It was warm against my fingertips, that harrowing band of carefully melded silver. Familiar intricacies are woven around the moonstone at its eyed centre forcing mine to narrow upon its surface. A gift from once upon a time. Found beside the corpse of a beast. Lycan. Its silver prongs bit into the calloused skin of my battle-worn palm as I held it tightly. My fingers became its cage - the sting barring the emotions it evoked as if I could will it all away with a simple thought. Close my eyes and it’d all vanish. The pang in my chest; the tightness strangling my throat. The searing salt threatened the rim of golden lashes. Grief. It plucked the fibres of my aching heart and chilled writhing viscera down to the soles of my feet. The pain I felt when I stared at her name etched upon stone...one I knew to be inevitably carved in the coming days. Did it make it easier? Watching her decay, knowing the outcome. Naive hope was blind to the signs but I knew - deep in my mind, I always knew I’d stand here without her. I lost myself to the suffocating din of ire and phrenic whispers teetering on the edge of mania. A warm wetness rolled down my cheek leaving a cold trail of sorrow. Part of me knew she’d died before I came back to play the part of big brother to the desert stray. They’d never put flowers in her room. No one kept me from her bedside. She’s too frail, Aethelos. Her condition could worsen with contamination. The light aggravates her illness. The hounds maimed a cat that crawled beneath the floor to die. We’ll send the gardener to fetch it. I felt so helpless standing here as a victim of my hopeless stupidity. “I pray, Arabella,” My voice was a raw whisper, a hoarse sound breaking through what felt like a dam of lament lodged deep in my throat. “That you did not suffer for their greed. That your… your last breath.” Mine shook. “That it knew peace.” I kneeled to rest a bouquet of pink fairy roses - one of her favourites - at the head of her tombstone. There were so many words I’d wanted to tell her - so many feelings I needed to say. They were mute on my tongue and only knew the quiet cry of mourning. Numbness took over in the hours I’d spent being jostled around to the melody of cobblestone and horseshoes. Again I found myself occupying my thoughts on the ring and its meaning. My mismatched iris observing the hints of blood I hadn’t been able to wash away nestled deep within the cracks of its design. They had lied about so much, our parents, that surely their letter - too - had been falsified. Daesn'yri… A flash of golden hair braided and decorated with pearls and beads splayed across silken sheets. A white gown pressed up against her hips. The taste of her hot upon my lips. Lo’, what sounds she made as we moved in tandem until we were lost to the throes of unspoken passion. Warmth spread throughout me roused by this memory, a merciless reprieve from the quiet torment of loss. The demure maiden who could barely talk straight when flustered… her claws adorned with blood. The image couldn’t find roots in logic. I couldn’t think of her in the way their letter portrayed her. Daesn’yri of the Dunes - murderer. I kept the ring close at hand while the nag slowed her pace to a walk when we approached the winding drive, the prelude to the grounds owned by one Avarice Trahern. What brought me here? Rumour, speculation? Hardly. It was the same flash of sunwheat tresses I’d caught glimpses of in town that had once lay beneath me, beside me, smothering me in her presence until it was burrowed deep into my skin down to the blood in my heart. “Do you know where she stays, madame Daesn’yri? I’ve something of her’s I’d like to return. Something very precious to her.” A flash of a ring, a sullen smile, and the desperate glimpse of a man who needed answers. A quiet plea that perhaps loosened the tongue of the hesitant woman. That’s all it took for the florist to give the address where some of their out-of-stock goods would be delivered. Did she hear my sigh of relief? “The Trahern estate, sir. I’ll scribe you the address.” The nag was released to graze on the wild grass and trimmed brush of the woods surrounding the walls of the Trahern grounds. Booted heels crunched against gravel as I moved towards the iron gate that groaned quietly when pushed open. What would I say? What would she do? Would it be her I saw here or another that would shoo me away for trespass? I glanced to the left, drawn by instinct or perhaps a quiet knowing of what I’d find tucked away in the garden grounds. That familiar hint of blonde. The shape of her shoulders, the curve of her hips. My breath hitched deep in my throat. Anxiety gnawed at my stomach, twisting and turning and controlling my insides until I felt like I could vomit. It took everything in me not to turn back down that drive. My boots were quiet on the grass, gloved hand tightly holding the ring - her ring - until I was sure it would embed itself into my skin. For a moment I stood there, watching her tend flowers before tossing the sterling band at her feet… and I said nothing. |
War of the Rose
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08-14-2024, 07:05 PM
A WREATH OF THORNS ADORNS THE DOOR
She had grown accustomed to the departure and arrival of various staff within the Trahern estate that she had been priveledged with keeping the company of. Avarice was overly kind, though she didn't strive to merely accept her dear friend's charity. In truth, most of her time in recent days had been spent within the embrace of the wilds. The landscape was vastly different, and she didn't have the hands and aid of her people, but there was an overwhelming comfort to regaining some semblance of closeness to her roots. They were not yet ensnared deep enough within the soils to be unaffected by the threatening blight of frost, however, and the creeping lethargy of winter's threat had chased her closer to the manor walls.
