Shura
Pounce Ninja
Rusar sat before the fire in awe for several minutes just taking the sight in before slowly coming back to her sense. The amount of magic was still overwhelming but not in an oppressive manner, but more as a sensory overload. She was used to feeling slight traces of magic when other used it. The academy was damn near soaked in it. Each type had their own special sense to it, it was slight and indescribably but made sense, to her at least. but this magic was different. Teachers called it residual magic, faint traces left behind by magicians that faded over time. The mystic fire however had a completely different sense to it even for fire magic. Strangely enough if felt more… natural? As if this creation belonged here and to disturb it would be breaking some kind of natural law. It made everything else almost seem artificial.
She sat taking everything in trying to understand the mystery before her. There wasn’t much around aside from the fire and swirls of char marks along the cavern walls. She looked down over the edge cautiously seeing nothing but intense light and pulled back. She looked down at the touched she had all but forgotten and blinked a few times noticing the ball of fire had dwindled to a small flames the smoke wafting towards the center of the room as if the head and fire was drawn to its kind. Interesting, to say the least.
Trying to figure out such questions took her back to her days of schooling where the concept of magic was very raw and new to her. The professors lectured for hours about theories and concepts making it feel almost like a science. A small smirk curved her lips at the thought of those same teachers coming across such a grand discovery. They would rack their brains for hours trying to figure out how such an anomaly could exist without something to control or maintain it.
An alarming though came to mind as she remembered those days and realized how other fire magicians would probably never get to see this. A chilling sense of loss ran through her cutting through the walls and layers she put up to detach herself from the tragedy that had befallen their country. Curious bright magicians that would have loved to bask in the glow of such a legend possibly giving birth to some sort of new magic where ways of old could be used with current methods.
Rusar took several deep breaths trying to come to reason. Surly she wasn’t the only fire magician left. Then again even if she was not everything had been lost the group of survivors huddled around a campfire was proof of that. The appearance of two other survivors also proved that there were others out there scattered and lost as they were. She opened her eyes to look up at the fire watching it swirl and move on its own. Experimentation wasn’t something she’d done often but she was there for a reason. It couldn’t have been a coincidence they found a mountain who knows how many other had ventured upon before and be the one to find the fire.
She sat up straight looking around the cavern for clues on where to start spying only the strange char marks along the walls. Faint dark figures could be made out within the char that flicking flames making them seem like they also had life. Moving as the flame did. Her gaze traveled back to the flames as she watched the swirls of odd colors. Whether thought exhaustion or imaginations she could see some kind of figure with in the fire moving and dancing with the flickering flames.
She thought back to the legend and what was known about ancient magic remembering that they had a more spiritual belief than a controlled scientific one. An offering? Prayer? It seemed rather strange but it was worth a shot. She glanced down at the torch thinking to the way its fire had been drawn away and got an idea.
She claps her hands together creating a small ball of fire to hover inches from her hands and watched in fascination as the flames tilted and swayed as if some sort of invisible wind was pulling the flames towards the larger one. With it the pulling sensation once more. “Well… that kind of explains things…” She muttered before gnawing on her bottom lip in thought. There really was no telling what such a small offering could do to a large flame but it was pulling from her already. “This is… a really stupid idea but...” She sighed closing her eyes, the cynical side of her didn’t think this would work and she felt very silly for talking to something that couldn’t really hear her.
“Help me to try and understand” She prayed quietly letting the last of the fire fade off. Rusar sat still for a few moments before peeking one eye open seeing no immediate changes. She let her hands fall to her lap and shook her head. “Okay… that didn’t…” She trailed off noticing the spiraling of the flames increase to a slight degree, the strange figure changing its tempo as other joined it. There was a loud crackle and pop as the flames grew bright. A burst of heat was expelled from the top pushing a wave of heat around the cavern and down the corridors which spread from the large cavern. It was very similar to the one felt when she first coming across the cavern only a good bit stronger.
