Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Quickie Fiction: The Arsarmarium

The Arsarmarium was a hexagonal chamber measuring over one hundred yards high, two hundred yards long, over sixty yards wide.  Located in the western side of the Seat of Faith, the chamber is protected by reinforced walls that have been tempered with both material and magical defenses.  While the walls were basically concrete blocks that have been interlaced with iron bars and a fire-resistant wood surface, if one were to study the grooves and minute designs upon the wood, one would see the intricate patterns and markings that empower the wall with a nearly subliminal song of durability.  Three large rose windows adorned the western wall: one with a theme of the Ancestral Dragons still alive and strong, taking to the skies with their widespread powerful wings, one on the middle with a theme of the rise of the first Hierophant and the beginnings of the Faith, and one with the theme of the Whole showing a man and a dragon almost as one single being with the skin and scales melding into a single form.  Above the three rose windows, like a halo of colored glass, are five hundred seventy nine stained glass windows.  Predominantly yellow in hue, the windows allowed daylight to creep in and bask the chamber in a golden glow.  At night, however, the stained glass windows cast a soft glow outwards, ensuring the rose windows stayed illuminated and cast their images inwards into the chamber.

At first glance, it is easy for many to mistake the presence of such windows to be a security risk to what was the main vault of the Seat of Faith's Dragon Song arsenal.   Everything from the bronze lance of the first Hierophant to the harmonic bows used during the Fang Wars, the ceramic dragon armors that magnified the range of Dragon Song manipulations to the Grand Composer itself, artifacts and ancient weapons of war were stored in this place for safe-keeping.   These magnificent weapons of war and wondrous devices were kept in the same chamber where the more common ivory bows, tuning daggers and dissonance nets were stored, supposedly to be a constant source of inspiration to those of the Faith of what has been accomplished, of what must be remembered and of what was has been foretold.

While any member of the Faith, it was said, had the right to enter the chamber, the Voices of the Faith had long ordained new rules that limited access to the chamber to them alone, as well as to the Hierophant himself.  The risk of these artifacts being stolen was deemed far to great.

And this was even considering the chamber's notable defenses.  The stained glass windows, like the minute markings on the wood, are permanent transcribed Dragon Songs that targetted any attempts to breach the chamber's walls magically.  At the moment a Dragon Song is woven, the intonation or harmony is detected, inverted, and reflected back at its source.  The resultant dissonance tune has created deadly and devastating effects, reminding the infiltrator that the room is not without its safe-guards.  There have been a few cases of chantadores, the less formal term for those who had an understanding of the Dragon Song, attempting to infiltrate the chamber using intonations and harmonies and finding themselves torn apart by the destructive cacophony that was created.

Nayd walked through the open archway and stood at the very spot where the colored pictogram of the first Hierophant struck the ground.  The Voice of Faith genuflected upon one knee, then held his head lower in reverence of the First Hierophant.   None remembered his name.  There were no records speaking of the man who first heard the Dragon Song and learned to comprehend it.  There were precious little documents preserved that spoke of the first man whom the Ancestral Dragons trusted enough to manifest their presence to.  His deeds however, were easily recalled.  Using the bronze lance he had crafted following the precise details the Ancestral Dragons taught him, the First Hierophant was said to have conducted a magificent coda which allowed him to reshape the very land, redirect the very flow of rivers and alter the weather itself to whatever was deemed most suitable.  The bronze lance acted as a massive tuning instrument which sung accompanying his song, magnifying the very music from what was once a lone voice in the empty plain, into a massive chorus of world-transforming power.

With it, the First Hierophant reshaped the world, creating the valleys for the many tribes to flourish, the mountains to channel the winds, the plateaus to become the earth upon which the Seat of Faith and the capital cities were to be built all in accordance to the manner the Ancestral Dragons have declared.

"Do we truly stand upon the threshold of the end? " Nayd found himself asking aloud as he stared upon the First Hierophant's image.  His eyes welled with tears which he could not explain.  There was no real fear in his heart.  If this was the end, he understood this was meant to be.  He clearly comprehended his role in the unfolding saga.   But there was an emotional quality which he could not really define that sought to break free from within him. 

A drop.

A teardrop escaped the catch of his eyelashes and slid down his cheek, clinging onto his chin precariously like a frightened child.  Nayd casually wiped it away and walked towards the first rack of ivory bows.  Nayd reached for the two closest ones, then with a jerk, had them collapse into themselves until they were merely compacted into simple short rods.  Sliding these two into his belt, Nayd reached for a second pair when he noticed a streak of color upon the back of his left palm.  Raising it closer, Nayd looked at the dark smear and realized the blue sky painted upon the window cast its image upon him.  A few paces towards the harmonic bows brought Nayd away from the blue umbra and gave him a chance to see the smear for what it was.

Blood.

Nayd's eyes suddenly began to water even more.  Emotionlessly weeping, Nayd raised both hands to his face and pressed his palms against his eyes.   Drawing them back, Nayd saw his fears were true:  he was weeping blood.  And now, the blood was also starting to ooze out from his ears.

He turned around, wondering what was causing the hemmorhage and hoped to find some sign of whether this was an accident or an attack.  The act, however, gave no answers.  Instead, a sudden wooziness clamped upon Nayd's head, like some heavy invisible hand, and began to painfully force Nayd into unconsciousness.  Blackness began to fill the edges of his vision.  Small sparks of starlike explosions danced in Nayd's field of vision.  He lost his balance, toppled to the side and fell on top of the rack of harmonic bows. 

Nayd looked up, seeing the exit, and called upon every remaining ounce of strength in his body.  On all fours like a dying animal, Nayd began to crawl, hoping to make his way to the door before it was too late.  He had begun to suspect the Arsarmarium might have triggered its own defenses against him.  Perhaps the Arsarmarium had somehow mistaken him to be a threat.  Hands pushed against the ground.  Knees moved in concert with each motion.  Blood contiued to drip.  The growing circles of blood on the flood smeared as Nayd's own robes wiped over them as he moved.  The exit looked ever distant.  The lightheadedness was winning the battle.

"Help-"

Nayd slipped.  His hand failed to brace against his weight.  His shoulder collided against the floor.  The shadows in the room danced around Nayd's field of vision, growing larger by the passing second.  Nayd could already taste his own blood welling out from his very throat.  In his mind, he fought every urge to use the Dragon's Song.  Every urge to intone a message, or to invoke an elemental assistance was quickly stomped down.  The Arsarmarium was unkind to such invocations.   Though Nayd feared the Arsarmarium was already deeming him a threat, he feared more the chance he was wrong and that the very action would cause the Arsarmarium to tear him apart.

"Someone please.."

Nayd heard a footstep.  He craned his head towards the sound.  The blood blinded him too much.  He could not see who had made it.

"Helpe me..."

A massive puddle of blood erupted from Nayd like a crimson hole suddenly emerging from beneath his body.  The blood was flowing now, freely and richly, from Nayd's eyes, nostrils, mouth and ears.  His twiching body began to grow still as death silently came to claim him. 

* * *

The Hierophant stared at the nearly translucent copy of the contract with Libram had sealed between him and the mercenary Alucita.  He stared at the text and found himself wondering if this was the best course of action.  He knew that if he had instead the Voices of the Faith investigate on the matter, there would be among the radical ones the urge to "prove" the Other as wrong regardless of whether or not it was wrong.  He understood too well the allegiance and blind faith some members of the Faith had sadly embraced.  He had hoped to accomplish the investigations in private.

But now, thing were spiralling out of control.

A soft footfall alerted the Hierophant to a presence in the room.  He looked up and saw one of the Kabal in front of the wall beside the door.

"It is done?"

The silent man nodded almost solemnly.

"Three to go," the Hierophant noted, even as the other Kabal quietly stalked their prey.

Monday, March 30, 2009

We stopped.

My egg shared me this wonderful story by Haruki Murakami.

I've never been that active a reader, I will admit.  The few books I have read range from Clive Barker to Poppy Z. Brite, Banana Yoshimoto to Amy Tan, with the odd occasional Neil Gaiman, Stephen King, Isaac Asimov, Dan Brown, Anne Rice selections.   I've read a few other novels that I enjoyed, from hobby books like the War of th Lance, to staples like Lord of the Rings, and the less popular White wolf novels, (for this era) Hardy Boys and the like. 

But my egg wanted me to read this single short story.  My egg fell in love with this story and wanted me to experience the joy of reading it as well.

I did.

Allow me to share this to you all.

This is "On seeing the 100% perfect girl one beautiful April morning" by Haruki Murakami.
http://www.mat.upm.es/~jcm/murakami-perfect.html

Sunday, March 29, 2009

For my egg

(Jai Ho)
(Jai Ho)I got (I got) shivers (shivers),
When you touch away,
I'll make you hot,
Get all you got,
I'll make you wanna say (Jai Ho)

(Jai Ho)

I got (I got) fever (fever),
Running like a fire,
For you I will go all the way,
I wanna take you higher (Jai Ho)
I keep it steady
Cuz steady is how I feel it.
This beat is heavy, so heavy,
You gonna feel it.

(Jai Ho)You are the reason that I breathe,(Jai Ho)
You are the reason that I still believe,(Jai Ho)
You are my destiny,
Jai Ho! Uh-uh-uh-oh!
(Jai Ho)No there is nothing that can stop us(Jai Ho)
Nothing can ever come between us,(Jai Ho)
So come and dance with me,
Jai Ho! (oohh)

Catch me, catch me, catch me, come and catch me,
I want you now,
I know you can save me, come and save me,
I need you now.
I am yours forever, yes, forever,
I will follow,
Anywhere in anyway,
Never gonna let go.

