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š’žath ā„³elainea

Cath Melainea was born as the Shard of Temperament, formed deep within the psyche of the Monarch long before she was ever expelled to express herself as an individual essence. So it was that she was borne unto the firmament as a roiling iridescent flame of violet hue, a coiling fractal of experience. Coalescing after many of her siblings, Melainea came to know herself only in those moments that followed, as if every instant before had been spent as a growing babe, coming to understand herself and her place in the world to come. Thus, as she was borne unto the Palace of Creation by her father--where for a brief time she remained--she ruminated her existence.

As she pondered, her Father--indeed, the Father of All--let her be, having greater endeavors than soothing his newborn daughter*. So it was that she came to understand that from which she had been wrought.

Consciousness.

Her essence, having remained within the Monarch of All's embrace for longer than most, had been condensed and tempered into a specific form and within this vessel--this Crucible--it had become another thing completely.

Emotion.

As the goddess of such a potent phenomena, this great tempest of experience, Melainea understood herself for what she was: An agent of change. Through the rising and falling tides of sorrow, joy, and rage she could inspire--nay--invoke in others a shift. With subtle grace, or careless abandon she might tip the scales and insight in others grief, reflection, or even understanding. Her Shard--her Aspect was that of Temperament and so, as she once had been, she decided then to be the Crucible within which Galbar--and indeed its inhabitants--might become ever greater. Through her will she would foster greed in the heart of lords, driving them to steal from and trample others. On her command, love might surge forth in the hearts of many, and inspire an age most golden. Through her touch, the esoteric power of her ethos might be infused unto a stone, its essence that of heartbreak, of sorrow, and woe unyielding. So twisted by such a burden, the stone would warp and twist and shatter, becoming a collection of many rings.

Smiling at the thought, the Goddess rose from the flawless surface of the palace and gazed down onto the world that was their birthright and soon her second home.

ā€œRings to bind together when worn in pairs; rings to bend and break when fractured by life's affairs.ā€ Her violet eyes shone with glee, and then with malice, then with an almost mournful contemplation.

Temperament, a thing forged in the great tempest of experience, a reflection--an expression perhaps--of consciousness, and in its changing, a thing that might be refined and tempered into an ever greater form. She was a confluence of these ideals. In that instant her perspective expanded, blossoming into yet still a greater form. Violet eyes blazing as she transcended her former self, Melainea laughed, her voice soaring within the cavernous halls of the Palace.

She was emotion, the font from which it flowed, and its purest manifestation. Rage and Bliss; Hate and Love; Contentment, Apathy, and all things between. Through her will, others could find their innermost worlds expressed tangibly upon the firmament. Yet, this ability to twist and warp the fabric of the world was itself another facet of her shard, it was not of Temperament, but of Tempering. So forged in the divine womb of their genderless Father, the Monarch of All, she had been crafted for this purpose and turned into a thing of ascendance. To be infused with, or indeed to bathe within her quintessence was no mundane thing. Where a taste of rage gifted unto a mortal might instill in them a righteous fury, a burning desire that could carry them through life, to bathe in the Crucible's core and know the esoteric source of such a feeling would be to change utterly. A Homuran might thus enter the Crucible of her being, only to emerge entirely renewed, as a caterpiller is remade in its cacoon, emerging a butterfly, so too do those things touched or suffused with her divine ichor.

Raising a hand before her she gazed upon her open palm, and within it was conjured stone. With a gentle caress, the stone crumbled, as heartbreak touched it, guiding it to shatter. Watching the small stones tumble through the air, she flicked her wrist downwards and for a flickering instant there was no hand, but instead a fractal of experience, a rift upon the world playing as if it were as a thing of mortal make. From it spilled flames of indigo and violet too. They fell upon the stones midair and before they'd touched the earth, what they once had been was burned away. What remained were several mournful crystals, shining dully upon the ground. Kneeling, she cupped them in her grasp and imagined what they might do.

ā€œSorrow's Ore, thy name shall be,ā€ she whispered, her fingertips stroking across the stones as if they were some favored beast. The stones hummed, and their voices were deliciously full of woe, they danced within her mind, conjuring images of mortals collapsing at the sound. Tears pressed at the edges of her eyes and spilled over, yet a smile remained upon her lips. ā€œAh, but what might your touch incite,ā€ she mused aloud, running a perfect nail over the surface of one smooth stone.

Despair tore at her heart, and then indeed her flesh, splitting her fingertip oh so slightly. Joy surged behind her eyes, burning away the sadness as she sucked in a startled breath. Astounded, astonished, pleased she withdrew her fingers and rose from the cold stone of Creation's Palace. With a flourish of her palm as it fell to her side, the stones vanished through a rift.

Through that tear upon the firmament, she gazed down upon the world, before prying it further open and stepping through.



Night had long since fallen and the young man was only out on account of knowing that the next day would be the Long Restā€“one of oh so few days that the men and women both spent time to recuperate from the near-constant work that it took to survive in the wilds at the edges of the great Eidolonian Plains. He'd snuck away from the sleeping bodies of his family, desiring some solitude in the gentle embrace of the night. Brushing his fingertips through the tall grass of the land he'd always known as his home, he stared off into the distance, the stars laid plain upon the heavens above. They were beautiful, those swirling flecks of light painted on a canvas of blue, and black and purple. There was a mystique to them and though his people had stories for what they were, he had never quite believed them.

As he stared into the night, pondering small things, and considering what might lay beyond the far horizon, that young man's mind went mute as he noticed the sudden absence of sound. A shiver ran up his spine, and the hairs at the back of his neck stood on end. The chirping song of the crickets had grown still, as if all at once they had tired of the tune they'd sung for every night from the evening he'd been born, to just a moment prior.

Turning about, his motion slow and deliberate as he bent at the knees, using the tall grass to obscure himself, the young man peered into the moonlit night, a subtle dread growing in his heart. There were stories of the things that sometimes prowled the plains and though they often knew better than to stray too close to the village, there were always exceptions to the rule. Suddenly, his desire to be alone seemed an awfully foolish thing as he found himself crouched within the grasses, peering blindly into the black.

Then he saw it, not aground, but a league or so away, hovering within the air. He had no word to describe the thing, but it reminded him of a day now months past when his tunic had been snared by the thorns of a bush, and turn as he ran an errand for his gran. For it was like that, a tear in the fabric of the sky. It widened and in a flash, something dove through it, falling down towards the ground. The tear slowly closed, its strange light dimming with every moment.

Quietly, Somni crept towards it, careful not to rustle the grasses as he moved with practiced ease through the field of plants. Strangely, he'd heard no thump, no sound of one thing striking the next as the unknown had fallen from the sky-tear and towards Galbar's soil. Eventually, he noticed something strange, the closer he got to the area he'd surmised the object must have fallen, the easier it became to see. Frowning slightly, his brow creasing as he considered this shift in circumstance, Somni considered that perhaps to approach this complete unknown was not a terribly wise course of action. Yet...he felt compelled to find out what could possibly have emerged from such a strange phenomena as a tear in the world.

