A set of eyes had pinned him
Became his version of a kingdom
She's everything the devil can't be
When she's singing to me, "Glory"
There were two sides of Novus.
One was very transparent. It was very obvious. Novus was made up of four solar courts dedicated to their patron deities. Worship of the assigned ideology within those said courts was not mandatory, but encouraged. Within Terrastella, the general consensus was that Vespera was a
bitch. Apparently everyone else liked to rub elbows with their patrons. Every court had a ruling sovereign. Beneath them, a regime and council. Days of peace were followed by nights of tension. Dawn would come, and the cycle would repeat. This was all very factual, very ‘by-the-books’. Very obvious.
The other was far more mysterious. Magic crawled through the world of Novus, although it was not near as prominent or obvious as it had been within Helovia. It slid through the soil, lucrative and cunning, waiting for the right person to gift
or curse with its abilities. Creatures bonded their souls to worthy, and sometimes
unworthy equines. Israfel had already been touched, either by birthright or arcane design, she didn’t know.
All she knew was that while Novus had two sides, the one that called to her now was very much the latter.
’You’ll go?’ Solaris questioned, gliding lazily through the air as Israfel sashayed across the familiar crags and stone slabs. Every step was done so with confidence. This treacherous terrain did not daunt her, not when she had patrolled these very cliffs since her arrival into Novus. Vermilion eyes glanced upwards towards the placid ivory Phoenix, taking in her tame colors. There was no missing the look of concern within Solaris’ lavender eyes, however.
Israfel had awoken with the call. It was a familiar summons, the invisible, intimate
pull that tugged upon her very being with such coercion and persuasion that even she, strong and defiant and stalwart, had been powerless to refuse. It sunk below her skin, piercing her muscle and bone, wrapping around with a merciless grasp and
pulling as though the puppeteer, and she, the show.
’Come,’ it seemed to say, an ethereal whisper echoing in her ear and wrapping itself around her brain,
’Come, Sun Daughter. Prove your worth.’ Oh, but she would.
“Are you surprised?” Israfel questioned after a moment of deliberation, a vermilion stare glancing briefly to the gliding Phoenix above her head before refocusing on the path in front of them.
“I have to. This… I know this. I know what this is.” Or so she thought. This was not the first time that she had felt this mystical summons. The last time had resulted in her death, swallowed whole and burnt alive by the very element that flowed through her veins, her
birthright. The treachery against her own bloodline stung to that very day, respect sullied by resentment and confusion, but she was not a
coward. If this was, indeed, the same magic that had called to her, lured to her, sung promises and sweet nothings in Helovia that had resulted in her premature death, then Israfel would not turn away from it.
Strength filled her body, determination igniting a flame that nothing could douse. Impenetrable and impregnable, her strength would not fail her. Not today.
“I will not fail.” A promise, a vow.
The first guiding fire was spotted shortly after, dancing about in the darkening sky as though placed upon an invisible torch. The flames twisted and curled, calling to her like luring fingers, and Israfel passed it by with a flick of the tail. A second flaming beacon twisted and curled not too far off, and she passed it by as well with a sidelong glance. A third emerged, floating curiously in the air, a fourth, a fifth, a sixth… Like beacons they guided her path, pulling her along, that feeling within her breast growing with every confident step she took. Every step guided her closer to the edgeline of the cliffs, but her eyes, stalwart, dauntless pearls of fierce vermilion, were locked upon the twisting, roiling shape in the distance placed against a backdrop of colors from the sunset lowering behind it.
Recognition bloomed within her heart in the manner of a second. The Sun Daughter’s ears tipped back, lips parting to form a savage snarl with teeth bared, and her eyes narrowed into pinpricks of judgement. She could hear it, the sounds of popping and crackling as though encountering the world’s largest bonfire. In a way, she supposed she had. A large, all consuming pillar of flame and destruction ascended towards the heavens only paces ahead, just off the edge of the cliffs. The spiraling wall twisted and turned, glowing a vibrant orange and illuminating past the growing darkness of the oncoming night. It was a magnificent sight, awe inspiring and terrifying, and the Warden of Terrastella understood well what might happen here.
Even from this distance she could feel the heat, the power, the waves of unseen heat buffeting her frame and toying with the strands of her hair as though a dry summer breeze. It pressed against her almost intimately like a long-lost lover, both adored and hated, and the Daughter of the Sun God took a determined step forward.
“Not this time,” she whispered. To herself, to this pillar of flame, to her father, she didn’t know, but the words escaped rose-kissed lips before she could think to stop them. Not this time. Never again.
Piercing the veil that ensnared her was Solaris, the avian’s fearful words echoing in the back of her head.
’Don’t do this, child. I was sworn to keep you safe, not to stand by and permit you to kill yourself.’ Israfel straightened her shoulders, a confident action of rolling them back almost elegantly and letting her wings lift from their lax position tucked against her sides and fan out. The gilded markings across the entirety of her body seemed to
sing and
hum with a visceral, feral sort of
need, and when her eyes met the concerned, fearful lavender gaze of Solaris, her vermilion stare seemed to glow.
