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4 mos ago
Current I've been on this stupid site for an entire decade now and it's been fantastic, thank you all so much
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2 yrs ago
Nine years seems a lot longer than it feels.
2 yrs ago
Ninety-nine bottles of bottles of bottles of bottles of bottles of bottles of bottles of bottles of bottles on the wall
4 likes
4 yrs ago
Biting Spider Writing
7 yrs ago
They will look for him from the white tower...but he will not return, from mountains or from sea...
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Quinn shook her head, firm but quick. Any more might reawaken the nausea or headache and that was the last thing she wanted, but an emphatic head-shake was an emphatic head-shake all the same. "Nuh-uh, I've already been putting it off. I was going to see him yesterday before," she swallowed uncomfortably.

"I just really need to see him soon. Aaaannd...I wanted to ask his advice myself, too." She sighed. "Roaki still doesn't really seem to want to live and I wanted to ask him what he thinks I should do. Last time I asked him, he mentioned making her an informant like...um...what did he say his name was...Gast?" She took a deep breath, collecting herself as her thoughts began to run away with her. "He said she'd be safe if she did but I never brought it up because I never felt like it was the right time."

She started to go on, but her head started to throb again. She winced, then took another spoonful of cereal and slurped it down, staring off into the distance. She should've mentioned it to Roaki by now, she knew. But a part of her knew that it wasn't because she never felt like it was the right time.

She was scared. Simple as that.

Scared that Roaki would yell at her for suggesting she work for Runa. Or, even worse, terrified that Roaki would just...say nothing at all. Would turn and face the wall again. And Quinn had no idea how she'd react to that.

Roaki didn't deserve to die.

After a long spell of cereal slurping and spoon clinking, she spoke again: "I just..." she lapsed into silence again, trying to collect her thoughts as they started to fray, then hung her head as her voice dropped to just above a whisper in a tone filled with self-loathing and self-pity.

"I just want someone to tell me what to do."
In Lem's Stash 1 yr ago Forum: Test Forum
S H Y S C A
S H Y S C A

"Everything's different now. I don't understand. Is this the Divine Aeter's path for me? Was the Virtuous Mother lying to me all along?"
C H A R A C T E R P O R T R A I T
C H A R A C T E R P O R T R A I T
_________________________________________________________
C H A R A C T E R N O T E S
C H A R A C T E R N O T E S
_________________________________________________________
Shysca Celicantha is a young quarter-elf Cleric who swore herself to a faith that worships an entity known as the Divine Aeter, and was gifted powerful divine magic. She doesn't need any kind of focus, but she finds that it helps her think more clearly if she uses a long metal staff colored white to match her clothing. Why metal? Well, in addition to a kind of spellcasting focus, it's also surprisingly useful for whacking a stubborn adversary over the head.

Speaking of her magic, it's very supportive in nature these days; healing, shielding, curing, reviving. While she can unleash the smite of the Divine Aeter in a flash of white light and flame, she very much prefers not to do that, firmly believing that violence should be the final recourse.

---

"I love you so much, my little light."

It feels like it's been a lifetime since then.

"Oh wow, Shysca, did you bake that all on your own?"

Like a whole world has come and gone in the time it took to blink the memories back behind her eyes.

"Of course daddy is proud of you, my little light. How could he not be?"

...Had it really only been ten years?

The cool morning air smelled of the past. Of early morning dew and early spring frost. Of strawberry pastries and pinecones, and the wide bank of the river. It smelled of the stones that she used to skip over the gray water. She breathed deep and closed her eyes, savoring this old simple joy, and all thoughts of guilt and redemption evaporated like mist in the sun as she walked lightly through Ardenfel like a great weight was gone, like she'd never known it was there.

As she walked, she saw the children that she knew so well. Danyl on the other side of the street. Lyndii would be reading, probably, even on a day like this. A kind of foolish pleasure seeped through her as she smiled. Mary walking in the other direction towards her and her heart swelled. She opened her mouth to call out when another smell undercut the blissful haze.

Smoke?

