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She meets eyes with the one who calls himself Arbert.

The Warriors of Darkness work in perfect harmony, tearing apart their newly reformed Scion group with frightening ease.

And then she sees those same eyes in a quiet tavern in Featherfall. Blue as heavenly skies, sad as the rain outside. They meet across the bar table in the drowsy, damp quiet, other patrons bent over drinks sweating in the sudden humidity before the inevitable temperature drop. Her usual instinct to reach for her weapon is instead replaced by a levin-shock of recognition — not of an enemy, but of someone who is looking for silence amid so much noise.

He nods at her. She nods back. He frowns; his face does not seem predisposed to such an expression, like he must work at it, but grooves have formed all the same.

She rises from her seat, slips gil upon the sticky table, and steps outside. If he doesn't follow, that is for the best. She's testing something — mostly herself. The failures grow and grow. She has a preoccupation with sticking her hand in the flame just to prove it won't burn her this time, even though her hands are red with the proof.

She watches rain drip from the old wood eaves. He steps outside.

"Where are your companions?" she asks, not looking at him.

"Where are yours?" he replies.

She meets eyes with the one who calls himself Arbert. The Warriors of Darkness work in perfect harmony, tearing apart their newly reformed Scion group with frightening ease. And then she sees those same eyes in a quiet tavern in Featherfall. Blue as heavenly skies, sad as the rain outside. They meet across the bar table in the drowsy, damp quiet, other patrons bent over drinks sweating in the sudden humidity before the inevitable temperature drop. Her usual instinct to reach for her weapon is instead replaced by a levin-shock of recognition — not of an enemy, but of someone who is looking for silence amid so much noise. He nods at her. She nods back. He frowns; his face does not seem predisposed to such an expression, like he must work at it, but grooves have formed all the same. She rises from her seat, slips gil upon the sticky table, and steps outside. If he doesn't follow, that is for the best. She's testing something — mostly herself. The failures grow and grow. She has a preoccupation with sticking her hand in the flame just to prove it won't burn her this time, even though her hands are red with the proof. She watches rain drip from the old wood eaves. He steps outside. "Where are your companions?" she asks, not looking at him. "Where are yours?" he replies.

The gift of her father is that she can sense movement like breezes. The way Arbert moves even without his armor is like a stone thrown through the air, blocky and heavy. It moves aside because it has no other choice. Does she move like that?

When she finally looks at him, he's staring at her — something calculating, then desolate, in his face. His skin is scruffy with dirt and facial hair. His eyes are painful to look at, a sharp blue the likes of which she's never seen before. All he is wearing is a stained tunic and breeches with laced boots like any common laborer, and the sight makes her gut warm dangerously.

"I am tired," is all she says in answer.

"Aye." He agrees. A beat passes. "Are you?"

She squints at him. He squints at her. Something scorching lingers about his bearing, like her answer has reminded him about his anger.

"You have the whole world to look upon," he says, dark.

She tilts her head. Twilit hair falls down her shoulders. "And you do not?"

"This place isn't mine." He watches her hair move. "It will never be mine. I don't want it."

It sounds like a mantra. The beat is familiar to her.

The hateful words of her Mother ring strangely true in this moment. Fight me if you, like, child. Some things are gone, nonetheless. "Why not? According to whom?"

"You're very proper, aren't you."

She reels from the reflexive tease.

"Whom." His smirk is nearly a sneer. "Who talks like that?"

The gift of her father is that she can sense movement like breezes. The way Arbert moves even without his armor is like a stone thrown through the air, blocky and heavy. It moves aside because it has no other choice. Does she move like that? When she finally looks at him, he's staring at her — something calculating, then desolate, in his face. His skin is scruffy with dirt and facial hair. His eyes are painful to look at, a sharp blue the likes of which she's never seen before. All he is wearing is a stained tunic and breeches with laced boots like any common laborer, and the sight makes her gut warm dangerously. "I am tired," is all she says in answer. "Aye." He agrees. A beat passes. "Are you?" She squints at him. He squints at her. Something scorching lingers about his bearing, like her answer has reminded him about his anger. "You have the whole world to look upon," he says, dark. She tilts her head. Twilit hair falls down her shoulders. "And you do not?" "This place isn't mine." He watches her hair move. "It will never be mine. I don't want it." It sounds like a mantra. The beat is familiar to her. The hateful words of her Mother ring strangely true in this moment. Fight me if you, like, child. Some things are gone, nonetheless. "Why not? According to whom?" "You're very proper, aren't you." She reels from the reflexive tease. "Whom." His smirk is nearly a sneer. "Who talks like that?"

