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by Creeper on June 4th, 2012, 2:17 am
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by Tiki on June 4th, 2012, 5:03 am
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by Asha on June 8th, 2012, 1:08 am
Asha turned fitfully on her bunk, eyes tightly closed in sleep. She was locked tightly in the embraces of a dream though it brought her no pleasure. In her dream she sat upon the very bunk she now slept in and fog crept through the longhouse door. Her dream self stared at the fog listlessly, uncaring. The fog reached her spectral body and curled around it, tendrils invading her nose and throat. As the fog began to choke her she stood and clawed her way through the bank of fog and out of the longhouse. With each step she felt her body change, nails and teeth began to elongate as territorial aggression filled her psyche. Her dream self was confused and angered by the changes. She couldn’t seem to free herself from the fog and her broad, black chest heaved as she sought fresh air. Her entire being trembled in anger and her gaze sought out something or someone to take it out on. A human woman stood near the entrance of the longhouse scrubbing clothes in a bucket of water. Asha felt her weightless, dream body approach the woman and her massive right hand shot out and grasped the woman about the head. Asha looked down as the woman looked up at her. The woman’s mouth formed a perfect ‘O’ in a scream but no sound emitted from her throat. In fact, though she took no note of it while she dreamt, there was not a sound anywhere. No bird chirps or wind rustling leaves in the whole forest. Asha lifted her head to the sky as she held the woman firmly, preparing to crush her skull and feel brain and bone ooze in her thick fingers. She opened her mouth, revealing huge incisors, and roared triumphantly at the clouds. Her roar echoed through the entire camp, the only sound in that entire dreamworld. Before Asha could complete her intended violence, the fog parted before her. Through the parting an elderly Jamoura passed calmly and stood before her. He held her with a solid gaze and she felt shame in her actions. She had almost allowed herself to give in to her instincts completely and take another’s life. Asha’s grip loosened, and the woman’s body dissolved into the fog. Asha took no notice of the woman’s sudden disappearance and quickly forgot her existence as she continued to lock gazes with the elder. She felt booming, deep words echo through her mind though the elder’s lips never twitched. She listened to the elder’s speech, enraptured with each word as her anger slowly ebbed away. As the last echo of the elder’s words faded from her mind a flurry of images replaced it. The images showed her a path through the camp and forest to a group of Jamoura dressed in bones and feathers. As the last image faded so did her dream, both fading into blackness. The blackness began to become brighter, and suddenly Asha was sitting upright in her longhouse bunk. She wasn’t sure what to make of the dream, but she knew it was a call to help her people. A call to help her home was not one she could ignore and so she stood. She gazed around the longhouse, a few stirred here and there. She didn’t know if any others had shared her dream so she decided against speaking up. She strode to the entrance of the longhouse and passed through it, shuddering as she remembered what it was like passing through this place in her dream. She tried not to think of the dream woman she had almost killed and quickened her pace through the camp. |
by Ana Sol Starris on June 8th, 2012, 1:45 am
The sleep was light, but possibly deep enough for vague dreams to wander about her rapidly shut eyelids. Everything was the same, a time once lived, Zeltiva abloom in her mind as she took slow steps up to the second floor of her former childhood home. Every step she took, a clutch in her heart grew tighter and tighter, to the point she felt she would choke in her sleep if she did not open the door right away. The small Anas pace remained the same, ever unchanging as she came up to the door, her small hands gripped the knob as her eyes began to water uncontroably. The sounds of violence pierced through the door and grew in volume- then stopped. Blinking, the silence was eerie as she stood in the middle of the Longhouse she slept in with many others, their bodies sleeping ever soundly, peacefully. Ana glanced about, confused, now an adult, but oddly was not estranged by that fact. The forest beyond the field whispered, lightly, as the fog over took the longhouse considerably quickly. Ana stared at it, emotionlessly, head tilting to the side as it engulfed her.. Badump... Badump... Went the thiefs heart within her chest, fear quickly rising as her spell broke, she began to thrash violently to get it away from her. It was too late, the fog was working doubly quick on herself "guys! The mists