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#54 Multilingual 

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Eeri's logbook

Azazor gave me back my logbook. And saved me.
This isn't the first time I've written this, but I had given up hope of writing here again. And once again, we made it through. You have to believe that something is watching over my old skin. A Power? Or just plain luck. Just like when you spin the wheel of good old Brotherhood of the always more Fortunate Gubani.

So the Marauders gave him back my writings. That is to say that they trusted him. Not like they did with me. And because of me, we find ourselves like fugitives, on top of this mountain.

He no doubt read.

But I'm going to rewrite from the beginning, from when we arrived at Sentinel.
We were stopped by the Marauders, numerous and heavily armed. Separated, deprived of our belongings. It seems to me that they treated Azazor better than me very quickly... And they asked me stupid questions. What clan I belong to. Then I realized that my crystal was a problem. What I am doing here. I thought I could play the smartest with them. But I was not able to get any information about the Horizon Surveyors clan. As a result, they transferred me to The Citadel, tied up, with the convoy that was taking Azazor away. As for him untied and free. When I got over there, they hung me up by my feet in a broom closet. If I'd had an axe at hand, I'd have made you a Marauder's mash... upside down, I don't know how long. A few hours, a few days? They finally took me away to be questioned by several Marauders. Probably high-ranking, maybe even the homina who runs the Citadel, the Regent, as they call her. But I wondered why they were so interested in my case. It seems that the Marauders are spying on each other, and the clans are stabbing each other in the back to gain some power, to make their opinions known. Maybe they thought I was one of those spies. There, with them, I played it straight, and told the whole truth. I will never know if it worked, if they would have released me or killed me. From what I understood later, I would probably have been left in a cell until I starved to death, the Marauders having other kitins to worry about.

And it actually happened what I didn't expect, but then not at all...
I thought maybe Azazor, having arranged things for me, would show up with guards to free me before I set off again. Chained as I was, I saw no other possible way out. But it was Arid who arrived. A helmeted homin, alone. I understood later that he had not acted alone, but I have not had no contact with anyone else. He knocked out a guard, opened the door, freed me. I could have fallen in love, if he was not a Matis, and not so young. But I was not at the end of my surprises. He told me he knew my name, my taste for shookie—he even offered me one. I didn't even have the presence of mind to ask where it came from, but I understood that it was something rather rare in The Citadel. It's quite conceivable that this skill has come back from the New Lands, and that they produce some of it, somewhere in a camp in the Scaterred Desert.

Arid, Rapid Arma, Marauder and Seeker of Elias, exiled in the Old Lands for some twenty Jena years. He showed me his face, something Trytonists normally don't do back in New Lands. He didn't tell me his real name, and I wouldn't have asked anyway. So he knew me when I was a young legionnary who had doubts and had just turned his back on the Kamis. He especially knew Lopyrèch... Icus, my mentor, my friend. The one who made me a seeker of truth, the one who made me open my eyes to so many mysteries, to all that the Powers hide from us... The only other Fyros, with Azazor, to whom I gave myself up... Once, thanks to alcohol. One more thing I didn't tell to almost anyone, here... And ramèch, this is the result. A Fyrossa who abandons her kids and lies like she breathes. Lopy... If you were still alive, you'd slap me a lot worse than Azazor wants to slap me every day. And you'd be right. Or you would just tell me to hide the truth more intelligently... I realize that if it was useful in the New Lands, where the Powers are hunting us down, where we make such a fuss about the insipid power games between nations, it is something totally stupid and useless here, in the absence of the Powers and the political powers. But when I think about what I can answer to a question, only the most improbable and untruthful option comes out of my mouth... I have to change that.

So I owe my freedom to this Matis. He even took the time to get my belongings, and to provide me with another blue Marauder armor. The one I had on when I arrived would have attracted too much attention. He gave me a pike and a shield, in addition to my hatchet and my amplifiers that he had been able to recover. A pike! The only weapon effective against some kitins. I'd broken the last one in I don't know what fight. Food, enough to last a few days. He didn't ask for anything in exchange, I couldn't have offered him much. Except to keep alive the belief of a freed hominity. We left in the early morning from the cache where he had brought me and resumed this game of hide-and-seek with kitins' and Marauders' patrols. I didn't expect this from The Citadel. It's not a city, it's a battlefield, where a constant war with the kitins is going on. The Marauders here are almost like the Rangers back home, minus the "I love everybody" aspect. Here, it's sink or swim, it's the door that holds the next swarming of hell behind the mountains. Well, I shouldn't exaggerate either. He also told me that The Citadel is full of places to live: inns, schools, training facilities, armories... They live here, but everything has been designed over time to be moved around easily and to stay safe from the Kitins. I wasn't offered a tour, I replied, laughing.

Before leaving, he also told me about his journey to get here. About the same as we did, but with a larger group with quite disparate origins. This did not prevent him from seeing several of his companions fall, especially during the crossing of the Sea of Wood. When he arrived, the former Subject of the Kingdom that he was had to serve several years at the Cloudy Cliff Outpost before he could be considered trustworthy and allowed to join their ranks. After that, he was finally able to join The Citadel. Some of his companions are still here, some, especially the older ones at the time, remained on the island of Oflovak.

I also learned something very interesting. I had understood that Marauders use Karavan items, looted from abandoned cruisers for example, to power their own technology. How, that remains to be seen, but the contact I had with them is not going to help me find out more. On the other hand, what I didn't know is that the Karavan is still present in the area, in some way. Not much on the ground, but mostly in the sky. Arid explained to me that sometimes Karavan ships attack the kitins. They call it a "strike" here. Powerful spells, sent from their ships, presumably above the Canopy. Probably when the kitins are too concentrated in one place, sometimes right outside the gates of The Citadel. Or, more often, directed against certain specimens in particular, those famous flaming ones we had heard about.

No Kami in the area, on the other hand, Arid told me. At least, not that he knows of. It is said that in the time of Melkiar, some clan leaders had contact with them, but it has become almost a legend nowadays. Not this surprises me, in fact it confirms a lot of old theories. But that the Karavan, along with the Marauders, is still trying to contain the kitins is astonishing information. He told me that Karavan agents are sometimes seen at The Citadel, during important meetings, usually reserved for clan leaders. No one knows, except for these clan leaders, whether these ambassadors remain permanently at The Citadel. He also let me know, without wanting to say more, that the technology of the Marauders was partly linked to that of the Karavan.

So I asked... If the Karavan wasn't here, would the Marauders be able to hold the kitins back? Do they really work together? It seemed to me that his vision of the Karavan was no longer the one we Seekers of Elias might have in the New Lands. But Arid couldn't really tell me much more than that, as we were already late for be present at Azazor's departure.

Then something probably went wrong. His plan was to follow Azazor's convoy, and give him a few hours head start. As Arid had planned, the guards who had accompanied Azazor to that steep path had stayed there for a while after the Fyros had left, and when he was no longer in sight, they scattered into the crevices of the canyon. After a few seconds, from the watching point where Arid and I were positioned, it was impossible to detect the presence of a single homin. The Matis seemed tense. We waited again, and then he showed me the way, telling me that he was going to follow me at a distance. Being careful not to let anyone see me. "If anything goes wrong for me, hide, and let me handle it. We'll only get through this if I'm not seen with you. If you're spotted...run. I'll see what I can do." I asked him to leave from now, to teleport if he could. He had taken enough risks. He nodded without really saying what he was going to do. I hope he didn't get in trouble. Then after thanking him one last time, I headed off in the direction he had pointed me.

After a few minutes, just as I was about to cross a relatively uncovered area, a hubbub began to be heard, similar to the one caused by the swarm of kitins I had crossed a few days earlier. I hid as best I could in a crevice of sawdust, and waited a good while, trying not to panic, for the commotion to pass. It lasted, and I got lost in my thoughts... What if my release compromised the safety of the Trytonists of The Citadel? What if, because of me, attention was focused on them, to the point that they were incriminated? When I came out of my thoughts, the noise had stopped.

As I emerged from my hiding place, despite my cautions, I came face to face with a Marauder, alone, and armed with a spear. My clan, what am I doing here? I didn't lie, and told him I was hiding from the kitins, picking up my spear and pretending to put it back on my back. With a quick movement, I stuck it under his helmet, right into his neck. A sharp, fatal blow, for a homin who wasn't expecting it. "With Akilia's regards." I said while striking, without really thinking. His body dematerialized. Toub de toub... At the time, I had found nothing better to divert their attention. If they think that I am a spy of the Ashes Clan, they will perhaps forget about the Trytonists.

