Solo [The Mourner's Rest] You and I... and the dead guy.

[Job Thread] - Wikus drops a guy dead. Wait... No. He drops a dead guy.

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Built into the cliffs overlooking the Suvan Sea, Riverfall resides on the edge of grasslands of Cyphrus where the Bluevein River plunges off the plain and cascades down to the inland sea below. Home of the Akalak, Riverfall is a self-supporting city populated by devoted warriors. [Riverfall Codex]

[The Mourner's Rest] You and I... and the dead guy.

Postby Wikus on December 19th, 2015, 1:45 am

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14th - Winter - 515


It felt good to get some exercise, especially in the winter mornings. The skies were clear yet the temperature was low, a perfect condition to freeze and scare away those whom lacked the strength to face the climate. The weak had no place this early in the morning, and even he suffered the harshness of the weather as he cracked his whip. The sweat was present, yet turned deadly cold if he were to stop for even a tick. Activity was his only salvation now that he had started. The Krinin Gardens were quiet, at least in the sense of populace. He had spotted a few couples walking, sitting or whispering, a few loners walking calmly, and others simply sitting and gazing as they meditated. Wikus, on the other hand, was anything but in silence, his whip cutting through the air, sending sonic booms here and there and his lungs panting and heaving for air.

The whip flew forth, an overhead flick coming forth with a splendid crack to top it off, his arm retrieving the flexible weapon to instead use the momentum of the whip and chain the last attack with a counterpart in the opposite direction. This was accomplished by pulling the right side of his body and facing sideways, the right hand extending all the way back as the obedient whip followed and delivered a sideway flick with its crack echoing through the emptiness. He was satisfied, and would have kept going if his shoulder lasted longer, now being sore and tired to the point of almost complete exhaustion. With what remained of his strength and endurance, he’d return the whips length before him and, raising it on the air, he’d attempt a volley – a technique that chained crack after crack forward with a motion of the wrist and delivered most cracks in a concrete spot. Despite his motivation and energy, the shoulder just wouldn’t hold itself in position, slowly falling and taking the whip with it, the cracks not even present as the force wasn’t properly sent down the leather and the whole motion being rewarded with a few whistles until the leather laid flat on the ground.

With the energies depleted, Wikus wrapped his body with his shirt and returned the whip around his waist to once again hold his loose pants – the strand of rope having successfully held them in its… more or less. It was hard to walk about with his pants hanging as low as they did, instead being far more inclined of wearing them up until they covered his belly-button. Unfortunately, they weren’t made for such heights, instead resting on his hips. At least the whip offered a strong retention, which somewhat made him a bit more confident. Once his breath was more or less regular, he went on his way to, just as every other day, walk the streets in search of something to do.

As he walked, he retreated onto his mind as it was the only familiar territory he knew. Having spent his whole life amongst the Drykas had eventually ruined him, now being nothing more than a lost man in an unknown world. Not only he had nothing, but nothing to do or aim for. That was the part that angered him the most. He had focused his entire life on gaining those tattoos that swallowed his flesh, and even they were reduced to nothing more than simple tattoos when instead he should be at the very least Ankal in the pavilion he lived in. Having retracted from socializing, crafting relationships, love, and even speech, it was now when he finally regretted being born amongst those savages. They took his horse and kicked him out just like a stray dog, and now cannot even roam the same land he was born in without worrying about someone of them coming and taking his life in the middle of the night.

And worst of all was the fact that there was no solution to his problem, being forever stuck in the lonesomeness as instead whomever he brought close he ended up burying into the soil. Whatever house he bought it would eventually be overrun by the parasites, and even animals weren’t safe from his aura of decay. It was a never-ending cycle, he thought, in which every day he started fresh with nothing and whatever he built in that day, it would be gone the next morning. Whatever he got in return was not enough, instead cursing him even more as instead he was immune from disease, from illness, and the cold for that matter. It was funny to look into someone’s eyes and find envy whenever he was half naked in the snow. He’d trade his health for a single companion, even if that companion was as mute as his donkey. As he walked, lost in thought, he kept scratching the waving tattoos even if they didn’t cause any itch. He was simply not quite used to the tattoos changing their position even if they barely moved, maybe covertly afraid they too would one day escape him.

