Alright! Here's hoping Tumblr doesn't do horrible things to the quality on this one. It did not do well when put through my messaging app...
Anyway, this is Lucifer and Alastor's first meeting! I went on Google maps street view and dropped the little guy into the middle of a forest in Louisiana and then took a bunch of screenshots to base the environment off of. The northern foresty bits of Louisiana are surprisingly coniferous, which I wasn't expecting. I knew the Bayou was mostly in the southern part, but I thought the northern area would be more deciduous. The more you know, I guess!
This one took me literally forever. Mostly because of Rosaline and the background, not gonna lie. I draw people relatively quickly. Anything else takes me hours and hours to do. I am rather proud of how it turned out, though. I tried a new thing with the shading, too! I usually blend my shadows to give them more of a softer look, but I didn't do that here. I think I like it? For the trees, at least, I think it looks cool.
As far as lore goes, I feel like this one's pretty self explanatory. Lucifer picked up Alastor mostly because he thought that adding another person to his road trip would look less suspicious than just him, and this is set before people really started thinking about the dangers of picking up some random guy off the side of the road. For Alastor's part, he doesn't trust white men, like, at all. Which Lucifer is. (Technically. Race is a little weird to portray here since I'm drawing everybody in demon form, but just know that Lucifer is, in fact, white.) Lucifer is also only five foot two and built like a sturdy gust of wind would knock him over, so there's a bit of cognitive dissonance going on there for Alastor. That's another one of his internal Things he has to work through.
[Overwhelmed is the actual prompt for the 26th, but I promised a part 2 to Betrayal, and one thing led to another and Overwhelmed actually worked quite well as a part 3 to Betrayal, so. Here’s part 2 and part 3. 2 is pretty short, but 3 got quite long.]
Niniyv was impressed. They’d thought to poison the blade, which was just about the only thing that was currently inconveniencing her. Dizzily, she fought to free her wings from the cloth wrap she’d artfully draped around herself to give an illusion of normalcy. Growling under her breath, she ripped the fabric away and let it fall.
Wings free, she strained to check her downward spiral. Biting back a yelp, wings flared, she gripped just a touch of her power and let it burst beneath her. The sudden updraft gave her the break she needed to right herself, while the sudden infusion of fel energy cleared her head. She caught sight of Aeternita, dropping heavily next to her. As Niniyv’s descent slowed, Aeternita slipped farther away. Niniyv dove.
It was more of a controlled fall than an actual catch, but Niniyv was able to somehow stop both of them from slamming into the rough sea below with enough force to break them. The fel of her spell drained away in the cold water, and her head began to swim again. Clumsily, her grip weakening on Aeternita, she began to move in what she thought was the direction of the shore.
Aeternita’s arms closed around Niniyv’s waist. “Come now, it’s just a little poison,” the death knight said, deadpan.
“Easy for you to say, when you don’t have any, you know, circulation,” Niniyv grumbled tugging insistently in the direction she’d been trying to go.
Aeternita hauled the demon hunter around with easy efficiency, and began to swim in the other direction. She was careful to keep Niniyv’s head above the water, taking facefulls of swirling sea herself. Niniyv leaned forward. “Lucky, really, you don’t have to breathe,” she offered, her words lacking their usual precision.
Aeternita frowned, and ducked lower in an effort to swim faster. Dark and forbidding, the edge of the Broken Shore rose slowly before them.
The warriors were not the only ones periodically scouting the Broken Shore. The Archdruid had sent several scouts to keep an eye on the tomb; an early warning if the hordes pouring from the breach did something more than beam up to ships to be redeployed or gather in menacing groups waiting for orders.
Dezideran had been happy to volunteer. He was still rather shaky from his brush with the Nightmare, still stiff and unpracticed in a physical body after years hibernating. Here, all he had to do was watch, and perhaps flee precipitously if he was unlucky. Carefully blending in the shadows in a crevice between two boulders, he wasn’t too worried about being spotted.
Behind him, something splashed. He froze. Slowly, his ears twitched, to catch the sound of something being dragged up onto the dirty sand just below his perch. Ragged breathing accompanied an influx of a pungent death smell. There was no large influx of additional demon scent to add to the overwhelming fel cocktail that wafted constantly over the Shore. Curious, Dez shifted position.
A death knight, armorless, stood on the sand. A ragged hole in her shirt was stained a foul green, but she otherwise seemed uninjured, unfazed. Lying next to her, a semi-conscious demon hunter stifled a groan.
“An’ what now? Call f’r backup?” The voice was slightly slurred, with pain, perhaps, but it was immediately familiar to Dez. He paused, suddenly uncertain. This was not how he’d meant to find Niniyv.
Aeternita—and now that he knew the one, the identity of the other was painfully obvious—squinted in the direction of the city floating away and above. “I don’t know.”
“Don’ s’pose you still have any first aid tricks?” Niniyv asked.
“Poisons rarely bother me, Niniyv, I don’t usually need to plan for treating them,” Aeternita snapped. “Sorry. I’m just. Aren’t you supposed to be,” she flapped a hand. “What was the point of turning your back on everyone if it can’t even help you through a little poison?”
Niniyv squinched her face, obviously unhappy with the question. “’T won’t kill me,” she growled. “T’s just inconvenient. F’r a bit. I’m all fuzzy. And weren’t you ok with this?”