It took me several hours of climbing before I could see Azazor from a distance. The damn guy is doing pretty well, I must say. He's in much better shape than at the beginning of our trip. I stayed at a distance, so he wouldn't see me. Not yet. I had to give him a day or two head start. Luckily, he seemed not to look back. When he set up camp for the night, I tried to sleep on the sawdust in a crevice of the cliff, thinking about how to get in front of him.. What could I say to him... To play it down, now that The Citadel was behind us, I thought... "Aza! 'ren pyr, how's the climbing going? Hey, it's invigorating here. Shall we throw down knocks to each other now or save that for later?"

I guess I always succeed in my arrivals. The next day, he took a break after his hazardous crossing on a rope bridge. I waited on the other side until he wanted to resume his walking, again to give him a head start. It was then that I realized, by chance because I was trying to hide from him, that some Marauders, below, were climbing up pursuing me. They had seen me, and were hoping to get to me noiselessly. I had no chance to hide from neither one nor the others. Fighting was not a good idea, so I dashed across the bridge with my stuff on my back. Azazor was surprised, I thought he was going to send me into the chasm. But he waited for me to cross, then gave a great blow with his axe on the bridge ropes to cut it.

He no doubt read.

Last edited by Eeri (2 years ago) | Reason: English Translation by Nilstilar

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Eeri
"Quand on a le nez trop près de la bouteille, on ne voit plus le bar"

#55 Multilingual 

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The two adventurers have finally reached the very top of the ridge. As they make their way to the edge of the plateau to the east, Eeri sighs. It bothers her to bring up the matter again, but it's time to clear the air.

"Well, you can confess it to me now, you read my logbook?"

Azazor grunts but finally answers "Yes" in his beard. He hasn't trimmed it since their arrest by the Marauders, giving him the look of a bit enlightened hermit.

"So you know about… Uzykos?"

Eeri takes care to weigh his words, expecting at any moment a fit of anger as the fat Fyros is used to. However, his answer is particularly controlled, which is worrying.

"ney, I know."
"Does this have anything to do with the fact that you cut those damn ropes on the izam bridge?"

The Fyros does not answer, continuing his walk towards the east. Eeri prefers not to insist. She already knows one thing, he has read her notes. And it's not so bad after all.

An hour later, Azazor stops. Eeri thinks that he will finally tell her more. Instead of that, he resumes his walk, but slowly, and ends up freezing after about twenty meters. Eeri rejoins him cautiously, not knowing too much what to expect. The vision which is offered to her is quite simply monstrous. From where they are, they can finally see the ground below. A red and teeming ground. A few more hundred meters, and they are at the edge of the cliff. At the bottom, the soil can hardly be distinguished. It is literally covered with kitins. Some areas are denser with kitins than others, but wherever they look, everything is just a creeping invasion.

Azazor turns his gaze to the Fyrossa. Fear can be read all over his face. Fear but also… excitement. For what they see below is also the land of their ancestors. They have finally arrived. They see for the first time what few homins of the New Lands have ever seen: the ancient land of the Fyros.

They sit there for a good hour, their legs dangling in the void, gazing at the landscape that reminds them of the Imperial Dunes, with a tide of red kitins added. When Azazor finally speaks up.

"Eeri? "

She looks up from the swarming tide of kitins.

"Well, what?"
"Yes, I helped you with the Marauds' who were chasing you because of Uzykos. I don't want him to grow up like me without knowing his mother."

He points a threatening finger at Eeri.

"So you damn well better survive."

The homina smiles and nods.

"Anyway, I warn you, if you don't survive, I'll kill you!"

At these words, he bursts out laughing, followed immediately by Eeri. Down below, the kitins continue to teem, occupying the lands that were once those of the Fyros.

Last edited by Azazor (2 years ago)

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fyros pure sève
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#56 Multilingual 

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Eeri sprang up from behind a large piece of bark and threw her pique, which hit its target in the chest. Without waiting, she dashed forward, pulled a dagger from her belt, grabbed the spike with her left hand and swung its handle upward to knock the animal to the ground. She finished off the capryni with a blow from her dagger, wincing a little. Then, grabbing it by its hind legs, she dragged it a hundred meters, towards Azazor.

"Azazor, set up a fire! We're going to gorge ourselves on nosh !"

The Fyros complied at once, with the few wood he could find. He was hungry, it had been quite two days since they had last seen the trace of an animal.
As soon as the fire started to burn, he put his breastplate on it to cook the slices of meat that Eeri was carving. After that, she hung thin meat slices cut from the fatty parts on her pike, and positioned the weapon horizontally near the fire. A rather quick way to dry the meat to be able to keep it for a few days, she hoped. The task would have been easier in natural light, but the area was cool, in the shade of the canopy, and evening was coming.

The two chewed in silence, enjoying the meal. As soon as Eeri finished, she stood up.

"We don't have enough wood to finish drying the meat. I'll go back and try to drill some."

Without waiting, she grabbed her hatchet, the pickaxe Azazor luckily still had, and walked away.

The Fyros sat chewing on the rest of his meal. He watched the canopy above him with a dreamy eye. The vegetation that covered some parts and not others, the way some roots seemed to rest literally on others, as if by their complex entanglements, they helped each other not to collapse. Then his gaze followed the interlacing up to the horizon, hoping to see the places where the bark and the canopy met. At a glance, estimating the size of the various canopies was difficult, even from where he was sitting. He moved a little closer to the fire. If they had suffered from the heat during their ascent and then enjoyed the cool nights, the area they had just passed through was permanently shaded by this large canopy. They were expecting a freezing night.

Going through the top of the ridge was certainly the best way to get to Coriolis. However, they could only carry a small amount of food, as their mektoubs had remained at The Citadel. The altitude and steep path, or rather, the lack of a path and the crevasses, made the likelihood of encountering kitins almost nil. At most, they saw one or two kipestas on the hillside below. But they soon realized that they were also encountering few game. The capryni that Eeri had just hunted was an unexpected miracle. Since their departure, they had only caught one or two rather skinny and dehydrated Yubos.

When Eeri returned with more wood, she began to feed the fire with it and then brought the meat to dry a little closer. Crouching there, near the fire, she looked at Azazor, and smiled. For the first time in days, he seemed rested and relaxed.

"I have to tell you how I got through it."

Azazor, turning his eyes from the canopy to the fire, replied:

"The question I have is how we're going to get back. Going back through The Citadel is out of the question, and I don't think they're going to rebuild that rope bridge any time soon. All the more so since I won't be there well received either..."

Eeri continued, ignoring the words Azazor just grumbled:

"That's thanks to a friend of Lopyrèch. He has known me when I was young.

Azazor shuddered at the name, his jaw slowly stopped chewing and his eyes opened wide. He remained silent for a few seconds, as if to convince himself that he had heard correctly.

"He set you free?"
"ney. He took a lot of risks for that. He's the one who gave me this blue armor, mine was too flashy."
"That didn't stop them from spotting you and chasing you."

Eeri recounted her captivity and escape, only skimming over the subject of her liberator's Trytonist beliefs.

"Are you sure that's all?"

The girl looked at the fire, hesitated for a moment, then continued:

"I wasn't done. I had to kill a Marauder, before I could climb. It was either him or me... He dematerialized and probably raised the alarm. I guess they think I'm a spy from another Marauders clan. They probably think you are too, now."
"I don't think so, but it will make it harder to get back."
"We'll get through it. We always find a way."

Eeri went back to tending to the meat that was drying here, while Azazor softly resumed his grumblings:

"By the way... Do you still have your crystal?"

Edited 2 times | Last edited by Eeri (2 years ago) | Reason: Traduction en Anglais par Nilstilar / English Translation by Nilstilar

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Eeri
"Quand on a le nez trop près de la bouteille, on ne voit plus le bar"

#57 Multilingual 

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Eeri's logbook
I told Azazor everything. No more lies. Anyway, I have nothing to hide from him anymore… I don't have much left. They took everything. All the experiments I had planned, no longer possible. No more poison, to test if kitins' reactions are here the same as they are in the New Lands. No more goo, no more filtering helmet, and it's not here that I'll manage to make some. No more empty vials, I won't be able to bring back fragile samples either… Forget about poisons and secretions of local kitins, or other residues I might find in Coriolis. Anyway, I'll decide, when the time comes… It will take a lot of courage to carry something more, with no mektoub…
It's a miracle that I still can write, and that I've got my notebooks returned to me. The Marauders took a copy of them, according to Azazor. At this point, everything could have been worse.

