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Demeter Gray [ Inactive Character ]
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No one said it would be easy (Closed)
« on: March 31, 2015, 07:55:32 AM »
Demeter reached her mind out to her most extreme leaves and coiled them back into buds. All over her current form, the borad oak leaves folded themselves up into neat little bundles of green.  the buds hardened off and shrank back into the twigs and stems from which they had erupted.  For a brief period it was difficult to tell which bald branches belonged to the baringer-elect and which were those of the trees grown in the shrine of earth and tended by the acolytes, but as Demeter continued to morph back into her human form, the rapid movement and apparently backwards growth indicated that which would soon be flesh.  Twigs shrank into branches, branches into boughs and the boughs themselves were drawn back into the main trunk, excepting two that drooped down opposite one another, adjoining the trunk at just a few feet from the ground.  The bark of the tree began to smooth itself and lighten in colour as a humanoid shape became visible. Once all vestiges of flora had been disappeared, all that remained was a woman standing arms aloft, the eyes on her upturned head gently closed giving her face a look of peace.

She lowered her head and opened her eyes, stepping out from between the other trees as her bare feet squelched over the leaf-mould. The acolytes who she had come to know well over her past seven decades in the council helped Demeter into the harbinger's regalia, though she chided them for their solemnity and reverence.  The shrine of Earth had always been a rather informal affair under her predecessor, those with an affinity for that element being much more down-to-earth than some of the more cerebral elementals, and Demeter had no intention of lording it over her 'subordinates' any more than the last Harbinger did. These were her friends, to many of them she was as close if not closer than she was to her own family, and she certainly did not want them kowtowing to her in the slightest. Nevertheless, the regalia were a bit clumsy to don by herself and so she did allow them to help her on with certain parts of them.

Demeter hovered just inside the threshold of the madin shrine, listening to the hubbub of the gathered elementals outside. This day had been a long time coming; she had been preparing for it for a decade and everyone at the council had been hugely supportive, but it was still quite difficult to pluck up the courage to take those first steps out into the courtyard and in front of the whole council. She took a deep breath and counted down from ten, centering her thoughts and quashing her emotions. Once she reached one, she exhaled and started walking forward. The acolytes of the shrine started to applaud and Demeter couldn't help but smile. She had spent a few years as one of them earlier in her life and it warmed her heart that they were so pleased for her. She turned her head back towards the earth shrine and shot a playful glare at her companions, only now noticing that one of them had cast some variation of the spell madin adaugesco and the path from the shrine to here was sprouting with flowers.

Facing forward again before she started laughing at the ridiculousness of it all, suddenly today didn't seem so daunting.  She looked around as she continued on her journey to the central courtyard, smiling serenely at everyone. Once she reached the centre, she held up her hands and waited for the noise to die down.

"Thank you all, you are so very kind.  It is with mixed feelings that I stand before you today.  Harbinger Gavin Evans was a dear friend and mentor to me, and his return to his element is a great loss to me personally and to us all.

"Nevertheless, we must remember that all things must pass so that the circle of life and the balance of the elements can be maintained. Having returned to the earth, the late Harbinger will go on to nourish and support all manner of creatures, which I know he was looking forward to.

"I do not pretend to be in any position to replace him, but I hope that his legacy will live on through me and I will endeavour to discharge my duties in a way that he would be proud.

Demeter's demeanour softened and she abandoned the lofty public address voice she had been using. Instead she simply smiled and spoke in a much more casual manner. "I've never really been one for speeches, so lets get on with this." She raised her voice again once more to properly kick off the proceedings. "Which element will issue the first challenge?"
« Last Edit: September 11, 2015, 06:49:13 AM by Zachary Incarnadine »

Dermod Larkin Morfessa [ Death Eater ]
1378 Posts  •  59  •  Straight  •  played by Carys
Re: No one said it would be easy (Open to Zealots/Harbingers)
« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2015, 05:20:08 PM »
~NPC Candelario Sandoval~


A fire burned at the centre of the Incin shrine. One might imagine a cheerful, warming blaze confined within a simple hearth, but this was fire of a different kind. Reaching some twenty feet into the air, the column of flames rose from a bare stone floor, seemingly fed by nothing. Colours laced through the flames; predominantly red and orange, but fading across every shade from carmine through vermillion until even tiny licks of white and blue were intermittently visible. Up close, the fire was searingly hot; mere feet away it shed nothing more than a pleasant warmth, and nothing of the blaze suggested it was anything but perfectly controlled.