in the camp! The CAMP!" Ana shouted, both loudly in her dream and into the morning as well when she tried to distance herself from the wall of white. To no avail. Every feeling she was afraid of bombarded her senses to follow, fear first, anger second, lust third and then finally a need to kill. To see blood, she wanted something dead, right now, right here. Right then. Blood, though it wasn't as bad as touch and being in water, it held a tightening grip on her throat as she tried to dart away, to hide, scurry before attempting to knock beds down, flip them over like a maddened animal, a dog backed into an inescapable corner. Then suddenly, the feeling ceased, the mist parted and an elderly and wizened looking Jamoura had entered. Turning, she glared harshly at him as the fog acted as his cloak, his stare, like a softly edged but strikingly piercing dagger to her mind seemed to have freed her just as quickly as she had been captured. Anas heart was racing against her chest, pounding hard to the point she felt it might burst, his words, calming, soothing, they only just relaxed her to the point she could listen to him carefully. The jamoura, he reminded her of something.. But possibly nothing, vague, very unlikely memories of a grandfather passed her eyes only to be lost again. His request, no, he wasn't asking, he was demanding her to follow his call, she stared at him like a frozen deer. Anas heart thumping rapidly against her chest as she watched carefully, trying, with every shred of sanity she clung to in that petching mist to understand him. Mission, the brief word passed through her ears, you have a mission to engage in, though the Jamoura had not said it directly to her. The simple and short sentence was all she needed to comprehend what he was saying, her own way of understanding, if it was a mission he was putting upon her then she would gladly do it. A job. The reason they came to the Spires in the first place, a mission to reclaim it, she opened her mouth just as the wizened Jamoura disapeared, she was about to ask something, trivial, but something... No, this wasn't the time to ask it. Not right now, perhaps later? The dream had seemed so real she was confusing the reality around her with the imagination of her mind. Such as all her dreams induced, taking on life like qaulities albeitly with magical properties, inexplainable odds and occurences. An image of a hidden face of the darkness lingered, flashing by only as a brief memory, Motif hadn't visited her in the dream.. Did that make the dream a reality? No Motif? With a gasp she awoke, clutching her chest and writhing to awake further, sweating, shaking, the small woman was in somewhat of a state of shock.. Pausing, she inhaled slowly, then exhaled, rubbed her eyes then stretched once she had calmed properly. What a strange dream.. Most of the images had dissapeared but the ones leading out of the camp to the strangely dressed Jamoura that seemed to have been waiting.. For what? Ana pondered curiously, all but the few images and a mission passing from her mind to be devoured into her subconscience. No longer groggy, she swung her feet to the ground and stood up already fully clothed from the night before, placing her scabbard to her side then quickly digging through her stuff.. Ana wondered, what was she doing exactly? Follow a dream? One most odd... Actually, it worried her, not once had such a dream like that been presented to her but rather gruesomely depicted horrors of her family. It wouldn't hurt to check it out, right? Anas curiousity was really getting the better of her these days, especially when nothing really interesting happened about the camp. With a shrug she began to seperate items from necessities, which in truth wasn't much. The Spires weren't exactly thievy denizens as she had noticed before now, but she didn't entirely trust them from Sunberthian experience. With a stressed sigh she put everything back in her bag and onto her back, strapped the buckler on her arm and looked around her, shaking her head slightly then running a hand through it to calm the mess down. She needed a comb or brush soon badly otherwise she'd have to cut the blonde locks off to a suitable length. With a glance around, it had seemed there were others doing the same, getting ready for unknown reasons to Ana.. Wait, no they couldn't have possibly had the same dream, right? |
by Chamaeleon on June 8th, 2012, 6:10 pm