She stares at him, unexpectedly hurt by this, for some reason. "It is how I was taught."

His voice croaks, half-amusement, half-ache. "By an old wizard or something?"

"E-Sumi-Yan is over two centuries old, yes."

He searches her face. He looks away, as if accidentally slashed by what he went digging for.

"It's not mine because that isn't what fate has in store for me." He seethes, burns, glimmers against the darkening sky. He's tall. Broad. Captivating as a sole mountain covered by snow on the horizon. "Or was I wrong in thinking you don't understand that? Should I go?"

Her shoulders slacken. She stares out at the rain pooling in ugly mud puddles across the dirt path. "Do we know each other from somewhere?"

Arbert purses his lips. "I don't know."

What a strange answer. It should just be no.

"I stole a…friend," she hedges, unsure what to call Estinien now for she knows the taste of his lips, "from the jaws of fate recently. I was waiting to be punished for it. And here you are."

This, more than anything, makes Arbert startle. She can feel the way he tenses, then relaxes, and then is confused by that in the same moment, like he has an inexplicable ache in a muscle he didn't use. "Here I am," he echoes, miserable.

She turns to watch him. She pulls her arms around herself, nails digging into goosepimpling flesh. It's getting colder by the moment.

"If I'm wrong," he says, quiet, "I've doomed the only people who still love me."

She stares at him, unexpectedly hurt by this, for some reason. "It is how I was taught." His voice croaks, half-amusement, half-ache. "By an old wizard or something?" "E-Sumi-Yan is over two centuries old, yes." He searches her face. He looks away, as if accidentally slashed by what he went digging for. "It's not mine because that isn't what fate has in store for me." He seethes, burns, glimmers against the darkening sky. He's tall. Broad. Captivating as a sole mountain covered by snow on the horizon. "Or was I wrong in thinking you don't understand that? Should I go?" Her shoulders slacken. She stares out at the rain pooling in ugly mud puddles across the dirt path. "Do we know each other from somewhere?" Arbert purses his lips. "I don't know." What a strange answer. It should just be no. "I stole a…friend," she hedges, unsure what to call Estinien now for she knows the taste of his lips, "from the jaws of fate recently. I was waiting to be punished for it. And here you are." This, more than anything, makes Arbert startle. She can feel the way he tenses, then relaxes, and then is confused by that in the same moment, like he has an inexplicable ache in a muscle he didn't use. "Here I am," he echoes, miserable. She turns to watch him. She pulls her arms around herself, nails digging into goosepimpling flesh. It's getting colder by the moment. "If I'm wrong," he says, quiet, "I've doomed the only people who still love me."

getting back in the saddle bit by bit. some #wolardbert, set in 3.4.

#emberwrites ; #eiraverse

11 7 4 0
Mother's raven-dark hair is loose, cast about her heavy shoulders. She's bent over her porcelain wash basin almost greedily, like prettiness is something she must forage from the dirt. "I know what you're going to say."

Eira swallows, dry, clutching her newly made conjurer's staff to her chest. "It's my choice."

Mother makes a nasty sound out of her throat. Ugly and mean.

"You can come with me," Eira whispers, helpless.

"How nice of you to think of me now."

In Eira's gut erupts a primal need to scream. "I didn't do this to hurt you."

Mother looks back over her shoulder. Light catches in the silver of her gaze — perfect silver, as the Dragon Father graces. Mother is a great beauty, especially according to the ways of their people on the Old Continent of Meracydia, with dark hair as long as her back and chestnut skin unmarred even now by time, but she has been poisoned by too many years of too many tribulations, even if they are mostly of her own making. "Oh? And why did you do it?"

