What had at first began as reluctant determination became a roaring inferno of righteous fury.
Tasting battle, it seemed, was the tilt necessary to transform Sebastian from scholarly rogue to crusading paladin. It was not the violence itself, though; he had, like so many unfortunate others, been mired in death before. It was experiencing the nature of the great beast that stalked from beyond the Veil that evoked his ire. Watching so many be consumed to sate a bottomless, empty hunger, only to have the mortal coils utterly perverted into such abhorrent forms was reprehensible…to put it in the most mollifying way. Possessing and devouring the physical matter was not enough, either. He had come across many enthralled souls and corrupted shades alongside the denizens of the Void. He would not stand for such depraved atrocities.
There was even more to the complex web of emotions that snared Sebastian into this conflict. Curiously, his motivations were less about the survival of the world than they were personal, at their heart. Being familiarized with Eldritch unknowns as he was, he did not share the desperate hopelessness that most folk harbored when the nightmare began. Now that assaults were well underway, methods of destroying these things had been uncovered, tried, and tested. Gods in this world could fall, and die. So too could a deity from Beyond.
No. What unsettled Sebastian the most was his initial encounters with the malevolent invaders. They all but ignored him, or in some cases even rallied near him as if he were one of their own. He hadn't perceived it at first, but the energy they gave off was very similar to his own aura. Similar, but not the same. Things had changed now after lashing out at the beings, of course. The legion hive mind that Azhizheth and its underlings operated on now knew of him and saw him as a threat. Perhaps this was an odd detail to be expected, having been marked, and at one time unwillingly used by principalities like the World Eater. If there was one thing he had learned about Eldritch entities, they shared things in common with some intelligent mortal races. Mainly in that they are intensely tribalistic, and intrinsically hostile towards one another. In fact, they are so disparate in kind that the energy of one could affect another like one was a priest, and the other a demon being exorcised.
Such was the reaction these creatures had to Sebastian.
He could have let the over-cerebrated dread stop there, but a burning, morbid paranoia and curiosity had formed around it. His trials had come full circle. How much of his will was his own? Was he even human?
Sebastian moved rapidly across the marshes, running, long dark coat billowing, then kicking up vast amounts of water each time he projected himself forward to tree cover with a blink.
The Mystic had left Jasumin in a rush to be of aid in the Copts when the tide of creatures had stemmed for a time thanks to the efforts of resistance. There were high concentrations of poltergeists, banshees, and other shades in the swamps. These were a threat that Sebastian was more capable of dealing with. He had proven to himself that he could go toe-to-toe with the monstrosities as well though, if need be.
Threats here were often found in small, isolated pockets, and the aura glimpsed in a thicket ahead was no exception. Infestors. Not a surprise.
He was quite taken aback to spot a woman they were stalking though, who had stopped to drown her sorrows away in the bottom of a flask. He could smell the liquor from a league off in his heightened, agitated state. What was she doing out here so far from the settled and fortified areas of the marshes?
Not hesitating for a moment, Sebastian rushed toward the creatures, reaching out with his mind and projecting a blanket of telekinetic energy which sent the arachnid-like things nearest the oblivious woman flying and screeching off in random directions. Some struck trees or rocks with enough force to crush them in, splattering the surfaces in their vile ichor. They quickly converged and surrounded him after recovering, skittering towards him in a mad dash. Quickly, Sebastian withdrew his strange onyx-coated chime from his coat, ringing it soundlessly with intent. Whatever imperceptible reverberation the object emitted, it caused the Infestors to pause and writhe in agony. He took this opportunity to use his flint box, normally reserved for smoking his pipe to create a small flame. Taking hold of the embers psionically, they stoked and grew before being pushed out like an intense wave, consuming the otherworldly bugs in an instant.
Panting, soaked through with the scent of the marsh, with an overgrowth of beard and tattered clothes, Sebastian turned to the woman seated on the rock at the edge of the wetlands. His autumnal eyes had been aglow with a fiery inner light which slowly faded as his nerves quieted.
"Now's not a keen time to be wallowing like a little piggy bereft of mud, dear heart!" he called out warmly with a wry grin, in stark contrast to the intimidating display of power he'd just engaged in.