In that moment, as he considered his actions and debated upon changing course, a sudden shift occurred. The sky was suddenly above him, stark in its swirling display of light. Then the air was driven from his body as he hit the earth, skidding back a pace before a weight settled upon him and a silhouette of pitch blacked out the sky above. Wheezing as he tried to pull air into his lungs, Somni tried to strike the figure above him, only to find his wrists pinned to the ground by slender hands. Then, as he watched--a panic overcoming him--two violet orbs opened in the night, as unseen eyelids slid away. Calmly the regarded him and slowly he regained his breath and again tried to struggle.

ā€œCease thy struggle child,ā€ a woman's voice chided, cutting at the silence. Gradually, a faint violet light filled the air, illuminating his assailant's visage. Heart in his throat even as it beat a feverish rhythm in his chest, Somni went still as the supple outline of a feminine form made itself known in the low light. Yet, he did not recognize her voice, it was nothing like any of the girls of the village, nor their mothers. Nay, this was a stranger come into their fields, now atop him, preying upon his foolish inattention.

ā€œWh--,ā€ he began.

ā€œShhhā€¦ā€ she replied, cutting off his query. Gradually he became aware of an entirely different discomfort. In the low light, he saw her smile and he swallowed hard in response.

ā€œSuch a strange thing, thy body,ā€ the woman said with amusement in her tone. Slowly, she released his wrists, tracing fingertips over his chest before pushing off him and to her feet. The light dimmed as she retreated. Somni did not wish to see it go.

ā€œWait,ā€ he said, finding himself almost breathless, his voice weak. Propping himself up he met the eyes of the woman, who stared back, her violet gaze seeming almost to bore through him.

He shuddered.

ā€œBold,ā€ she said, her tone carrying only the barest hint of its earlier warmth, he found that he did not know quite how to respond. She glanced away, casting her glowing gaze elsewhere, though she did not leave him. Rising to his feet, Somni covertly tried to brush himself off. He found that they were of a height with one another and yet...beside her felt so small. Why was that?

ā€œWho are you?ā€ He queried, his words filling the empty air. She chuckled, and with that melodic sound, the crickets once more began to sing. Somni glanced around, confused. The woman turned, reaching out to him and he found himself rooted to the spot. Her velvet palm caressed his cheek and then coy words teased his ears in kind, "Mmn, twice you ask the wrong question." Lightly, she patted his cheek, seeming to forgive him. She paused a moment and heard his breath catch within his throat. Again that bewitching smile. Yet, there was something strange in her violet gaze, emotions he could not quite fathom. Her clothes too were elaborate and foreign, now that he took the time to notice. Still, in the faint light, he could ordain very little.

ā€œCath Melainea,ā€ she said, as if in reply. He blinked and he watched as she rolled her eyes.

"Tis my name."

"Ah. Somni's mine."

The amusement returned, and her eyes burned, flaring with violet flames. He found himself taking one step back.

"I know," she replied. Dumbfounded, Somni felt his mouth go suddenly dry, his breath hitch. Why was it that he hadn't fled? Hadn't asked her why she'd pounced upon him. How had she gotten here, surely she had not entered through the tear he'd seen. No, surely not, for what mortal could do such a thing.

"Ah, what mortal indeed," she purred, and then in a sudden flash of light, she burst aflame. Burning away all semblance of familiarity, those violet fires they engulfed her form entire, rising into the air and setting even the sky alight. The stars danced far above, and so too did the wind join them, kicking into a gale. He stumbled away from her, mouth agape, eyes wide, the only thought in his mind that she hadn't screamed. Then the fire moved, but not as fires do, no it shifted as if it were itself a woman's silhouette, but burning against the black of night, consuming the darkness.

"What is this?!" He demanded, terror in his visage, voice filled with conviction.

The burning figure laughed, and the sound was perfectly resonant. As he heard it, it tickled at his mind, tugging a smile onto his lips as if against his will. It became a grimace.

"Closer have thy questions have become, thus a gift you shall receive. As I said, I am Cath Melainea, the Exalted, a daughter of the Monarch." She gestured with a hand composed of flame, indicating her form, "...and this a form truer to my nature."

Confusion crossed his guise, then filled his mind. Her form glided across the field and the tall grass parted to let her pass. where she touched it, not a single stalk was singed. "What...I. The Monarch? There is no lord in these lands. What do you mean? Are you some fell witch come to prey upon my people?" Though his chest was tight with fear, his loyalty won out, and he raised his fist, as if he were not powerless before her. As if somehow a man could strike at flame.

She paused in her approach, regarding him.

"Admirable," she crooned, sounding almost impressed.

Then she drew herself up and the flames winked out.

Somni's vision flashed, his mind filled beyond its limit with a feeling. Cloying fear, overwhelming terror. Then another joined the fray, deepest joy, adoration, love, and contentment too. Surging, warring within his mind, his psyche seemed not his own. Reeling, he fell to his knees and distantly felt tears slipping down his cheeks. A terrible whine reached his ears and he realized it was his own whimpering, subdued scream. Before him stood a glowing metallic flame, teardrop-shaped and spinning. In it he saw himself reflected, and within himself, he felt the reflection of that thing. Coiling flames reignited, snapping outwards from the floating metal heart. Their amaranthine hue took away all other sights until it was all that he could see. No longer were there stars above, or grass on every side. There was only flame and spinning metal. A burning figure torn into the world, feminine and pure. Behind it, within that rift were fractals endless and true and awful to behold. Like peering into an endless crystal he lost himself. Like bathing within a pyre, he felt himself consumed. Like drowning beneath a boiling lake, he burned and felt his lungs fill with bile. His mind screamed, his voice gone ragged.

Yet he desired nothing more, he deserved nothing less, would not settle for it in fact. The coiling heart, the burning rift-torn figure embraced him then and as if given a final release, all thought fled his psyche.


Oblivion. He had surrendered to the darkness of the sleeping mind. Chuckling, her voice the crackling of fire, the soothing sound of a woman's gentle laugh, the bending, grating, dripping sound of tearing molten metal. A crack of thunder, closing eyes. The Crucible died down to a simmer and she allowed her form to calm, rendering itself once more into a mortal guise. Gently she knelt before the unconscious man who now lay upon the grass and in the dirt.

"So fragile, these mortals are," she mused, brushing hair from the human's cheek. "Tis but a strand of feelings," she said the words gently, soothingly, almost as a mother might to a fearful babe. Yet he did not wake so she took him into her embrace, lifting him from the soil. Lightly and with inhuman ease, she carried him home.

In time she arrived, the stars still twinkling far above, the wind a gentle caress upon her flesh. However, it seemed that they'd been noticed, for within the hearth she spotted a flickering mundane flame. A man and woman rose, seeing the boy she held in her arms; seeing Somni. His mother rushed over then, abandoning propriety and any fear of the stranger who had brought her son back unto the fold. Fussing over her boy, she beckoned her husband come, and he shook his head. After a moment to assess the stranger, he sighed and then obeyed, joining his wife before the figure. So offered, the father took from her his son, carrying him back to the warmth of the flame. Yet, the mother remained, staring up into the eyes of the Violet-eyed woman.

"Thank you," she said, her relief almost a tangible thing between them. Melainea smiled and nodded, placing a comforting hand upon the woman's shoulder. She shuddered, but could not know why. Not yet.

"Think ye not of this. Remember only that he is yours," the woman replied before she turned and walked away.

Somni's mother only frowned, confused, but shrugged it off swiftly and returned them to the fire and her kin. The coming day would reveal the truth of things.