Mother's raven-dark hair is loose, cast about her heavy shoulders. She's bent over her porcelain wash basin almost greedily, like prettiness is something she must forage from the dirt. "I know what you're going to say." Eira swallows, dry, clutching her newly made conjurer's staff to her chest. "It's my choice." Mother makes a nasty sound out of her throat. Ugly and mean. "You can come with me," Eira whispers, helpless. "How nice of you to think of me now." In Eira's gut erupts a primal need to scream. "I didn't do this to hurt you." Mother looks back over her shoulder. Light catches in the silver of her gaze — perfect silver, as the Dragon Father graces. Mother is a great beauty, especially according to the ways of their people on the Old Continent of Meracydia, with dark hair as long as her back and chestnut skin unmarred even now by time, but she has been poisoned by too many years of too many tribulations, even if they are mostly of her own making. "Oh? And why did you do it?"

fairytale about WoL Eira's life as the cursed daughter of a cursed woman -- go from my mind so i can do my work

#emberwrites

10 4 1 0

my offering this day is from my rarepair fic series last year, two chapters with #woljullus smut 😏

they are stupid for each other. heed the descriptions/tags at the beginning of the chapters...

archiveofourown.org/works/563848...

#emberwrites | #izziejullus

20 7 1 0

honestly i love a lot of the early interactions between Izzie and Jullus. so much tension and yet, the revelation they are both so young.

#emberwrites ; #izziejullus

9 2 3 0
The fine blade of longing cuts him as his fingers run through the copper tendrils of her hair.

Jullus watches them fall against her freckled back. Even sleep is something Izzie does intensely, prickly and dead as a rose bush when winter grips the star.

Once upon a time, he let ice be his crown and his reward. 

She twitches in sleep, as if she can sense the direction of his thoughts. He smirks, broken-hearted — but it’s like a lake thawing. He wants to hear the crack. 

He folds her closer to him. He kisses her neck and smells lilacs on her skin.

The fine blade of longing cuts him as his fingers run through the copper tendrils of her hair. Jullus watches them fall against her freckled back. Even sleep is something Izzie does intensely, prickly and dead as a rose bush when winter grips the star. Once upon a time, he let ice be his crown and his reward. She twitches in sleep, as if she can sense the direction of his thoughts. He smirks, broken-hearted — but it’s like a lake thawing. He wants to hear the crack. He folds her closer to him. He kisses her neck and smells lilacs on her skin.

#Vierapril 11 + 14: spring/winter

In Garlemald, there's an old story about the lady of spring and the beast of winter...

[ #emberwrites ; #izziejullus ]

17 7 4 1
Da sits at the edge of the wagon. He points his walking stick upward, toward the spindly fingers of gold.

“Kalkoro says it’s called the Burning Wall.” They shimmer threateningly against the slanted evening sun, red pulsing at the edge of them like blood. “It does…burn.”

Izzie hands her Ma a badly scrubbed cup with sand in it still. “Can we go there?”

Ma stops scrubbing the tea pot. “Absolutely not.”

“Why?”

Ma’s smokey gaze is flinty, seeing futures Izzie isn’t privy to. The insight of a mother is heavy and hard. “Word says there’s monsters.”

Izzie doesn’t look deterred. Ma purses her lips. Please not yet.

Da sits at the edge of the wagon. He points his walking stick upward, toward the spindly fingers of gold. “Kalkoro says it’s called the Burning Wall.” They shimmer threateningly against the slanted evening sun, red pulsing at the edge of them like blood. “It does…burn.” Izzie hands her Ma a badly scrubbed cup with sand in it still. “Can we go there?” Ma stops scrubbing the tea pot. “Absolutely not.” “Why?” Ma’s smokey gaze is flinty, seeing futures Izzie isn’t privy to. The insight of a mother is heavy and hard. “Word says there’s monsters.” Izzie doesn’t look deterred. Ma purses her lips. Please not yet.

#Vierapril 9: wanderlust

After the Calamity, there are new sights upon horizons that were once painfully familiar.

[ #emberwrites ; #izzielore ]

13 5 3 1
Izzie’s meandering walk eventually stumbles into a wobbly-legged jog. Her chest is crushed into bits as something expands outward from the middle of her — a dream escaped from its cage, unrolling like a map.

Orange trees with gnarled branches, grown in impossible clusters. Fruit hanging like heavy sunstones, perfectly round. Green grass. Green leaves. Green fucking vines and moss and—

Noel grew up here, in a place Izzie thought she imagined.

The sea wind tangles her hair before she reaches the cliffside. She stops at the edge, toes sending pebbles down to the ocean.

She could fall and not know which way was sky or water.

