Ymiden 25, Arc 718
Ellen stared at the canopy of leaves ruffling in the dry wind that blew off the sea. Several meters away waves rolled up the shore in their rhythmic dance before sliding back out. She'd spent a lot of time watching the pulsing water at the end of every trial after foraging and hunting for food. At the moment though, she didn't feel like doing any of it. The signal fire she'd kept going since just a few trials after washing up on this island was barely smoldering. A weak column of smoke rose from the pile of branches, leaves, and driftwood she'd collected so meticulously.
There was plenty of fuel lying nearby, but what was the point? No one was going to find her. She'd been tossing around the idea of lashing a bunch of trees together and trying to float away, but she had neither an axe nor sailing abilities. Once the half-breed had even tried to fly away--to where, she didn't know, because she didn't know where here was. But that had been a ridiculous idea. She'd flown higher than she'd ever dared before, up to where the horizon curved at the edges and everything was cold and quiet.
When she'd seen no sight of land in any direction, she knew it would be suicide to leave. Ellen couldn't swim, and she couldn't stay in the air forever. So she'd returned to her little camp and vented her frustration by repeatedly punching the beach. The beach didn't seem to care. Now she lay on her back at the edge of the forest contemplating her fate. It seemed to her that she had particularly wretched luck. Sure, there was good sprinkled here and there--but when she really though about it, things were going pretty piss-poor lately.
Patrick had left her after his Sessfiend had nearly killed her, Niv was gone--hopefully only temporarily, and all the redhead had wanted was to go home and recuperate. But no. She was stranded on this island instead. Ellen fished around carefully in the small pouch lying beside her and pulled out the seed that Niv had entrusted her with. She'd given it to her before she was--No, there's no need in thinking about that. It would only make her miserable. She'd done a decent job of keeping those thoughts at bay. Any time they tried to creep back she listened intently to the waves, letting their rolling sigh drown out everything else.
Ellen did just that again while she held the seed up in front of her face, pinched carefully between her thumb and index finger. It was somewhat broad and flat, with little swirls that looked almost etched into it. It was mesmerizing to look at. Endless and infinite. Was Niv's soul cradled inside? She closed her fist around the seed and held her knuckles to her lips.
"Sev hìtua ariwo av nïkïän iwọnotu ïdäkẹjï wiwọle miu alailesin. Tioni snätänhìtsyìp av toṣe srä," she murmured before slipping it back inside the pouch and crawling to her feet.
Her bare feet were silent on the white sand as she wandered down to the surf. Cold water rolled over her toes and splashed around her ankles. She stepped carefully into the waves, stopping when the water pushed and pulled at her naked thighs. She'd stripped down to just about nothing in her time on the island and was running around now in her undergarments because--well, because why not? She was totally alone and it was hot. So the small knotted loincloth around her waist and band of cloth around her breasts was acceptable enough. Her pale skin was burnt and peeling from exposure. Her lips were dry and cracking.
Ellen shielded her eyes from the glare of the sun with her hand. The cold water felt nice on her sunburnt legs. She blinked rapidly in relief, at least for this brief moment. The waves tugged away at her frustrations one by one. If she stayed like this long enough, she was able to imagine that she was standing on the beach in Desnind. It was the same sea. The sand felt the same between her toes. She peered at the blue expanse that seemed to the stretch on forever, uninterrupted.
Or not.
Her eye caught something in the distance. Some sort of dark blob on the horizon. She peered harder, watching for a long time before she realized it was a vessel.
"Ship?!" she screeched aloud, wading into the water around her belly as if those few inches would really help her see it better.
But it was definitely a ship. The flash of a white sail was unmistakable, and the way it bobbed slowly closer over the waves. Ellen didn't hesitate. She sloshed back up onto dry land, unfurled her wings, and launched into the air. Whoever they were, she didn't care. She was saved.
Ellen stared at the canopy of leaves ruffling in the dry wind that blew off the sea. Several meters away waves rolled up the shore in their rhythmic dance before sliding back out. She'd spent a lot of time watching the pulsing water at the end of every trial after foraging and hunting for food. At the moment though, she didn't feel like doing any of it. The signal fire she'd kept going since just a few trials after washing up on this island was barely smoldering. A weak column of smoke rose from the pile of branches, leaves, and driftwood she'd collected so meticulously.
There was plenty of fuel lying nearby, but what was the point? No one was going to find her. She'd been tossing around the idea of lashing a bunch of trees together and trying to float away, but she had neither an axe nor sailing abilities. Once the half-breed had even tried to fly away--to where, she didn't know, because she didn't know where here was. But that had been a ridiculous idea. She'd flown higher than she'd ever dared before, up to where the horizon curved at the edges and everything was cold and quiet.
When she'd seen no sight of land in any direction, she knew it would be suicide to leave. Ellen couldn't swim, and she couldn't stay in the air forever. So she'd returned to her little camp and vented her frustration by repeatedly punching the beach. The beach didn't seem to care. Now she lay on her back at the edge of the forest contemplating her fate. It seemed to her that she had particularly wretched luck. Sure, there was good sprinkled here and there--but when she really though about it, things were going pretty piss-poor lately.
Patrick had left her after his Sessfiend had nearly killed her, Niv was gone--hopefully only temporarily, and all the redhead had wanted was to go home and recuperate. But no. She was stranded on this island instead. Ellen fished around carefully in the small pouch lying beside her and pulled out the seed that Niv had entrusted her with. She'd given it to her before she was--No, there's no need in thinking about that. It would only make her miserable. She'd done a decent job of keeping those thoughts at bay. Any time they tried to creep back she listened intently to the waves, letting their rolling sigh drown out everything else.
Ellen did just that again while she held the seed up in front of her face, pinched carefully between her thumb and index finger. It was somewhat broad and flat, with little swirls that looked almost etched into it. It was mesmerizing to look at. Endless and infinite. Was Niv's soul cradled inside? She closed her fist around the seed and held her knuckles to her lips.
"Sev hìtua ariwo av nïkïän iwọnotu ïdäkẹjï wiwọle miu alailesin. Tioni snätänhìtsyìp av toṣe srä," she murmured before slipping it back inside the pouch and crawling to her feet.
Her bare feet were silent on the white sand as she wandered down to the surf. Cold water rolled over her toes and splashed around her ankles. She stepped carefully into the waves, stopping when the water pushed and pulled at her naked thighs. She'd stripped down to just about nothing in her time on the island and was running around now in her undergarments because--well, because why not? She was totally alone and it was hot. So the small knotted loincloth around her waist and band of cloth around her breasts was acceptable enough. Her pale skin was burnt and peeling from exposure. Her lips were dry and cracking.
Ellen shielded her eyes from the glare of the sun with her hand. The cold water felt nice on her sunburnt legs. She blinked rapidly in relief, at least for this brief moment. The waves tugged away at her frustrations one by one. If she stayed like this long enough, she was able to imagine that she was standing on the beach in Desnind. It was the same sea. The sand felt the same between her toes. She peered at the blue expanse that seemed to the stretch on forever, uninterrupted.
Or not.
Her eye caught something in the distance. Some sort of dark blob on the horizon. She peered harder, watching for a long time before she realized it was a vessel.
"Ship?!" she screeched aloud, wading into the water around her belly as if those few inches would really help her see it better.
But it was definitely a ship. The flash of a white sail was unmistakable, and the way it bobbed slowly closer over the waves. Ellen didn't hesitate. She sloshed back up onto dry land, unfurled her wings, and launched into the air. Whoever they were, she didn't care. She was saved.