He reached the end of the main street faster than he could imagine, standing next to Vin’s Smokehouse, an establishment he visited often as many times the only thing he could do is smoke the day away. His lack of planning froze him on the spot at the mercy of the occasional ‘bone-crushing’ breeze as he liked to describe it, it’s cold being enough to cause a shiver so intense he could barely believe his spine was still intact. But instead of regaining his strides, he noticed the small group gathered on a small stone building near the water down a small gravel path. Grieving men and women gathered hugging themselves as they wept, some more than others, yet still clear in their face the sadness even when they offered shy smiles amongst themselves, perhaps for empathy. They were human mostly, some of the colored giants also being there, bending knees to reach the hugs of those shorter in size. He had never approached said building before, not only because it was close to the big mass of water he feared, but also of the apparent emptiness of it – possessing no windows nor any other features that wasn’t straight stone walls, the door being the only thing to signify it wasn’t just a pile of rocks stacked together for adornment.

Wikus moved towards one of the nearby buildings and leaned on it, waiting for the grieving to lose themselves down the street. It took some time, but after a few chimes he found himself standing alone before the glass doors of the building. He didn’t doubt now, instead simply sliding the door and stepping inside as if he lived there.

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[The Mourner's Rest] You and I... and the dead guy.

Postby Wikus on December 27th, 2015, 2:56 am

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The building was surprisingly vast on the inside, despite the rather small appearance from the outside. This was easily accomplished by the builders by removing details or objects that weren’t necessary. Built with grey stone, the outside air flooded the inside throughout the open ceiling that clearly was designed with the intention of letting every ray of sunlight, every drop of water, and every detail of the skies revealed for whoever roamed the inside. Despite the cold stone burning his feet, Wikus felt somewhat more comfortable between the four walls than outside in the streets. It wasn’t just the lack of the sudden gusts of air, but it also felt strangely peaceful even if he was intruding. The sounds of the city were muffled completely inside, as if once he slid the door closed anything that lied outside the walls had perished or paused until he came out.

Intrigued, fascinated and addicted to the strange sensation, he stepped forth. Right before the door lied a giant wicker figure, facing directly towards him. The realism was very impressing, taken aback by the quality of all the details made with simple plant fiber. The eyes, the features, and the hair were all there, on top of a body that proudly demonstrated even more details on its body. If he wasn’t mistaken, this image represented one of those blue men. Despite the lack of color, the figure represented a male proudly holding a great sword with one hand, while the other held a single daisy, features looking somewhere in the distance. It was as if those eyes saw past him, past the walls and past the stone, looking somewhere men of flesh would never reach. It was simply beautiful, Wikus’ eyes enchanted with the art accomplished with mere wicker. Dubious, feeling his steps unwilling to leave the sight of the statue, he finally moved past it and further inside the building.

Columns rose up to the ceiling, a few steps serving to delimit the zones in which one was supposed to walk. Everything flowed and was connected, something he discovered once he laid eyes on the small stone bed that lied forth. Similar to that of an altar, a great pile of flowers laid on top to which he almost fell back. Flowers in winter were very rare, and having found such a wide collection was almost a dream come true. Approaching quickly, his surprise was even bigger when he found the flowers were actually draping one of those blue men. He was quite obviously dead, having taken him a couple of moments to figure out as he seemed surprisingly in peace. Peaceful death was not something Wikus had known until now, and so seeing a man lying with complete serenity drawn in his dead features was highly irregular in his eyes. It was so irregular that he needed to actually make sure the Blue was actually dead. Lifting a finger, he’d poke the man’s cheek gently. The contact demonstrated that the man’s flesh was as cold as the stone, and also demonstrated Wikus’ fingers were once again leaking – he had just left a black spot of ink on the blue man’s face.