Jai Ho

(Jai Ho) Escape (escape) away (away),
I'll take you to a place,
This fantasy of you and me,
I'll never lose the chase. (Jai Ho)

Yeaahhhh (Jai Ho) Yeaahhhh

I can (I can) feel you (feel you),
Rushing through my veins,
There's an notion in my heart,
I will never be the same.

(Jai Ho)Just keep it burnin', yeah baby,
Just keep it comin', (Jai Ho)
You're gonna find out, baby,
I'm one in a million.

(Jai Ho)You are the reason that I breathe,(Jai Ho)
You are the reason that I still believe,(Jai Ho)
You are my destiny,
Jai Oh! Uh-uh-uh-oh!

(Jai Ho)No there is nothing that can stop us(Jai Ho)
Nothing can ever come between us(Jai Ho)
So come and dance with me,
Jai Ho! (oohh) (You and me, it's destiny)

Catch me, catch me, catch me, come and catch me,
I want you now,
I know you can save me, come and save me,
I need you now.
I am yours forever, yes, forever,
I will follow,
Anywhere in anyway,
Never gonna let go.

Jai Ho (Yeeeaaahh), Jai Ho (Yeeeaaahh), Jai Ho

I need you,
Gonna make it,(Jai Ho)
I'm ready,
So take it!

(Jai Ho)You are the reason that I breathe,(Jai Ho)
You are the reason that I still believe,(Jai Ho)
You are my destiny,
Jai Oh! Uh-uh-uh-oh!

(Jai Ho)No there is nothing that can stop us,(Jai Ho)
Nothing can ever come between us,(Jai Ho)
So come and dance with me,
Jai Ho! (oohh) (You and me, it's destiny)

Jai Ho!

Baila baila!
Baila baila!

Jai Ho!

Baila baila!

Jai Ho!


Saturday, March 28, 2009

shine shine shine, gonna let it shine...


to my "Fans"

Mum mum mum mah
Mum mum mum mah

I wanna hold em' like they do in Texas Plays
Fold em' let em' hit me raise it baby stay with me (I love it)
Luck and intuition play the cards with Spades to start
And after he's been hooked I'll play the one that's on his heart

Oh, oh, oh, oh, ohhhh, ohh-oh-e-ohh-oh-oh
I'll get him hot, show him what I've got
Oh, oh, oh, oh, ohhhh, ohh-oh-e-ohh-oh-oh,
I'll get him hot, show him what I've got

Can't read my,
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)
Can't read my
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)

P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)
P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)

I wanna roll with him a hard pair we will be
A little gambling is fun when you're with me I love it)
Russian Roulette is not the same without a gun
And baby when it's love if its not rough it isn't fun, fun

Oh, oh, oh, oh, ohhhh, ohh-oh-e-ohh-oh-oh
I'll get him hot, show him what I've got
Oh, oh, oh, oh, ohhhh, ohh-oh-e-ohh-oh-oh,
I'll get him hot, show him what I've got

Can't read my,
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)
Can't read my
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)

P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)
P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)

I won't tell you that I love you
Kiss or hug you
Cause I'm bluffin' with my muffin
I'm not lying I'm just stunnin' with my love-glue-gunning
Just like a chick in the casino
Take your bank before I pay you out
I promise this, promise this
Check this hand cause I'm marvelous

Can't read my,
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)
Can't read my
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)

Can't read my,
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)
Can't read my
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)

Can't read my,
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)
Can't read my
Can't read my
No he can't read my poker face
(she’s got to love nobody)

P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)
P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)

P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)
P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)

P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)
P-p-p-poker face, p-p-poker face
(Mum mum mum mah)

Friday, March 27, 2009

Quickie Fiction: Failings

Like a hand reaching for the very moon, four towering obelisks marked the corners of one of the passageways connecting the underground Febhed Confessionarium to the surface.  The calm night sky painted above gave no hint to the tremendous events that were unfolding each passing second.  Voices carried in the darkness.  Orders to maintain formation, to prepare for the mission, to bid farewell to loved ones fluttered back and forth as the gathered Febhed prepared for their mission.  Some were clearly experienced warriors, with small scars making their faces and arms with reminders of painful tribulations they had survived before.  Others were far to clearly new, stumbling to move into their ranks, or struggling to wear the armor and uniform well.  From the sky, the whole scene would have looked like an army of red and black ants were moving about the mouth of a hole leading deep below.   Their lack of coordinated order, however, was far too evident.

Pateron Acheu felt the pain in his leg begin to throb again.  Ever since that single night he had fallen asleep with his boots on, his leg had been menanced by this intermittent distraction.  On worse nights, he could barely apply his own weight upon it.    Acheu lifted his leg up, pushing his knee against his chest, then began to knead on the shin and ankle with his hand.  He felt the tighteness of his skin.  He felt the bumps that marked the presence of his veins.  He did not realize how much tired he felt.  Or looked.

He stared at his frail-looking hands.  The scars on his skin reminded him of the harder days before he rose to the position of one of the Patermaster's chosen.   The days when he believed he would be nothing more than a farmer, working for the merchant families that owned the land he was to earn his keep on.

While the rest of the world seemed content to believe in the Ancestral Dragons and their having chosen the Faith to represent them, Acheu lived a childhood that was filled with unspoken questions of why and why not.  Each time the Faith would visit the farm which Acheu and his family worked upon to collect the monthly "donations," Acheu would struggle deep inside himself and wonder why their hard labor and sweat bore fruit that had to be shared with the Faith.   And each time the Febhed barbarians would "come to assault" the farmlands, Acheu would wonder why there were always a few who would make sure they would leave baskets with bread, milk, and meat before locking the doors to their homes as the Faith have always warned them.  It was not until after the merchant Acheu's family had served passed away did he gain a chance to see the other faces of the Faith and the Febhed.

And mind you, by passed away, the merchant did not die a natural death.

"Donato," Acheu motioned at one of the guardsmen nearby and waited for the young soldier to approach.  Brown-haired with a face revealing to easily the fact he was barely past fifteen summers, the young man walked up to Acheu, clicked his heels together as he came to a stop a yard from the Pateron, then clamed his right hand against his left bicep in a salute.  Donato was dressed in the layered leather and padded chainmail garb.  A brown-red overcoat then adorned his shoulders and back.  Steel-toed boots and, had the crystal-like face guard been in place, steel gauntlets completed his look, giving him the appearance of a clothed golem.  "Proceed with the formations without me."

"Sir?"

Acheu reached towards Donato with an open hand.  The soldier took it, shifted his weight, to assist Acheu as he rose from his chair.  The Pateron then intoned a basic note and the chair unbuilt itself and submerged into the earth. 

"Our contingent is to proceed without me.  You will be in charge," Acheu pronounced.

"But father-" Donato gasped, "I cannot-"

"Donato."  His firm voice silenced further complaints from his own son.   Acheu knew where the fear was coming from, after all.  He knew more than just what Donato was thinking of.  He knew Donato was right.   The boy was too young to manage the contingent on his own.  He was not due to do so, if only his brother had not abandoned the Febhed Guard and chosen the less honorable path of a mercenary.   But after leaving the Guard to raise his children on his own, then seeing them massacred by the scavengefolk, Sunaj had lost faith in both the Febhed's ability to protect them and the Faith's embrace towards predestination.  Though Acheu suspected Sunaj would return, he had thought then all his eldest son needed was a gentle push back.   Acheu did not realize the scavengefolk he had led to the town would be so vicious.  Nor that they would actually fail to be stopped in time.  Acheu's plans of arriving in the nick of time to save Sunaj's town and family fell apart, and pushed Sunaj further away.   Faced with the empty poisiton, Acheu had no choice by to have his other son take the post.  It would have been far more embarassing to have the post empty.

It would have made him look weak.

Acheu tried to explain to Sunaj.  The Febhed could not protect his family in time, because they were too distracted by the Faith.  In some ways, Acheu merely wanted to spin things around in a direction he prefered.  But in other ways, he was trying to convince himself that the deaths of his grandchildren were not the result of his own actions.

Acheu knew Donato was his only hope to recover some of the self-respect that had been lost.  But Acheu also knew that this hunt for the dragon offered a different level of opportunity.  Among the Febhed, finding a dragon that could communicate fully with a human without resorting to the Faith's reliance on the Dragon Song was proof that the Faith was no longer favored by the Ancestral Dragons.   That the Faith might no longer even be necessary.

"Simply echo the commands of the nearest contingent.  The Patermaster wants this army mobilized."

Donato nodded, although his eyes clearly showed his worry. 

"Your contingent will be part of three others.   The Patermaster will have you and the Ruby contingent on the flanks.  While the rest of the contigents take down the Faith dragonrider and his steed, you and Ruby contigent shall focus on capturing the emerald dragon."

"I understand father, but I've never-"

"You will capture the dragon alive, Donato. And I shall expect you to pay attention.  Note any opportunity to be the very one who successfully captures the dragon.  The Patermaster must be impressed by your achievement."

"But I-"

"Donato," Acheu grabbed his son's shoulder so suddenly, Donato's audibly gasped.  "Do what you have to do.  Sunaj has embarassed our line long enough among the Febhed.  He has traded his love for the family and his loyalties to the Patermaster for the lure of coin and the lusts of his adventuring whore.  You have to undo what he has done to us.  Do you understand me, Donato?  You have to."

"I understand father," Donato inhaled sharply to steel himself, "But where are you going?"

Acheu shook his head as a reply.  His hand loosened its grip on Donato.   And by the time he started to walk away from Donato, his son had long realized his father did not answer because he did not want his own son to know.

