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Sorta blasted this out in the last four hours or so. The general idea is that of a Baldori kiddo who was suffused with Thelan culture and is now pissed af that his own nation is treated so poorly, so wants to make a big name for himself and make other fellows reconsider what Baldoris are. If there's any tips y'all have to make it fit the rest of the world better, I'm basically all ears. But now I sleep.


New Years is gonna banish me into the mountains for a couple of days, so it'll probably take until next week for me to get a character sheet in. I've more or less read everything there is to read though.
There still spots open?
A lasso of truth is probably a more humane method of interrogation than what other stuff the Beacon Ascendancy does, ye.
Gonna drop some tentative interest here. We'll essentially be totally normal human beings, yeah?
Hard light constructs seem pretty basic tbh.


The moment Amaryllis sliced into Billy, she could tell that something was wrong. The resistance that she felt was all off, and her Sword shuddered against her lungs as well, disgusted by what it had just cut through. Nothing but a mass of skin and bone, like sheets of paper stacked up and given structure with plastic tubing. With all the damage dealt, the lich’s form twisted and transformed into a true monster, shedding any semblance of the barbaric swordsman he had been before. A monster of many mouths snapped at her, and Amaryllis twisted away, scraps of her uniform caught in those horrific maws. Bounding away atop her aerial footholds, the Knight of Rose drew in a deep breath as she assessed the situation once again.

Billy was nothing more than a graceless flesh slug now, and one that was most likely improbably strong as well. Slicing into him would only give him more weapons, and his ability to shed his flesh meant that her usual tactics of lining wounds with silver meant nothing. What they needed was magical artillery. What they needed was the ability to just blow that monster up to bits, and hopefully spot its weak point while doing so.

What she needed was to stall him.

“Sage Mariette, Captain Sophia! I shall bind this gluttonous beast down, so bombard it with the entirety of your sorcerous might!”

Leaping high up in the air, the amethyst-eyed fencer tunneled into the depths of her magical reserves and forced it all out in a burst of magical power. The dozens of iron buds she left suspended in the air around Billy erupted with vigorous growth, ivy chains latching onto each other and shooting through the open maws of the wretched lich. Though individually weak, they entwined and ensnared, countless gleaming threads pulling against the teeth that sought to close upon them, pushing against the flesh that sought to pulsate against them. And where some broke, more tendrils of metal burst out, a steel hydra that continued to tangle up the flesh-hulk, until it was incorporated into the monster’s body itself.

Upon a highway lamp, Amaryllis grit her teeth, her left hand clenched over the enlargening flesh-hulk as her magical veins rebelled against strain. But so long as it was only her left hand that paid the consequence of magical overuse, that was fine. For in her right hand, her Silverlight shone bright, its mirror-polish hungry to dye itself in the viscera of the flesh-hulk.


Nashiro City -- Road to Hyakusawa Academy
April 20th, 2019 | 8:15AM



It was on dreary, rainy days that Kazuki wanted nothing more than to sleep in, but he was old enough to know better. He had been up before his alarm rang for 6:15AM, flicking the digital clock off so that it didn’t ring and wake his father up. His mind was still fuzzy, and his muscles were sore from the hellzone that was doing drop sets, but that was nothing a glass of cold milk couldn’t fix. Shrugging on a jacket and slipping on his fuzzy slippers, the brunette began cooking. Rice, instant miso, fried eggs, microwaved mackerel, and salad greens. There wasn’t much variation when it came to breakfast with the Magases, but it looked nice at least.

Not Instagram-worthy, but fuel was fuel, and his mom ate fast enough that it didn’t matter anyways. For her eating habits, Kazuki made sure that the miso and mackerel were lukewarm, and she guzzled it down like it was a competition. Unlike Kazuki, Ayumu Magase did have a habit of sleeping as long as she could. It wasn’t a normal morning if she wasn’t rushing to get to work on time, after all. A quick word of thanks, a quick word of farewell, and she was off, still skipping on one foot as she tried jamming her shoe onto the other. Kazuki held onto her lunch and her purse patiently, and approximately seven seconds later, his mom burst back into the suite, an awkward grin on her face as she took what she forgot, pecked Kazuki on the cheek, and booked it the hell out again.

He washed his face later; her kiss smelled of miso and fish.

His father was still asleep by the time Kazuki had finished eating and was ready to go. No reason him to wake up this early, not when the drama he followed didn’t start till 11AM. Kazuki had poked his head in the bedroom a couple of times, just to see if the man had woken up or not, but without any indication of consciousness, the youth cooked some extra meat, put everything on the stovetop, and decided that his father would probably be eating brunch instead.

