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royaltyjunk

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  1. Summary: Only when Minerva shuts the door does she realize that Michalis had been hiding from the slanting sunlight pouring through his window. Written for the FE: Community Design challenge on Tumblr. Author’s Ideas: The theme was light/dark. I love me some FE1/11/3/12. Also, Minerva’s great, I would die for her. So have both. Bonus of a family/sibling theme. [Minerva was my first five-star in Heroes and I'm so glad she was she's great and you bet your ass I was on Team Minerva] I may or may not have been so busy writing this I forgot to memorize my lines for an upcoming show… let’s pretend that never happened :^) Disclaimer: I don’t own Fire Emblem - obviously. ~ / . / . / ~ Candlelight in the Shadows ~ / . / . / ~ Minerva knocks gently on the wooden door in front of her, the sound reverberating through the empty hallways. “Michalis?” The clock in the hallway ticks away furiously as she waits for a response from her brother. His gruff voice doesn’t respond from the other side of the door, and she knocks again. “Michalis? Are you in there?” Still, silence. She’s knocking desperately now. “Michalis!?” There’s a soft noise from the other side of the door, and Minerva leans against the door, calling loudly, “Michalis!? What’s happening? Are you okay?” “I’m fine. Go away.” “Michalis…!” When she hears her brother’s voice, she’s filled with relief, but it dies down as soon as he tells her to leave. With a huff of impatience and annoyance, she shoves open the door. “Michalis, you can’t just-” “I said go away!” Michalis screams. Minerva squints, spotting her brother squished up against the wall. “What are you-” She pushes the door shut behind him and rushes to Michalis, but stops halfway there, catching a glance of her brother. “Stay away, Minerva… go away… I don’t want to hurt. I don’t know what I could do like this, but… I don’t want you to suffer because of it.” There was something majorly wrong with Michalis ever since the war ended - Minerva could tell, but she didn’t know it could amount to this - to this hideousness that’s crawling up along the left side of Michalis’s body. His entire left side is a splotch of purple darkness, a mess of violet, lavender, magenta. His left hand is no different, and his entire hand has warped, now only a wrinkled palm with gnarly fingers and long, curly nails. His sclera is black, and he stares at her with a pleading red iris, a clear contrast to his remaining brown eye. His hair is dotted with black, red, and purple, like strands of the shadows themselves. “It’s been seven years… I don’t understand. It was only supposed to last for that first war,” Michalis gasps, his form trembling violently. “What was?” Minerva asks, her blood growing cold. “Medeus’s darkness…” he whispers, “was his powers. He gave me some… he said he would take it away when I was defeated.” “But… I defeated you,” Minerva says. “I defeated you… I know I did!” “I know you did!” Michalis cries. “Something is wrong!” She takes a step back shakily, a hand ghosting over her lips in shock. “I have to tell Sister Lena… and Maria…” Minerva murmurs. “They’ll know what to do, they-” “Just leave me alone,” he hisses, glaring at her from his position, pressed up against the wall. “Leave me alone!” Only when Minerva shuts the door does she realize that Michalis had been hiding from the slanting sunlight pouring through his window. ~ / . / . / ~ The sunlight grows stronger the next day, when Michalis refuses to leave the shadows, and Maria spends the morning helping Sister Lena. “Maria?” Minerva calls into the sanctuary tentatively. “In here!” Her sister responds from the inside, and she follows Maria’s voice. Minerva walks in on Lena, Julian and Maria, measuring a white dress. “Who is that for?” Minerva asks, watching Maria collect a few pieces of ceremonial wear off the floor. “We made it for you!” Maria says, rushing out the sanctuary and down the hallway, her ceremonial robes in her arms. “But you didn’t have to-” “Oh, come on, Minerva. Let us pamper you for a bit,” Julian grins, and Lena elbows him gently. With an “oof”, Julian leaves the room, a playful expression on his face. His wife sighs before holding out the white dress in front of Minerva. “It looks wonderful. Why don’t you try it on?” Minerva sighs in defeat before trudging off to her room, and Lena stifles a laugh behind her hand. She emerges back into the sanctuary a few minutes later, a gentle expression on her face. “It’s a very nice dress,” Minerva murmurs, spinning. “I couldn’t tie the strings on my back. There were too many.” The red-haired bishop reaches forward, grasping at the strings and tightening them. “How is it?” Lena asks, gently tugging at the fabric strings along Minerva’s back. “It’s fine. You can tie it.” The strings are fastened along Minerva’s back, and she reaches for her red coat, slinging it on. Lena stands back, looking her over before smiling warmly. “You look wonderful.” “Sister Lena!” Maria rushes up the sanctuary’s halls, her ceremonial bishop robes flowing behind her. There’s a veil in her arms and her bishop’s pendant is clutched in her hand. Lena takes the veil from Maria and fastens it onto Maria’s head with a smile. Maria clips on her pendant and smiles back. Lena gives her a gentle kiss on the forehead. “There you go. Go on, now.” “We’ll be back before you know it!” Maria grins and pushes open the doors. Lena watches Maria go before turning to Minerva, helping her button up her coat. “It’s been awhile since we’ve had some orphans to care for. Keep an eye out for some, will you?” Lena