Breathe: just focus on breathing and you’ll live.
So Ayatah inhaled, and then blew a cool jet of air from her lips. Pressure eased, her muscles relaxed a fraction…
Yes, that was easy. Let’s try it again, shall we?
Once again she obliged the strange, calm voice of her mind. This time her lungs burnt and the air caught in her throat so she choked and retched. She rolled onto her side, bringing her knees up and wrapping her arms around them. Her eyes closed, and Ayatah waited, waited, waited -- though what exactly she was waiting for, she did not know. Time drifted past, though the half-breed could not have said whether it had been a chime, a bell or a year. Her senses were muddled save for the strange pains that ripped inside her randomly.
Something foreign had buried itself deep within her cells; making her skin crawl and nerve endings spasm and twitch. At the same time, something quite different was trying to fight its way out of her body, clawing at her insides and her heart and now her brain…
But these sensations were all internal to her; Aya could feel nothing of the grass she lay upon, or the wind that had blown so savagely just chimes before.
The wind, where is the wind?
It had been such a nuisance, something so foreboding and terrible but now Ayatah almost missed it. The sudden stillness - and the silence that came with it - was all the more terrifying. The jungle was never tranquil; it was full of life, full of animals and insects that buzzed and growled. So why was it suddenly so perfectly still?
A mixture of courage and stupidity made Ayatah open her eyes to investigate. Her head throbbed as if she had drank her weight in wine the previous night, but Aya glowered and forced her arms to prop herself up, to observe her jungle home. Everything looked so… normal.
But then she turned towards the blockade, and saw… nothing, no one.
Confusion hit her first; where had her comrades gone during such a time? How had they managed to simply up and leave like that?
Then came the panic; was she the only one left? Ayatah twisted around (almost vomiting at the sudden movement), and was relieved when she caught sight of Alva and Tinnok. They also seemed to have suffered some great… thing… whatever the shyke had just happened. Her intellect, knowledge and reading would not help her; Ayatah simply did not understand what had happened, and that scared her more than anything.
So she tried to speak. She opened her mouth, made some strange noise, and then sighed. Licking her lips, Ayatah tried again.”What..?” Goddess, voice was so hoarse and broken. The word was a simple one, though perfectly summed up her confusion and fear.
Her muscles contracted and twisted once again, and with a gasp, Ayatah’s hand flew to her stomach. Whatever life had existed in there had been stolen from her body -- but with a Myrian-esque growl, Aya refused to admit defeat, or the truth.
So Ayatah inhaled, and then blew a cool jet of air from her lips. Pressure eased, her muscles relaxed a fraction…
Yes, that was easy. Let’s try it again, shall we?
Once again she obliged the strange, calm voice of her mind. This time her lungs burnt and the air caught in her throat so she choked and retched. She rolled onto her side, bringing her knees up and wrapping her arms around them. Her eyes closed, and Ayatah waited, waited, waited -- though what exactly she was waiting for, she did not know. Time drifted past, though the half-breed could not have said whether it had been a chime, a bell or a year. Her senses were muddled save for the strange pains that ripped inside her randomly.
Something foreign had buried itself deep within her cells; making her skin crawl and nerve endings spasm and twitch. At the same time, something quite different was trying to fight its way out of her body, clawing at her insides and her heart and now her brain…
But these sensations were all internal to her; Aya could feel nothing of the grass she lay upon, or the wind that had blown so savagely just chimes before.
The wind, where is the wind?
It had been such a nuisance, something so foreboding and terrible but now Ayatah almost missed it. The sudden stillness - and the silence that came with it - was all the more terrifying. The jungle was never tranquil; it was full of life, full of animals and insects that buzzed and growled. So why was it suddenly so perfectly still?
A mixture of courage and stupidity made Ayatah open her eyes to investigate. Her head throbbed as if she had drank her weight in wine the previous night, but Aya glowered and forced her arms to prop herself up, to observe her jungle home. Everything looked so… normal.
But then she turned towards the blockade, and saw… nothing, no one.
Confusion hit her first; where had her comrades gone during such a time? How had they managed to simply up and leave like that?
Then came the panic; was she the only one left? Ayatah twisted around (almost vomiting at the sudden movement), and was relieved when she caught sight of Alva and Tinnok. They also seemed to have suffered some great… thing… whatever the shyke had just happened. Her intellect, knowledge and reading would not help her; Ayatah simply did not understand what had happened, and that scared her more than anything.
So she tried to speak. She opened her mouth, made some strange noise, and then sighed. Licking her lips, Ayatah tried again.”What..?” Goddess, voice was so hoarse and broken. The word was a simple one, though perfectly summed up her confusion and fear.
Her muscles contracted and twisted once again, and with a gasp, Ayatah’s hand flew to her stomach. Whatever life had existed in there had been stolen from her body -- but with a Myrian-esque growl, Aya refused to admit defeat, or the truth.
|| Ayatah's speech || Ayatah's thoughts || Others' speech ||