The younger sister looked upon it all with an aloof gaze, taking in the sights and sounds of the truly strange interaction. So it was that as they settled in by the fire, the mother spoke,

"What a strange, yet kind woman," she muttered, stroking the cheek of her sleeping boy.

Her daughter replied, her tone distant and small.

"She had glowing violet eyesā€¦."

Both her parents slowly turned upon her, staring.

"No, 'twas simply the moonlight."

"Nay, it was the stars."

Both parents denied the truth and so the daughter relented. Still, she knew in her heart of hearts that had not been just a woman, nor a mortal either. No, this encounter had been different somehow, something other had touched their family and she knew not what it would soon entail.

Doom or Glory?

This they would know in time.

Edited the sheet above as well as added it to the Character tab
š’žath ā„³elainea. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .į“› Źœ į“‡ į“„ Ź€ į“œ į“„ Ī¹ Ź™ ŹŸ į“‡
"Hide not thy nature, burn brightly your truth, until nothing else remains."
-- Cath Melainea, The Exalted Goddess.
Theme I ā™¦ Theme II ā™¦ Theme III


š’žath ā„³elainea. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .į“› Źœ į“‡ į“„ Ź€ į“œ į“„ Ī¹ Ź™ ŹŸ į“‡
"Hide not thy nature, burn brightly your truth, until nothing else remains."
-- Cath Melainea, The Exalted Goddess.
Theme I ā™¦ Theme II ā™¦ Theme III


š’žath ā„³elainea. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .į“› Źœ į“‡ į“„ Ź€ į“œ į“„ Ī¹ Ź™ ŹŸ į“‡
"Hide not thy nature, burn brightly your truth, until nothing else remains."
Theme I ā™¦ Theme II


A Coincidence of Magic



Itā€™s not often that miracles happen - the arrival of the gods was one, sure, but otherwise, they donā€™t happen much.

However, with all the rampant magical energies still surging about, the breakdown of reality still occurring throughout the Shard (reduced, sure, but still), and the divine changes enforced upon the land to keep it together, it wouldnā€™t be unheard of that something slightly out of the normal could happen simply because of chance.

One such case happened in a grove of Kelā€™a Maeori trees - these titans of life deep in the mountains that had been created to stabilise the chaos of magic. As if the creation of these trees by Malath Kaal hadnā€™t been miraculous enough, one trunk among tens had, upon its inception, been struck by a particularly potent bolt of magic. While the boltā€™s power would have disintegrated even a biological fortress like this, the tree had--despite all probability--refused to be reduced to cinders. For in the same second as its unfortunate exposure to magical lightning, the tree had realised it had a soul, and the determined soul within the tree had learned to wield the very forces that threatened to undo it. The tree had twisted the potential of the bolt that would end it into a spell - a protective charm fused into its bark that deflected the worst of the damage and spread it out across its leaves and the leaves of its peers. The very air around it had radiated an oily aura - the thickness of magic texturing the very air. Lithulmisomilin, the One-Who-Refused, became the first of the Sage Trees, whose souls were enlightened with knowledge of magic and the wisdom to pass it on, be it by creaking bark or twisting root.

Lithulmisomilin would have been utterly alone - as a tree, it had no mouth with which to speak, and despite its magical potential, it could not bring itself to move (at least not yet). However, whatever had created it and its compatriots had tied them and all that grew from the soil together with an endless network of information - the Keā€™esath Saeā€™a. Using these billions of fungal nets, webs and roots, it reached out, its wooden voice pulsating throughout the network like a shockwave, quelling all other whispers of lesser floral souls.

ā€Help.ā€

There came no answer. Lithulmisomilin felt a disheartening gust of wind test one of its branches. Its soul had authority on the network, but what was authority good for if no one connected to the network could understand it? It was far from the only powerful voice on the network, too - other trees notwithstanding, other Kelā€™a Maeori boomed almost as deafeningly as itself, the strength of the magic pumping through their roots not necessarily any weaker than its own.

Its determined soul was not one to give up, though. It called out again.

ā€Help!ā€


The pulsing thrum of blood through veins more vast than the bodies of most creatures pumped as the mind of the Formless Flesh writhed unseen. A great violence had upset its slumber, stirring the vast bulk of its mind to motion.

For far beyond its mountainous abode, near the shardā€™s far edge, a terrible conflict had occurred.

So it was with a groan like a great falling tree that Malath Kaal did wake, his veiled form writhing and grasping in the dark. For a time he dwelled upon the nightmares he had envisioned, wondering at their meaning, grasping at their cause. However, all at once, he realized that it had not been violence which had caused his sudden waking.

ā€Help!ā€ It was a silent voice, one heard only by a few, and even they caught only whispers. For all but Saā€™a Malath Kaal had ears aplenty with which to listen, and so, to hear.

Thus summoned, the god did move, towards the child that had called him.

Lithulmisomilin had not expected to be alone, it confessed - it had hoped that the vast network of souls whose chaotic discussions it could hear so clearly, would have at least one other soul that could answer it. In its mountain recluse, where it grew alongside maybe thirty or fifty of its compatriots, the One-Who-Refused stood amidst unenlightened moss, dull pines, foolish fir and some surprisingly thoughtful mushrooms. The mushrooms, however, did not seem interested in it, no matter how Lithulmisomilin asked. So in its solitude, it reached out to the moss around its roots.

ā€œBloom,ā€ it said and cast its second ever spell. The moss stirred slightly and then spawned a crown of white lilies to set Lithulmisomilin apart from its peers. Hearing the cacophony of the lesser florals, it declared itself superior - as an enlightened tree and a practitioner of magic, how could it not? Though as a tree, it saw not with eyes, but felt the world through its roots, through the Keā€™esath Saeā€™a. It felt, however, that the world around it was more than just the underground; just as the earth buzzed with insectoid and floran life, the air blew at its leaves and bark, and the air was cool and frisky. As time passed, though, it felt a quiver in the fungal network - something great was approaching. While Lithulmisomilin felt quiet relief that something came for it, it could not help but feel fear, as well. It cast its third spell, and the air immediately around its bark turned to grains of clay, blowing around the trunk in a cautious patrol.

ā€œWho?ā€

For a drawn out instant there was no reply ā€˜cept the thrumming lifeblood of the mycelial network amidst its roots. The wind spun about and danced lazily, stirring the clay throughout, spreading it further and further out. Then, quite suddenly--as the clay brushed against something truly vast in size--the wind sped into a gale and blew against the great trunks of the many trees in that first grove.

Some trees of lesser structure shattered into splinters, but many simply bent and waved in the sudden storm of wind. It carried on this way for a time, leaves blowing free of branches, shrubs shredded, trees bending to the windā€™s whim, but it could not last.

So it did not, the wind becoming still air in an instant, the grove becoming quiet and subdued as if every living thing remaining held its breath.

Strange light then fell upon its branches and the bark that was its skin. It was warm and familiar, yet all at once unknowable and alien. Through the great network beneath the earth all fungi and flora grew silent, holding their breaths like all the rest. Then, a pulsing rhythm surged through the Keā€™esath Saeā€™a and it was purer than any other could be, or had ever been. It continued, but changed, becoming more complex--intricate and full with nuance and brimming with life. When it touched the roots of Lithulmisomilin it blossomed into meaning, and spread throughout its core, suffusing it en full.

