📚 elegy for a star Part 111 of 12
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SCIENCE FICTION FANTASY

Elegy For A Star Ch 111 130

Elegy For A Star Ch 111 130

by elegisterotica
19 min read
4.89 (1600 views)
adultfiction

I combined these chapters because this is a long stretch of no NSFW chapters. If you are in this for the NSFW, skip to Chapter 127 and 128. The next batch will have a lot more NSFW!

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Chapter 111 - The Hurricane

It was difficult to hear anything over the sound of wind and rain beating against Joyona's armor. She could only take one step at a time. Her armor dug hooks from her heels, piercing into the ground to stabilize her body and keep from being picked up by the rush. Still, with the soil so damp, it was never a guarantee. "Yerthwerk!" Joyona called out, "Can you see Miren? Aku?"

Her pauldrons flapped, her gorget rattled. Yerthwerk was speaking to her and Joyona could understand. No, he replied in a series of coded fidgets of her armor, But I will tell you when I can sense them. Joyona made a slow advance toward what she thought was the eye of the hurricane. The way out must be there. It must. Joyona wasn't afraid for herself, but she was afraid for Miren.

Mairaela hated her and for that reason alone, Joyona wished that she could muster up the anger to defend the Summer Fey from Miren's jabs. She couldn't, though. Miren had done nothing wrong. She was from the Winter Court and for that she was hated. She was different, that's all. She knew the same could have been the case for her own people. Perhaps it was because they were more imposing it became difficult to hate them too openly. Winter Fey, while alone, were not as much of a threat. Then again, Joyona had seen Miren fight. Perhaps she was more of a threat than any of them thought.

There was a series of clicks and snaps in her armor that Joyona could only hear as an echo within her helmet. It was too loud outside to hear the typical sounds that Yerthwerk would make. One of them, he told her, To your left.

One of them? Aku was protecting Miren. Whether it was Miren or Aku, them being separated was extremely dangerous.

Joyona pivoted and trudged, following the sound of Yerthwerk's clicking to guide her in the proper direction. The faster the clicks, the closer she was. It kept her on the proper course.

It took some time to peer through the debris, but Joyona spotted the great, white wolf trying to balance himself, desperately searching around. Aku turned and snapped his jaws at Joyona, growling, "Have you found her?!" His fur was soaking wet and he struggled to look at Joyona through the pouring rain.

Joyona shook her head and called over the noise, "What happened?!"

"Does it matter? She's not here! We need to find her!" Aku snarled.

Joyona could see that the wolf was struggling to balance itself. It wouldn't be carried away by the wind, but it could be toppled and rolled across the dirt. "Stay here, I'll look for her!" Joyona called out. Aku growled something, but Joyona couldn't hear him. She was too socially anxious to risk asking him to repeat himself, so she risked the chance that it wasn't important, but hated herself for letting her anxiety control her in such a dangerous situation.

"Let's go, Yerthwerk," Joyona spoke within her helmet, feeling the acknowledging squeeze of her metal companion around her body. She trudged her way as hastily as she could in the direction the wind traveled. It was difficult to see past the cloud of dirt picked up by the wind, the pouring rain and dripped from her visor, the stones and branches carried around in whipping circles, clattering against her armor. Joyona was struck in the back with a firm force--a larger than usual stone, perhaps--and knocked forward. Yerthwerk threw bracing rods of armored metal from Joyona's shoulders and knees, digging them into the ground and keeping the giantess from falling forward more than a foot.

"Thanks," Joyona grunted, once more acknowledged by a squeeze of her armor. Every time he did that, it felt like a hug. It was the hug that Joyona had wanted since departing from her Cairn. She had missed him during her time at Kravana. She hadn't spoken to Yerthwerk since that morning in the Void Exercise when Gwen caught her speaking to, well, seemingly nothing. He was a friend. A construct, sure, but a friend nevertheless. There was sapience within his metal frame.

To your left again, Yerthwerk stated with a rattle of the helmet and a metallic snap of the left pauldron, I believe it's Miren.

Joyona hurried in that direction, stumbling for a moment in her haste, but pressing onward with Yerthwerk's aiding support. Miren was huddled against a short, wide tree stump, the rest of it having been ripped from its base. She hugged it desperately, arms and legs both. Joyona could see blood running down her cheek from a deep cut upon her temple. She didn't seem to notice Joyona's approach.

