by Khazius Raine on September 13th, 2013, 4:24 am
So here they were again. Khazius and Marina exchanging pleasantries on the docks of Zeltiva. It wasn't too far from here where they had parted company, so many years before. That night a fierce storm with snarling rage had swept through the city, laying waste to a number of wooden structures and not so sturdy trees, few as there were in the city. A particular ship under the authority of a certain Mr. Raine Senior had fallen victim too that night, a distraction that had proved most fatal to Raine Junior.
At least, that was what Marina had thought. Before her eyes the young, foolish Khazius had been swept from the pier in the night, like a greedy child grabbing for candy off a shelf. Into the inky water below he went, while Marina's outstretched hand clutched only air. Well, nothing in fact. She was a ghost after all.
It was true that, with the right combination of trajectory, weight, reaction and plain luck, a boy falling into the ocean at night during a storm did present good odds for not walking out alive. Or rather swimming out. In Khazius' case, he had managed to enter the cold arms of the water head first, no mean feet considering the distance between the pier and the ocean proper. It was perhaps the lucky part of the equation - if any luck at all could be attributed to falling off a pier into the sea, then this was it - that his slip had caused his body to fall in such a manner that it turned in midair. Granted, this might have been an irrelevant detail for some, but for Khazius on that night it had proved life saving.
Having entered the water in a dive, involuntary as it was, it had still put Khazius into a forward inertia that carried his body through the watery surrounds for several feet. Had he gone in any other way, he'd have been splashing and fighting for something in the dark to grab onto. But diving in as he did, he was able to push forwards and come out head first with almost a graceful execution. His prize was a misbehaving line of rope, playing truant at one end where it dangled tantalizingly off the edge of the pier adjacent to the one he had come off to begin with. Within reach thanks to his lanky arms, young Khazius was able to grab hold of the rope for dear life. The pier was literally a climbing frame, constructed of timber in a crisscross pattern that proved little challenge to conquer. By the time he had pulled himself onto the pier, the storm had swept up even more angrier, as if enraged at the boy's escape. Or perhaps it was loudly cheering him on, such was the deafening applause of thunder that rolled overhead.
In any case, Marina hadn't seen any of this, or she would not have been in the situation she found herself now. Only, if this was indeed Khazius come back as an older man to mock her, why had he not recognized her? Those purple orbs were not to be forgotten in a hurry. But as she materialized, she was presented still with the man's secretive expression, giving away nothing as his eyes met with hers.
The answer, again unknown to poor Marina who by now was in quite a state, was due to a dash of bad luck, no doubt designed to restore equilibrium for Khazius' earlier fortune with the rope. No sooner had he stepped off the pier onto solid ground, a poorly constructed roof consisting of rotting wood had been plucked from a nearby warehouse, as though the storm had lifted the lid off a cookie jar and discarded it without a care. Tumbling in midair, the roof crumbled and broke into a hundred segments, cascading down in random order like some bizarre jigsaw puzzle tossed on the ground. One such piece had chosen Khazius' head for its final resting place. The end result, as Marina now saw before her, was an older, maybe wiser, Khazius Raine, who had literally had the memory of her from that fateful night smashed out of him. He knew he had met a ghost that night. It was a life changing meeting that had led him here. He just didn't know that ghost was now stood in front of him.
So here they were again.
Marina had offered her name, waiting with anticipation for the man's response. His name, the key to this riddle that would put a stop to the crazy notion that he was Khazius Raine. Only, he was Khazius Raine. Not that she was going to find out just yet. Back then, years ago, he'd offered his name in return without hesitation. But no more the innocent and naive boy. Khazius was a spiritist now. A competent one no less. Stood before the ghost on a dark fall evening, he wasn't ready just yet to offer his name. No no. Farris hadn't taught him to chit chat. This was serious business and the game was only just about to begin.
"Marina, I wish to let you know before anything else that I am a spiritist. I'm telling you this first so you can decide whether you want me to move on or... if you want to talk further."
Khazius was going to need all his skills now. His intelligence warmed up, recalling thoughts, lessons and advice from Farris on the process of first contact with a ghost. His observational skill took in the details presented to him, trying to decipher them for any advantage or clue he might gain. And his persuasive manner was designed to put the ghost at ease, to let them feel that they had control of the situation.
It might all have sounded devious or some such, but these skills were deployed not to gain an upper hand over the ghost, but to attempt to steer the situation towards one with an ideal outcome. Ultimately, if at all possible, Khazius was going to offer his help to the ghost. That was after all what he was being trained to do. The end game was to help ghosts figure out why they lingered in this world. In doing so, it was possible to then guide them on the path of rectifying that, so they could then accept reincarnation and return to the cycle.
Those were the good cases, like a medic every now and then being able to bring someone back from the brink of death against the odds. It didn't happen often for Khazius and Farris, since ghosts were a hard nut to crack. But for the ones they did get through to, it was certainly worth it. That feeling of triumph, not for themselves, but on behalf of the ghost. Well, it was hard to put into words.
Even though reincarnation was the final aim, it would be too naive and too presumptuous to shoot for the jackpot from the start. It wasn't something that could be rushed. So delicate and fragile, it had to be tended with care, like the building of a deck of cards that could come tumbling down with one careless move. Even if reincarnation didn't seem a likely outcome, ghosts could still be helped in other ways. They might have been after some decent soulmist, or perhaps even they were just looking for some conversation. Khazius had had one of those a few months back, a much too talkative and cheerful character to be a ghost.
But whatever he could do tonight, be it help Marina in some way or just see to it that the encounter ended without violence, Khazius had to ensure she didn't see him as threatening. She might have appeared to be a young girl, but that offered nothing to the question of what she was capable of.
That he was still breathing was a good sign, at least.
Last edited by
Khazius Raine on October 2nd, 2013, 10:56 pm, edited 2 times in total.