13th Ymiden, 719
"Pier. Pre."
Varlum stood out in the woods, away from everyone that might disturb him. Right now the world didn't matter. Only one thing did. As he waited, Varlum leaned back on a large tree, axe resting at his side. It was unusual for him to pray in any kind of way, especially to Immortals he had a sour taste in the mouth with. He wouldn't pray to Faldrun and that man had done less to him than Pier or Pre had. Being his father and attacking his city was the only crime the Immortal of Fire had committed against Varlum. The twin Immortals, however, had cursed him. Had broken their own beliefs, their own domains of justice and equality, and had done something against his body without asking. After condemning Vri for threatening the same. It was spiteful, pitiful and wrong.
But Varlum couldn't hold on to it. Not right now. He wasn't here to confront them, or he'd have his axe ready. Instead, he wanted to make a deal, one that they owed him from the past. "If you hear me, you promised me a favour once. I need your favour now" he said and closed his eyes for a trill, waiting as no answer came. Perhaps he had to go deeper. "Right now, we can not defeat Ellasin. Whatever I think of you, whatever you think of me - we are fighting the same war. Ellasin is our enemy, even if you are not my ally. Which means right now, we need each other. What happens after this doesn't matter, what happened trials ago doesn't matter. This is now."
With a small sigh, the Ithecal waited. Repeating their names quietly. This was all he had left that he could do, it was the only thing that he could think of. Despite all the hatred he felt towards Vri and the twins, the anger he felt towards a lot of Immortals bar the ones that had helped him, Varlum needed to let it go. At least for right now. He had plans and goals, he had enemies that had been made. But the only enemy in this war was Ellasin. If this favour could be used to help end the war, or even be a favour that could end the war in one blow - then that was what mattered. That was all that mattered.
So he kept praying.
"Pier. Pre."
Varlum stood out in the woods, away from everyone that might disturb him. Right now the world didn't matter. Only one thing did. As he waited, Varlum leaned back on a large tree, axe resting at his side. It was unusual for him to pray in any kind of way, especially to Immortals he had a sour taste in the mouth with. He wouldn't pray to Faldrun and that man had done less to him than Pier or Pre had. Being his father and attacking his city was the only crime the Immortal of Fire had committed against Varlum. The twin Immortals, however, had cursed him. Had broken their own beliefs, their own domains of justice and equality, and had done something against his body without asking. After condemning Vri for threatening the same. It was spiteful, pitiful and wrong.
But Varlum couldn't hold on to it. Not right now. He wasn't here to confront them, or he'd have his axe ready. Instead, he wanted to make a deal, one that they owed him from the past. "If you hear me, you promised me a favour once. I need your favour now" he said and closed his eyes for a trill, waiting as no answer came. Perhaps he had to go deeper. "Right now, we can not defeat Ellasin. Whatever I think of you, whatever you think of me - we are fighting the same war. Ellasin is our enemy, even if you are not my ally. Which means right now, we need each other. What happens after this doesn't matter, what happened trials ago doesn't matter. This is now."
With a small sigh, the Ithecal waited. Repeating their names quietly. This was all he had left that he could do, it was the only thing that he could think of. Despite all the hatred he felt towards Vri and the twins, the anger he felt towards a lot of Immortals bar the ones that had helped him, Varlum needed to let it go. At least for right now. He had plans and goals, he had enemies that had been made. But the only enemy in this war was Ellasin. If this favour could be used to help end the war, or even be a favour that could end the war in one blow - then that was what mattered. That was all that mattered.
So he kept praying.