asks, smoothing out Minerva’s coat when the last buttons click together. “Alright,” Minerva gives Lena a slight curtsy, and the bishop smiles before leaning in. “Keep an eye on Maria, too. I don’t know if it’s best for her to be outside after yesterday’s occurrences.” Minerva nods, a wave of fear crashing over her. Shaking off the strong emotions, she follows Maria out of the church and down the streets that are crowded with people and vendors. “The princesses of Macedon!” “Over here, lovelies! I’ve got just the thing for you both!” They ignore the calls of alluring shopkeepers and curious shoppers, looking upon the bustling city. “Here you are!” A light voice drifts from a certain stall along the edges of the city, and the sisters glance over. There, behind the makeshift open tavern, is a young brown-haired girl, her hair tied into a high ponytail with a pink hairband, a similar shade to the pink dress she wore. She hands off a red book to a customer, and looks up. Surprise lights in her eyes, but melts to happiness, and she waves, a great laugh bubbling from her lips. “Princess Minerva! Princess Maria! Hello there!” “Lady Linde? Why are you here?” Maria asks. “Don’t call me ‘Lady Linde’! It makes you sound so formal, Maria. We’re friends!” “Yes… yes, you’re right, Linde,” Maria beams. “But why are you here?” “Selling tomes. Merric had way too many in his dusty academy in Altea, and I needed to raise some money to help rebuild Pales. It all worked out with this festival coming up, anyways.” “Why come here? Surely there are better places to sell, where there are more purchasers?” Minerva asks. “Oh, of course. I’m just covering as much ground and meeting as many old allies as I can in these few festival days.” “Where have you been so far?” Behind her, Maria scuffles away, flipping through the pages of the tomes Linde has on sale. “Altea, to visit Merric, Marth, and Caeda… Archanea, if you can still it that, to visit Jeorge, Midia, and Astram… I bumped into Sheena in Pales, with that mercenary friend of hers. Samson, I think? They were selling flowers and baskets, so if you need some, head on down there!” Linde winks, holding up a finger. “It sounds nice. We’ll probably visit soon. Maria-” Minerva turns over her shoulder to speak to her sister, only to realize that the tavern is empty aside from her and Linde. “Huh? Where’d Maria go?” Linde asks, tilting her head. A pit of despair opens in Minerva’s stomach, and she excuses herself quickly, bursting from the small store Linde has set up and glancing around the stands. There’s not a sign of her sister, and Minerva rushes down the streets. Panicked, Minerva opens the door to a nearby makeshift shop, and the bells on the door chime as she looks inside. In the corner of the store is a head of red, veiled by white. She rushes to the redhead, ignoring the smell of medicine and herbs, something that would have normally disturbed her greatly. “Maria!” Her sister slams a box in her hands shut and whips around. She stands abruptly, a guilty look on her face. “Minerva?” “Why did you run off like that?” She notices Maria’s expression and reaches out, readjusting the veil around Maria’s head. “Is something wrong? What were you looking at?” “...Herbs. Healing herbs,” Maria murmurs, clasping her fingers around her bishop’s pendant. “I wanted to see if there was anything that could help him.” “Oh, Maria…” Minerva hugs her sister tight, and Maria tenses up before relaxing, squeezing Minerva back. “He'll be fine,” the older sibling whispers. “He'll be fine, he'll be okay.” “I wish he would be,” Maria murmurs, and Minerva starts, pulling away. “What do you mean?” She demands. “Not knowing his symptoms doesn’t help,” Maria rambles on. “What caused that darkness? Why on him? I don’t know how to cure shadows. Even if staves use magical power, they can’t dispel the darkness. And herbs don’t help either. Michalis isn’t hurt physically, internally, or mentally - at least, it doesn’t seem like it.” “Maria-” “And I know, there’s no way to cure darkness. Darkness can only be slain by light, and to use light magic against Michalis wouldn’t just purify him, it’d remove him from the world along with the darkness in him, and I don’t want that to happen, I don’t!” Maria’s voice pitches to a breathy and high whisper, her words barely comprehensible with the multiple wavering in her voice. “Maria… you need to rest. We’ll talk about this later. Let’s go back to the church for now,” Minerva murmurs. Thankfully, Maria just nods mutely, biting her lip. Her eyes are moist, but there are no tears - at least, not yet. The bell above their heads chime as they open the door and walk down the cobblestone street that leads to the entrance of the wooden church. Lena is out front, washing a set of white dresses that belong to Maria. She glances up, surprise reflected on her face when she sees the Macedonian siblings. “What are you two doing here?” She asks, standing and smoothing out her skirts. “I thought you were going to stay in the town square until night. There are many more shops this year than last year, aren’t there?” “Maria needed a breather. Most of them were selling the same thing,” Minerva responded, lifting her white skirt to avoid trailing it in the mud around the stone path. “What sorts of things?” “Clothing, herbs and medicines, crops, weaponry, products like that. Although, we did run into Lady Linde. She was selling tomes on behalf of the people in Pales.” “Linde? That’s interesting. I’ll have to stop by and give her my greetings.” “I do believe Naverre was there,” Maria pipes up. “He was with another mercenary who looked much like him.” “Samuel and Naverre?” Minerva asks, frowning. “They