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#nikkyanswersasks
nikkywrites · 2 years
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HI i am here to demand (ahem) ASK about the world of crimson daybreak!!
Hi Marine! The world of Crimson Daybreak was formed just to fulfill the prompt(s) and get the piece done, but for you I will delve into it a bit (lot?) more <3
First of all, I did admittedly fit in more worldbuilding into that than I thought I would. It’s one of my finer worldbuilding moments. For real, though, let’s just talks about the dragons because. well, that’s what bore the sacrifices that’s central to Crimson Daybreak.
(Note from future me: this turned into a retelling/overview/dive into the original ceremony that became the Crimson Daybreak sacrifice).
Read more because long ramble/explanation. To no surprise.
So there were dragons and they weren’t just big beasts, they were godlike beings. Like. Massive as all heck, formed the world and all things in it sort of godlike beings. They were older than known history and as the human race was starting to take off… the dragons were dying out. By that point, the Creation that formed them (this world’s chaos/stardust that forms literally everything) was running out. It was in the world, in the things that they had made. So there’s one dragon left. The youngest of them, the one that’s contributed least to the world it’s breathren made and the one that will be it’s tomb. The only known to humans and it’s so obvious that it’s ancient — curled atop the highest mountain peak, cracked and covered in ivy like an old ruin, hardly breathing, hardly alive. It’s there and for a while (years, decades, centuries), it’s worshipped. Is a temple and a god both.
The humans know little of the dragons, but they form prayers and ceremonies and a religion. The dragon is practically comatose — it’s eyes never open, it’s breaths are few and shallow and long between. It’s hardly conscious. But the humans can tell that it’s divine (it’s a knowing in the air). So they worship it. Send their priests (maybe a dozen or so) into the almost-cage of one of it’s claws, where the sun barely shines between the bars of its talons, to say once-a-moon chants, for good harvests or good weather or good fortune.
But every five-ish years (perhaps it’s a time made significant because that’s when the dragon blinks, for a few decades, until it’s eyes never open again. It’s a significant measure of time, akin-sorta to a decade for us due to something like that), the collection of priests choose one to stand before the dragon, not a foot from its face, to act upon a ceremony (on the day of dragon’s blink). It’s a dual purpose — to see the fate of the next five years (received from the wind, and, if the next years are to be especially favorable — from the dragon’s breath) and wish well upon the dragon, laying some sacrifice or significance before it (the object the chosen person holds dearest, perhaps). There’s a constant wind atop the mountain, drawn to and formed from the last spark of Creation there is that’s still semi-tangible (that’s keeping the dragon alive, that’s feeding the heart of the people’s religion).
Because of the dragon’s decline, breaths are becoming fewer and weaker and longer between. Details are kept tight, between the priests and the chosen person and other such high ranked people but some of it, inevitably, leaks.
And one year, the one chosen (they are chosen as children at 10 (and there’s requirements to even be considered but I’m trying not to get too off-rail), because of… something dragon related. A trinket — a chipped bit of scale or talon or tooth, from the dragon they know or a salvaged bit from one they don’t. There’s a reaction that makes them chosen and perhaps it’s a series of trials — a series of hoops that must be leapt through just right). Anyways, the one chosen one year is closely related to a priest. A daughter, or a niece, or something such. There’s a personal tie, where there’s been no recorded one before (not the records are that in depth, or plentiful). So there’s… a smidgen of doubt, that this child was truly chosen, among the other priests (did the priest spill secrets to the child? Taint the results?) but they continue because once a child is chosen, it’s done. The child is chosen the same day as the ceremony, so as one is fulfilling their part, another is being chosen to replace it. And they are trained/prepared for the next five years, until they are the one standing before the dragon and so the cycle goes, on and on. (And, to clarify: the last girl is not wrongly chosen, just believed to be so).
So a child, tied to a priest somehow is chosen. They — she, because it is a girl and this year and this ceremony and this day is ancestor to the one in Crimson Daybreak. This child, this teenager, for she is fifteen when it is her turn is pessimistic or realistic or just smart. She thinks that all of this: the ceremony, the religion, the dragon; is ridiculous. They see the pattern of the dwindling breaths, have a lack of faith where most/all others have trust. She knows the dragon will not breathe. Suspects that the things it is making her people do is unnecessary — she is not a believer, though she’s kept the fact hidden (she wouldn’t be chosen if it was known).
So she has a grudge, a bitterness, a rage to her. Perhaps on the last ceremony, there was little wind and no breath (like there’s been the last too-many times, tales of it’s breath too old to be really believed to be truth) and the day following it, a friend or family member was lost. And in her childishness, her naïveté, she places blame on the dragon. On the ceremony’s failure. On the religion entirely. The priests are saying that they are ones failing the dragon — there needs to be more worship, stronger worship — but the girl doesn’t believe the fault lies with them. Believes that the dragon is the one failing.
