I've gone a million miles
With the same crooked smile
The day was growing late. To the west, the sun slowly fell beyond the reach of the Terminus Sea, enshrouding Novus in a cloak of cool darkness and offering a reprieve of summer’s scorch. It was relaxing, he dared to say, and he set dutifully to the task at hand – to locate, retrieve and mix together two very specific plants. One of them was burdock, a burred plant which hosted blooms of violet during this time of year – and the other, echinacea, a type of daisy that bloomed nearly any color under the sun, and was a giantess of its kind.
Traversing the edges of the cliffs, Atreus was ever cautious of where he placed himself, but fear held no grip on him as he did so for he had faced far greater danger in his life than the possibility of falling to his demise. It would be a shame to do so, truly, but he greatly doubted that such a thing would be his undoing. Eventually, he found one of the things he sought, a cluster of orange echinaceas, and set the basket down that he’d taken from the hospital. With substantial care, he worked to pull the entire plant up from the ground so as to leave the roots intact, doing so with all but a few of them. Laying them back in the basket, Atreus picked it up and continued in his search.
Within an hour’s time, he had collected a significant amount of each plant and proceeded back to the carefully contained fire he’d prepared upon his arrival to the cliffs. It was there that he would extract what he needed and prepare them for use, but as he approached the still flickering flames, he found that somebody else awaited him. One ear cocked back and his brow rose quizzically as he drew near, and suddenly recognition flashed in his eyes. The wild, unruly hair adorned with fragmented bones and other such prizes, laid out over a bony man who still bore the skull of a bovine long deceased.
“… What are you doing up here, you old cod?” He asked as he lowered his head, setting the basket and thus his collection a few feet away from the fire. “The sea will be your end, if your eyes are as bad as I remember.”
And I always give you all you need
But I can see that you're dancing with the devil
@Turhan
be careful with that one, love, he will do what it takes to survive
all contact is permitted and encouraged
05-21-2018, 09:20 PM - This post was last modified: 05-21-2018, 09:20 PM by Atreus
Far to the west, the sun smoldered against the horizon, but it was the trail of smoke that drew Indra's gaze, a velvety dark streak against the deepening purple of the sky. Picking her way along the cliffside path, the unicorn paused, her golden eyes narrowing. She turned her face to the inland breeze, filling her lungs with that deep, raw scent so at odds with the brine blowing in off the sea.
Fire was a word every horse knew—less a thing than a call to action, a rush of heat and need. In the riftlands, it had been but one among a thousand dangers, but Indra knew even so to be wary of lightning in a dry summer wood, of molten rock spilling down glassy black slopes. She knew as well as anyone did that it took but a single ember to turn forest and meadow to ash.
But there was another world, half-remembered, in which fire was a tool to be summoned at will, a gift by which to warm and craft and heal. The knowledge rustled in the back of Indra's mind as she followed the curl of smoke, and soon enough a flicker of light appeared, gradually resolving itself into a small campfire.
This was no wild blaze, come to scorch the earth and bring new growth. This was a fire that had been built, and tended.
It had been a long, long time since Indra had thought of the Ilati—how long, she would have been hard-pressed to say, for time in the rift had been a tricky, treacherous thing, and often the unicorn felt older by far than her four years. The shamans that had raised her, the swamplands that had held her close—they felt less like the past than a waking dream.
But the men before her now were Ilati men, and the realization seared through her like a bolt of light, white and fierce. Impossible, impossible to believe that she had stumbled her way back to Terrastella after all of this time, all of her wandering. But the strings of bones, the mask, the basket full of herbs—
She did not know these two, but that meant nothing; there were always unknown faces among a herd which numbered in the thousands. But both wore marks of status among the Ilati people, and Indra dipped her head low as she approached the small camp, her iron feather winking in the firelight.
"Grandfather," she greeted the elder stallion where he lay, and, turning to the other male, "Uncle. What brings you so far from Tinea?" She hesitated, then went on, "I have been away for some time. Do you have any word of Nahane?"
i n d r a
@Turhan @Atreus hope you don't mind Indra crashing xD
@Atreus , @Indra
Ooc: This is way beefier than the intro. I don't usually make it a habit to throw so much into posts but I was struggling with direction and I'll edit the link to the thread pertaining to where he was before he was here. Dingo, I was kicking around the idea that, in their younger years they've shared a few fires and passed secrets or traded tools of the trade. Feel free to add, I figure it's a good way to establish their previous encounters.
