The Artisans Pride XII
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Thirtiest Day of the Second Month
Deep beneath the earth, they had done it. They had created something they both had sworn to never make. For one, it was a matter of principle, for the other, one of pride, yet that similarity that was and was not had been the first faint trace of trust between the two of them. It was only fitting that they had broken the letter, though not the spirit of that oath together.
The young girl ran a finger over wizened flesh, thin tendrils of black blood that had begun to curdle in the veins rolling beneath the pressure. "The decay has already begun. The graft is rejecting you." They had made something unfit to live. Something that would devour itself as flesh turned against flesh. Something that would die in agony.
"Good," was the only word rasping from the throat of their subject. It was not the time for words and it was a small wonder that Qyburn could even speak at all. Anyone who were to see him would have presumed him dead, just to be filled with horror at the realization that he yet breathed. That he still moved and felt.
Most of his skull had been pried away, his face looking like a grotesque facade behind which there was nothing. Though there was something behind it. More even then there should be. His own brain, still loosely held in place and now wrapped in a membrane of eldritch origin, still was roughly in the place it was supposed to be, but behind it, there was a second one. Wrapped in fake flesh and the shards of bone cut from his skull rested a much larger brain, pried from the skull of a true horror from beyond all reams that man ever had dared to walk.
But there was method to the madness. No matter how many would have called them insane for even contemplating this, it was ambition that drove them. The desire to push back the boundaries one more time. To overcome one more limit. And thus they worked quietly, only speaking when they had to. While the young girl from the Braavosi swamps made sure their patient survived the ordeal, gently nudging flesh and blood to keep working, the other woman worked at a furious pace.
Under Elahehs fingers, flesh parted and merged again, sinews fusing to bones as if they belonged there, even though the other end was not within the body, but anchored to the harness holding it. Giant cysts full of strange fluids were hastily grafted into the old mans body. The raw materials for the work yet to come. She had done the same work before. Hundreds of times in fact, for the Praetori all endured something similar, but unlike them, this time her patient was slowly wasting away as she worked, making every movement all the more important, each second all the more precious.
It seemed to her as if she had worked for hours, even though it could not have been more then a few minutes.
"It is done," she said at least and for her that was true, so she slowly stepped back. Vee followed a moment later, one last healing spell cast at Qyburns body before she too left the small tank he had been strapped into.
As for the man himself, he tried to smile at them. It was a crooked thing, with drool running from one corner of his mouth, but it still carried the sentiment just fine. "Farewell," he rasped, just as the membrane began to rise from the floor, closing off the pod.
"Don't be silly and say a farewell," the Kyton spoke as the green ichor begun to rush into the enclosure, quickly rising to engulf Qyburns feet.
"We wouldn't have helped you with this if we had doubts."
From her side, the other girl made a gruff sound and crossed her arms. "You will come out there just fine."
"Not me," he pressed out, the words hard to form and the ichor already reaching to his stomach. They frowned at him, but he kept that crooked smile and with all his power, he forced through two more words. "Something greater." And with those words spoken, his face disapparead beneath the green sludge, never to be seen again.
AN: A bit shorter then usual, but there is not really much more to say here.