There was nothing left to say. Negotiations had been attempted already, and they’d broken down. Now all that remained was force of arms. Iraleth raised her sword and settled into her starting stance as the dividing line fell, surveying the field.
More than enough cover to favor Ciara’s ambush tactics on the outskirts. And she wasn’t stupid enough to face Iraleth head-on. That was fine. Iraleth wasn’t the one who had called for this duel. Ciara would no doubt attack first.
The paladin strode into the clearing, raising her sword up level to her head and settling into an ox stance as she extended her senses around her, waiting for Ciara to make a move.
“Really gonna start this without talking to me?”The brush rustled as Ciara steadily approached, eyes locked on Iraleth. She only took a couple steps into the clearing, one hand on a glass ball at her waist, the other hidden behind her back. And beside her, Otis's sword, held in black.
Ciara studied Iraleth's face, before her eyes tightened.
“We don't have to do this, you know.””I wasn’t the one that asked for this. I have already requested for you to recant the duel. Anything that happens next is on your head.”Ciara snorted under her breath.
”Very well, then.”In one fell swoop, she stepped forward, yanking a ball off its latch and smashing it into the ground at Iraleth's feet. As the ball shattered, smoke enveloped the area, seeded with chilli powder. If Iraleth were to remain where she stood, she would soon come in contact with the smoke, causing burning, watery eyes and blindness.
In the same instance, Ciara pulled a twig free and slammed it into the ground.
“Timber!”A tree quickly sprung up, cracking the earth as its roots spread. Ciara grabbed a branch, catapulting herself into the air, over the smoke. And, as her quickling tree fell over and decayed, Ciara remained sailing in mid-air, hoping to dive down on Iraleth with her sword and surprise her with a mighty downwards blow.
Iraleth saw the glass ball in Ciara’s hand moments before it slammed into the ground, and was already hastily backstepping out of the smoke’s radius. That, however, put her in direct range of the tree crashing down upon her. The half-elf’s eyes narrowed. Ciara wanted her to evade. She wasn’t playing that game.
She raised her sword, glistening with Light.
”Cleave!” Iraleth roared, infusing her blade with the namesake Essence she’d just screamed out loud. A flash of steel, and the armored girl cut through the tree trunk cleanly, just in time to see Ciara crashing down upon her.
The paladin took her left hand off of her sword, raising it to grasp Ciara’s sword by the blade with her gauntleted, barriered hand out of midair and
yank, aiming to slam Ciara by her weapon face-first into half of the tree she had tried to use against Iraleth.
Unprepared, Ciara found herself hurtled face-first into the crumbling tree. Her own personal barrier took the edge off, and moments later, the tree disintegrated.
”Is that all?” Iraleth advanced steadily, her left hand uninjured thanks to the Personal Barrier they’d just covered earlier that day.
”If you’d like to stop wasting everyone’s collective time, say the words. Say the damned words. You are not an Umbralist. Now either be one or surrender. This is a farce.”Ciara only grinned, before taking a deep breath, and uttering
“Lotharil.” Before she blew a cloud of pollen towards Iraleth. If impacted, Iraleth would get the seasonal sneezes and watery eyes.
In the next instant, Ciara had stepped into the shadow of her sword, reappearing on the ceiling, one hand holding onto one of the lights, her other hand twirling Otis’ blade. Darkness streaked down the tip, lengthening the sword by at least four times, and she swung it
hard, aiming to take out all the overhead lights in one fell swoop.
Iraleth wasn’t able to evade the cloud this time. She burst through it as quickly as she could, her eyes burning and her nose tortured. Nevertheless, she held in a sneeze, refusing to give Ciara the satisfaction.
The lights went out, and that was the first move Ciara made this duel thus far that Iraleth had seen coming with a hundred percent certainty. For someone with the witch’s skill set, she would have had to practically bathe in darkness out to have any hope of victory. Not that Iraleth was going to let her have that uncontested.
