| Welcome Ghost ( Log In | Register ) | Resend Validation Email |
|
ANNOUNCEMENTS
2nd September - Congratulations to Element and Fy'Ra, our Spotlight and Community Souls for August! - More edits have been made to the Rules, including a standardized mature topic title marker. - The Rule changes also include the banning of embedded content, including Flash and Javascript applets. Members have one week to remove existing embedded content before it is manually pruned from the board. - The Staff page has also been reorganized. 19th August "Excessive powerplay or godmoding" has been added to the list of bannable offenses because for some reason it wasn't there already! :o |
fund total: $112.16 |
![]() ![]() ![]() |
| Kris |
Posted: Jun 17 2009, 06:21 PM
|
|
|
Wanderer
|
|
|
|
|
| Requiem |
Posted: Jun 17 2009, 07:16 PM
|
|||
Cathubodva the Morrigan MILITIAE SPECIES AMOR Boudica |
500+ The woman had carried the body from the boarders, lifting it in her arms. The body was heavier than she had expected, as if, without life, the shell that once harbored the wolf named Ril’o became as the earth, a rock returning to the source. She had taken the body to Cercelee, walking the long way to the Church, carrying that body with great care. The head was cradled, as if it mattered. While the warrior did not often exhibit such compassion for a dead body, her mind was understandably connected to the death of the packmate which she now carried upon her shoulders. With her destination having been reached, the Dahlian Adonis had hidden nothing from the white leader. The Warrior knew that she had brought Corvus Vendetta to the Dahlian boarders. Her incompetence had brought Death upon Ril’o, and the Warrior promised the Rosea now that she would stop him. Silently, she promised that she would go to him, to kill him, or to be killed, perhaps even subdued as her mother had been. Whatever must be done to stop the crow wolf would be done. That was what Cwmfen had promised. As Cercelee built the pyre, the woman tended to the body, locked in the kitchen where the pups would not be exposed. The woman had felt some regret for having brought the embodiment of Death to the family, but she knew that Cercelee must know, and she knew that the Rites of Death must be performed. It would have been unjust to the soul of the fallen to be delivered without the ceremony and respect that was deserved, and as Warrior, the woman knew the importance of such rites. The blood and the wounds were cleaned with clean water and a rag. The gaping hold in his neck could not be closed for the flesh had been torn off, so the woman simply cleansed the place that no longer bled. Once the body had been prepared, the woad warrior looked down upon him, vowing once more to him that she would not rest until Corvus were dead or until she were dead. Her woad bound hand was placed upon his shoulder as he was lay there upon his side, as if to solidify the magnitude of the vow. Had she been Roman, the vow would have been the equivalent of swearing upon the River Styx. Having carried the body to the Rosea that stood upon the pinnacle of the cliff, the warrior lay the body to rest upon the pyre that had been prepare. Together, with her leader, the warrior collected the flowers in silence, the white and red having great symbolic worth to the warrior: purity, death, power, blood, and the blessing of the gods. The sweet smell floated on the night air, and as the final preparations had been complete, the two leaders of Dahlia rested, awaiting the coming of Dawn. The white orbs were turned to the dark heavens and the horizon in the east, her mind wandering. Her soul was content, ready to do what she must. And with Dawn, with the sending off of the first fallen of Dahlia de Mai, the woman was resolved. The Rosea rose first and Cwmfen followed. Cercelee laid out the final tinder to be ignited. The black female took a short, blunt stick that had been prepared and lit it with the sparks that Cercelee provided. And with the final words that were gifted to Ril’o, the woman lowered the flaming torch into the tinder, igniting the pyre and the body together, sending the dead upon his journey. "May your journey to the Land of the Dead be safe and untroubled," the alto melody sang, her voice just above a whisper. And the pied Raven came as if called, lingering above the smoke that rose with the rising sun, as if to collect the soul to carry to the lands beyond where no living creature could go. The white orbs looked through the flames to watch the Rosea of Dahlia de Mai in silence. |
|||
|
|
| Kris |
Posted: Jun 20 2009, 11:05 AM
|
|
|
Wanderer
|
|
|
|
|
| Requiem |
Posted: Jun 21 2009, 03:46 PM
|
|||
Cathubodva the Morrigan MILITIAE SPECIES AMOR Boudica |
