
It was a long night.
Fueled on approximately four bells of sleep, plus however long she had been fitfully unconscious in her tent during the afternoon, Aislyn joined the final battle of Alvadas. Within her notebook were drawings of every front, every leader, and every monster they had faced. Within her mind were the images of every death that had occurred to bring them to that point in time. Within her body was a determination to continue on, despite all that. She was powered by sheer spite towards the amalgamated horrors that had tried to execute her. Petch you for attacking me, I’ll live just because you had the audacity to try to kill me.
It was a philosophy that kept her going.
The retreat didn’t last all that long. The living gained ground, yes, but after a while the undead realized there weren’t a whole lot of places to run to, resulting in a cornered battle that ended right up on the edge of Alvadas. Aislyn, being the absolute best shot, tried her best to assist those who pushed back the remains of the creatures. There were other archers, certainly, but with the strength and danger of the monsters on the Eastern Advance, she could do little more than simply weaken a target before some duo of swordsmen finished them off. The east was obviously a front for teamwork, and Aislyn was not good at working with others.
Nonetheless, the battle waged on, into the night. Soon, many were fighting blind, slashing as wildly as the undead they condemned for doing the same. In the breaths between her shots, when Aislyn hooked her foot in the stirrup of her bow to force another arrow, another bolt, another shot, she found herself reflecting. Soon, it was a tradition. Concentrate only on the fight when it came time to shoot, but when she leaned over, looked down, reloaded in the robotic motion she had done a thousand times before, slow as ever, she recuperated. It took her a chime to reload, so she spent a chime at peace. She made sure her illusions were in line. She rolled out her ever-tense shoulders. More than anything, she thought.
Two days ago, she had told Phobius that, on the other side of the door, they’d find what they were looking for. They’d be the heroes Alvadas needed. That everything would be fine. The missing people that had disappeared would return to them.
Now, looking back on it, she knew those all to be lies.
Lining up another shot, Aislyn took aim at a screeching corpse that was actively throwing itself at a shielded swordsman. A banshee, it was. She aimed at the head; if she managed to actually hit it in the mouth, how ironic would that be?
Pulling the release, the arrow flew. Just barely, it grazed the banshee’s shoulder. The thing let out another screech, shattering the usual serenity she had when she reloaded. Hands on her weapon, eyes on her adversary. Pull back the string, then the bolt. There was no use in being caught off guard.
The swordsman, seizing the opportunity, swung at the banshee, landing a fair blow before the beast recovered from the distraction Aislyn had provided. Crossbows were wonderful at short range, but the further away a target was, the more her shot became a guess. That meant she had to move in, protected only by the hope that her opponent would be dead before it reached her, if it saw her at all.
Another shot. The thing went down, this time, from a combination of a bolt to the throat and a sword to the chest. Teamwork. Kind of.
Moving back, Aislyn found herself in a growing group of fighters who seemed to be having the same thoughts she was. There weren’t many more of them. This is it. This is it, the end.
The last few monsters in sight were quickly finished off, leaving a silence that felt… Empty. Dead.
It was done. Some way or another, it was done.
Fueled on approximately four bells of sleep, plus however long she had been fitfully unconscious in her tent during the afternoon, Aislyn joined the final battle of Alvadas. Within her notebook were drawings of every front, every leader, and every monster they had faced. Within her mind were the images of every death that had occurred to bring them to that point in time. Within her body was a determination to continue on, despite all that. She was powered by sheer spite towards the amalgamated horrors that had tried to execute her. Petch you for attacking me, I’ll live just because you had the audacity to try to kill me.
It was a philosophy that kept her going.
The retreat didn’t last all that long. The living gained ground, yes, but after a while the undead realized there weren’t a whole lot of places to run to, resulting in a cornered battle that ended right up on the edge of Alvadas. Aislyn, being the absolute best shot, tried her best to assist those who pushed back the remains of the creatures. There were other archers, certainly, but with the strength and danger of the monsters on the Eastern Advance, she could do little more than simply weaken a target before some duo of swordsmen finished them off. The east was obviously a front for teamwork, and Aislyn was not good at working with others.
Nonetheless, the battle waged on, into the night. Soon, many were fighting blind, slashing as wildly as the undead they condemned for doing the same. In the breaths between her shots, when Aislyn hooked her foot in the stirrup of her bow to force another arrow, another bolt, another shot, she found herself reflecting. Soon, it was a tradition. Concentrate only on the fight when it came time to shoot, but when she leaned over, looked down, reloaded in the robotic motion she had done a thousand times before, slow as ever, she recuperated. It took her a chime to reload, so she spent a chime at peace. She made sure her illusions were in line. She rolled out her ever-tense shoulders. More than anything, she thought.
Two days ago, she had told Phobius that, on the other side of the door, they’d find what they were looking for. They’d be the heroes Alvadas needed. That everything would be fine. The missing people that had disappeared would return to them.
Now, looking back on it, she knew those all to be lies.
Lining up another shot, Aislyn took aim at a screeching corpse that was actively throwing itself at a shielded swordsman. A banshee, it was. She aimed at the head; if she managed to actually hit it in the mouth, how ironic would that be?
Pulling the release, the arrow flew. Just barely, it grazed the banshee’s shoulder. The thing let out another screech, shattering the usual serenity she had when she reloaded. Hands on her weapon, eyes on her adversary. Pull back the string, then the bolt. There was no use in being caught off guard.
The swordsman, seizing the opportunity, swung at the banshee, landing a fair blow before the beast recovered from the distraction Aislyn had provided. Crossbows were wonderful at short range, but the further away a target was, the more her shot became a guess. That meant she had to move in, protected only by the hope that her opponent would be dead before it reached her, if it saw her at all.
Another shot. The thing went down, this time, from a combination of a bolt to the throat and a sword to the chest. Teamwork. Kind of.
Moving back, Aislyn found herself in a growing group of fighters who seemed to be having the same thoughts she was. There weren’t many more of them. This is it. This is it, the end.
The last few monsters in sight were quickly finished off, leaving a silence that felt… Empty. Dead.
It was done. Some way or another, it was done.