Leather-shod footsteps approached slowly, and a figure stopped in front of the column of flame just before the heat became uncomfortable. Soft words in Council gaelic seemed to cause a reaction in the fire and the outermost flames flickered, at first almost imperceptibly and then more rapidly as the column began to shrink. The figure resisted the temptation to step backwards, but even knowing there was no danger, especially to himself, it took a certain amount of willpower. But he stood patiently as the flames diminished and then, as he had known would happen the column gradually took on a vaguely human shape. Torso, arms and legs of pure flame that gradually coalesced into a figure clad in plain robes of deep red, white hair and beard neatly trimmed yet too long for fashion; blue eyes sharp and knowing as they had been a century earlier yet sunk into a face deeply lined with age. Candelario Sandoval raised his hands and watched with a faint smile as the last vestiges of his element returned to within and his fingers returned. He flexed them gently and returned the greeting of the figure standing before him.

"It is time, then?" he asked, turning to be assisted into the sleeveless, ceremonial robe that he would wear over his everyday robes. His voice still betrayed a trace of his native Spanish, though it was less noticeable in Gaelic than when he spoke in English or French. He had been speaking the language so long it almost felt like a part of him. The other regalia he would have shunned; but for a ring set with an emerald-cut ruby, rumoured to have been handed from one Harbinger Incin to the next for a dozen centuries, on his left index finger; and a smaller, marquise-cut carnelian on the third finger of the same hand. But this was a solemn occasion, the challenging and subsequent welcoming of a new Harbinger, and today everything must follow tradition.

Lario knew what to expect; his own challenges had been just a few years earlier after all, but this was the first time he would welcome a new Harbinger. He had mixed feelings. Admiration and respect for Gavin Evans, now returned to the Earth, but also happiness for Demeter. She was the perfect embodiment of Madin, and he had no doubt she would lead them well. But first came the testing, as it had always done. "Let us not keep them waiting" he said to Bogale, the acolyte.

Within the courtyard there was already quite a gathering, and he exchanged greetings with many of those he recognised. But at the back of his mind was what was to come. This would feel like...attacking a friend. And yet, tradition demanded, so he must obey. 

When Demeter arrived, her acolytes applauded, and Lario smiled warmly. He didn't miss the slight stiffness with which she held herself as she approached the centre of the courtyard, nor the way she relaxed once she noticed the floral path in her wake. At first she seemed to have abandoned her usual informal style; but then she relaxed, and it was the Demeter he had known for decades.  "Which element will issue the first challenge?" 

Nobody moved. Lario glanced around the courtyard; everyone seemed to be waiting. Were the other Harbingers as reluctant as he? The seconds stretched out, and he took a step forward.

"As a wise man once said, 'So shall the weakest be first'." he paused, and the trace of a smile crept across his lined features "Or if he didn't, he should have done." his voice took on the more formal tones the occasion demanded, the proscribed words. "Demeter Grey, you stand before us wishing to prove yourself as Harbinger Madin. So shall you be challenged, and should you prove worthy, you will be accepted."  Then he cast INCIN MULTERNIS*, silently, without warning. Dozens of small fires surrounded the woman, springing up in concentric circles and growing in intensity until each burst fully ten feet high, their heat suddenly fierce and doubtless frightening to those who didn't understand the nuances of their control. Knowing that Demeter's second element was Hor, it would be interesting to see how she dealt with fires that, while easily extinguished with water, would immediately be replaced with other, higher blazes. He just hoped she would beat this challenge before the courtyard became an inferno.

[*OOC: It's not listed in the guide, but basically multiple versions of the eternal fire]

Demeter Gray [ Inactive Character ]
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Re: No one said it would be easy (Open to Zealots/Harbingers)
« Reply #2 on: August 21, 2015, 06:09:29 AM »
Demeter smiled warmly at Candelario as he stepped forward.  She was fond of the old man, such a humble fellow - aside from Harbinger Garth he was easily the eldest and most learned of her soon-to-be peers and yet he insisted his element was weakest.  Sure, this may have been true on paper, but with the better part of two centuries under his belt Lario was a formidably powerful elemental.  Demeter's smile began to falter as these thoughts passed through her head, but Lario's aside soon calmed her nerves again - hopefully he would go easy on her. She resolved her face into something representing reverence whilst Lario issued his challenge, and then the whole world burst into flames.

