Estinien Wyrmblood (
coerthantorment) wrote in
abraxaslogs2021-08-01 05:02 pm
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[OPEN] cold wind blowing beneath my wings
WHO: Estinien Wyrmblood and YOU
WHAT: Estinien is back in the real world and not particularly happy about it, at least until he manages to meditate his way into the Horizon again. Meanwhile, his cellmate Relena goes missing and he gets very angry about it.
WHERE: In prison and also the Horizon.
WHEN: From July 24th to August 12th
NOTES: If you'd like something more specific with Estinien feel free to hit me up on the Discord or at
quixocalypse.
I➔ And Back Again
II➔ To The Horizon
III➔ The Weight of Absence (Aug 5+)
WHAT: Estinien is back in the real world and not particularly happy about it, at least until he manages to meditate his way into the Horizon again. Meanwhile, his cellmate Relena goes missing and he gets very angry about it.
WHERE: In prison and also the Horizon.
WHEN: From July 24th to August 12th
NOTES: If you'd like something more specific with Estinien feel free to hit me up on the Discord or at
I➔ And Back Again
The descent from the Horizon feels akin to being summoned back to a dead body, both in terms of power and relative comfort. The aches and pains of his imprisonment return with merciless acuity. While his energy had been boundless in that higher realm, here it is reduced to scraps as the ravages of hunger and exhaustion weigh down on him. It's the contrast itself that is the most jarring, along with the fact that he wakes up in shackles.
Yes, the fear that had been haunting his subconscious his entire stay in the Horizon has come back into context. This is what he'd been desperate to escape, and now that he's returned to it, he feels no less dread. Even worse is the fact that Ambrose seems perfectly chuffed with himself for what they've experienced.
Upon being returned to prison, he wonders what it was all for. Any connection to the power of the Horizon seems to be gone, and given that somehow accessing the Singularity was his one hope of escape, their return leaves him in a rather dire mood. To make matters worse, it seems that the guards haven't forgotten about his aggression on the way to the portal, and also on the way back. They decide to deny him food entirely on his first day back to his cell. He should be glad he's not been simply put back into solitary, something in his gut says.
The atmosphere around him is one of miserable defeat, during those first few days back in prison. Even during the recreational hours, his accumulated frailty can be seen. As much as he tries to flex his muscles, he soon finds himself slumping against the rec yard wall. He's tired, starving, and clinging more and more tenuously to any sort of hope. Was the Horizon an escape at all, when it was all according to the High Mage's plan?
II➔ To The Horizon
Fortunately for him, his obsession driven life means he is not one accustomed to giving up for good. It takes only a couple of days before he realizes the futility in surrender - especially when he's hardly explored all his options. The Horizon was something experienced outside the body, was it not? So why not see if the connection remains?
He spends the rest of that day attempting to sink back into the Singularity's power, carefully clearing his thoughts. He is used to stilling his mind from years of being connected to Nidhogg's eye, but it has been a while since such intense concentration was required of him. He's not sure when it happens, but finally, something clicks.
Instead of awakening on his prison mattress, he wakes in a field of rolling grass - and not long after, a pile of snuffling karakul. Everything comes rushing back. He'd remembered his time in the Horizon, but something about experiencing it again reforges the connection between those two states of mind: the mind of the dragon, and the mind of his true self. To think, that all of this had been made by his hand.
He frees himself from the overzealous affection of his flock, a lifetime of memories allowing him to better keep his reflexive fear of them at bay. He wanders the valley for a while, his memories casting all he sees in a new light. What did it mean, that his unshackled soul decided to build this? Was this what he wanted, after everything? He comes along the long bit of housing within his domain, a single-family household carefully crafted of timber, but left completely empty inside. For all the time he'd spent in the valley, he spent little time dwelling on this creation. He thinks he can understand, the emptiness of its walls resonating with a similar emptiness in his heart.
He traces his fingers along the windows, across the door, but he doesn't dare open it. Instead, he decides he'd rather go somewhere else.
Without his memories, he hadn't been particularly curious about other people's domains, mostly interested in his own creations and keeping them safe. Now, though, a lifetime of experiences draws him to the outside world. He wonders if anyone else has reawakened to this place. He traverses the Horizon on foot this time, and occasionally in soaring leaps and bounds that are nearly akin to flying. Yet, he summons no wings. He can't imagine he made a particularly good impression on anyone, the way he was before.
III➔ The Weight of Absence (Aug 5+)
And then, some days later, Relena is taken.
He doesn't know the meaning of it, at first. The guards simply come to remove her from the cell, saying it's for some manner of 'trial', and she goes, with nothing he or Himeka could do to stop it. He demands answers at the time, shouting at the guards, but receives none. Initially, he wonders if she'll be freed, much like Kay was. It'd make sense, he thinks. If the trial was just, he could see no reason for her to be put in solitary or anywhere else, and he knows she has at least one friend on the outside.
Yet, when he doesn't hear anything from her in the coming days, he can no longer rely on that hopeful thought. Kay has been allowed to come and go, just like the other guests. Would Relena not have come to speak to them, after being freed? If not for him, for Himeka or the others?
As each day passes, his frustration and worry increases. He'll start attempting to flag down any passing guests, asking if they have seen her amount the others upstairs. On the way to recreation, he will check to be sure she hasn't simply changed cells, and ask around the other prisoners.
"Relena - the girl from my cell, with the long sandy hair - the guards have taken her somewhere. Have you seen her?"