She blinked, and the world was suddenly a blur. Fire. Steel. Screaming that she didn't realize was her. She looked around frantically and found everyone gone except Mary. And as soon as she started towards her, her hands ignited in searing pain. She looked down in panic and found them livid with a seething white radiance that soon spread over the rest of her body as she fell to the ground, twisting in agony. She looked up, trying to find MARY again through the white light,a nd onl y f oun d h e r s e l f--
C H I L D H O O D I N A R D E N F E L D
C H I L D H O O D I N A R D E N F E L D
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Mr. and Mrs. Yarrel and Talulah Celicantha (but please, call her Lulah) were fond of calling themselves the best bakers in Ardenfel. And they were very, very good at it; people would walk from the other side of the village to avail themselves of a fresh hot loaf, or a fruit pie baked to perfection. They were masters of their crafts; and though they were small town bakers that obviously didn't know how to make the delicate pastries that you might see in the big city, they were no less skilled for it.

But then everything changed, once their daughter was born.

Even Lulah didn't know that she had elven heritage. And Yarrel certainly had no idea at all; having hair that pale was unusual, but not impossible, obviously. Not until Shysca's birth. The hair that later grew on her head could be excused just like the mother's. The slightly oddly-colored eyes could be played off in any number of ways. Every odd quirk of her appearance could be explained away, save one. There was no getting around the sharply pointed ears. And Yarrel did not appreciate the idea of there being elf in his family.

Talulah loved Shysca enough for both parents, and made sure she grew up knowing that she was loved. But as she aged and her elven traits became more distinct, well, Yarrel grew what you might call...distant. He didn't grow violent, not until she was ten or eleven, when Talulah started to take ill. But moreso he just...neglected her.I t was like she'd lost her dad. Or, more accurately, like she'd never had one at all. Like she was a ghost to him. And so her mother's kindness became the most important thing in her life, and she began to mantle it. From that point on, she tried her best to be something like a mother--or, more likely, an older sister--to all the other kids in Ardenfel, or at least the ones she knew. After all, maybe if she acted like mommy then daddy would listen to her, right?

No. Obviously.

Once Yarrel started hitting her, that smile came less often. But, given she was in her double digits, that certainly wasn't the worst thing that would happen soon,would it?

Because then, the bandits came.

L I F E A T T H E O R P H A N A G E
L I F E A T T H E O R P H A N A G E
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In the Landeil orphanage, though...the smile came back in full force. It needed to be. She knew these kids. She'd played with them in the street. She'd patched them up after they'd scraped their knees. She'd heard them talking about their parents. She knew those kids; she loved those kids.

And what those kids didn't need was another person crying.

They needed someone they knew to turn to, she thought. She didn't know what the family who owned the orphanage were like when she first got there, so, quite simply, she devoted herself wholeheartedly to making everyone's lives better. She threw herself into it and didn't look back. All smiles, all the time. She comforted Mary when she had nightmares. She tried to talk things through with Teth, even when she didn't want to listen. She spent hours around Danyl; he always seemed to lean on her so much, after all. She spent a whole year like that. It wasn't a particularly good life. It CERTAINLY wasn't a comfortable one. But it was all that she needed in the end, right? Even after Mary ran away, leaving Shysca's hands and lower forearms marred with a large and encompassing burn that turned into a painful scar, even then, she kept trying. There were still kids that needed her help.

But then the Church of the Virtuous Mother stopped nearby.

She didn't know much about them. Didn't know anything, really. But just out of curiosity, she went to listen to the sermon. Just once wouldn't hurt, right?

And then Shysca was transfixed. She fell hard, and fast.

All thoughts of responsibility fled her mind as she heard them preach, and she felt a fire stoke in her heart. After the sermon, she approached them and explained: she had just come to hear them speak, she felt as though she'd been born anew. She lived in the nearby orphanage, could she leave with the and join the Church? And they acquiesced and lifted her out of the orphanage to return to their monastery with them, and live her life anew.

O N W A R D: A N E W P A T H
O N W A R D: A N E W P A T H
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It was in the Church of the Virtuous Mother--a monastery high in the mountains, a long way away--that Shysca first learned of the Divine Aeter, the grand embodiment of all light and purity in the universe. And though she had some doubt at first, she became something of a zealot in a relatively short period of time. The Virtuous Mother and, by extension, the Divine Aether became beloved in her eyes. An idol.

And the problem with idols is that you stop really thinking about what they're doing.

Over the past ten years, there are numerous times that Shysca, using her newly-learnt holy divine magic, 'brought nonbelievers into the Divine Aeter's light' in the most permanent way possible. Things that she would've balked at not long ago, she barely noticed, she was so thoroughly indoctrinated into this cult. It was like she had only half a mind of her own. Word has begun to spread about her, slowly spreading through pockets of people: stories of the wrathful black-clad cleric with the burn-scarred hands.

