.
Keene stood on the plateau, the air around him heavy with the impending storm. He had sensed it: the taste, the feel, the whisper of the empty cavern as he'd woken from his sleep. The gentle chill from the mark on his back had responded to the impending change in weather. He'd been drawn out and up towards the single spot on the entire island that felt like his own place - not in the sense of ownership, but that of a comfortable state of being. He could feel the wind itching to dash across the plains, pent up in the sky and held just short of release. There was agitation there, just slightly, but it was mostly a heavy sense of anticipation: there was to be a storm, and the skies had all the intention of it being a full blown monsoon.
It was with a strange feeling of exhilaration that he stood on the edge of the precipice, staring out into the darkened pallor of the world below. He was changed. The world was changed. There were things he knew about himself, about life in general, he'd never thought he'd come across. There was the unbearable ache of loss, the burning fire of rage, the feverish allure of desire, the emptiness of despair, and even the soft embrace of love. These things swirled within him like the storm that the charged air promised him, twisting and tugging at his heart, coloring his views of the world in a way he had not thought possible. They were both entirely unwanted and coveted at the same time, and as the thunder rolled across the sky, so too did it reverberate within him. Ever since his encounter with the god of storms, when it rained or when lightning filled the sky, he was filled with an inexplicable excitement, his own emotions leaping fourth from him as if beckoned by swirling winds and whipping rains.
The process was exhausting, but Keene had found that exhaustion was entirely a beneficial state of being. It allowed him rest and a quiet of the mind. Thus, as a spike of purplish white peeked out from behind the clouds preceding another boom of reverberating sound around him, Keene let his eyes close as res drifted from his finger tip. The rain began as a light mist, drifting from the weighted clouds like an ethereal curtain of moisture, alighting on his naked body like the most gentle of kisses. A caramel skinned grin passed through his mind, rough hands moving slowly over his skin. Then, with a hiss, the rain began to fall in earnest, as if signaled by the next crashing blow of the thunder that sent shivers down his spine and filled the air with its power. A body, broken and limp, filled with ice and void of life lay before him, his heart cold and unfeeling as the blades that permeated her bleeding, watery flesh.
Rain drenched him in a matter of ticks, the wind, in its joy, whipped the drops around him as his res spread out around him. The water was cool, battering against his skin with a suggestion of numbness. Emptiness then, the blank stare of a woman who's fire had been enough to light the souls of a hundred more blankly gazing into the nothingness she had become. His fingers tightened, pressing against the scars on his palms, the subtle rise of the skin where the wounds had stitched themselves back together. Res swirled around him, mirroring the pattern of the gathering winds that playfully threatened to throw him from his perch atop the cliff. He remained resolute, bathed in the darkness of his own creation, only partially aware of the storm that had surrounded him. Cracked skin over a face with desperation in the bleeding eyes, a pleading voice asking the most simple of request. Despair filling him entirely, staying his hand for better or worse. When the thunder sounded again, Keene roared with it, his res whirling around him as it gathered the rainfall, pulling it from its path to wrap around him in a massive bubble of water.
He could feel the storm responding, throwing more and more rain his way. The powerful, ethereal entity curious to see what the single mortal creature might do with even a fraction of its own strength. Lost, lonely, afraid. A child drifting through the expanse of nothingness. The thunder sounded once more, ordering him to do what he would with his magic lest the winds carry him away. Throwing his arms to either side of him in a sweeping motion, the pale blue res twisted away from him, the water following behind like two swirling snakes illuminated by the flashes of lighting that descended from the firmament to crash down upon the island below. He stepped back, right hand arc upwards and in front of him while the left swooped under to mirror the motion. The watery res responded, tendrils wrapping themselves around him, both moving clockwise about his pale frame. With a thrust of his elbows, Keene pulled his hands apart from each other along the horizontal. The res shot upwards in a thin sheet, carrying with it the water it had collected as it rocketed up into the sky.
Lighting, thunder, the glow of red res mixing feverishly with his own pale blue. Muttered words, a frantic transmuting of heat and air and water. They had always wanted control, dominance. But Keene had found that Zulrav's children were not puppets. They were not creatures to dominate through will alone. They were alive and conscious of the power they possessed, the power that was rightfully their own. As his res spread out into the sky above him, Keene's fingers splayed on his heads, swirling the res, water, and air into a vortex above him. The clouds drifted from their course, confusion and furor filling the air around him. He felt the storm's heart, it beat to a rhythm unknown to any man. As the clouds gathered above him, Keene let himself become immersed in the sway of the motion, eyes shut against the bite of the rain, mind as one with the raging force of the storm's might.
.
