Tumgik
#Chyrus and Thenios are bros
Text
Steadfast - October Writing Prompt
Thank you to @toastvogel for suggesting Chyrus. He is the best paragon <3 
..................
The Archon sits on no throne, but even without one, many kyrian often see her as a more distant figure. It is understandable. Even if she wasn’t a god, she is the leader of the realm. By her will is Bastion maintained, and by her hand are the ascended directed. There is more work that goes into doing even those two dealings than most will ever know, and she does so much more than that. It is a wonder she ever has time to address any of her subjects.
In that way, Chyrus can’t help but wonder—hope, really—whether she is at least somewhat protected from some of what is happening right now. She is not at the temples, watching their brethren fall before each other’s blades. She can feel the realm wither around her, in spite of her will, but she cannot see how that crushes the spirits of those relying on her unwavering resolve. She is spared their doubts.
Until those doubts become too powerful.
And then she is blindsided with the betrayal.
Because most anyone else could have seen something like this coming. Perhaps not on such a grand scale, but there were signs, clear as the skies over Bastion.
Chyrus frowns as the sound of a broken chime reaches his ears. With a quick inspection, he finds the culprit underfoot, half crushed under his large toes. Kneeling, he picks them up gingerly, the lute-like chimes tiny in his palm, and the ring they used to hang on broken.
It’s hard to imagine what could have damaged it so. Someone getting thrown into it and their weapon catching it just right? Or had one of their many attackers been so overcome with rage that the sound of the gentle instrument filled them with such animosity that they wanted to make sure they would never play again?
There has been so much heartache in Bastion throughout the eons.
Bastion’s pride is its noble cause, but perhaps it is because he does not cling to such emotion that Chyrus has always been able to see the melancholic undercurrent. The broken hearts sent back to Oribos to be judged anew because they could not relinquish the memories of their mortal lives has always been there. Friends and students alike have ‘fallen short’ over the years. He wonders where they’ve gone, sometimes—those he remembers.
And there are those who have done as was required of them, who sometimes quietly peruse their old memories, watching the foreign stories play out with a quiet resignation that their sacrifice was for the greater good. Still, sacrifices are nothing if they are not mourned from time to time.
As Chyrus peers around to see if there are any other pieces of the little chimes to be gathered—to be given to someone with smaller hands who needs so desperately something to focus on other than the present—the sound of large wings grow closer.
He catches the last bit of pipe beneath his foot as Thenios lands, unintentionally scattering the debris left in the forsworn’s latest attack with his great wings.
Chyrus offers him a word of greeting before picking up the chime. It wouldn’t do to forget it, and even though there was no proof of it, Chyrus has often felt like little objects could have a feel to them. They could know when they are broken and appreciate when they are repaired.
It’s a notion Visephone smiles to think of, and one that Xandria will mull over before irritably asking questions that have no answers. Simple things that cannot be done in front of their charges, but are held precious in those fleeting moments when the paragons are alone together.
This is not going to be such a moment, Chyrus can tell, if only by the thin line of Thenios’ lips.
That doesn’t stop Chyrus from giving him a simple smile himself. “What brings you all the way out here?”
Thenios stands tall and firm, armor shining in Bastion’s radiance.
That in itself makes Chyrus’ heart hurt. Thenios does not don his armor for any occasion.
Or he didn’t. Not before the forsworn, before Devos’ betrayal. Though he would never voice it, Chyrus often suspects that Devos fall from grace affected Thenios the most severely of them all, hitting him harder than even the Archon.
How often had the two visited each other’s temples in casual attire to sprawl out together and read. Thenios usually brought the scrolls and books, and Devos was always pleased to see whatever it was that he had for her. She’d once told him he could make even the driest, most technical of reports sound fascinating.
Chyrus can still remember finding them curled up together, feathers fluffed up as they read through something that wasn’t work related, and how Xandria had hounded them about how adorable they were for weeks after, insisting to Visephone that she had missed something absolutely precious.
When it was just them, of course. When they have those fleeting moments where they can simply be people instead of unyielding leaders.
Thenios hasn’t taken his armor off since Devos’ death.
The paragon motions for Chyrus to follow him, and they both take flight, soaring out into the fields where they will not be overheard.
Their feet have barely touched into the soft grasses when Thenios begins to speak, unable to contain himself any longer. His voice is a mix of its usual matter-of-fact tone used to inspire confidence among his aspirants and something else, something almost accusatory. “The Maw Walker has recovered some records for me. Salvaging what the forsworn are so hasty to destroy in their hunt for whatever they think matters more.”
“We are fortunate to have such help—”
“They brought me this.”
There is nothing particularly noteworthy about the record in Thenios’ palm, but Chyrus knows what it will be before it plays. Funny that he was just remembering this aspirant as he surveyed the damage to his temple. She had been close to ascension when she fell. She came to him, telling him that the path had taken everything from her, made her into someone she didn’t recognize.
She had been the latest in a long line of those who were not meant for the path after all.
Chyrus listens to his own disembodied voice recount the incident and remembers musing about whether there was another way for those within Bastion, a way that didn’t require a complete abandonment of the past.
The reasons for the path’s current route were valid, of course. No good came from ferrymen who judged the souls they collected.
It was a hard path, but it was one that had served them well for almost all of eternity. And if it weren’t for the lack of judgment in Oribos…
Chyrus makes no offer to take the record from Thenios, more than a little sure that if he did try, it would be denied him. Instead, he waits for Thenios to make whatever point he is there for. A chiding perhaps that such a thing was left where aspirants could find it?
“Did she ever talk to you?”
The question is a surprise, a reminder that Chyrus cannot predict everything his fellow paragon will think or do, and it hangs between them.