I didn't even ask Azazor why he didn't say or do anything to get me out of this ramèch situation. I owe him that much. He had his reasons, which I respect. I screwed up. Maybe I shouldn't have listened to Mazé'Yum, but if it wasn't for him, if it wasn't for that crystal, I really would have ended up in the belly of a monster from the Wide Puddle. Maybe I should have just told him. Who's right, who's wrong… We are both doing well to put aside what has rotted our relationship since Azazor discovered that vial of poison so long ago.

Who said going up the ridge would be fun? The path we took to get to the top was certainly shaped by homins in the past. But when we reached the top, almost nothing left. We progress as we can, avoiding the crevasses, sometimes compelled to make a detour of a few kilometers to cross. And sometimes, a staircase or a ladder has been installed. Perhaps we are simply losing track of the few arrangements that have been made, as the path is so little used. I especially hope they haven't set up a Zinuakeen further down the path we're following. The Marauders could simply be waiting for us, weapons in hand… Azazor seems to have heard that only a few red dragons hunters and a few Rangers still venture in this direction… They probably have something else to do than chasing us. I guess we are not that important to them.

According to the indications Azazor received, we have a few weeks of walking to do before reaching Coriolis. We are walking on the lookout for any game, any edible plant. When we will be in Coriolis, we will have to find a way to go down the ridge, very carefully. Avoid falling, and avoid being spotted by the kitins. Who knows what we'll find… Maybe nothing, maybe the answer to so many questions.
If we don't starve to death by then.

Below, we can see the hell that has invaded the desert of our ancestors. When we're not walking, the view we get of the kitins' movement is impressive. But the farther we get from The Citadel, the more we can see that they don't cover the whole area, far from that. They move in groups, much larger groups than the ones we can see in our New Lands. But some areas seem to contain fewer kitins, or none at all. Perhaps these are areas devoid of game or food? Or are they areas that kitins avoid for other reasons? Do they move from area to area, depending on the season? Or depending on the food they find? It seems to me that despite their distinct group movements, some kitin herds tend to move closer to the ridge during the day, and further away in the evening. Maybe to find the coolness? We will see, but we may have to go down to Coriolis at night. The desert stretches as far as the eye can see, and we can only see a small part of it, so it would take us a few more days watching these same areas to determine if they are the same groups, or if larger movements are taking place. From here, it is also relatively difficult to distinguish which species are involved, nor to get an idea of the size of these areas. We are so far from the ground, so close to the canopy, without it being accessible. To see the world from so high gives a mixed sensation, between victory, vertigo and infinite anguish. And the more we advance towards Coriolis, the more our impatience turns into feverishness.

Coriolis, the land of our ancestors, where, while digging, they awakened the kitins' swarming. Or Fyrak, perhaps… Perhaps the place where the Powers hide their most terrible secrets.

Last edited by Eeri (2 years ago) | Reason: Traduction en Anglais par Nilstilar / English Translation by Nilstilar

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Eeri
"Quand on a le nez trop près de la bouteille, on ne voit plus le bar"

#58 Multilingual 

Multilingual | [English] | Français
                
[quote=Azazor's logbook]
After four years of travel from Silan, we finally arrived in Coriolis! Or at least where the mining city once stood. Four years to get there! We are novices, clearly. Novices, weakened by generations of living under the protection of the Powers, when Marauders or Rangers have known how to do without and travel the Silan-The Citadel route in two or three cycles.

From the top of the ridge, looking down, there is nothing. No buildings, not even recognizable ruins. Everything seems to have been swept away by the kitins. They can be seen in the distance emerging from various holes in the ground. These may be the old amber mines, since entirely colonized by the kitins. They form a teeming cloud, at first sight totally anarchic. However, this mass then splits in two. One part converges somewhere to the southeast, towards what I think is the old Matis forest, and the other one goes towards The Citadel. It really looks like Coriolis is some sort of starting point for the kitins.

We know that we are at the level of Coriolis, because, apart from this agglutination of kitins denser than elsewhere in the desert, we can still see some ruins on the side of the cliff, high up. One of them reminds me of what is left of a watchtower, another of a half-collapsed facade. But the best preserved ruin is the one we are in. It is a kind of temple more or less troglodyte almost at the very top of the ridge. Only its facade emerges from the cliff, the rest of the temple being carved in the bark. We had to go down a little with the ropes to reach it. The position of this ruin, very difficult to access by kitins from the bottom or the top of the ridge, explains its relatively good state of preservation.

Given the amber columns that decorate the entrance façade, it is most likely a temple. On the tympanum, also visibly carved in pure amber and finely decorated, one can still read "talum glad èt" (knowledge is a weapon), as well as an engraving resembling the tattoo of the Fire of Coriolis. It is difficult to say what function this temple had. A library? I imagined them rather in Fyre than in Coriolis. A place for crafting and restoring of amber cubes, perhaps, as Eeri suggests? Which wouldn't be silly, given the proximity of the amber mines.

Concerning the access ways, a staircase cut in the cliff used to allow to reach the temple by the bottom, but this one is now totally unusable, since only a few pieces remain here and there, all the rest having collapsed. There must also have been other buildings lower down the cliff, accessible by the same staircase weawing on the wall. Bending down, one can still see some remains of these buildings from time to time.

Inside the temple, there is a main hall with a half collapsed roof. The whole back of the hall is inaccessible because of the collapsed ceiling which forms a heap of rubble obstructing access to possible rooms at the back. Only two well-preserved doors, on the sides, are still accessible. One on the left, leading to a room entirely collapsed on itself, and another on the right, in which I am. On the floor, some furniture falling into dust, empty shelves carved from the bark, and the remains of a campfire, suggesting that this room was used in the not so distant past. By whom? Marauders passing through, like the famous Clan of Red Drakes Hunters that Titus' father once belonged to? Or by Rangers on an observation mission? It must be said that from the only window of the room, we have an unobstructed view on the desert and its teeming tide of kitins.

With Eeri, we decided to excavate the back of the main hall, to try to access hypothetical rooms further back. If there is still some knowledge preserved in these places, it can only be behind the rubble. It will take us several hours to create a passage towards what can be found behind all this jumble.

......

We have started excavating the back of the hall but we are pausing for a moment of reflection. One thing puzzles us. While patiently removing the wooden rubble, we could notice that some of it was probably not the result of a collapse but had been put there on purpose. It is in fact a precise place that alerts us. It is as if there was a tunnel already dug in the original heap of rubble which would have then been filled in with what one had to hand. It seems that we are not the first ones to dig a passage, but that the last ones to have done it had to fill it up again quickly afterwards. This refilling should not date from very long ago. Our hypothesis is that behind is a gallery through which kitins can potentially come out and that this has been filled in by homins to ensure a relative security for the place. However, even if it is not very prudent, we must see what is on the other side.

I think for the first time in my life I like to dig. I feel like the Coriolis miners who went deeper and deeper to find the Great Dragon and were the first to stumble upon the kitins. I may know what the story is, but I can't help but feel the excitement of my Fyros race, the excitement of going further and deeper in search of the Truth. If there are kitins behind it, then so be it. I am ready to die, here, on our land, surrounded by our ancestors. For, after all, does courage remain forever in the memories of our ancestors fallen in battle, or does it still flow in the hearts of patriots?For after all, does courage remain forever in the memories of our ancestors who died in battle, or does it still swell in the hearts of patriots?

Edited 3 times | Last edited by Azazor (2 years ago)

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fyros pure sève
akash i orak, talen i rechten!
élucubrations
biographie

#59 Multilingual 

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"Aza, look at this!"

Eeri completes the clearing of the sawdust covering a skull that is in pretty good condition. For several hours Azazor and Eeri have been meticulously clearing what looks more and more like a tunnel dug by who knows who. Homins? Kitins? It's impossible to say. The fact remains that the said tunnel has been refilled afterwards. The state of the backfill makes no doubt about it. The two Fyros did not try to clear the entire tunnel and limited themselves in digging a narrow one that only a single homin, lying down, wuld be able to cross. By dint of going back and forth, they dug for themselves a gallery of several meters long and eventually entered a kind of small cave lined with sawdust. The cavern ends in another tunnel, perfectly open as for it. This one must not be part of the temple, considering the walls which seem rather rough. Were this cave and tunnel already present when the temple was built by the Fyros Empire? Or were they built afterwards, the tunnel leading to who knows where? Unless this tunnel is just a kitin digging?

