1 Summer, 511 AV
Humanity suffered from a highly communicable social disease. For the dominant race in Mizahar, their very prescence was a poison to the other cultures and races scattering the post Valterrian geography. Humanity brought their culture and while not overtly pushing, marinated everyone in their idealism and philosophy. As it stood, humanity may have been able to overcome a war with any one or two races of the land, but instead the race played with its conquest, like a cat with a mouse.
Interesting, if not a little disturbing.
Dhalvasha tried to banish the thoughts from his mind. Humanity was a troublesome species, but few could refute their accomplishments. After the Valterrian, it was the humans that rebuilt the most, establishing trade across Mizahar. The Symnestra retreated to their caves, living in the shadow of extinction and forced to live as kidnappers just to manage procreation.
In a strange duality, procreation and termination were accomplished in the same act...although unlike their eight legged cousins, Symnestra rarely gave birth to more than one child.
A curse or biological fluke, either way every child born passable for full Symnestra was responsible for matricide before it even had the ability to reason.
Did that make his species abominable?
In some ways, yes...the inherent biological need of his race to consume their mother made it difficult to maintain a population. Should the child die in the midst of birthing, both mother and infant stood to perish...depleting the inherent value of the Symnestra race.
They were a mutation unto themselves, and it was disconcerting to see so many humans after the relative emptiness of Kalinor. Bathed in a corona of dust, the gateway dust kicked up by travelers, Dhalvasha squinted his eyes under the bright light...still unsure where to go.
Unlike Endrykas or Riverfall, rules and statutes were more heavily maintained, the population regimented in their unsightly mobs down established streets. He wasn't used to so many people, but rather than reconsider his path he stepped forward into the crowd of people. A medical scientist, especially a Symenstra, must not allow occupational hazards to detain hi progress...otherwise what was he but a fair weathered practitioner?
Swallowed in a sea of bodies, Dhalvasha pushed into Syliras, his red eyes darting to each uncomfortable face in the crowd as people streamed around him...frightened, perhaps, more by the story of his kind than any practical knowledge.
A rough handed push, as though the entirety of the human collective had attacked him, sent the Symnestra sprawling to the cobblestone road, kicked and jostled roughly by those passing by him. The culprit, if there was one, was immune from castigation in the safety of the crowd. Dhalvasha curled in to himself, trying to keep his more fragile appendages from the rough treading feet of the living river around him. As much as a being of stronger constitution might have seen this as an inconvenience, albeit a painful one, Dhalvasha was in very real danger of being crushed by a mixture of uncaring superstition and malicious intent.
Closing his eyes, the Symnestra offered a rare prayer to Varitas, hoping that, if anything, he be roughly pushed outside the path of this stampede that he might recover.
But he was no worshiper, and his racial god likely turned its face away.
Just as well, the world would be changed by mortal hands...as immortal ones had already plunged creation into disaster. He could only hope that he lived long enough to add his abilities to the possibility of mortal transcendence.