The eighty-seventh day of winter, 514 AV
Keene stood on the plateau, the air around him heavy with the impending storm. He had sensed it: the taste, the feel, the whisper of the empty cavern as he'd woken from his sleep. The gentle chill from the mark on his back had responded to the impending change in weather. He'd been drawn out and up towards the single spot on the entire island that felt like his own place - not in the sense of ownership, but that of a comfortable state of being. He could feel the wind itching to dash across the plains, pent up in the sky and held just short of release. There was agitation there, just slightly, but it was mostly a heavy sense of anticipation: there was to be a storm, and the skies had all the intention of it being a full blown monsoon.
It was with a strange feeling of exhilaration that he stood on the edge of the precipice, staring out into the darkened pallor of the world below. He was changed. The world was changed. There were things he knew about himself, about life in general, he'd never thought he'd come across. There was the unbearable ache of loss, the burning fire of rage, the feverish allure of desire, the emptiness of despair, and even the soft embrace of love. These things swirled within him like the storm that the charged air promised him, twisting and tugging at his heart, coloring his views of the world in a way he had not thought possible. They were both entirely unwanted and coveted at the same time, and as the thunder rolled across the sky, so too did it reverberate within him. Ever since his encounter with the god of storms, when it rained or when lightning filled the sky, he was filled with an inexplicable excitement, his own emotions leaping fourth from him as if beckoned by swirling winds and whipping rains.
The process was exhausting, but Keene had found that exhaustion was entirely a beneficial state of being. It allowed him rest and a quiet of the mind. Thus, as a spike of purplish white peeked out from behind the clouds preceding another boom of reverberating sound around him, Keene let his eyes close as res drifted from his finger tip. The rain began as a light mist, drifting from the weighted clouds like an ethereal curtain of moisture, alighting on his naked body like the most gentle of kisses. A caramel skinned grin passed through his mind, rough hands moving slowly over his skin. Then, with a hiss, the rain began to fall in earnest, as if signaled by the next crashing blow of the thunder that sent shivers down his spine and filled the air with its power. A body, broken and limp, filled with ice and void of life lay before him, his heart cold and unfeeling as the blades that permeated her bleeding, watery flesh.
Rain drenched him in a matter of ticks, the wind, in its joy, whipped the drops around him as his res spread out around him. The water was cool, battering against his skin with a suggestion of numbness. Emptiness then, the blank stare of a woman who's fire had been enough to light the souls of a hundred more blankly gazing into the nothingness she had become. His fingers tightened, pressing against the scars on his palms, the subtle rise of the skin where the wounds had stitched themselves back together. Res swirled around him, mirroring the pattern of the gathering winds that playfully threatened to throw him from his perch atop the cliff. He remained resolute, bathed in the darkness of his own creation, only partially aware of the storm that had surrounded him. Cracked skin over a face with desperation in the bleeding eyes, a pleading voice asking the most simple of request. Despair filling him entirely, staying his hand for better or worse. When the thunder sounded again, Keene roared with it, his res whirling around him as it gathered the rainfall, pulling it from its path to wrap around him in a massive bubble of water.
He could feel the storm responding, throwing more and more rain his way. The powerful, ethereal entity curious to see what the single mortal creature might do with even a fraction of its own strength. Lost, lonely, afraid. A child drifting through the expanse of nothingness. The thunder sounded once more, ordering him to do what he would with his magic lest the winds carry him away. Throwing his arms to either side of him in a sweeping motion, the pale blue res twisted away from him, the water following behind like two swirling snakes illuminated by the flashes of lighting that descended from the firmament to crash down upon the island below. He stepped back, right hand arc upwards and in front of him while the left swooped under to mirror the motion. The watery res responded, tendrils wrapping themselves around him, both moving clockwise about his pale frame. With a thrust of his elbows, Keene pulled his hands apart from each other along the horizontal. The res shot upwards in a thin sheet, carrying with it the water it had collected as it rocketed up into the sky.
Lighting, thunder, the glow of red res mixing feverishly with his own pale blue. Muttered words, a frantic transmuting of heat and air and water. They had always wanted control, dominance. But Keene had found that Zulrav's children were not puppets. They were not creatures to dominate through will alone. They were alive and conscious of the power they possessed, the power that was rightfully their own. As his res spread out into the sky above him, Keene's fingers splayed on his heads, swirling the res, water, and air into a vortex above him. The clouds drifted from their course, confusion and furor filling the air around him. He felt the storm's heart, it beat to a rhythm unknown to any man. As the clouds gathered above him, Keene let himself become immersed in the sway of the motion, eyes shut against the bite of the rain, mind as one with the raging force of the storm's might.
.