by C S » Mon Nov 28, 2016 3:57 am
At a clearing spotted from atop the foothills, the moment of truth was upon the two. Desrium spent the day prior learning the extent of his abilities. It was up to Evisa to run him through his paces.
The treeline was tangled at its edge with fallen branches, tiny limbs locking together to make for some impassible terrain. The sun was directly over the opening in the canopy, and the ground glistened from ice crystals and the slick layer of water at the surface, where some melt was taking place. The snow on the ground here was mostly undisturbed. Animal tracks were preserved across it, and those of the armored being and his viking sparring partner were just added to the prints.
They had entered their meeting ground from opposite sides of the clearing, for that dueling effect. Evisa parted the blockade of timbers with swift, burning punches and kicks. Desrium, in his approach, walked forwards and the obstructions collapsed around him in a staccato of snapping wood.
Once they were out of the trees, they walked across the snowy open and met in the middle.
Desrium did not really care for the involved formalities. As long as innocent life was out of harm's way, and needless damage was mitigated as much as possible, this spar could have happened anywhere at any time. Evisa, truehearted viking that she was, was very much the same, perhaps with less consideration for property damage in relation to the preservation of life. Nevertheless, she insisted that things had to be this way.
"To be completely straight with you, I can't say I was too pleased with the results of our last match. Despite everything," Evisa told Desrium, doing the last of her stretches. She arched her spine to either side of her, as if she were reaching for the sun to boost her ability in the coming fight. "It's not becoming of a viking, or the Lady of Light for that matter, to lose because of a miscalculation of battle pacing."
Desrium heard this with his usual sense of impassiveness, not moving at all. Evisa took it to mean he was just waiting for her to finish up, so she turned on her heels and prepared to take the customary paces away before they engaged one another.
"Do you mean to defeat me, this time?" Desrium asked, taking her by surprise. She looked over her shoulder and saw that he was still frozen in place. What would have been an insult a little over a month ago simply made Evisa chuckle now. "You're that worried about hurting me, hmm? I don't suppose a limping den mother is any more becoming of a viking, either."
"I'll need to do some more growing, some more training and break a lot more of my limits before I can claim I can best you without making a fool of myself," Evisa replied, "but I'm here today to test you, and I intend to give you a worthy test."
Desrium ruminated on her words, then bowed his helm. "Very well. I am relieved."
"It's just as much a test for me, too," Evisa added, wagging a finger. "What you show me today will show me how much I need to raise the bar for my own strength. No going easy on me. Show me everything you've learned in your training."
Desrium nodded his agreement.
"Now, let's take our places, shall we?"
Desrium turned and walked. Evisa looked straight and walked.
They stopped no more than ten feet away from one another. Desrium pulled the Fang from its resting place and held it in front of him. Evisa assumed a wide Ourn-tae stance. One fist was held out in front of her, while the other was closer to her waist.
Golden light flashed around her hands and feet. Equally as abrupt was her ensuing charge. Evisa dropped from her stance, almost landing on one knee, and drove forwards on her pumping legs, her head and spine aligned with Desrium's midsection. It was a sight to stop a man's heart cold: being rammed by a viking with a bladed helmet.
Desrium threw his weight onto one foot and swerved out of the way. Evisa's feet created minor shockwaves when they slammed down on the earth, blasting snow into the air, which promptly burst into steamy wafts from the heat she radiated. Conditions were not right for her more iconic blazing trail, but seeing the Lady of Light race a mist of her own creation was still quite something to behold. It was when this mist overtook Desrium that Evisa dropped once more, one hand bracing against the ground to drive her momentum into it. The force imparted into the earthen floor made the permafrost heave, and there was a rush of air that accompanied the crumpling, cold soil to give the impression that Leyuna had been winded by the blow.
The steam was blown away. A fraction of a second later and Evisa's foot was carving through the air, whooshing towards Desrium's helm. He leaned to one side to evade, and Evisa was carried with the motion, snapping upright and onto her other foot. She spun on her heel and brought the kick in for another impact, which Desrium avoided by taking a step back.
"If in practicing restraint, he means not using the sword at all, he's doing pretty well from where I'm standing!" Evisa kept her pressure up. She advanced for every time Desrium retreated and did not let him out of reach of her fists, for which there were many punches sent his way.
Desrium knew he couldn't dodge these blows. It was at this stage in combat that he brought his sword into play, which surprised Evisa at first. Her glowing fist was on a true course with the Stalwart's armored chest and her knuckles slammed into the metal of his blade instead after its speedy repositioning. The attacks and counterattacks were faster than the blink of an eye! Evisa's arms and legs were blurs as she punched, spun and kicked, true to her word that she was the only one in Brodudika who could match Desrium's speed. If only for a little while.