So she is angry and hidden in the large flowing robe, there is a sharpness — a dagger or a spearhead or a rock. And she expects the little response there is, but upon the stillness — the dying dragon, the lazy wind, the dry sky — in the face of it, her rage boils over. She draws the sharpness and strikes it against the dragon’s face. It is not a large wound, in comparison to the dragon’s size (the mountain is a small perch, considering and all of their priests hardly fit in the sacred room of it’s claw) but it is roughly the length of the girl’s forearm and it is deep enough to shed blood. Blood which has never been seen, for it is sacrilege to touch the dragon without proper reason or permission. It is a startling yellow, so bright it looks glowing.
It is a small wound, but to the dragon, who has hardly been living for centuries, to whom this is a revokation of the dribbles of Creation that has been keeping it hardly alive? It is enough. It is the last straw.
It dies.
The divinity falters, the air of life cut out in one harsh moment. The ceremony is done privately, just before sunrise, the chosen girl having made the climb up over the night before. And there is no grand destruction, no obvious revelation — no wind that picks up howling, no sudden onset of black clouds or rain, no out-of-the-blue thunder or lightning. But it is there, the death. In the air. A feeling brother to the one of breathlessness when the air is forced from your lungs. That breathlessness sweeps over the mountain and though there is no grand show of proof, it is known. The dragon is dead. The ceremony has failed. The girl is claimed a traitor of highest degree — she’s slain their god, their world’s heart.
And this day is what Crimson Daybreak’s celebration and sacrifice comes from. The events of Crimson Daybreak would not be if not for this day, twisted though the memory of it becomes.
The girl is blamed, immediate, for on this day the dragon is the chosen one’s responsibility (perhaps they are a keeper of sorts, until they’re twenty and the next person takes over). And her name is ill-remembered, butchered pronunciation of her name modern (meaning Crimson Daybreak time) translating to a grave insult. It’s one of the few shreds that’s survived the centuries between the times.
That, and what follows the dragon’s death.
The felled blood’s crystallized form, that hums under the right girl’s blood. The startling change of the sun — from always yellow to red.
The people are terrified at the change — believe it to be the end of the world, brought upon by the girl. And so she is hunted (the few priests were stunned to stillness or moved to the dragon and she quickly fled). And at some point she is captured — shortly after, at midday, just before the red sun is sinking. And she is dragged back to the dragon’s head and she is killed, as urged by the witnessed priests, who saw her slay the dragon, as retribution and sacrifice. And the night is a long, terrifying thing. People waiting for death, admitting their committed atrocious trying to salvage themselves (also urged by the priests, attempting to earn favor back from the world they think is dying).
And the sun rises yellow again, the next day.
The priests claim it to be because of their honest confessions. That regrets and sins laid bare is what salvaged the world from ending.
And time slowly warps the old ceremony, that day, into what it is during Crimson Daybreak. The terrified confessions turns into the burned ribbons — yellow after the dragon’s blood, burned in repetition of the sun rising and easing the people’s fear and honesty. The chosen girl turns into the sacrificed girl. The slab of blood that hums is the new choosing trial. The sigil the girl’s blood makes upon it is the one the chosen girl drew, all that time ago (then a call for good fortune, now a death sentence). The lone night before is the chosen girl’s hard climb. The room being so red is mockery of the day of the red sun — playing it out on her alone instead of the whole world and her sacrifice is to please the sun’s color shift into lasting just the one day. And so such.
Backtracking to explain a thing or two that didn’t quite come across in the ramble. The ceremony, roughly, is like so:
At ten, a girl is chosen via prerequisites (birthed close to the day of the ceremony?), trials and the last test done on the day of the ceremony. For the next five years, she is raised by the priests, or some other figures in the religion, in preparation of the ceremony. She is taught the loose magic of sigils, has to craft her own that will shape the five years following her day. And on the night before, she must climb to the dragon’s head via the front arm not attached to the clawed room (? Using the scale gaps as handholds? It’s not too long a climb and she is prepared to be capable of it beforehand. The climb is entirely lost, modernly, just the lone girl the night before is remembered). The priests participating in the ceremony, only a few, not all, take a longer route. When the time is right, the girl lays out a pouch of soft sand and draws the sigil she crafted into it. If it is blown away, there is good fortune, if not, there isn’t and the inbetween. The priests are stationed evenly behind the girl in a semicircle. They are to stand witness and they drop their own fistfuls of sand, to blow in the wind/breath.
The chosen one beforehand did not have to be a girl, just. The last one was and that’s what’s remembered so all modern chosen ones are girls. Because the last is all that’s remembered.
Is that. What you wanted, Marine? I got carried away with the original ceremony and kind of forgot that you just wanted more of the world in general, not necessarily the past but it is still knowledge of the world, so… it counts? I think? If you want specifics, you should ask the specifics. I get off track so easily.
