Mar 23 2025, 03:26 AM
S E L R I C
AW | The Warrens | Emergence
There was nothing.
Not sound, not silence, not darkness nor light—just a complete absence of thought and shape, of sentience and sensation. By all definitions, he didn't exist. Not truly. There was no self to hold on to, no space to inhabit, and no reason to know the difference.
But then, there was something.
It didn't arrive like a light being switched on. It was far quieter than that—a slow awareness, curling inward from nowhere and everywhere. A pressure that formed around him, and suddenly there were edges—something enclosing him, surrounding him, defining him. The weight came steady and close, wrapping around every part of him as though the world had always been pressing in, and he had only now been given the means to notice.
He couldn't even begin to understand what it meant, only that it was here now. There, and unavoidable. And so the pressure grew, ticking away until it felt like his body—or whatever vessel it was that he could only assume was him—was pushing back.
Something shifted inside the space. Not a thought, not a decision—just a pulse. A flicker of energy that jolted through him and trailed outward in every direction. It came without warning, sudden and strange, as something deep inside him tightened—fibers or strings or whatever it was that bade him move, drawing taut in scattered bursts. Nerve endings lit like sparks against stone, and somewhere in the confusion, something moved. A twitch. A ripple. Motion born from whatever he was.
It startled him.
Not in a way he could name, but in the way that things change when they shouldn't. In the way that the stillness buckled, and with it, everything else.
Cracks formed along the edges of the space around him. Not just physical ones—though they were there too, splitting the hard boundary that held him—but fissures in whatever quiet had cradled him until now.
The silence, once endless, began to fall apart.
A flicker of something came in the space beside him. A zinging, light and thin, like pressure stretched too tight in a single place. He didn’t know what sound was, but it felt like the shape of movement with no touch to go with it. A tickle at the base of his awareness. A fluttering in the hollow behind it.
The enclosure gave way.
Cold slipped in first. It slid along his side, and something beneath the surface jerked in response—an instinctive flicker, more reflex than decision. He didn’t understand what had triggered it—only that the sensation simply came, and his body reacted before thought could catch up.
Light followed shortly after, then sight. Neither made sense. Everything was unfiltered, each stimulus colliding in a rush of color and movement. His body trembled, unsteady beneath itself. He blinked without knowing the purpose of the action, and his eyes caught on things he had no names for: scattered pieces of something solid, strange textures climbing vertical, glistening surfaces that bent the light in ways he didn't understand.
He stayed where he was, curled loosely on a cold surface. His limbs felt stiff, unfamiliar. The rise and fall of his chest came unevenly, as if breath, too, was something his body had to learn. It was quiet around him, and yet everything felt too loud.
There was a strange sensation in his chest—not anything that spoke of discomfort, but a kind of weighted presence that pulsed in time with the air he pulled in. Something important was there. Something central. That, at least, was easy to understand.
A fragment of something slid from his shoulder and clinked softly against the surface that stretched beneath him. Instinctively he turned his head toward the sound, slow and unsure, and watched it settle.
His jaw slackened, but no sound came. He didn't know what he had meant to do—whether to speak, or breathe again, or simply respond to the strangeness of existing. But whatever it was, it passed without answer. He blinked once more, slow and uncertain. Then he stilled.
Not sound, not silence, not darkness nor light—just a complete absence of thought and shape, of sentience and sensation. By all definitions, he didn't exist. Not truly. There was no self to hold on to, no space to inhabit, and no reason to know the difference.
But then, there was something.
It didn't arrive like a light being switched on. It was far quieter than that—a slow awareness, curling inward from nowhere and everywhere. A pressure that formed around him, and suddenly there were edges—something enclosing him, surrounding him, defining him. The weight came steady and close, wrapping around every part of him as though the world had always been pressing in, and he had only now been given the means to notice.
He couldn't even begin to understand what it meant, only that it was here now. There, and unavoidable. And so the pressure grew, ticking away until it felt like his body—or whatever vessel it was that he could only assume was him—was pushing back.
Something shifted inside the space. Not a thought, not a decision—just a pulse. A flicker of energy that jolted through him and trailed outward in every direction. It came without warning, sudden and strange, as something deep inside him tightened—fibers or strings or whatever it was that bade him move, drawing taut in scattered bursts. Nerve endings lit like sparks against stone, and somewhere in the confusion, something moved. A twitch. A ripple. Motion born from whatever he was.
It startled him.
Not in a way he could name, but in the way that things change when they shouldn't. In the way that the stillness buckled, and with it, everything else.
Cracks formed along the edges of the space around him. Not just physical ones—though they were there too, splitting the hard boundary that held him—but fissures in whatever quiet had cradled him until now.
The silence, once endless, began to fall apart.
A flicker of something came in the space beside him. A zinging, light and thin, like pressure stretched too tight in a single place. He didn’t know what sound was, but it felt like the shape of movement with no touch to go with it. A tickle at the base of his awareness. A fluttering in the hollow behind it.
The enclosure gave way.
Cold slipped in first. It slid along his side, and something beneath the surface jerked in response—an instinctive flicker, more reflex than decision. He didn’t understand what had triggered it—only that the sensation simply came, and his body reacted before thought could catch up.
Light followed shortly after, then sight. Neither made sense. Everything was unfiltered, each stimulus colliding in a rush of color and movement. His body trembled, unsteady beneath itself. He blinked without knowing the purpose of the action, and his eyes caught on things he had no names for: scattered pieces of something solid, strange textures climbing vertical, glistening surfaces that bent the light in ways he didn't understand.
He stayed where he was, curled loosely on a cold surface. His limbs felt stiff, unfamiliar. The rise and fall of his chest came unevenly, as if breath, too, was something his body had to learn. It was quiet around him, and yet everything felt too loud.
There was a strange sensation in his chest—not anything that spoke of discomfort, but a kind of weighted presence that pulsed in time with the air he pulled in. Something important was there. Something central. That, at least, was easy to understand.
A fragment of something slid from his shoulder and clinked softly against the surface that stretched beneath him. Instinctively he turned his head toward the sound, slow and unsure, and watched it settle.
His jaw slackened, but no sound came. He didn't know what he had meant to do—whether to speak, or breathe again, or simply respond to the strangeness of existing. But whatever it was, it passed without answer. He blinked once more, slow and uncertain. Then he stilled.
"Speech."
Round: | N/A |
Attempt Made: | N/A |
Defense: | None |
Injuries: | None |