(An RP between Storybook and @Chrocey )
At its throat, it bears a bell of fire.
- Sun's Pokedex
The first thing that could be heard was the roar of the wind. Whistling, dashing, racing as crisp as sunlight through the empty boughs of the forest's trees, shivering skeletons squandered of their dying, brittle leaves. With it, the wind carried bits of dust, bygone stars, and trails of leaf mold cast from the earth, and together, the earth and the wind swept in out of nowhere and vanished, as similarly, into nowhere, a constant stream of past and present singed by frost in the cold, white air.
The first that could be seen was a swift, black river, a shadow cast from the moon's nightly reign, endless and mysterious, flowing down the sharply jutted hill, for the cold's touch coaxed the earth into a candid realm. Bits of ice trailed in its waters, children of the frosted plains cast into its constant flow to dabble its surface with their toes and, drifting to the ocean, soon grow old. Shifting forever from past to future, waters running, ripples fading, ice growing from thin and fragile splinters of frost, and the first that could be seen was a swift, black river, and the first that could be heard was the roar of the wind.
Edging delicately out of the fall season, Johto's Route 45 had become a desolately magical place. Crippled winter had traveled again out of the west to grace the world with her withered majesty, and the world was crisp and clear and true and silent, save for the wind and the water that told of time's pass. Still, the place held a sense of magnetism for trainers and tourists young and old. Perhaps this was because the route had changed after a number of years- its treacherous, one way road had been overshadowed by an easier to use, stone path carved out beside the river's ever deepening gorge, and although numerous strong Pokemon still loitered in its depths, they were largely cowed by the rise of a more urban life within the area, and newer trainers or those without Pokemon had become welcome travelers along its banks. In an attempt to preserve some of its wild roots, foreigners had planted hardy trees that soon sprouted into small groves at its edges, and the route, remaining stubbornly wild, became diverse in its utility to trainers and tourists alike. For the wonder-filled, it was a place of beauty. For the boisterous, it was a place for talent. For the quiet, it was a place of peace. For the travelers, it was a quick route to their next destination. But more often than not, its candid nature was not well received, and it had failed developer's plans for a more bustling attraction, for it forwent strengths for weaknesses and caused strife where the hardiest should have found none.
To go there, a trainer and their partners had to be thick as thieves.
The sound of a bell ducked into the wind's howl, ringing sharp as the frost's bite, its tones high and clear as if beckoning the world to be its challenger. Though the wind tore into its ring, a crisp bite to its voice, sharp as the popping of a raging bonfire, imposed upon the bell a sense of character, challenging the wailing howl with a knightly misdemeanor- a ring of focus, faith, and desire. Hurriedly dashing from past to present, the ring overtook the wind's river of a voice, and its sharp and clear tone grew laced with fire, as if a Rapidash parting the dark sea's flow. And then, it was as if the ring itself was the flame within its voice, and the wind stood back, partly in awe and partly aghast, as fire curled out of the flaming bell and wreathed around a set of dull white fangs, inducing a concentrated gleam akin to that of a beam of sun.
Notes began to slink into the bell's high pitched ring- those of a parched bow stirring vibrations from a tautly set string. Rosin dust, as pale as snow, spun away from the bow as it drew from the string a cautious melody, trapped in an ethereal, minor cord. Somewhere beneath the ghostly, tired tones lay a dash of magic- of wonder and hope- that rose and spun and yet seemed hidden beneath the quickly moving cloak of bells and notes. Faster, then, the bow began to move, and it vied for a spot against the bell's ring until the air shook with vibrations, and the roar of the wind and the black gurgle of the river grew solemn beneath their tones.
Again and again and again and again, ring of a bell and ethereally drawn string, words like ghosts hanging in the notes in a quickly escaping clothesline of melodies and fire. From past to present these songs dashed through the air, always escaping the ear as it drifted constantly into the future, and what was played was but a memory that seemed oh so real in its proximity to the present. Many might call it magic that it became a unified form at all within our closure seeking minds, for each part was played after the others had been already lost to time. And yet, measure after measure, ring after ring, put together only in memory...
Again and again and again and again, ring of a bell and ethereally drawn string, practiced again and again and again in an attempt to capture them in the here and now. Fire leapt, chords dashed the sky, and still, they disappeared, and the girl and the Torracat were left chasing them forever. Chasing the magic of a fire and a string, because they loved them oh so dearly, and what they loved they'd chase to the ends of sky and back to keep safe within their palms.
A fruitless task, a magical task, a hopeful task. A task where everything was always changing, and so where the chasers, and so was the chased.
