by James » December 17th, 2006, 1:50 am
The jaguar finished rising, his form materializing into flesh from stone. Rising, rising, rising from the grave to be at the side of his father, his mentor, his creator. From stone to flesh, the undead cat was like a normal cat in shape, size and color, except for one piece- underneath the coat of vibrant yellow and white fur, the color of undeath laced throughout the jaguar's body, shimmering at a seemingly random focal point.
Argus smiled and patted the feline on the head. It purred and rubbed against him.
Turning to Blythe the mage nodded at him. "Yes, father. There are various forms of... acquiring one's familiar as a practicioner of the arcane arts. The way I created mine is supposedly a bizarre case, and my cat, though very gentle and indistinguishable from a living jaguar, is still undead and therefore he disturbs people should they discover his state of undeath. If you want to ask me how I created Art, then by all means go ahead, but not now. Now, I need to think. I need to discover what lies beneath the fabrics of my morals and my life and discover my new purpose."
Argus blew a sigh of exhileration. The cat switched its tail and peered over at Blythe, remaining in his position, keeping silent. As silent as death. Those who would turn white at the sight of the powerful muscles of the typical hunting cat would be exponentially afraid of Art. Two doses of silent expiration within one package was often too much.
Art smiled, if a jaguar could smile. He purred and rubbed against Argus more, harmless as a june bug.
"Oh! I forgot to answer your question. Forgive me, Blythe. The reason I was able to create light without siphoning my mana was because I used the wall's mana to manipulate itself, I merely told it to do so, much like you tell the orb I showed you how to create. The only difference between these is that you use mana from something to create the orb, but the wall is already there and thusly needs no rite of creation."
Once again Argus feels the weight of his articulation. Again having that hidden feeling that Blythe did not enjoy listening to lectures, Argus read the meanings of Blythe's view upon darkness. The answer felt correct. The reasoning felt correct. Unfortunately, the discomfort it collected within Argus did not feel correct.
He continued to think. Everything in the universe balances like a scale. There is life. There is death. One cannot exist without the other. There is hunger. There is appeasement. One cannot exist without the other...
Argus rattled through a large list in this fashion. While it did take him mere seconds, it felt like agonizing hours spent just organizing his thoughts like a puzzle.
Suddenly, he locked onto the point he was discovering.
There cannot be dark without light, nor light without dark. One cannot exist without the other... Yet, if there is no light, that does not mean there is no good. Light cannot correspond with the righteous or good hearted, nor can dark correspend merely with the evils of this world. Here I am, undead, yet still in my right mind, good. Here is Blythe, a vampire who is by no means evil. Good and evil cannot correspond with light and darkness, but light gives those who are born of good comfort, while... no, no, no. That is wrong.
Onward and onward he rambled in his mind, the tumulant rapids speeding forward, leading him to the conclusion he needed- He was destined to be one with the darkness, and one with the darkness he was. It comforted him, it bathed him, it clothed him, it patted him, it gave him candy. He basked in the absence of light, and visibly relaxed.
Art's tail twitched. Time returned to Argus and a smile crept upon his face, him being content to have understood his meaning for existing, however bizarre it may seem.