handsofwinter (
handsofwinter) wrote2019-03-30 11:11 pm
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All That Are Fallen (for
coldsong)
They retreat through the storm, invisible. Engine noises deadened and buried beneath the howling gales; hulls silent in tell-tale wavelengths and shielded from prying radiation by their cloaks. For most anyone they’d be nigh-impossible to track, even with the most sophisticated and cunning of sensors.
But there’s always one, isn’t there?
Loki can follow the little fleet through the frenzied snow and the roar of wind, over the dim shadows of forests splashed dark over the terrain below, the thin ridgelines that merely hint at tricky crags and sheer precipices. They travel fast. It’s not long before they begin to descend into a shallow, snowbound valley.
They’ve been at work here for some time by the look of things. The valley is criss-crossed with long hills- no, they look more like barrows, all blanketed in a thick layer of snow and swarming with activity in and out of round doors. The transport ships join others circling above and begin to offload their passengers, adding to the general din. The three largest barrows form a great rough triangle with only a couple of smaller structures between them. There is the heart of the encampment – and the noise. Vandals and a few captains in particularly good armor move among the others, directing chaos into order. Shanks lift into the air and fly to one barrow in formation. The injured limp or are carried in one direction, some with seared and blackened limbs or armor spattered shiny with blood. A dreg shrieks as his companions try to lift his scorched armor to check the burns beneath. Other dregs are tasked with taking the dead away, laying them out under the supervision of a vandal with a different style of helm and clothing.
But others are simply packing up their weapons and gathering around the officers counting heads. And others- others who were already here, are clearly sorting booty. Beneath a rough tent crates are stacked high and others lie open as the dregs beside them lower inventory tablets and cheer for the returning army. Before them lie piles of blankets, computer parts, miscellaneous trinkets… and a lot of books.
The sorted crates are being picked up and taken to the biggest of the barrows. The one with the biggest banners hung before it, and the most disciplined and armored guards beside its door. And the one before which decorative poles have been driven into the ground. Atop them sit skulls. Most look human.
Here be monsters, then. But monsters with voices, and as their speech slowly resolves itself around him, as snarls become words and words become orders, questions, greetings-
Here, too, wait answers.
But there’s always one, isn’t there?
Loki can follow the little fleet through the frenzied snow and the roar of wind, over the dim shadows of forests splashed dark over the terrain below, the thin ridgelines that merely hint at tricky crags and sheer precipices. They travel fast. It’s not long before they begin to descend into a shallow, snowbound valley.
They’ve been at work here for some time by the look of things. The valley is criss-crossed with long hills- no, they look more like barrows, all blanketed in a thick layer of snow and swarming with activity in and out of round doors. The transport ships join others circling above and begin to offload their passengers, adding to the general din. The three largest barrows form a great rough triangle with only a couple of smaller structures between them. There is the heart of the encampment – and the noise. Vandals and a few captains in particularly good armor move among the others, directing chaos into order. Shanks lift into the air and fly to one barrow in formation. The injured limp or are carried in one direction, some with seared and blackened limbs or armor spattered shiny with blood. A dreg shrieks as his companions try to lift his scorched armor to check the burns beneath. Other dregs are tasked with taking the dead away, laying them out under the supervision of a vandal with a different style of helm and clothing.
But others are simply packing up their weapons and gathering around the officers counting heads. And others- others who were already here, are clearly sorting booty. Beneath a rough tent crates are stacked high and others lie open as the dregs beside them lower inventory tablets and cheer for the returning army. Before them lie piles of blankets, computer parts, miscellaneous trinkets… and a lot of books.
The sorted crates are being picked up and taken to the biggest of the barrows. The one with the biggest banners hung before it, and the most disciplined and armored guards beside its door. And the one before which decorative poles have been driven into the ground. Atop them sit skulls. Most look human.
Here be monsters, then. But monsters with voices, and as their speech slowly resolves itself around him, as snarls become words and words become orders, questions, greetings-
Here, too, wait answers.
no subject
She sits back on her throne, with the air of one well-satisfied. "Have you listened enough, Loki of Askaar?"
no subject
And she is confident enough to be certain of her victory against Blaze should she return to life to face them again. Loki stares into the dead optics pensively, breathing in deep of the air around him, senses unfurled and alert for the scent or taste of a lie of any kind. There is much he does not know here.
"My curiosity will never be sated, Baroness," he tells her. "I have never listened enough. It is not in my nature."
He pulls the pike free with a fluid twist and tucks the disembodied head under his arm. "I assume I will be permitted into your territory at least once more, to return with word from the Nexus?"
no subject
Others will come, she said.
"Rehnarr named you an ally," she says now, and waves a hand as if to brush aside any quibble he might have with that specific word. "You may walk the storm among us. And after, yes. Come with your message."
Trapped and silent, Ghost's pale blue gaze follows his Guardian's head. He's so close, so close, cut off from the steady ember of Light he can still detect in there. If he could just reach it...
But the Fallen are watching, and there's no chance of that.
no subject
They just want to be left alone. That their approach to achieving that goal is so harsh is unfortunate. It may win them the opposite of what they desire, in the long term. Time will tell.