Izzie’s meandering walk eventually stumbles into a wobbly-legged jog. Her chest is crushed into bits as something expands outward from the middle of her — a dream escaped from its cage, unrolling like a map. Orange trees with gnarled branches, grown in impossible clusters. Fruit hanging like heavy sunstones, perfectly round. Green grass. Green leaves. Green fucking vines and moss and— Noel grew up here, in a place Izzie thought she imagined. The sea wind tangles her hair before she reaches the cliffside. She stops at the edge, toes sending pebbles down to the ocean. She could fall and not know which way was sky or water.

#Vierapril 6: dream

Izzie discovers that Noel grew up in the kind of place she thought she'd never see.

[ #emberwrites ; #izzielore ]

13 6 3 1
Izzie steps into Skysteel Manufactory. She squints through the stuffy heat. She breathes in oil and smoke and the ozonic tang of crushed aspected crystals and lets her eyes flutter shut as her thoughts turn to mist.

“Miss Nenelori.” The smiling voice of Stephanivien makes her jump. “Welcome back.”

She stares at him, bare. “Izzie.”

“Miss Izzie. Right.”

Stephanivien is very tall. She must crane her neck to look up at him, like so many people in Ishgard. Her voice is quiet, a little broken. “I like the work.” 

He watches her. Seeing through her. “You’re good at it.”

Izzie steps into Skysteel Manufactory. She squints through the stuffy heat. She breathes in oil and smoke and the ozonic tang of crushed aspected crystals and lets her eyes flutter shut as her thoughts turn to mist. “Miss Nenelori.” The smiling voice of Stephanivien makes her jump. “Welcome back.” She stares at him, bare. “Izzie.” “Miss Izzie. Right.” Stephanivien is very tall. She must crane her neck to look up at him, like so many people in Ishgard. Her voice is quiet, a little broken. “I like the work.” He watches her. Seeing through her. “You’re good at it.”

#Vierapril 3: work

Stephanivien knows a grief-stricken escapee when he sees one.

[ #emberwrites ; #izzielore ]

17 5 3 0
Izzie’s grip upon the tent-leg of the Dravanian tree turns slippery as she smears the rot colored bark with blood.

“Izzie!” Alphinaud hisses upward. “You’re being foolish!”

“So?” She glances down. Bad idea. The world does not spin but instead pinpoints on Alphinaud’s delicate brow, pinched with worry. “No one cares”

She swears he turns pink. The color of candies she coveted in windows in Ul’dah as a kid. “That is fundamentally untrue.”

“Stop worrying,” she grunts. She ignores the bloom of joy in her body, that he might worry, anyway. “I want to see if I can do it.”

Izzie’s grip upon the tent-leg of the Dravanian tree turns slippery as she smears the rot colored bark with blood. “Izzie!” Alphinaud hisses upward. “You’re being foolish!” “So?” She glances down. Bad idea. The world does not spin but instead pinpoints on Alphinaud’s delicate brow, pinched with worry. “No one cares” She swears he turns pink. The color of candies she coveted in windows in Ul’dah as a kid. “That is fundamentally untrue.” “Stop worrying,” she grunts. She ignores the bloom of joy in her body, that he might worry, anyway. “I want to see if I can do it.”

#Vierapril 2: tree

Izzie takes out her frustration with the Dravanian expedition on Alphinaud's nerves.

[ #emberwrites ; #izzielore ; #izziphinaud ]

13 5 4 0
1: soft

Her daughter sleeps the sleep of the drunk — open-mouthed, lips wet with milk. Izzie giggles, a rollicking thing that tumbles down her stomach.
 
Her thumb presses into Aurora’s round cheek, then over a springy, bent leg. The baby’s skin is the same warm tone as her father’s, stark against the gentle blue of her tiny ears.

“Gods,” Izzie whispers. “All those sharp kicks and she feels more like dough in my hands.”

Noel brushes hair from Izzie’s face. Her smile is soft as morning sun. “They’re beautiful.” Her blue gaze shimmers gold-laced. “Even the one screaming in the other room.”

1: soft Her daughter sleeps the sleep of the drunk — open-mouthed, lips wet with milk. Izzie giggles, a rollicking thing that tumbles down her stomach. Her thumb presses into Aurora’s round cheek, then over a springy, bent leg. The baby’s skin is the same warm tone as her father’s, stark against the gentle blue of her tiny ears. “Gods,” Izzie whispers. “All those sharp kicks and she feels more like dough in my hands.” Noel brushes hair from Izzie’s face. Her smile is soft as morning sun. “They’re beautiful.” Her blue gaze shimmers gold-laced. “Even the one screaming in the other room.”

