10-11-2023, 03:15 PM
@Vahaelarr
the staff team luvs u
Tamir was a fool to believe his blubbering attempt to share his secrets would absolve him of his sins, bring upon him a retribution he'd been seeking out since the moment his paws left the earth on that dreadful day. He'd hoped by telling Tove it would relinquish the guilt and dissolve the fragments of pain he felt when it came to her, when it came to all of them. It was selfish, but the dues were unpaid and unyielding, the consequences creeping underneath his pelt the moment that water came within view. Even now that he'd long departed from it, its nails dragged across his skin, tugging on his senses as he boiled beneath their uncaring and volatile perusal.
It took everything in the shadowsinger to pry himself away, but he'd done so with heavy paws and a clouded mind. Flashes and echoes stuck to him like burrs, bristles digging into his sides every time he took steps further away from the Vale. They had yet to find Raenar and each day without the last piece of their trio only added to the blame Tamir bore. He'd been there that day, the day they'd perished, and he could've sworn the male followed after Tove? He was sure of it. So where was he? Had he not been as blessed as the rest? Was he cast back to the squalors of the world they'd left, at war with itself and broken beyond repair?
The thought enraged the dark man, a fit of scalding anger that tore at his chest much like it'd begun to these past few days. He didn't know it if was blame, grief, or utter rage at their stupidity, at his, or if he was merely reverting to his former self with the change in environment. Without control, he was nothing short of a fuse aching to be lit. Something uncontrollable, a person he'd banished to the back of his mind, to the dark depths of his heart the moment he'd left the shadows. But then, he supposed, everything did have a way of coming to the surface, certainly with him still so keen on the darkness lurking beyond every corner.
A sigh rippled the quietness of the clearing as the shadowman slunk from corner to corner, leering beyond trees like nothing more than the sheet of darkness he'd deemed himself to be. As of now, there was nothing for him to appreciate, no shred of faith in his mind that could've urged him to take care in stepping across the terrain with prayers in his wake—apologies to a Mother that'd let his brothers and sisters perish.
That earlier rage stroked him, purring in delight as he shirked his devoutness for a moment. He ravaged the corners of the hollow with determination. Nothing but a goal in his mind to find his brethren, even if it happened to be that he was not here at all, not in this world.
It took everything in the shadowsinger to pry himself away, but he'd done so with heavy paws and a clouded mind. Flashes and echoes stuck to him like burrs, bristles digging into his sides every time he took steps further away from the Vale. They had yet to find Raenar and each day without the last piece of their trio only added to the blame Tamir bore. He'd been there that day, the day they'd perished, and he could've sworn the male followed after Tove? He was sure of it. So where was he? Had he not been as blessed as the rest? Was he cast back to the squalors of the world they'd left, at war with itself and broken beyond repair?
The thought enraged the dark man, a fit of scalding anger that tore at his chest much like it'd begun to these past few days. He didn't know it if was blame, grief, or utter rage at their stupidity, at his, or if he was merely reverting to his former self with the change in environment. Without control, he was nothing short of a fuse aching to be lit. Something uncontrollable, a person he'd banished to the back of his mind, to the dark depths of his heart the moment he'd left the shadows. But then, he supposed, everything did have a way of coming to the surface, certainly with him still so keen on the darkness lurking beyond every corner.
A sigh rippled the quietness of the clearing as the shadowman slunk from corner to corner, leering beyond trees like nothing more than the sheet of darkness he'd deemed himself to be. As of now, there was nothing for him to appreciate, no shred of faith in his mind that could've urged him to take care in stepping across the terrain with prayers in his wake—apologies to a Mother that'd let his brothers and sisters perish.
That earlier rage stroked him, purring in delight as he shirked his devoutness for a moment. He ravaged the corners of the hollow with determination. Nothing but a goal in his mind to find his brethren, even if it happened to be that he was not here at all, not in this world.
the staff team luvs u