Rain still waterfalled from the rafters when Kazuki left for school, dressed in his middle school raincoat. Another morning, another day. He yawned, pulled his plastic hood lower over his face, and marched off towards school.

He had forgotten his rain boots, of course, but there was no helping that.
Sparks Fly
[Aelious + Esmeralda, with a touch of Verity and Jonathan]

Golovan was a great man. A masterful man. House Aureolin owed the Star Sage for the knowledge that he disseminated, the star maps that guided ships and wyverns through long, moonless nights. But Golovan was also a long dead man, and Aelious didn’t feel particularly bad as Freecloud perched upon the Observatory, the gleaming wyvern applying just enough pressure to keep ahold of his position, without damaging the stonework beneath. Smart boy, really. Though he didn’t have anything like a massive, overpowered telescope, the Heir of House Aureolin could see the rest of Harrow’s Keep just fine from his vantage point, and he could do it without awkwardly squinting one eye while mashing it against a metal scope.

It had been a good morning for flying, and now, with some nice exercise done on both their parts, it was high time for some lunch. Unwrapping some aged beef, Aelious sliced chunks of it off with his dagger, before absentmindedly tossing the bloodied chunks into the air for Freecloud to snatch up. While his steed may be granted delicious, marbled meat, his own lunch was simply bread and wine, nice and light. As he ate, he glanced over to his wristwatch. Hopefully none of the Harrow Bros were gonna tell him off for this, right? Or, hell, if he were to be chastised for ‘rapscallion behavior’ by a House Lord or Lady.

Banish the thought, honestly.



Well, maybe company wouldn’t be bad either, even if every other House representative was so insistent on the masks they wore.

“Hey! What’re you doing on the roof?”

Aelious looked down and saw an older monk through the telescope slot.

“Get off the roof! People aren’t supposed to go up there. The retractable portion is fragile!”

“Which is why I’m treating it with care,” Aelious responded, an easy smile on his face. “So long as it isn’t damaged, there’s no reason why I can’t be up here, right?”

“...” The monk stopped as another one came running. The approaching one whispered something into his ear.

“...Alright, Sir Aureolin. But you must be careful, or we’ll be billing your lord for any expenses caused by your beast!” The monk sat down on a sofa, where he could keep an eye on the two perched on the roof.

“I’m always careful.” Aelious winked, before accidentally(?) tossing a slice of meat a little too far out. With a grunt, Freecloud lunged forward, the shifting of his weight almost(?) enough to superficially damage the roof. But there was no harm done, and the Heir looked unflappable up there, leaning back. Sipping at his wine, cheap by the standards of any blue-blooded aristocrat, the bespectacled man let out a content sigh. A nice clear day indeed.

He snapped his fingers, drawing the attention of the monk down below, and tossed over his flask of wine. “What’s your name, friend?” he asked, carefully breaking a loaf of bread in half. With an ungloved hand, Aelious picked the crumbs off his lap, while his wyvern opened up his razor-sharp maw to lick them off.

The monk below scrambled to catch the falling bottle. “Jonathan, my lord.” He looked at the flask and set it aside on one of the coffee tables. “While I may enjoy some alcohol from time to time-” The monk looked sidelong at the flask distastefully. “-I hesitate to partake in such foolishness on a roof.”

“And for that reason, I’m sharing with you.” Aelious laughed. “Suppose you’ll be watching me till I depart, so may as well take it easy till then, no?”

“Thank you for the offer, my lord, but I am on duty,” Jonathan leaned back in his chair. “How… how old is your wyvern?”

Aelious shrugged. He could respect that, at least, even if he couldn’t understand it himself. What use was being sober when you flew through the eye of a blizzard? Being completely clearminded was the task of wyverns, not their riders, after all. He ran a comforting hand over the neck scales of Freecloud. Good thing he had enough brains and good sense for the both of them, neh?

“Eleven,” the Heir replied, switching his legs to one side so he could more easily face the bald-headed monk. “Freecloud’s got ‘bout twenty or more years to go before he can retire and be a stud, so till then, Imma get him as many accolades as possible. Why the question though? Own one yourself?”

The monk shrugged. “Making small talk,” he called.

A blonde woman strode up to the sitting Brother. “Could you possibly be any louder?” she asked. “Who are you even- Oh. An Aureolin.”

It was Esmeralda Nols, uptight as ever. The woman could write a novel in the dirt with the stick up her ass.

“Lady Nols,” Aelious kept his swashbuckling grin on, tipping an invisible hat in the direction of the trade mogul. “Come to pay respects too?”

“Only if it’s your house’s funeral, Aelious. How’s Althein?” Each word dripped with annoyance.