Demeter's immediate response was to call upon her second affinity - the counter to that which now surrounded her, but she dithered.  Somehow it didn't feel right to use hor magic during her investiture as Harbinger Madin.  Still, as the concentric circles contracted towards her and expanded outward toward the crowd she had to take some action.  Lario would have the flames under control, she knew - they wouldn't be allowed to harm the congregation or damage the shrines, but that wasn't the point. The point was to see how she dealt with it and she needed more time to think.  As the flames seared hotter and hotter, pressing inwards and presumably outwards too, she instinctively meddled with the soil levels, and sank herself and the fires into a twenty foot pit to contain the inferno.  Right, that was everyone else protected, now what about her.

Having spent the last couple of decades or so developing her second affinity, the fire was really getting to her.  The poor woman was dripping with sweat and beginning to feel lightheaded as she wracked her brain for a form that would weather the heat better while she collected her thoughts.  Suddenly it struck her - how foolish she had been.  Some of the first plants Nikodim had brought her back from his travels was perfect here. They symbolised the synthesis of their two elements perfectly, and would be a very poetic way of dealing with her current situation. She whispered a message of thanks to him, for no one's ears but her own, then set to work.

Demeter closed her eyes and filled her mind's eye with the image of one of the shrubs in question "Madin adaguesco".  By her feet, a Banskia sp. protea sprouted in a patch of ground that was yet to fill with fire.  Feeling it beginning, she shifted the image to another species, then another, and soon she was standing in a patch of Australian shrubs with corky stems that resisted the heat well.  They unfurled their leaves as they grew rapidly to maturity, putting out flowers that appeared fantastically alien looking to a western eye.  Quickly the flowers set seed, and then the real magic happened - the magic of nature.  Demeter liked to think of these plants as phoenix shrubs.  They were pyriscent - plants adapted to survive through raging bushfires, either as individuals or as a species. As Demeter released her mental grip on a portion of the plants and allowed their growth to slow, she accelerated some even further so that they shrivelled and dessicated, dying back and soon enough Lario's fire caught them and they burst into flames, bringing the fire ever closer and spreading it throughout the grove of proteas she has sown.

The fire licked at those plants she had allowed to stall in their growth, taking on some and burning them to the ground (thereby fertilising it with their ashes), but being resisted by others until they had a chance to complete their life cycle. The heat caused the now swollen seedpods on these plants to burst dramatically open and chemicals in the smoke kickstarted the germination of the next generation, before the parent plants too succumbed to the fire.  The ashes and seeds smothered some of the columns of flame that Lario had started, and now she poured her energy into rushing the growth once again.  Those plants which had not seeded sprouted back from underground nodules that became active in the wake of the fires, and those seedlings that were born out of the fire were encouraged to quickly and repeat their cycle.  In the space of a few minutes, Demeter pushed the patch of bush she had created in Inverness through multiple generations and the fires became more and more patchy, unable to find defoliated areas to take hold. 

Having poured a lot of energy into the plants, Demeter took the opportunity to morph into a fire-resistant protea herself whilst the last few flames were beaten back and smothered.  Resting for a few minutes in this form, she could sense that her task was completed. She reached out with her roots to take back into herself as much of the life force of the shrubbery as she could.  It died back and shrivelled around one particularly resplendent specimen in the centre that, after a few seconds began resolving itself back into Demeter's human form. The woman surveyed the sinkhole she had created, now covered in a layer of super-fertile ash. Once satisfied that the flames were not going to reappear, she levelled out the ground again, raising herself up back to the level of the congregation.

"Fire may destroy, but in doing so it refreshes the earth and makes way for the next generation.  Madin feeds Incin, but is not consumed and will rise again from the flames stronger and renewed." Demeter spoke the words solemnly for all assembled to hear before flashing a thankful smile at Lario.  Her spirits were bouyed by her success in her first trial.  One down, four to go.  "Which element shall be the next to challenge me?"

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