It calls us back to who we truly are.
It wasn’t that Ryori thought this entire mission was asinine. Someone had killed an Omen, and even if it had been two mortals working together that was no small feat to accomplish. Eden had always been annoying, but she was arguably one of the most powerful demon generals across all the Prime Sins, and had been serving Ozorith since he first took up the post countless eons ago; since long before Ryori had become a member of his court. The matter was certainly worth looking into, and she understood Ozorith’s desire to nip the issue in the bud. The problem was that she simply didn’t care. Frankly, she had more important things to do, namely trying to figure out what the fuck Shepard was up to and where the hell he was hiding. She had been searching for months at this point, but ever since his little plot to murder the other mortals she had saved – the ones she had learned later were father and sister to the current Sword’s fiance – it had been impossible to pick up even a whiff of the Trumpet’s scent. He knew he was being tailed, and he was doing everything in his power to make sure he couldn’t be found. It was beyond fucking infuriating, and there had been countless times since where she wondered if it would have been better to just let the two humans die. But there was no changing things now. She’d chosen her course, and the consequences were just something she’d have to live with. Still, she could do with finishing her current task before Ozorith sent her off on another like some errand monkey. Jareth could have handled this just as easily, and the fact that the lord of Wrath had pulled her away from her search to handle such mundane nonsense had put her in quite the irritable mood. Not that talking to Ozorith ever put her in a good mood, mind. He’d waited only long enough for her to return from her fruitless search in the desert before he gave her the new orders, insisting she drop everything to take care of business right then and there. She had refused at first, naturally. At this point he should have known her well enough to know that she wasn’t going to follow through with something just because he told her to. Actually, she was more likely to tell him to shove it up his ass the harder he insisted on making demands. However, it quickly became apparent to her that her quest to find Shepard had once again come to a full halt. Simply put, she had zero leads and nothing more to work off of. All she could do at this point was continue to keep an eye and ear out and hope that he slipped up, or even left a trap that she would happily spring. In the meantime, she had little else to do, and saying that she was disgruntled over her target evading her for so long was the understatement of the century. So in the end, only two days after Eden’s death, she found herself in the Silent Glaciers where the deed had been done, examining the scene. The evidence of the battle was hard to miss; there were a couple of craters, and the entire side of a mountain had been blasted to smithereens. Normally she would have expected more damage from a fight with an Omen. By all rights, the entire glaciers should have been turned into a wastelast. But curiously, the fight had not lasted long according to Jareth. He hadn’t been there, but he had been dispatched the same time as Eden, and had not been out for very long before the two men in question – Vandrad and Cedric – had returned to them without the Omen of Passion. It was curious. Even more perplexing was the fact that she couldn’t fully retrace what had happened. She had meditated at the site of battle, called upon the Weave to show her the memory of events that had passed, but a large portion of the fight was blocked from her sight. She saw the two men approach with Eden and wander into what had once been a cave, observing the ghosts of their actions as they attempted to search for any signs of their prey, but the moment the fight started everything went fuzzy like static. That had never happened before. Was the Weave deliberately hiding the events from her, she wondered, or was it something else entirely? There was only one way to find out. Closing her eyes and blocking out all of her other senses, she sank into the Weave, letting it carry her like a branch floating upon a river’s current as she focused on the images of the two men she had seen. It did not take long to find them, the Weave almost eager to reveal their location. Gritting her teeth, she reached her hands out in front of her with her palms open. The moment she locked onto them fully, she gripped her hands into tight fists and yanked them back, quite literally ripping the two men from their place in the world and dumping them before her. She would give them a moment only long enough to get their bearings, studying them with calculating blue and purple eyes that lacked any emotion. In fact, Vandrad would find that even his empathic powers were drawing a blank, leaving him with only a composed, if stern, expression to attempt to read. Despite the cold weather, she wore an outfit that, while not necessarily racy or revealing, did have a number of rips and openings exposing her bare flesh to the elements, with only a tattered cloak with fur trim around the collar to fight back the chill of the snowy lands. Blue war paint covered her forehead before fading down to her eyes, along with a thin line leading from her lower lip to her chin. Her hair was a thick mixture of braids and free flowing strands that were black at the roots and gradually faded to pure white. Almost oddly, there were an array of delicate blue and white flowers woven into some of the strands. Strapped to her back was a large double handed sword, the blade of which was a hand’s width in thickness, and from tip to pommel was nearly as long as she was tall, her own height being somewhere between Vandrad’s and Cedric’s. Ryori merely watched them as they adjusted to the sudden change in their surroundings. She made no effort to reach for her sword, nor did she introduce herself or say anything at all. However, considering the location in which they once again found themselves, there would be little wonder about who she was and why she had dragged them before her. The slight shifting of her feet as she made the most minute of adjustments to her stance was all the warning they would receive before she engaged them, swiftly closing the few feet of distance between them before she began throwing punches and kicks at them both in tandem. |