by Paroxysm on Fri Apr 13, 2012 12:57 am
Pendaran held out his hand and called his sword - the very same sword he had shown to Trydian earlier - into existence; he held the sheathed blade by the hilt and looked from it to Trydian thoughtfully.
“Unfortunately, because you so readily dismissed my offer before, I already promised it to another,” he laughed, “and he’s a vindictive sort, you understand? Would likely stick a knife in your back the first chance he got, if I gave you this sword now.”
Honestly, the novel thought of Trydian using his sword had already worn thin and Pendaran could no longer justify simply handing something of such power, an instrument that represented his authority and power, even, to Trydian Xanathi. If the sword was misused or Trydian somehow moved against the court with it, it would be Pendaran’s name and reputation on the line. Pendaran could not and would not risk an inter-faction war at this late a stage.
“No,” Pendaran waved the sword out of existence once more, “I don’t think I can give you this sword,” he admitted, “but we will forge you one of your own, later. Similar, but different; it will be made of your power, not mine. But... Yes, let’s skip that for now. You want to surrender your name, your heritage? Elaborate further,” the king urged.
There were two options that immediately jumped to the forefront of Pendaran's mind for achieving what Trydian was asking for but one of those options, dangerous and nearly unheard of, needed heavy consideration; regardless, the first and most simple path for Trydian to get from underneath the shackles of his family was to wholly join the Unseelie, in body and soul. Not through a bargain, but by willing, conscious choice. Not much would change about him, he would still be a demon, through-and-through, but he would be of the Fae as well; he would most likely only gain the features common amongst the Unseelie court and those affiliated with it but would otherwise remain himself.
The second option... That was something else entirely, something interesting, however; it was something Pendaran had always wanted to try but could not due to a lack of justification. What would happen if he changed a person's name? Not their given name, of course, but their true name - the unspoken name that wholly and fully described a person or thing right down to its very existence. It was the kind of thing that could do exactly what Trydian wanted and more, but it was also the kind of thing that could unmake a man entirely. One mistake on Pendaran’s part and poof, Trydian was gone.
"I can -”
And then there was Lydia - the Bocan - and she was bringing gifts, which was good, since she was interrupting something Pendaran was quite interested in attempting. For academic reasons, of course. Bocan or no, Pendaran did not enjoy his scholarly pursuits interrupted.
“Ah,” Pendaran smacked his lips, “Lydi-” he cut the name short when he realized he was going to be interrupted again, but this time, it would not be in the middle of a conversation. Indeed, Pendaran, in statue-like silence, sat on his throne and waited patiently, and continued to do so up until this intruder, this trespasser in his realm, began to abuse its host’s body.
It was true, Sebilla was not to be harmed by the Unseelie while in their care and after she was released, but, likewise, she was under Unseelie protection - and while she was in the stronghold, she was under Pendaran’s personal protection. By taking possession of Sebilla and attempting to harm her, this being had spat on Pendaran’s hospitality and goodwill, and that, that was a very bad thing to do.
Pendaran did not reply with words. He said nothing and made no obvious move, but that did not mean he did not act; indeed, those with the sense to feel would sense the power gathering around Pendaran as he felt within himself and drew out his energy and mixed it with the ambient power of the world.
The quality and power of Pendaran’s spellwork would have been the life-defining moment of any sorcerer and the difficulty of what he was doing was not to be undervalued; it took an unwavering mind to stitch fundamental forces together, after all; and Pendaran was doing it easily.
As arcane energy entangled itself with Qi - the spiritual life force of the world and all things in it - the air around Pendaran began to grow wet and chilly, and fog, starting at the floors, began to roll in waves around the room, spreading from Pendaran outwards.
A spiritual presence, tinged with Pendaran’s power, began to fill the room, and thus the king’s intention became clear; it was an entropic spell but one that dealt a spiritual blow - caused spiritual decay - rather than physical. This demon could have been Sentinel himself and Pendaran would not have cared; it invaded his kingdom, his court, and by the Gods, if it did not behave appropriately, Pendaran would bleed it from Sebilla or kill them both in the attempt.
"algor mortis," Pendaran finally spoke and his words held a weight to them, almost a physical blow, in fact, "trespasser. Exorcism? No, I prefer entropic spiritual decay. Foolish thing, Sebilla Xanathi is involved in a bargain with my court through her brother and because of it, I have power enough over her to preserve her life, but you? I will sunder you, I will drag you into Purgatory and abandon you to its monstrosities, alone and helpless, and watch as you're torn from one spiritual limb to the other."
The Unseelie king stood from his throne and electricity crackled just behind and to the side of him, blanketed by the fog, which was undergoing oscillation, swirling and thickening, and clinging hungrily to his body in search of more energy, more power.
It was a living spell and also clear, definitive proof that Pendaran could do more than simple illusions and glamour.
“You will cease your games and disrespect.”
Pendaran was not bluffing; if need be, he could use the small connection between Sebilla and the Unseelie, forged when Trydian struck his bargain, to strike at the presence directly. Sebilla Xanathi would probably survive. Somewhat. At this point, Pendaran could not even begin to express how little he cared.
FATAL KERNEL ERROR_
Mind link to COMP disconnected_