Usually, when she slept, she didn't dream. Or rather, she didn't remember dreams anymore. Limbs twitched in her sleep, bumping into the press of bodies around her. Even in sleep she was hunting. Hunting to satisfy some bestial need, craving, or hunger. Her black claws closed around a throat in her dream, wrung the life out of some animal that was not an animal. She dreamt bringing her meal back to the others and watching them tear at it. She would eat something else, something easier than stringy meat from a fox. Abruptly, her mates turned to face Out. She followed their eyes. An old ape creature came towards them, and as one the lot of them snarled, their dream warning coming out remarkably clear. Teeth were shown from both the fur-clothed and skin-clothed and hackles rose at the threat of the armed monkey. If memory served right, they were hard to kill, but age meant a lot. The ape looked across them, almost sadness in his deep, dark eyes, before they rested on her. Immediately, she showed her fangs in her own challenge as he addressed her, only the barest meaning of his words seeping through her instinct to defend. She perceived him as a threat, one to her pack, and dared him to come closer with every wordless snarl past her ghostly lips. When his words died out, her dream seemed to shatter into fragments of images of things that reminded her of Out. Buildings woven of wood, wise old monkeys all armed with staffs, and the center.of Out. With a start, she woke, jerking against the two on either side of her. One stirred, giving her room to sit up and look around. Her chest heaved from the excitement of the dream, adrenaline that shot through her in preparation for a fight. There was no one else but them, though, and she was angry because of it. The Symenestra got onto all fours and slowly stretched. She felt soreness creeping up on her from the rough lifestyle her pack had chosen, but didn't complain. It was this or death out there. Even now, the apes were howling at one another in defiance and somewhere, probably closer than would have been comfortable had the sound not been familiar, a snake rattled its tail. It was one of them, though, a scale-skin they kept because he was stronger than them all. They did not run with apes in her pack, and they needed all the strength they could get. She picked her way through the bodies, slapping at one as she opened bleary eyes to look at her. The spider didn't like to be stared at. The other female growled quietly but was seemingly too tired to do anything about the abuse, turning over and falling right back asleep. The spider crept beyond the edges of their "den", which was more of a water-corroded gap in the bark of a tree, and made her way to the stream of water that ran through the entire city. Warily scanning the fog that hugged against her body for signs of an outsider, she slowly lowered her guard enough to lower her head and lap at the water. Her whole body was tensed, ready to flee. The dream was but a distant memory to her now, something to remember when she was winding down to sleep. |
Spider, spider. |
by Eldon Sunkiss on June 14th, 2012, 1:49 am
Eldon was exhausted. The young Drykas warrior, turned adventurous champion of Caiyha (not officially, be he felt like it recently) was still very new in the Spires. The work that needed to be done would not easily be completed. He wasn't sure what work was still to be done, much less how and why he himself was important (assuming he was at all, really), but he was here. It was the dreams that first drew Eldon from Endrykas to the Spires. Since then, he hadn't slept well. Whether it was something in the Djed storm that wafted magical fallout over him, or just him feeling overtaxed, overzealous, and overly active in his cause, he hadn't slept well in days. An hour here, three or so there. Tonight was one of those nights that he sat in his bunk, silently listening to the faint snores and peaceful (and not so peaceful in some cases) slumbers of the others nearby. The others, Eldon didn't know them, yet felt the urge to. He was new here, spoke none of the common languages that most in the Spires spoke, and hungered for genuine fellowship. As said, Eldon could have sworn he hadn't slept, but it was just like that night when the dreams spoke of the Spires. Tonight, he dreamed, possibly without sleeping, about one purpose of his. Eldon found himself standing in his homeland, Cyphrus, so many years away it felt, yet he was there. Eldon, he was without his horse, his trusty companion Vanah, and without his Drykas people. Yet, somehow, he knew that it was for the best. Like, he was expelled from them, abandoned by them, left to die, by them. Eldon wanted to say that, as terrible as it felt, that's how it was. He was exiled, forced to leave these lands on foot, an almost guaranteed death in such a place, but even that felt wrong. He knew it was wrong, because he felt the unnatural stride to his step. He wasn't a Drykas, not a human, but something different, familiar, yet different. It was like his body was controlled by something, an emotion perhaps, that could not be restrained. His stomach ached faintly from hunger, natural hunger, like that when you hadn't eaten all day. Hunt! The Eldon, whatever he was, took off in a maddened run through the tall golden grasses of Cyphrus as he again felt all the familiar sensations of home. The feel of the dry earth on his bare feet, the smell of the grasses dancing in the