were here?” Maria ponders on the thought, and responds, “I think they just came to look at the swords, though. They didn’t hear me calling out to them. Lena smiles, a nostalgic look in her eyes. “I’ll leave once I finish washing these, then. Can you two make sure you take them in at sundown if I’m not back by then?” “Of course, Sister Lena,” Minerva nods before pushing open the large church doors, greeted by multi-colored light that pours in from the stained glass windows of the church sanctuary.. Julian is sitting in the back pews of the sanctuary, and looks behind him when he hears the door crack open. He smiles, standing and shoving his hands in his pockets. “Back already?” “Maria needed a breather,” Minerva repeats, shedding her red coat and hanging it up on the coat hanger beside the doors. The strong smell of herbs and flowers tells her that incense was recently burned. “Lena’s going out soon. You should join her.” “Maybe I will,” Julian responds, brushing past them as he exits, whistling a soft tune. The sisters share a knowing glance before exiting the sanctuary through a side door that leads into a carpeted hallway. The hallway is lit with small candles and sunlight streaming through the small windows. Minerva wrenches her gaze from the door on the far side of the hallway, a room too recently flooded with bitter darkness. Maria opens the door to her room, and Minerva makes to leave, but her sister catches her hand. Minerva turns and Maria lets go of her hand. “I'm tired of this, Minerva,” her sister murmurs, leaning against the doorframe. “I'm tired of these wars. Even if it's over, the consequences still affect us and I dislike it so much.” “I know, Maria,” Minerva coaxes. “I dislike it too. But we have to endure it.” “Why us?” Maria cries loudly. “We fought hard and experienced heartbreak! We were just like the soldiers that fought alongside us! And yet… we have the worst consequence upon us! That we will lose-” “Hush!” Minerva yells over her sister, and Maria stares at her, wide-eyed and mouth shut. “I'm sorry. I didn't mean to yell at you. It's just… Michalis…” “I know, Minerva. I'm sorry for raising my voice too.” Maria glances up at her sister anxiously, and Minerva smiles. “Make sure you get some rest, Maria,” Minerva commands, stroking her hair. “I want to see him,” Maria says. “Can I go with you tonight?” “Maria…” One look at her sister tells Minerva that Maria is not going to be swayed. “Alright. I suppose. I'll stop by your room when I go to visit him, at moonrise. Get some sleep by then, okay?” Maria gives her a soft smile, but the light in her younger sister has disappeared somehow, and before Minerva can question her, the princess-turned-bishop closes the door on her. ~ / . / . / ~ Her sister’s white dress glows under the candlelight, and Minerva huddles into her red coat self-consciously. “Do you really want to come along?” Minerva whispers hushedly. Maria nods firmly, but doesn’t say anything. Minerva sighs. “Listen, Maria-” “What are you girls doing up so late?” Julian’s voice rings from above them, and the sisters glance up to see the former thief leaning over the wooden railing of the staircase. “It’s almost night, and you know how active the little critters are around here.” “We were just going to see Michalis,” Minerva calls back. “We’ll get to bed as soon as we finish.” “Alright. Just don’t make Lena fret again, you hear?” “Yes, Julian. Good night,” Minerva says, and Maria reiterates her sister’s words before hurrying down the hallway. The candle in Maria’s hand glows, leading them past the corridors and the door to the sanctuary, where the smell of incense floats from. They stop at a door at the far end of the hallway, Michalis’s room, where Minerva takes a deep breath. “Listen, Maria… I don’t know if it’s good for you to be here. Michalis didn’t want to see anyone last time I came by, but… if anyone, you deserve to see him. Don’t step out of line, alright? Maria squeezes Minerva’s hand, and she smiles before opening the door. Michalis hisses as soon as he sees the door open, and presses himself closer to the smooth stone wall. His eyes soften for a moment when he realizes who had stepped into his room before hardening again, an angry look in his remaining brown eye. “Michalis?” Minerva asks cautiously. Maria blows out the candle in the holder, and sets it down on the small table in the middle of the room before following Minerva closely, an unidentifiable look in her eyes. “Why are you two here?” Michalis narrows his eyes, pulling his black cloak around himself and blending into the shadows, his head, half full of red hair and one brown eye the only things that stand out in the blackness. “I told you to stay away.” “I-” Minerva’s cut off by Maria, who lets out a noise, akin to the sound of choking. Minerva turns to her sister just before Maria collapses to her knees in front of Michalis. Minerva catches a glimpse of Maria’s face, and knows the look on her sister’s face - her eyes rimmed red and familiar hiccuping movement in her throat tells Minerva that she’s been crying, or is about to start. “Maria!?” Michalis cries out, his eyes filled with worry and voice pitched with emotion. Yet, he only reaches out his unaffected hand from the shadows, but Maria takes his outstretched fingers, holding his hand tight as she cries into her other one. “Maria…” Minerva sits beside her sister, tucking Maria’s stray hairs behind her ear. Her breath is inconsistent from her, trying to hold back her tears. “Maria, it’s okay. You can cry.” “But-” “We’re your siblings,” Minerva and Michalis both respond immediately. Maria glances at them both, a lost look in her eyes before