Before perhaps venturing further into the tunnel beyond the cave, the two Fyros set out to search the ground for anything important that might have been preserved under the sawdust. Very quickly, they managed to uncover there a piece of shield in advanced decomposition, here the blade of a retch without its handle or some finely cut balls of sap probably issued from a jewel. The few remains found so far suggest that a number of Fyros died here. The light of the torch they have planted in the ground brings out the remains of this battlefield, making the scene rather gloomy.

Azazor gets closer to the skeleton found by Eeri. So far, only its skull is clear of the soil. The remainder is still buried in the soft ground made of sawdust and debris of all kinds. Unlike Eeri, it is not the first time that he is confronted with a skeleton, he has already seen one during his anatomy classes at the Imperial Academy. However, it is the first time he touches one, and the contact of the bone under his fingers gives him a shiver that runs through his spine. Clearing his throat to refocus, Azazor begins to clear around the skeleton to free the rest of the body.

"What are you doing?"
"Doesn't it show? Digging."
"Do you want to see if he was bow-legged?"
"dey, I want to see if the rest of the body has been better preserved by the sawdust. Jewelry, boots, a semblance of clothing, anything. We found only crumbs for the moment.

Eeri shrugs her shoulders but nevertheless helps the Fyros in his task. Even if it disgusts her, she is also curious to know if the homin in question left something else than his old bones in his death. After a few minutes of searching around the skeleton, Azazor comes across a box closed by a latch. He proudly holds it up to Eeri, who opens wide astonished eyes. The Fyros smiles at her and hurries to open the box. Alas, nothing is inside. Azazor's discomfited face makes the Fyrossa smile. What was he hoping for after all? To find an amber cube ?

As this thought crossed her mind, her gaze caught a brief flash of light below where the box had been. The Fyros saw it too and dips his hand to grab the object before she does.
This time, no disappointment. The object that Azazor pulls out is cubic in shape, giving off a slight purplish glow.

"Coriolis ! can't help but let go of the Fyrossa."
"There is an inscription on it. Wait…"

The Fyros blows on it to expel the impurities then starts to read the inscription. His voice echoes in the cave.

"bavèchen coriolis fyrum…"
"Rumors about the fire of Coriolis!"
"ney! But given the condition of the cube, we won't be able to read it here. We'll have to reactivate it at least."
"Yep, it's missing a piece, too."

A corner of the cube is indeed missing. Seeing this, Azazor starts to search around the skeleton for the lost piece, when a noise is heard from the back of the tunnel.

"Aza, did you hear that?" Eeri bellows.
"Help me searching!" the Fyros yells while continuing to rummage frantically around the skeleton.

Another noise is made hear, closer this time. Eeri, with a sharp ear, recognizes the rapid movement of a kitin coming to meet them.

"Aza, there's a kitin turning up!"

The Fyros looks up at Eeri, looking peeved. A kincher's growl paints the terror on his face.

"ramèch! We scram!"

They both rush towards the gallery they have dug and, crawling as fast as they can, come out panting, covered with sawdust and completely panicked. Behind them, the kincher lets out another howl.

"He… he won't be able to pass, the gallery is too narrow and…

As if to make the Fyros lie, the kincher starts furiously scratching the gallery to enlarge it. Its strength is phenomenal, and soon it seems obvious that the beast will quickly cross over to the other side, where the two terrified Fyros await it. They have faced kitins before in the New Lands, but not here. The ones in the Old Lands are much tougher, they know. And most of all, if they fall, there will be no one to pick them up.
But soon their martial training takes over and they equip themselves with the weapons they had left in the small room to the right of the hall. Azazor equips himself with his shield and his hatchet, Eeri slip on Azazor's amplifiers, her pike being anyway ineffective against the kinchers and the Fyros having formally forbidden her to handle his two-handed axe. In any case, he is the tank, he has always been, always reluctant to take care of healings.

Ready to fight, the two Fyros face the gallery from which the kincher soon emerges and explodes the pile of fill that was blocking the tunnel. It is gigantic compared to those of the New Lands. Even bigger than a Gerder or a Daï-den. Its red color also clashes. Its mandibles slam violently against each other while it lets out an even more piercing howl than before.

As if to respond to the kincher's attempt at intimidation, Azazor bangs his shield with his hatchet.

"Come here, kitin! Here, there are still Fyros fighting!"

The fight that follows is particularly violent. More than once, the Fyros must painfully take the hits of the kincher on his shield while the Fyrossa provides support from behind. Fortunately, the kitin fights no differently than in the New Lands, and most of all, Eeri is there to provide healing and cast fire spells when the opportunity arises. After a tough fight, where the Fyros sees his hatchet shatter in the kincher's mandibles and is forced to let go of the shield to fight with the two-handed axe, the kitin finally collapses under a final fatal fire spell from Eeri. The two Fyros barely catch their breath when a tremor is felt in the temple. A thousand paws crackle from the back of the hall, where the kincher has appeared.

"There are others Aza! We have to get out of here!"
"ney! Back to the rope and then to the plateau!"

Running like crazy, they just managed to hang on to the rope when a multitude of kitins, mainly kirostas, come out of the tunnel and head towards the two Fyros. These don't hesitate and climb back up as fast as they can, while the kirostas stay below, unable to follow them in their climb.

Edited 4 times | Last edited by Azazor (2 years ago)

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fyros pure sève
akash i orak, talen i rechten!
élucubrations
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#60 Multilingual 

Multilingual | [English] | Français
"For once, it's not because of my bullshit," Eeri gasped. "Were you able to save the cube?"
"ney" Azazor grumbled in a breath, slouching onto his back to catch his breath. "ramèch, let's hope there's no gallery leading to the plateau of the ridge."

Eeri stood up quickly and slowly started to pull up the rope.

"One more Tryker with us, and it would have broken, she laughed. We were lucky. But I don't think we'll be able to use it again."
"One less Fyrossa and I would have finished my trip here."
"Don't talk nonsense. We're just making a good team," replied Eeri. "When we're not smacking each other around,", she thought.

Eeri hurriedly climbed a small hill, and watched the surroundings, on the lookout.

"Don't delay, Aza. If the kitins have a way to get up here, they'll roll up any minute…"
"You're right. Let's not dawdle."

Azazor sit up quickly. They had to get away from the edge of the ridge and move carefully, on the lookout. The mountain probably had many tunnels, it could take only one access for a horde of kirostas to come after them.

"So that was it, Coriolis," announced Azazor, in a solemn manner.
"I guess so. I didn't really know what to expect…"
"There's nothing left but the little we could see."
"Otherwise, we'd have to find a way to get down further."
"Are you seriously thinking about it?"

Eeri stopped, and looked towards the horizon.

"geniyùch, talorùch, didraùch... dey, odraùch.*"
"Do you really think this is the time to declare poetry?" Azazor scoffed.
"Well… We've come this far, and even if it's not as glorious as we imagined, we should find the kind of quote that could remain in the legend, you understand…

Azazor shrugged his shoulders with an unconvinced look.

"The legend," Azazor laughed, resuming his walk. "What a beautiful legend you're."
"You're right, ney, that doesn't sound so good," she continued. "And there's nobody else but us, we'll be able to come up with something that's a little bit cooler later on."

Eeri followed Azazor's lead, sticking out her tongue toward him.

Last edited by Eeri (2 years ago) | Reason: English translation by Nilstilar !

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Eeri
"Quand on a le nez trop près de la bouteille, on ne voit plus le bar"

#61 Multilingual 

Multilingual | [English] | Français
They found the perfect place to set up camp when it was already dark. It was a large piece of bark, luckily forming a small hut. Eeri took out what was left of the dried meat and put it between Azazor and herself. They had walked for hours. They had been right to stay on guard: a few kirostas did find their way to the plateau, and seemed to be patrolling the area in groups. The Fyros redoubled their caution. Two of them would not have been the match for several kirostas, but a group was easier to avoid than a few scattered, independent individuals. It took them several hours, however, to get around the area and far enough away.

Still panting, they pecked at the meat, piece by piece, chewing slowly. The less there is to eat, the more you have to make your body believe that you are eating. Eeri began to speak in in hushed tones, so as to stay on the lookout for the slightest noise in the surroundings.

"Any idea where we are, dey?"
"More or less east of Coriolis. We should have gone west, but those damn kirostas…"
"I think we did well to stay very far away. Some of the kirostas back home can spot us from a long way away… So here, who knows."
"I'm not saying we should have gone near them."

Eeri swallowed a bite and swallowed loudly.

"Anyway, the east is our road."
"What are you talking about?"