#Vierapril 1: soft

Izzie discovers the definition of the word.

[ #emberwrites ; #izzielore ]

19 5 3 0

But for my modern writing, definitely my current project: archiveofourown.org/works/532002...

go on, let it fall
it's where I've been doing the most of my writing experimentation + exploring Garlemald + it's #woljullus what can I say. Fell into the rarepair pit.

#emberwrites

4 2 1 0
a man fighting in the snow

a man fighting in the snow

He bites wrong and his mouth fills with the taste of metal, like blood but sharper, and he nearly throws the wire down on the floor. His heart gives him a single, awful kick.

One moment at a time. Take it one moment at a time. No use being caught in the sweeping surge of ennui in moments like this. Sometimes he swears he will look at the horizon and it will be the scorching white of a bomb, the kind that will make him little more than an ashy shadow on the pavement, and too often he wonders at the relief of such a thing.

He breathes. And breathes.

The air warps.

His mouth fills with the taste of sparkling lemonade, so out of place he stumbles backward, sure he’s losing the plot this time, but whatever fluctuation created that peculiar sensation fades in a sharp zing — and instead, he comes face to face with Izzie Nenelori.

He bites wrong and his mouth fills with the taste of metal, like blood but sharper, and he nearly throws the wire down on the floor. His heart gives him a single, awful kick. One moment at a time. Take it one moment at a time. No use being caught in the sweeping surge of ennui in moments like this. Sometimes he swears he will look at the horizon and it will be the scorching white of a bomb, the kind that will make him little more than an ashy shadow on the pavement, and too often he wonders at the relief of such a thing. He breathes. And breathes. The air warps. His mouth fills with the taste of sparkling lemonade, so out of place he stumbles backward, sure he’s losing the plot this time, but whatever fluctuation created that peculiar sensation fades in a sharp zing — and instead, he comes face to face with Izzie Nenelori.

🌒 go on, let it fall. ch. 4: the reflex act of life
🌒 rated M.
🌒 #woljullus ; #wolphinaud ; Jullus/Izzie/Alphinaud

The desire to live is a hard-fought thing.

archiveofourown.org/works/532002...

[ #izziejullus ; #emberwrites ]

19 9 2 0
Garlean poetry has a strange and meandering style. Jullus had never cared for the art form. Not in school, not when he stole glances through the tomes his mother loved so much, and not when classmates would share their piteous attempts to woo the opposite sex via their wordsmithy.
But something compels him to sit with it, this strange book that has survived the elements. He settles with a sigh in the creaky bed of his tiny train car cabin, and he cracks it open to read.
He always did well in school. His math scores were perfect, his science exams all passed with ease. He could comprehend a story perfectly well, of course, and tested excellently in all matters of Garlean literature and language.
His eyes catch on a poem with a title that’s smeared.

Deep-hearted man, express
Grief for thy dead in silence like to death—
Most like a monumental statue set
In everlasting watch and moveless woe
Till itself crumble to the dust beneath.
Touch it; the marble eyelids are not wet:
If it could weep, it could arise and go.

He nearly slams the book shut. The true meaning escapes him, but the words slip in between his ribs and lance his lung.

Garlean poetry has a strange and meandering style. Jullus had never cared for the art form. Not in school, not when he stole glances through the tomes his mother loved so much, and not when classmates would share their piteous attempts to woo the opposite sex via their wordsmithy. But something compels him to sit with it, this strange book that has survived the elements. He settles with a sigh in the creaky bed of his tiny train car cabin, and he cracks it open to read. He always did well in school. His math scores were perfect, his science exams all passed with ease. He could comprehend a story perfectly well, of course, and tested excellently in all matters of Garlean literature and language. His eyes catch on a poem with a title that’s smeared. Deep-hearted man, express Grief for thy dead in silence like to death— Most like a monumental statue set In everlasting watch and moveless woe Till itself crumble to the dust beneath. Touch it; the marble eyelids are not wet: If it could weep, it could arise and go. He nearly slams the book shut. The true meaning escapes him, but the words slip in between his ribs and lance his lung.

Jullus finds a book of Garlean poetry his mother once loved.

[the poem is an excerpt of "Grief" by Elizabeth Barrett Browning.] #emberwrites

11 3 3 0