Quickie Fiction: Failings

Like a hand reaching for the very moon, four towering obelisks marked the corners of one of the passageways connecting the underground Febhed Confessionarium to the surface. The calm night sky painted above gave no hint to the tremendous events that were unfolding each passing second. Voices carried in the darkness. Orders to maintain formation, to prepare for the mission, to bid farewell to loved ones fluttered back and forth as the gathered Febhed prepared for their mission. Some were clearly experienced warriors, with small scars making their faces and arms with reminders of painful tribulations they had survived before. Others were far to clearly new, stumbling to move into their ranks, or struggling to wear the armor and uniform well. From the sky, the whole scene would have looked like an army of red and black ants were moving about the mouth of a hole leading deep below. Their lack of coordinated order, however, was far too evident.

Pateron Acheu felt the pain in his leg begin to throb again. Ever since that single night he had fallen asleep with his boots on, his leg had been menanced by this intermittent distraction. On worse nights, he could barely apply his own weight upon it. Acheu lifted his leg up, pushing his knee against his chest, then began to knead on the shin and ankle with his hand. He felt the tighteness of his skin. He felt the bumps that marked the presence of his veins. He did not realize how much tired he felt. Or looked.

He stared at his frail-looking hands. The scars on his skin reminded him of the harder days before he rose to the position of one of the Patermaster's chosen. The days when he believed he would be nothing more than a farmer, working for the merchant families that owned the land he was to earn his keep on.

While the rest of the world seemed content to believe in the Ancestral Dragons and their having chosen the Faith to represent them, Acheu lived a childhood that was filled with unspoken questions of why and why not. Each time the Faith would visit the farm which Acheu and his family worked upon to collect the monthly "donations," Acheu would struggle deep inside himself and wonder why their hard labor and sweat bore fruit that had to be shared with the Faith. And each time the Febhed barbarians would "come to assault" the farmlands, Acheu would wonder why there were always a few who would make sure they would leave baskets with bread, milk, and meat before locking the doors to their homes as the Faith have always warned them. It was not until after the merchant Acheu's family had served passed away did he gain a chance to see the other faces of the Faith and the Febhed.

And mind you, by passed away, the merchant did not die a natural death.

"Donato," Acheu motioned at one of the guardsmen nearby and waited for the young soldier to approach. Brown-haired with a face revealing to easily the fact he was barely past fifteen summers, the young man walked up to Acheu, clicked his heels together as he came to a stop a yard from the Pateron, then clamed his right hand against his left bicep in a salute. Donato was dressed in the layered leather and padded chainmail garb. A brown-red overcoat then adorned his shoulders and back. Steel-toed boots and, had the crystal-like face guard been in place, steel gauntlets completed his look, giving him the appearance of a clothed golem. "Proceed with the formations without me."

"Sir?"

Acheu reached towards Donato with an open hand. The soldier took it, shifted his weight, to assist Acheu as he rose from his chair. The Pateron then intoned a basic note and the chair unbuilt itself and submerged into the earth.

"Our contingent is to proceed without me. You will be in charge," Acheu pronounced.

"But father-" Donato gasped, "I cannot-"

"Donato." His firm voice silenced further complaints from his own son. Acheu knew where the fear was coming from, after all. He knew more than just what Donato was thinking of. He knew Donato was right. The boy was too young to manage the contingent on his own. He was not due to do so, if only his brother had not abandoned the Febhed Guard and chosen the less honorable path of a mercenary. But after leaving the Guard to raise his children on his own, then seeing them massacred by the scavengefolk, Sunaj had lost faith in both the Febhed's ability to protect them and the Faith's embrace towards predestination. Though Acheu suspected Sunaj would return, he had thought then all his eldest son needed was a gentle push back. Acheu did not realize the scavengefolk he had led to the town would be so vicious. Nor that they would actually fail to be stopped in time. Acheu's plans of arriving in the nick of time to save Sunaj's town and family fell apart, and pushed Sunaj further away. Faced with the empty poisiton, Acheu had no choice by to have his other son take the post. It would have been far more embarassing to have the post empty.

It would have made him look weak.

Acheu tried to explain to Sunaj. The Febhed could not protect his family in time, because they were too distracted by the Faith. In some ways, Acheu merely wanted to spin things around in a direction he prefered. But in other ways, he was trying to convince himself that the deaths of his grandchildren were not the result of his own actions.

Acheu knew Donato was his only hope to recover some of the self-respect that had been lost. But Acheu also knew that this hunt for the dragon offered a different level of opportunity. Among the Febhed, finding a dragon that could communicate fully with a human without resorting to the Faith's reliance on the Dragon Song was proof that the Faith was no longer favored by the Ancestral Dragons. That the Faith might no longer even be necessary.

"Simply echo the commands of the nearest contingent. The Patermaster wants this army mobilized."

Donato nodded, although his eyes clearly showed his worry.

"Your contingent will be part of three others. The Patermaster will have you and the Ruby contingent on the flanks. While the rest of the contigents take down the Faith dragonrider and his steed, you and Ruby contigent shall focus on capturing the emerald dragon."

"I understand father, but I've never-"

"You will capture the dragon alive, Donato. And I shall expect you to pay attention. Note any opportunity to be the very one who successfully captures the dragon. The Patermaster must be impressed by your achievement."

"But I-"

"Donato," Acheu grabbed his son's shoulder so suddenly, Donato's audibly gasped. "Do what you have to do. Sunaj has embarassed our line long enough among the Febhed. He has traded his love for the family and his loyalties to the Patermaster for the lure of coin and the lusts of his adventuring whore. You have to undo what he has done to us. Do you understand me, Donato? You have to."

"I understand father," Donato inhaled sharply to steel himself, "But where are you going?"

Acheu shook his head as a reply. His hand loosened its grip on Donato. And by the time he started to walk away from Donato, his son had long realized his father did not answer because he did not want his own son to know.

I Only Speak the Truth

Satine: Never knew I could feel like this
It's like I've never seen the sky before
Want to vanish inside your kiss
Every day I'm loving you more and more
Listen to my heart can you hear it sing?
Come back to me and FORGIVE everything!
Seasons may change winter to spring
I Love You, til the end of time
Christian: Come what may! Come what may! Come what may! Come what may! I will Love You
Satine: I will Love You
Christian: Until my dying day!
Satine: Dying day!
Both: Come what may! Come what may!
Satine: Come what may
Both: I will Love You until my dying
Toulouse: Christian! He’s got a gun! They’re trying to kill you!
Zidler: Shut up!
Toulouse: Look, he’s got a gun!
Zidler: Guards, seize them!
The doctor: Vive le vie de Boheme!
Argentinean: No problem! Go back to work!
Toulouse: No matter what you say,
Cast: The show is ending our way. Come on and stand your ground For freedom, beauty, truth, and Love
Chorus: How wonderful life is
Satine: One day I'll fly away
Christian: My gift is my song
Chorus: The children of the revolution, No you won't fool the children of the revolution
Satine: One day I'll fly away
Christian: My gift is my song
Chorus: No you won't fool the children of the revolution. No you won't fool the children of the revolution
Chorus: Come what may
Satine and Christian: I will Love You
Chorus: Come what may
Both: Yes, I will Love You
Chorus: Come what may
Both: I will Love You
Duke: My way! My way! My way!! My way!!!
Cast: Until my dying day!

I Only Speak the Truth

Satine: Never knew I could feel like this
It's like I've never seen the sky before
Want to vanish inside your kiss
Every day I'm loving you more and more
Listen to my heart can you hear it sing?
Come back to me and FORGIVE everything!
Seasons may change winter to spring
I Love You, til the end of time
Christian: Come what may! Come what may! Come what may! Come what may! I will Love You
Satine: I will Love You
Christian: Until my dying day!
Satine: Dying day!
Both: Come what may! Come what may!
Satine: Come what may
Both: I will Love You until my dying
Toulouse: Christian! He’s got a gun! They’re trying to kill you!
Zidler: Shut up!
Toulouse: Look, he’s got a gun!
Zidler: Guards, seize them!
The doctor: Vive le vie de Boheme!
Argentinean: No problem! Go back to work!
Toulouse: No matter what you say,
Cast: The show is ending our way. Come on and stand your ground For freedom, beauty, truth, and Love
Chorus: How wonderful life is
Satine: One day I'll fly away
Christian: My gift is my song
Chorus: The children of the revolution, No you won't fool the children of the revolution
Satine: One day I'll fly away
Christian: My gift is my song
Chorus: No you won't fool the children of the revolution. No you won't fool the children of the revolution
Chorus: Come what may
Satine and Christian: I will Love You
Chorus: Come what may
Both: Yes, I will Love You
Chorus: Come what may
Both: I will Love You
Duke: My way! My way! My way!! My way!!!
Cast: Until my dying day!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Weekend Outing with the Faraons - part two




On the last day, just before heading off to make our long trek home, I realized I had totally forgotten to try and take more pictures. So here's the few pathetic attempts at getting more pictures of that fun weekend.

I can't wait for the next one!

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Quickie Fiction: Threats

Nicodemus crumbled to the ground as spasms of pain shot through the saffron dragon.  Searing pain moved like slithering barbed wire through its body as the woven magic forced the dragon to pull away.  Through the Onus Bond, Vandross felt his dragon's suffering, twisting and coiling through his chest like a raging tornado of broken glass and fangs that wanted to break free.   The two did not expect that the mercenaries were that skilled both in the ways of combat and the harmonies of the Dragon Song. 

The two had remained deep within cloud cover when they spied Sunaj and his female companion.  The dwarf was sipping the simmering broth while his female companion simply stood by his side and waited.  Vandross had barely scanned the area for Savati when he realized the green dragon was not too far away, clearly illuminated by torchlight.   Was this a trap laid for them?   Vandross weighed the idea in his mind.  He was not aware of anyone who sought for him personally, save perhaps the Febhed he had encountered some time ago.  It was not too far a stretch to consider that Pateron had hired these mercenaries to hunt him down. 