tears spring up, tears that fall too fast for her to stop, and soon she’s crying and crying, like she’s never cried before. Stroking her sister’s hair, Minerva embraces her as Maria cries. Michalis squeezes her hand, and Maria gives him a gentle smile through the tears welling up in her eyes. “What happened?” Michalis coaxes his sister, in a hushed voice. Maria glances at Minerva pleadingly, and she nods to Maria, tightening their embrace for a second. Her younger sister lets out a gentle breath, nodding to Minerva. The former Dragon Lord looks Michalis in the eyes, swallowing down the lump of fear and hesitation in her throat. Maria had entrusted her with this task. “Maria… she was looking for ways to cure you.” “You didn’t-” “She couldn’t find one,” she says bluntly, and turns her head away, not bothering to hide the pained expression she knows is being displayed on her face. “I can’t cure you. I can’t cure you,” the youngest of the siblings repeats softly to herself like a mantra, and then silences herself with another half-stifled sob. Michalis scoots forward a little bit. “It’s just like that time,” Minerva murmurs under her breath. “What time?” Michalis asks, looking at his sister. “She’d stay up all night, just to make sure you were okay,” Minerva ignores his question, “and she’d work herself sick. It came to the point where I had to stay in her room to make sure she didn’t sneak off during the night to your room. She’d hug you and pray with tears streaming down her face. I remember it so vividly, like it was yesterday.” “Maria… I know you saved me, but… you tried that hard? You were just…” he trails off, turning his gaze to the black cloak draped around him. “A child…” Maria murmurs, squeezing Michalis’s hand. “Still… they wouldn’t let anyone treat you… they wanted to leave you for dead. Then, and even now… I don’t understand why. But…! I wanted to save you, I really did! That’s why I tried so hard! Minerva never said it, but I knew it was all up to me to save you. So I tried! I really did! I wanted you to get better, just like now! But now… I don't know…” Maria breaks off with a sob. “Maria…” He clenches his shadowed hand, and then Michalis looks up at Maria, a determined look in his eyes. “I’ll go tomorrow. I’ll go with you two, and we can look together. Just us, as siblings. Like before that war…” “Brother…! Thank you!” Maria wipes her tears from her eyes, and pulls Michalis to his feet, taking his other hand. The moonlight pours through the window at the moment, and in a grand moment of light and dark, Michalis, with a body half afflicted with shadows, is standing under white brightness, and Maria is covered in shadows. Yet, Michalis doesn’t flinch, and neither does Maria. They embrace, and Minerva slips from the room then, feeling the silence around her drag on as she exits the room. When she leaves, she takes the candle with her. As she relights the candlestick, the red of her cloak and hair is reflected against the bright white moonlight and the dark patchy shadows of the church walls, like Maria and Michalis themselves.
  2. Summary: He dreams for the first time since Altena left Thracia, almost four years ago. She goes looking for Arion seven years later. Author’s Ideas: I love Genealogy to bits, but damn, does it leave some things unexplained. The entire reason this one-shot was created was because I decided to ask myself, “Why does only the Gaé Bolg have a ‘price’ for the user?” If you didn’t know, the legend goes that the Gaé Bolg is the lance that controls both love and sorrow. Quan and Ethlyn’s deaths and the conflict that separates Arion and Altena are supposed to be because of the Gaé Bolg. The game says that the Gaé Bolg and the Gungnir are intertwined. Not by what, though, but I like to think it’s by blood and by legend. I started wondering why the Gungnir didn’t have a “price”, and this popped out. Used this piece to work on my imagery writing - let me know if I did okay! Warnings: Rated a strong T for insanity, macabre, and all the other fun stuff that comes with Genealogy. Disclaimer: Do I look like I own Fire Emblem. ~ / . / . / ~ Cursed Crown of Thorns ~ / . / . / ~ “I’m dying,” Finn rasps, leaning his head against his bedframe. Altena looks up from her hands, gripped tightly around a wooden bucket of water, and catches a panicked look in her brother’s eyes. “Nonsense, Father,” Nanna scolds from her place beside the aging knight. “You’re being ridiculous.” He lets out a breathy sigh, closing his eyes. Nanna pulls his blanket away from his chest, her hands lingering on her father’s bandaged chest before gently tugging at the white cloth. It falls from Finn’s wound, and Altena tries not to flinch when she sees the dried blood and swollen skin around the raw scratch scored across his chest. Nanna pulls back, snatching the towel slung over her shoulder and dousing it in the water bucket Altena is holding, though she's careful not to let any water jump out and onto Altena. Leif offers Nanna a Recover staff, and she takes it, gently brushing the damp towel against her father’s chest. Flecks of maroon blood dot the wet towel, but Nanna doesn't flinch until all the dried blood is stuck to her hand or the towel, and she can see the pink flesh and welling, fresh red blood along Finn’s wound. Nanna lifts the Recover staff in front of her lips, watches it glow in response to the gaping stab wound. Slowly, Finn’s skin contorts and twists together in a fashion all too familiar to Leif and Nanna, yet a strange sight to Altena. Suddenly, the staff dulls, its glow lost. Nanna stumbles backwards, and Leif barely catches her. Altena sets down the bucket in her hands and kneels beside