Horror, panic, and fear took over him. His hand acted on its own, trying to swipe away the black spot but instead leaving an even bigger stain. Another swipe which split the Blue’s face between black and blue and Wikus’ mind was broken as he witnessed. His heart was beating heavily as he looked down at his hand, only to find the black substance was being leaked from his fingers. He knew sometimes it leaked from his skin automatically, but his knowledge of that ability was very limited. Absorbing the black substance was something he couldn’t do, and so cleaning the man’s features of it had to be done with his hands. He couldn’t leave the dead man’s face like that, he simply couldn’t. Cleaning his hand with his own chest, he’d quickly return on the Blue’s face in attempts of cleaning the mess he had made, trying to rub on the skin that simply didn’t let go of the black.

Finally, using a bit more of force, he saw how the black spot began slowly fading away. It would take a lot of time, but thankfully it had a fix thought Wikus. Suddenly, his eyes captured the image of a stare, of a person watching him with clear killer instincts. An old woman with rugged bronze skin watched him, the intensity of her eyes being enough to demolish his confidence. When he looked back, she started approaching, surely to end his life for the sacrilege he had just done to the deceased. With all his strength and all his will to live, he began rubbing his hand on the man’s cheek with so much force and so much concentration he didn’t quite realize of the logs the Blue laid on, slowly rolling to the side and in a matter of ticks sending the Blue deceased down to the floor, every flower that draped him scattering on the ground, every log falling on top to further crush the heterogenic mixture. The tragedy was in Wikus' eyes, taking both hands up to his head and simply regretting ever having stepped inside this attractive building.

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[The Mourner's Rest] You and I... and the dead guy.

Postby Wikus on December 27th, 2015, 6:53 pm

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The bronze skinned woman didn’t react as harshly as Wikus expected, but in a way it was even worse. There was no yelling, no growling, no blades flinging towards his neck. Instead, the female merely stared at him with an intensity that could easily crush him if kept up enough time. Wikus’ breath was halted, unable to even move as he was feeling as guilty as he actually was, simply waiting for the punishment the female had for him. But said punishment didn’t come, instead simply shaking her head morosely and moving towards the fallen body. “Sorry… I…” Wikus’ attempts of an apology were apparently in vain, the female not bothering to lay eyes on him but instead crouching and slowly raising the upper body of the dead Blue. Wikus watched, still paralyzed, until he finally approached to at least help her place everything on its place. Instead of bothering to even lay a finger on the body, he’d slowly begin raising the logs and one by one place them on the stone altar. Many of the flowers were smashed underneath them, something that made him cringe.

The woman held the dead man’s face in her chest, gently caressing his cheek as if she herself knew him as Wikus returned the logs to their place. They were returned to their place soon enough, now forced to communicate with the female in order to keep providing some help to redeem himself. Looking down at them, a couple of ticks of hesitation finally brought words to his mouth. “You… you need help?” The female didn’t seem to hear him, at least not at first, when eventually she simply rose to her feet as she attempted to bring the blue man’s hulking body up on the altar. Wikus helped her, holding the dead man by his feet and gently leaving him on top of the logs. The female didn’t even seem to be conscious of Wikus’ help, or if she did she showed no sign of it. It was as if she only had eyes for the deceased, as if the culprit of its fall from the altar was there no longer. Being ignored like that was a heavy blow to Wikus. Once he was placed on top of the logs, Wikus would arrange the dead man’s feet the best he could, something that didn’t seem to quite be enough in the eyes of the female as she rearranged them in her own way, feet brought together.