The giantess knelt down next to Miren, pulling the Winter Fey into her arms. Yerthwerk's metal plates shifted, breaking away from the front side of Joyona's body to envelop Miren within him as well. It was a tight squeeze, certainly uncomfortable, but Miren was pulled into the suit of armor beside Joyona.

"Joyona?" Miren asked, looking dizzy and worn; completely out of breath, "Where am I?"

"You're in my armor," Joyona replied, already turned around and hiking her body slowly against the wind back toward Aku. This was even more difficult with the weight of the hurricane trying to throw her in the opposite direction.

Miren squirmed inside the metal, grunting, "You can't make it a little more comfortable, can you?"

"Not without exposing ourselves more than we already are," Joyona replied. The armor on her right flank was spread thin, revealing part of her body to the wind and rain. Blowing rocks and branches struck her exposed side, the winds and rain chilling her to the bone. She was their rock, though. She would bear that for her team and Miren was a part of the team.

When Joyona returned, Aku was still huddled down, trying his best to keep from losing his balance. "Aku!" Miren called out, forming an echo that rang in Joyona's ears.

The wolf looked up, eyes peering through the rain and wind, "Miren?!"

"She's in the armor," Joyona replied loudly but calmly, "Let's get out of here."

Aku rose to his feet, but the winds threatened to roll him anyway. Joyona braced the giant wolf against his flank, "Let's move."

"Which way is the eye?" Aku shouted, using Joyona's weight as a support to keep from being taken by the wind.

Yerthwerk clicked and whirred, flapping and squeezing in different intervals across Joyona's body. Forty-five degrees right, he said.

Joyona followed his instructions, "This way!"

It was a long and treacherous journey, but with Miren safe upon her left and Aku steadied upon her right, Joyona carried the team through the hurricane and into its calmer eye.

Not all of the wind was gone. There was the occasional gust that whipped through the eye, but the rain was over with and for the most part they could stand in relative peace. Joyona released her hold on Miren, letting her fall from the embrace of her armor. She steadied herself against Joyona's flank, adjusting her windswept hair to its relatively proper place, tied behind her back. Joyona wondered why she bothered, considering how wet it was in the first place.

Joyona's helmet folded off of her face, merging into her gorget. She turned to look at Miren, "All set? I think you lost your rapier."

"I should have it when we get back out. I still have a dagger, anyway," Miren replied. There was something about her face that looked sad. Perhaps she was ashamed that she needed the giantess' help. Miren was a proud woman. It wouldn't be easy to say thank you, but Joyona knew she didn't need to. She knew Miren was grateful.

Ahead of them was a glowing, white gate. They'd made it. Joyona felt some relief, beginning a slow march toward it. She'd saved everyone. She felt proud. She felt confident for once in her life. She did well. She was a hero.

Joyona turned and began to move toward it.

Yerthwerk spasmed across her body just before there was a punch in the side of her neck. A sting. A burn. Joyona could feel blood welling in her mouth in an instant, and it became difficult to breathe. She felt like she was drowning. A hand whipped up to the wound, pulling a dagger out of her throat and throwing it to the ground. The giantess was confused. What hit her? What danger had she not seen?

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Her helmet formed around her head just as she fell to one knee. She heard Miren say something, but not what. "Run," she tried to say, only managing a gurgle, spitting blood onto the inside of her helmet. There was a white light. A warmth. Yerthwerk was healing her.

Before she could breathe again, she felt herself squeezed around the torso and legs. She looked down to see Aku's jaws wrapped around her body. He was crushing her. Why? Did she offend them, somehow? Did she mess up? What did she do wrong?

She was on her back, feeling Aku's jaws begin to pierce Yerthwerk's metallic skin. Miren was standing over her, covering her mouth with her hand, sobbing.

"What-.." Joyona managed to cough out.

"I'm sorry," Miren said, "I'm so sorry, Joyona."

Joyona felt Yerthwerk crumple under Aku's bite, and Joyona's ribs exploded as she heard the wrenching snap of her armor.

Chapter 112 - Those Who Remain

Tess' throat was so tight she struggled to breathe. Her chest rose and fell and she tried to keep herself from hyperventilating. Tess had to hug herself. This wasn't happening. Joyona didn't make it? Joyona was the toughest of them all, how could she not have made it?

Gwen was tearful, but simply hung her head. Mairaela however, the Summer Fey was wracked with heaving sobs, covering her face in her hands and bawling into her palms. Even Miren looked haunted, her face damp with tears. She'd never known the Winter Fey to have such little composure.

Tess couldn't believe it herself. Just moments ago, they were invincible. Joyona, especially, was invincible. This just wasn't possible.