The morning sun would find her enveloped within the gardens, aiding one of the women in picking the various medicinal herbs the Lady of the house tended to and grew despite her absence. The workers still maintained her supplies in the event she needed them, and the wolf was not one to rest on her laurels. Not when she felt so restless, especially. Maybe this complacency was why she no longer surged with paranoia when the creak of the gates announced a visitor to the property. Had she known previously, what would she have done differently? She heard the approach of foot falls, assuming it to be another to procure the whicker baskets they had gathered full already, and she paid little heed beyond the acknowledgement of another presence. The soft hum of her vocals continued their sway, a gentle lull, a precious lullaby that her mother had once sung to them on the cusp of night's embrace while she tucked them within their bed rolls. She could no longer recall the scent of her hair as the wheat strands had passed over her face to tickle her nose and cheeks, but the tune remained within her cerebrum. A loll that only halted as she heard the thud of something nearby instead, something dropped. Something thrown. No sooner than her eyes lit upon the band did her veins run like currents of ice. No sooner than she beheld it, did she know the presence that loomed behind her. She stood there for a moment. Her heart beat. Once. Twice. Her outstretched hand, reaching to retrieve the previously unknown object coiled, withered away like a vine to press tenderly to her chest. To the scarring of the bullet's explosive exit. She had unknowingly, foolishly nurtured a naïve hope that she would be left well enough alone. That they would be complicit with the announcement that she had died. That whoever had met the grave's peace in her place was enough to satisfy them. She certainly should have surmised otherwise. After all, the Beleverons could never be satisfied. "Cathlene," she was proud of the way she kept the trembling from her vocals, pleased with how easy it was to keep the neutrality of her expression. "Would you allow me a moment?" The thickness of her accent would be accompanied by a small simper. The woman offered her a smile as well, a nod, an 'of course!' as she instead retrieved the full containers. The lamb was quiet within her breast, it offered no bleating resistance as the hand there coiled into a fist, sere nails biting hungrily into the skin of her palm. He didn't move. He didn't speak. Somehow, it made it worse. It made her even more infuriated that he didn't try to smack her as he did upon their first reunion. That he didn't offer his petty serpentine venom. That he gave her nothing. She hadn't expected an apology by any means, knowing full well those of his ilk could never be so kind. So it was that she finally turned to face him as the last steps of the retreating maid depleted into silence. She wasn't dressed in the same gowns and finery as she had been when she'd anxiously awaited him with giddy, misplaced excitement at the Beleveron's front door. Her hair was messier, braided hastily and pulled itself with the length of its weight over the breadth of her shoulder, the looser strands brushing against her crawling skin within the crook of her neck. Her gaze seized his, unabashed, unrelenting housed within her raised countenance. Defiant. Proud. Her jaw clenched. "Pick it up." The words escaped her through a cage of teeth as she kicked the moonstone embedded thing she had once treasured back towards him, the metals clinking quietly against the bump of stones. She didn't care to watch its path, she didn't allow her vision to leave his face. She wasn't even particularly searching it for rhyme or reason for his appearance. He had already taken everything he could from her. She had nothing. left. "Your kind are not welcome here." NO ONE COMES HOME ANYMORE
08-14-2024, 09:22 PM
08-15-2024, 02:57 PM
A WREATH OF THORNS ADORNS THE DOOR
