by Nayt on Thu May 14, 2009 2:46 am
As soon as he was grabbed, Silver paused. Perhaps he was surprised--perhaps he wasn't. There was no way to tell. Once Eilert threw him, though, Silver rolled, hitting the ground shoulder first, and coming to a stop, sitting on one knee. His right knee touched the floor, while his left was only inches from his chest.
Then, the glyphs went off.
The explosion shook the general around around the man, and alongside splatters of blood which seemingly flooded the cracked stone floor in a slight radius around him, smoke and dust emitted, much like it did with most other explosions. This smoke, however, was tainted red. The sky itself seemed to shudder with the force of the attack, and the vibrant yellow forced behind the open cracks in the sky shook violently for a brief moment and began to flicker all around. The flickering was rapid at first, but as the smoke around Silver began to clear, it slowed.
Nothing remained of Silver's left shoulder--and part of the left side of his head, for that matter. The hood was torn and tattered, and only covered half of his face, which was easy enough, as only half of it remained anyways. He had his back turned to Eilert, and remained sitting just as he had before. Oddly enough, though, his left arm hung in the air, half-gone at the elbow, but it remained in the air where it should have been, as if it was still connected to the man's body. Bone fragments pushed through flesh like shrapnel, and blood dripped from every opening in and around his missing shoulder. He was a mess, and should have been dead--but he wasn't. He hadn't moved an inch, even.
The "afflicted" arm, on the other hand, remained completely unscathed.
In an instant, what remained of his left arm began to pulsate, and the fragments of bone that remained above the elbow began to crack and stretch, just like the sinew did around it. The upper left side of his ribcage began to crack back into place and tissue quickly began to reform. The pace was intense, nearly instantaneous, much quicker than Eilert's rate of healing--but different. Much, much different. The new flesh that grew so quickly seemed already laden with cuts and scars, n the arm, the shoulder, the upper chest, neck, and even the face--cut up skin over muscles that all pulsated as if they had wills of their own. No hair remained atop the half of Silver's skull which had reformed, though the cuts looked the part.
And then . . . Silver was gone, disappearing in yet another flash of blinding light.