Now that the body was laid to rest on the logs, Wikus began returning the flowers to the altar in attempts of mimicking their original position, but as soon as he returned one of them the female’s hand swept away the flower back to the ground. He attempted to repeat the process, even more conscious about the proper position of the flower, yet the female neglected his effort once again. Blinking, Wikus once again limited himself to watch. The female retrieved a small bucket of water from which a rag hanged on, and instead of bothering with the flowers she began cleaning the deceased’s flesh. From the same corner she took the bucket, Wikus would retrieve a bucket for himself and without a doubt he’d begin mimicking the female’s motions. Submerging the rag in the cold water and afterwards disposing of the excess of water, he’d trace small circles on the male’s forearm as lightly as he could. The female didn’t even acknowledge his presence, not bothering to look at Wikus, or talk to him, or give him directions. The silence was absolute, only the sound of the rags dripping water and the occasional whistle of the wind being the soundtrack of the work.

As time passed Wikus began gaining confidence in his task and instead of repeating the same motion on the same spot, he slowly advanced up the dead man’s arm to eventually reaching the chest. As the female lacked any comments, he limited to shoot a glance once in a while towards her. Somehow, the dripping of the black substance had halted, now that he was completely focused on not letting it escape his skin as he lacked any kind of wish for the dire situation that caused all this to happen again.


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[The Mourner's Rest] You and I... and the dead guy.

Postby Wikus on February 24th, 2016, 6:23 pm

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The job was incredibly… boring once he realized that cleaning the dead body would be most of his task. The female had left him the task to him alone and instead had moved to fidget with the wicker-woven figure that stood near the exit. Of course, he offered no words to Wikus or any sort of attention whatsoever – her concentration was entirely focused towards all the details and their absolute perfection. Wikus’ knowledge didn’t yet allow him to help her with that, now that he had to remain and help her after his tattoos had leaked all over the dead man. At least the lack of any kind of forced conversation allowed the human to focus entirely on his own thoughts, and allowed him to meditate as he performed the soothing motions of cleaning the Akalak. Having moved to the feet, they too were soon to be thoroughly cleansed of whatever dirt wished to hide in the man’s pores. The perfectionism of the female made him cautious not to miss any sort of detail, nor any spot on the blue flesh he was cleaning, making sure to even clean between the body’s toes thoroughly. Wikus didn’t even clean himself so thoroughly, which felt weird now that he was cleaning a dead Akalak – especially with the hatred they harbor for it.

With a loud sigh, Wikus dropped the rag onto the bucket and stretched his back. Almost as if the female had read his thoughts, she left her task and immediately headed to one of the glass rooms, losing herself inside as Wikus waited on the spot. She returned minutes later, with two gigantic baskets in her hands full of flowers – vibrant, shiny and lively in a way that they almost shocked Wikus. It wasn’t a mystery his love – obsession – with flowers, and since the winter had begun taking away those flowers with the harsh weather it had been quite a while since he saw such a wonderful collection. It was clear that the female raised them in that room of hers, and her skills were obvious due to the extreme beauty and care her flowers presented. Placing a basket on each end of the altar, one at the feet and one at the head, she stood by the head, thus Wikus moving to the feet. The female bent over and extracted a flower from her basket, a blue aster. Wikus bent over too, but instead extracted a globe amaranth. It was then when the female glanced at him for once, with a ferocity that warned him of his fate – her eyes were commanding, scary and certainly nothing he’d like to see again. Quickly, Wikus returned the flower back in the basket, and instead retrieved a blue aster that matched the female’s pick. He rose again, showing the flower to which the female did not react. She laid it facing outside, just in the middle of where the center point that connected with the exact and precise middle of the Akalak’s body.

Wikus didn’t know what to do, so he just waited for the moment. The female placed a total of ten flowers on her end before moving to where Wikus stood, the human moving away to let her work and see what the process is about. She took the aster from his hand, placing it an inch away from the Akalak’s feet. Retrieving another flower from the basket, she basically mirrored the color palette and position of the flowers with what she had done on the other end. As soon as she finished, she moved back to the head and began moving down the sides with the careful laying of the flowers. Wikus didn’t stay still, however, as he watched the picks from the female and matched it as he retrieved a flower from his basket, laying it carefully on the same side. This also was not enough for the female, whom glanced towards Wikus once more and left her task as she headed his way. Wikus quickly moved around the altar and placed the flower on the opposite side, this time the female stopping on her way and returning to her own position. Turns out the flowers were meant to be placed in an opposing manner – when she worked the Akalak’s right, Wikus had to work the Akalak’s left, the flowers meant to form a sort of spiral. Now that he knew the technique, Wikus’ work speed increased and the female’s scary eyes didn’t bother to lay on him, as instead they focused entirely on the deceased they were pampering with flowers.