05-27-2018, 03:14 AM
Played by
Dingo [PM] Posts: 50 — Threads: 5 Signos: 330
I've gone a million miles
With the same crooked smile
The answer received was far from unexpected, and it was a shame that the Elder couldn’t see the wickedly amused grin that swept across the poison master’s features. Unlike many of the Ilati, Atreus did not worship Vespera or any deity for that matter – none had helped him get where he was now, and none had come to his rescue when he’d needed it most. Oh, he knew that they were real and that their power was greater than any he could ever own, but he had no need for their grace.
Lowering his head, the man of crimson and silver dutifully set to his task. Taking advantage of the magic gifted to those who passed into Novus’ borders, removed the flowers from the basket and lay them gently in a wide bowl suitable for crushing. From there, he took a rock and began to meticulously crush them, as though he would completely destroy them if not careful in his actions.
Turhan spoke, and Atreus flicked his eyes of black and gold questioningly up towards the lounging man. He had felt a deep rumble from the earth beneath his feet the night prior, a curious thing indeed for in all the years before, he couldn’t recall a single time he’d felt something like it. Sure, Terrastella had experienced minor quakes of the earth in the past, but this had been something different, something that had penetrated his hooves and shaken his very bones. But Atreus did not know the source.
”I haven’t the slightest,” he admitted truthfully, glancing back down to the progression of his work, ”It could be anything – an earthquake, the Gods toying with us. Maybe Vespera guiding you.” But he was not so foolish as to think it was any of those things. Another question came before he could offer his insight as to what may actually be afoot, and this time Atreus quirked a brow at the ramshackle man. “Veneror, you mean?” He asked for clarification sake, “Perhaps I could make the trip, if it were worth my while. I’ll need more than just ’blue blooms’ to go off of, though.” Atreus made to speak further, to inquire as to who ‘Atatu’ was, but was abruptly stopped by the arrival of another.
Craning his neck, Atreus surveyed the grey for a moment, assessing her. Her posture was one that offered respect to both he and Turhan despite the fact that the poison master failed to recognize her. Perhaps even more curious was her choice of words, and the cogs of the man’s mind began to turn with realization. She was Ilati – or at least connected to them in some way, just like Atreus himself was.
He hummed softly beneath his breath as he turned away and directed his attention back on the bowl at his feet and the contents it held. “Flowers,” he answered quite simply because, honestly, it had been his only reason for venturing to the cliffsides of Terrastella. ”Besides, swamp musk hardly suits me.” A grin flashed across his face in that instant, but it was gone as he glanced back in the direction of the dappled girl, that blackened eye haunting against the glint of the flickering fire and the growing darkness. The subject of Nahane was quite easily the most cherished topic amongst the Ilati people, and although Atreus could care less himself, to speak so openly of her hadn’t always been viewed with positivity. In response, the man gave a short and simple, gruffly spoken answer. “No.”
And I always give you all you need
But I can see that you're dancing with the devil
@Turhan @Indra
be careful with that one, love, he will do what it takes to survive
all contact is permitted and encouraged
05-29-2018, 07:11 AM - This post was last modified: 05-29-2018, 12:03 PM by Atreus - Edit Reason: Missing italic -
There was something strange about them, these two men, but Indra could not quite place exactly what. She had grown so accustomed, lately, to strangeness of the vast and earth-tilting variety that it had all but ceased to faze her; but gazing across the campsite at these two stallions edged in the flickering firelight, she was struck by how the small, mortal strangenesses of the world could be just as unnerving.
They did not seem right, for all that their Ilati trappings were as plain as the constellations shining high overhead—and yet those, too, seemed oddly awry, and Indra could not help but frown briefly up at the night sky. Was not the Riverdrake always visible at this time of year? And when had the Serpent slunk so close to the tip of the Sky Queen’s wing? It was as if the very heavens had been shifted—a feat that Indra doubted even the gods themselves could manage.
“The old ones,” she repeated aloud now, eyeing the Ilati elder curiously. “You mean the gods?” She shook her head, her mane gleaming like blood in the gold of the fire. “I have never spoken with them. I leave that to the Witch Doctor, and others touched by Vespera.” In truth, though she had been raised in many of the Ilatis’ ways, she had never joined in their worship of the deities. The world into which she had been born did not keep any gods but time, and magic, and the rift.
To the herbalist she offered a small, sideways tilt of the head, her iron horn flashing with light. “You do not live in the swamp with the others?” she asked him. “To which clan do you belong?” There were dozens, she knew, and while most kept within the borders of Tinea, a few had ventured further afield as the Ilati populations had burgeoned, testing their luck in the wilds of Terrastella and beyond.