Rusar jumped slightly by the loud crack edging back against the wall before being hit with the wave which pushed back into the wall behind her once more. As the tingling warmth of energy pasted her she felt energized for a moment then a sharp sense of nausea hit with the same tug of war feeling felt before only more intense this time around. Rusar just leaned back against the wall dumb struck but also exhausted. In the back of her mind the huntress knew other would worry if she wasn’t back at camp by morning but the worry fade along with the waking world as she fell asleep.
She sat taking everything in trying to understand the mystery before her. There wasn’t much around aside from the fire and swirls of char marks along the cavern walls. She looked down over the edge cautiously seeing nothing but intense light and pulled back. She looked down at the touched she had all but forgotten and blinked a few times noticing the ball of fire had dwindled to a small flames the smoke wafting towards the center of the room as if the head and fire was drawn to its kind. Interesting, to say the least.
Trying to figure out such questions took her back to her days of schooling where the concept of magic was very raw and new to her. The professors lectured for hours about theories and concepts making it feel almost like a science. A small smirk curved her lips at the thought of those same teachers coming across such a grand discovery. They would rack their brains for hours trying to figure out how such an anomaly could exist without something to control or maintain it.
An alarming though came to mind as she remembered those days and realized how other fire magicians would probably never get to see this. A chilling sense of loss ran through her cutting through the walls and layers she put up to detach herself from the tragedy that had befallen their country. Curious bright magicians that would have loved to bask in the glow of such a legend possibly giving birth to some sort of new magic where ways of old could be used with current methods.
Rusar took several deep breaths trying to come to reason. Surly she wasn’t the only fire magician left. Then again even if she was not everything had been lost the group of survivors huddled around a campfire was proof of that. The appearance of two other survivors also proved that there were others out there scattered and lost as they were. She opened her eyes to look up at the fire watching it swirl and move on its own. Experimentation wasn’t something she’d done often but she was there for a reason. It couldn’t have been a coincidence they found a mountain who knows how many other had ventured upon before and be the one to find the fire.
She sat up straight looking around the cavern for clues on where to start spying only the strange char marks along the walls. Faint dark figures could be made out within the char that flicking flames making them seem like they also had life. Moving as the flame did. Her gaze traveled back to the flames as she watched the swirls of odd colors. Whether thought exhaustion or imaginations she could see some kind of figure with in the fire moving and dancing with the flickering flames.
She thought back to the legend and what was known about ancient magic remembering that they had a more spiritual belief than a controlled scientific one. An offering? Prayer? It seemed rather strange but it was worth a shot. She glanced down at the torch thinking to the way its fire had been drawn away and got an idea.
She claps her hands together creating a small ball of fire to hover inches from her hands and watched in fascination as the flames tilted and swayed as if some sort of invisible wind was pulling the flames towards the larger one. With it the pulling sensation once more. “Well… that kind of explains things…” She muttered before gnawing on her bottom lip in thought. There really was no telling what such a small offering could do to a large flame but it was pulling from her already. “This is… a really stupid idea but...” She sighed closing her eyes, the cynical side of her didn’t think this would work and she felt very silly for talking to something that couldn’t really hear her.
“Help me to try and understand” She prayed quietly letting the last of the fire fade off. Rusar sat still for a few moments before peeking one eye open seeing no immediate changes. She let her hands fall to her lap and shook her head. “Okay… that didn’t…” She trailed off noticing the spiraling of the flames increase to a slight degree, the strange figure changing its tempo as other joined it. There was a loud crackle and pop as the flames grew bright. A burst of heat was expelled from the top pushing a wave of heat around the cavern and down the corridors which spread from the large cavern. It was very similar to the one felt when she first coming across the cavern only a good bit stronger.
Rusar jumped slightly by the loud crack edging back against the wall before being hit with the wave which pushed back into the wall behind her once more. As the tingling warmth of energy pasted her she felt energized for a moment then a sharp sense of nausea hit with the same tug of war feeling felt before only more intense this time around. Rusar just leaned back against the wall dumb struck but also exhausted. In the back of her mind the huntress knew other would worry if she wasn’t back at camp by morning but the worry fade along with the waking world as she fell asleep.