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    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


    I know someday the smoke will all burn off; Djinni
    #1
    The sky is awash in all the colors of summer’s death.

    The blues, oranges, and pinks of early sunset play and blend on the surface of the spraying ocean.  Droplets land on his grey muzzle, tickling the sensitive skin and making him wish it was someone, not something, evoking the response.  It is still a new sensation.  For one so unaffected by touch for so many decades, he finds himself craving it now.  Now, as the days of hot, hot summer evaporate slowly into fall, Walter recognizes his want.  

    As he stares out across the ocean, he sees a pod of dolphins making their way to their night waters.  They jump and frolic like the butterflies of the sea, breaking up his picturesque scene without a care in the world.  For the first time, he wants to move like they do, wants to understand how that freedom would feel.  Only the skies give him that now.  A thread of playfulness unspools within him.  A part of him wonders if he will trip over it.  A part of him wonders if he will regret it.

    But he finds her anyway.

    “Come,” he says, and it is a command.  But then his lips go crooked (like they always do these days, when he can’t hold it in) and he’s nudging her shoulder and they are off.

    And it’s a little bit darker, but that’s all right because her glow more than makes up for it.  He thinks she looks lovelier now than she ever has.  All pink and warm, like the sunset behind her.  He tells her, because words have never been his problem.  “You look magnificent.”  And then he’s running his grey muzzle down her neck so gently that only his whiskers drag along her skin, because touch is no longer a problem, either.  He is evolved.  He is better, because of her, for her.  She smells like the ocean and the wild oats, but it is not enough tonight. Tonight, he wants to be in the sea, with her.

    On the beach, he wuffs a warm breath in the hollow space behind her shoulder, wanting to continue his whisker-touch trail but wanting other things, too.  He withdraws slowly, regretfully.  Her eyes pull his own up like magnets so that they connect as they have many times before.  This time, they don’t want to let go.  He sees the dark edge of night reflecting in her gaze and he wants to be there for that and all the nights to follow.  He wants walk with her along the swell and receding of the shoreline with the tides as time passes them, as they grow even older together.  But he’s always scared they will lose each other again.

    Tonight, though, his fears are carried far away on the backs of dolphins.

    Walter takes a step towards the water.  "I've never..." he starts, then stops himself.
    He lifts his wings in eager anticipation for the splash at his feet, on his legs.  He looks back at her once (a dare, a challenge) before slipping in.  The water rolls underneath him, and it is almost sensual.  It reminds him of endless cycles, of chasing over and over again forever.  Tonight, he will do no chasing.  She will come to him.  That is the game and there are no rules.


    @[Djinni]
    #2
    The cold air brushes against her sides, tugs at the rosey strands of hair that fall onto her shoulders in an ombre cascade. Her gaze is fixed on the sea. The water dances along the horizon, a peculiar dark shade between emerald and iron. It also rushes in toward the motionless mare, eating away at the cool grey sand upon which she rests her golden hooves.

    The light is seeping away by the time Walter finds her, and Djinni turns to him with a soft and happy smile.

    Her heart has long since stopped leaping each time she sees him, but that exhausting elation still visits now and then. Now is such a time, when the sunset illuminates the familiar length of his face in a way that makes him look almost a stranger. He isn't though; he is something better. Djinni accepts his compliment for the truth it is; she has never had trouble with poor-self esteem.

    He moves away, closer to the water. The empty space where he had stood is now filled with a rush of cool air, a secondary reminder of his absence even as she watches him brace against the incoming surf. A smile tugs at her dark mouth as the water surges against him, but it's not aimed at Walter himself.

    The dun mare moves forward as well, to where the foaming sea whorls about her legs and leaps up to brush at her belly. "I hope you're not too old to learn something new." Djinni says without taking her brown eyes from the rippling water. The dusk is quickly rising; even in these clear and shallow waters her legs are nothing more than shadows in darkness.

    A crisp breeze blows down the cliffs, sending a shiver down her spine that she had not all excepted. She leaps closer to Walter, splashing water high around them but still managing to press her side against his for a moment.

    "You picked the second most terrible season to learn to swim," Djinni tells him with a wry smile, reaching up to press her cheek to his. "Though I suppose I should be glad you didn't choose winter. We'd have had to go to Ischia for that." They could go to Ischia now, she thinks idly; it'd be far more comfortable than this chilly Nerinian shore.

    She forgets that though rather quickly. The water is always where she forgets. For all her shifting, the depths are an antithesis the genie never fully respects. They'll stay here, she thinks, at least for a little while longer. As long as Walter wants it.




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