It was time.
He'd been spending his time tirelessly gathering materials. Wood and coal and any charcoal he could get his talons on were piled onto the forge he'd chosen, piled high - higher then he would probably ever put them, but this fire needed to last a while if his plans were to work. It would all be put to waste if it burned out before he could stoke it again.
He did feel a twinge of guilt, leaving his fire burning at its earliest infancy, but perhaps the strength of his spirit would stoke it in the place of his physical form. Or Ember would. Or Dread. It didn't really matter to him, as long as it was kept burning.
At long last, he piled the last of the wood and hopped off, taking a step back. It was a veritable mountain of fuel - enough, of course, to get the forge going and hopefully enough to keep it burning for many days. The wood would burn quickly but the coal underneath, when it caught, would last.
He cleared his throat and paced around the forge, waiting for Ember or Dread to arrive. He had called for them earlier, after all.
Ember wasn't sure where Dread had gone, but he himself had just arrived back, the day before, from a visit to Orion. He still hadn't decided which cave to remain in. Orion had Sir Hammersly's old forge, and Pride; Leo had more forges, Glory, and Dread.
Maybe a sort of... joint custody sort of thing-
...Something about this... worried him--he couldn't have said quite what. It was nothing like a seer's ability, but rather the look of frenetic energy and determination to Glory, and the strangeness of his having piled what looked like a week's worth of fuel on the forge.
It was... It was like, Ember mused, he planned to start the forge and just leave it burning, not working it at all. That was wrong--there was no reason to do that, and it'd waste fuel--and that troubled him.
@Glory
Glory straightened up, eyes bright as Ember approached the forge he'd cleaned out.
There was a spark of madness in his eyes as he turned towards the pyre, an artist that had been left alone far too long, born of pure passion and heart and hope.
Ember stared.
He didn't move much--motionless, standing in silence at first--but his expression went from loosely relaxed and friendly to tensely attentive and mildly alarmed.
Surely he must have misunderstood-?
Glory nodded in confirmation, solemnly.
He seemed to deflate a little and looked down at his feet.
He turned back to Ember, fully serious now.
Glory couldn't mean literally. No, Ember must be misunderstanding. He must have missed something, somewhere.
And, as a second consideration:
Burning-... hurt.
Faint panic rose in Ember, now--what if he wasn't misunderstanding? What on earth--or rather, what in the caves--had gotten Glory to think that burning himself alive was a good idea..?
@Glory
It seemed like his many long-winded explanations were not getting through to Ember. Or, at least, they just weren't helping calm him down. To be honest, he hadn't really expected them to, but it was better then leaving him in the dark. Although he didn't like that the more he talked, the more panicked Ember seemed. He hadn't gone that far off the deep end, surely...?
He adjusted his wings and clacked his beak, dismissively.
The mention of pain made him pause just for a moment. He sighed.
Ember stared.
He thought that Glory was insistent, in an almost obsessive sort of way, and it frightened him. He desperately wanted to run for help--to go to his father and ask what the hell to do when someone wanted to casually self-immolate.
He spoke slowly, instead, a frigid and terrifying feeling of unreality seizing him.
And suddenly, that blank feeling snapped. He stepped back, blinking, horror welling up like sickness in his gut.
The wholly disparate views--one Gembound viewing it, perhaps, as a reasonable legacy and the other, a sick horror--left him reeling. The idea of his friend screaming and thrashing as he burnt alive was horrific, and Ember didn't want to be here for that. Not to see it, but not to hear it, not to have to sit with the stifling odor of smoldering feathers-...
He shook his head, taking another step back, blinking.
@Glory
Glory nodded as Ember went over what he was requesting.
His eyes blazed.
Ember was stepping back. Perhaps he was distraught now, but Glory hoped that during his time sleeping and healing, his mind would change, at least enough to come help watch the forge in his stead. He watched him with a sharp gaze before turning and fluttering atop the pyre he’d created.
He wasn't making a coherent argument. Far from it; he was just half-frantic.
He continued, giving his heart and soul to try and save his friend from what he perceived as an idiotic fate.
From what he'd seen so far, it didn't look like Glory would listen to him.
@Glory