"Did you get her lost soul?" Mairaela asked Miren.

Miren's eyes went wide in realization and she shook her head, "No, I-... it never showed up!"

"Then she's alive!" Mairaela shouted with renewed vigor, "We have to go get her!"

Wydwen, sitting down beside the group, shattered that hope, "The portals to the second trials have closed."

"She was dead, Mairaela," Miren assured her Courtish counterpart, "I promise... I-.. I checked. Maybe I didn't stay long enough to see the Lost Soul form."

Mairaela looked like a ghost of her former self, eyes red and wet, hands shaking. "N-no," Mairaela stammered, "She's alive. I know it. I know she is."

"Even if she was," Wydwen explained, "She is trapped in that world forever."

"I-... hate you," Mairaela hissed, looking at Wydwen, "You and your fucking trials. I have been constantly degraded, haunted... and now you-... you trapped Joyona?" She had to curse through clenched teeth, "We are never taking you out of here. All we have to do is kill you to end this. That's what we should have done at the start."

"You know Joyona wouldn't have wanted that," Tess said softly.

"Don't talk about her like she's dead!" Mairaela screamed at her.

Miren insisted, "She is, Mairaela. Believe me... she was... her body was-..."

Gwen shot her a vicious glare just as Tess reached over to squeeze the Winter Fey's shoulder a bit roughly. Miren paused, nodding her head.

"I have done what I could," Wydwen spoke with an unintentional purr, "I warned each one of you about the second trials. Mairaela, I willed the device out of you to spare you further hum-..."

"You think I want to hear about that now?" Mairaela asked incredulously.

"Mairaela, Joyona didn't make it, so we need to finish this place and get home," Gwen said, quickly changing topics before reaching over to touch Mairaela's back. The Summer Fey shook and jerked away from Gwendolyn. She was so vulnerable, shaking her head.

"I don't believe you," Mairaela said softly, "I don't believe any of you. I know... she's-..." The Summer Fey began to choke on her words. She shook her head still, refusing to hear or give the truth any consideration.

Tess looked down at her feet for a moment. She was quiet. They all were; grieving individually in their own way. Well, as best they could given the situation.

The four of them broke apart, sitting separately among the upside down tower. Mairaela sat by a chandelier that jutted upward like a candelabra, but the others were resting against the stony walls. Except Miren. The Winter Fey stood, turned so that her back was to the others. Tess could see her shaking now and then. She was crying as much as anyone. Tess thought it was touching that Miren was so upset about someone she knew so briefly. She didn't know that Miren and Joyona had that sort of connection.

An hour of this silence passed by. Tess was staring at the furniture upon the ceiling when Miren spoke up.

"I-... I can't keep it to myself," Miren said softly, "I thought I could. I'm so ashamed, but I need to tell you all what really happened."

This caught their attention. Gwen and Tess looked over. Mairaela sat with her head hanging between her raised knees. She didn't budge, but she was listening as much as anyone.

"It was me," Miren said wearily, guiltily, wiping tears from her eyes. Her words were shaky, her arms wrapped around her midsection for comfort, "Joyona died saving me."

Gwen looked back to the floor, but Tess watched Miren closely.

"There was a storm that we had to push through, and I got lost. Joyona rescued me," Miren's voice wavered and she briefly broke down into choking sobs. Her words were tight, disturbed by desperate breaths and genuine distress, "When we got through it, there was one more monster.

"It-... She killed her, but-... it was because of me," Miren's lips quivered, eyes squeezing shut, "I just had to leave. I couldn't-... I tried..."

"The thing is still alive?" Gwen asked.

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Miren paused. She nodded as though she was only just then remembering it.

There were a few more seconds of silence before Gwendolyn spoke up, "We need to go. Let's finish the Trials and go back home."

Miren pushed herself off of the wall. Tess stood up.

Mairaela didn't budge.

Gwendolyn gave her a couple seconds before snapping, "Now." Her anger was clear in her tone. Tess could only imagine what Gwen was thinking. If she knew Gwen at all, it was guilt that was tearing at her. The once-knight took too much upon herself.

Tess was experiencing a wave of guilt herself. Everyone else dealt with horrific challenges and torment. Tess' Trial was hedonistic and decadent. It was pure pleasure. Why did the Trials make this distinction?

The guilt squeezing away at Tess' heart was more of a Trial than what she actually faced within the portal.

Gwendolyn trudged toward the still unmoving Mairaela. Once Gwen was standing over her, the Summer Fey slowly rose.