strong warm winds, the sky as blue and cloudless as ever, and here he was, chasing his soon to be meal. This was exciting! He was home! He was back home and hunting his natural prey! Sama'el! Eldon would have paused, choked, and thrusted a knife into his own chest just to deny himself of this strange animalistic behavior. Here he was, watching from his own point of view, Eldon dashing for his own cousin, his brother in blood, his best friend. Eldon watched, it was all he could do as his massive taloned feet carried him soaring over the earth, his own razor-sharp beak clamping wildly as it anticipated tearing and cleaving the most important living person left in his life in half. Eldon tried so desperately to cry out, to stop himself, but it wasn't until blood splattered and drenched his eyes that he felt his world grow dark. Eldon would have felt relief, yet something told him that relief was not yet there to be felt. Instead, he opened his eyes, only too once again see his homeland, except from a new point of view. Now he was flying, and down below he saw a gruesome sight, a sight that he knew too perfectly well despite being too far away to see. It was a Glassbeak tearing apart his cousin. It was the other Eldon, killing his last love in life. Again Eldon tried to scream, but instead of his cries of pain he heard a terrifying screech, one that made his own ears ache in agony, making the hairs on his neck stand at attention. This was a sound he'd never forget. It was a Zith. Eldon didn't have to imagine very far to understand what was happening now. He was the Zith, the worst, most gods-be-damned creature he'd ever met in his life. As to be expected, the new body of Eldon moved without his will saying to do so, it's mighty wings beat viciously against the night sky (yes, the day had shifted to night in mere seconds) as the monster descended. Again he felt that hunger in his stomach, except it was more brutal now. The pain was more desperate, and would settle for nothing less that the shattering of Eldon's heart. He found himself landing gently against the ground, and the Zith took from flying, to silently stalking through the grass. In the distance, a horse whinnied, a dog barked, and a man was speaking aloud in Pavi, yet for some reason Eldon couldn't decipher his language. It felt like ages before the Zith in control took over the dog, burying it's claws deep into the canine's belly and pulling from it everything inside. Next, the man charged with a spear, a thrust, a strike, a random throwing knife, over and over the Drykas tried to kill the Zith, but it was too quick, it over powered the man, disarmed him, and threw him to the ground. It wasn't until Eldon, trapped behind the eyes of the Zith, was standing over his father that he recognized him. Staring up at Eldon with the same bewilderment that Eldon felt. "Son?" Eldon didn't even get the chance to reply (though it would have been futile) before he saw his father slain, for the second time, by a Zith. This time, it was Eldon. Twice his fault, first time by his own hand. Eldon's world went dark once more, only to return him to the bunk he was sleeping on, though he felt like he still hadn't slept in days. He glanced around the room, thick with fog, a scent of blood lingering in the air as he glanced around. All around him there were sleeping people, of every race. Again he felt that hunger in his stomach. He was certain that he would be forever trapped in moments like this, for the rest of his life. The young Drykas tried to bury himself under the blanket, as if doing so would shelter his feral feeling, his wild uncontrollable anger and viciousness, like some beast, but is efforts were no good. All he wanted to do, was kill, to maul, to eat and kill again. He slowly crawled from his bunk to the floor, on hands and feet both, and stalked slowly across the room, stood just to hover over the slumbering lump underneath their blanket, and he felt the teeth in his mouth growing exponentially, the nails on his hands morphing into dagger-like claws, and his eyes shifted to a black-and-white spectrum. Lastly, he could even hear the pumping of blood through their neck, their chest, he could smell the sweat on their face, their arms. Yet, he was held still as the fog seemed to dissipate from around him. He turned slowly to see a Jamoura standing there. Eldon listened intently, and for the first time this night it was because he wanted to. He was once more in control of his actions. Then, when the Jamoura finished his speech, a command to assist the Spires (surely, one of his purposes) was given to him, and the vision departed. His own eyes fell victim to a series of views, different locations, pieces of a map, parts of a puzzle that led to his destination, or at least the first of many. Eldon blinked, his body ached from his muscles alone tensing so viciously. His eyes fluttered painfully as he glanced around the room, he was standing