Eeri took another piece of meat and began to chew it. She went to spit out a piece of rind, but changed her mind and chewed harder. Food was scarce. Azazor continued.

"We go west, we find a way to get off that damn ridge into the desert of the Oflovak Road."
"dey. We continue east, towards Fyre."
"BUT YOU ARE COMPLETELY INSA…"
"But shhhh!! We said no noise!"

Azazor, resumed whispering in a strangled voice, his eyes exorbited:
"You're completely insane… It's at least three months away…"
"So, have you ever been that close to Fyre? Me dey."
"And then, we have nothing to eat!"
"We'll find some."
"Eeri… We found an amber cube that seems to speak about Coriolis! I can't risk losing it. And then, there is probably nothing left, like here."
"I am ready to run the risk. I will go alone, if you don't keep up with me."

Azazor answer nothing. He knew that if Eeri had an idea in mind, it would be difficult to convince her to change it.

"We'll talk about it when it's light," he grumbled.
"I'll keep watch for a few hours, get some sleep," Eeri replied.

Eeri, on the lookout for the slightest noise, got out of the bark nest in which the fyros was already snoring. In the darkness, his gaze wandered eastward, ever further from the New Lands. Fyre, the land of her ancestors, the city whose name made the dreams of Pyr's children vibrate, when she was a child. A city so big, so far away. Probably destroyed, in whole or in part, by now. She backed up against a small bush, balanced her pike on her lap and closed her eyes. It was decided, as soon as the light of day appeared, she would leave for Fyre. With or without Azazor.

Last edited by Eeri (2 years ago) | Reason: english Translation by Nilstilar

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Eeri
"Quand on a le nez trop près de la bouteille, on ne voit plus le bar"

#62 Multilingual 

Multilingual | [English] | Français
"Eeri!!!"

The Fyros was shouting his head off, but continued to pant for a few hundred yards, before screaming again:

"Eeri!!! Damn you, you filthy bodoc-head!!"

Azazor stopped for a moment to catch his breath. He had been following her tracks for days, and now he thought he saw her in the distance. She was moving fast, much faster than when they were together.
As night fell, he thought of starting a fire. The light in the night might warn the Fyrossa that he was on her heels, and she would probably wait for him, or so he hoped. Then again, the light from a fire could attract predators. Too risky, especially when alone.

"What an idea to let her go alone," he grumbled as he set off again. He could still walk at least two hours before nightfall, he had no time to waste. If only he had made the decision earlier to finally leave for Fyre… But was this a good decision? He had an amber cube, a cube that might hold a great truth about the Fire of Coriolis. It was irresponsible to take that risk, he knew. But he couldn't bring himself to let Eeri discover Fyre alone. And then… she was Uzykos' mother. His son. They had left together, they would return together.

Azazor moved forward as long as he could see where he was stepping, more and more cautiously as the night fell. When it was almost dark, he noticed a crevice in the sawdust and sat down there, axe in hand. Since they had left, they had become accustomed to the same ritual at nightfall, when they had to rest or stop in an unknown and unprotected place. Sitting down. For a moment, total silence, weapons in hand, and concentrate on the sounds, trying to imagine their distance and position in the dark. A brief isolated noise was never a bad sign, it could always be a crack of the bark. Rapid footsteps, more or less close, were often signs of wildlife around, usually herbivores, like themselves on the lookout for predators. Here, herbivores were few, so you had to concentrate rather on possible predators. In general, muffled footsteps on the bark, approaching or describing a circle around them. If after long minutes the area remained silent, they could begin to relax. For predators never wait long before signaling their presence and attacking.

When all seemed silent, he could finally close his eyes, exhausted.

***

He woke up in the same position at dawn and looked around. Everything looked different from what he had been able to watch in the dark before laying for sleep. He had not thought he had fallen asleep so close to the precipice, and now realized that only a few meters lay between him and the ravine. He stood up, stretched, and looked down at the spectacle of the desert below, once again. The desert of his ancestors, still teeming with kitins, a veritable army held back by this montain. The swarm he had experienced in the New Lands was nothing compared to the amount of kitins he could see here, and the small patch of desert he could see from here suggested him that there must be millions of them in this desert alone, if not more. Probably a number that no Fyros could ever imagine.

Quickly, he set off again, following the edge of the cliff, and after several hours of walk, he posted himself on a small hillock to observe if he could find a trace of Eeri. But nothing, she was probably already far away, ahead. He went back down and resumed his route, thinking of a better way to signal her about his presence. If only he had a firework… Or a torbak horn, it was possible to create prodigiously loud sounds by blowing into it. But nothing like that. He was walking along, a little lost in his thoughts, until he heard a growl. By reflex, he grabbed his axe and stopped.

A cuttler, in front of him, was looking at him with hungry eyes, a sort of dusty slime on its lips. Its color blended with the sawdust of the ridge.

"ramèch, I sure needed that…"

He looked around, knowing that a cuttler never comes alone. He guessed a second one, slightly behind on his left, in the shadows. Two of them? Too easy. He clutched his axe and prepared for the assault. Attack the first one, and be ready to parry the fangs of the one who would come from behind, if possible with a blow of his axe. However, his attention was disturbed by something, another presence. A third cuttler? He wasn't sure. The predator, in front of him, had not yet attacked him, seeming also to hesitate. It was then that a terrible cry was heard. Eeri emerged from the bank and rushed at the animal, daggers in hand.

"Gruuuuhhh !"
"Eeri!"
"Watch out for the third one!"
"What third one?"

Another cuttler, which he had not seen, lunged at Azazor. The Fyros dodged, and with a great kick, sent the animal into the ravine.

"Well done! Another one behind," shouted Eeri, still struggling with the first one.
"What the hell are you doing here, I thought you were days away," replied Azazor, sending a sharp blow with his axe into his attacker's jaw, knocking out some of its teeth.
"I'm the one asking you that! I thought you were gone!"

After several blows from Azazor's axe, the third cuttler ended up running away on three legs, panting and dripping with blood, while Eeri while Eeri finished off the one she was holding down with a series of dagger blows. Azazor shrugged his shoulders.

"With two, it's easy."
"ney. So you're accompanying me?"
"ney. You didn't think I was going to leave the rediscovery of Fyre to a half-tryker Fyrossa, did you?"
"Now that's the spirit!"
Pointing to a cuttler on the ground, she added:
"Have you ever eaten cuttler?"
"dey. It must be gross, but if that's all there is to eat, I'm not going to refuse."

Eeri's face gave Azazor her usual butcher's smile, and she began to cut off the four limbs of the animal.

"You have to hammer the meat well before you roast it, it reduces the acidity and it's more digestible. Then if you have time, you cook it slowly, it's a little more tender."
"I know it tenderizes it, but the acidity?"
"Did you know that Fraiders sometimes eat tyrancha? Well, they can cook the cuttler too."
"And so they bang on it?"
"ney, you crush it and get the juice out. It's drier, but it saves you a lot of trouble."

She threw a thigh to Azazor.

"The head and the torso, they're really not edible. Moreover, this one is not very big. Anyway, we have to find a place sheltered from the wind, we can't light a fire here."

She fixed the two front limbs on her bag with a piece of cord, then threw the thigh on her shoulder.

"Let's go. We'll find a place to set up camp and coo…"

Eeri was interrupted by a roar of incredible power that shook the mountain.

"I know you're hungry, but still…"

Something was approaching. The two Fyros remained for a moment dumbfounded, motionless and silent. The rumbling sound came again, closer, and the air filled with an ominous tension. Peering over the edge of the cliff, where the noise was coming from, they saw a gigantic creature emerge, the likes of which they had never seen before.

"Put your amps on!" Azazor shouted.
"dey, YOU put on the amps. This time it's my turn to play," Eeri shouted back, snatching the axe from the Fyros' hands.
"But!"
"My axe won't do the trick ! Do as I say!"

Edited 2 times | Last edited by Eeri (1 year ago)

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Eeri
"Quand on a le nez trop près de la bouteille, on ne voit plus le bar"

#63 Multilingual 

Multilingual | [English] | Français
Eeri dropped the meat from her bag and screwed her helmet on her head. Her hands clenched on the axe.

"A red dragon!" Azazor finally shouted.

The homina concentrated, determined to fight, and watched the kitin for the slightest crack in its carapace. The kitin was already a few meters away from them, and had slowed down, as if he too wanted to observe and appreciate its prey. Its carapace was scarlet, vivid and shiny. Each scale seemed to pulsate with burning fire, as if the kitin's veins carried molten embers. This red dragon was a huge kipesta, several meters long, surrounded by a halo of gray smoke, looking ready to explode. Its carapace, clad with sharp crests of spines, connected its protruding skull to the tip of its scaly tail. As for its pollen pouch, it was much larger than a Kipeskoo could have, and oozed a scarlet, steaming liquid, quite different from the one kipestas usually produced. To finish, the beating of its six wings made the sawdust fly around it, and generated a deafening whirring.

