-wielder in order to be broken.

    Or maybe it was a cocoon. Perhaps her daughter came out … differently.
    Maybe she never came out at all.

    All Eyas knew was that there was hope, and where there was hope there was reason for her stay and keep watch over the thing while it grew. So two years later here she was, entrenched in her usual self-isolation on a remote isle to the North, watching the night sky light up with phantom ribbons of colors while she kept watch over the giant ice sphere behind her. On nights like these when the sky was clear and the heavens made gateways of galaxies far beyond their own, Eyas liked to sing to her daughter.

    She crooned softly, more-or-less in harmony with the gently howling winds of old man winter:
    Don’t be afraid
    when the night wolves cry.
    Feast on their bones,
    suck the marrow dry.

    Their teeth may be sharp
    and their sins may be dark,
    but your heart holds a power unknown.

    Grey clouds roll over the hills, bringing darkness from above



    -OOC: this is a plot-purposes thread with myself. Yay.
    ► Powerplay Me : Powers (any)
    #2
    This night was just like any other clear night on Icicle Isle. Perhaps it was a little bit colder than usual, with the rutting season soon passing and true winter on its way. Otherwise it was cold and strangely beautiful. The heavens were clear of any cloud cover, free and naked to show off their stars with a clarity unseen anywhere else in Beqanna. The northern lights floated through them like a trail of magical light, in colors only capable of being replicated - never reproduced. Far below them were the snowdrifts of the northern isle, and in their midst was a skinny, unkempt pegasus mare who stood beside a large ice sphere and sang to herself.

    The melody was upbeat. Nothing like the actual lyrics, themselves dark and puzzling as a myth could be. Resonate and soothing, the notes floated on the frigid winds before dying out and then they stopped altogether when the song had finished. An eerie silence took their place.

    The pegasus turned back to face the ice sphere, struggling to see past the tangled knots of her forelock in the wind, and that’s when she heard it: a cracking sound. The sound of ice fissuring. A threatening sound, dangerous to those who trekked the northern snowdrifts or the risky few who explored glaciers. But the pegasus didn’t run. She stood dead still and waited, until another sharp crack (this one louder than the first) broke the silence, and then she stepped closer to the frozen sphere.

    It popped again, and then once more, and then the crackling grew louder - the chain reaction of a thousand tiny fissures breaking apart the sphere from within, spider webbing their way across the glassy surface in a frenzy. Instinctively sensing danger, the buckskin pegasus lifted a wing to shield herself and the exact same moment a loud CRACK rang out from the sphere. As expected, it shattered. The final crack forced the mosaic pieces apart, flinging shards of deadly ice in every direction. They cut through the frozen feather’s of the pegasus’s wing and some even embedded themselves into her skin, gouging her with marks that quickly began to bleed, but she seemed not to care.

    She lowered the wing now riddled with holes and stared with a bloody face at the place once occupied by the giant sphere of ice, dazed by what had just happened.

    There, lying on her side under a crumpled, leathery wing of her own, was the pegasus’s daughter. Two years had come and gone, and every second of them had kept Ehko encased in ice. Now that she was free, it was obvious as to why.

    Her wounds had healed. Her skin was as fresh and new as it’d been three years ago when she’d been born. She’d only been a yearling when the seamare had tried to eat her, but nothing of that horrible encounter in Islandres remained on the now somewhat-mature horse. Her perfectly blue eyes opened in shock and she gasped her first breath of painful air in over two years, exhaling with a raspy, moaning cry. The pain of her rebirth was all she could feel.

    Leaving bloody marks in the snow around her, Ehko’s mother walked slowly toward her daughter. She watched the form in the snow shiver and writhe, trying to remember the sensation of being alive again after living more than half of her life suspended from it, and said nothing. It was clear from her expression that she was astonished. She came to stand over the body covered in frozen scales, glinting blue like the ice they’d been encased in, and breathed hot plumes of her own air down upon the nearly-grown child.

    “Ehko?” She asked.

    Her daughter whimpered. Slowly, her gold-and-white patterned head lifted from the snow to gaze up at the blood-flecked face of her mother, and the torture reflected in her eyes belied how she was feeling despite how she currently looked.

    “Mother?” Ehko responded. “Where are we?”
    [Image: cBWs9N.png]





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