just where he was before the Jamoura stopped him. Right where he was when he nearly killed whoever it was that still slumbered there. He gasped lightly, fearing (though illogically) that everything he had dreamed had really happened. He wanted to jump back in his bunk and sob, but he couldn't. He had a job to do. Mourning his father's death could wait. After gathering what he needed (he both knew and ignored that there were others awake before him, and probably saw him watching someone sleep with murderous intent), his spear, his waterskin, his trousers and shirt, boots and his pack (which is where Sylvi still slept soundly, thank the gods she didn't witness Eldon's nightmares too), he stood up and looked at everyone else in the room that was awake. It was like he was looking for confirmation that he wasn't alone in this, yet somehow, he was certain he could point out just who else had received the visions. He locked eyes with Tiki for a moment. And he just knew, he wasn't alone. |
by Lixue on June 17th, 2012, 5:29 pm
Lixue rarely dreamed. Tonight was different. In real life, her petite body was engulfed between her husband, Ly, and the wall. Both were asleep, though one was frowning and the other emotionless. In Lixue's dream, a wall of fog overtook the longhouse. She fought to not breathe it in, having seen the effects first hand, but the attempt was useless. Breathing was necessary sooner or later. Cool to her nostrils, Lixue thought when the thick air was sucked in. Slowly, the feeling of calm fled, leaving behind only anger, desperation, and basic instincts struggling against her normal mind. It left her fighting between the need to attack the nearest person and flee from the camp. Before she could give into the mental battle, a male Jamoura appeared. He was obviously an elder, judging from the walking stick. Lixue recoiled, warily watching the man. Confusion slipped into the haze inside Lixue's mind when the Jamoura began to speak, but did not have moving lips. "Time to wake up little birds, we have much work to do. It is time to retake our home, once and for all. I have found within each of you a power, a power you do not yet recognize. I cannot ask you to come, I must tell you to. We need each of you, for if one of you falters or fail, our city will be lost forever. So wake up, and travel to here, together, and be prepared. This will be the most important event in each of your lives. Muster your strengths, defeat your weaknesses, and find who you really are." She fought to listen, fought to hear everything he told her and fought to overcome the effects of the fog. Fought to stay in control. He wanted to take over the Spires again? But he needed… her help? Was the man ill? Lixue was not sure she could help him. Her crippled body was not suited to saving a city. Before she could continue thinking, pictures overtook her currently fragile mind. The longhouse doorway, the camp center, the exit of camp, several more landmarks before Jamoura filled the picture. Strangely dressed, they wore feathers, bones, and plants. Others had leather. Every single one had a staff of some kind. Empathy slid past the effects of the fog, made Lixue want to help in whatever way she could, even as the fog made her want to fight each one. Awaking with a gasp, Lixue pushed against the blanket holding her down. Cold sweat covered her body. Goosebumps lay upon smooth flesh. Breathing hard, she lay on the bunk for a few moments. Was she going to travel to the location the elder Jamoura wanted her to? What were the chances this was something more than a simple dream? No one in her longhouse was moving. Did she want to travel more than a bell into the wilderness on a simple hunch? There was no harm in trying, given an untamed creature did not try to eat her alive! Rolling over Ly to leave the bunk, Lixue nearly screamed when a hand grasped her elbow. Ly's purple and pink eyes seemed worried, running over her face. "You alright?" filled the silence. "I am fine, just going for a walk. Do not fret. Sleep well." Leaning down, a chaste kiss was placed on his brow before Lixue continued removing herself from the bunk. Retrieving her cane from under the bed, Lixue limped her way out of the longhouse into the fresh night air. Those who were not marked by Morwen may have found it cold but Lixue found it refreshing. Somewhere nearby, an owl hooted. During the long walk, Lixue was silent except for her pant legs brushing together and the soft pat pat of her cane on the ground. She did not know what to expect upon arriving at the designated place, but found a group of people waiting. It appeared she was the last to arrive. |
by Creeper on June 20th, 2012, 12:23 am
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by Tiki on June 23rd, 2012, 2:19 am
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by Asha on June 30th, 2012, 4:27 pm
