by Paroxysm on Tue May 01, 2012 7:56 pm
Once Trydian entered the circle, the first thing he would be to note, was that there was an elastic resistance to his entering, and, once he ploughed through that resistance, it would rebound with an audible snap and then immediately hardened until it became an invisible wall. Leaving the circle was no longer an option.
“Perhaps,” Pendaran said doubtfully, “But we will see.”
Exhaling his breath, Pendaran pointed a finger at Trydian and called to something; he grabbed a hold Trydian’s soul with his senses, which was Pendaran’s by bargain, and he separated a portion of it from the demon. What the Unseelie king had cut from Trydian’s soul began to visibly appear in the air, seeping from an invisible wound around Trydian; it was not a pleasant thing to look at, truth be told, and it reflected Trydian’s nature, the good and bad parts of the demon.
It was not pure, but Pendaran had seen darker.
With a beckoning move of his hand and finger, Pendaran pulled the piece of Trydian closer to himself, altering it until it was perfectly round, a slight ripple and wave running across its surface, and as it came to rest beside Pendaran, the Unseelie king made a similar gesture to the weapon Trydian held, which would similarly seek to leave the demon and make its way over to Pendaran.
“Like my weapon,” Pendaran explained, “I can make this sword a part of you,” he said, “I can augment it with your powers and bind it to you, and it can be shaped by your thoughts,” to emphasize Pendaran rapped a knuckle across the surface of the blade and, like the fragmented soul, the metal’s surface rippled just slightly, as though malleable and compliant to touch.
“There are drawbacks, however, and if you die, linked as you are with the blade, it will be rendered inert, and . . . If it’s broken, the shock could kill you,” Pendaran said with a smile, but his eyes were hard and cold, and it was clear that by could he meant would.
He would save Trydian the details, but, fortunately, it would take considerable effort to break this sword. Short of a Lesser God or one of their children, not many were going to find the strength and resolve required.
“The bonding is painful,” Pendaran admitted, “but the power gained is proportional to that pain. If you wish, you can back away now, because there is no stopping once we have begun.”
Between augmenting Trydian’s weapon with raw, demonic power and inscribing semi-powerful runes into the surface of the blade, Pendaran was sure Trydian could come within reach of his uncle and father. The sword would be another part of Trydian, by the end of it, and it would have the same otherwordly, supernatural powers as the demon, though they would be subdued and less potent. The runes, on the other hand, would not be nearly as overt, but, instead, they would call on the cunning, subtle powers of winter.
Pendaran could lessen the distance between Trydian and his family, but, in the end, all the Unseelie king was doing was giving the demon a boost in strength. Vylrath and Thorin Xanathi were still his seniors in combat and war, and Pendaran could not give Trydian twenty or thirty years of experience. It would be up to the boy to think and employ his powers creatively.
FATAL KERNEL ERROR_
Mind link to COMP disconnected_