If anyone wants to make their little appearance, now’s the time~ 500+ The heat of the flame was drawn by the dark colour of her fur, but the tongues of the flames were kind and did not singe her even for her close proximity. The acrid smell of smoke imbedded itself in the soft scent of her fur, soft fingers incessantly rising with brightened ashes to the heavens. But they did not lift her soul. The world sung quietly and her soul hummed in response as the sword would in her hand, as the spear would in her grip. But the songs were quiet, subdued by this time of mourning. The sadness within the warrior was a diluted feeling as was her guilt and her anger, but it existed there and she recognized it. As the Rosea blew upon the ashes, the white orbs followed their trail upon the wind that gently carried them to the open sea. And the sea of eternity accepted them in silence as one accepts a thing gifted. The child of Nemain felt a quiet contentment. Although neither the Rosea nor the Adonis were specialized in the rites of the dead, the soul of Ril’o had been sent with ceremony to that land of the Undying Souls. He no longer lingered within these lands, and she felt that he would not return to linger and taint the earth with a dissatisfaction that some dead had. And Ril’o was no angry soul. She knew that he would find solace in those Untraveled Lands and forget the troubles that this life had brought upon him. With a soft sigh that seemed to signify an end, the woman turned her eyes to the heavens only to find that the pied Raven, having levitated upon the place above the pyre, had gone once more. She gave a respectful bow and watched the white Rosea as she departed. For along while, the black female simply stood there as if in deep thought, as if in careful consideration. Then, as if content with what had been found, the warrior, with a brief acknowledgement of those who had come to gather at the place of mourning, she turned to the last remnants of the pack member that she had failed. And as warrior, she did believe that she had failed him. There was a quiet determination within those white orbs as the sun glinted off of their pure colour. Fluidly, she strode to the last remnants of the fallen wolf before lowering herself at the edge of the cliff as if in meditation. Slowly, the form melted away to yield the primal shape of the wolf, her posture straight and still as if frozen in time. The light played across her fur, illuminating those woad designs of power and protection, as if drawing in the energy of the world so that a future task may be completed. The woad warrior sat in silence, her gaze turned toward the calm sea of morning, lingering at the body’s place of rest and dwelling upon the path that she must take and upon the things that must be done. |
|||
|
|
| Miyu |
Posted: Jun 23 2009, 07:19 PM
|
|
|
Wanderer
![]() |
Slaying the Dreamer
|
|
|
|
| |
Posted: Jul 5 2009, 12:29 AM
|
|
Wanderer
The gorls love me ;D |
Sankor had been fighting with himself for hours on if he was going to go or not. He didn't want the world to know how deeply the death of his friend effected him but he knew that there would be talk if he didn't show. The male was torn between emotions and guilt. He wanted nothing more than his friend to return, to know that they cared that he would be missed. Sankor came close to the area where he knew that the funeral would be held and he stopped in his tracks, closing his eyes and trying to gather himself before stepping out into the clearing.
There were no words to say as the dark two toned male approached the blaze that once had been his friend. The hair along his back stood on end as he watched the flames lick around Ril'o's body. He lowered his head as the others settled around the pyre. There was nothing he could offer his fallen friend but instead the dark mahogany male titled his head back and let his voice lift to the clouds above. The lonely sound of his howl echoed across the lands as he let the song rise to the heavens, hoping that the only gift he had to give would usher his friend home to the next life. |
|
|
| AG (for Anime Girl) |
Posted: Jul 12 2009, 11:59 AM
|
|
Wanderer
|
The news had travelled, as some things did here, through the pack grapevine, so when the call came, Lubomir wearily made his way to the rest of his packmates. He couldn't really say why he was here. After all, he did not know Ril'o at all, had never spoken to him, although his face was familiar from pack meetings and chance encounters. His death had been a shock, the thought of someone coming into pack lands to murder in cold blood something he could not fathom. Lubomir had wanted to stay away, had wanted to hide and ignore that there was no need for him to be there. But from what he knew, they'd shared a rank together, they had been responsible for the pack together. And yet Lubomir was here, alive and breathing, and this one was not. There were not many here. He could see the leaders, of course, though Haku was conspicuously absent. Lubomir felt a light sneer curl his lip. Of course the male wouldn't be here to pay his respects. Why should he? Let the women lead and ignore the rest. He stood silently as everyone paid their respects. How eerie it all felt. Lubomir looked away. How much did it really remind him of his own pack's demise? There had been no ceremony there, there had been no pyres, nothing to mark the passage of his family to the world of the dead. And there would be none, unless he braved the great distance and held some ceremony for them. In his heart, Lubomir mourned his loved ones with every breath. And now he would add Ril'o to his list. "May Fenrir guide your way from now to the world of the spirits. May your journey be easy and painless. May you not remember the pains of this world to enjoy the good of the next. You will be remembered, Ril'o." Lubomir looked to the stars. They promised clear, warm nights and days of languish, nights to dream of better things. But now, all was cold and painful in Dahlia de Mai. One of their own was dead. |
|
|
![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() |