Filled with sorrow and mournfulness, the four of them--plus Wydwen--continued on to the next floor.

"Ready for the third Trials?" Wydwen asked just as easily as he'd done last time.

None of them disagreed, at least, and Wydwen must have taken that for affirmation. The white light washed over them and Tess was whisked away someplace else. She wondered for the briefest moment if that would be the last time she saw one of them, just like before, when it had unknowingly been the last time she'd seen Joyona.

Tess found herself standing on a stony floor. To one side was an expansive, brass rod, 8 feet at its widest portion, slowly tapering to a small lens at the bottom. It stuck out of the side of the building, aimed at the sky. Tess was drawn to it, her bare feet padding along the stones. When she reached it, and its upturned lens, she peered through.

It took a moment for her vision to focus, but through the device she saw an empty darkness, speckled with stars. They were so much clearer. Larger. Closer.

Among them, noticed only by the absence of them, was a great void. The Black Sun. It was far away, though. Further away than she'd ever seen. It wasn't here yet.

"Hey," came a voice from behind her.

Tess spun around, only to see a green-eyed, pale woman with dark brown hair. She was wrapped in a bright red cloak, wearing leathers underneath.

"Who are you?" Tess asked, trying to quell her sudden panic.

The woman reached out, offering a hand, "Oh, we've met. Name's Krahe."

Chapter 113 - The Heroic Divine

"Krahe?" Tess replied. She was certain that her face betrayed her absolute shock and, well, a little bit of fear, too.

She had gotten a better look of the room she was in. Everything was built of limestone bricks, if Tess had to make a guess. Rectangular in shape, a singular hallway on the right, multiple windows on the left. Judging by the open sky beyond, they were in some sort of tower. On the other side of the room however--opposite the gigantic looking glass--was a crumbling portion of the room. The wall was missing, the floor and walls giving away with a ruinous pattern. Beyond it was a sea of clouds; Just how massive was this tower, to breach the sky?

Scattered about the room were various trinkets and constructs, most contained within glass-covered pedestals. There was a great red-and-gold suit of armor that looked like it could move at any moment. On the opposite side sat a pair of boots that were stabilized upon an airtight-contained cloud of smoke as easily as they would on the limestone floor.

The person standing before her had dark-brown hair, practically black, and deep, green pools for irises. Her athletic build suggested a great deal of work outdoors, but the scarlet cloak she wore must have protected her from Thyr's withering gaze because she was quite pale. She wore a smirk as comfortably as her clothing, one eyebrow pitched upward in amusement as though Tess were a joke in and of herself. She was youthful. Younger than Tess. Was she even fifteen?

The cloak she wore; Something about it drew her in. Tess occasionally found herself lost in its enticing color.

"Yep. Krahe, in the flesh," the rogue held her hands out to either side. There was a triplet of parallel scratches across her right forearm. The slash of a claw? The way she spoke betrayed a maturity far beyond her apparent age. "Been looking forward to finally having a little face-to-face time," she added, "You've really gone and fucked things up."

An anxiety gripped Tess at her core. What was it that she'd done?

"I don't understand," she replied.

Krahe let out a sigh, "Yeah, I know. I'm being cryptic and vague, right? Hey, there's a reason for it, I promise. You can't know yet." She reached out and gave Tess a friendly slap on the shoulder.

"Can't know what?" Tess asked, quickly realizing what a moot inquiry it was.

Krahe just chuckled and stuck her tongue out for just a moment.

At the same time, a number of individuals entered the room from a side hallway. Five in all. Six, if Krahe was included. Tess recognized the brutish and armored Maeros from her dream not too long ago. He was significantly younger than she remembered him, though. The gray hair from her dream was black instead, and many of his wrinkles and scars were gone. In her dream, he looked ruined. Right now? Right now he looked hopeful.

Besides him, Tess was uncertain about the others. A ragtag group of Wyrden and warriors.

"Who's this?" An underkin dwarf questioned sternly.

Krahe waved him off, "Stuff your shit, Dolen, she's a friend."

"What's a 'friend' doing here?" He replied with a grumble of a voice.

"The plot thickens!" The Summer Fey dressed in brightly-colored, cortier's clothing laughed, "More and more mysteries. First the Winter Fey princess, then the Sphinx, and now strange allies appearing out of nowhere?" When Miri vanished, Tess had to go to Scirocca for information on the Heroic Divine. Judging by what she'd learned, the colorful man must be Rahberon, a minstrel from Valkaria's royal court.

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