put on your war paint {P/R/C/E vs 4 Cipactili}
Mar 31, 2013 18:56:42 GMT -5
Post by Python on Mar 31, 2013 18:56:42 GMT -5
- - - - - -
He had searched for hours. In a labyrinth of silence, uncertainty, desperation, and overgrown weeds, he had clipped vines and staggered through uneven grounds in a feverish haze. The burns pulsing in his swollen forearm had left him whimpering and dry heaving muffled sobs into the humid air, his skin slick with sweat and blood that belonged to himself and to Asunder. He had managed to shake off the majority of the snakes and tear away the ones that savored his flesh, but by the time he had finished patching himself up he had grown completely aware of the rising bump on his arm leaking fluids of a strange color and odor. The burning sensation was familiar - not because of the blistering fires he held dear and dangerous, but because he recalled that dreadful, nauseas feeling of being poisoned. He had grunted, groaned, and cursed - cursed Asunder for murdering Noah, cursed Owen for trying for poisoning him with a bag of damn snakes, and cursed himself for his foolishness. He had been victorious in destroying Asunder (I saw his face in the sky along with Noah’s), but at what cost? His blood was bubbling in toxins waiting to strike his heart and kill him slowly. He had lost Gypsy. I walked for hours and I couldn’t find her. She’s gone. But she was not dead.
Her face missing from the night skies gave him a glimmer of hope. If she was still alive out there, she could still win. She wouldn’t need to carry him as a burden, to care for him or drag him when he was too weak to limp on. She won’t need me anymore. But where did that leave him? Poisoned and dying, that's what. He had curled up around his water jug, quenching his parched throat will a series of small gulps as he clenched his teeth to bear the pain of the burning. He had been prepared to accepted defeat, realizing the poison was going to kill him and eyeing the silver sword resting loyally by his side. He had considered ending it quicker, maybe plunging the blade into his own chest whenever he gathered the courage to do it (or when the agony became unbearable). A silhouette among the treetops stopped him, however; a grey parachute bearing a small canister. When it floated gracefully to his side he sluggishly propped himself up on his side and unscrewed the lid. Inside was a syringe, and attached to it a note. ”Antivenom.”
He shook his head. Why, all of the sudden, were sponsors showing sympathy? Hadn’t he made it obvious he wanted Gypsy to win? Stalling his death would only complicate things further. There were six tributes left, by his tally. Five needed to die in order for her victory, and that included himself. Then there was Owen, the pretzel girl with the insect’s name (Cricket, that’s it), Elodie the sex-fanatic, and River, who was Noah’s district partner. The thought of them roaming around suddenly unsettled him. Owen had made it perfectly evident that his ties with the Keenis were broken, so he was perhaps the biggest threat of them all. Cricket was an absolute monster with any weapon since she could twist herself at any angle and earned a perfect score in training. River was someone he didn’t want to kill, but with that deadly weapon of hers crushing skulls in the heat of battle he couldn’t let her near his sister. Tensions were high, and they weren’t out of the boat yet. He still needed to protect Gypsy somehow, even if he couldn’t be by her side. I have to kill them so they can’t kill her. He suddenly grabbed the syringe and plunged the needle into his veins. He pushed the liquids into his system and waited for the burning to subside. Gradually, it brought him serenity, and he turned in for the night beneath a roof of dangling leaves, invigorated with a new sense of purpose and eagerness to fight.
He was charged and awake as soon as the sun peered through his canopy of dropping leaves. He wasted no time in gathering his belongings and maneuvering himself out of the suffocating gardens, a metal helmet perched atop his head - except his time it was not his sword he wielded confidently. It was a bag of writhing, slithering, agitated snakes, no doubt caught by Noah during some point of the Games, though it pained him to imagine why. He clutched it with both hands as he trudged through the arena, eyes peeled in search of the tribute he wanted to see most. As soon his Owen so much as stepped into view Pyrian was going to dump all seven snakes onto his damn head and pray that they bit into his neck and poisoned him before he could touch Gypsy with his grimy, unworthy hands. His sword, meanwhile, remained safely stored away but at an easily accessible position. If Pyrian could hope to even stand a chance against somebody as strong as Owen he would have to be swift once the snakes were released, and although he was clumsy and still too inexperienced with combat he planned to execute a perfect kill whether it be through poison or swordplay. He was going to make sure Gypsy was saved if it was the last thing he ever accomplished. With this in mind, flaring his determination with embers of hope and anger, he found himself being lured to the golden building he recognized from the day before. The hall of treasures and false hope. Maybe Gypsy would be there, and with her, maybe Owen Rook.
Unfortunately, Gypsy was not who he found in the hall of empty promises. It was a hollow shell to him, now, coated in paint that was meant to be cherished as gold. There was nothing this hall could possibly offer him now, there were only prizes which he would work for (Gypsy’s life). The skyscrapers of priceless jewels and gold coins were meaningless. He noticed only the vast emptiness, the cracked walls, and the dancing shadows, one in particular that seemed to flash and flicker like that of a flame’s shadow. His heart leapt into his throat when he realized it was danger, and yelped when a body collide with his. He would’ve tossed the snakes right then and there with a cry of rage if it weren’t for the unmistakable flare of red hair that told him the person was no immediate threat. River Destin was as shocked as he was, and burst into a brief, hasty monologue accompanied by strange gestures he guessed were meant to help him understand her.
”It’s my fault. I’m so sorry.”
He shook his head. If anything, it was his own fault for failing to acknowledge his two allies as murderers and concealing secrets from Gypsy. They had all assisted in his death, but it was Asunder who had caught his last breath and struck him into oblivion. For that, Pyrian had refused to forgive him, and had punished him with his death. He wondered if River knew, if she may have guessed that it was he who had sought and executed revenge. He wanted to tell her, he needed to find a way to communicate with her because she was the only one who would understand and share his anguish. Nobody else had a single clue, but I can only blame myself for that.
He nearly dropped mass of thrashing bodies, his expression suddenly mirroring the mask he wore after the feast, eyes bleary with the threat of tears and lips pursed into a tight frown, but a movement lurking in the shadows behind River sent a charge through his nerves, jolting him back to his predatory stance. He did not consider who or what it could be, but immediately assumed that it was Owen waiting for the perfect opportunity to ambush. Acting on sheer instinct, fearful panic, and ambition to fend for himself and for Gypsy (wherever she was) he lurched and separated the strings of the bag, releasing seven hissing serpents into the air to rain down on what dared to sneak up on them. By that time, River had already struck it down with a flaming sword that surpassed every torchlight hung along the corridor.
[throws bag of seven snakes at Elodie]
[dice=20]
[miss]
[dice=20]
[Bite to forearm, poisoned - 4]
[dice=20]
[Small bite to leg - 2]
[dice=20]
[miss]
[dice=20]
[Severe bite to leg - 6]
[dice=20]
[Severe bite to leg - 6]
[dice=20]
[miss]
[18 damage total]
A wild Trap appears!
[dice=30]
shallow cut on forehead - 4.5
[rand=8248557273764163338147543836385089246623218059549591399196069688]