Sayanastia!
The Dark Dragon was not a Morning person.
She followed Injimo from inside her shadow, dragged along behind sprinting feet, gleaming eyes in the ever-shifting pool of darkness.
"Have you considered instead," she said, with the edged boredom of the lacuna, "not doing any of that?"
"Not!" Injimo said, racing against the hurricane of wingbeats. "Not?!?"
"Not," said Sayanastia. "Not run run run. Not sweep sweep sweep. Not - you get the picture."
"Mmm!?!" said Injimo, rolling to avoid the descent of talons.
"Morning is a fool, and worse: a fool by choice," said Sayanastia. "She has had a single idea in her life and has then spent the rest of her life in such a frenzy of activity that she never had time to question it."
The crash of wood and fangs. A momentary lull. "... yeah?"
"Do not look at me like that. I am entirely different from her."
She plunged suddenly as Injimo leapt off a branch, falling in an instant down miles down to the forest floor before lunging back up to the adjoining tree as quick as blinking. "Are?"
"Look - stop it. It is simple; her manic energy can only exist when feeding off the joy and energy of others. If she has no one to play with she will falter and fall to slumber. She does not know how to entertain herself and can only exist in the shadows of others."
"Hmm," a blade is drawn, blunted for training. Sayanastia curled her lip. All that skill without a weapon to put it through. She might as well try to cut through an oak with a spoon.
"I said be silent," said Sayanastia.
"'kay," said Injimo, taking her eyes off the shadow to look directly at the coming Morning. She felt the rush. She felt the joy. She felt like she could dance here forever, ten thousand years to overcome a single dragon, with her beginner's weapon delivering one bruise at a time.
"Oh. You fool," hissed Sayanastia. "You are as bad as she is."
Injimo nodded as the great whirl of leaves ascended. Her feet were ready as she waited for her moment.
"Then at the very least..." Sayanastia said, and she...
And she. And she? Reached.
Shaped. Bent. Destroyed. Obliterated, atom by atom, the dulled edge of that blade. Sharpening it until - no, not even that was enough. This thing was made by a fool (Heron) who knew nothing about blacksmithing. The iron was impure, the cast was misaligned, she could feel how trivially it would break. So she broke it instead. That was the easy part, but the hard part was. Was. Was.
It wasn't really the same thing as making something. She was just. Externalizing destruction. The same way as making a monster. A sword might be a beautiful thing but in the end it was a thing of hate, and she could understand that. She just needed to spit out a curse, hollow out this girl and render her an eternally damned sword reverent -
But she was that already. Wasn't she? The kind of person already damned to fight the Morning -
- So this was just... fixing that. Fixing a curse. Making it more like itself. Refining it, into something that wasn't just deadly, but was also...
"Beautiful," said Injimo, looking at the new sword of amethyst and silver.
And then there was no more time for words. The storm was upon them.
The Dark Dragon was not a Morning person.
She followed Injimo from inside her shadow, dragged along behind sprinting feet, gleaming eyes in the ever-shifting pool of darkness.
"Have you considered instead," she said, with the edged boredom of the lacuna, "not doing any of that?"
"Not!" Injimo said, racing against the hurricane of wingbeats. "Not?!?"
"Not," said Sayanastia. "Not run run run. Not sweep sweep sweep. Not - you get the picture."
"Mmm!?!" said Injimo, rolling to avoid the descent of talons.
"Morning is a fool, and worse: a fool by choice," said Sayanastia. "She has had a single idea in her life and has then spent the rest of her life in such a frenzy of activity that she never had time to question it."
The crash of wood and fangs. A momentary lull. "... yeah?"
"Do not look at me like that. I am entirely different from her."
She plunged suddenly as Injimo leapt off a branch, falling in an instant down miles down to the forest floor before lunging back up to the adjoining tree as quick as blinking. "Are?"
"Look - stop it. It is simple; her manic energy can only exist when feeding off the joy and energy of others. If she has no one to play with she will falter and fall to slumber. She does not know how to entertain herself and can only exist in the shadows of others."
"Hmm," a blade is drawn, blunted for training. Sayanastia curled her lip. All that skill without a weapon to put it through. She might as well try to cut through an oak with a spoon.
"I said be silent," said Sayanastia.
"'kay," said Injimo, taking her eyes off the shadow to look directly at the coming Morning. She felt the rush. She felt the joy. She felt like she could dance here forever, ten thousand years to overcome a single dragon, with her beginner's weapon delivering one bruise at a time.
"Oh. You fool," hissed Sayanastia. "You are as bad as she is."
Injimo nodded as the great whirl of leaves ascended. Her feet were ready as she waited for her moment.
"Then at the very least..." Sayanastia said, and she...
And she. And she? Reached.
Shaped. Bent. Destroyed. Obliterated, atom by atom, the dulled edge of that blade. Sharpening it until - no, not even that was enough. This thing was made by a fool (Heron) who knew nothing about blacksmithing. The iron was impure, the cast was misaligned, she could feel how trivially it would break. So she broke it instead. That was the easy part, but the hard part was. Was. Was.
It wasn't really the same thing as making something. She was just. Externalizing destruction. The same way as making a monster. A sword might be a beautiful thing but in the end it was a thing of hate, and she could understand that. She just needed to spit out a curse, hollow out this girl and render her an eternally damned sword reverent -
But she was that already. Wasn't she? The kind of person already damned to fight the Morning -
- So this was just... fixing that. Fixing a curse. Making it more like itself. Refining it, into something that wasn't just deadly, but was also...
"Beautiful," said Injimo, looking at the new sword of amethyst and silver.
And then there was no more time for words. The storm was upon them.