If more of the Crimson Daybreak world is wanted (not necessarily Gianna-related at all, just the literal world)… ask? Kinda think I’ve given it too much worldbuilding to be just one thing but I’ve also (miraculously, surprisingly) escaped the Urge (but that may just be the mental exhaustion of doing this all), so. Maybe not? Let me know if there’s interest.
Leave a comment about this because it really took something out of me. Worldbuilding is not my favorite thing when not done on the fly as I’m writing a piece, so give me kudos for this.
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nikkyshows · 3 years
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Please let Eli know, that he's adorable and I love him and wish him all the best treats and pets.
Will do! I gave him some ear scratches for you, anon. He says thank you.
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nikkywrites · 3 years
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?
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I got a typewriter!
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nikkywrites · 2 years
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which of your OCs do you think you'd get along with in real life?
Thanks for dropping by!
Off the top of my head, Keithia. She’s chill enough that we could be in the same room doing different things and still consider it hanging out. I don’t think she’d be too draining social wise either (can you see my introversion shining through? XD) and I think she’d be fun to talk to for a day anyways!
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nikkywrites · 2 years
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Hi Nikky! Good luck with writing your scene. Any chance you can share a bit what it's about?
Hey! :)
Thanks for the luck. It’s needed. I think I just need to get a solid start going and it’ll start falling into place. It’s Calypso rising to comfort a sailor while she’s in a very similar mood, basically. I’d tell you more but. You know. It’s being a butt. I’m not sure why. But it’s Soft Calypso with her sailors (a sailor, in this case) which is always sweet.
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nikkywrites · 3 years
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I can relate on the "wanting to write but not wanting to drive" part so good luck with getting out of the impasse^^
I did/am writing. It’s mostly awful dialogue that I’m trying to ignore the quality of and just power through as it is first draft and it’s... not fun. I hate doing dialogue, for reference. It’s the weakest point of my writing.
Thank you for the ask/luck, though. Good luck to your writing endeavors too!
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nikkywrites · 3 years
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Hi, random character question here! Which one of your characters could you fight, if any? Why? Happy writing!
Hey!
Honestly, given that most of my character are either not human or have powers of some sort, I probably couldn’t take any of them. Maybe Starla from The Superhero Next Door, she doesn’t have any powers or anything, but even then. Probably not.
Thanks for the ask!
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nikkywrites · 3 years
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hmm, strange... maybe I can tag you if/when I post something there, so you'll see it in your notifications? --dubius
Maybe. Until then I can ‘tag’ you in the thing and you can do it if you see it/want to?
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nikkywrites · 3 years
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dubius here! i haven't made a sideblog before but i THINK i've correctly done it-- i'm @dubiuswrites if you want to tag me for ask games and stuff! (the blog's basically completely blank right now, i'll get to it)
Hmm... something must not be right. Can’t find/tag that blog. I’d offer to help, but I’m not sure what I’d be able to do for you.
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nikkywrites · 3 years
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saffron, blush and thistle (but I already know I'm gonna stay for a long time)
Saffron: I love your ideas. Blush: Seeing you on my dash makes my day a little better. Thistle: I only just started following you.
I’m glad you enjoy seeing me on your dash^^ That’s sweet to hear. All of it is, actually. Thank you!
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nikkywrites · 3 years
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Hi Nikky, hope you're having a nice day!! If you weren't writing Ocean's Heart but had to pick a different greek myth to write about, which one would you pick?
Hi! My day is going well, I hope yours is too. I actually have other myth drafts already. There’s things focused on Rhea and her husband. I have a thing (that I cannot now find) about Hermes’ origin. I have 3 different ways I want/can tell Persephone’s myth and I have a doc with all of those. I have many drafts of many things.
If you meant you want me to pick something I haven’t done— I’m not sure. Maybe Prometheus or Atlas? Medusa, perhaps. If I think too hard about it, I’ll want to do it.
What you guys probably would have seen first, though, is the Hermes thing, but like I said. I cannot find it. I think tumblr deleted it so I have to try to redo the whole thing, I guess. That’s,, fun.
Thank you so much for the ask though!! :D
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nikkywrites · 3 years
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You've been visited by the random OC question fairy! :D ~☆
What's your character's taste in literature? What's their favorite book or author? Why?
Wow, I am horrible at answering things. This is like a week and a half old.
This isn’t something I think about too much, actually. I think Lila wouldn’t be a big reader, like it’s not something she can get into easily. She’s tried but doesn’t have the focus for it and she has better things to do. I’m not sure, but I can’t picture her just sitting down to read.
Xia... hmm. She probably likes mystery or horror novels just to see how “scary” they are or how obvious the bad guy is (or that’s her excuse). She plays it off as a joke, but she’s actually into it. She doesn’t get the chance to read too often, though, but it’s how she unwinds when she has the time.
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