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  • Beqanna

    COTY

    Assailant -- Year 226

    QOTY

    "But the dream, the echo, slips from him as quickly as he had found it and as consciousness comes to him (a slap and not the gentle waves of oceanic tides), it dissolves entirely. His muscles relax as the cold claims him again, as the numbness sets in, and when his grey eyes open, there’s nothing but the faint after burn of a dream often trod and never remembered." --Brigade, written by Laura


    curiosity killed the cat || any
    #1
    … curiosity killed the cat &
    satisfaction brought him back
    The black beast lays comfortably in the shallows of one of Tephra's larger water basins, his legs folded beneath him and just off to the side. The pond is fed by a combination of a mountain stream and a lava drip, offering him perpetually (and perfectly) warm water. He has moved away from his favorite copse of trees - the ones nestled just at the volcano's base - for the time being, opting to appear more approachable to the other citizens of Tephra.

    His mind wanders, as much as he tries to force it not to, to the thought of Lucrezia and her soon-to-be-born offspring. The black beast scolds himself internally, a silent reminder that he has no right to feel betrayed or anything akin to that, when he has not found the courage to tell his Queen just how he feels for her. It's a daunting thing, to feel this way. He remembers Desole telling him (in one of their very, very few personal conversations) about the first time she told his father the way she felt for him, and how her stomach would have rolled and emptied its contents, had it been able.

    Now, he understands.

    The councilman sighs and adjusts his position slightly, but is mostly content to remain in the water that nearly laps over his dark back. The steam from the pond has plastered his mane to his muscled neck, making him look quite like a drowned rat, but the black thoroughbred doesn't mind in the least.

    He has been called worse.
    break some bread for all my sins
    BY MITZI
    #2
    He’s been quiet. Warrick normally is, but recently he has developed a habit to be the kind of quiet that is untraceable; he finds himself lingering in the shadows and keeping to himself, becoming like a ghost that haunts the tropical flora and humid breezes of Tephra. To him, though, it was natural. His ups and downs were consistently inconsistent, where one day he is alive and cheerful, but then on others he can barely feel the urge to leave his warm cave that he had found in a hidden sluice of volcanic rock. The feelings that attempt cling to him so desperately (love, anger, doubt, fear) cannot seem to fasten their grip, thus allowing a lottery of emotions to appear. Today, it was uncertainty.  

    The auburn stallion, painted a sharp navy on his legs, ears, and mouth, quietly emerges into the open. It had been a few weeks since Tang’s unwanted departure from him and it had been even longer since his cerulean eyes had rested on Ellyse’s golden body. He huffs, the thought of the two he was the closest with now being far away from him (possibly even farther than he could imagine, for Ellyse) brings a sense of anxiety over him. Once again, he has been left alone to fend for himself, to withdraw into darkness and into his loneliness where he was greeted kindly by grim and dastardly thoughts.

    He blinks back the brightness from the springtime sun, realizing that he had slept most of his day away. Of course, he hadn’t truly been sleeping – what was sleep? He merely could not will his body to get up.

    With a deep and shuddering breath, the stallion steps forward in search of freshwater or perhaps some grass – anything to bide his time and to attempt to distract his mind.

    It was here when he quietly came upon Dahmer (of course, he had not met the lean, black stallion yet). Warrick watches as steam freely flows from the warm pond, carefully watching the stallion as he continues to approach. He halts a few strides away from him and takes note that a hot bathe might later soothe his troubled mind. The afternoon is strangely silent, save for the soft sound of water lapping against the onyx stallion’s back and legs. Warrick lowers his head to graze, not intentionally trying to interrupt Dahmer’s relaxing dip in the warm pool. Before Warrick’s lips part to tear at the vivid green stalks of grass, he speaks. “Afternoon,” His voice is solid against the silence of the afternoon light. “I’m Warrick,” he offers, then begins to graze.
    like the sun,
    swallowed up by the earth
    warrick




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