When he had ever been, she did not know. Even in the desert the fool hardy hardly listened to a word she proclaimed. Despite her knowing the perilous pitfalls, the beasts that stalked the wild, the hot blood of youth (or so her father had claimed) would not allow him to listen. Not to a woman, not to a savage. She had learned then to let them make their own mistakes. They had learned better that way. The same as she could say she had. She would no longer be biting the hand that fed her, she would no longer be silently begging and pleading for the attention she had so sorely craved. He wasn't coming to meet the false face of his sister. He wouldn't find her babbling and flushing over her clumsy words and improper etiquette for Babington to scold her for. "Queen." The word was bitter upon her tongue as she corrected him. If he wished to use titles, then he would at least choose the correct one. It wasn't an entirely proud declaration. It tasted of iron and blood and chains as it trespassed from between her lips. More like an admittance. A confession. He would have known she was not the first in line. Nor the second. Not even the third for such a succession. It would make a nice bauble for some fortunate crows. “And which kind would that be, exactly?” The storm was gathering now within his stare as well, the motion of his fists clenching catching her peripherals as the entirety of his frame tensed before her. "Snakes." She would almost whisper. "Vipers. Traitors." For the first time, she wanted to edge closer, she wanted to fulfill his accusation. She wanted to show him fang and claw. That even he would hint that there was truth to the claim that she had been the aggressor... Well, it only proved within the cold of her eyes that he was indeed in on their ploy. Of course he was. He had gone along with everything else they had asked of him thus far, hadn't he? What more could she expect? It was as he said, but while she was the wolf, he was little better than a dog tied to their leash. She remained where she stood, however. The entirety of her rioting against the stillness. The whole of her vibrating with the cry for action. For vengeance. It was leashed, this overwhelming animosity, as she stepped from the mulch and dirt and onto the walkway that they would now share. Perhaps it was something sprung from when her mind was broken, begun with Khalila, but the ideal of being betrayed clawed at her sanity more than the tethers of moonlight from swollen Artemis. He hadn't been there. He had left. He had abandoned her. He knew. He knew it all - everything. No, he hadn't been there, but he may as well have been among the firing squad. "But to kill..." she would let the words suspend themselves upon the air between them for a moment, "no. I didn't get to finish what I started. After all, your father should know best how to deal with savages." NO ONE COMES HOME ANYMORE
08-24-2024, 09:34 PM
09-06-2024, 05:29 PM
A WREATH OF THORNS ADORNS THE DOOR
She was ever her father's daughter - often he joked that she was the son he had never been given. She was so young when her mother had died, she couldn't recall the way he grieved her. Not only the loss of the woman he had loved so devoutly, but the future that was still surely ahead of them. Perhaps the siblings she would have yet gained should her dame not be plagued by problems. Many had said he had changed in the wake of the devastation of saying farewell. That the light in his gaze had dimmed, but she had never seen it extinguished. Not until the eldest of her sisters had been slain and lay wrapped in his arms as he cradled her the way he would have a babe. She could recall the dread that had crept through her body like blood, the horror that clawed up her throat like bile. She had never had the privilege of being introduced to the man she called 'father' prior to morph that grief wrought upon him. She wondered what that intangible thread would have looked like as well, what the footprints left behind on such a trail would have lead them to instead.