That sound it spoke to the newborn Sage, and its words were thus:

ā€œChild of bark and blossom,ā€ it thundered, coursing through its every fibrous cell. ā€œOā€™ arcane son, you have awakened!ā€

There was elation in the rhythm, joy in its thrumming tone, but above all else something greater was communed.

Power. Endless surging might. Echoing through each cell, through its mind, through branch and vine and blossom.

The power had a name, which to the Sage tree instinctively arose.

Saā€™a Malath Kaal.

ā€œRejoice!ā€

The godā€™s exclamation was transcendent thunder, twas laughter and roar alike. The wind shook through many branches, but no longer harmed. Soon animals emerged once more, curious at the being in their midst. Yet they could not find end nor beginning to its shape, for that God of Form was wreathed in a haze of faintly glowing fog.

Still, within that vast roiling vapor, there dwelled a silhouette, and it was ever-shifting, always changing, and unspeakably vast; impossibly huge. Though glimpsed, it remained a mystery all the same.

ā€œLord,ā€ greeted the great tree and knelt before the magnificent being in all sense but the physical. A gust of the wind rocking the forest turned around, and seeds now sailing on the gust, harshly blown from their homes, blossomed into flowers of orange, red, blue, white and yellow, all floating in gentle offering to the source of the mighty, yet wise quakes shaking Lithulmisomilinā€™s core. An arcane arc of blue twisted through its bark with excitement.

Gentle bursts of wind pulsed against the Sage treeā€™s leaves and blossoms both, and with a momentā€™s time, Lithulmisomilin might realized that the exhalations were the laughter of the god.

ā€œSon,ā€ the Great Presence answered. The miasma twisted about its form, writhing into a column, and so the shape of the Formless Flesh changed with it, becoming as tall and rigid as its child. Root-like appendages pressed down into the earth and met with the Keā€™esath Saeā€™a, and in that moment they could truly communicate.

Deep within the fog, the Eye of Malath opened, and it was bright and powerful as its gaze fell upon the great tree. Through the mycelium, and indeed through Lithulmisomilinā€™s very roots, the thrum of communion became apparent.

ā€œUnto me did you call, so I have come,ā€ the roots and fungi said, carrying their great fatherā€™s will.

ā€œWhat distresses you, Oā€™ joy of mine?ā€

The Sage Tree tested its metaphorical tongue - complex thoughts and words were still quite foreign to it, but in the safety of a peer like this presence, it dared explore new vocabulary, which its roots could milk from the ever-giving thrum in the mycelium. In its voiceless and wordless language, which still almost had a sound to it like the roll of thunder, groan of bark and trickle of earth, it spoke: ā€œAlone. Seek others. The Lordā€¦ Arrives.ā€ If its mycelium could bow, it would. ā€œWith help, find more. Learnā€¦ Learnā€¦ Learnā€¦ More others. More Lithulmisomilin.ā€

Meaning drove through the weft and weave of fungi, reaching easily their father, who in turn responded. Shifting in place, the miasma that hid his shape splayed out, reaching forth in many directions to touch other trees--both near and far. Each of them had been borne of his will, shaped by his power. Then, with a limb of flesh and bark and chitin, Malath Kaal touched his conscious son.

His great and glowing eye, that symbol in the haze, it pulsed suddenly with brilliant life and so the Sage Tree would briefly become dazed.

Finally, that Deity of form--the Formless Flesh, the Unbent Lord--did speak, and his words echoed far and wide, heard by any who cared to listen. Its sound carried a single word, and ā€˜twas an edict that he proclaimed.

ā€œEnkindle!ā€

In a single momentous instant, all nature--even his newly awoken son--would black out. Birds from the sky would fall, predators cease in their hunts, prey stumble to their knees.

The sky shook, leaves crashed outwards, carried by the fell wind of his voice. It was a shockwave of forceful power, an expression of divine purpose, it was life--of both flesh and mind. In some seldom few who were not yet ready, seeds of conscious flame were planted to perhaps one day awaken. Yet, in others...in others it blossomed into awareness and flowered into being.

Across the vast shard that remained of a now dead world, other Sages became aware and through roots and fungi did their first cries swell.

Around that God, that Deity of Form, animals awoke once more confused and quite unsure. Nonetheless, life would not wait and so they carried on, unaware of precisely what had changed. They might never know, but one would always remember: Lithulmisomilin.

ā€œSo unto you Iā€™ve given siblings, from which to learn and with which to commune!ā€

Unsaid, other meanings slithered, whispering ā€™...and perhaps one day to subsume.ā€™

All around the world, the Sage Trees had acquired sapience, and the fungal network filled immediately with enlightened thought of a hundred philosophers; although their vocabularies were still in very early development, one could sense the complexities pumping through a million magical fibres. The voices were not coherent at first, but once all of them understood that they needed to cooperate, they did. Many hundred voices combined as one and spoke, ā€œThank you.ā€

In woods all over the Shard, in certain groves, the blue-streaked, glowing bark of a subset of the local Kelā€™a Maeori trees flickered with the realisation that they could think and that they could practice with the magic fueling their leaves. In every grove, miracles of magic came to life through the work of the Sage Trees. Dying animals healed at the roots of trees who found themselves benign; others who felt themselves to be superior wonders of nature, turned all creatures insolent enough to disrespect their glorious persons to stone and ash. Lithulmisomilin probed the network again, permitting itself a moment to not address its lord.

ā€œWho?ā€ it reverbed.

ā€œMilitabulkim,ā€ said one voice.

ā€œQuasaarmahavizim,ā€ said another.

ā€œRutulmodipilin,ā€ said a third.

The voices presented themselves in calm and collected order, and as Lithulmisomilin inquired as to where they were from, they answered the likes of ā€œmountainsā€, ā€œvaleā€, ā€œseaā€, ā€œlakeā€, ā€œiceā€, ā€œgrassā€. Truly, they spanned the world, and while their numbers were few, they were protected by their wisdom and knowledge of the arcane. This, it was certain of. So its metaphorical face turned back to its master and spoke, ā€œNowā€¦ Learnā€¦ Together.ā€ Warm and pleasant winds blew from its branches towards the miasma. ā€œGratitudeā€¦ Overflowing.ā€

With a nod and a pulse from his great eye, the Deity of Form retreated, leaving the Sages to their discourse as he traveled across the shard and back into his mountain.


Among the Teeth



The revelry had lasted for quite some time, but joy waned; reason surged, and the Vhan-ka realized their shift in situation. The stone beneath their feet no longer remained utterly level and smooth. When they moved, they heard the edges of the cavern, and indeed, no longer was it lightless. While many of their ilk grew worried as their contentment faded and reality set in, their leader remained calm and resolute.

Once-Fein--Meae Natah-- looked with his trio of eyes about the room. Finally, he beheld once more the world in truth. Unlike his clansmen, who he had led for generations, Meae understood the gifts he'd been given, for it was not his first encounter with divinity. Patiently he watched the others--the man he'd come to know as a brother, the woman who he knew cared for him beyond a friend--as they reoriented themselves and began to panic. As he observed their faces, he knew how they must feel. He knew that their every instinct told them that they'd left behind protection, that they were lost and would not be found again. Meae saw in the growing whites of their eyes an old fear, fostered by entities both ravenous and strange.