Climax reigned as the notes grew faster and the bell rang louder, and against each other they waged war within the air, for they were two different songs who couldn't quite figure out how to connect, nor considered that they should. And the notes spun quicker and faster and faster and the bow was but a servant to a pale skinned wrist as it flicked back and forth, back and forth, and the fingers curled and flicked and curled as the intervals decreased, faster and faster, and the bell spun its concentrated chord and the fire rose, flying again and again at a rock that was, for the hour, its target. Wreathed around a set of fangs, dull white, hot orange, fire spinning, spinning faster, spinning outlines on a face of ash that lay trapped beneath the fire's shadow, raging, wreathing gleaming fangs, servants to a sulfurous eye's grip, and yet not even a crack was sliced against its candid surface, and the fire spun and the bell rang, faster and faster, spinning quickly out of control, and the noise grew clamorous and broken and sick until, with a shout of frustration, it collapsed upon itself into silence.
''I give up,'' sighed the viola's player, laying her instrument back into its delicately frosted case. Her voice, dispirited and weary, seemed as ethereal as her music, haunted by an undertone as pale as dust. ''I don't get what I'm doing wrong.''
The weary player had burdened, red hair cropped right above her shoulders, curled slightly at its tips as if in a constant, thoughtful breath, snaking in and out of one another. Her skin, sheltered by her curls, was a blushed, rosy pink haunted by a grayish undertone of wrinkles and age. Darkness circled lightly around her infinite eyes, a memory of thoughtless nights, and her eyes themselves were a somber blue, so deep in their cobalt stain that the light took it upon itself to trick the eyes into seeing more than what was actually there, to imagine such undertones of purples and greens that the eyes appeared as if galaxies encased in black holes. Her mouth was sunk in a contemplative frown as she lay upon the candid earth, rubbing, with one thumb, a polished shard of petrified wood that hung about her neck. Against her woolen overcoat, her hand was strikingly thin and sinewy, marred with callouses and thin, clipped nails. Her coat itself was made of a dense, woolen material, and upon its charred brown surface was the yellow pattern of a Stantler's horns, complete with the black balls that she'd always thought were the most enchanting part of the deer's hallucinogenic nature.
The galaxy-eyed girl appeared to be around fifteen, and, from her snake like hair to her worn clothes, exuded a rather weary air. And yet, between her small stature and her constant, musty aroma, her weariness was countered by a sort of far off warmth, for she seemed as if a fading light circled by the dark, a galaxy trapped within her own black hole. She was, for certain, a creature with many sides, for she had grown up in a multi cultural hub where every piece was inspiringly unique, and yet none of it quite seemed to fit together.
Lying upon the frost-dampened earth, her head resting on the closed case, she cast her eyes behind her to the fire-bearer, stricken with admiration at the frustration written upon his face, for it told of a persistent concentration she wasn't sure she could repeat. He was a rather large, feline creature, with rough-housed, black and orange fur that prided itself in its tangled demeanor, refusing to lie flat. This seemed worst upon the creature's chest, where orange fur proudly nestled a yellow, bell-like organ in a cove upon his chest, sheltering his heart of fire. The organ itself stared out into the world as the cat did, a distinct certainty in its gaze concocted from passion and pride alike, and when the girl looked for its attention, his gaze would look, with a warmth, upon her, running his tongue across his fangs and requesting a moment to let his fire raze the earth and his passion swell past the sky. Yet his attention didn't last for long, for he was a restless creature, kneading the earth with his strong forelegs and flicking his ears from the sky to the girl as his tail swung idly from side to side. Only in battles would he let his tail fall still, silent but for the ringing in the air.
''No luck either, huh, Ossie,'' the girl observed, voice bearing an ethereal warmth. ''Perhaps that Jinx we ran into laid a curse on us.''
''Mrowow-ower,'' the large cat responded with a gravelly purr, his tail flicking faster and faster in restless amusement, for the fire bearer could never sit still for long.
''We should head out,'' the girl commented, a smile in her distant tone. ''It's almost noon.''
---------------------------------
Spinning speedily between the two, the wind picked up its pace, gathering bits of dust, fallen stars, to be swept into the sky. As they continued their travels upon the road beside the river, their footsteps were washed away by the gurgle of the black water, ice children eavesdropping upon the last of their conversation as they drifted on the current to melt within the sea.
''You know, Oscar, I'll never understand why you're so obsessed with battling.''
''Mroowr-owr-owr.''
And their voices were stowaways upon the wind with its cargo of dead stars and fallen leaves as the girl and her partner were cast into time's endless ride, chasing each other into the present until
all that could be heard was the roar of the wind, and all that could be seen was the swift, black river.