Focused on the creature's appearance, Eeri did not see its first attack coming. The powerful tail strike she received in the chest sent her flying for several yards and sent her crashing straight into a stump, which she caught right in the kidneys. Breath taken from the double impact, the Fyrossa collapsed in the sawdust, totally stunned. She hadn't expected such vivacity. Not wasting a second, Azazor cast a healing spell towards Eeri. Although he was not an expert mage in healing magic, the enchantment put on his amplifiers was of good quality and did the job perfectly. And yet… He still had to make sure he didn't use up all the sap crystals he had in reserve, otherwise he wouldn't be able to use the enchantment on his amplifiers. And unfortunately, the first blow of the kipesta having knocked out Eeri, he was forced to use up his stock. Circling around his friend's body, sending out bursts of healing, and dodging the attacks of the kitin who had now spotted him, he finally managed to get her up. What he didn't manage, however, was to see that her feet were getting dangerously close to the edge of the cliff…

"This way!" shouted Eeri, standing up again.
"Give me back my axe! You're a better healer than I am!" replied the Fyros.

Ignoring Azazor, the Fyrossa lunged at the kitin, whose back was now to her, and struck it with a powerful blow of the axe, hitting one of its wings. The creature turned around and retaliated with a circular tail strike, which Eeri dodged this time. Seeing that the kipesta had barely flinched, she realized that it would take much more to defeat this enemy. The wound that she had just inflicted to it was ridiculous in comparison with its size… Furious, the monster gave a third blow of tail in direction of the homina, which dodged it a second time. In truth, it was not an easy thing: the monster was so big that it was necessary to largely anticipate its attack to hope avoiding the shock. Moreover, every blow the beast delivered sent the sawdust flying, sending a cloud blurring the Fyros' vision. Spotting the kitin's glowing aura in the dust cloud, Eeri lunged at it again, screaming like a fury, striking wherever she could. But the axe only bounced off the burning carapace. The kipesta tried another attack with its tail and the Fyrossa ducked just in time to feel the sharp spines only scrape the top of her helmet. She then took the opportunity to execute a counterattack, which the kitin dodged with a flap of its wings as it gained height. Abruptly turning around despite its huge mass, the beast finally made an aerial charge and managed to hit Eeri, who flew a second time several meters away. Disarmed and slumped in the sawdust, the homina barely had time to understand that the impact had dislocated her left shoulder when Azazor's enchantment immediately put the joint back in place. Her comrade continued to circle around her tirelessly, tending to each of her wounds. Picking up her axe and checking the effectiveness of the enchantment with a twist of the arm, Eeri charged at the creature once more. The fight was definitely going to be long…

And indeed, the fight lasted a few minutes. Minutes that, in this kind of situation, were like hours. If the kitin managed to hurt Eeri most of the time, seldom did the Fyrossa succeed in touching it in return. Without Azazor's care, she would have died long ago… And when she was finally succeeding in reaching her target, the axe would come smashing against the thick carapace of the kipesta. Not once did she manage to touch its wings again, the only part that was a priori more vulnerable than the others. As if the beast had understood. As if it had understood that it was enough for it to take a little height to avoid the most dangerous blows. The kipesta was, indeed, able to fly high in the sky, out of reach of any attack. When it couldn't fly away fast enough, it would simply present its head frontally to parry the axe blow which would then hit the thick protective carapace of its skull. Meanwhile, Azazor was gradually emptying his stock of sap crystals by healing Eeri every time she found herself on the ground. He didn't even have time to take off his heavy armor to try to cast any kind of fire spell. At times, the monster tried to attack Azazor. When that happened, Eeri put on her own pair of amplifiers, to support her comrade long enough for to succeed in getting the kitin's attention again. And the manege repeated.

It repeated until, suddenly, as if bored by the turn the fight was taking, the kipesta quietly turned around, moving away from a dozen meters. Disconcerted, Eeri lowered her guard and glanced at Azazor. Against such an opponent, a draw was worth a win, right? If her comrade had not been helmeted, the Fyrossa could probably have read the horror on his face as he pointed his amplifiers at the kipesta. But it was already too late. The creature stiffened, flapped its six wings, and propelled itself backward toward Eeri. Never before had the two Fyros seen a kipesta perform such a maneuver. Without Eeri even being able to react, the sharp, scaly tail pierced its belly. The monster then had only to snap its abdominal end like a whip, towards the ground, to get rid of the body of the homina, which rolled in the sawdust like a vulgar rag doll. Her mutilated and disarticulated body was going to require many care before being completely repaired… Her precious pike too, previously attached to her back, and now broken in two in the dust.

Probably aware of its success, the kitin left Eeri and turned back to Azazor, who was struggling to get his partner up. The creature let out a terrifying growl, but did not act, as if sizing up its opponent. Taking advantage of the few seconds available to him, Azazor charged at Eeri, draining his amplifiers of all magical charge, depleting his entire supply of crystals. But that was not enough to get her up. She was alive, he could feel it. But in very bad condition, almost unconscious. Not giving up, he tried to heal her without enchantment, in heavy armor, gradually exhausting his stamina in handling the sap. If the kipesta continued to observe him like this without reacting, he would have time to get her up. He had to. And just as the Fyrossa was beginning to get back on her knees, the kitin sent her back to the ground with a swipe of its tail. Distraught, Azazor clipped his pair of amplifiers to his belt without taking his eyes off the creature. It was playing with them, he was sure. This monster was playing with them, and having defeated Eeri, it was now seeking to fight Azazor one-to-one. Without being able to confirm his hypothesis, which was perhaps only the fruit of a feverish projection, the Fyros accepted the duel. If he had to die today, let it be with a retch in his hand than with amplifiers!

Long seconds passed, during which the two warriors gauged each other, then Azazor finally took action. With a deft foot movement, the Fyros picked up Eeri's broken pike and threw it towards the kipesta, who parried it with yet another tail swing and charged at his opponent. The duel had begun. Staking his life on it, Azazor avoided the kipesta's charge with a roll and picked up the axe that Eeri had let slip from her hands. Then he also lunged at the kitin, howling like a beast. This outburst of courage did not impress the monster, who sent the Fyros tumbling over the cliff with a skull blow right into his chest. Planting his axe in extremis in the edge of the cliff, paying no heed to his taken breath, Azazor managed to avoid the deadly fall. He could barely breathe, his ribs were probably broken, and he was no longer able to lift Eeri. But he wasn't dead yet. Managing to pull himself up onto the platform, the Fyros raised his axe and whirl it over his head, shouting with all the strength he had left. A war cry, perhaps his last. Drawing on his last resources to regenerate his wounded body, he charged the red dragon. With a jump, he avoided the sharp tail, and with a final roll, he managed to land a furious axe blow on the side of the creature, which probably didn't expect the frail homin to take so many risks. As a reward for his bravery, Azazor then saw a scarlet scale flying. Finally, the beast had a weak spot.

"ORAK !!!!"

But the joy was short-lived. The kipesta let out a vile howl, and at the same time, the Fyros thought he saw flames pulsating where the scale had been before he managed to tear it off. Realizing that something was in the works, Azazor unhooked the shield he had been wearing on his back and moved to stand in front of Eeri, who was still lying on the ground. He barely had time to position himself before he felt the temperature increase. As he took one last look at the creature, he realized that his impression was well founded. The kitin was swelling all over. From the tip of its tail to its skull. But that was nothing compared to its pollen pouch, which had tripled in size in barely a few seconds. With an erratic movement, the monster planted its proboscis in the ground, and Azazor knew it was the end. A gigantic explosion occurred, shattering the portion of the cliff they were fighting on, and releasing a flood of flame so powerful that it razed everything for a hundred meters. The last thing Azazor felt was the heat.

Melting his shield.

Then his armor.

And finally his skin.

((OOC: text written with 6 hands by Eeri, Azazor and Finaen))

Last edited by Azazor (1 year ago)

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fyros pure sève
akash i orak, talen i rechten!
élucubrations
biographie

#64 Multilingual 

Multilingual | [English] | Français
Azazor opens one eye. A single one. He sees himself floating, flying, like smoke from a great blaze. He is floating above the desert. He sees the Great Ridge, the desert and even water further away, beyond another mountain range. The Wide Puddle perhaps.