Did it look like her current state in time? Would he recognize her like a reflection? Would he mourn the daughter - the son - he had had before? The one he knew? Or would beleaguered understanding only haunt his mournful stare as it rested upon her? Would he witness the husk left behind by her untimely execution? Or bury it. She had wanted to remark that he had picked an odd time to stop following orders. She had wanted to rant and rave at him for stupidly following the king to Dunmeath so adamantly despite her nearly begging him not to. She wanted to rake the talons of blame over his spine until the lacerations wept deep crimson for leaving her after all. For not running away with her as he had promised. For making a pyre of her and only coming back to inspect the ashes left behind, but in the end, that's all that there was. Damp, gray soot. The words couldn't pass the cage of teeth that had formed around them like a snare. Her tongue a rabbit caught and weakening behind them. She couldn't scathe him, because she had broken promises too. Ones that if she had only kept, Arabella may have been fine. She had always known she was second, a frustration once - yes - but now only an echoing after thought, a pang of indifference that relaxed the severity of her nails digging into her palms until her fingers were lax at her sides. She wanted to hurt him the way he had her, but she supposed in the end, she already had. She would be it. This Queen of Nothing. Housed upon a cracked throne in a crumbling empire. The edges of her mouth twitched once again, though she didn't smile in full. "And perhaps I would rip your throat out, if I thought it would hurt them at all." But it wouldn't. That much was obvious as the words fell numbly from her lips. She didn't rightfully know if she meant them or not as she picked up the wicker basket she'd been gathering the plants, herbs, and flowers into. Anything for her nails to dig into and spare the raw and now sticky plains of her palms. "So what will you do now?" She breached, resting the container on the cocked curve of her hip. "Now that you've decided to stop following orders, losslu lirk?" She would address him the way her father used to, a title he had once loathed her mocking. NO ONE COMES HOME ANYMORE
09-06-2024, 08:22 PM
09-08-2024, 07:46 AM
A WREATH OF THORNS ADORNS THE DOOR
He was right, she knew he was. She would have defended her people. She had defended her people. She shed blood, she claimed lives. She ordered it done, and it was a weight that crushed her shoulders to know that ultimately in the end, she had failed them. She could have been logical about it as well - she could have reasoned that she didn't have the training of someone for that position, that she didn't know well enough to lead them. The position was thrust upon her simply because she was the next of the bloodline destined to lead. The oppression of their doom was thrust squarely upon her and her alone, another fact she could have claimed ignorance of. This one she would, however. It was just them. It was only she and her youngest sister remaining. She sought her often, when night terrors plagued her and she knew not what action should be next taken as they struggled merely to continue their meager existence. Had all of her words been poison seeping into her ears with those advisory whispers? In the end, her people had simply been far too forgiving. To both of them.
"Then why not take me?" She demanded, just as avidly as he defended. He knew she could fight. "If I am no damsel in distress, why treat me as one and lock me away? What if you had died?! What was I to do then?" Her jaw clenched, her gaze searching his face for answers, ones she doubted he had either. Even if she hadn't been accosted within the confines of the tower he'd been content to tuck her away in. If the dragons meant to guard her hadn't turned to bite the hand that fed. Her days prior to the betrayal had been steeped in worry, an ever darkening elixir that clouded her inclinations with festering regret and remorse that she could do no more. Word was scant to none from the front lines - not that the Beleverons seemed to care one way or another the directions of the tides to her dismay. Sari had found it almost impossible to lay finger on even a shred of news as well despite her best efforts. A survivor. She was to be a survivor, he claimed. "I aum nis cinsuns si murulw serzozu!" Still, they didn't fall, those saline droplets. Despite the tightness she felt encapsulating her throat like an enraged fist and strangling the words from her in a hoarsely chaotic cadence. Her stare ascended sharply, glancing over the cloudy haze of the lazy winter skies so imperceptive of the tiny lives that lingered below. The bruised tapestries loomed in threat of a storm, one she loathed as it blanketed the earth in the chilling snow. The cold breath of the zephyrs wrought a sigh from her own lips as her stare fell to the space between them. The next quiet, not above a whisper as she gripped tightly to the basket. "Nis whun I aum shu inlw inu lufs." The last of her family. The last of her people. The last of those she knew. What was the point in surviving that which had already seen her slain? In her tribe, women were just as fierce a warrior as any man, only those who had children were ever left behind. And she was no mother. Maybe just as much as it was a thorn in her side to have known nothing, was the nettling sting to her pride. What was left of it. NO ONE COMES HOME ANYMORE | |||
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