With a heel tap, Vandross signalled Nicodemus to descend.  He had locked both knees against Nicodemus' horns and drawn his bow and armed it with two strands plucked from Nicodemus' head.  Nicodemus sliced its claws against the wind as they descended, and created a whirlwind that cushioned their fall while swirling soil and loose leaves about in a blinding cloud that announced their arrival.

"I am Vandross, Dragonrider Archer of the Faith-"

Vandross had barely finished announcing his presence when he realized the blinding cloud Nicodemus had sung had too rapidly dispersed into the winds.   The next sight Vandross saw was the muscular short man cutting through the winds seconds before a tattood fist slammed into his face.

Blood.

Vandross tasted blood dripping out from between his clenched teeth.  His lower lip had popped open from Sunaj's punch.  How the dwarf had leapt the distance from the ground to Vandross standing upon Nicodemus' back, the archer did not know.  What he knew now, for certain, was that these mercenaries were dangerous.

And the woman knew how to compose with the Dragon's Song.

Alucita continued to stroke her fingers in the sequenced fashion that plucked the tones of the Harmony that combined the tones of fire and water.  The resultant vibrations were rapid riffs of pain that burned through the circulatory system of living targets.  The victims would feel their blood rush in unpredictable directions, vessels bursting from the stress as their heart struggles to maintain its steady rhythm.  The Harmony known as Vitaesis.

It was a deadly Harmony.  One even the Faith was loathe to teach, or allow to be practiced.  But being the child of the Hierophant, Alucita learned, had its advantages.  The gifts of comprehension that the Ancestral Dragons granted the Hierophant, in some strange symbiotic way, also reached her.

Sunaj landed a few feet away from where Vandross had struck the ground.  The archer tried to shake the stars out of his eyes but he recovered far too slow.  A heavy boot smashed harshly into Vandross' stomach, followed by a solid blow from Sunaj's knee into his face.  Vandross nearly blacked out from the powerful strikes.  Clamping down the urge to give in, Vandross forced his eyes open and on the last moment, kicked off the ground in time with a whistled intonation.  The air picked up and lifted him from the ground, allowing Vandross to dodge Sunaj's next assault.  Suspended in the air for a brief second, Vandross twisted his left arm to flick his bow into a new configuration.  The bones and musculature moved, snapping into place and transforming the bow into a shield like framework that enclosed his arm.  As the string of the bow began to rapidly weave through the frame into a netted skin, Vandross peered at his attacker and discovered the source of his immense strength.

His tattoos.

The lines and markings looked abstract enough.  The angled corners and the soft curves.  But Vandross was a man whose gaze studied patterns well - the routes a target may attempt to escape, the path through the forest that a running target may attempt to use, the areas of cover where a rival archer may be preparing to strike back from - and in the scant moments he looked down at Sunaj he realized what the tattoos were.

They were an autographed notation of Vitaesis.  The written score of a Vitaesis harmony meant to increase one's strength.  A permanent tune seared into the man's skin.

"Stop this!" Vandross screamed as he fell, but using the shield configuration of his ivory bow, timed his parry of Sunaj's next punch, to redirect the fall into a roll to the side.  A flick once again reconfigured the shield into a bow, but this time its configuration was meant for smaller range.  "You are both Febhed.  The truce demands we cease hostilities."

"This isn't hostilities," Sunaj laughed and charged forward.  Each step he took to rush towards Vandross left a tiny crater on the ground.  He swung his fists at Vandross, twice missing as Vandross timed his dodge to plant a foot on Sunaj's knee, then whistled once more to kick off and leap into a high arc into the air.  From there, Vandross launched the two arrows he had plucked earlier from Nicodemus' back.  The arrows unfurled as they sailed in the air, then entangled to each other as they erupted into numerous shooting threads that converged upon Sunaj in the form of a net.  Sunaj pulled against the strands but found that they stretched with his motions, then using the contained energy, sprung back to pull him against the ground.  The salty tang of blood in his lips concerned Vandross far less than the jolts of pain that he could feel from the Onus Bond.  He spun to face the direction where Nicodemus was and allowed the ivory bow to reconfigure itself back into its default setting.  "Stop now, Febhed Pateron," Vandross threatened and pointed the bow at the woman in the distance.  It was easy even at that distance to see the bow had no arrow notched to it, but Vandross maintained his threatening stance.

"Alucita," the woman called back, "Huntsman.  I would sooner throw myself down to be devoured by the mantis colonies here than kneel before the Patermaster and be chosen."

"Let my dragon go," Vandross growled.

"Your bow has no arrow," Alucita teased.

"I will ask one last time.  You do now want to test me," Vandross maintained his stance.

Alucita's eyes narrowed.  Was this Dragonrider Archer mad?  Did he truly hope to intimidate her with an empty bow?  Was there some song that the Archers now practiced which made their weapons deadly even without the presence of an arrow? 

"Let my dragon go," Vandross gave the final warning.

Alucita stopped the movement of her fingers.  Nicodemus gave out a sound that clearly reflected a respite from the pain.  The dragon remained on the ground, catching its breath.  Vandross slowly walked towards Nicodemus, all the while keeping the bow trained at Alucita.  The Huntsman eyed him whimsically.  The smile on her face clearly showed she did not fear him.   For a moment, Vandross pondered if she was actually mad.

"The pain will pass," Alucita offered, but saw only Vandross scowl in return.  "The Harmony I used was meant to hinder it.  Not kill it.  Killing songs are far easier and quicker to use."

The words were the last thing Vandross wanted to hear.  He raised the bow again and let the string go.  Alucita felt something whip past her face.  She jerked back instinctively as a sharp searing pain sliced into her cheek.  Drawing her hand away from her cheek, she saw it was stained with a line of blood. 

"How-"

Vandross reached Nicodemus, slid his arm around its head, and tried to wake it.  The dragon stirred a bit, but did not open its eyes. 

Quickie Fiction: Threats

Nicodemus crumbled to the ground as spasms of pain shot through the saffron dragon. Searing pain moved like slithering barbed wire through its body as the woven magic forced the dragon to pull away. Through the Onus Bond, Vandross felt his dragon's suffering, twisting and coiling through his chest like a raging tornado of broken glass and fangs that wanted to break free. The two did not expect that the mercenaries were that skilled both in the ways of combat and the harmonies of the Dragon Song.

The two had remained deep within cloud cover when they spied Sunaj and his female companion. The dwarf was sipping the simmering broth while his female companion simply stood by his side and waited. Vandross had barely scanned the area for Savati when he realized the green dragon was not too far away, clearly illuminated by torchlight. Was this a trap laid for them? Vandross weighed the idea in his mind. He was not aware of anyone who sought for him personally, save perhaps the Febhed he had encountered some time ago. It was not too far a stretch to consider that Pateron had hired these mercenaries to hunt him down.

With a heel tap, Vandross signalled Nicodemus to descend. He had locked both knees against Nicodemus' horns and drawn his bow and armed it with two strands plucked from Nicodemus' head. Nicodemus sliced its claws against the wind as they descended, and created a whirlwind that cushioned their fall while swirling soil and loose leaves about in a blinding cloud that announced their arrival.

"I am Vandross, Dragonrider Archer of the Faith-"

Vandross had barely finished announcing his presence when he realized the blinding cloud Nicodemus had sung had too rapidly dispersed into the winds. The next sight Vandross saw was the muscular short man cutting through the winds seconds before a tattood fist slammed into his face.

Blood.

Vandross tasted blood dripping out from between his clenched teeth. His lower lip had popped open from Sunaj's punch. How the dwarf had leapt the distance from the ground to Vandross standing upon Nicodemus' back, the archer did not know. What he knew now, for certain, was that these mercenaries were dangerous.

And the woman knew how to compose with the Dragon's Song.

Alucita continued to stroke her fingers in the sequenced fashion that plucked the tones of the Harmony that combined the tones of fire and water. The resultant vibrations were rapid riffs of pain that burned through the circulatory system of living targets. The victims would feel their blood rush in unpredictable directions, vessels bursting from the stress as their heart struggles to maintain its steady rhythm. The Harmony known as Vitaesis.

It was a deadly Harmony. One even the Faith was loathe to teach, or allow to be practiced. But being the child of the Hierophant, Alucita learned, had its advantages. The gifts of comprehension that the Ancestral Dragons granted the Hierophant, in some strange symbiotic way, also reached her.

Sunaj landed a few feet away from where Vandross had struck the ground. The archer tried to shake the stars out of his eyes but he recovered far too slow. A heavy boot smashed harshly into Vandross' stomach, followed by a solid blow from Sunaj's knee into his face. Vandross nearly blacked out from the powerful strikes. Clamping down the urge to give in, Vandross forced his eyes open and on the last moment, kicked off the ground in time with a whistled intonation. The air picked up and lifted him from the ground, allowing Vandross to dodge Sunaj's next assault. Suspended in the air for a brief second, Vandross twisted his left arm to flick his bow into a new configuration. The bones and musculature moved, snapping into place and transforming the bow into a shield like framework that enclosed his arm. As the string of the bow began to rapidly weave through the frame into a netted skin, Vandross peered at his attacker and discovered the source of his immense strength.

His tattoos.

The lines and markings looked abstract enough. The angled corners and the soft curves. But Vandross was a man whose gaze studied patterns well - the routes a target may attempt to escape, the path through the forest that a running target may attempt to use, the areas of cover where a rival archer may be preparing to strike back from - and in the scant moments he looked down at Sunaj he realized what the tattoos were.

They were an autographed notation of Vitaesis. The written score of a Vitaesis harmony meant to increase one's strength. A permanent tune seared into the man's skin.