Without hesitating for a moment, she raised her free hand to the air, an utterance sending an orb of light hovering up towards the ceiling. It shone across the field of battle, emanating a weak light that served to keep the shadows at bay, at the very least. Iraleth could have made the light stronger, but this was as much as she could maintain indefinitely without too much strain on herself.
Now, what advantage had Ciara bought herself with her few seconds in the dark…?
As the light illuminated the dark, it almost appeared like pulsating black
feelers rippled all around her. They were thick, blocking out any shapes of trees. One could almost forget they were even in the Iris Record, looking out at this sea of feelers. Every direction looked, where the light grew weak, there were feelers, wriggling in madness, along the floor, in the air, and above, making a canopy of dense, writhing shadow.
Morphing in from the feelers, like pools of goo, forms rose up. They appeared like the shadow of people, or
things, with each having different colored, piercing eyes.
“Finally! We see it with our own eyes!” One shadow spoke.
“It looks delicious.” Said another.
Arms morphed into elongated blades, as the shadows stared gleefully.
“It’s mine!” One called out on Iraleth’s far right. In two quick slides, the shadow was upon her, slashing at her side.
The rest of the four shadows followed suit, one swiping for Iraleth’s leg, another at her arm, one at her chest, and one from behind at her neck.
Disgusting. Iraleth sneered in distaste at what she beheld, her sword at the ready. Was this Ciara’s Ethos, then? It wasn’t
quite the devastation that had ruined her orphanage, her village, but all the same, this shadowy madness brought up old nightmares that had haunted her for years.
The talking shadows closed in, and Iraleth burst into action in response. Cut. Kick. Punch. Headbutt. She tore through the shadows even as they clawed at her armor, rending gouges in the plate. Her glower intensified as she closed her eyes, relying on sound to try to pinpoint where the witch was hiding. Ciara may be stealthy, but Iraleth’s (half) elven ears still provided her some advantage in this regard.
And so it was. Iraleth would be able to hear the swish of a sword as Ciara crept up behind her and lashed out horizontally, hoping to slash her spine.
Her ears twitched. Of course she knew what a sword sounded like, considering she’d trained half her life thus far with one. Iraleth whirled around, parrying Ciara’s sword with her dominant hand. Her other hand reached out, grabbing Ciara by the throat and lifting her up with one hand in a chokehold. Iraleth began to squeeze. Not too tightly, given she wasn’t aiming to snap her neck. Yet. But enough to cut off air.
The sword fell to the ground with a
clunk as Ciara struggled in Iraleth's grasp, hands clawing at the gauntlet.
She couldn't breath, panicked gurgles escaping her mouth.
Her red eyes stared down at Iraleth, a mixture of rage and shock written in them. Before they were all replaced with a growing urge to live, a panicked desire to breathe.
Her lungs burned. There was no lasping off into unconsciousness, no reprieve. Just burning, painful lack of air that drove every instinct to maddening ends.
That madness unhinged something in Ciara. A terrible monster lurking behind the mask.
In a terrible, and swift moment, Ciara opened her mouth, and with all her will, all the force in her mind, she moved essence in a ‘sucking’ motion.
The essence in question?
Iraleth's.
Pinpoints of light shone radiant in swirls as Ciara tore into Iraleth's prime essence, her soul, absorbing as much as she could. It was like a tidal wave of light leaving Iraleth and ending up in Ciara's mouth.
The taste almost made Ciara forget she was being choked.
Exquisite.
Her desire for more food,
real food, became blind ravenousness, intent on devouring
all of Iraleth's lifeforce, right then, right there.
She felt her
soul being sucked away. What was this?! Iraleth’s grip intensified as she channeled Light in panic, purification magics running up her arm. That tore it. She’d finish this now, before Ciara could become a monster in truth.
It was a race against time on both ends. Would Ciara finish devouring Iraleth before the latter purified the former? In the end, the question was academic. The strain on both girls proved to be too much, and they collapsed next to each other in tandem, hitting the ground at the same time, neither rising. Barely breathing. The shadows melted away, leaving the ground marred.