her sister, who shakes and trembles. “It's not-” “Shh. It's okay,” Leif whispers, and lets Nanna press her face against his shoulder. Altena sits back and watches the two, a burden of guilt and shame on her heart. That night, Nanna comes to her room, her eyes red and cheeks wet. “Do you want to talk about it?” Altena asks gently, guiding Nanna to the seat in front of the table in her powder room. “I… Give me a moment,” Nanna whispers, folding her hands in her lap. Her gaze remains focused on the mirror in front of her, and Altena moves to clean up the cosmetics she left on the table that morning. “Please, leave them there. I don’t want to impose on you.” “Of course you aren’t,” Altena reassures, but listens to Nanna either way. “Are you ready to talk?” “Yes.” Nanna clears her throat before looking up at Altena with moist eyes. “It’s about Father.” “Finn? What’s wrong?” “He’s dying, Lady Sister,” she sobs, clenching her hands into fists. “He’s dying, and there’s nothing I can do. I’m sorry… I know you wanted to talk to him more, learn from him more, but he- he’ll be gone soon.” Altena places her hand on Nanna’s shoulder tentatively. “Nanna…” Nanna wipes her eyes and gives Altena a tearful smile. “Oh… I’m being unreasonable, I forgot to tell you why I came here. Father said he wanted to see you. Will you go?” “Yes, but-” “I’ll be fine,” the blonde reassures, and smiles at the brunette. “Go on, Lady Sister. I’ll be fine.” Altena nods mutely, and leaves Nanna in her room. Gently, she walks down the halls of Leonster castle, and despite her four years in the place that is supposed to be her home, she feels as though she has walked through them for the first time. The dark spirit of death lingers around the portraits of kings and queens that grace the walls, clinging to the smiling faces of King Calf and Princess Ethlyn. It follows her, down the hall and to the left, wreathed around the room of an old Duke Knight. She pulls the metal handle down, pushing the door open. The room is stuffy, and there’s the gentle smell of Thracia, of Nanna and Leif, and of faint white roses, a smell so uniquely Finn’s that Altena finds herself tearing up. He’s holding a pressed white rose in his hand, twirling it mindlessly between his thumb and his index finger when he looks up, and there's a bright and feverish look in his eyes. “Finn…” Altena whispers, her hand over her lips. “Princess Altena… you came,” he murmurs, giving her a kind smile. She trembles a bit at the sight of Finn, who looks like he’s on the brink of death. “Of course. I only want to help you, Finn. You should know that already.” “Then… will you accompany an old man in his final moments?” He asks. Altena draws herself up, steeling herself before pulling a nearby chair next to Finn’s bed. “Gladly.” “Are you… glad, that you came back?” Finn asks the question so tensely that Altena feels like he’s trying not to break a thin sheet of ice over a frozen lake. “Yes,” she responds boldly, then pauses. “Yes, I’m glad. Sometimes… I miss old Thracia. Sometimes I miss Travant, sometimes I miss Arion, sometimes I just miss the townspeople. But when I think about what we would’ve done to achieve our goals… it makes me unhappy. And who am I to deny my birthright? I returned to Leonster to help, and that’s exactly what I did. And… one of my loved ones is here. At the very least, I have someone here to help me.” “Lord Leif?” “Yes… my brother.” “Did he ever tell you?” “Tell me what?” “The legend of the Gaé Bolg.” “There is a legend?” “Only the royal family is supposed to know… but Lord Quan confided in me, so that one day I might tell you if he were to pass away. I told Lord Leif a few moons ago… he did not react happily.” “Is that why Nanna forced you two out of the castle and on a ride that night?” “Yes. She always was too persistent for her own good. Just like her mother… but that is besides the point. Would you like to hear the tale?” “Yes.” “Even after hearing of your own brother’s reaction?” “Of course. It is my duty as a princess of Leonster, and the wielder of the Gaé Bolg. If I must endure knowledge that may break my heart, I will.” Finn lets out a breathy chuckle. “You remind me so of your mother. Lady Ethlyn…” “Finn, I’m- I’m sorry,” Altena bites her lip, gripping her tunic with her hands. “What are you apologizing for?” He questions. “I’m not sure… but I'm sorry.” “It is not your fault, Lady Altena. Whatever you are apologizing for, it is not your fault.” “Thank you, Finn. Please, go on.” “Of course. The legend of the Gaé Bolg begins with the brother and sister Crusaders Noba and Dain, who shared a close sibling relationship. Their relationship caused them to jointly rule the Thracian Peninsula as one country that comprised of both the Manster District and Thracian Peninsula with no political clash whatsoever.” “They ruled together for a while, did they not? What happened then?” “At some point, Noba wed a knight who was a good friend of her brother's, and the two lived happily for a good while. However, Noba's husband and Dain later got into an argument, one that led to a dueling. In an attempt to break up the fight, Noba accidentally impaled her husband with the Gáe Bolg.” “How horrible…” “This was quickly followed by Noba committing suicide out of both grief and guilt, alongside Dain dying under mysterious circumstances. A series of unfortunate events occurring within the Leonster royal family then happened, which eventually caused Thracia to split into two distinct northern and southern districts. Eventually, the Gaé Bolg became known as the lance that separated lovers.” Altena chokes, holding a hand over her mouth as she looks away from the old Duke