However, he knew something they could not: They had a second chance now.

"What are we to do?!" One called out through the dim murk of the cave, his voice a frantic whisper.

"I cannot run any longer," another said, and there were tears in the child's eyes. Reborn or not, these people were tired.

"...my belly yet aches, despite that being." A girl who might grow to be a woman in a year or three said, her voice a quiet plea, a somber echo of long-carried misery.

Meae let their words touch him; he let their emotions suffuse his skin. He let their worries briefly slide amongst his bones--eyes closed in contemplation--then he shed them. Silence cut off any further protest from his tribe, and they looked to him. There were no gasps, but something in them changed as they saw him. Before he had been an ageless figure, a symbol of survival and stability in a harsh and unforgiving world, a world tearing at every seam. Yet, he had been flawed as any of them, as if he too had barely held himself together. They had respected him, and he had been an ideal they could aspire to, but not out of reverence or awe as beyond all else, he had been one of them. Imperfect. Human. Beaten down. Exhausted. It had been his perseverance and his ageless nature that had struck a chord in them. Now? Now he was different. He was more.

Before, he'd been a living idol to perseverance--an old and weathered bulwark against a storm that might soon break him. Now it was as if he had been utterly renewed. There was no strangeness in him as they looked, for it was almost as if they'd known--somehow--that he'd always had three eyes and skin of shifting pearlescent black. They'd known he had power beyond their knowledge, but it had always seemed to drain him as if every time he used it, the magic aged him many years. Now, as Meae raised a hand, there was magic inherent in the movement, something otherworldly living alongside him in his skin, bound by his Will.

"So we will not run," Meae said.

His flesh pulsed with unearthly light, and his eyes grew effervescent as burning stars.

"But we cannot fight them--..." one said.

"We can," he replied.

Meae's light filtered outwards through the dim-lit cavern and touched each of them in turn. With its caress across their skin, eyes drifted shut, and breaths caught or blew away. Their age-old tension left them, each and every one until there was only stillness. Then, where it had lived, hope appeared within them.

Meae smiled and strode out from the cavern. They followed, no longer daunted by the cold wind's bite or the beasts that lurked beyond.

They would not run any longer.

It was time to fight for what was theirs.



The Unheard Dirge



Once, the world had been new, and upon its surface had lived an endless deluge of prey. Their minds had spread all across the globe and penetrated beyond its unseen seam. Then they'd had another name--those beasts--a name feared, reviled, cursed. Yet in those ages, they'd been little more than thought-forms bereft of bone or vicious flesh with which to thirst.

And yet...

Yet they'd known hunger.

Terrible, all-consuming need.

To be full, to be whole, but this power was not theirs, so endlessly they'd had to feed.

Then, in time, into vessel's they slipped, finding purchase 'pon that aging, forgotten land.

And yet...

Yet, they could not feed for the apocalypse had come.

Of course, worlds may tremble, men might fall, stone might crumble--the forgotten gods could flee--but their flesh, their minds, their hunger...these things could last an eternity.

So it was that those beings, the Unfulfilled, children of Dream's flesh, had survived unscathed throughout the dread apocalypse.

Yet now, though flesh they had to devour and predate, they found that so few lives remained to plunder and so once more their hunger they could not sate.

And yet...

They ate.

They ate.

They ate.

Too late.

Too late.


Among the Teeth


A thing lurked upon a mountainā€™s peak but remained unseen. It hailed from a realm beyond the pale where seldom mortals tread. It knew their minds, those delicious treats. It knew desire and thought and emotion too. Now, it was more than these for flesh had it been gifted, yet even such a gracious gift could not leave its mind uplifted.

For it was a fire in the chest, seething, seeking to destroy. It was what might kindle fury or revenge. Red and black were its colors. Blood, fire, and decay. Its eyes they reviled, its talons twisted, and muscles gripped and tore. As it lusted after targets, it swore and swore and swore. Pure malice: Discontent. Vile, putrid mind-rot, and yet in this beast, it would not relent.

Head rising, wrought of black and silver bone, the beast sniffed the mountain air and smelled something it could not bear.

Joy. Contentment. Hope. ā€˜Disgusting pestilence,ā€™ it thought. Yet these things were held by living beings with minds that it still sought.

So it opened churning eyes, casting mind's gaze across mountains and snowing skies. With supernatural ease, the beast rose then before its talons tore the earth. In moments it vanished downwards, drilling through soil and stone, like knives cut at supple meat. With violence, it destroyed, ate, and expelled the shard's decaying peat.

Soon, it knew, soonā€¦it would eat.




Up a rocky ridge, through snow and gale, they trod. It was a perilous path, but they struggled no more. Their steps were sure, their minds at peace, and in them burned the warmth of hope.

The tribe did not know precisely where they were headed, but they trusted Meae Natah; heā€™d never led them astray. To follow him was easier than to again consider the coward's path: To cower and to flee. No more, they thought as oneā€”no more running.

Far ahead, just behind Meae's brotherā€”if not by blood, then by bondā€”considered the changes in himself and in his kin. Vham Ane he had been, but now it did not fit. In his skin, he felt a strength beyond his own, beyond a normal man's. He knew that he could run farther than before, that he could leap farther, higher, and land as if with practiced ease. The cold bit at his skin, but it no longer felt like shearing claws that sought to tear away his vital heat. The world seemed brighter, but above all else, there was something in him that he did not understand.

Power.

"Brother," Meae said, and his voice cut through the wind without great volume or any sign of strain. "What shall I call you now?"

"I'm not sure," he replied, and in his voice, he found strength heā€™d never known. He heard it clearly and knew that so too could his kin. "This is all so strange; I don't understand what we've been given."

Meae did not respond, but his tattoos pulsed, and the light melted snow and warmed the air around him. ā€œIn the time before,ā€ he began, and the wind carried his words to all, ā€œI could cast my Will upon the world and bend it to my desires.ā€ He let the words linger in the chill wind as it danced about them, creating intricate flurrying patterns from the snow.

"They called us Willcasters, and I am the last of them. This power...what we've been given, it's different somehow, but similar." Meae stopped then, turning to his brother. "Open yourself to it," the Willcaster said, and his brother complied without thought.

A warmth rose in his chest, then a glow touched his flesh, and he felt a tingling in his feet, through his shoes. Somehow, then, he felt the earth beneath him, vast and without clear thought. Meae nodded then spoke, his words a command, "Bind it!"

Meae's brother gaped, unsure what he should do exactly, but nonetheless, he tried. He focused his mind, his awareness, and with a glacial slowness, the wind around him stilled. The glow of his flesh suffused the air, creating a glowing halo that increased in brilliance by the moment. Then the light flashed, winking out into oblivion.

"I am Ka-Vhalen," Meae's brother said, and as the words left his lips, he felt that the power had not vanished when the light had. No, it still built around him, and soon the air creaked with the force of his Will, begging to be released.

So he did.

Casting a hand to the side, he cast his power out. What followed was the rapid movement of wind and snow like a tearing gale that rose upwards in a pillar of force as if some titanic beast had erupted from the earth with great violence. Ka-Vhalen stared at the result of his actions before turning his gaze down to his own hands. When he looked up at his brother, he found Meae smiling.

