Isabella Amariah ⍋ "Amariah" (
dark_light) wrote2013-02-16 09:03 am
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our goddesses answer when we call
Amariah, shortly after coming home from her visit to Juliet's world, makes a breakthrough on movement-based magic.
There are seven goddesses, and four of them have compass directions, and the other three have intermdiate directions. Facing one or sending Path to fly in such a direction while she casts boosts a call to a goddess. (She's still not sure what the other motions do, if anything; they get erratic results. But she's sure about facing, and about Path's flight.) The southeast is unmarked, and facing or sending Path in that direction will amplify a spell that falls under no particular goddess's purview.
As soon as she has this figured out, she slots it into her elaborate draft of a one-target immortality spell.
She goes looking for Kas when she's rewritten the final verse and placed the final margin note.
There are seven goddesses, and four of them have compass directions, and the other three have intermdiate directions. Facing one or sending Path to fly in such a direction while she casts boosts a call to a goddess. (She's still not sure what the other motions do, if anything; they get erratic results. But she's sure about facing, and about Path's flight.) The southeast is unmarked, and facing or sending Path in that direction will amplify a spell that falls under no particular goddess's purview.
As soon as she has this figured out, she slots it into her elaborate draft of a one-target immortality spell.
She goes looking for Kas when she's rewritten the final verse and placed the final margin note.
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(Metis has a harness set up specifically for holding large sacrifice animals that can't be clenched in one hand after their docility fades. Isabella goes and makes sure it's secure.)
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The poem is long, and despite her assertion about having it memorized, she consults her notes during the recitation. Every compass point apart from the one Kas stands at is addressed by goddess, and by their moon phase or sun or starlight or Evisa Iannakara's oddball light-element of bioluminescence, and other relevant portfolio items. She's entreating them each to lay their hands (metaphorically) on Kas and his daemon and offer them the agelessness that witches enjoy.
At the last part, when she entreats Kas Petaal the patron of sacrificial magic, she sends Path on his last flight out along the compass point and she herself dives to take the life of the deer. It breathes its last as she utters the final word: "always".
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Then he flings himself at Isabella and kisses her.
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