She turned again to the masked elder curled beside the fire, struggling to remember whether she might have seen him before at a festival or other gathering. “Nahane will chastise me, for I have surely forgotten your face and name,” she suggested, “but I am pleased to have found your fire all the same. What trouble is it that you speak of, in the mountains?” For she had overheard their earlier words, as she approached, and she knew that there would be much she had missed in her absence. And then, because she didn’t exactly have much else on her agenda, she offered, “I could help to gather your blue blooms. But who is this Atatu?”
i n d r a
I've gone a million miles
With the same crooked smile
“Unfortunately for me, Tinea commands my attention quite often – her arsenal continues to prove useful in my work where her putrescent aroma does not.” Then, she asks of what clan he belongs to, and the curvature of his lips slowly upturns into the beginnings of a gentle, yet ominous smile. “I prefer to think that I do not belong to anything, nor anyone in particular. I offer my aid throughout the Ilati when and where it is needed, and I leave it at that.” It was unlikely that this cryptic response was the answer Indra was looking for, but for now, it was all she would get.
Turhan was speaking then, immediately retracting his previous request that he go and gather ‘blue blooms’ from Veneror Peak. Where one might look on at the Elder in utter confusion or grow frustrated at the way he made no sense, Atreus had grown used to Turhan’s moment of lapse in memory. In five minutes it would all come back to him and the very moment in which they were living now would be gone forever – or it wouldn’t – it was honestly impossible to tell.
Before Atreus could allow for the nonsensical words to go through one ear and out the other, a sound rippled through the air and was followed by a most repulsive smell. His nose crinkled in automatic response, and leaving his concoction to continue boiling over the open flames, he stepped away before he could choke. “You’ll set yourself aflame if the sea doesn't claim you first, old man,” came the bitter words of the poison master, now standing at a distance which he hopes will prove safe against Turhan’s relentless stench.
With a look akin to disgust, Atreus turned his haunting eyes of black and glimmering gold back upon Indra, drinking in her form for a sliver of a second before speaking. ”If you wish to help search, Indra, you are welcome to join me at the mountain peaks.” The man pauses, and through narrowed eyes of annoyance he glances towards Turhan and then back again. ”If there is something happening, our best chance of discovering what it is would be to investigate it ourselves.”
And I always give you all you need
But I can see that you're dancing with the devil
@Turhan @Indra Sorry for the late response my lovelies!! I've had a lot going on <33
be careful with that one, love, he will do what it takes to survive
Quietly Indra listened as the Ilati elder spoke, his mind seeming to drift between place and time with every crackle of the flames. So much of what he said made little sense to her, though whether this was due to confusion on his part, or a lack of context on hers, she could not say. Here and there, reason glinted through the rambling chaos of his speech, and she could see that there was wisdom buried there, the profits of a long and difficult life.
And then he would lose his thread again, drifting off to sleep or loosing the fetor of his bowels. Indra held her breath and did her best to maintain a neutral expression. She could not guess at how old the elder was—Turhan, he had called himself—or what sort of man truly lay hidden beneath the wild, matted mane and filthy, painted hide. She did not doubt that he could be a valuable teacher, if one had the patience to learn from him, and she wondered again about Atatu, and what their relationship might be.
Atreus was gibing the elder in a way that suggested to Indra that they two, at least, were well acquainted, despite the younger stallion’s disavowal of any particular Ilati clan. She had been watching his work as they conversed—crushing flowers, boiling a draught—and had concluded that he was an herbalist. Now she narrowed her eyes, frowning at the contents of his pot. “That is not a healing remedy,” she observed. “Foxglove induces seizures.” Her golden eyes flicked to his, startled comprehension widening them ever so slightly. “You are a poisoner.”
But Turhan was speaking again, his words directed at her. She turned politely back toward him, expecting more of his unsteady digressions, but his words struck her unexpectedly to her core. You are new again. Yes, that was it, wasn’t it? This world that she had once known… It had changed, somehow. The stars were different; the Ilati were different. She was not sure, yet, in what way, but she would find out.
It was almost dizzying, to hear such insight from lips that were crusted still with the remains of some insect he had plucked from the tangle of his mane. With an effort Indra turned again to the poison master. “It would be wise,” she agreed, “to see what is unfolding. We do not want to be caught unawares by some untoward development.” She flicked an ear, her old restlessness stirring again inside of her. She had no appointments, no cause for hurry, and yet she got the feeling that she had tarried here at their fireside long enough. “What is your destination? Do you camp tonight, or continue on?”
i n d r a