Though...she did keep one secret from the Virtuous Mother. When Mary had fled the orphanage, Shysca had seen horns on her head. She'd seen the phantasmal flames that had writhed around her in her sleep back then. She knew that there was something demonic going on with her. She should report it, and she should be brought into the Divine Aeter's light. But...

But she couldn't. It just felt wrong.

Not long ago, she remembered something that she'd nearly forgotten. Old friends. A promise to meet. People--children then--whose faces she could still see ever so clearly in her mind's eye. And as she thought about their smiles, she felt a revulsion rise in her throat.

Would they ever smile at her like that if they knew that she had killed?

With no warning to the Virtuous Mother, she dropped the amulet that marked her as a member of the Church into a mountain chasm beside the monastery, replaced her black church robe with a dress of pure white, then fled off into the night to return to her old home, see the old faces. Perhaps it is only when she does that she'll resolve the crisis of faith that swirls inside her skull, and the horrible nightmares that have again to begun to plague her will perhaps abate.

The Church is behind.

The road awaits.

Quinn nodded and exhaled heavily, then picked up both the spoon and the bowl so she could lean back into the comforting warmth of Besca's shoulder as she ate. The cereal had gotten soggy by now. But that was okay; she kind of liked it better when it was soggy anyway. So instead of picking ineffectually at it as before, she really gave it her all to eat it. Her stomach was still a little bit upset, but it seemed to settle a bit as she slowly and steadily ate, and contemplated her day in silence.

The immediate thing that leapt to mind was that she wanted to check Ablaze again. It had become a bit of a daily ritual, after all. That, and she supposed it was helping her look at it more as her own and less as an object of terror. As much as she tried to shunt it to the back of her mind, the image of the cannon glaring down on her in the streets of Hovvi wasn't an easy one to ignore. And, she supposed, she wanted to talk to Tillie more, if she was there. She was nice, and leaning into Besca as she ate cereal notwithstanding, Quinn was still feeling a keen sense of lonesomeness. Maybe--hopefully--the dinner with Deelie would help alleviate that some.

Speaking of, she needed to decide where she wanted to eat. And as much as she loved the places in the Aerie, she wanted less to eat with her family as much as spend time with them. So maybe she could help Dahlia make something in the kitchen. She was a pretty hopeless cook, but hopefully Deelie and Besca would be enough to make up for it, right?

And then the other thing she needed to do today. Something that she selfishly wanted to put off out of sheer embarrassment; returning to Roaki after she'd made a fool of herself, throwing up like that. And then she'd doubly made a fool of herself by getting drunk in response to it.

She briefly paused eating, and a moment passed.

"I think..."

She wasn't particularly looking forward to anything until dinner. The pause dragged on as she thought, until: "I still need to see Doctor Follen this week. And I think I'll visit Roaki after, since I'll be in medical anyway."

Then, with the clink of a spoon, she resumed eating.
For just a moment, snuggling against Besca in that brief hug, everything really did seem okay. And maybe even like it'd be okay.

Then the hug ended, and the world came rushing back, with all the associated aches and pains. She wasn't incredibly nauseous anymore, but she certainly didn't feel good. Her headache had abated and being around Besca really did help to distract her, but it still thrummed cloyingly against the back of her skull. And the physical pain was only half the battle, really. If even that.

But she nodded, seeming almost solemn by the look on her face. But then, it wasn't uncommon these days for that drawn look to be present. "Y—yeah. I feel...better."

After a moment, she left Besca's side, retrieved the milk from the fridge, and sat down, though she pulled her chair much closer so she could still lean against Besca as she did so. Her pouring of the cereal was a bit clumsier than is usually would be, and she blinked blearily again and let her mind go slack as she began to spoon the cereal into her mouth. Though it didn't show, a brief, dim glow of happiness lit her up. It was her favorite.

Then, as she stared off into space and her eyelid dropped a bit lower, her thoughts wandered back to last night, or...whenever it was, and what preceded her brief moment of wakefulness. Without really realizing it she dropped her head slightly, face turning downcast as she thought. She didn't remember much of it at all, which was a mercy. But what she did remember was the feeling of blissful peace that was painfully shattered. She paused a moment before she spoke. She'd never really talked about her dreams with Besca, largely because of the shame attached to Safie. But...it was okay to talk to her, right? And, as the pressure of the memory built, Quinn needed to talk to someone.