At its throat, it bears a bell of fire.
- Sun's Pokedex
The first thing that could be heard was the roar of the wind. Whistling, dashing, racing as crisp as sunlight through the empty boughs of the forest's trees, shivering skeletons squandered of their dying, brittle leaves. With it, the wind carried bits of dust, bygone stars, and trails of leaf mold cast from the earth, and together, the earth and the wind swept in out of nowhere and vanished, as similarly, into nowhere, a constant stream of past and present singed by frost in the cold, white air.
The first that could be seen was a swift, black river, a shadow cast from the moon's nightly reign, endless and mysterious, flowing down the sharply jutted hill, for the cold's touch coaxed the earth into a candid realm. Bits of ice trailed in its waters, children of the frosted plains cast into its constant flow to dabble its surface with their toes and, drifting to the ocean, soon grow old. Shifting forever from past to future, waters running, ripples fading, ice growing from thin and fragile splinters of frost, and the first that could be seen was a swift, black river, and the first that could be heard was the roar of the wind.
Edging delicately out of the fall season, Johto's Route 45 had become a desolately magical place. Crippled winter had traveled again out of the west to grace the world with her withered majesty, and the world was crisp and clear and true and silent, save for the wind and the water that told of time's pass. Still, the place held a sense of magnetism for trainers and tourists young and old. Perhaps this was because the route had changed after a number of years- its treacherous, one way road had been overshadowed by an easier to use, stone path carved out beside the river's ever deepening gorge, and although numerous strong Pokemon still loitered in its depths, they were largely cowed by the rise of a more urban life within the area, and newer trainers or those without Pokemon had become welcome travelers along its banks. In an attempt to preserve some of its wild roots, foreigners had planted hardy trees that soon sprouted into small groves at its edges, and the route, remaining stubbornly wild, became diverse in its utility to trainers and tourists alike. For the wonder-filled, it was a place of beauty. For the boisterous, it was a place for talent. For the quiet, it was a place of peace. For the travelers, it was a quick route to their next destination. But more often than not, its candid nature was not well received, and it had failed developer's plans for a more bustling attraction, for it forwent strengths for weaknesses and caused strife where the hardiest should have found none.
To go there, a trainer and their partners had to be thick as thieves.
The sound of a bell ducked into the wind's howl, ringing sharp as the frost's bite, its tones high and clear as if beckoning the world to be its challenger. Though the wind tore into its ring, a crisp bite to its voice, sharp as the popping of a raging bonfire, imposed upon the bell a sense of character, challenging the wailing howl with a knightly misdemeanor- a ring of focus, faith, and desire. Hurriedly dashing from past to present, the ring overtook the wind's river of a voice, and its sharp and clear tone grew laced with fire, as if a Rapidash parting the dark sea's flow. And then, it was as if the ring itself was the flame within its voice, and the wind stood back, partly in awe and partly aghast, as fire curled out of the flaming bell and wreathed around a set of dull white fangs, inducing a concentrated gleam akin to that of a beam of sun.
Notes began to slink into the bell's high pitched ring- those of a parched bow stirring vibrations from a tautly set string. Rosin dust, as pale as snow, spun away from the bow as it drew from the string a cautious melody, trapped in an ethereal, minor cord. Somewhere beneath the ghostly, tired tones lay a dash of magic- of wonder and hope- that rose and spun and yet seemed hidden beneath the quickly moving cloak of bells and notes. Faster, then, the bow began to move, and it vied for a spot against the bell's ring until the air shook with vibrations, and the roar of the wind and the black gurgle of the river grew solemn beneath their tones.
Again and again and again and again, ring of a bell and ethereally drawn string, words like ghosts hanging in the notes in a quickly escaping clothesline of melodies and fire. From past to present these songs dashed through the air, always escaping the ear as it drifted constantly into the future, and what was played was but a memory that seemed oh so real in its proximity to the present. Many might call it magic that it became a unified form at all within our closure seeking minds, for each part was played after the others had been already lost to time. And yet, measure after measure, ring after ring, put together only in memory...
Again and again and again and again, ring of a bell and ethereally drawn string, practiced again and again and again in an attempt to capture them in the here and now. Fire leapt, chords dashed the sky, and still, they disappeared, and the girl and the Torracat were left chasing them forever. Chasing the magic of a fire and a string, because they loved them oh so dearly, and what they loved they'd chase to the ends of sky and back to keep safe within their palms.
A fruitless task, a magical task, a hopeful task. A task where everything was always changing, and so where the chasers, and so was the chased.