"Stop this!" Vandross screamed as he fell, but using the shield configuration of his ivory bow, timed his parry of Sunaj's next punch, to redirect the fall into a roll to the side. A flick once again reconfigured the shield into a bow, but this time its configuration was meant for smaller range. "You are both Febhed. The truce demands we cease hostilities."

"This isn't hostilities," Sunaj laughed and charged forward. Each step he took to rush towards Vandross left a tiny crater on the ground. He swung his fists at Vandross, twice missing as Vandross timed his dodge to plant a foot on Sunaj's knee, then whistled once more to kick off and leap into a high arc into the air. From there, Vandross launched the two arrows he had plucked earlier from Nicodemus' back. The arrows unfurled as they sailed in the air, then entangled to each other as they erupted into numerous shooting threads that converged upon Sunaj in the form of a net. Sunaj pulled against the strands but found that they stretched with his motions, then using the contained energy, sprung back to pull him against the ground. The salty tang of blood in his lips concerned Vandross far less than the jolts of pain that he could feel from the Onus Bond. He spun to face the direction where Nicodemus was and allowed the ivory bow to reconfigure itself back into its default setting. "Stop now, Febhed Pateron," Vandross threatened and pointed the bow at the woman in the distance. It was easy even at that distance to see the bow had no arrow notched to it, but Vandross maintained his threatening stance.

"Alucita," the woman called back, "Huntsman. I would sooner throw myself down to be devoured by the mantis colonies here than kneel before the Patermaster and be chosen."

"Let my dragon go," Vandross growled.

"Your bow has no arrow," Alucita teased.

"I will ask one last time. You do now want to test me," Vandross maintained his stance.

Alucita's eyes narrowed. Was this Dragonrider Archer mad? Did he truly hope to intimidate her with an empty bow? Was there some song that the Archers now practiced which made their weapons deadly even without the presence of an arrow?

"Let my dragon go," Vandross gave the final warning.

Alucita stopped the movement of her fingers. Nicodemus gave out a sound that clearly reflected a respite from the pain. The dragon remained on the ground, catching its breath. Vandross slowly walked towards Nicodemus, all the while keeping the bow trained at Alucita. The Huntsman eyed him whimsically. The smile on her face clearly showed she did not fear him. For a moment, Vandross pondered if she was actually mad.

"The pain will pass," Alucita offered, but saw only Vandross scowl in return. "The Harmony I used was meant to hinder it. Not kill it. Killing songs are far easier and quicker to use."

The words were the last thing Vandross wanted to hear. He raised the bow again and let the string go. Alucita felt something whip past her face. She jerked back instinctively as a sharp searing pain sliced into her cheek. Drawing her hand away from her cheek, she saw it was stained with a line of blood.

"How-"

Vandross reached Nicodemus, slid his arm around its head, and tried to wake it. The dragon stirred a bit, but did not open its eyes.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Weekend Outing with the Faraons




Emman and Apple were kind enough to invite me, Rocky, Brian, Buern and Jo to their beach house for the weekend. I barely was able to take pictures with my iPhone but I might as well share the ones I did take. These are pictures for the second day there. Will post the pictures of the third day (just before leaving) once I can.

Bioshock 2 teaser trailer


Bioshock 2 teaser trailer


Monday, March 23, 2009

Quickie Fiction: Something Brewing

The fire crackled against the breeze, sending glowing embers into the sky.  Sunaj dipped the metal spoon into the simmering broth and sampled a bit of the soup.  Realizing it still lacked the saltiness he preferred, he then pinched a bit more salt from the small jar set beside him and rubbed his thumb and forefinger over the pot.

Sunaj missed simple joys like this.  Back in his hometown, Sunaj was a cook.  And a husband of seven children.  The gratification of combining different flavors and ingredients into a succulent meal was one of the two things Sunaj derived pleasure from.   And hearing the joy of his children's voices as they relished the meals he made was the other.

Who would have known that the memory of hearing each child cheer and squeal in delight as Sunaj revealed each gastronomical delight would be replaced by the horror of hearing them pleading for their lives. 

A wild band of scavengefolk assaulted the town one evening.  The town crier ran through the streets, calling out for alarm as the band charged past the walls.  Like rabid wolves, the scavengefolk tore through the streets and attacked anyone they came upon.  Teeth, sharpened nails and vicious fists tore flesh and drew Febhed blood without mercy.  Sunaj fought valiantly to protect his own family, taking down seven of the scavengefolk with his bare hands.  The eight, however, was skilled in Fire Chants, and using the secret words of power that allowed one to manipulate fire, the scavengefolk was able to invoke the burning walls of the hut nearby to rise up like a swelling tower of churning flame, then dive, striking like a deadly viper.  The assault struck the ground between Sunaj's feet, missing him by a few inches.  The dwarf moved, leaping away from the rising flames, then ducking beneath a second strike to weave in and clamp both bleeding hands upon the scavengefolk's neck.  He squeezed, feeling the muscle and bone strain beneath his grasp. 

The scavengefolk, seeing in Sunaj's eyes that the Febhed planned to kill him, retaliated in the best way to possibly distract the enemy.  Pulling against Sunaj's fingers just enough to gasp for air, the scavengefolk barked out the four syllables necessary to redicted the serpent of fire.   It was only when his children began to scream in fear that Sunaj realized the flaming serpent had been directed to wrap around the very home where his children safely hid.  And that moment when Sunaj turned to see the house catch fire, the scavengefolk wiggled free an arm enough to grab a nearby rock, and smash the rock into Sunaj's very face. 

Sunaj fell, the pain overwhelming both self-preservatino and the need to do something to save his children.

By the time he had awoken, the town was in ashes, the burnt bodies were no longer smoldering, and a small note was left on his chest by the scavengefolk.   He had been left alive on purpose.   The sole survivor in the whole town.

The pain of loss could have defeated Sunaj that moment.  It could have eroded all sense of meaning or joy in his life.  It could have been the beginning of self-blame and weakness.   But instead, it became a reason not to give up.  It became a reason not to grow weak.  It became a reason to find himself and become a stronger person, even if he never knew himself to be weak.

To the very least, Sunaj realized, he would be an even better person;  he would become a person his children, wherever they may now be, would be proud to have call as their father.

"More salt," Alucita suggested as she walked up towards Sunaj.  She had seen his expression change the moment the spoon touched his lips.  

"Yes," Sunaj smiled.  Part of him recalled how Alucita entered his life, but the act of musing over that meeting for now had to wait.  He noticed Alucita was walking with one hand already holding her echoblade.  The curved blade had the shape of the cross-section of a vicious wave of tempered steel.  Both sides were sharpened into effective cutting edges.  Small holes could be found across its body, acting as finger holes to grasp the weapon safely.  It was meant to be used as a defensive edged melee weapon, but skilled users were also aware how to weild the device as a boomerang and like its namesake, the echoblade would always spin back towards the original thrower, slicing through the air with dangerous ease.  "More salt would have been nice.  We are out of time?"

"Unless you think blood could be a good substitute for salt," Alucita gave a mock smile and nodded, suggesting Sunaj look upwards, "They are here. "


Quickie Fiction: Something Brewing

The fire crackled against the breeze, sending glowing embers into the sky. Sunaj dipped the metal spoon into the simmering broth and sampled a bit of the soup. Realizing it still lacked the saltiness he preferred, he then pinched a bit more salt from the small jar set beside him and rubbed his thumb and forefinger over the pot.

Sunaj missed simple joys like this. Back in his hometown, Sunaj was a cook. And a husband of seven children. The gratification of combining different flavors and ingredients into a succulent meal was one of the two things Sunaj derived pleasure from. And hearing the joy of his children's voices as they relished the meals he made was the other.

Who would have known that the memory of hearing each child cheer and squeal in delight as Sunaj revealed each gastronomical delight would be replaced by the horror of hearing them pleading for their lives.

A wild band of scavengefolk assaulted the town one evening. The town crier ran through the streets, calling out for alarm as the band charged past the walls. Like rabid wolves, the scavengefolk tore through the streets and attacked anyone they came upon. Teeth, sharpened nails and vicious fists tore flesh and drew Febhed blood without mercy. Sunaj fought valiantly to protect his own family, taking down seven of the scavengefolk with his bare hands. The eight, however, was skilled in Fire Chants, and using the secret words of power that allowed one to manipulate fire, the scavengefolk was able to invoke the burning walls of the hut nearby to rise up like a swelling tower of churning flame, then dive, striking like a deadly viper. The assault struck the ground between Sunaj's feet, missing him by a few inches. The dwarf moved, leaping away from the rising flames, then ducking beneath a second strike to weave in and clamp both bleeding hands upon the scavengefolk's neck. He squeezed, feeling the muscle and bone strain beneath his grasp.

The scavengefolk, seeing in Sunaj's eyes that the Febhed planned to kill him, retaliated in the best way to possibly distract the enemy. Pulling against Sunaj's fingers just enough to gasp for air, the scavengefolk barked out the four syllables necessary to redicted the serpent of fire. It was only when his children began to scream in fear that Sunaj realized the flaming serpent had been directed to wrap around the very home where his children safely hid. And that moment when Sunaj turned to see the house catch fire, the scavengefolk wiggled free an arm enough to grab a nearby rock, and smash the rock into Sunaj's very face.

Sunaj fell, the pain overwhelming both self-preservatino and the need to do something to save his children.

By the time he had awoken, the town was in ashes, the burnt bodies were no longer smoldering, and a small note was left on his chest by the scavengefolk. He had been left alive on purpose. The sole survivor in the whole town.

The pain of loss could have defeated Sunaj that moment. It could have eroded all sense of meaning or joy in his life. It could have been the beginning of self-blame and weakness. But instead, it became a reason not to give up. It became a reason not to grow weak. It became a reason to find himself and become a stronger person, even if he never knew himself to be weak.