"What you ask is not unreasonable, though I am not sure why you have chosen to come and settle in this place. It's a shame the anti-violence field has failed us all. Had no fatal blows been struck between you and the mortals, this would be easier. Were there some kind of central authority in the Nexus that anyone truly recognized, this would be easier-but then it would not be the place it is."
There is much at stake here, far more than the life of Blaze and her Ghost. More than a momentary peace between hostile groups, neither of which really own the land they live on. There is a precedent to be set here.
"I will raise no hand to your House save in self-defense, or in defense of the few people I claim. I would learn more about you, should your terms be accepted and a truce succeed, but perhaps that is a matter for later discussion."
"In any case, I thank you, for a window into what will prove to be an interesting discussion, and possibly a monumental change in the Nexus itself."
no subject
Her scorn is momentary. The Baroness is not inclined to give much away of her intentions, besides what she demands of the Nexus denizens. Why should she, after all? As well announce her plans to the Guardians. She rumbles acceptance of his promise, inclines her great helm a very little. "My Eliksni will let you pass. Let the Houseless squabble until they decide. Return with their answer. Then... we will talk again."
no subject
"I suppose Death is prepared for us all," he adds mildly, though he's not sure Pelsor is being quite that philosophical. "Even the gods perish, at the end of things."
The Nexus is a kind of insane quantum-mechanical singularity. People from thousands of adjoining universes come here and dwell and play, sometimes set down the squabbles and vengeance they bring from their own worlds, sometimes carry them at their sides despite the change of venue, but in the end no one knows what created this place, what power sustains it, or why it is the way it is. A year from now, a minute from now, the whole place might go unstable and collapse, might decide to become hostile to all carbon-based beings, might become a lake of magma rather than a chilly winter world. But living things are reckless, and they will stay here, and build lives here, regardless.
None of them should be taking the place for granted. It's stupid, really. He likes that about it.
He has so many more questions for Pelsor, but to linger now would be to court failure. He can be annoying later, if it seems like an effective tactic. He is playing diplomat now, and he bows to her once more. "For now, then, I take my leave, Baroness. But I look forward to speaking with you once more."
no subject
Meantime, she lifts a hand, gestures for him to go. She does rumble a farewell, of a sort: "Until then, Loki of Askaar." One gets the impression anyway that her English fluency isn't suitable for poetic courtesies, if this is that kind of court.
Lexoris moves back to lead the way again. The guard follows again, and they're still keeping watch, but things seem subtly less tense when they head back the same winding route they came. Loki's still going to draw just as many stares and startled hisses from the Eliksni they pass, however.
no subject
"You're different," he murmurs in one of the quieter corridors. "I wonder what it is you see when you look through someone, or something, as you do."
He doubts he'll get an answer, but maybe he'll get a reaction, and it might tell him something new.
no subject
"Sometimes much. Sometimes little." He stops before a side door, a second before it opens to admit a servitor and its attendants. Lexoris waits respectfully for the machine to glide off down another corridor before he looks up at Loki.
"You are..." and he's not sure of this word, now, not sure it carries the correct weight in this alien tongue, "undecided."
no subject
He watches the servitor glide by curiously, having no clear idea what the significance of this machine might be to the Eliksni, but certain that it is, to them, vitally important. Another item on the mental list of things to inquire about that he's creating. Too much inquiry would be pushing his luck right now, but if a truce can be established, maybe later there will be time for more. Time to study, for lack of a better term.
"Undecided?" He repeats. "Do you mean that you are uncertain what you see in me, or that you sense that I am undecided about something?"
In fairness, if it's the latter, Loki wouldn't be able to deny that.
no subject
"You look... like a human. Like Reef-dwellers. It is strange. But that is just shape, yes? You are more. Like Rehnarr. Like... ghouls, another way."
no subject
"I am a shape-changer. I can look more like a human and less like one, should the mood take me. My birth form was like this, though. Blue, with red eyes. Smaller, of course."
"Do your people have no concept of gods, or immortal spirits?"
no subject
"We know gods," he says slowly. "Machine gods of Eliksni. Gods of Hive. The Great Machine. All different. Whose god are you?"
no subject
"I suppose that's why Reynard described me as kin. But I was raised by the Aesir, who you might mistake as human at a glance. But they are not. They are longer lived, far more physically powerful, and many are sorcerers."
no subject
"These Ay-siirr... were human, once?"
no subject
Surtur was far, far bigger than any Jotun, but no one called him a 'fire giant'. It is a bit peculiar now that Loki thinks of it.
"No. No, they were never human, but the superficial resemblance is undeniable. There are a number of beings like that here, you'll find, I think. Not everything that looks human is human, and there's a variety of types of humans as well, because so many worlds meet here."
"As to why Aesir and human look identical at a glance...well, their stories, human stories, claim the first two humans were created by Aesir. But the Aesir claim no such thing."
no subject
"You say they do not trust you. Why?"
no subject
That's unrelated to anything Lexoris has been asking him, of course, but maybe Loki just felt like talking to fill the silence.
He laughs softly when asked why he's mistrusted. "I have a checkered past. I am known as the god of lies, or the god of mischief. Most of the humans here that know me know me as the person who attempted to conquer their planet, at the head of the Chitauri army."