Samara Asenta
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The black pools of Samara's eyes shot open wide as the Horrors visited the pair with skeletal hands and piercing screams. She could see the bony tips stretch out toward her face. Feel her body tremble in Cauldwin's cloak from the pain and dread that flooded her senses.
Breath was expelled from her lungs when her valiant, black knight bent over to draw her away from the grasp of the dead. Samara drew in new breath and turned her eyes forward, down, and then to Cauldwin's side to observe the latest level of the Abyss to which they'd sunk -- a living, waking nightmare.
The philosophical or metaphysical natural of the place hardly mattered. With the shrill shrieks it was impossible to think. Scarcely possible to know they needed to get out of there as fast as possible, but Cauldwin managed the fleet of foot. Until even darker appendages lashed out at the man's legs from the liquid that surrounded them. Samara hadn't even noticed it until their progress showed obvious signs of slowing. The sound of the black fluid being thrashed by his weight had been drowned out before it began.
As Cauldwin struggled, Samara knew she needed to act. Only the Dark Elf found she couldn't conjure the dark powers that had shown themselves earlier. In fact, even the voice of Dshara had been strangely silent the entire time. Since the cell where the man found her. With no blade, Samara found herself without any means to help the man that carried her through the endless terror that surrounded them. All she could do was lay there in his arms. Her teeth clenched in response from being so useless.
Light shone in the dark ahead suddenly, which drew even her eye. It hurt to look at especially the closer they came to it, but it had to be a way out. It couldn't be worse than where they were now. Even an end would be a tender mercy. Cauldwin's progress grew ever slower even as he fought all the more against the tide of darkness and despair around them. "You can do it, Cauldwin. Your strength is greater than these pathetic shadows. This isn't the end." Words of encouragement were all Samara had at her disposal. Hopefully they were enough even from a tainted Vampire like herself.
Samara gave a choked cry as her eyes squeezed shut from the light that engulfed them. It truly had been blinding as her light-sensitive eyes were bleached by the veil they tumbled through.
Once they landed, the Dark Elf lay still in Cauldwin's arms with her eyes still shut. The ghost of the light still flooded her vision even with her eyelids firmly closed. Silence, however, reigned; the pain in her ears diminished rapidly unlike that burned into Samara's eyes.
Cauldwin soon stirred even as he continued to hold her close. Samara's breaths were slow, but shallow for a time. Even when he spoke, the Elf didn't open her eyes. "Where are we?" she asked quietly. "It doesn't feel like... before." It was too peaceful. Too serene. Even the very air around them was light and swept over them as a sweet caress. Part of the Elven woman felt afraid to open her eyes even as the echo of blindness began to fade from the insides of her eyelids. The place felt right, but at the same time wrong. If this was the place of Cauldwin's Warfather then Samara wondered what might become of her if they lingered too long.
Perhaps nothing. Perhaps everything. Samara didn't even fully understand the nature of what the Dark One had done to her soul, and what it meant to the vast cosmos -- if anything. But the darkness within did not like being there.
Cauldwin Talson Valfnyr
Breath was expelled from her lungs when her valiant, black knight bent over to draw her away from the grasp of the dead. Samara drew in new breath and turned her eyes forward, down, and then to Cauldwin's side to observe the latest level of the Abyss to which they'd sunk -- a living, waking nightmare.
The philosophical or metaphysical natural of the place hardly mattered. With the shrill shrieks it was impossible to think. Scarcely possible to know they needed to get out of there as fast as possible, but Cauldwin managed the fleet of foot. Until even darker appendages lashed out at the man's legs from the liquid that surrounded them. Samara hadn't even noticed it until their progress showed obvious signs of slowing. The sound of the black fluid being thrashed by his weight had been drowned out before it began.
As Cauldwin struggled, Samara knew she needed to act. Only the Dark Elf found she couldn't conjure the dark powers that had shown themselves earlier. In fact, even the voice of Dshara had been strangely silent the entire time. Since the cell where the man found her. With no blade, Samara found herself without any means to help the man that carried her through the endless terror that surrounded them. All she could do was lay there in his arms. Her teeth clenched in response from being so useless.
Light shone in the dark ahead suddenly, which drew even her eye. It hurt to look at especially the closer they came to it, but it had to be a way out. It couldn't be worse than where they were now. Even an end would be a tender mercy. Cauldwin's progress grew ever slower even as he fought all the more against the tide of darkness and despair around them. "You can do it, Cauldwin. Your strength is greater than these pathetic shadows. This isn't the end." Words of encouragement were all Samara had at her disposal. Hopefully they were enough even from a tainted Vampire like herself.
Samara gave a choked cry as her eyes squeezed shut from the light that engulfed them. It truly had been blinding as her light-sensitive eyes were bleached by the veil they tumbled through.
Once they landed, the Dark Elf lay still in Cauldwin's arms with her eyes still shut. The ghost of the light still flooded her vision even with her eyelids firmly closed. Silence, however, reigned; the pain in her ears diminished rapidly unlike that burned into Samara's eyes.
Cauldwin soon stirred even as he continued to hold her close. Samara's breaths were slow, but shallow for a time. Even when he spoke, the Elf didn't open her eyes. "Where are we?" she asked quietly. "It doesn't feel like... before." It was too peaceful. Too serene. Even the very air around them was light and swept over them as a sweet caress. Part of the Elven woman felt afraid to open her eyes even as the echo of blindness began to fade from the insides of her eyelids. The place felt right, but at the same time wrong. If this was the place of Cauldwin's Warfather then Samara wondered what might become of her if they lingered too long.
Perhaps nothing. Perhaps everything. Samara didn't even fully understand the nature of what the Dark One had done to her soul, and what it meant to the vast cosmos -- if anything. But the darkness within did not like being there.
Cauldwin Talson Valfnyr