To the very least, Sunaj realized, he would be an even better person; he would become a person his children, wherever they may now be, would be proud to have call as their father.

"More salt," Alucita suggested as she walked up towards Sunaj. She had seen his expression change the moment the spoon touched his lips.

"Yes," Sunaj smiled. Part of him recalled how Alucita entered his life, but the act of musing over that meeting for now had to wait. He noticed Alucita was walking with one hand already holding her echoblade. The curved blade had the shape of the cross-section of a vicious wave of tempered steel. Both sides were sharpened into effective cutting edges. Small holes could be found across its body, acting as finger holes to grasp the weapon safely. It was meant to be used as a defensive edged melee weapon, but skilled users were also aware how to weild the device as a boomerang and like its namesake, the echoblade would always spin back towards the original thrower, slicing through the air with dangerous ease. "More salt would have been nice. We are out of time?"

"Unless you think blood could be a good substitute for salt," Alucita gave a mock smile and nodded, suggesting Sunaj look upwards, "They are here. "


Saturday, March 21, 2009

Musings at the Beach

The sun is starting to set
and the day is growing cold.
I sit before my laptop
working while at the beach.

The weekend is going well;
we've had loads of laughs,
tons of jokes,
and the hours pass quickly
swimming,
lazying,
reading,
sleeping.

There is salt on my face.
Sweat dots my skin.
My bare feet touch sand,
while my fingers run across the keys.
Working.  Vacationing.
Sitting alone by the cool water
watching as the rest of the world goes by.

Occasionally, I check my phone,
switch a glance at Yahoo! Messenger,
or toss a peer at Facebook.
No message.
No smileys.
No pokes.

You're not online.
You're actually here.

But not with me.

Musings at the Beach

The sun is starting to set
and the day is growing cold.
I sit before my laptop
working while at the beach.

The weekend is going well;
we've had loads of laughs,
tons of jokes,
and the hours pass quickly
swimming,
lazying,
reading,
sleeping.

There is salt on my face.
Sweat dots my skin.
My bare feet touch sand,
while my fingers run across the keys.
Working. Vacationing.
Sitting alone by the cool water
watching as the rest of the world goes by.

Occasionally, I check my phone,
switch a glance at Yahoo! Messenger,
or toss a peer at Facebook.
No message.
No smileys.
No pokes.

You're not online.
You're actually here.

But not with me.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Quickie Fiction: Truth

"This is unacceptable," Tajuc's words erupted out from his lips heavily coated with frustrated anger.  His hands trembled in contained rage, causing the golden cuffs to shimmer in the darkness.  His cheeks flushed as he stared at the three other Voices of the Faith that were in the room with him.  One of the other monks speedily moved to the nearest window and pulled the shutters closed.  Another walked towards Tajuc with his arms extended forward, in a futile attempt to calm his fellow monk down.  But Tajuc could not be brought to quiet down.  The third quietly stood there, hands crossed over his chest.  News had reached him of the Hierophant's actions born from the confession he had given some days back.  And rumors of the presence of Febhed mercenaries within the Seat of Faith spread like a virulent disease.  The halls of the Seat of Faith were sanctified, kept unblemished in fear of destroying its eternal resonance to the Dragon's Song.  For the Hierophant to allow other people, particularly Febhed mercenaries, into its sheltered chambers was unthinkable.

"Tajuc, calm down," Ammen whispered in his croaky voice.  Damaged from years of preaching the Dragon's message upon the faithful, Ammen was the oldest among them in the room.  "Calm down.. the Ancestral Dragons themselves would wake from your ranting.  The Hierophant surely has his reasons."

"I confessed the matter to the Hierophant due to the simple fact that if the dragon my friend Vandross claims to have seen is truly his Other, then the Hierophant will have to confirm its existence."

"But an Other," Nayd hushed from the shuttered window, "Tajuc.  An Other?  Not even my grandfather ever spoke of his generation having seen one."

"Confirmation," Tajuc sighed with his voice growing heavier with each frustrated second, "The Hierophant has to confirm its existence.  Our very tenets speak of how the Onus Bond exists merely to bind us with our dragonkin until two souls completed by each Other return to show us the way.  If Vandorss is right about this dragon, this is an event for all of the Faith to celebrate.  It would be a time when we all feel the Onus lifted."

"And the Hierophant," Nayd shook his head, "And on that time, you do remember what happens to the Hierophant."

The monks stared at Tajuc whose face began to express a clear comprehension of what was happening.  His hands cupped his own face as he began to pace back and forth as the realization struck home.  The Hierophant was to confirm the Other, and if found true, was to step down from his place upon the Seat of Faith and be the first of many to listen to the words of the Whole.  The Whole was to teach all how to no longer rely merely on the burdens of the bond and truly find one another.   It was said to have happened before, a long terrible time ago before the Faith was established.  But was said to happen again.  Some postulate the event is a cycle, that there is upon long forgotten unrecorded history been periods where a Whole generation exists in tranquility and peace.   Others say it was how things always were, before the Ancestral Dragons and man were separated by lesser things.  And the coming of the Whole was the first step into returning into that perfected state of existence.

"The Hierophant," Tajuc shook his head.  "Was I wrong?  Is it not our duty to report such an event?"

The third monk finally spoke, revealling his face as he drew his hood back.  A scruffy beard covered his chin.  A widening scar marked his face, starting thin as a needle on his left temple, then growing into an inch-wide blemish that slashed across his left eye, nose ridge and right cheek.  It was an old long-ago healed wound.  "Perhaps, it was your duty.. but only after confirming it yourself.  The Hierophant now fears losing all.  Perhaps selfishly.  Perhaps for the good of the Faith.  He has called for the Febhed to hunt for the dragon.  Maybe to keep the investigation secret.  Or maybe to ensure it succeeds.   Ultimately, we cannot simply stand by idly to see what fruit shall be born from all this."

" Romac is right," Tajuc stared at his fellow monk, "We can't.  Not when the Hierophant has chosen to rely on the Febhed for something this important.  Ammen, head for the stables.  Prep our own dragons.  Nayd, visit quickly the Arsarmarium.  We will need weapons."

"And you, Tajuc?"  Romac asked boldly, "Are you certain you are ready to do this?"

"The Faith expects no less from-"

"Vandross is your friend."

Tajuc realized what Romac had implied.  The role of the Other was tremendously important in the Faith.  False claims of such were not taken lightly.  If proven to be false, Vandross would to the very least be excommunicated from the Faith.  At worst, be made a living example of.

"Truth."

Romac nodded.

"The truth is always worth the risk."

The four monks exited the room.   They were not to rejoin until much later in the night, when the four took to the skies on their secret crusade.

Quickie Fiction: Truth

"This is unacceptable," Tajuc's words erupted out from his lips heavily coated with frustrated anger. His hands trembled in contained rage, causing the golden cuffs to shimmer in the darkness. His cheeks flushed as he stared at the three other Voices of the Faith that were in the room with him. One of the other monks speedily moved to the nearest window and pulled the shutters closed. Another walked towards Tajuc with his arms extended forward, in a futile attempt to calm his fellow monk down. But Tajuc could not be brought to quiet down. The third quietly stood there, hands crossed over his chest. News had reached him of the Hierophant's actions born from the confession he had given some days back. And rumors of the presence of Febhed mercenaries within the Seat of Faith spread like a virulent disease. The halls of the Seat of Faith were sanctified, kept unblemished in fear of destroying its eternal resonance to the Dragon's Song. For the Hierophant to allow other people, particularly Febhed mercenaries, into its sheltered chambers was unthinkable.

"Tajuc, calm down," Ammen whispered in his croaky voice. Damaged from years of preaching the Dragon's message upon the faithful, Ammen was the oldest among them in the room. "Calm down.. the Ancestral Dragons themselves would wake from your ranting. The Hierophant surely has his reasons."

"I confessed the matter to the Hierophant due to the simple fact that if the dragon my friend Vandross claims to have seen is truly his Other, then the Hierophant will have to confirm its existence."

"But an Other," Nayd hushed from the shuttered window, "Tajuc. An Other? Not even my grandfather ever spoke of his generation having seen one."

"Confirmation," Tajuc sighed with his voice growing heavier with each frustrated second, "The Hierophant has to confirm its existence. Our very tenets speak of how the Onus Bond exists merely to bind us with our dragonkin until two souls completed by each Other return to show us the way. If Vandorss is right about this dragon, this is an event for all of the Faith to celebrate. It would be a time when we all feel the Onus lifted."

"And the Hierophant," Nayd shook his head, "And on that time, you do remember what happens to the Hierophant."

The monks stared at Tajuc whose face began to express a clear comprehension of what was happening. His hands cupped his own face as he began to pace back and forth as the realization struck home. The Hierophant was to confirm the Other, and if found true, was to step down from his place upon the Seat of Faith and be the first of many to listen to the words of the Whole. The Whole was to teach all how to no longer rely merely on the burdens of the bond and truly find one another. It was said to have happened before, a long terrible time ago before the Faith was established. But was said to happen again. Some postulate the event is a cycle, that there is upon long forgotten unrecorded history been periods where a Whole generation exists in tranquility and peace. Others say it was how things always were, before the Ancestral Dragons and man were separated by lesser things. And the coming of the Whole was the first step into returning into that perfected state of existence.

"The Hierophant," Tajuc shook his head. "Was I wrong? Is it not our duty to report such an event?"

The third monk finally spoke, revealling his face as he drew his hood back. A scruffy beard covered his chin. A widening scar marked his face, starting thin as a needle on his left temple, then growing into an inch-wide blemish that slashed across his left eye, nose ridge and right cheek. It was an old long-ago healed wound. "Perhaps, it was your duty.. but only after confirming it yourself. The Hierophant now fears losing all. Perhaps selfishly. Perhaps for the good of the Faith. He has called for the Febhed to hunt for the dragon. Maybe to keep the investigation secret. Or maybe to ensure it succeeds. Ultimately, we cannot simply stand by idly to see what fruit shall be born from all this."