Dead, he is dead. There is no doubt. His body is all the way down, charred, reduced to ashes by the red dragon, and he is floating like smoke. Yet he has to fight the urge to let himself be carried away.

gladuch odraèt og, didrauch fyrak gladuch, these are the words of the gey-zas who died in battle, this is his duty. To fight the smoke that rises to descend into the depths for fighting the dragon. Then he closes his eye and concentrates to go back down to his last fight.



Last edited by Azazor (1 year ago)

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fyros pure sève
akash i orak, talen i rechten!
élucubrations
biographie

#65 Multilingual 

Multilingual | [English] | Français
Eeri opens one eye. Maybe both, who knows. Everything is blurred. She sees nothing, feels nothing, except the impression to be posed on a substance at the same time icy and burning, vibrating of energy. The pain and the absence of pain. A long, endless howling seems to have taken possession of her mind, a shrill crash resounding on the sides of her skull. A long and terrible scream locked in her, erasing all notion of time, of past, of present, of future.

So this is the void? The nothingness? The punishment for her soul and her seed of life, the punishment for the mistakes of her past life, her secrets, her lies, her escapes, her abandonment?


An endless, deafening howl.

A shadow emerges from the chaos. There are shadows in the void? A shape, rather, a silhouette, a helmet. The helmet of horror. The din in her mind becomes more intense and piercing, as the figure gets closer. Icy daggers come to plant themselves in her orbits, her eardrums, her throat, her chest.

The pain, last release before the death.

And suddenly, the silence. Her spirit sinks into oblivion.

Last edited by Eeri (1 year ago) | Reason: Traduction en Anglais par Nilstilar / English Translation by Nilstilar

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Eeri
"Quand on a le nez trop près de la bouteille, on ne voit plus le bar"

#66 Multilingual 

Multilingual | [English] | Français
Eeri gently threw the bone she was holding into the fire, the last remnant of the yubo leg she had just eaten. Her interlocutor stopped talking and looked at her, in silence, aware that it was going to be necessary to leave her some time for her to absorb what he had just told her.

"It was that, then she articulated. They didn't say anything more?"
"They said they thought you were dead. It's happened before, and sometimes they give a decent burial to the homins they find, if they can. Does that surprise you that much?"
"From them, yes," said Eeri. "I always thought they were working against hominity."
"Against hominity? You know, they need hominity. And despite what their appearance suggests, they are not all the same. Some of them have the heart to protect all of us."
"ney, I see. And we owe them our lives. They saved us and healed us… A kamist and an… agnostic."

The ranger smiled softly and looked at the hominid sitting across from him. It had been several weeks since their bodies had been brought to his camp, and he had taken it from there. The care he had given them was beginning to pay off. Eeri had been the first to come to her senses the day before. She had let out an incredible howl, and had become so agitated that it took two homins to hold her down until she came back to her senses. Then she fell into a dumb silence when she saw her friend beside her. The next day, she got up calmly to find him, finally accepting some food. He was hopeful for the other fyros, even if he still needed several days of rest.

"It looks like your friend protected you from the flames. He was much more burned and injured than you, but he seems to be slowly recovering. They found him clinging to you, which is probably why you were less affected by the flames than he was."
"He protected me…"
"They suspected that hisseed of life had been hit. They had to extract a huge wooden thorn that went right through his skull, and that should have killed him. I hope he didn't lose his mind completely… In any case, his survival is undreamed. And yours too! In truth, it is a miracle that you are still alive. 'Miracle', that's the word they used. Can you imagine?"

Eeri remained silent, her gaze plunged into the campfire. Her fault. It was her fault. Again. Taking the path to Fyre, as if after Coriolis it would only be a walk without any danger. Then she lowered her gaze to her hand, lying motionless on her lap. The burns were still alive there, marking her palm and a part of her forearm. She turned her left arm over, to contemplate the palm of her other hand, miraculously spared by the flames.

"It won't come back, dey?"
"I don't think so. You were in a bad condition, unconscious, unable to regenerate. They spent a long time clearing up to find you under the rubble of the partly blown-up cliff, and after a certain time, some wounds become untreatable…"
"So these marks are imprinted in our seed of life…"
"Yes. And even their technology can't do anything about it. As I told you before, it's already a damn miracle that you survived."
"We Fyros are said to be very resistant to fire."
"And to being buried under tons of rubble, obviously! By the way, how is your eye?"
"Still nothing."

Eeri got up slowly, leaning on her left arm, and took a few steps to reach the tent that housed Azazor. She looked at the scarred face of her friend, who seemed to be sleeping peacefully on a cot. A light cloth modestly covered his torso and legs.

She felt a tear running down her face.

Last edited by Eeri (1 year ago) | Reason: traduction en Anglais par Nilstilar / English Translation by Nilstilar

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Eeri
"Quand on a le nez trop près de la bouteille, on ne voit plus le bar"

#67 Multilingual 

Multilingual | English | [Français]
Cela fait plusieurs heures qu’Azazor contemple le plafond de la tente où il est allongé. Plusieurs heures à observer la toile de peau légèrement craquelée par des années d’usure. Regarder les ombres danser au rythme du crépitement du brasero. Ecouter de vagues murmures lui parvenant du dehors. Des sons, des rires, où se mêlent la voix d’Eeri et d'autres homins.

— … ont l’habitude de les chasser avec leurs vaisseaux. Mais même eux font attention lorsqu’ils doivent les combattre. Les flamboyants sont intelligents. Ils savent se mettre à l’abri quand ils se savent traqués.
— Une intelligence individuelle ? Je croyais que les kitins n’avaient qu’une intelligence de groupe ?
— Pas tous a priori.
— Il s’est montré en effet particulièrement roublard au combat.
— Oui, et quand ils ne peuvent fuir, ils ont aussi leur terrible attaque de feu.
— J'étais probablement déjà à terre... Azazor a dû trouver son point faible pour qu'il attaque de la sorte.

La douleur de ses brûlures le fait décrocher de la conversation. Au début, il n’y avait que la douleur, comme un déchirure en continu irradiant tout son corps. Le noir, le silence, l’impression de flotter dans… une grande flaque de souffrance - la Grande Flaque - Eeri qui se fait avaler par le prakker. Eeri… Puis vint la sensation de son propre corps, l’impression d’être alité, d’avoir un haut et un bas. Puis les sons, des murmures, Eeri qui lui dit de se battre. Et maintenant, la vue. Ces ombres qui dansent.

Il n’est pas descendu dans les profondeurs combattre le dragon. Il a survécu. Et c’est à la Karavan qu’il le doit. N'en pouvant plus, il retombe dans ses songes angoissants.

...


De nombreux jours passent avant qu’Azazor ne puisse parler. Ses lèvres, qui s’étaient fondues l’une à l’autre sous la chaleur, ont fini par être séparées grâce aux soins apportés par les Rangers. Il peut maintenant marmonner quelques mots, en articulant péniblement. Il lui faudra des jours pour réapprendre à parler, et probablement autant pour remarcher. Mais au moins, il n’a pas perdu sa tête. Pourtant, des images lui parviennent, comme venues d’un rêve. Il se revoit encore flotter au dessus du désert. Les Rangers qui prennent soin de lui ont pu lui expliquer ce qu’il s’est passé.

On lui parle du repérage et de la mise à mort du flamboyant par un vaisseau de la Karavan lorsqu’il a utilisé son attaque de flamme et fait exploser une partie de la falaise - il se souvient d'ailleurs de cette conversation avec les Maraudeurs lors de sa dernière soirée avec eux, ils lui avaient dit que la Karavan traquait ce genre de kitin en priorité. On lui explique aussi le déblayage des décombres pendant plusieurs heures pour retrouver les corps des deux homins l’ayant combattu, le corps d'Azazor, toujours aggripant et protégeant celui d'Eeri, leur transport dans une sorte de nacelle et le choix fait de les ramener dans ce campement ranger de l’autre côté de la dorsale, malgré leur état, malgré le peu de chance de survie qu’ils avaient. Oui, la Karavan, ou du moins ces agents là, ont fait un choix qui ne leur était pourtant pas favorable : celui de sauver deux homins sans importance. Ainsi, la défense de l’hominité fait bien partie des valeurs de la Karavan.

Eeri vient d’entrer dans la tente. Elle a un sourire aux lèvres et une larme coule de son unique oeil, le deuxième étant caché par un bandeau. Une larme de culpabilité ? Peut être, mais il ne lui en veut pas.