It was really relaxing to work on this. Wikus hated the Akalaks and everything about them was displeasing, yet working on this dead man was nothing violent. It didn’t felt wrong, or forced. Working with flowers and in silence was perhaps one of the biggest blessings he had received until now, he thought, as he continued mimicking the female’s work on his own end. He and his ‘condition’, the one that made those around him fall in their knees as they were riddled with disease, had unfortunately made his feet aware that every once in a while, he’d have to dodge bodies of the dead. In a way, he disliked the idea of killing only with his presence as death was nothing he liked at all, but aside from that he felt… encouraged. Not everyone died around him, not everyone fell sick and never recovered. Most times, nobody even coughed near him. Did his condition choose its victims by some of their traits, or was it random and spontaneous the next victim? Certainly, dying of a cough was pathetic, a disease being all that’s needed to end a man’s life. It was unfair to even think of such an end. He, the ousted Drykas, the father without his children, the man without a heart, had spent his long and harsh life in pain. Even when he was ill, he had moved past it and went out to earn his name and his reputation.

And that entire life of suffering had offered him… nothing. Nothing but these tattoos that leaked and dripped whenever he wasn’t focused on them, as if they too would fade away if he didn’t keep track of them. He had suffered more than everyone else, he was sure of it even when the statement would never be a certainty. When others died, he rose and stood proud. Even after being broken so many times, he was still standing tall and proud for the next challenge, for the next twist of fate that would attempt to finish him yet never being successful. That is what a man was, and not one that died because someone like him stood nearby and infected them with this ‘condition’ he carried. They deserved it if they can be killed with a presence – anyone that died near him because of Wikus being there was meant to die. If a disease ended their life, then perhaps they were not ready for every other challenge their life would send their way with time. He, having lived so long as to being certain his generation of Drykas was completely eradicated and forgotten by now, had experienced all the cruelty and all the pain possible. That’s why he was better, that’s why he was superior and that’s why he was happy to never having met his match. That man that once came to his aid, the man that rescued him from a void existence and blessed him with this condition he carried, had given him the best possible gift – reassurance that he wasn’t a mistake, but he was the simple truth and the pure strength.
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[The Mourner's Rest] You and I... and the dead guy.

Postby Wikus on February 24th, 2016, 8:48 pm

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The Akalak now had a beautiful bed full of colors, full of flowers and of soft aromas that were perhaps enough to make his eyes regret closing forever. The beauty was so present yet at the same time so humble, truly something magnificent to behold – or at least it was for Wikus. The Akalak’s blue features contrasted with the red, white and yellow flowers, yet sometimes being in touch as the occasional blue flowers were there to return harmony and blend in the body with the beautiful array of floral adornments. The flowers had been stacked on top of each other until they had created a simply wonderful coat over the dead man’s entire body, as if being kept warm and comfortable even if he was dead. Wikus stared at it for a long while, truly captured by the sight and almost feeling as his tears were about to escape his eyes. He loved flowers, and this female surely had a talent with them. He wanted to learn more so that one day he too could make something so perfect, so carefully done and could easily turn a man’s knees weak. The female, as usual, hadn’t said a word in a long while, and she had simply moved to work on the gigantic wicker figure behind him.