Aeternita huffed a disparaging laugh. “What made you think I was all right with your decision? When I …woke up… I went looking for you. To think that you would leave your child, and turn to the very thing that drove us all apart…bah. We have bigger problems. The first of which is that you are flat on your back when you are supposed to be this all-powerful—”
“Not all powerful,” Niniyv interjected. A brief silence fell between them. Predictably, Niniyv filled it. “Haven’t thanked you yet, h’ve I? F’r watching Kiri?”
Aeternita looked down at her. “No.”
Niniyv nodded. “Prob’ly should. When I’m thinking straight.”
“You could now,” Aeternita grumbled.
“Psssshh,” Niniyv hissed. “Wouldn’t mean asmuch, would it?”
Aeternita didn’t answer. Dezideran thought now might be a good time to point out that he was, well, eavesdropping. Especially since Niniyv had turned a little greener since they’d landed. Steeling himself, he jumped down, dropping any pretense of stealth.
Both women reached automatically for weapons they weren’t carrying. Sitting, Dez raised his forepaws, shifting back to his natural shape as he did. Hands up, he said quietly, “I didn’t think I needed to be watching behind me. The bad guys are all that way.” He nodded inland.
Niniyv flung herself upright at the sound of his voice, then clutched her head. Aeternita stared at him, eyes cold and unblinking. “They still are,” she said.
“Fair point,” Dez said. “I didn’t write you any letters explaining my thoughts on…everything. To be honest, I didn’t know you were. Ah.”
“Around?” she offered, raising an eyebrow.
He turned his hands, lifting them in agreement. “I’m on your side. Bigger problems, and all that.” He once again waved inland.
“Should I leave you two to it, then?” Aeternita asked. Both she and Dez looked to Niniyv.
“This’s not how I thought this’d go,” Niniyv muttered. She looked up at Dez. “You said you were a druid now.” She half-laughed at the thought. “You got anything f’r this?” She gestured to the wound in her side.
“Casting out here is a bad idea. They’ve got magic sniffers patrolling. But I’m so clumsy at it anyway, they might just ignore the lack of threat.” Carefully he moved over to sit next to her. “Maybe if I keep it small,” he mumbled to himself, hand pressing just a hint of something vibrant and green to her side.
Niniyv hissed at his touch, drawing a ragged breath. A moment later, her color began to return to normal. Turning her head, she studied him as her mind cleared. “You look the same,” she said, quietly.
Pulling his hands back to his lap, he made a slightly strangled noise. “You don’t.”
She shrugged, turning the movement into a roll of her shoulders, stretching to see how it felt. “It made sense at the time,” she said, which was all the explanation Aeternita had gotten from her as well. She nodded up at the death knight. “Throw one her way too, could you? Even if it doesn’t circulate, I’m sure it burns at the spot.”
“Aw, you do care,” Aeternita said. “Don’t bother, Dez, it’s a mild inconvenience, and you said magic might attract the demons’ attention. And we are all unarmed.”
Dez tilted his hand back and forth. “Technically, I’m armed.”
The two women shared a glance. “Somehow, that’s not very comforting,” Niniyv said, letting a gentle lilt color the phrase with a shadow of her old teasing. Relief flooded through him. They might be ok, eventually, if she could still laugh at his poor combat skills.
He grinned back. “C’mon,” he said, standing. “There are some warriors who keep a small boat just around the bend. They might let us borrow it.”
He offered Niniyv a hand up. Aeternita was already walking in the direction he had indicated. Niniyv glanced at her friend’s retreating back, then grabbed Dez’s hand. He pulled her to her feet. She was still shorter than him, even with the horns. For a long, terrible moment, they just stared at each other, utterly uncertain in a way they had never been. He reached forward, tugged her blindfold up, and met the ruin of her eyes with a soft gaze.
“What do you see?” he asked.
“A falling world. So many targets to remove in order to cleanse that world. But if you mean, right in front of me?” She reached out and carefully traced a finger along his jaw. “Something tried to taint even you,” she said softly. “I can still see its echoes.”
“I’m stronger than that,” he said.
“Hmm, I believe you,” she said. “What do you see?”
“Desolation.” He sighed. “But I will try to look past what my mind is screaming is a ruin. After all, you have always been stronger. Certainly stronger than any taint.”
She shook her head slightly. “All talk, then. Let’s go.”
“Niniyv—” He caught her arm, pulled her in, carefully burying his face in her hair, tightening his arms carefully around her back, trying to avoid wings and horns—
She froze for one long moment, before lifting her wings, ducking her head, hiding her burning eyes against his shoulder. Ten thousand years, and this would never be enough. Too much to work through, to talk about. The distance might threaten to engulf them, drag them down to drown in decisions long since made.
Aeternita, somewhere down the beach, turned, and then stomped back. “Good to see nothing has changed,” she snapped. “You’ll have time for this later.”
It was Niniyv who let go. Maybe Aeternita was right, at that. She caught at Dez’s hand as they headed toward the warriors’ hidden docking point. He didn’t pull away, smiling slightly. The three of them, together again. The odds of saving the world had just increased.
I didn’t get to watch AoS tonight because I ended up on the phone with my best friend for 3 hours (which was absolutely lovely since I like never get to talk to her). But I also have 35 more pages of reading to do for tomorrow and I have to get up at 7:30, so AoS will have to wait until at least tomorrow, maybe later than that.
As much as I hate having to switch back to female pronouns and my birth name when I'm home, I really couldn't imagine being anything else than that role for them. Hearing them call me Ben, while ideal, would be weird, I think. I don't know. I think it was a smart move not bringing the pronoun switch into the picture.