" Romac is right," Tajuc stared at his fellow monk, "We can't. Not when the Hierophant has chosen to rely on the Febhed for something this important. Ammen, head for the stables. Prep our own dragons. Nayd, visit quickly the Arsarmarium. We will need weapons."

"And you, Tajuc?" Romac asked boldly, "Are you certain you are ready to do this?"

"The Faith expects no less from-"

"Vandross is your friend."

Tajuc realized what Romac had implied. The role of the Other was tremendously important in the Faith. False claims of such were not taken lightly. If proven to be false, Vandross would to the very least be excommunicated from the Faith. At worst, be made a living example of.

"Truth."

Romac nodded.

"The truth is always worth the risk."

The four monks exited the room. They were not to rejoin until much later in the night, when the four took to the skies on their secret crusade.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Snarf.

Every time our eyes meet
This feeling inside me
Is almost more than I can take
Baby when you touch me
I can feel how much you love me
And it just blows me away
I've never been this close to anyone or anything
I can hear your thoughts
I can see your dreams

I don't know how you do what you do
I'm so in love with you, it just keeps getting better
I wanna spend the rest of my life with you by my side
Forever and ever
Every little thing that you do
Baby I'm amazed by you

The smell of your skin
The taste of your kiss
The way you whisper in the dark
Your hair all around me, baby you surround me
You touch everyplace in my heart
Oh, it feels like the first time everytime
I wanna spend the whole night in your eyes

I don't know how you do what you do
I'm so in love with you, it just keeps getting better
I wanna spend the rest of my life with you by my side
Forever and ever
Every little thing that you do
Baby I'm amazed by you

Every little thing that you do
I'm so in love with you
It just keeps getting better
I wanna spend the rest of my life with you by my side
Forever and ever
Every little thing that you do
Oh, every little thing that you do
Baby I'm amazed by you

-----------------
Amazed by Lonestar

Quickie Fiction: Aroma

Nicodemus soared through the winds, feeling the currents of air keeping him aloft, as he carried Vandross through the clouds.  The archer peered through the feathery mist and surveyed the horizon for any sign of the emerald dragon.   Nicodemus felt in the pit of its stomach the pangs of guilt for feeling jealous.   It felt the shame for having acted in the way it had.  Though its logical mind cried out that i had not reacted in any unexpected illogical manner, Nicodemus could not help but feel that its selfishness should have been tamed in some manner. 

It was not Nicodemus' nature to be selfish.   For the longest of times, Nicodemus has known itself to have been devoted to his Onus Bonded rider.  It had used its own body as a shield in the past to protect Vandross from incoming arrows.  It had survived without food and water and acted as a shelter from the unforgiving rays of the sun when they once found themselves marooned in the middle of some desert.  And most of all, it had chosen the young man when he so desperately wanted to form a bond with a dragon, even if for Nicodemus, one human was no different from any other (a belief which Nicodemus, not long after learning to socialize with Vandross, learned to be an unfair generalization upon the human race.)

But now, Nicodemus couldn't help but wonder if that choice made so long ago was a choice it was now to regret having made.

As the landscape beneath them shifted from sands into green, Vandross' keen eyes caught sight of a glow in the distance.   Closing his eyes, he focused his attentions instead on his olfactory senses and inhaled deeply.   Meticulously, he took note of each and every scent in the air and began to categorize them.  It was a skill that he had learned to master as a child.

"Leaf.  Green.  Wood..."

Each scent painted a picture in his mind's eye that matched the scene before him.  But with his eyes closed , he was forced to decipher the scene through smell alone. 

"Water.  Wet grass.  Old wood...."

It was a training he had received as one of the Faith's Dragonrider Archers.  While sight had its limitations when weather and illumination came into play, smell on the other hand was a perceptive option that a dragon could help enhance.  Through slight manifestations of the Dragon's song, a dragon could draw the air from miles away closer, and through their intense and for some almost maddening training, a Dragonrider Archer of the Faith could learn to dissect the air into key scents in order to paint an accurate picture of the lay of the land.

"Smoke.  Ashes.  Embers..."

Few were aware of this training method and assumed that all Dragonrider Archers of the Faith were gifted with some supernatural sense of sight.  Others mistakenly assumed the archers carried with them spyglasses or telescopes.  A few even spread malicious rumors that the archers had stolen the eyes of other dragons and through some dark magic now use them as their own.

"Chicken broth,"  Vandross opened his eyes.  Nicodemus felt the slight tap of one foot against its scales.   Slowing its flight, Nicodemus awaited for Vandross' new orders.

The rich salty aroma of chicken broth suggested many things.  The obvious was that down below, the source of light was indeed a campsite and that the broth was being prepared as a meal.  Vandross, however, was far more skilled than most and discerned more details from the smell alone.  He recognized that the chicken was well cooked, easily suggesting the camp had been set up for quite some time.  The spices in the broth included ginger, black pepper and Ossusi horseradish, and the latter was an expensive spice.  This suggested those camped were most likely a merchant family traversing the dangerous land for some excitement.  However, the fact that chicken broth alone was what Vandross smelled made it clear this was no merchant safari.  Which narrowed it down to a smaller group, capable of affording expensive fare, traveling in this dangerous place.

"Mercenaries," Vandross declared.  "Take to the sky higher, Nicodemus.  We fly towards that light.  However, keep within cloud cover.   We might have Febhed down below."

Nicodemus gave a low growl.  Vandross patted the dragon's neck to calm it.

"Savati is there," Vandross nodded, "Don't ask me how I know.  I just know it."

Snarf.

Every time our eyes meet
This feeling inside me
Is almost more than I can take
Baby when you touch me
I can feel how much you love me
And it just blows me away
I've never been this close to anyone or anything
I can hear your thoughts
I can see your dreams

I don't know how you do what you do
I'm so in love with you, it just keeps getting better
I wanna spend the rest of my life with you by my side
Forever and ever
Every little thing that you do
Baby I'm amazed by you

The smell of your skin
The taste of your kiss
The way you whisper in the dark
Your hair all around me, baby you surround me
You touch everyplace in my heart
Oh, it feels like the first time everytime
I wanna spend the whole night in your eyes

I don't know how you do what you do
I'm so in love with you, it just keeps getting better
I wanna spend the rest of my life with you by my side
Forever and ever
Every little thing that you do
Baby I'm amazed by you

Every little thing that you do
I'm so in love with you
It just keeps getting better
I wanna spend the rest of my life with you by my side
Forever and ever
Every little thing that you do
Oh, every little thing that you do
Baby I'm amazed by you

-----------------
Amazed by Lonestar

Quickie Fiction: Aroma

Nicodemus soared through the winds, feeling the currents of air keeping him aloft, as he carried Vandross through the clouds. The archer peered through the feathery mist and surveyed the horizon for any sign of the emerald dragon. Nicodemus felt in the pit of its stomach the pangs of guilt for feeling jealous. It felt the shame for having acted in the way it had. Though its logical mind cried out that i had not reacted in any unexpected illogical manner, Nicodemus could not help but feel that its selfishness should have been tamed in some manner.

It was not Nicodemus' nature to be selfish. For the longest of times, Nicodemus has known itself to have been devoted to his Onus Bonded rider. It had used its own body as a shield in the past to protect Vandross from incoming arrows. It had survived without food and water and acted as a shelter from the unforgiving rays of the sun when they once found themselves marooned in the middle of some desert. And most of all, it had chosen the young man when he so desperately wanted to form a bond with a dragon, even if for Nicodemus, one human was no different from any other (a belief which Nicodemus, not long after learning to socialize with Vandross, learned to be an unfair generalization upon the human race.)

But now, Nicodemus couldn't help but wonder if that choice made so long ago was a choice it was now to regret having made.

As the landscape beneath them shifted from sands into green, Vandross' keen eyes caught sight of a glow in the distance. Closing his eyes, he focused his attentions instead on his olfactory senses and inhaled deeply. Meticulously, he took note of each and every scent in the air and began to categorize them. It was a skill that he had learned to master as a child.

"Leaf. Green. Wood..."

Each scent painted a picture in his mind's eye that matched the scene before him. But with his eyes closed , he was forced to decipher the scene through smell alone.

"Water. Wet grass. Old wood...."

It was a training he had received as one of the Faith's Dragonrider Archers. While sight had its limitations when weather and illumination came into play, smell on the other hand was a perceptive option that a dragon could help enhance. Through slight manifestations of the Dragon's song, a dragon could draw the air from miles away closer, and through their intense and for some almost maddening training, a Dragonrider Archer of the Faith could learn to dissect the air into key scents in order to paint an accurate picture of the lay of the land.

"Smoke. Ashes. Embers..."

Few were aware of this training method and assumed that all Dragonrider Archers of the Faith were gifted with some supernatural sense of sight. Others mistakenly assumed the archers carried with them spyglasses or telescopes. A few even spread malicious rumors that the archers had stolen the eyes of other dragons and through some dark magic now use them as their own.

"Chicken broth," Vandross opened his eyes. Nicodemus felt the slight tap of one foot against its scales. Slowing its flight, Nicodemus awaited for Vandross' new orders.

The rich salty aroma of chicken broth suggested many things. The obvious was that down below, the source of light was indeed a campsite and that the broth was being prepared as a meal. Vandross, however, was far more skilled than most and discerned more details from the smell alone. He recognized that the chicken was well cooked, easily suggesting the camp had been set up for quite some time. The spices in the broth included ginger, black pepper and Ossusi horseradish, and the latter was an expensive spice. This suggested those camped were most likely a merchant family traversing the dangerous land for some excitement. However, the fact that chicken broth alone was what Vandross smelled made it clear this was no merchant safari. Which narrowed it down to a smaller group, capable of affording expensive fare, traveling in this dangerous place.