Knight. “Lady Altena? You don’t look very well.” She lets her hand fall from her lips and into her lap. “You are saying that…” “Oh… I’m so sorry, Lady Altena. You bear the weight of the lance that controls love and sorrow. No one but you can.” “If Gaé Bolg visits tragedy upon its wielder, then…” “Do not blame yourself. It was due to the unfortunate circumstances that you were born under that have pushed this burden on you so early. I did not want you to suffer… but I could not stop it.” He leans his head back, gripping his fingers around the pressed white rose in his hand. “I am sorry. I… was useless.” She stumbles out of her chair, and then breaks for her room, her mind a hazy veil of lost emotions. The next morning, she receives news that Finn has died. She doesn't know what to do. ~ / . / . / ~ He dreams for the first time since Altena left Thracia, almost four years ago. He dreams about his country, the old and the new. He dreams about Thracian wyverns, with scaled wings and beaten bodies that lug themselves across the sky at a rider’s will. He dreams of Leonster flowers that cover the soil, of Thracian men who glance up at the sunlit skies as they hammer away at the hard dirt ground beneath them. He dreams about burning villages in Isaach, snow on the mountains of Silesse, the great sea that parts Leonster and Grannvale, and the rocky mountains of Thracia, sights he had seen as an adult. The strange sensation of warping, and then he is walking the city streets of Tahra, and Linoan runs up to greet him, a gentle smile on her face, flashes of his teenage years. A twist, and then he is thrust to a time when his father brings back a small girl, a golden lance, and a silver lance covered in blood as he reassures the little girl, which he remembers witnessing as a child. He dreams of his parents, of times when his mother still accompanied him, of times when they would both laugh if he sought for either of their attention. He dreams of his mother’s execution, of his eyes covered with his father’s rough hand, and when he looks again, his mother is gone, never to be seen without the blood leaking from her severed head. He dreams of his father, struck down by a single arrow from the Holy Bow Yewfelle. His wound is bloody, his hair strewn from harsh bites of the wind. Travant’s eyes are blank, his mouth curled in an eternal state of condemnation, and his fingers are clenched around a spear that no longer exists to fight for his cause. Arion dreams of killing, then, of striking men down with the great spear of Crusader Dain, the three-headed lance of silver slathered in blood. Whether it is guilty blood or innocent blood, he does not know. He has the feeling that he does not care. First is his father, a man he has so loved and despised his entire life. His father is yelling at him, his harsh voice echoing in Arion’s ears. He’s thrust backwards with the butt of the Gungnir, and he lays winded as his father yells at him, challenges him. He remembers sparring with his father, of times when his father would strike him down and tell him to get up. This time, he has a feeling this spar will end horribly. And it does, for he dashes forward and rips the Gungnir from his father’s hands. For what reason, he does not know, and turns himself in to the bloodthirst that screams at him from within. With speed, power, and precision he’s never witnessed, a work of the Gungnir’s blessing, he tears the spear through his father’s chest. His father curses and sputters his son out, a brazen and aggressive look in his eyes and over his face as less words and more breaths spill from Travant’s mouth. He pulls away then, Dain’s lance held tightly in his hand. Blood falls from his father’s wound as he lunges for his son, but he steps away. His father falls to the ground, twitching, and Arion brings the lance up. When his father stops moving, stop breathing, he lets Gungnir fall back down, and tears apart his father’s corpse, a raw look of lusty power and a seeking for blood walking through his eyes. Next he kills Linoan, Dean, Eda, doesn’t stop until everyone who served under him is dead. His wyvern darts above houses and over cobblestone streets, yelling a bloodcurdling, war thirsty cry for death. Tahra, Alster, Manster, even the little village of Fiona. All are splattered with blood, and roads are littered with countless lives lost. Soon, he’s killing the Crusaders he helped in the final Holy War. King Seliph, Queen Lana, King Leif, Queen Nanna, King Ares and Queen Lene. All lay bloodied and slaughtered beneath his wyvern’s claws. He picks the remains of King Ced off of his lance, watches Princess Julia cower and scream, and aims his lance for King Lester, who moves just a bit too slowly to avoid the fatal strike. Lastly is Altena, Princess Altena, Lady Altena, his sister Altena, and the wind tears at his hair and cloak as it leans down and whispers maliciously in his ear, is Altena. They sit atop their airborne mounts, riding beside each other like they used to when they were children. Altena is talking, her mouth moving, but Arion can barely hear her words over the rush and pound of blood in his ears, the bloodthirst welling up in his throat. A roar escapes his wyvern, and it collides with the scream that rips from his throat. Before he can stop himself, he’s buried his lance deep into Altena, watches her lips fall open before she topples over. Her green wyvern dashes off into the sky, screeching and yelping, and Altena is left dangling in the sky. She struggles with every last bit of strength she has, but he can see that her life is slipping away, the light in her eyes is fading. She’s panting, hands wound so tightly around