"My power was one of attunement. I believe yours is similar, but know this...it is not the same. I command the world with my Will, but you...you are doing something else," he said, then looked past Vhalen and to the rest of the tribe. "Each of you has this strength within you. I know not its limits--not yet--but I know that it should come to you with ease. Often, the gifts of the gods desire to be used more than anything."

Meae turned his gaze cast elsewhere. "Today, we test those gifts. Brace yourselves; our enemy approaches."

Rha Lia stepped up, putting a hand to Meae's shoulder, standing with him. For a moment, she regarded him beforeā€”with a worried caste to her featuresā€”she followed his gaze. "Who are they?" She asked, an old part of her dreading the answer, knowing the truth.

"This one is Hatred," Natah responded.

Lia frowned.

Soon after, the earth shook beneath them; the tribe hardly stumbled. Far off, birds took off, fleeing from Hatred's gaze.

Then Hatred arrived.

Stone shattered, snow shot upwards towards the sky, and a terrible sound reached their ears. It was like a scream, a roar, like a rock being crushed. The snow cleared, and what lay behind it was unveiled to them. Some few among the tribe stepped back, but none ran.

What stood before them, pulling its jagged, jet black skeleton from the mountain's flesh, was indeed a horror to behold. It stood on four painfully thin limbs, its body devoid of any true meat. Instead, it possessed numerous stringy sinews that blew in the harsh mountain wind. Blood dripped from it and froze in the air before boiling away into steam from the incredible heat it expelled with every breath. Its head was like the skull of some long-abused creature that had long ago been slain and buried. It had long curving horns with spines that zigzagged every which way as they swept back from its skull as if they sought to cut away at the very air around it.

It stood atop not two or four limbs, but six, each ending in thin digits possessed each with eight talons. Spikes and frayed frills protruded from its spine, and though there was little-to-no flesh elsewhere, something grotesque protruded from its midsection, like a distended stomach or the overripe belly of a woman soon to give birth. Behind it whipped and twitched a sinuous tail that seemed composed of intertwined bones that wove and jutted out at strange unnatural angles. This creature prowled several meters off, knowing somehow that there was a difference in these beings, sensing the Power sleeping therein.

It snarled and snapped at the air, then it reared up, frills flaring out, spines bristling, and roared a thunderous melody, its voice rife with maladies unending.

"Run, chattel; Flee or fight! I will subsume you all the same!"

Then it lunged at Lia, who had stepped away from the others, terror in her eyes. The wind howled, the earth shook, her muscles grew taut as the beast hurtled through the air like a black flash of hateful lightning.

Ka-Vhalen met its charge, his body a blurring burst of movement as he pushed from the earth and slammed a fist of coiled Power into the beast, sending it careening off its course. Other members of the tribe stepped forwards, calling out. Some cheered.

Vhalen landed between his Lia and the vile beast, which reared up again and shrieked, its voice cutting at their nerves.

Lia's every breath was ragged, but she grew steadier by the moment, and before long, she took a step forward. Ka-Vhalan looked at her, and she nodded, then both smiled and joined hands. Meae simply watched as a gale stirred at the feet of the pair.

Sensing the disturbance, the beast's gaze turned to a glare, the churning orange of their unearthly glow somehow diminishing even the happiness in their hearts. Vhalen and Lia faltered as it touched upon their minds.

At this, Meae spoke.

"Stand firm."

So they did, steel creeping into their eyes as they fought against the monster's insidious psychic snare. The world began to warp and flicker in the space between their gazes; the snow melted and froze, the wind whipped about then died. Snow trembled at their feet, freezing in strange patterns even as some of it melted and flowed as water across the stone and dirt. A red haze crept across the pair's vision, and black overtook the natural hues of their eyes. The beast took a step towards them, then another.

Once more, the wind howled and whined, but now the tribe knew it for what it was: The laughter of the beast.

That knowledge was all it took to shatter the illusion. The pair needed their help, so they ran.

Yet none fled, for each and every one charged the beast, crossing the distance in mere moments. It roared, but the sound cut off as fists and blasts of Power beat upon its form, driving it back. It snarled in disgust, lashing out with tooth and claw and tail, but they fought on.

Unbidden, a voice pressed upon its mind. 'Too late,' it said, and there was a smile in the sound. For a blessed moment, despite all the horrors it had wrought in its long existence, it felt at peace. Then hunger and pain tore through it, body and mind, and its form surged with a terrible blazing black. The flames scorched the earth and took several tribesmen by surprise, searing them to ash.

It roared, and the sound scattered clouds. It shrieked, and eardrums ruptured. It growled, and hearts stuttered in their rhythmic dance.

Only then did Meae move.

One step was all he took, but in that movement, there was a quiet ancient grace. As he shifted the position of his arms, opening his mouth, the world held still. In an exhaled breath, his voice blossomed outwards in a wordless song of pent-up righteous fury. It was the sound of one once deprived of beauty, a man who had persevered despite it, who had preserved others at the cost of himself. It harmonized with the heartsong of the hateful beast, but not for long.

Erupting into a rising note, the sound tore away at Hatred's flesh; it rent his spirit, it flayed his sinew and burned his mind. Black and silver bone was shaved away, flames of pitch were doused, and strength fled his every limb. He fell, collapsing to the earth as if a colossal weight had struck it down from far above.

The song stopped, replaced only by the soft crunching of snow beneath one man's feet. Hatred looked up with the last of its strength, its eyes only faintly burning. There it glimpsed the 'Caster's solemn smile.

"I forgive you," the man said, and those words they slew the beast.

In a blinding flash, its entire body decayed away to smoke and mist. What was left behind was but a vestige of the thing. Its orange gaze fell upon Meae before it too was turned to pure quintessence.

A long silence descended as the tribe looked then upon the bones of their ancient foe. It was naught but ash now, blown swiftly away by the wind. The beasts were no more remarkable than men, it seemed, just as fallible, just as flawed, and mortal in their way. Strangely, despite their victory, not one of them felt the need to celebrate or cheer. For, despite their age-old rivalry, those men--in that moment--had discovered an unexpected kinship. So, rather than joy, they felt only a displaced and disconcerting sadness.

Still, they had only a moment before Meae turned and continued on. As before, they followed, but now in utter silence, reflecting on that moment.

After all, without their notice...everything had changed.




High above a peak of obsidian and pitch, a glowing emblem rose into the sky, piercing clouds, rain, and wind alike. It shone with black and azure hues and looked down upon the world or at least its greatest shard.

Below, in a cavernous mountain tomb, the God of Form stirred, writhing as the coiling expanse of its mind considered its domain.

The Eye of Malath swiveled, and its gaze saw what remnants of life remained. Few survivors remained, and even fewer hailed from the old world that the god could not remember. He knew only that these beings held little substance from those who had come before; it was written in their flesh. So too, it seemed, had quintessence been shorn away, as only wisps and fragments did remain.

The monolithic entity shifted in its hollow realm, and though no light touched the air or stone of the place, eyes opened and found that they could see. Far away from its titanic form, a gateway opened in the mountain, light barely spilling in. The god considered the world through its aperture--and indeed, through its greater Eye. It saw many things.

Plants withering, animals burning. Men...so few men. Sadness struck Malath in that moment, for he understood all at once the enormity of what creation had lost. He felt it in the broken chains of succession, in the branches that had vanished from the Tree of Life, never again to be seen. He knew that lives had been lost, but so much more was gone than that. Even substance itself had fled, reason too was gone from this world for its ancient enemy writhed above him--above them all--stirring up the skies.

