starve the prophets — myrcella. & bastian.
Feb 10, 2019 1:38:30 GMT -5
Post by napoleon, d2m ₊⊹ 🐁 ɢʀɪғғɪɴ. on Feb 10, 2019 1:38:30 GMT -5
He did not look at her.
Even after the crowd dissipated and her silhouette stood dark and proud against the afternoon star, Bastian's eyes did not rise like songbirds to comfort Myrcella Hudson. Perhaps, she did not need comfort — she had never asked for it once in the times he'd come to know her.
Myrcella wore grace as a robe and it hung loose from her sunburned shoulder blades. Yes, she was a girl, but she was also something more grandiose, laced together with silver linings, arrow strings, and olive wreaths.
And, she was proud and reticent as all beautiful things tended to be, head held high to a sky so hauntingly blue he could break it to shards. What Bastian feared was how beautiful things were stolen, and then broken the most.
He mistook the dark of her veins as cracks, webbing over whitish skin, when he entered the justice building quietly.
The war within Bastian Fray discovered a brief armistice, and it was as quiet as dawn breaking over a ghost town here. So quiet that he cannot hide his heartbeats, each throb feverish and concerned. Bastian had saw omens before, but none as strong as the one circling Myrcella Hudson. He wouldn't be surprised if all the mirrors around her vicinity erupted to a shower of crystal-edge glass.
“Hey,” He greeted, not bothering to draw a veil over the agitation in his gaze, which discovered the courage sufficient to meet her eyes. Let her see the battered soul within, he did not care. “Of all the girls in One, it had to be you, huh'?”
For a second, for a flutter of an eyelash, seeing how the architecture of her bones had yet to falter under the weight of everything, and how she still managed to hold her head high, Bastian believed that she could crawl out alive from wherever they locked her up in.
They were the young gods after all, ichor crackling like newborn thunder beneath their sunburned skins. “You know what to do, right?” She should. She should know. She must know. She has to know. “There's no one else in that arena who can hit a bullseye twice in a row, Myrcella. It's just you.”
Even after the crowd dissipated and her silhouette stood dark and proud against the afternoon star, Bastian's eyes did not rise like songbirds to comfort Myrcella Hudson. Perhaps, she did not need comfort — she had never asked for it once in the times he'd come to know her.
Myrcella wore grace as a robe and it hung loose from her sunburned shoulder blades. Yes, she was a girl, but she was also something more grandiose, laced together with silver linings, arrow strings, and olive wreaths.
And, she was proud and reticent as all beautiful things tended to be, head held high to a sky so hauntingly blue he could break it to shards. What Bastian feared was how beautiful things were stolen, and then broken the most.
He mistook the dark of her veins as cracks, webbing over whitish skin, when he entered the justice building quietly.
The war within Bastian Fray discovered a brief armistice, and it was as quiet as dawn breaking over a ghost town here. So quiet that he cannot hide his heartbeats, each throb feverish and concerned. Bastian had saw omens before, but none as strong as the one circling Myrcella Hudson. He wouldn't be surprised if all the mirrors around her vicinity erupted to a shower of crystal-edge glass.
“Hey,” He greeted, not bothering to draw a veil over the agitation in his gaze, which discovered the courage sufficient to meet her eyes. Let her see the battered soul within, he did not care. “Of all the girls in One, it had to be you, huh'?”
For a second, for a flutter of an eyelash, seeing how the architecture of her bones had yet to falter under the weight of everything, and how she still managed to hold her head high, Bastian believed that she could crawl out alive from wherever they locked her up in.
They were the young gods after all, ichor crackling like newborn thunder beneath their sunburned skins. “You know what to do, right?” She should. She should know. She must know. She has to know. “There's no one else in that arena who can hit a bullseye twice in a row, Myrcella. It's just you.”