the Gungnir that her knuckles have gone white. She stops moving heartbeats later and her arms fall limp. Her head lolls, and her long hair sweeps in front of her closing eyes. Her red lip rogue disappears behind a curtain of blood-spattered brown, and the golden crown around her head slips ever so slightly. He watches her, watches her die, bit by bit, until she’s just a weight on his lance, a weight that must be disposed of. He tilts his lance towards the outstretching sea beneath them, and Altena’s corpse slides off of the pronged end of Gungnir, falling and falling until all Arion knows about his sister is that she hit the sea with a loud splash, and that her blood is all over him. He wakes up then, gasping and sucking in the warm Thracian air of summer. It’s dead silent, and he casts his gaze down at his hands. They tremble and rock violently, unable to hold still for more than a heartbeat. The dreams he had seem ethereal, like a wisp of smoke above his head. He should know better than to believe them, but they haunt him, the promise of Gungnir’s curse in his ears. “I am not insane,” he breathes, clenching his fists. “I am not.” The silence of his castle greets his lies. Long ago, his father had told him the price of the Gungnir. Four years ago, his father had fallen to the same fate. There was no choice but for the Prince of Old Thracia to believe, to believe in the price of the Gungnir - insanity. “I suppose I am going insane,” Arion murmurs, and he drapes his arms around himself, content to shiver in the cold of the moonlight, blood crawling along his fingers and screams of his people echoing from the horizon. He knows it’s all in his mind. ~ / . / . / ~ She goes looking for Arion seven years later. Her brother gives her the pardon, and as she slips out of his room, she cannot help but feel as though Leif knew, somehow, that she would have taken to the skies once more to look for him. She spends a majority of the day in towns and flying in the sky. She’ll stop at his favorite places and look in. Sometimes she’ll stop and say hello, or grab some goods, but most of the time, she leaves immediately after she finds out he isn’t there. It’s only when the sun sets and the Leonster castle is on the horizon that she finds a clue - or rather, the whole thing. Her eyes trail on a small speck of black in the distance, flying from the castle’s general direction. “Who…?” Altena squints, directing her wyvern to fly lower and meet up with the other Wyvern Lord. The enemy spots her, and suddenly their wyvern is tearing through the sky to meet her. It takes her a simple glance at his pose to notice their incentive: to kill her. The lance in their possession and murderous aura about them makes it clear. “Don’t come closer!” Altena points the Gaé Bolg to the mysterious person, who pulls to a stop in front of her. “I am the Princess of Leonster, Princess Altena, and I will strike you down if need be!” With a flap of the other’s wyvern wings, the enemy dashes forward, thrusting their lance at Altena. She parries with the Gaé Bolg, and barely catches a glimpse of the silver lance in their possession before the enemy makes another strike. “Why…” she grunts as she blocks the blow, “do you have the Gungnir!?” As always, her enemy remains silent, and makes to strike again. Altena pulls the reins of her wyvern to the side, and as the Wyvern Lord flies just past her, she drives the Gaé Bolg through the other wyvern. It lets out a tremendous cry, and sinks to the ground as Altena withdraws her lance. She orders her wyvern to fly to the ground, and waits between the trees where the enemy wyvern has fallen. A flash of black in the corner of her eye alerts her, and she turns just in time to see the other wyvern rider slash out at her. She jumps back, dismounting her wyvern. When it cries out, she orders it to sit down, and faces the other person. “Who are you?” She whispers under her breath, as if she doesn’t want to accept the theory that has floated around her head for such a long time. They jump forward, and Altena cries out, barely dodging the blow. She moves to strike, but they parry, a perfect parry that is strangely familiar to her. They continue like this for a while, striking and parrying, lunging and dodging, hitting and missing, playing a game of cat and mouse, cat and mouse. Finally, she manages to avoid a blow that puts her directly in front of him, and takes the opportunity to stab the Gaé Bolg right into their chest. The enemy Wyvern Lord screams then, and it’s a scream that Altena has heard before, a scream that shatters the mirror of lies that Altena has laid before herself, and sends the glass fragments of her mind flying across the ground. “Arion!” She screams, letting go of the Gaé Bolg. He falls to the ground then, and she rushes forward, helping him sit up. “Al… tena?” He rasps. “I’m sorry… I’m sorry, I’m sorry!” She cries, feeling the familiar hotness of tears building up in her eyes. “It’s fine…” He chuckles, reaching his shaky hands up to bring the helmet off of his head. It falls to the ground, and a bloodied Arion stares back up at her. He doesn’t look healthy. There are heavy bags under his eyes, and they’re heavily bloodshot. His lips are bloody and cracked, with lines of blood falling from his mouth. “Arion… you’re-” “Do not worry about me… for once, worry about yourself,” he coughs, and blood splatters across his armor and over the golden lance in his chest. “I can’t worry about myself when you’re about to die because of me!” “I see… then, I suppose it’s my fault… I’m sorry I attacked you.” “Why? You know I can defend myself!” “Altena…” He grasps her hand and glances up at her, his eyes