Climax reigned as the notes grew faster and the bell rang louder, and against each other they waged war within the air, for they were two different songs who couldn't quite figure out how to connect, nor considered that they should. And the notes spun quicker and faster and faster and the bow was but a servant to a pale skinned wrist as it flicked back and forth, back and forth, and the fingers curled and flicked and curled as the intervals decreased, faster and faster, and the bell spun its concentrated chord and the fire rose, flying again and again at a rock that was, for the hour, its target. Wreathed around a set of fangs, dull white, hot orange, fire spinning, spinning faster, spinning outlines on a face of ash that lay trapped beneath the fire's shadow, raging, wreathing gleaming fangs, servants to a sulfurous eye's grip, and yet not even a crack was sliced against its candid surface, and the fire spun and the bell rang, faster and faster, spinning quickly out of control, and the noise grew clamorous and broken and sick until, with a shout of frustration, it collapsed upon itself into silence.
''I give up,'' sighed the viola's player, laying her instrument back into its delicately frosted case. Her voice, dispirited and weary, seemed as ethereal as her music, haunted by an undertone as pale as dust. ''I don't get what I'm doing wrong.''
The weary player had burdened, red hair cropped right above her shoulders, curled slightly at its tips as if in a constant, thoughtful breath, snaking in and out of one another. Her skin, sheltered by her curls, was a blushed, rosy pink haunted by a grayish undertone of wrinkles and age. Darkness circled lightly around her infinite eyes, a memory of thoughtless nights, and her eyes themselves were a somber blue, so deep in their cobalt stain that the light took it upon itself to trick the eyes into seeing more than what was actually there, to imagine such undertones of purples and greens that the eyes appeared as if galaxies encased in black holes. Her mouth was sunk in a contemplative frown as she lay upon the candid earth, rubbing, with one thumb, a polished shard of petrified wood that hung about her neck. Against her woolen overcoat, her hand was strikingly thin and sinewy, marred with callouses and thin, clipped nails. Her coat itself was made of a dense, woolen material, and upon its charred brown surface was the yellow pattern of a Stantler's horns, complete with the black balls that she'd always thought were the most enchanting part of the deer's hallucinogenic nature.
The galaxy-eyed girl appeared to be around fifteen, and, from her snake like hair to her worn clothes, exuded a rather weary air. And yet, between her small stature and her constant, musty aroma, her weariness was countered by a sort of far off warmth, for she seemed as if a fading light circled by the dark, a galaxy trapped within her own black hole. She was, for certain, a creature with many sides, for she had grown up in a multi cultural hub where every piece was inspiringly unique, and yet none of it quite seemed to fit together.
Lying upon the frost-dampened earth, her head resting on the closed case, she cast her eyes behind her to the fire-bearer, stricken with admiration at the frustration written upon his face, for it told of a persistent concentration she wasn't sure she could repeat. He was a rather large, feline creature, with rough-housed, black and orange fur that prided itself in its tangled demeanor, refusing to lie flat. This seemed worst upon the creature's chest, where orange fur proudly nestled a yellow, bell-like organ in a cove upon his chest, sheltering his heart of fire. The organ itself stared out into the world as the cat did, a distinct certainty in its gaze concocted from passion and pride alike, and when the girl looked for its attention, his gaze would look, with a warmth, upon her, running his tongue across his fangs and requesting a moment to let his fire raze the earth and his passion swell past the sky. Yet his attention didn't last for long, for he was a restless creature, kneading the earth with his strong forelegs and flicking his ears from the sky to the girl as his tail swung idly from side to side. Only in battles would he let his tail fall still, silent but for the ringing in the air.
''No luck either, huh, Ossie,'' the girl observed, voice bearing an ethereal warmth. ''Perhaps that Jinx we ran into laid a curse on us.''
''Mrowow-ower,'' the large cat responded with a gravelly purr, his tail flicking faster and faster in restless amusement, for the fire bearer could never sit still for long.
''We should head out,'' the girl commented, a smile in her distant tone. ''It's almost noon.''
---------------------------------
Spinning speedily between the two, the wind picked up its pace, gathering bits of dust, fallen stars, to be swept into the sky. As they continued their travels upon the road beside the river, their footsteps were washed away by the gurgle of the black water, ice children eavesdropping upon the last of their conversation as they drifted on the current to melt within the sea.
''You know, Oscar, I'll never understand why you're so obsessed with battling.''
''Mroowr-owr-owr.''
And their voices were stowaways upon the wind with its cargo of dead stars and fallen leaves as the girl and her partner were cast into time's endless ride, chasing each other into the present until
all that could be heard was the roar of the wind, and all that could be seen was the swift, black river.
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