Desrium had angled the Fang each time so that Evisa hit the broadside in such a way as to deflect her strikes, the sword pointed towards the ground with its curve facing towards Evisa and the teeth facing away from her, so that she was not in any danger of being injured. The blade glowed with heat in much the same way Desrium's armor would, had the viking struck true all those times. It did not billow into steam for it, however. It was only Desrium's body that chilled on contact.
Evisa thought it a mad tactic at all to block any blow with a sword in the first place. Especially against her. That was just asking for some shattered steel. But Desrium was not any plain steel, and neither was his sword. It did not bend, nor did it break from her onslaught. Not even the smallest crack or chip. She felt slight vibrations running through its structure with each consecutive block but overall, the Blood Dragon's Fang remained rigid. Any other sword of similar build would have been rendered a wriggling mess of metal, either jumping out of its wielder's grasp or snapping in the heat of the battle. Yet another confounding thing about Desrium to come to terms with.
The viking skidded to a halt in the snow, which promptly melted and boiled away in her presence. She eyed Desrium across the way through her helm, breathing strong, steady breaths to regain her composure. "Impressive work," she said to the armored being, who remained on guard, as he should. "You know a thing or two about hand-to-hand, but you really come into your own with that sword. That blocking technique of yours is pretty solid."
The glow traveled down the entirety of the jagged edged sword. Its blue tint was replaced with an iridescent orange, with a core of white. Desrium used the lull in the sparring to spin the Fang about in his hands, its rapid passage through the air drawing the heat from its composition. After a few revolutions that created an audible buffeting, it was sufficiently cooled to regain its usual appearance. Desrium held it at the ready in front of him afterwards.
"You must have practiced that for quite some time."
"This is the first time I've attempted it."
Evisa sagged forwards. "Really?"
"I now know I could do things with the Fang that I would never have attempted before. In technique, as well as its other qualities."
Evisa humphed. She supposed this was part and parcel with this whole endeavor. Desrium was breaking his own boundaries, and she was seeing just how extraordinary this unassuming metal man was. If the idea wasn't so ridiculous, she might have actually pitied the demons that came before him in the past. With a small chuckle at that tiny silliness, she raised her fists and juggled her self in between hopping from foot to foot.
"At the very least, I won't be doubting your footwork, but I came out here today to see more of your surprises! Let's put my light against your shadows then, shall we?"
Desrium nodded. There was no need to reaffirm his ability as a blademaster. He had to ascertain whether or not he was worthy of the Fang's more exotic capabilities, if he could be trusted to bear the responsibility of using them when the situation called for it, and in the course of doing so, handle them with wisdom and care. This was where the danger to Evisa lied: if he wasn't worthy and found the power too intoxicating to control...
"It is a great honor to be able to claim that I have known you, Evisa. It is an even greater honor to be able to call you an ally." She really was putting her neck on the line, whether she was fully aware of it or not. Desrium could not ask her to back down now, so his only recourse was making sure he had said everything he needed to in the event that the worst came to pass.
"Oh, enough of that. I've got a bunch of babies to live for; and if we discover that my time on this here plane expires on this day, then feel no sorrow for me." Desrium could envision the smile hidden behind her helmet. "An honorable death and a proper funeral at sea, carried out by my vaughrediin brethren is all I can wish for, if that is to be."
"Alright." Desrium paused. "I will take you back to Vanguard myself, in that case."
"And I will enter Ulfbertdsill with pride, yet not any time soon if I have any say in things." Evisa thumped her chest and hunkered down for the spar to resume. "I've got to see that harbor built, after all!"
With that, Desrium held his sword out to one side, and it was coated in void. Evisa's whole body was covered in a layer of golden light in response. The umbral wings draped over the Stalwart's shoulder, and rippling waves of heat radiated outwards from Evisa. The snow disappeared with an hissing ambiance.
When she moved, Evisa brought tidings of an early summer upon Desrium. The atmosphere was excited by her heat, a meeting of hot air rapidly mingling with cold. It meant that when Evisa threw her flurry of punches, there was practically a thunderstorm's gale circulating around her and Desrium, the wind and her fists wailing on the armored being. The gusts were hot, Evisa herself was searing. No longer was snow on the ground. Through the trees, across the distance, city guards stationed at the ramparts of frost the Stormweaver had devised could see a twinkling in the woods where the Lady of Light did battle with the Stalwart Paladin.
What a battle it was, for just a sparring match.
Evisa twisted her body as she hurtled down from above, the back of her heel coming down on the broadside of a blade made entirely out of shadow, held over Desrium's helm. It swallowed the light she exuded and repelled her when Desrium swung it about, throwing her into a midair flip.
A blast of light and heat forced Desrium into a half-kneel and sent Evisa rocketing in the opposite direction. She thudded down onto the earth yards away, and not a moment later she was racing back to the armored being, one fist cocked and ready to swing.
