Cara laughed. "Suppose that means you want a surprise." Cara felt an inner flame rising in the tips of her toes and slowly building up, and spreading to each portion of her body. It was an intoxicating feeling. As though her body were merely matching the res she had ignited. The tiny orbs of fire were hovering just above the palms of each of her hands. They illuminated certain portions of her face, while leaving others masked in shadow. It made Cara seem rather otherworldly. The wind was picking up and causing her hair to whip behind her. Cara smiled wickedly. "Do yourself a favor and turn around Berus, surely you don't want to know which of your limbs is about to be burnt off. FEELING it burn, after all, will be more than painful enough for you, and all the more fun to watch," Cara taunted. "Now, perhaps if you manage not to scream..." Cara's voice trailed off. If he continued to keep his mouth shut, she'd be certain to make his torment all the more painful. Not to mention, she'd find a way to get rid of his tongue, and thus his speech, permanently. When it seemed as though Berus would not run, as Cara had hoped, and he wouldn't speak, Cara decided that she had waited long enough. The time had come for her to start hurling fireballs at him. Of course, she had run out of mean things to say for the moment, and simply, went right into her attack. Cara drew back her right hand, and then threw the fireball at Berus. It whizzed by the right side of his ear. Crackling and hissing as it went. A steady stream of smoke floated up silently into the night sky behind it, one of the few reminders of the fireball's existence. The fireball had flown so close to the bard's ear, that Cara suspected it may have singed a few of his hairs. Cara's eyes sparkled, they seemed to reflect Snowsong's fear. She was certain she could see him trembling, but whether it was with cold or fear remained unclear. The snowballs he held seemed to shrink, as though he were gripping them more tightly. The fireball she had thrown had fallen a few feet behind him, to his left. It sizzled upon making impact with the newly fallen snow, and was soon, put out by the snow that melted around its heat. Spilling into the empty space it left in the ground. Cara cackled. "Don't you want to dance Snowsong?" Cara asked as she took a step closer to him. "Or are you too afraid to stand up for yourself? Stick to what one could only assume was your sad excuse for a plan. Two pathetic, shrinking piles of snow in each of your hands." Cara paused. "Are they trembling Snowsong? Afraid of how the heat will make them melt? For surely you don't expect to put out an entire fire with just the two of them." She paused again, and took a half step to the left. "Surely not even the likes of you is foolish enough for something such as that." Cara spread her arms out to her side. The fiery orb still hovered above her left hand, while the right was empty. The left side of her face was the only thing that remained clear. The right was buried in darkness, her long black hair curled around the edges of her chin now that the wind had stopped. "In which case, there will be no one to stop you. Throw your heap of snow Berus. Do your best to meet your mark. It is not as though you can extinguish anything with such a pathetic element." Cara paused. "Feel free to use it, nonetheless. No one is going to waste their energy trying to stop the likes of you from doing so." Cara took another half step to the right as she simply glared at her prey. "That doesn't mean, however, that anyone is going to stop trying to kill you. It would take far more than a pitiful snowball or two to keep that from happening," Cara taunted as she stopped dead in her tracks. "So make a few more snowballs if you'd like, build up a tiny arsenal of the bloody things... I'll wait, as long as you do it quickly. After all, they're not going to save you. Nothing, my dear, could possibly save you now." But of course, Cara was growing tired, if not somewhat cold despite the fire that glowed by her side, keeping her hand warm. She hoped that the fool would move swiftly, do what he will to protect himself, and then let her finish off the game. |