“No,” Chyrus finally replies. The word feels cruel somehow in its succinctness. “The first—and only—time I heard of Devos’ dissatisfaction with the path was when she told us of Uther’s injury.”
Thenios flinches at her name. No armor can protect him from his memories, and Chyrus has been worried about what will happen to him. Forgetting their fallen brethren will be nigh impossible. Their paths were far too entwined and to take her away would leave him with so much emptiness…
Chyrus has already lost so many, his heart breaks at the mere of thought of who else may fall, of who might be left a shell of their former selves because of hearbreak they can’t overcome.
“She told me.” Thenios voice cracks at the last word. He is quiet a moment before clearing his throat, his composure regained. “I told her to be careful the sort of thing she said.” His chin inclines, gaze skyward. “I did not think…I did not know that you had wondered about this very thing.”
“Haven’t we all?” Chyrus offers gently. None of them are above doubts, after all. He reaches out and lightly places a hand on Thenios’ arm, a connection his friend so clearly needs. The action startles Thenios out of his thoughts.
“If I’d listened…if I had let her talk…hadn’t let her feel so—” Thenios curls his fingers around the record, practically crushing it in his hand as he lowers it to his side, fist shaking. “How could she have… the Jailer.”
His voice cracks again, and this time he stops talking, a tremor in his jaw as he clenches it.
With a quick step, Chyrus reaches out and wraps Thenios in a hug, ignoring the way the bits of armor poke into his bare arms. There is hesitation, and then Thenios grips Chyrus back, clinging to him like a drowning man in a stormy sea.
There is not enough time. There may never be, but here, now, Chyrus is acutely aware of how damaged his friend is and how there are people who need both of them to be unbreakable pillars.
It is cruel that he can offer Thenios so little of his time. Chyrus makes himself a silent vow that he will be there for his friend, to properly mourn what they have lost when things are finally set right.
When Thenios pulls away, a shiver runs through his feathers and for a moment, Chyrus thinks he may take his helm off.
Instead, he takes Chyrus’ hand, surprised to find the tiny bits of broken chimes already there as he places the record among them. “I would hate the forsworn to get this and think you would be a good target to convert.”
Chyrus chooses not to point out that they have already tried. “Thank you, my friend.”
Thenios turns away and then pauses, looking back at him. “If you need someone to listen to your doubts…”
Chyrus wants to tell him that Devos’ fall is not his fault, but there is no way for words to reach, much less ease, the guilt there.  Instead, he gives Thenios a nod and a gentle smile. “Of course.”
Thenios attempts something like a goodbye, but when he can’t trust his voice to hold steady, he instead dismisses himself without ceremony. Chyrus does not insult him by watching his retreat, instead turning his attention back to his temple.
There is much to be done.
15 notes · View notes
bloobabloo · 3 years
Note
Favourite Shadowlands NPCs?
almost all of them
this is definitely a difficult question to answer; i have so many favourites! i'll list the ones that i think i've spent more time thinking about but there's a lot of others (especially from bastion and revendreth) that i'll be leaving out 😔
In order from favourite to least favourite:
1: The Curator the curator lives rent-free in my brain at all times. i love her so much. sometimes when i'm trying to draw something completely unrelated it just turns into her. i think i'm cursed ngl. but it's a welcome curse. i just think she's very precious, the way she talks, her personality and her story. i hope blizzard gives her a happy ending although they seem to be making her memory even worse and that's making me v sad
2: Devos before i even met the curator or played shadowlands in general, i was in love with this woman. at one point she was all i drew for about two months or so because i loved the story that they SEEMED to have set up for her. you can imagine my disappointment when i played the kyrian campaign. i loved her unique design too; her strong facial features is a beautiful rarity when it comes to character design as you usually only encounter little button noses, round jawlines and other things people would consider the average and generic beauty standard. but i really loved this about her, and it makes her even more beautiful imho
3: The Winter Queen i absolutely ADORE the winter queen from the first moment i saw her. her design piqued my interest because i've always loved interesting fae designs where they don't just look like little princesses like wings. her flower petal crest and antlers immediately made me want to draw her (but alas, she is very difficult to draw which is why i don't more often). i also loved her personality and voice actor. seeing her actually feel pain after what happened to ara'lon in the final chapter of the fae covenant just made her feel more real than some of the shadowlands characters coughcoughkyrestiacoughcough
4: Plague Deviser Marileth so when i saw the afterlives shorts i was 100% convinced i would never want to join maldraxxus. i do like necromancers and their lore, i'm very soft for draka and her story, and i loved aka'rek and krexus' designs, but i felt like it just... wouldn't be for me. and then as soon as i entered the zone, there was vole and krexus and... everything. i was starting to change my mind. and then i met marileth and suddenly i fell in love with the necrolord covenant and was really considering just flinging all my characters there. i just loved marileth so much, he completely charmed me. whenever i do an ember court i can't not invite him and vole. i just can't. i want him to be happy and to recover from his loss of his margrave and friends ):
5: Grandmaster Vole i have to include uncle vole. i was smitten when i met him in the intro the maldraxxus. he has such an explosive yet somehow cute personality. and when you get best friends with him in ember court it's even better. what a bro. i just love how casual and explosive he is at the same time. how he cares a lot about the maw-walker evidently and how he tries to start a fight club and wanders the court with 1 HP. what a madlad. i just love him very much and he deserved a spot here
Honourable Mentions: (because i couldn't not include some of my other favourites) renathal, accuser, theotar, denathrius, vorpalia, remornia; moonberry, marasmius, thiernax & qadarin, herne, ara'lon; thenios, chyrus, xandria, pelagos, apolon & kynthia, eridia; the primus, buttons & MRAAAZ, kevin, heirmir
i'd include more but we could be here all day
13 notes · View notes