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Excruciating pain pierced his body as flesh was rent apart and stitched back together by threads of magic. He felt his body being remade even as his spirit arrived to inhabit it, its physical traits being altered from what it had been to what suited his nature. The process was short but harrowing; none of his senses worked except to experience the agony of being reborn, he could not move nor breathe, and he did not know where he was or why he was there.
Then air rushed in to fill his freshly formed lungs and he felt his weight come to rest on a pair of strong legs. As if waking up abruptly from a deep slumber, the world came crashing down on his senses all at once, momentarily overwhelming him: the smell of fresh blood; the sound of frantic, shouting voices; the warmth of a late summer evening.
His vision came last as the complex organs that were his eyes settled into their new shape. He found himself in what appeared to be a small room of the kind that were typically found in Rodorian inns, adequate yet sparsely furnished. At his feet lay a piece of parchment with the telltale scorch-marks of a cheaply written incantation, still smoking from its contents being destroyed by the magic channeled through it. And ahead of him, perhaps two meters from where he stood, was a broken door hanging off its top hinge, swung open to reveal two armor-clad men.
The men stared at him with eyes wide in fear and uncertainty. One held an arming sword in his hand while the other wielded a short spear, both of which were stained with blood.
But even more telling was the crest on the tabards they wore over their armor: the full-body profile of a drake, wings outstretched, tail coiled and talons primed to strike.
A cold, sharp sense of dread came over him.
Crusaders...His attention shifted to the floor at the feet of these men, where he saw a trail of familiar red liquid leading toward where he stood, and he belatedly realized that he was standing in a small puddle of blood. There was no one else in the room with him besides these crusaders; the one who had summoned him was nowhere to be seen.
“Where is she?” he asked, panic making his voice high-pitched and desperate. To be summoned to the Corerealm was already rare for most divines, but to be summoned to Rodoria specifically and without feeling any magical compulsion to obey his summoner? It had to be her. It had to. So why was she not here?
The armed men looked at each other nervously, then one of them turned his head and shouted over his shoulder: “We need help up here! The damned creature summoned an angel!”
Creature? He heard and felt his heartbeat in his ears and it felt as though the ground was tipping under his feet. He unnecessarily looked down at his hands, visually confirming that they were indeed his hands, complete with dark maroon skin and pale, hooked claws at the tip of each finger. This was a full summoning; he was not inhabiting some inanimate material, a corpse nor possessing the living body of another. A life had been sacrificed to bring him here and create a suitable body for him. Someone had died, and their body had supplied the raw materials to shape his vessel.
Again he looked at the blood on the ground. Looked at his hands. Looked at the crusaders, at their bloodied weapons. And with an intense feeling of revulsion, he knew.
He clutched his chest with both hands and let out a long, heartrendingly despondent wail as he felt his mind reeling with the conclusion he had tried so hard to not reach. The two crusaders took a step back, understandably cautious and fearful in the face of a literally otherworldly immortal, yet stayed in the doorway, blocking his only means of escape.
They called her a “creature”, he thought, his gaze drawn once more to their freshly used weapons.
Members of the Crusader's Guild. Minions of Kevalorn the Holy. Humans who blame the Withering on the other sapients. Who hate them.The chill of fear turned to white-hot rage in an instant, and the hate he felt for himself paled before what he felt for these people. To these disgusting mundane beings, who tormented and killed each other for such stupid reasons.
He drew in a deep breath before roaring at them, his voice now deep and booming with the blazing intensity of his wrath: “What did you do?!”
The spear-wielder lunged at him, aiming to plunge his weapon into the chest of his quarry. The angel flung his left arm out to meet the attack, his fury so intense that he did not even feel it piercing his forearm and getting stuck in his flesh, while his right hand thrust forward and seized the crusader's head by the face.
The attacker let go of his spear and instead clutched the fingers palming his skull, trying desperately to escape while crying out for help.
Hearing this only fanned the flames of the angel's ire.
No one helped her.He had only been in Reniam for a few seconds and had not had time to channel much divine energy from his native realm yet, but at this point he directed every shred of power at his disposal into his hand, into the crusader's head. He poured all his hatred into him, letting it fuel his desire to destroy.
The crusader's calls for aid turned to screams of agony as black smoke began pouring from between the angel's fingers. Skin sizzled, hair burned and blood boiled until the screams ceased and the man's body went limp in his grasp.
As his fingers uncurled, the released crusader collapsed nervelessly onto the floor, his still-smoking face a bloody mess.
He turned his attention to the other crusader, and any courage that might have survived seeing his comrade brutally executed left the man as he felt the angel's loathing focus on him. The human turned on his heel and fled, though his footfalls were soon joined by what sounded like numerous others.
It was likely the right course of action to retreat and regroup before facing someone who had demonstrated the ability to kill with magic like that, of course. It was what any sane person would do after witnessing an ally murdered with such brutal efficiency.
At least that is what anyone unfamiliar with Angels of Deceit would think.
The angel grasped the spear that was still embedded in his arm with his right hand and pulled it out in a quick motion. Immediately he felt his flesh begin to knit itself back together to undo the damage it had sustained, just as he felt the energy he had just expended being replenished and exceeded. Though his divine power had been depleted, it now flowed through him and into the area around him, waiting to be given purpose through his wrath. Little sparks of electricity wove paths of light between his fingers; streaks of swirling flame crawled up his arms; the very air vibrated against his skin.
They had given the angel the one thing they could not afford to give it: time. Expending what little power he had had left him practically defenseless, but each passing second made him more powerful, more dangerous.
His stomach churned with revulsion at the thought that his flesh was
her flesh, that his life had been bought with
her life. These people, this world, had driven her to sacrifice herself to bring him here. After everything she had been through, despite all her beautiful hopes and dreams, she was gone. And he was here instead.
An ominous, vicious growl rumbled in his chest. He would make sure that this world remembered her, no matter what. He would use the body she gifted him to leave a scar upon this realm that would be felt for centuries to come.