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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


    we will tame the vicious seas; lior
    #1

    She calls it the Unbecoming, the day the old world died. For many, it was devastating; it was the end of the beautiful lives they had built around themselves, the splintering of something comforting, something familiar. They had been torn from family and friend, scattered across a land that was new and unrecognizable – terrifying in its strangeness. They had been pulled from homes, and those homes had been ruined in their wake, undone and then used as the bones of a new society. It had been so much change, too much new, and it overwhelmed them.

    For Syrine, it was different.

    When the world unhinged, when the magic in the mountain pulled her to it, she was set free. The Cove had always been home, home from the very first moment she opened her eyes and swallowed the scent of ocean brine. But home and comfort were two very different things. She cannot remember her mother, and she never knew her father, no gentle caress from warm, satin lips. But she will always remember that soft shade of purple and how the color looked when it was edged so carefully in stark white lines. She will always remember how it felt with his mouth against her skin, and his iron buried like blades in the thrum of her veins. At first, she had not understood why it always rained on her, why the sun never split the cloud above her head to dry the steel and tawny of her delicate back. But he was eager to show her why, eager, when he drew patterns in her pretty flesh, ribbons of red against the white and grulla. It was because the world wept for her –because even the sky grew weary of watching such things.

    But then one day the mountain reached for her (it reached for everyone, she is not special) but she was plucked from his grasp, hidden somewhere beyond the reach of purple and iron. At first she had not understood, could not fathom an existence that lacked violet and violence, but then the rain had gone and she found it easier to believe. If the sky did not weep for her still, surely she must be as new and changed as the rest of the world. Then, when those wings had unfurled from the knots of muscle on either side of her shoulders, as soft and gray as the storm clouds that had been her childhood shadow, she knew for certain that this world would be better. 

    She picks her way through the meadow, burying herself among the red and gold of autumn, grateful that the wildflowers have all wilted in the cooler weather, that there is no pale purple to watch her pass. Her wings are tucked against her back, soft and grey, and she is used to their weight now, used to their warmth where once there was only the cold, endless tears of a torn open sky. Where she walks at the edge of the meadow, following just outside the line of shadow cast by the trees from the forest at its edge, the grass is tall and untrampled. Her lips brush the stalks, not tasting, but memorizing the texture of bristling gold, smiling when the wind pulls them from her reach. The Cove did not have such grass. The salt from the sea had tempered everything, and the vegetation had been short and dull and dry. 

    There is a sound to her left, a sound from the shadows beneath the nearby trees, and she turns to face it with eyes wide and blue and glacial, framing a white face freckled with bits of soot and steel. Her wings tighten around her sides as she searches the dark, waiting for the dull gleam of iron or the flash of lavender.  But neither comes, so foolishly, slowly, she takes one hesitant step toward the trees. 

    “Is someone there?” Her voice is like a chime, soft and resonant when the wind carries the words away.

    syrine
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    #2

    And I don't want the world to see me
    He is not God's perfect creature. He was a product of creation from a monstrous horse and some sort of magic that was beyond his comprehension. A blood offering with the devil in return for a punching bag, a chew toy. At one point, not long ago, Beqanna's own blessing vibrated through his veins and engulfed his very being. He could change, morph, be who ever he wanted at a whim. Wings had spread thickly in coarse black feathers to blot out the sky. Lior had been powerful, wild.

    But then the Reckoning had happened.

    Gone were his abilities, the wings, the callous hatred for all things. In it's place stood a simple man, naked and vulnerable...but truly free.

    Gray eyes had fallen upon her long before she sensed him. When Lior no longer relied on the magic, his senses became sharper, clearer. The large black stallion stands amongst the dense thickets of thorns and dying foliage with no inclination of emotion. The mare, teetering on the edge of a frightful collapse, moves passed him with the audible 'crunch-crunch' of brown dry leaves. He is not one to bother with others, preferring a life of solitude. He notes the way her moves, the hesitant steps, the dilation of seeking nostrils, the carefully placed heather green wings. For a moment, Lior feels a tiny pang of jealousy before it is banished by the idea of Gunsynd...his maker.

    The stallion prefers to only move from his rooted place when he can feel the static of her fear growing. One large feathered hoof finally draws him towards her, coming from his place of seclusion. He emerges with a small grunt as he eyes her carefully, swallowing the blue of her irises with his own gray reflections. "I am." One would never considered Lior a stunning or enthusiastic linguist for he spared no words for sheer conversation in effort to thrust aside the comfortable silence that he has learned to adore. Every syllables tip toes from his tongue strategically while the steel of his gaze fixates on her softer form.

    He does not smile to ease electricity that practically pops in the atmosphere around them but instead, Lior allows it to hang between them. Long lashes fall over the darkness of his eyes in a slow blink. Inhale. Exhale. "Lior." He offers his name calmly as it seemed the right thing to do. A moment passes as he notices the freckles that scatter over her feminine features like constellations and Lior can feel a small tug on his lips absentmindedly in response to this small realization
    'cause I don't think they'd understand.
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