"Mercenaries," Vandross declared. "Take to the sky higher, Nicodemus. We fly towards that light. However, keep within cloud cover. We might have Febhed down below."

Nicodemus gave a low growl. Vandross patted the dragon's neck to calm it.

"Savati is there," Vandross nodded, "Don't ask me how I know. I just know it."

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Woof.

Nothing's gonna harm you
Not while I'm around
Nothing's gonna harm you
No sir, not while I'm around
Demons are prowling everywhere
Nowadays
I'll send 'em howling I don't care
I got ways

No one's gonna hurt you
No one's gonna dare
Others can desert you
Not to worry, whistle, I'll be there

Demons'll charm you with a smile, for a while
But in time, nothing can harm you
Not while I'm around

Being close and being clever, ain't like being true
I don't need to - I would never hide a thing from you
Like some

No one's gonna hurt you
No one's gonna dare
Others can desert you
Not to worry, whistle, I'll be there

Demons'll charm you with a smile, for a while
But in time, nothin' can harm you
Not while I'm around.


-------------
Barbra Streisand's 1985 album, The Broadway Album

Woof.

Nothing's gonna harm you
Not while I'm around
Nothing's gonna harm you
No sir, not while I'm around
Demons are prowling everywhere
Nowadays
I'll send 'em howling I don't care
I got ways

No one's gonna hurt you
No one's gonna dare
Others can desert you
Not to worry, whistle, I'll be there

Demons'll charm you with a smile, for a while
But in time, nothing can harm you
Not while I'm around

Being close and being clever, ain't like being true
I don't need to - I would never hide a thing from you
Like some

No one's gonna hurt you
No one's gonna dare
Others can desert you
Not to worry, whistle, I'll be there

Demons'll charm you with a smile, for a while
But in time, nothin' can harm you
Not while I'm around.


-------------
Barbra Streisand's 1985 album, The Broadway Album

Quickie Fiction: Demands

Crystals hummed as the old wizened hands of the Patermaster drifted above them.  Black tourmaline rods vibrated as invisible waves of energy grew within them.  Clear quartz bars began to emit a growing azure glow.   Gemstones glimmered in the nearly completely dark chamber while the Patermaster continued his chained intonations, carefully bringing forth one tone after the other to enact what the Febhed referred to as the Earthen Confessional.  The ritual was one which only the Patermaster was able to accomplish.  Through the successive intonations of various earth elemental tones, the Patermaster creates a subliminal drones that would resonate to other nearby elemental tones.  The longer the Patermaster can sustain the harmonic resonance, the further the echoing drones spread out to even further  and further echoes.  During this ritual, the Patermaster gains snippets of information of anything that transpires in the surrounding area of these drones.  Impressions of what objects, persons or events are present in the vicinity of the drones reach the Patermaster's senses.  Even tricks of invisibility and magics that delude the senses are foiled by the Earthen Confessional, so long as there was contact with the ground at the moment the drones resonated through the area.  Theoretically, the Patermaster could "spy" on the whole world, given enough stamina and time to maintain the echoes that long.

"The dragonrider attacked me!"

The Patermaster felt his brow tighten in irritation as he heard the angry outburst from one of his Paterons.  It was child's play for him to single out which Pateron was complaining out loud even as the Earthen Confessional began to unravel from the disrupted harmonics.  Among the many Paterons present, the Patermaster turned his attentions on the Pateron whose head and body were bandaged in some areas.  Hints of dried blood on the bandages suggested the wounds have yet to fully heal. 

With a soft intonation to have all the crystals retract back into the earth, the Patermaster rose from his earlier meditative position and allowed his brownish red robes to straighten with the pull of gravity.  The hematite jewelry that adorned his wrists and neck clattered softly against each other as he reached upwards and pulled back his hood to reveal his bald tattooed head.  Tattoos covered most of the Patermaster's skin, using inks of powdered crystals, iron oxides and clay.  The marks showed the geometric beauty of the various minerals although most who percieved the marks merely thought they visually seemed mathematically artistic.  Not a single strand of hair remained on his body, with even his eyebrows and eyelashes having long been lost by age and time.  The Patermaster's light blue eyes completed his image, contrasting against his darkened skin and tired expression.

"I call for justice!   That dragonrider broke the truce between our people!"

"Be at ease, Pateron Acheu.   The Patermaster heard you the first time," a nearby Pateron tried to appease the angry one, but instead received scathing glances in return.   It was clear that Pateron Acheu hoped to be allowed to deliver some level of vengeance.  Some however suspected the Pateron was in some way the instigator in the truce's disruption.  His attitudes towards laws and authority was known by most to be... lacking.

"That dragonrider shot an arrow at me!"

"I am certain you feel your life was adequately threatened to merit the demand for action, Pateron Acheu," the Patermaster finally spoke, silencing every one else the moment he spoke.  "And I am appalled as well at the loss of life of our people, an even greater transgression which some how you have overlooked to complain about."

Pateron Acheu hoped to speak in his own defense, but an initial attempt to speak was met with the Patermaster's gaze.  Acheu new better than to say anything further.

"I shall send a messenger to the Seat of Faith and deliver word of our concern.  The Hierophant shall learn of this transgression and will be certain to determine a just punishment to be enacted upon your attacker.  Do you have a name?"

Acheu struggled to recall if any name was spoke.   Thinking back of that fated day, he recalled how the archer had threatened to kill him (the thought of the other Febhed with him dying was far from Acheu's concerns) and how he was ordered to use the magics his Patermaster had taught him to free the dragon he had captured.  Even until now, he could not fathom why the dragonrider would go to such lengths to rescue the emerald wyrm, considering the rider already was Onus Bonded to the saffron beast. 

As the memories flood back to him, Acheu began to recall a few more details of that day.  The Pateron had uncovered that the infamous pirate Mesin had a fancy for gemstones and had plans of punishing the thief for the manipulations and losses it had bequeathed upon Acheu's travelling monks.  Acheu posed as a travelling merchant caravan and proved an irresistable lure to Mesin, especially when he began "showing off" the fist-sized gemstones that he had reputedly for sale.  The emerald dragon spied the enormous rock from the sky, and in true fashion, landed at the deck ready to reappropriate the jewel from the humans.  The Febhed allowed Mesin to walk close enough to take the gem, then on the Pateron's signal charged into batter her into unconsciousness.  Caught unawares, the brawl kept Mesin from being able to focus and misdirect her foes with Maya until she was overwhelmed and brought low.

Mesin reverted back to her dragon form, much to Acheu's horror.  Though the truce permitted Acheu to do as what he desired to the dragon, the Pateron actually had high respects for such magnificent creatures.  In many ways, he too envied the Onus Bond and wished it were possible to forge one with such frightening beasts.  He intoned onto the ground and buried her, hoping that the dragon would sleep its silent sleep and only awaken with little memory of what had happened. 

But then, they came.
The Saffron dragon and its archer rider.  With little effort the two fought Acheu and forced them to surrender the emerald dragon to them.  And as the earth peeled back its layers to reveal the emerald dragon they had captured, Acheu remembered the dragon's words.

"Vandross, Patermaster.  The archer's name is Vandross."

"The Hierophant shall be expected to compensate us for our loss.  A total of how many monks were lost in the fight?"

Seconds passed.  A full minute. 
The Patermaster turned to look at Acheu and realized the Pateron was lost in his own thoughts.  Glancing at the other Paterons, the gathered chosen simply shrugged and motioned that none of them had done anything to silence him.  One motioned to his companions that maybe Acheu had lost his mind.

"Pateron Acheu," the Patermaster asked again, "A total of how many monks were lost?"

"Spoke."

"Acheu?"

"The dragon," Acheu gasped aloud, with one hand moving to shield his wide open mouth.  A bead of sweat suddenly erupted on Acheu's temple, precariously clung on to the corner of his eyebrow, before failing against the pull of gravity.  "The dragon spoke."

All the Patersons gasped now, realizing the significance of this detail.  All dragons were unable to speak.  It was only through the dragon song, which those of Faith could interpret, that they could be understood.   The Febhed, on the other hand, had another means.  Through the vibrations of the earth and the collective web of memory that is embedded onto the earth, a Pateron could decipher communicatio"n of two parties so long as one side is using a language the Pateron can understand.  Some believed the Pateron would use the understood language as a foundation of deciphering the context of the other's words, but this would not explain how even concepts that were not familiar to the Pateron would be deciphered.  Others assumed it had to do with the adage that the earth had witnessed everything before and will witness everything again, and through their connection to the earth, such knowledge may be tapped.

"The dragon spoke," the Patermaster repeated as if to help him consider the ramifications of that fact, "and this Vandross.  He understood its words?"

"Yes,"  Acheu replied, and his face was turning far paler than earlier.  The other Paterons were shaking their heads in concern.  All knew what this suggested.  None had the courage to say it out loud.

"You are absolutely certain of this?"

"Yes, Patermaster," Acheu admitted, "And I am now shamed to realize this only now.  I should have realized it then and there.  I should not have allowed the dragon to escape."

"Acheu.. Acheu.. Acheu..." the Patermaster shook his head and planted one hand on the Pateron's cheek, "That was no mere green dragon."  Acheu nodded, his eyes wet with tears now at having realized the immensity of his failure.  He had not only shamed the Febhed with his actions.  He had shamed the Patermaster, being one of his very chosen.

"That dragon," the Patermaster alone could say what the rest feared to speak aloud, "is the one the Febhed have been waiting for, for a very, very, very long time." 

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