Her voice, when she finally broke the silence, was quiet and tremulous, almost indistinct.

"...hdabddrimlassnht..."

Then, realizing that even she could barely understand that, she took a deep breath and tried again.

"...I had a bad dream last night."

She was quiet again, looking down at the bowl of cereal like it held the answer to everything and biting her lip. A lump was starting to form in her throat, and it was evident in her voice as she pulled herself inward, dropping the spoon with a clink.

"...I don't remember much of it. But..." she shuddered as she recalled an echo of that empty calm, "...everything was..was so dark. So dark and quiet and...peaceful." She screwed her eye shut. "It was like...like nothing could hurt me. Then..." An image leapt to her mind then, the vague blur of Besca's face. "You...you were there, I saw you. But..."

A tidal wave of shame rushed through her, and her right hand resting on the table clenched into a tight white fist. She opened her mouth, but the words stuck in her throat. She shoved the bowl out of the way, ignoring the half-eaten cereal as she dropped her face into the crook of her arm. It took several seconds and a great deal of effort for her to finally choke out through the guilt and shame, "...But I--I wished...I wished you weren't."

Her voice shrank to a tiny hoarse whisper, almost inaudible through her arm,

"I'm sorry."
It took Quinn a few minutes to fall asleep. More time than it had before for sure; she didn't manage did drink all the juice, more or less half wasn't bad before she nodded off. Her dream, most unlike her last sleep, was more typical; a warm fuzzy daze that she'd never remember on waking up, but would let some of that warmth linger in her.

And it did. Next time she woke up--her clock said it was late morning--the warm Safie fuzzies replaced the splitting headache. It wasn't quite gone, there was still a little bit of both it and the sickness lurking in the back, no but she could mostly ignore them.

She rose, blinking the sleep from her eye and yawning cavernously. She didn't quite realize it, but with the brief break she'd had with Besca and the medicine--though just like the dream it was a bit of an indistinct blur--she'd slept for nearly twenty-four hours. So really, it was small wonder she felt a bit sluggish as she managed to extricate herself, and finally stand on her somewhat shaky feet.

Only after she looked around did she realize this wasn't her room, it was Besca's. She felt a brief tug of guilt, but ignored it as, at long last, she walked back out into the commons in what felt like the first time in years.

Everything was as it had been for the past few weeks. With one very major exception that brought a faint smile to Quinn's face. For the first time in who knew how long, Besca was there when she woke up. Just her presence was a bit of a balm for Quinn, and the last of the headache flickered and died as she walked over with somewhat unsteady feet and wrapped her in a brief hug that was meant to be tight, but she wasn't the absolute strongest right now, as she buried her face in the crook of the woman's neck. Despite the day and night she'd had, just being around Besca made her feel miles better.

"Morn'ng, Besca..."
Quinn's brief tenure alone in the darkness, absent of both Quinnlash and whoever was moving around outside of her door, was an upsetting one indeed. The pain in her head, the horrible sick feeling in her stomach...they cast her mind back years, to that awful, awful day she'd first seen the sunset. When her eye had burst from her skull. So, all alone, there was nothing she could do but stare at the wall and try not to cry.

Then the door creeped open, and she turned her head leaving laconically to see what was happening, even through the light from the kitchen hurt to look at. When the shadow loomed in front of her, synapses sparked on her brain and her eye shot open. The memory of the pain and sickness...the shadow of a woman coming into her room...for just a brief, heart-stopping moment, her muddled mind was terrified, truly terrified and utterly convinced, that MOM had come back to punish her.

Then the moment passed, and the shadow revealed itself as Besca. So Quinn let that eye loll half-closed as she watched Besca, and her voice, so incredibly soft, spoke to Quinn. Told her what was going on. Told her why it was going on. Offered her apple juice and said it would make it better, so even though she didn't want to put anything on her stomach again ever, Quinn leaned forward slightly and sucked some juice through the straw. Just a few sips before she leaned back again.

Then the other thing Besca has said. Quinn looked distrustfully at the little cup on her nightstand. It had been made fairly obvious after Quinn had discovered what her parents did to her that she now looked very fearfully at any medicine.