Asha’s strides were long and quick as she traveled through the forest. Each stone and tree was familiar from the images in her dream and gave her a startling sense of déjà vu. Her chest heaved gently as she strode. Speed was not a trait any Jamoura could claim and the pace she had set for herself caused some exertion. For a bell she traveled through the forest unmolested. It was strange that no animals came across her path or bothered her journey. It was as if she had been given a pass through the forest, though she had little time to dwell on that thought. She finally arrived at the clearing where the Jamoura elders waited. Their dress was bizarre to her eyes, skulls and bones decorated their bodies. A male stepped forward to speak to her, though Asha found herself entranced by his staff. A vine wrapped around the body of it, though it hardly looked like it was merely wrapped. The vine appeared to almost be alive and living upon the staff. It was strange, certainly, and made the hairs on the back of Asha’s neck stand on end at the unnaturalness of it. Surely magic was involved. An old, deep magic from the fount of nature and life. Her eyes snapped away from the vine and to the elder as he spoke to her. As he mentioned her father her jaw tightened, emotion clawing at the back of her throat. Truly this male had seen her heart and knew her weakness, her desire to bring pride to her family. She at once hated and admired him for this. Hating him for invading the private places of her mind and admiring him for his skill of persuasion. She had no voice to respond to him, so she merely nodded her acceptance of his words. Her chest had ceased heaving but her heart still throbbed powerfully, though she knew not whether it was from her exertion or the emotions he had stirred in her chest. Asha gazed around as a host of other creatures soon arrived at the clearing. Apparently she had not been the only one summoned. She was of course grateful for the company. Standing before the group of elders had been rather intimidating, and the thought of accomplishing some task for them daunting. She recognized a few faces in the group though she refrained from approaching them. She was too curious about what the Jamoura might want from them, though if she was honest with herself her curiosity was more of a tight ball of apprehension. The male spoke to the group as a whole, and informed them of what they were trying to accomplish before settling issues with a few individuals. Asha tried to be discreet as she looked over her fellow group members. They were a ragtag bunch there was no doubt about that, though she did include herself in that classification. Asha watched with interest as Chamaeleon changed, horns appearing and hair changing hues. She had never seen such a thing before and was entranced with the delicate beauty that it lent Chamaeleon. Asha had to admit to herself that for a hairless, human-like creature, Chamaeleon was absolutely gorgeous with the changes that had been wrought on her. Deurl spoke again, breaking Asha’s concentration and bidding them to begin the next part of their journey. After what felt like chimes to Asha, she was in the city proper again. It was just as destroyed and wrecked as the last time she had been here. They stood at the edge of the Meditative Petal and Asha slowly turned her head, taking in all the destruction. It was all the same as last time, but it hurt no less to look upon her shattered home. She had been unsure and awkward before they ascended the petals, following the elders mostly out of a sense of duty and curiosity. But now her resolution hardened and sharpened in her mind, there was absolutely no other option then to be exactly where she was doing whatever she would be asked to do. Deurl focused his gaze on the Temple, and Asha realized that was the target of their mission. He turned and spoke a few words to them, but they hardly mattered. It was only intonations meant to comfort them. Asha needed no comfort, she would do what she must and accept what consequences befell her as a small price to serve her city. The male Jamoura grabbed a vine and swung easily to the other side. Seeing the ease with which he accomplished gave her confidence. She had not visited the Temple very much in her lifetime and the vines always made her a little uncomfortable. Asha stepped up beside a few others who were grabbing vines. As she grasped a thick vine she turned to her nearest neighbor and nodded wordlessly, taking and sharing solace in the task ahead. Asha attempted to mimic the movements of Deurl and swiftly curled her legs up into her body. As she began to swing towards the Temple she could feel her stomach jump up into her throat and her heart began to beat rapidly. She was not a thrill seeker by any means and the rush of adrenaline made her nervous. The swing over seemed to stretch into eternity, but soon enough she approached waiting swarm, hoping it would part for her as it had the last. |
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