— oren pyr mon gros ! Il paraît que tu peux enfin parler ?
— n..ney
— Ouais ben te force pas trop hein, je suis pas pressé de t’entendre de nouveau beugler !
— de… tal

La fyrette éclate de rire puis, contre toute attente, enlace d'un seul bras le fyros allongé qui grimace de douleur.

— ramèch, j’oubliai que t’étais sensible. Attend, je vais voir si je peux te ramener de cette crème miracle qu’ils t’appliquent depuis notre arrivée ici. Ça répare et ça calme la douleur.
— a...ke..p

Eeri soulève un pan de toile pour sortir de la tente puis tourne la tête vers son ami.

— C’est moi qui te remercie. Les Rangers m’ont dit que tu t'étais probablement placé devant moi, pour encaisser l’attaque de flamme. Sans toi, je serai morte.
— MM..m
— Garde tes forces, je reviens tout de suite.

Il aurait voulu lui dire « moi aussi » mais n’a pas pu. Il ferme les yeux et replonge dans ses rêveries.

...


Plusieurs semaines s'écoulent ainsi dans le campement ranger. Celui-ci est l'un des nombreux postes arrières rangers de la région. Il y en a d'autres, plus discrets, et parfois plus proches encore de la menace kitin, y compris en hauteur sur la dorsale. Le camp actuel est un lieu de passage également pour les maraudeurs et les tribus des alentours. Une sorte de lieu de paix, préservant sa neutralité dans les conflits entre tribus homins et clans maraudeurs. La Karavan l'a bien compris et y dépose parfois les homins blessés trouvés ci et là.

Pendant toutes ses semaines de repos, Eeri apprend à remplacer l'usage de son bras droit par le gauche. Il est clair qu'elle ne pourra plus combattre comme avant, d'autant plus avec un oeil en moins. Quant à Azazor, il réapprend à marcher et à parler, mais les progrès sont lents et difficiles. Par ailleurs, un éclat de bois avait traversé son crâne, abîmant probablement sa graine de vie. La Karavan, en les ramenant au camp, a parlé de "miracle". Ses chances de survie était nulles. Et pourtant, il était bel et bien vivant. Vivant mais durement blessé. La Karavan ne savait pas quelles seraient les conséquences d'une telle blessure, mais qu'il fallait s'attendre à des troubles. Pour l'instant, hormis une large zone devant son crâne où ses cheveux laissent place à une vilaine cicatrice, rien ne semble indiquer que sa graine de vie ait été touchée. La pire crainte était qu'Azazor perde la raison. Mais il parait pour l'instant avoir encore toute sa tête. Si les cheveux ont commencé à repousser à l'arrière de sa tête, malgré les brûlures, le devant sera à jamais dénué de cheveux, rendant son visage encore plus hideux avec ses plaques brûlées et ses cicatrices.

Les Rangers leur disent qu'ils devraient attendre encore avant de reprendre la route, qu'ils pourraient les accompagner, des expéditions rangers en direction de Fort-le-Phare et passant par la Halte d'Oflovak s'organisant régulièrement. Il s'agit principalement d'une rotation de Rangers, pour ne pas toujours laisser les mêmes au front. Le chemin du retour n'en serait que plus sûre et plus rapide pour eux. Azazor et Eeri s'empressent d'accepter. Leur état ne leur permettrait de toute façon pas de faire le chemin seuls.

Ainsi, les jours continuent de s'écouler lentement dans le camp, en attendant une futur expédition...

Edited 3 times | Last edited by Azazor (1 year ago)

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#68 Multilingual 

Multilingual | [English] | Français
He is sitting with his friends at the Thesos bar. The flames of a brazier light up their smiling faces. There are of course the legionnaires, Naveruss, Wixarika head leaning on Lylanea's shoulder, Zuros and even Lopyrech, back from the dead. There is also Jazzy and the whole Drakani gang, the Talodis, the Rangers of the Almati Wood Circle and others. They are all there, listening to the story of their journey. Eeri is also at his side, and Uzykos, their son, in a red tunic and playing with the mace of Naveruss. The shooki is flowing and the laughter can be heard all the way to the fortress. He speaks, without difficulty, without the need to articulate. His wounds have miraculously healed and he is not in pain anywhere. He is at the episode with the red dragon.

"So we accepted the fight. We fought with savage fury and met death incarnate with all its horrors, without backing down or complaining. Neither of us asked to be spared nor did we run away. We fought as long as we could stand. And when death in the form of a rain of fire fell on us, we greeted it with the smile of proud fighters who had died with dignity. I understood then, just before I lost consciousness, what akep really meant. akash depyr, death with honor. And yes, I thanked then with a last sigh this red dragon for having resisted us so valiantly."

He pauses for a moment and then resumes.

"And yet my friends, here we are, before you. For destiny had not finished with us. It took the form of the Karavan, which came to our rescue and saved us both. Yes, the Karavan!

Do I regret being saved? No! I, who do not hold the Karavan close to my heart, say thank you to them. For if this death in front of the red dragon was the most beautiful that I had been offered, the one that will come one day will be even more beautiful. But not yet! Not today! So let's live my friends, and raise our glasses to life! May it be the most glorious of all!
CAL I SELAK!"

They all raise their beakers, shouting the legionnaire's salute. And many laughs are heard. It's Uzykos: he has managed to raise the mace above his head. He is strong! Like his father! The laughter becomes even louder when he falls backwards and starts to cry. A cry… Almost a scream. Yes, a shrill scream, getting louder and louder. A shriek! And… and her son's face which changes. Which… becomes… vaporous… as if seen behind a smoke screen. The smoke of a great fire. A hot breath… A breath of fire! It is now a dragon in front of him! HIS dragon! And what he thought was crying was its scream. A hoarse, guttural sound that cuts through him. A pouch under his gullet begins to swell, swell… And fire begins to spurt out over his body as it burns, burns like a blazing log which consumes.

He wakes up with a start, sitting on his cot. It is still dark. He touches his face with his hands and feels the still vivid patches of his burns. But he doesn't burn. It's that damn dream again. Always the same one. Tomorrow the long awaited return expedition will leave. The trip will be painful with his disability, but it will probably be nothing compared to the outward journey. His body stabs him around. He feels like he is in too small a body. It irritates him all over. The ointment he applies to himself several times a day does him good, but it's not enough to take away that dry, tight feeling on his skin. And of course, the pain. Especially when he doesn't moisturize enough.

Sitting in his camp bed, he thinks back to the evening he spent a few days ago with a group of Atakorum nomads who came to the camp to trade potions. He also had a new revelation on this occasion. One more, of course, but this time concerning him specifically. When he told the nomads his name, Azazor, they were taken aback. In their cult, a form of kamism that does not say its name, Azaz is the name given to the spirits of the desert that only certain sages of their tribe can see. What could have been a simple coincidence turned out to be more profound than that when he gave them his last name: Eridlo Mirihus. One of the nomads then explained to him that Miri is a very common name among them. Maybe one of his ancestors was one of the few Atakorums who managed to escape during the Great Swarming and reached the New Lands, while most had settled on the other side of the great root ridge. When you think about it, this is not absurd. Mirihus means third in lineage of Miri and his father had explained him that his mother was from a nomadic family. So after all, why not? In any case, we all have an ancestor from the Old Lands. From a nomadic people who are very fond of potions and strange rites, this does not surprise him at all. He himself is a stranger among his people. Even more so now with his bloated face and body.

Azaz, the protective spirits of the desert… Yes, the Kamis may also have had something to do with their miraculous survival. Perhaps this was the answer to the "miracle" that the Karavan spoke of? Too many unanswered questions. Too much to think about at the moment. Azazor rests his head on his cot and tries to sleep a little more before tomorrow.

Then comes the long awaited departure. After years of travel on Oflovak Road to the edge of Coriolis, after having survived a thousand dangers and lived what few homins of the New Lands can claim to have lived, our two adventurers take the way back, wounded and bruised in their bodies, their convictions shaken or sometimes reinforced, but above all proud to have been able to go through with their ideals. As they turn their gaze towards the east one last time, melancholy catches up with them, a touch of bitterness at not having been able to go all the way to Fyre and beyond. But they have so much to tell, so much to share. Azazor takes in his pocket the broken amber cube he could protect from the flames, the only proof he has left. He shows it to Eeri who smiles at him. Yes, they have so much to tell, but also to offer. And it is thus with a smile that they turn back towards the west, where their folks await them.

Edited 3 times | Last edited by Azazor (1 year ago)

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