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Private  - biblical loopholes

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Played by Offline Kezz [PM] Posts: 20 — Threads: 7
Signos: 1,010
Inactive Character
#1



R     A     Z     I      E     L
o f   h o u s e   a z h a d e



"You're a shitty loser, you know that?" Raoul barked at him as they dropped to a clattering trot, their flanks blooming, shoulders glistening.

Raziel knew better than to take his brother's bait, knew better than to spread that smug grin a little wider with a retort that would only irritate his own skin. But knowing better didn't mean much when you were a twin. "And if Mother hears you swearing she'll cut out your tongue; did you know that?" Raoul laughed at him, raspy and low, but Raz did not miss the way he stared a little longer into the sea of faces that swarmed the bustling streets of the capitol and, for him, that was enough. Now who was wearing the smug grin?

They strolled lazily (like kings, like two burning suns) swerving synchronously between chariots and beggars that bled into one hedonic haze. Princes of the Capitol and of the Rats beneath their feet. 

Raziel can feel the memory of what is about to happen begin to stir, like a beast awoken from its slumber. And he can do nothing as it rears its ugly head; he cannot bind its thirsting claws or sever its bulging jaw. He stands witness before a jury that condemns the sky and the gold that runs from cracks in their dark, dark skin. 

And when the gavel comes down, it is Raoul who bears the tremor. 

There is blood, there is fire and there -- there goes his brother's skull, bouncing impossibly like an overinflated ball down the cobbled street. He can do nothing. He is small and limp and he cannot breathe when Raoul's eyes, gore-red holes drilled into his freshly severed head, flash open to seek him so.




The heavy blue of dawn was monstrously overwhelming. 

He woke to the sensation of cool, sweat-licked sheets clinging to his damp chest; a curse even in summer. For though the nights were short, they remained buried in a chill that would rattle even the fleshiest of men, and Raziel Azhade was far from fleshy. For a broad, dull moment Raziel simply lay, staring at the intricate green and gold Damask detailing along the canopy and draperies. It calmed him: tracing the elegance of the satin weave and wondering what secrets his ancestors had sewn into its hem. This was not an uncommon occurrence -- for the man to jolt upright as black wept into blue, breathless from the nightmare that crept into his sleeping mind - over and over again. 

Deja Fucking Vu. 

Gahenna stared at him from across the room, her milk-drenched gaze tunnelling into his skin. He knew she would have been watching him for hours (far longer than he cared to know) waiting for the nightmare to begin; for the sweat to rain and pool, for his eyes to pivot and his chest to hammer. She had tried once, just once, to wake him from his torment. She had never tried again. 

The first brilliant beams of sunlight were bludgeoning their way through the elephantine curtains, striking the marble floor with fine clubs made of honey and dew. He thought to himself that it looked beautiful. That fight; that wanton greed. The sun would not rest when it knew of the shadows that lurked out there still. As he rose with Gahenna at his shoulder, combing his spear-straight hair, sweeping out of his grand bedchamber, drawling down the spiral staircase, stealing along a back corridor and out at last into the desert that knocked ever closer upon Saudagar's door, Raziel wondered what it would feel like: to possess the passion of the sun. 

Or, even, to want anything at all.


-

art by nifty-boi | table by kezz

@elif <3333





[Image: deadj5s-7ea0ce6c-63ed-494d-a2b1-1ea29d98..._KYezSKapw]





Played by [PM] Posts: N/A — Threads:
Elif
Guest
#2


it was meant to be simple
just one golden rule

E
lif isn’t sure what brings her here, out to the border of the desert where sand merged into city, where everything was the same color, a hundred shades that added up to brown.

She has not been sleeping well. Surely none of them have been, not since the news that their queen was dead; maybe even before that, for none of the past few years in Solterra have been particularly kind, much less normal. The pegasus tells herself that it isn’t hunger that wakes her, that has her leaping from her small balcony and into the chilly pre-dawn sky. Instead she tells herself that the cold against her skin, the wind between her feathers and the moon overhead, is like a little piece of that evening with Mateo, at the altar of the world. Never mind that it comes with its own kind of discomfort.

If it is cold she wants, then good: it is all she gets, when the capitol falls away to scattered estates and the song of coyotes. There is shame in the pit of her stomach when she licks dew from a thorny, stubborn shrub, and worse when she has a moment of fleeting jealousy for a lizard that goes darting by, a thick beetle in its jaws. Though in a way it’s a comfort, to know that not all of the Day Court suffers the way its people do beneath the silver king’s tightening fist.

She could leave, she knows. She should leave. It would be as easy as spreading her wings and pointing any direction but east. But stubbornness is as much in her bones and blood as sunlight, as fire, as wind; she will not abandon her city (this she repeats to herself, daily, a mantra that becomes less sure every sunrise. Have so many of them - her family included - not already abandoned her?).

Now the sun is coming up and she’s forgotten again why she’s out here. There is no water among the dunes, any filly still on milk knows as much. But there seems nothing better to do than walk, and listen to the song the wind sings, lonely in the dunes - until the cry of a hawk brings her head up, green eyes bleary.

And there, like a mirage, is Saudagar.

Elif has never been within the estate’s grand grounds. But though the Erdogans were culled from their modest rank with the fall of Zolin, she has still learned of the families whose stars far outshone their own, and has passed over the grounds more than once as a curious girl - though she cannot remember now whether her feelings were of jealousy or disdain (likely both). And she remembers, though dimly (after all, it was another world then) a boy, not much older than her. She had never had an ear for gossip, or she might have remembered that boy had a twin.

Now all she sees is wealth, and power, and both those things mean water and food. Still, were it not for the haze of exhaustion that lays over her like the new dawn, she might have turned away. Instead, defiance draws her upright, lifting her narrow head, and she begins the long approach to the Azhade’s grand door.

Surprise stops her short when she meets the unicorn, a great beast at his side (a hellhound, she remember blearily), and she has to squint her eyes against the glare of the sun off of his molten gold.

She has forgotten her manners entirely. She should curtsy, she thinks dimly, or at least duck her head in some semblance of feigned respect - but all she manages is “Water,” and then she sways on her feet, falters, and ends up on her knees all the same.


{ @Raziel | this got dramatic











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