Wikus wanted to help, as after all he had caused great damage previously by dripping his ink all over the deceased Akalak and ruining pretty much every effort of the female. Now that he had restored the beauty of the Akalak’s death bed, he still wished to help out as perhaps this female would gift him a couple of flowers. Moving towards her, she quickly pulled away from the figurine and once again, without a word, headed into one of the rooms that were separated from the open sections. Ticks later, she came out with… a broom. It was pretty clear what his next task would be, now that the female tossed the broom towards Wikus, whom attempted to catch it midflight but ended up blocking it with his head. The female went back to work with the wicker figure as Wikus began cleaning the floor. Now, he really experienced the tedium in full effect. He had never used a broom before, yet he quickly took notice on what he was supposed to do with it – clean the stone floor. It wasn’t really filthy at first glance, yet the more the broom came into action it was clear it was all an illusion. Surely the open ceilings filtered all this dust inside, which had even changed the color of the grey stone into a darker hue, now up to him to bring back the true shine of the stone.

As he swept the floor clean, he glanced towards the female and her work. It was… slow and very precise, to say the least. Even if he lacked a closer view, he could see that the wicker fibers were complicated to weave and that an enormous show of patience was needed to do such. He wouldn’t learn a thing starting from such a distance, so instead of trying to engage in such a complicated task, he limited himself to cleaning. Time apparently moved slowly, especially when his mind was only open to the image of the broom wiping the stone clean. The more he wished this tedious task to be finished, the less progress he made. Instead, he once again retrieved to the depths of his mind and lost himself in thought as usual. It was the same as traveling the Sea of Grass. These days, he didn’t have a pavilion to move with, and it was only him and his donkey without exception. As the donkey offered no words or big companionship, and the distance between them and the unknown destination was surely so great he couldn’t quite measure it, he only had his thoughts as company. Many times he focused on merely collecting flowers, on rolling with them or simply laying beside them as if Wikus belonged to of their species. Nothing in this world gave him more pleasure than flowers – no gold, no silver, no women and no friends would ever match his precious flowers. So big was his obsession with them.

Having cleaned half the building already, a few of the grieving came back, surely friends and acquaintances of the deceased that now waited outside the glass doors. They didn’t dare look inside and face their pain, no matter how strong they believed themselves to be. The pain of a lost relative was gigantic, Wikus aware of it through experience. His philosophy no longer allowed him to feel any kind of grief towards these things, but nonetheless he remembers the long nights of silent cries and the waterfalls of salty tears running down his features. The woman seemed to finish with whatever modifications she was doing to the wicker figurine, now retrieving her own broom from one of the rooms and aiding Wikus in the cleaning of the floor. It didn’t take them long before they both met up at the south exit, opening the door as they disposed of the dust and put an end to the cleaning. She took both brooms and stored them away, now heading to the main entrance and opening the glass doors. Nobody said a word to each other; the female taking Wikus by the arm and dragging him outside with her as instead the family of the deceased entered the building.

Outside, the female let go of him and instead leaned against the grey stone as she extracted a small case of cigarettes, taking one and lighting it up with a match. Wikus followed her example and prepared his pipe, which took him quite a while. Clearing his throat once he was ready, the female glanced at him before handing him a match, which Wikus used to light up his pipe. Leaning against the stone, the pair smoked as the muffled cries of the family came from inside the building they just exited. It was sad, but none of them apparently cared much for their grief – perhaps because they both carried their own grief and suffocated it by burying it deep down. Eventually, Wikus finished his pipe and walked away as for now his task was done. He would return tomorrow and the day after, mostly to once again work with flowers rather than bother with the dead folks. It was a quiet job, soothing and that was enough for him. He would make sure not to drop any of his ink on a dead body, too.


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[The Mourner's Rest] You and I... and the dead guy.

Postby Theo Popcampio on July 11th, 2016, 1:01 pm

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To the victor...

Issues :(

Secret :
Unfortunately Wikus buddy I'm gonna have to crack down on you. Formality and all, trying to leave a good impression for the kids, I'm sure you'll understand. Anyways, your CS isn't up to date. Please update it to include your wages and expenses for the Spring. Then we can all go home to our wives and children. Happy hunting!

...go the spoils.
All my templates were made by the grace of the enchanting Aislyn Leavold.
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