With fewer and fewer kind possibilities in his mind, he'll start turning his aggression to the guards, shouting at them to ask for her location, and trying to grab at them through the bars when they inevitably ignore him. Finally, he manages to catch sight of a guard he thinks he recognizes from the day she disappeared. He manages to catch them by the arm, dragging them back against the bars of the cell.
"Where is the girl?" he snarls.
no subject
"There are people that would agree with you, and I didn't always believe what I believe now. When I was younger, I was so angry that I did try to kill someone in revenge, but I didn't accomplish that and I learned that it wouldn't have satisfied anything. It would just perpetuate a cycle of revenge and death, in the end. That kind of action, it was childish and I don't want to go back there. I almost betrayed my father's memory that way."
She might as well be candid, at least.
She lets out the smallest of laughs, though it's humorless, and rests her chin on her hand.
"I work with that woman now, almost regularly. We're on the same side, both trying to maintain peace. Both trying to put out fires in two different worlds: I work in politics and she works to subdue terrorist factions trying to kick up old alliances. I've forgiven her and it was better for me. But..."
She rubs her eye with her other hand and looks over to Estinien, trying to put on a calmness. She has always been able to subdue herself when she catches her breath.
"If you're right, if they're right, then I need to atone, don't I? If I'm a sinner, I shouldn't keep sinning, should I? If I'm not that symbol now, I have to become that. I have to work even harder than I do now. I have to find resolutions for the things that cause war and death in the time I have. Poverty, famine, class disparity and justice for those who have been oppressed in the colonies long before my time, even: I have to work to resolve the issues that make people fight," she pauses and her expression turns thoughtful.
"But I have no position to do that here, especially not right now. So, it may be that I have to fight or others will die for my cowardice, like you said. I might have to fight... and I have no idea who that will make me. I know you said it doesn't mean I'll be going against my beliefs, but I can't shake the feeling that it will. I'm afraid of ending up like my brother months down the line. I really don't want to lose myself, Estinien, so I'm not sure what to do. I'm sorry, I know that's probably not a good answer."
no subject
It's distressing because he really has no idea what to say to this sort of thing. Based on everything he's heard from her, he sincerely doubts she'll end up becoming a bloodthirsty murderer because she learned to defend herself, unless she's significantly more unhinged than he's been led to believe.
At least she understands his intent, and he hers. At least she does seem to understand the need to resolve core issues first, that violence is most often the symptom of greater ills. He simply does not believe the idyllic world she strives for is possible, and that she will only destroy herself in doing so. If only there was more he was capable of doing.
"I'm not the one you have to convince," he murmurs, at a bit of a loss. "Don't they say the perfect is the enemy of the good? You only punish yourself based on a level of purity that doesn't exist."
no subject
She realizes he's awkward now. She looks away from him. She thinks she let far too much of the 'too big' in her out. She usually keeps most of it to herself. She thinks she should have held much more back. She evens her tone out purposefully, politely, and puts herself back into her shell.
"I'm sorry. I suppose so. I guess I wasn't prepared for this to be the environment where I'd learn to come to terms with that reality, but it's not like anyone could have been prepared for this. I'll just have to learn to adapt like everyone else is. To fighting and to everything else that lies ahead here."
no subject
"In many situations, fighting back needn't be a bloodbath. There are skills you might learn to mitigate the damage to those around you, especially if..." He hesitates and then quiets his voice. "If magic may be at our disposal."
He means the Singularity. She refused to acknowledge her potential even while within it, but that doesn't have to remain the case.
"You could even learn the healing arts if it better suited your taste. There may be times that isn't enough, but it can turn the tides of battle and save lives all at once. Mayhap Himeka could teach you."
It wouldn't be ideologically pure, to heal allies only to have them carry on the attack, but it shouldn't have to be, in his opinion.
"Your intent means more than you know. Even if you fight, your choices may shape the outcome of the war, for you and the enemy. You may steer your comrades to a gentler outcome, through it all."
no subject
She looks his way again, though she doesn't meet his eyes. Her voice gets quieter in kind.
"I suppose that's true. And we did have something like that, there, didn't we? I've never experienced it before."
She hadn't really had use for anything she's gained, so she doesn't fully understand what she can do now let alone that she can do it outside of that place. The idea of having the ability to heal is more palatable to her at this point, so she nods agreeably.
"If she would, and if I have any aptitude, I'd be willing to learn. Maybe I can ask her when the time seems right."
She hardly thinks they'd have opportunity locked in this hole with guards around them, but the time will come when they're free of this place. She believes in that. She has to. Learning a skill like that, she can accept it easily. At least she would be able to save people. At least she'd have some use here.
"I think, in the end, if I had to choose anything, it would be to choose that. If that's what I have to do here, I'd rather mitigate losses. Even if it turns out that there's no choice but to hurt people, I think I want to at least not kill them. "
no subject
Relena didn't seem to believe herself capable of much, even within the Horizon. Perhaps putting the idea of healing in her head would at lest give her something to strive towards. If it does that much, he'll consider himself accomplished.
"Aye, and there is plenty of use in that as well, if you'd rather keep your prisoners healthy. Himeka's craft can also be used to create shields and ward off illness. All things that could be a boon to your allies."
He looks her over.
"You might train in a shield, as well... if you could manage to lift one, at least."
He at least seems like he's at the point he can tease her a bit.
no subject
"Wow, she's able to do all of that. She's impressive, but I guessed as much. When we're able to get out of here - " because for her, she must believe it is a when even if she's fighting a lack of optimism - "then maybe there'll be time for her to teach me."
She looks at him then looks down at her skinny arms and smiles, letting out the smallest laugh.
"Well, depending on the size, I'll either succeed or fall right over, I think."