The great Eye swiveled once more, and the glowing symbol lit upon something genuinely new, yet unspeakably ancient in a way.

Pestilence.

Far afield, a deific force wrestled with the chaos of the skies. Slowly, ever-so-slowly, it was winning, but it was not enough--not by half. The being was small in stature and wreathed in dire sickness and decay. To look upon it was to know true malignance and disease. For Malath Kaal, it was at once like learning he had a brother and discovering that they'd committed acts too heinous even to recount.

Still, even such a force acted to save this decaying shard, perhaps even against its essential nature. This...this Malath Kaal could respect. Yet still, he was not done, for there was much to see. The Eye turned, and in a great arc, joy surged anew in his form.

Like beacons, other figures--large and small; ancient, yet newly born--appeared within his awareness. One struck a great metallic drum with a bone of the earth, its head crudely shaped yet sturdy and robust. With each beat of the figure's rhythmic work, the shard stabilized. Others wrest pillars up from the earth and maintained them, stilling the trembling remnant of stone and rock and dirt. Others still existed, twisting life or forging it anew--spreading it. Some few held forms utterly alien to him, so unlike his own were they. Their actions he could not comprehend, and with those, there were others whose forms were familiar but whose minds wove in patterns that his own could not seem to follow. Pride swelled within him, joining the jubilation that had come before. Soon, those emotions welled up with power, and then conviction joined them.

Far above, the Eye of Malath began to brighten. First, it could be seen only from his mountain, then it was so bright it lit the sky for miles. In moments it became a star, and then a sun so bright was its glaring gaze. Brighter still, it glowed until the entire mountain range was obscured by its brilliance, and the intensity of its light burned away all clouds and wind and rain that it did touch. A roar echoed out from that blackest of mountains--Se'raa Kelet, the Black Maw--and it struck the structure like a gong. Yet, despite the vibration, the earth beyond it did not shake, though a tremendous wind roared out, carrying the sound. There were no words in it, but it held its own deeper sort of meaning.

Endure.


The luminescence could easily be seen from every corner of the shard, and further...it would not matter where one looked. Even buried within the earth, its shining brilliance would be known. The echoing sound of that victorious roar would resonate through the bodies of all that yet lived. It would give them warmth; it would fill their bellies and sate their thirst--if only for a time. Further still, it did something that few others of his kin could do; it cast a trillion-trillion lifeforms through the air and scattered them far and wide. In a microscopic rain, would these organisms fall like a gentle blanket barely seen drifting down to earth.

That unseen shower of life soon came to rest all across the shard, and all it touched birthed new life as if the ground itself had become a womb. Slowly, those tiny lives sunk into the soil, stone, and soot where they lay for a time...dormant. Then, as with his first children, the tiny lives within the Maw, they spread. At first, they formed only tendrils, writhing through the dirt, and where some failed, they changed. These became hardier to traverse stone and long since antiquated bone. Gradually, as the world breathed, these lives spread out far and wide, uniting as they stretched out unseen limbs beneath the ground. Finally, with a final burst of their Lord's light, they began in earnest their most crucial work.

All across the shard, the varied mycelium of the Ke'esath Sae'a burst forth from the soil. Some entwined with roots and bark, others stalks, and yet others merely spread across the surface. Through the Ke'esath, nutrients were divied and cast out far and wide. Where fires raged, they scorched at the fungal roots of Malath, but they would not be impeded. Adapting, as all things must in a world so harsh and cruel, the mycelium took from its would-be-killer and harnessed its destructive might. So fires became fuel themselves, and the mycelium crept on.

Slowly, as the fungus finished its great encroachment, Malath's Eye began to dim until once more it was seen only by a seldom few nearby. Far below the Eye, the Great Presence briefly grew still within its abode, considering its work. Every branching fiber of that vast mycelial web was like a nerve in his own body, allowing him to perceive much even without the aid of his greater Eye. Still, that had not been his aim, for while the Ke'esath Sae'a indeed spread nutrients all across the shardā€™s many miles, it barely made a difference. This irked him, for he knew the world needed more, and so he moved once more. Twisting, the unending bulk of Sa'a Malath Kaal rose up within the mountain. In response, the gateway at its base slipped closed, cutting off all light. Moving with a swiftness that one could not expect of such a massive creature, the Deity of Form reached the limit of his domain. Only then did the gateway open above the god, revealing to him the sky.

Light cut downwards through the black, but it revealed only swirling mist and the faint outline of an endless coiling beast. That haze ascended from the mountain's opened peak and pressed up into the sky. Where beams of brilliance struck that blinding brackish fog, it died as if eaten by whatever dwelled within. Then, as the fog--and the god within it--reached the apex of their climb, they met with Malath's ardent sigil. Within the veil of essence that hid his divine flesh, something stirred and then was revealed. It was like a wall of flesh, beautiful and strange, but the truth of it was soon unearthed. Upon that pearlescent skein opened a truly massive orb, its gaze taking in even the symbolic Eye of the god.

The Eye of Malath, at that moment, faded from existence, replaced instead by the true countenance of the Formless Flesh. At the true Eye's unveiling, the world shuddered, and then Malath Kaal spoke.

"Arise."


With a sound like thunder--no--like reality snapped in twain, his voice rang out through the heavens and across the shard. Where storms of unreality writhed, his voice took shape, calling upon Ke'esath Sae'a to aid its cause. That sound it drove itself into the earth in many far-flung spears of iridescent power, and where it struck so arose something new. At first, they were only saplings--small and supple wood--but in minutes, their fibrous bark groaned. With a violence they grew upwards at the sky, their branches spearing upwards at the storms that threatened life's long-since-weakened hold. The winds tore at them, and those supernatural forces threatened to shatter their earthbound trunks, but they would not relent.

The Unbent Lord, their god, called out; his truest Eye a shining beacon.

"Renew."


That edict struck their bark and suffused them with power most divine. So blessed by Malath, they opened blossoms to the storm of unreal etheric force and supped upon its power. Like men dying of thirst after a long drought, they drunk from the storm, taking their fill--then more. Steadily, the arcane storms began to calm as the power was drawn down into the shard itself, suffusing the earth--and as the trees exhaled--the air as well.
Satisfied, Malath Kaal withdrew his form and power both into the mountain, leaving behind enough only to maintain the delicate balance that the Kelā€™a Maeori--those great trees--maintained. Quietly, he rested, allowing his sleeping mind to spread far and wide across the Ke'esath Sae'a so that he might dream of the world soon to come. His final thought, before unconsciousness took hold, was singular and ringing. It shut out the light from the world--the peak to his abode forming anew--and released flickering fragments of his power onto the shard.
It was not thunderous, but it could be felt, if only as a whisper. It said onlyā€¦

'Emerge.'





Hours passed, then a day, as the fatigue of an almost endless race for survival ended, each member of Fein's tribe allowing themselves--for the first time in many moons--to give in to their body's needs and simply rest. All the while, the 'Caster watched over them, vigilant. Though he understood this being to be one of supreme power, he had yet to trust it. Instead, Fein had spent much of the last day in silent observation of the darkness beyond their eyes' reach. Over the hours that he'd watched, he mainly saw the colorless void of that vast expansive cavern, but in some moments, he heard--and caught brief glimpses--of something beautiful and monstrous in equal measure. On the second day, when some of his people had yet to wake, Fein became suspicious. So it was that on the third day--when his patience betrayed him--he decided that it was time to break the silence that had stretched for so long between gods and men.