But...

But Besca was giving it to her, right? She trusted Besca.

So, feebly, she reached out a hand for the brilliant red stuff. She looked at it again, eyeing it suspiciously.

Then she tilted back her head and dribbled it into her mouth.

The instant it touched her tongue she gagged on the taste, nearly choked, and spat back up most of it. She only swallowed about a third of it in the end, the rest ending up on either her own face or on the covers piled on her as she coughed.

When she spoke, weak, humiliated tears starting to bead already in her eye, her voice was thin, hoarse, and reedy; barely even there.

"I'm...I'm sorry..."
Everything was dark, and still, and quiet, and empty, and void. Quinn floated through it in a haze; half awake and half not, she was embraced softly by a wonderful senseless ataraxia. There was something comfortable about the eternity that she was bathed in, something beautiful and certain, in a life where nothing ever was. Like a warm blanket on a cold night, wrapping her up, cradling her, keeping everything soft and numb.

A part of her subconscious mind—a part that was slowly but steadily growing—wanted to stay there. Stay in that perfect peace. The world outside was...so confusing. So difficult and complicated. But this—this tranquil anesthetized bliss—it was all so simple. So easy. Nobody could take anything away from her here. Nothing could hurt her. She didn't need do anything. She didn't need to think about anything. She didn't need to think at all. Here, she could just...

Sink.

Sink, Quinnlash.

And she did.

Until suddenly an image flashed through her mind. There and gone in the space of of half a blink. Perhaps it was longer, or perhaps shorter; time meant so little here, and it was so hard to bring herself to care. The image was impossible to tell as well; no rhyme or reason in the brief space her mind had to breathe before it was slowed down again. It was...it was white, she knew that. It was all white, with—with some silver-gray, and—

In the waking world, Quinn's body shifted.

The image retreated, and she began to slowly, certainly sink again. Sink into peace. But then another image blurred past. She caught some of it this time; it was a person, a person with brown hair, but that was all she could tell. And then after that, another. Again, almost no rhyme or reason, as Quinn's mind struggled against itself. Nothing to do. Nothing to remember. Just a woman with brown—

Besca.

And all at once, that brief eternity between dream and reality—her wonderful little pocket of blurred nothingness—shattered. It was filled in the space of a heartbeat with flashes of blazing colors, pieces that didn't fit together that shattered into shards all around her. It hurt. It hurt, it hurt, she wanted to go back into the soft quiet where nothing could hurt, her almost sleeping form began to thrash, and standing above and behind it all was Quinnlash outlined against the bloody red of Ablaze's single blazing eye as her horns split and contorted and thick black liquid began to drip where they were attached to her head, her look of joy, then—then—As she unconsciously gasped in frantic breaths of air—

"Nnnnnnnnhhh—"

"AH!"

Quinn cannoned upright to a sitting position, and the short, sharp cry spilled out of her room and rebounded through the dorms. Her eye was wide with disbelief and fear and filled with tears. She had just enough time to realize she was hyperventilating madly.

And then her body caught up to her brain.

Her own scream felt suddenly like someone was pounding nails into her skull. And it was immediately followed in rapid time by an intense and powerful nausea, enough that she could barely hold back another round of vomit as she flopped back down, pulled her cover over her, and curled up in a ball. As the minutes ticked by, the images blurred, and the instinctive terror abated. Her heaving breaths turned to shivers, and a long, feeble groan dribbled from her mouth before trailing off into nothing:

"Ughhhhh..."



Stop it.

Another swing of her glaive. Another missed strike, as Elidthianis stepped seemingly-effortlessly out of the way.

Stop it.

She tried again, this time a feint into a quick stab. But again, he danced past it. Her teeth ground against each other so hard her jaw hurt.

Damn you, stop it!

Whispers descended around them as he continued to taunt her, and she had to fight to keep the red veil of anger from blinding her as he continued humiliating her with how little he seemed to care. Still, she clung gamely on. She still had a few options up her sleeve, right? She just needed to get a little less straightforward, and a little more tricky.

With a sudden motion she hurled her weapon as though it were a throwing spear, then, as he inevitably let it fly past, let the magic dissipate as it fell back into water. Immediately afterwards, another one dropped into her hand and she brought it to bear again with a twirl.

