Ember's scent is never far from her nose. After all, Mosaiac has smeared it across almost every rock and blade of grass and grain of sand she's ever crossed. It doesn't linger long, at least not recognizably but the memory clings forever.
Ember gives off what could very generously be described as a bouquet of aromas. The soil caked into her clothes, the mortar under her nails. The smoky, just-burned tinge in her fur, the brine in her hair. The heady musk of her pack all over her, every smell but Gemini's. The salt and the steel and the faintly sweet-ish trace of old meat. But the most special part of all, the part that makes the smell Ember's and nobody else's, and the part the most concerted efforts of the Silver Divers and their little training techniques could never quite bury, is the smell of roses.
Holding her is like lifting a garden to the sky. She is everything in Bitemark and more than could be contained in the vast seas beyond it. She is elementally beautiful, which is why her scent is everywhere. It is here, too. Mosaic has held the little Ceronian in the same spot she holds this jaguar now, hearing her name moaned in the same tiny, desperate voice. She closes her eyes and drinks the air around her. She can almost, almost smell roses on the rubble.
But there are new things here as well. The sharpness of freshly shattered stone and flecks of acid where Stone Tribe claws had begun to worry at it. Churned grass kicked up in great clods by the power of her descent. The ocean, new fur that has never known sweat, and the very particular tang of brass that is almost as wonderful as music.
There is weight in her arms, and a lightness in her chest. Mosaic's muscles tense and coil, but do not strain. Her fingers find the back of this helpless sniper's neck, and she bends her claws toward delighting the spine into shuddering, full body tingles. There is a smile on her lips, and victory in her teeth.
Everything is stillness, the quiet of the world in the moments after battle, except for the two of them. Memories jump like lightning across her mind with every fresh touch, and every one of them brings that little trace of rose to the tip of her nose, the taste to the back of her tongue. The feeling of fur on fur and sharp edges made soft again with nothing but the curling of her arms. Tails entwining, and the sound of her own name in her ears like a prayer to some forgotten god.
Mosaic's body is soft. Her breasts are pillows for a weary, defeated head. Her arms are a blanket. Her breathing is steady. The heat of her body is the sun, the motion of her fingers the sea, and her eyes the stars. She could stay like this forever. She could drown in pleasure and victory and chase her little Ember through her memories until the mountain crumbled down around her forever and Beri and Rosedam became nothing but forgotten fragments on the edge of reality.
If only it was just a little bit stronger. If only the work was not so important, there might be time. She sighs, and plants a kiss on her defeated friend's forehead.
"Yes," she purrs, "That is my name. Now give me yours."
Even still, she does not relent. Her legs are valleys that split the sky and earth and beg for some brave adventurer to map them, to know every delight and secret. But when they shift and part, it is only to turn around and face the mountain one more time. A sigh builds inside her throat. The song is ending. The scent of the world is just itself again. And there is so much to be done.
"And then tell me: up or down? Are you gonna go back to your work, or stay and help with mine?"
Ember gives off what could very generously be described as a bouquet of aromas. The soil caked into her clothes, the mortar under her nails. The smoky, just-burned tinge in her fur, the brine in her hair. The heady musk of her pack all over her, every smell but Gemini's. The salt and the steel and the faintly sweet-ish trace of old meat. But the most special part of all, the part that makes the smell Ember's and nobody else's, and the part the most concerted efforts of the Silver Divers and their little training techniques could never quite bury, is the smell of roses.
Holding her is like lifting a garden to the sky. She is everything in Bitemark and more than could be contained in the vast seas beyond it. She is elementally beautiful, which is why her scent is everywhere. It is here, too. Mosaic has held the little Ceronian in the same spot she holds this jaguar now, hearing her name moaned in the same tiny, desperate voice. She closes her eyes and drinks the air around her. She can almost, almost smell roses on the rubble.
But there are new things here as well. The sharpness of freshly shattered stone and flecks of acid where Stone Tribe claws had begun to worry at it. Churned grass kicked up in great clods by the power of her descent. The ocean, new fur that has never known sweat, and the very particular tang of brass that is almost as wonderful as music.
There is weight in her arms, and a lightness in her chest. Mosaic's muscles tense and coil, but do not strain. Her fingers find the back of this helpless sniper's neck, and she bends her claws toward delighting the spine into shuddering, full body tingles. There is a smile on her lips, and victory in her teeth.
Everything is stillness, the quiet of the world in the moments after battle, except for the two of them. Memories jump like lightning across her mind with every fresh touch, and every one of them brings that little trace of rose to the tip of her nose, the taste to the back of her tongue. The feeling of fur on fur and sharp edges made soft again with nothing but the curling of her arms. Tails entwining, and the sound of her own name in her ears like a prayer to some forgotten god.
Mosaic's body is soft. Her breasts are pillows for a weary, defeated head. Her arms are a blanket. Her breathing is steady. The heat of her body is the sun, the motion of her fingers the sea, and her eyes the stars. She could stay like this forever. She could drown in pleasure and victory and chase her little Ember through her memories until the mountain crumbled down around her forever and Beri and Rosedam became nothing but forgotten fragments on the edge of reality.
If only it was just a little bit stronger. If only the work was not so important, there might be time. She sighs, and plants a kiss on her defeated friend's forehead.
"Yes," she purrs, "That is my name. Now give me yours."
Even still, she does not relent. Her legs are valleys that split the sky and earth and beg for some brave adventurer to map them, to know every delight and secret. But when they shift and part, it is only to turn around and face the mountain one more time. A sigh builds inside her throat. The song is ending. The scent of the world is just itself again. And there is so much to be done.
"And then tell me: up or down? Are you gonna go back to your work, or stay and help with mine?"