serious for once. “I went insane… the Gungnir…” A violent cough shakes his body, and Altena flinches as the grass next to him becomes coated with crimson blood. “Why didn’t you tell me?” Her voice is almost a whimper, and she squeezes his hand tighter. “You… were not yet ready… to face the reality…” He confesses, and anger bubbles up in Altena. “How would you have known, Arion!? It’s not like… you… oh… I-” “Did you forget? I… grew up with you. I… of all people would know…” “I guess I did,” Altena murmurs, running a hand through her hair. “You’ve… changed…” His voice is a gentle whisper of the wind, and he lets go of her hand. “Arion, what- no! No, not now! Not when I’ve just found you… please, don’t leave!” “I’m sorry… little sister… I loved you… to the… end…” “I… I loved you too,” she sobs, and feels the warmth seeping away from his body, bit by bit, inch by inch. Only when his body feels like snow, blocked into the shape of a human, does she move. She jerks the Gaé Bolg from his chest, and doesn’t bother to look back as she saddles into her wyvern, riding off towards the castle of Leonster. Nanna is pacing impatiently in front of the castle, and when Altena lands, she looks up, her eyes lighting up as Altena dismounts and beckons her over. “Lady Sister, you’re back! You… there’s so much blood! What happened!?” Nanna cries, dashing forward. Altena shakes her head, hands the reins of her wyvern to her sister, and brushes past the blonde, rushing up the stairs and blinking the tears out of her eyes as she opens the door to her bedroom. She shuts the door behind her, and sits on the floor of the balcony, her view obscured by the marble pillars of the railing. It not like she wants to see the great blue skies of New Thracia right now anyways. “Lady Altena?” She curls into herself deeper, pressing her legs against her chest and resting her face on her knees. “Lady Altena!” Eda cries, and from the pounding sound of footsteps, it sounds like her retainer has found her. “What is it?” She murmurs, not bothering to cast her eyes up. “Lady Altena, there was a body found in the nearby forest,” Eda says, and she freezes as her friend continues. “King Leif says that it’s Prince Arion, as the corpse was in possession of the Gungnir.” “Eda,” she looks up at the Dragon Knight bleakly, “he's dead… I killed him.” “Lady Altena, I-” Eda cuts herself off, and simply sits beside the brunette, laying her hand tenderly over Altena’s. They stay like that for countless ticks of the clock in her room, Altena too sorrowful to say anything, and Eda too frightened. “Leave me be,” Altena speaks up suddenly. Her voice is icy, like frost on the edges of her hair in cold Thracian winters. “With all due respect-” “Leave me be!” Altena’s voice echoes through her room, her room covered in torn papers and thrown books, in chaos lost to her control. Eda blinks slowly, and then slips away from her mistress, gently closing the door behind her. A flash of worry is all the princess of Leonster sees in Eda’s eyes. Altena cries then, her dignity lost and beauty crushed. She cries, and for once, the title of Crusader Noba’s descendant doesn't seem like a blessing. It seems like a cursed crown of thorns, a legend that tears her far from anything and everything she could love. She cries for the first of many times that day, and nobody sees her smile afterwards.
  3. Just wanted to point out that you listed FE3 Tiki on the data chart as from FE2.
  4. It's funny because I have both Cherche and Minerva, and since Minerva is my team leader, she's always present on the home screen. This meaning that whenever Cherche shows up she yells "Minerva", who's standing like two yards away. Out of context yelling is the best way to get people to notice you, Cherche.
  5. Eight, seven of which were pulled. They were: Minerva Effie Elise Hinoka Eirika [came as 4-star, upgraded to 5] Jaffar Rebecca Ryoma
  6. Hi. Yeah. Um. My name's Avietta. As you can probably tell, I'm new here. I don't know if any of you will recognize me. I'm mainly active on FanFiction and Tumblr. Those links are in my profile, if you want to see them later, but anyways. Since most of you don't know me, I'll tell you what I do. I write. Most of my activity is going to be towards posting one-shots and the like. I prefer to write about the older games, considering how much love Fates and Awakening have in the FanFiction base, although I'm not sure about here. I do draw, but I mainly use that as a way to pass time during classes, so it's not something I'm going to be posting all over the forums. In terms of a Fire Emblem fan, I'm not quite sure how to categorize myself. I'd say I'm more of a sucker for the older games, but I still love the newer games with a passion: especially Awakening, as it was my first game. For a count, I've played eight out of the fourteen games available. Having a MacBook hasn't made that accomplishment easy, but I've done it. Somehow. Here's a list of the games I've played, if you're interested: Gaiden Monshou no Nazo/Mystery of the Emblem Seisen no Keifu/Genealogy of the Holy War Fuuin no Tsurugi/The Binding Blade The Blazing Sword. Or Blade. Or whatever it is. The Sacred Stones Awakening Fates: All Three Routes I recently started Thracia 776. sAVE ME- Do note, though, that it takes me a long, and I mean a long time for me to formulate proper opinions on games. I played Awakening one and a half years ago, and I've still no clue how I should feel about that game. On the other hand, I also play Heroes, and have been playing it since the release. So, yeah. That's about it for me. Looking forward to a great stay here!
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