winds_voice: (Gathering Clouds)
Eleytheria ([personal profile] winds_voice) wrote2013-01-22 06:38 pm

8 - [Action]

[If your character is lucky, they might spot a new creature in the skies for a few days. It seems that while Eleytheria has been staying in the mountains, he has discovered that he can in fact change his shape. However, his shape-shifting ability is not as free as he would have liked. Even so, he is glad to be able to use a more familiar body.

You'll find a gold and white dragon, serpent-like and graceful, circling over the village and the forest and leaving a breeze in his wake. While ordinarily this dragon would possess four small feathered wings, in Luceti he now has an extra pair - the pair that render him vulnerable. While he might be large and perhaps intimidating to some, Eley possesses no altered powers in this form and is purely enjoying an aesthetic difference. It brings him closer to his spiritual origins and reminds him of home... He had spent so long as a human now, perhaps this was what he needed. A chance to find a little freedom even if in this enclosure it didn't seem like much.

The dragon will be resting in various spots around the forest and mountains and just outside the village too, giving the people of Luceti a chance to approach if they wish.]


(OOC: Eley dragon will be here for a few days~ He won't be doing anything in particular since, save from flying, his powers are the same as usual, but if you want your character to go poke him then go for it! Also I have a WIP reference here. Sorry, no icons, you'll have to use your imagination. ): )
merelychewed: (Default)

[personal profile] merelychewed 2013-02-17 02:09 am (UTC)(link)
I had hoped, perhaps, he could be changed...

[ But he had only been fooling himself in the end. Even vows made on one's deathbed had meant nothing. ]

That they can be. Emotions can be ever twisted against you, yet I still would not spurn them, for all the trouble they cause. Hmm. [ And to the question, he inclines his head downwards, not quite a nod, but close enough. ] I learned to hide from the world after that, which did me no good. In the end, I returned to fix my mistake, at a great cost, but it was what it had to be. To make up for what I had done.