All of this, though, was more or less a smokescreen. As she did her best to draw his eyes to her futile throw and the glaive being created again, a few more lines of runic script lit up on the larger of the two bracers, and behind and a bit above him small pockets formed in the fog as slivers of water, nearly invisible through the mist, slowly and silently accreted, edges and points blunted like the rest of her weapons. She swung for him again, trying her best to keep his attention on her as the knives finished forming, even as a growl of frustration and embarrassment seeped from her throat.

Then, at an unseen command, they lanced at him like shards of glass. She let out a huff of grim satisfaction as she launched another attack and the knives closed in. Even you can't dodge it this time.
It was disorienting, the way that Quinnlash shifted the scene. Disorienting the way that everything seemed off, even though Quinn knew why it was. Disorienting the way she talked about their mother, and the way she...got deep into their head and stayed there. Disorienting, the way it felt to once again look out over the lake from the cliffs, like everything had moved back to the start again, almost like nothing had ever happened.

But most disorienting of all was the undisturbed grass.

She knew, of course, that the house wasn't here in the dreams. She couldn't see it from the boat, Quinnlash had told her that it was gone, even, that she'd taken it away because their parents were takers. But it was one thing to know something, and quite another to experience it.

Though the boat was still moving like it was on the water, Quinn slowly, almost meditatively, walked out the back and set her feet that were all of a sudden barefoot on the grass, felt it tickling her feet, not at all considering that she'd never walked barefoot on grass and that this was probably not at all what it felt like in the waking world. No, she was preoccupied, as she meandered almost in a trance to the very edge of the cliff and sat down, staring out at the wildly shifting lake from far above it. On an impulse she reached her hand out as though to touch it. And even here, in this dream where she felt so much less, her heart burned like fire as she looked out over what Hovvi used to be.

"...But out there, where it’s real, we need to remember. We need to remember so we know who to hate."

She finally tore her gaze away from the false town and looked back over her shoulder at the tiny self that stood there, little hands balled into fists. And by way of response, she let her shoulders sag and lay back, looking up at the stars decoupled from the sky. She sighed. Her voice, when she spoke, was heavy as lead and quiet in the evening gloom, filled with a nameless futility.

"...Can you help me hate them?"



As Luen took a few long, deep breaths to calm herself and focus on the now, a boy appeared in front of her, standing languidly on the other side of the arena. She gave a muffled sound of surprise: this was the boy that had been standing next to her, the one that also had white hair. Elidthianis Hawke...she thought she knew the name from a book she'd read once, but she couldn't quite place which book it had been, nor nail down exactly in what context she'd heart the name. So, despite the whispers from the crowds, the surprise that Luen expressed was quite different.

She stared at him across the arena. His vivid, brilliant blue eyes were set off by his hair, much like her own crimson ones, and though his skin wasn't as white as her own, it was certainly pale to some extent. She blinked a few times in confusion and her mouth opened to say something before she was cut off by him speaking instead, and saying something that only made her more confused:

"I suppose you're my dance partner? You don't look like much."

She couldn't help but give a surprised "Eh?"

Of all the comments on her appearance she'd thought would be made, that was the least in line with whatever she'd expected. She looked weird. As little time as she'd spent outside of her house, all the rumors that had gotten back to her were more than enough to make sure she knew that inviolable truth. So why was he acting like nothing was wrong with her, in any way? She blinked a few times, trying to jigsaw that into her worldview, before she was reminded that she should probably respond to him; it was only polite, and just as before, she felt an immediate sort of kinship with him. What she wanted to ask was why he was so...un-hated.

But by the whispers in the crowd and the stares that went his way, maybe he was a little less so than he seemed at first. The feeling of kinship grew stronger, and she softly asked, loud enough to be heard by her opponent but quietly enough that the crowd gathered around the clump of arena's wouldn't: "Do they call you Ill-Starred as well?"

But that was as strong as she let that feeling grow, because she still needed to fight him, in the end, and he seemed very confident with holding a sword. So she flicked her hand out, and just as before the mist in the air coalesced, this time as her favorite weapon: a transparent, glassy replica of her father's glaive that she held in an easy, practiced grip of her own. She took one more long, deep, steadying breath. If she could force him back and keep him at her range, if he couldn't get in close, then the fight would be over quickly.

And then the signal was called. So she darted forward, determined to claim the initiative, and swept her glaive at him in a wide, vicious arc. The more she kept this fight to her tempo over his, the better.
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