Desrium evaded the punch, but took the elbow to the side of the helmet when Evisa reversed it on him, which threw off his balance and had the rest of his metal body staggering in kind. Evisa turned and threw her other hand out, which Desrium blocked by crossing the Fang and its Shadow.
After planting his feet firmly on the ground, he pushed against Evisa and sent her backwards in kind. It would have been an opening to lunge in and potentially finish off the viking while she was recovering, but Desrium did not take it. He was in control, and he was acting purely out of defense. That was all fine and well for Evisa, who thoroughly relished playing the offensive role in the match.
Evisa dropped into a sprinter's stance and then dashed, alternating her angle of attack from side to side. Desrium held his swords apart to cover both ranges and panned his gaze to track Evisa's darting approach.
She sprung at him and Desrium's ethereal wings stroked as he leaped backwards, putting space between him and Evisa's whirlwind kicks, which she used to spring into the air once more after a momentary landing. Her front flip closed in on Desrium, and she came out of it with her fists cupped together. They slammed on the shadowy sword and Evisa was bunted off by it.
She spun the other way before she landed on her toes in a crouch, and then the Lady of Light lurched forwards, using her hands as a foundation on the ground to swing her legs about in order to sweep Desrium's out from underneath him.
After another jump aided by the wings of eclipse, Desrium and Evisa effectively switched positions in their improvised arena. He landed where she had attacked from, and she dug her boots in where he had just been standing.
Evisa rose to her feet already primed to sprint at Desrium, and she was upon him split-seconds later. He did not have a sword in place to block her next strike.
Rather, Desrium had the Fang held low in a reverse grip at the moment she drew nearest in her attack. In the next instant, it's pommel was driven into her abdomen.
Instead of knocking Desrium off of his heavy boots, Evisa crumpled into him. His armor reacted to her heat, and she soon stumbled backwards out of the ensuing mist. Evisa put her hands on her knees and struggled for breath, her golden light dimming until it and its heat faded.
"Are you alright?" Desrium asked her. Evisa gave a thumbs up.
"Yeah," she rasped, "I'll be good. Got a bit too caught up in the moment." She chuckled weakly. "I'd say you don't have to stress out about whether or not you have enough restraint. If anyone needs to work on that, it's me."
Desrium let that sink in with a measure of relief. He rejoined the Shadow of the Fang with the void-coated blade, and then rescinded those shadows to where they resided within the jagged edged sword.
"I prefer this to burning out by a longshot," Evisa added, then coughed.
After Evisa recuperated, she and Desrium walked through the winter forest back towards Brodudika. Along the way, the viking's curiosity over the constitution of Desrium's armor and the Fang nagged at her until she finally asked about it.
"So are you... blessed by the Grace?"
Desrium looked to her. He did not know how to answer that question. Desrium's silence went on for a bit too long for the viking's liking, and she hummed thoughtfully.
"I don't mean to be crude, or insulting. That's not it at all."
"I did not believe you were," Desrium responded, "However, I do not feel that I can comment on the whims of a divine. I have been fortunate, and I am grateful. I cannot claim to be blessed."
"Mm. So... you're just naturally indestructible?"
"It is a side effect."
"Of?"
Desrium mulled over telling Evisa this story. It would be a hefty affair, far more involved than the tale of the True Blood Omen. In the end, his decision hinged on the fact that Evisa was not Septimus. There were things she was not going to understand, and things he could not explain.
"Ambition."
Evisa cocked her head at that, but saw it fit not to pry further. "I need to be more ambitious, then."
After a moment's silence, she broached, "Can I hold the Fang?"
"Hold?" Desrium wondered.
"It's a peculiar design as far as swords go, but it isn't like any other sword. And I don't even mean the shadow thing."
"I suppose not," the armored being replied as he drew the toothed blade. He turned it over in his grasp and held its hilt out for Evisa to take.
She reached out for it, and Desrium released it into her hands.
"OH WHAT--" It was like she was handed the mother of all anchors. And Evisa had lifted plenty of anchors as part of her training days to become Novarah, so this was a pretty intense experience, for sure. She stumbled a few steps, and strained to keep the blade from dragging through the underbrush. "A sword is not supposed to be this heavy."
Little by little, Evisa lifted it and braced the sword over a shoulder. She then turned her sights to Desrium. She had an expectant look underneath the helmet, wanting answers. Desrium could not see it, though.
"It is light in my possession, and as you know, Septimus carried it for me until my return to Aster."
"Septimus is a dragon," Evisa countered indignantly. "And you... you're something else. You can take this back before I dislocate something."
Desrium took the sword back and Evisa let out a heavy sigh. She'd have to do a few more stretches to fully get over that moment of being over encumbered. The Stalwart, as usual, had no problems at all maneuvering his sword and sheathing it.
