“tharivol!!” he rushes to the mage once they're all ejected out of the convoluted prison that loras constructed to trap the drow. objects and artifacts are flung across the forest floor as the demiplane collapses and implodes onto itself. the caster too is spat out and lands unconscious a few yards away like a broken butterfly. but vespin hasn't the mind to check if the chronomancer is alive or dead. he scrambles toward tharivol, pulling the sailor up by the shoulders. his scarred face twisted by a deep panic.
– i might not be able to kill you ... but i can break your heart worse than death.
loras' dark and sinister words echo in his mind. he saw the flash of malevolent magic leaving loras' hand like a barbed whip to rip tharivol asunder. once upon a time, he had seen loras disintegrated a beast with those deceptively beautiful, shimmering tendrils. his counterspell wasn't strong enough to penetrate the strings that had joined into a single beam to strike tharivol from across the room –
he didn't see what happened next. something happened that disturbed the weave all around them as loras cried out in pain and his magic crumbled, flushing them out of the elusive castle built on the grief of a mad man.
and here they are. in the rubble. he turns the drow over, feeling tharivol's face, his arm, his chest marked with a compass and an invisible hook, frantically confirming that he is still, still here ...
“h - hey ... can you hear me? tharivol, are you alright? say something!”
he was trying to warn loras all the while. the effects of magical corruption, of trying to pull on strings long severed -- the dancing along of a wizard through time meant he dangled between the old magic and the new. it never ended well for wizards like that.
summoning vespin, while not easy, is the easiest part of the equation in many ways. there's an anchor here after all. the hardest part is already taken care of. the part tharivol is expecting doesn't entirely come true, because he's expecting his blood to feed the circle that brings vespin to this plane.
what happens if you bring three remnants of a dead age into the same space? well, nothing good.
tharivol pulls at his bonds, feels them break under his grip, and gets his feet under him in time for the magic to sail through the air and strike him. it's the most pain he's been in in his life, he thinks (when he can think past the searing sensation of something trying to strip flesh from bone.)
when the castle crumbles, he's still screaming, though the resulting scattering leaves him dazed in the grass, his head lolling when vespin dragged him halfway upright. it makes his body throb in pain all over, every inch of him alight with it, and that makes him grit his teeth as he flutters his eyes a little.
" i. . .i hear you. i hear you. " he closes a hand around vespin's wrist, looking at dozens of lacerations that had opened across his skin. it burned in the warm air, enough to keep him awake with the hurt.
there's a moment where he reaches out to catch vespin's cheek, letting his hand linger there before he leans on him to try and sit upright under his own power.
" i'm here, i hear you. my body hurts. "
he scanned for loras, eyeing the chronomancer, before something in him twisted. he couldn't leave him for dead. it felt wrong to do so -- but. . .
" vespin, you're -- you'll be in trouble if you stay, won't you? "