Brodon could still hear the father's voice behind him. He dared a glance over his shoulder to see the ghost "pop" in and out of visibility, progressing in jumps toward him. A new surge of fear and revulsion gave him a boost, but his adrenaline was already taxed and his sprint was short lived.
The malice of the laughter intensified, growing closer in leaps and bounds. A sudden blast of cold spiked through his abdomen and the muscles seized and twitched in debilitating response. The flow of athletic motion was thrown off enough to slow Brodon down a half step. A stab of icy malice nearly disabled his upper spine, between his shoulders, and the jerky hesitance to his stride became worse. Blades of ice felt as if they were slicing through his organs on both sides of his backbone, disrupting his breathing as he gasped in shock.
He stumbled and went down, the cold nearly causing his body to go into a seizure. The voice sneered some untranslatable taunt and a stone came crashing into the side of Brodon's head. Dizzy pain turned to darkness and a wave of cold that consumed his entire body. The dizziness seemed to be sliding parts of his flesh away. It was not so much painful as disturbing. It brought back to mind his one single memory of succeeding in projecting djed from his body. It had been a shielding lesson he had reluctantly tried. A class he had ultimately rejected in favor of learning falconry. He simply was NOT comfortable with anything that tampered with the very essence of his body. He did not like it then, hen he had a semblance of control over it, and he disliked it even more now, when it seemed to be occurring of its own accord.
His revulsion gave him one last focus as he concentrated on his own body to recall the essence that seemed to be leaving him. Warmth rushed through him and he saw the stars over head shimmer as something was rejected from his body. Two things dawned on him, both of them deadly and terrible. One was that the ghost of the father had just been possessing him, which made him sick to his very soul. The other was that a cloud was roiling overhead, sparking with destructive energy. He had been stricken by djed lightning, formed by a wind wizard, once before, and the thought that he was now helpless, his body spent from the possession, brought terror to his soul. THIS time, he was already weakened. THIS time, his breathing was in ragged gasps. THIS time, his heart was already stuttering in exhausted mistimed rhythm. THIS time, he would die.
Then it got even worse. he heard the wailing sobs of the little girl rushing toward the father and he, coming beneath the cloud. The voice of the father changed dramatically from a taunting, triumphant crow of victory, to a horrified wail of anguish. All Brodon could feel was desperation. But not for himself, he knew he should have died many times over by now. It had only been by the grace of Eywaat and Yahal that he still lived. But now, everything that seemed to comprise the whole purpose of it, was about to be lost. Surely, the gods had guided him here to rescue this child. How could he fail?
A final surge of determined strength surged from...somewhere...and he found himself inexplicably on his feet, rushing toward the girl. The fathers voice was a boom of self-loathing and accusation, knowing that, without a body to possess, there was no action he could take to save the child, his child.
Brodon crashed into the girl, hurling her to the left, noticing, but not recognizing, that his iron staff was stuck upright in the sand a few feet to his right. The air crackled and sizzled and, in the millisecond before the surge struck, he felt his skin crawl and his hair stand up from the imbalance of energy in the environment. Then there was blinding light, deafening noise, and a heart-stopping flow of unstoppable power that tore every fiber of every molecule of his body into ramrod rigidity.
...then every thing went black and silent.