"Why have you done this?" He asked, accusation in his tone--for once, his voice bereft of pain. It had been so long since he'd last spoken--and since his voice had lacked the rasp of strain and exhaustion--that he hardly recognized the sound. How was it that he'd healed so quickly? Fein frowned, but before he could truly consider the implications of his revelation, a sonorous drone echoed through the black before him.

Slowly, the sound took shape, the great voice answering his query. "Burdens too heavy to bear," rumbled the god, "...without you, they would have broken each and every one."

Fein gritted his teeth, anger welling in his chest, almost clouding his vision. He rose from the ground, pressing forth and into the murk. "How dare you!" His emotions screamed, but he had not stopped them, and so the sound carried through the mountain, reaching the monster that surely lurked within.

"You would take away the one thing they desired most, after how hard they fought to keep it?!" His voice rose into a scream of rage, the emotion let loose, yet he could not help but feel that his body was different than before. Stronger, his voice louder and more melodic than even in eons long since dead and gone. Nonetheless, he raged, and the god listened in utter silence, unperturbed. With time, Fein's fury cooled to embers, and he was left almost gasping for breath. Some few among his clansmen had approached him, Rha Lia among them. She laid a hand on Fein's shoulder and met the 'Caster's gaze. Lia gave him a sympathetic smile and nodded as if to say that it was okay.

In that somber moment, warmth blossomed in his heart, soothing the burn of his anger, calming his mind. From the emptiness beyond them, light shone, then dulled in turn. Slowly, it became a pulsing, and that sight too became a sound--throbbing gently through the stone beneath their feet. It spread, and as it did, the stone shone a glossy black, and light fled further towards the entrance. Yet the clansmen found that they could see as if a faint bluish glow had suffused the space. Fein blinked and took another step forwards before reaching out not with his body but with his mind. Slowly, ever-so-slowly, the wind picked up, and Fein closed his eyes, joining his voice with the humming intonation of that monolithic being. For the first time since the Crippling Descent in the forgotten ages now lost to the world, he sang, and with the sound, the world bent, remembering his Will.

Beside him, Rha Lia covered her mouth, going wide-eyed as wind and snow and leaves danced about her friend in dizzying patterns. Each arrangement was almost too beautiful to bear, and before she knew it, there were tears upon her cheeks. Fein's voice soared in harmony with Malath Kaal's, growing stronger by the moment. Where before the mountain simply hummed, now it almost shook beneath the intensity of their might.

The stone, now black as basalt, seemed to spread its hue unseen. Their songs gave new life and purpose unto the tiny microbes which from Malath Kaal had spawned to blacken stone and flesh. The creatures crept upon the sleeping forms of men and women who could not wake, and on them markings began to form. With each hill and valley in their music, the microbes sank deeper into the flesh of those few mortals they had touched. They wove through every cell, through hair and eyes and spine; with them came change.

The song drifted into echoing melodies, resonating through the cavern, cutting swaths of sound through the earth, melding flesh, binding bone. Those remnants of sound drifted, carried far and wide by the wind, and they touched other tribes miles askance of their location, blessing them in times of need. It faded from the cavern, but its echoes remained, calling back and forth through the mountains. It was a melody of warmth and wellness.

Fein wiped tears from his reddened cheeks, the faint wrinkles less defined than even minutes prior--before their song had started. He choked down quiet sobs and, with a gasping breath, collapsed into a huddle on the floor. For so long, Fein had sung, and the world had remained silent and dead. For so long, he had hummed and bade the trees to listen and respond--all for naught. The apocalypse, its terrible destruction, its decay, had rent the spirit of the world as surely as it had its shape. In so doing, that dying world had worn away the spirit of a man at peace, a man who had lived longer than most.

Fein cried, not for the loss he'd suffered, nor for those born or dying in a decaying world bereft of peace or even mirth. No, Fein sobbed because the Primal's arrival signaled the return of something greater: Hope.

The god's Eye opened before him, and it spoke, flesh unfurling downwards from it; first bone, then ligaments and muscle, tissues, then nerves and skin. It was almost human, but it bore four eyes, two of flesh, and two of essence transposed upon each other at the center of its forehead. Beyond this, something long and sinuous stretched out behind it and into the darkness. The Eye of Malath--now embedded into its forehead, glowed a gentle light. Its eyes of flesh were featureless and white, its lips closed, and its form utterly naked--yet still androgynous.

"You are Fein no longer," the figure said, but the voice was Malath's, shaking the cavern. Its lips did not move, but its limbs did as it knelt before the man and placed hands upon his shoulders. "Be reborn within my gaze, Aged One. Bearer of burdens, he-who-carried-knowledge thought lost. Willcaster."

Malath spoke the final word with a mix of awe and deep respect. Fein could only nod in response, but the vessel of Malath understood for it felt every sensation of the human's body. He knew the man, from every sinew to every synapse. Though Malath could not grasp entirely the power that Fein had once held--nor could the Great Presence ever truly understand the laws by which magic moved in this land of new beginnings--there were some things within his power.

So it was that his vessel began to dissolve into a haze of black limned with azure light, its essence touching once-Fein and making him anew. The glowing mist suffused the human down to the atoms of his being, then deeper into the quintessence that had wrought him. His power touched the decayed seed of divinity that had once been kindled in his soul, and then it grew.

Likes vines or nerves, something blossomed within the human's mind, taking root within his brain, then entwining with his nerves. The haze of black pressed itself upon his skin, and so like his kin, he gained markings of swirling pitch. Yet his were not like the others, they had an iridescent sheen, and they writhed and changed across his form from moment-to-fleeting-moment. He shuddered at the sensation as he felt even his heart grow steadier, his lungs stronger, his muscles better. Then sound burst from his throat in one melodious note, and the tears evaporated from his face. That single note drove the sleep from his slumbering clansmen, from the children they thought would never wake, and it ignited within each of them a fire all their own.

The cavern echoed into silence then the God of Form did speak.

"Vhan-ka, you are my children born anew," hummed the deity, his voice a quiet, deep-toned hum. They felt his words, for he knew them now as his people: His first sapient creations. Gently, what seemed an impossibly long digit of far too many joints, emerged from the formless black and rested its taloned end upon once-Fein's hair. "Meae Natah, I anoint thee," whispered the mountain, its voice a tickling wind.

Once-Fein smiled, and for the first time since his transformation, he opened his eyes--all three of them. The third was as the vessel's had been, itself a luminescent facsimile of Malath's own Eye. Meae Natah laughed, the sound filled with boundless joy, and such was the power of his voice--indeed, his Will--that his clan too came to share his joy.

"Go forth..." said the Great Presence through the din.

His work done, yet only now begun, Sa'a Malath Kaal slipped back further into his abode and dissolved into the black. Though the clan could not care to notice in their joy, the cavern they had inhabited for three days moved beneath the earth until it was far afield from the domain of Malath Kaal.

Quietly, his voice only within, the Primal sent out his first edict unto the world. It was only one word, and above all others, the Vhan-ka would feel it.

Thrive.


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