He tied his boots.
With his two legs he launched into the blinding dawn.
"Why are you called Vanir?"
"Because I'm the god of nature!"
He had peeled off his night; this was more than freedom, this was world-severance. School? “If you want to damn me to a bonfire, make it one brighter. Gnomish firelighters to stain my pyre, scimitar my valediction speech to foes, everything a north wind soul can grant. The dreams night scrolls over us are enchiridion, not mummified scholarship; dint is a sheath to my heart.”
Like turning pages of the book of the sun blades of its strength flashed between black trees as he ran the road down; it was fall; crows made wild devils on the wind, the road curved, no more roofs of home were in sight and he seemed a vorpal shuriken breaching the escape velocity of habit.
Vanir paused at the bridge. If you'd scanned his brain then it would have been flushed like some kind of unfurled flower. I see him as a glass in the twin hands of youth and oxygen, ready to be hurled, shine, fall. That or a boomerang.
He unslung his backpack. He took out a tin cup. He'd worried ceramic would break. He went down to the riverbank and drank a lot. Then he walked around to the bridge's other lee and pulled out two drawstring pouches. He took one rune-scribed pellet from each, held one in each hand, and kneeled facing the ducks on the water. He stared at a spot in their midst. Steadied.
Then his fists traced a rapid sigil and there was an eruption of flight and honking, as the pure kinetic blast he'd cast hit.
Damn. No kill.
Not one.
But casting had been a release, an ice blush of dopamine. His palms were smeared gray with powder. He bathed them off. His casting had not been terrible but there was no way it could yield a missile strong or concentrated enough to waste even a bird.
At least they'd felt it.
He trouped over the bridge, headed north. At first random mental fragments swirled in time with his march, then it ground even them down.
With his two legs he launched into the blinding dawn.
"Why are you called Vanir?"
"Because I'm the god of nature!"
He had peeled off his night; this was more than freedom, this was world-severance. School? “If you want to damn me to a bonfire, make it one brighter. Gnomish firelighters to stain my pyre, scimitar my valediction speech to foes, everything a north wind soul can grant. The dreams night scrolls over us are enchiridion, not mummified scholarship; dint is a sheath to my heart.”
Like turning pages of the book of the sun blades of its strength flashed between black trees as he ran the road down; it was fall; crows made wild devils on the wind, the road curved, no more roofs of home were in sight and he seemed a vorpal shuriken breaching the escape velocity of habit.
Vanir paused at the bridge. If you'd scanned his brain then it would have been flushed like some kind of unfurled flower. I see him as a glass in the twin hands of youth and oxygen, ready to be hurled, shine, fall. That or a boomerang.
He unslung his backpack. He took out a tin cup. He'd worried ceramic would break. He went down to the riverbank and drank a lot. Then he walked around to the bridge's other lee and pulled out two drawstring pouches. He took one rune-scribed pellet from each, held one in each hand, and kneeled facing the ducks on the water. He stared at a spot in their midst. Steadied.
Then his fists traced a rapid sigil and there was an eruption of flight and honking, as the pure kinetic blast he'd cast hit.
Damn. No kill.
Not one.
But casting had been a release, an ice blush of dopamine. His palms were smeared gray with powder. He bathed them off. His casting had not been terrible but there was no way it could yield a missile strong or concentrated enough to waste even a bird.
At least they'd felt it.
He trouped over the bridge, headed north. At first random mental fragments swirled in time with his march, then it ground even them down.
26-Jan-2015 18:47:26 - Last edited on 26-Jan-2015 18:59:52 by Danarieth