“I have to do this… Stay here.” The order was given, and Solaris understood. The Phoenix’s heart thumped rapidly in her chest, watching her bond-mate straighten herself, prepare in whatever way was possible, and launch herself into the sky with a sweep of her glowing wings.
Israfel took to the skies, kicking off of the earth with a sweep of powerful wings and strong legs. The hot winds rushed her by, but her eyes were locked on the dancing flames rising into the sky.
Red, red, red, it was all she saw. There was no sky, there was no ocean; it was
all fire. Churning, dangerous, powerful,
beautiful fire.
’Come’ it said to her, pulling, yanking, beckoning once more, a sweet caress to the most tender of places,
’Come through’.
Come through.
The Sun Maiden’s ears flattened amidst strings of ivory and gold, pale, nimble legs stretching out as her wings steered her towards the task ahead of her. Come through, the voice had said, and she would. Wind buffeted her, hot as embers and coals, and the wind caused her eyes to tear up. Her expression was twisted in a determined grimace, a dangerous snarl of determination and stalwart ambition, and the flames began.
Upon her horn, the gilded pattern of etchings upon the ivory surface and the down of her wings, the golden markings woven intimately upon her body, the flames erupted. Familiar, soothing, and
hers to control. This would not stop her. Not this time. Her life was hers to keep, to live, to breathe, to experience the world in its entirety and nothing would stop her.
Like a flaming comet, Israfel collided with the roiling side of the pillar. It buffted her, fighting, wild and unpredictable heat enveloping her whole and for a moment she panicked. For a brief moment, the fear of pain, of agony, and death set itself alight within her chest… But then the pillar seemed to
bend, the white-hot wall of it seeming to give way beneath her courage and determination, and she passed into it. Inside the pillar, her hair flying about her face from heat and rising wind, Israfel laughed.
It was not a soft laugh. It was wild, triumphant, and feral. The sound itself was swallowed by the sheer volume of the wildfire spinning around her, rising up, up,
up. This was her birthright. This was why she had been born. This fire, it was
hers. Where one might expect pain, she felt nothing. Oh, she could feel the flames and the sheer amount of heat that they gave off, cloaking her body in sweat and perspiration. They licked, caressed, and kissed against supple ivory flesh, but it did not burn. It did not maim, or char, or inflict any sort of pain. Instead, it did the opposite; it gave life.
New power seemed to flow into her very being, resonating and echoing within the deepest part of her core. It sang to her, flowing through her veins, pushing and pulling in time with the beat of her heart and the path of the blood in her veins. A strength filled her, youthful and eternal, and somehow, she
knew.
Vermilion eyes gazed upwards towards the yawning mouth of the spiraling pillar, her hair whipping around her face by the sheer force of it all, and slowly then did her eyes close. The laughter died on her lips, replaced by an odd sense of peace, of belonging, of understanding, and even a tender touch of
apology.
Papa.
With the thought, everything stopped. The flaming pillar gave one mighty display of power and might, twisting and pulling itself up from the soil of the cliffs to disappear forevermore in the evening sky above. The red was replaced with the encroaching darkness of night, the all consuming, sweltering heat giving way beneath the expected kiss of autumn chill. Israfel’s hair fell back about her neck, her body covered in sweat and steam began to rise from her quivering frame. Somehow, her golden, cloven hooves had found purchase on the edge of the cliffs, her eyes facing the last dredges of the dying sun.
Breathless, she gulped in large swallows of cold air. The tears still stung at her eyes from soot, heat, and ash, and somehow, they began to fall, rivulets staining her sweat-soaked cheeks. Perhaps they were the tears that she had never allowed to fall for her homeland, from her previous experiences and the shock of death and revival, too proud and headstrong to give in to her tears… Perhaps they were from the overwhelming sense of emotion, the depths and spirals that had swallowed her in the leftover wake of adrenaline and victory.
Once more, laughter wracked her frame, but it was not the manic snap that had happened while in the heart of the tornado. No. This was a weak, tear-filled laughter of someone who had gone to hell and back, who had experienced loss and pain and agony, who knew darkness and light and the lingering stain of self-doubt. Israfel was trying. She was
trying, and, and…
Lifting her jaw, the Sun Daughter let the tears fall like gemstones to the soil below. Unashamed. Each tear caught the dying sunlight, and fell to the ground beneath her hooves, but she could not tear her eyes away from the lingering remnants of the sun. Vaguely Israfel was aware of Solaris hesitantly arriving at her side, but the Phoenix was notably cautious, sensing her bond-mate’s inner turmoil and confusion. For now, Solaris would allow the Warden time to process and grieve.
Israfel knew. Oh, did she know. There was so much she could say, and in the end she said nothing, save a simple elegy that could never be said in person. It was far too late for that.
”Goodnight, Papa. Goodbye.”
And the tears fell.
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Random Events - Thank you so, so much for this thread.
"Speaking."