“Here’s to hoping you’ve the same constitution as Lord Balaur then,” Aelious replied, unperturbed. Thorny as Esmeralda was, the Aureolin Heir found her attitude refreshingly sour. It was easy to see where he stood with her, if nothing else. “And Althein’s doing wonderfully; he’s rather looking forward to seeing the new Immolis Lord, really. Have you brought Carrey with you, milady? Or is he still at the estate?”

“Carrey’s at home. I see you’ve still remained single. Figures- Nobody in their right mind would care to marry you.”

“You see that?” Aelious lifted his brows, surprised. “I’m flattered you’d pay so much attention, Lady Nols.” Freecloud snorted as well, the wyvern’s bright eyes crinkling around the corners.

“Only because you topped the list of ‘most eligible bachelors in Croania,’ surprisingly. I believe Dalris’s wyvern captain put it together. It’s fitting that one who rides beasts would find one such as yourself attractive.”

The Heir grinned. “I’m sure I cut quite the dashing figure when viewed from afar. No doubt if they ever encounter me as you do though, they too would see me as absolutely insufferable.”

Nols shook her head. “Incredible. Was that a shred of self-awareness I just saw? Why I-”

“Lady Nols,” Jonathan cut in. “I understand you have some, erm, choice words to say, but could you please take it somewhere else? Your shouting has disturbed the other guests.” He waved around the observatory. Aelious could see Verity Seler glowering in the far corner of the observatory.

Looked like the Seler Heiress would have benefited from some snug earmuffs, huh? Aelious bowed apologetically towards the stern-faced woman, before turning back to the other stern-faced one. “Well, care to join me up here for some quieter conversation, or shall you save the rest for tomorrow, Lady Nols?”

She sneered. “If I went up there, I might throw myself off before a full minute passes. No, I’ll speak to you at the talks. Be ready, Aelious.” She turned on her heel and left.

Damn, must be real fun, being Wester Nols. Aelious shook his head, chuckling to himself. Solaris and Immolis, Aureolin and Nols. Althein was certainly gonna have a blast with this, wasn’t he? Letting out a breath, the bespectacled man snapped his fingers, a concentrated jet of air bursting from the table and popping his flask of wine back into his hand.

“Well, Lady Seler, Jonathan, apologies once more for that little lover’s spat, and I pray that the peace of this observatory remains undisturbed for the forseeable future.”

A click of his tongue, and Freecloud unfurled his wings, diving off the roof and falling back into the sky.


Well, things always looked like they were going well, until someone took four thousand damage in a single attack, huh? That made things serious real fast. As Cecilia skidded back, watching the creepy shadow children crawl out from the Treant's mouth to absolutely explode Aura, her eyes narrowed. She focused on her breathing, forced the fear down into the pits of her stomach. The Paladin meant nothing to her, of course; just another pub that they needed to pick up before they got themselves a permanent tank, but Cecilia wasn't going to let her die for no good reason either. Vengeance, that was what that attack had been called. Was it consistently four thousand, or did it scale proportionate to Treant HP lost? Ingrain looked to be healing over time as well, one thousand HP every thirty seconds.

If Vengeance scaled, they couldn't win. If Ingrain could be stacked, they couldn't win. In the Lancer's mind, the dice were tumbling in her skull, rattling and rattling and rattling, but never landing. They'd only show the result at the end. But regrets continued regardless. God, if she had purchased Beam Shot before, this would be so much kinder...or a scaling Vengeance would have instantly obliterated their tank.

Cecilia sucked in a breath. Whatever Willow was dealing with, she couldn't help her with. As a Lancer, stuck between the roles of tank and DPS, there was only one thing to do: be annoying and look fabulous.

"Redeeming Glow!"

Warm light bathed her as she charged in once more, streaming towards the rooted Treant as swiftly as her legs could carry her. Gritting her teeth, she leapt up, confounded gravity, and drove her spear right between its two yellow eyes. Sap seeped before she kicked off the tough bark, twisting in the air until she was upside down. Deal damage, stun, and repeat. The creature had high Fortitude for resisting such things, yes, but she hadn't put her back into it that time. Now though? As her feet found purchase against its canopy, Cecilia kicked off again, the last beads of light from Redeeming Glow making her lightning incarnate.

An echoing crack, and her lightning-enhanced spear found its way in the Treant's right arm. With a heavy kick, Cecilia sent it all the way through, swinging down to catch her spear as it fell out the other side, leaving a hole. It was just a hole, of course, but a mark was a mark regardless. If they couldn't do it this time, she'd at least give the miserable bastard something to remember her by.

"Willow!" Cecilia backed up again, each leap sending her ten feet further away. "If Aura gets chunked again, I'm out! We don't have the heals for this!"
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