Post by Morreion on Dec 5, 2008 23:40:34 GMT -5
The smell of burning filled the air.
He stood on the roof of the keep, looking out through the shattered gates of Thidranki Faste. He saw the red banner waving in the air; swarming shapes moved up outside the walls, edging up to the gates once more. Several bodies- Norse and Troll- lay where they had fallen in the courtyard. The battle had raged day and night, and many of Midgard had fallen to the ragged Hibernian defenders. Elation now gave way to inevitable defeat, much as an intense love grown cold until it was but a memory with little force.
Suddenly a Ranger appeared, bow drawn, and shot a Valkyn just outside the gates. The Valkyn yelled in pain, and ran back towards the bridge below. A ragged cheer went up from the exhausted few left on the walls.
He carefully made his way to the parapet, and then down the wooden stairs. He moved along the wall to the spot near the keep steps. There it was- the little patch of garden kept on a whim; growing things, life, in the midst of destruction. He broke off one of the few rose blooms left upon the wall trellis, and went back towards the stairs.
A Shadowblade, a Norseman dressed in black, watched him curiously from the shadows; on impulse, he let the man go, watching him as he ascended the steps, flower in hand, a rather homely Celt, the expression on his face showing that he was...elsewhere.
Warhorns sounded, and the red banner advanced, along with the Midgard host. He slipped back into the keep, through the thick oaken door.
Inside, the narrow corridor was packed with the dead and the dying. Moans, talking, prayers filled his ears. He picked his way carefully down the corridor.
"Sire?" a voice said to him as he passed by, a hand reaching out to brush his leg. "Is it true that the Red Banner flies? Will we all be put to the sword?"
He paused briefly, looked down at the man- a handsome young Hero, sitting propped up against the wall, with both legs, crippled and useless, outstretched before him.
So much suffering and waste, he thought.
He nodded briefly at him, smiling slightly, and then continued on.
He found her where he had left her, laying upon an old blanket, his pack under her head, used as a crude pillow; still silently sobbing, the tears coursing down her cheeks.
~~~
He had first met her, months ago, in the Spraggon Den. She was a Bard, lending her songs to all for inspiration to fight. When he joined them, she greeted him with a curtsey and smiled. As a Druid, he had assisted her in healing the Heroes and Champions as they battled the strange monsters found deep within the earth, in the eerie orange glow of the rock corridors. They had spoken briefly of the healing arts; she was vital, happy, alive.
By the end of that day, he had fallen for her.
Many a day he thought of how to tell her. He painfully wrote out what he would say, then discarded the words, and started over. He had learned from the past that he was inadequate to the task. One woman had actually laughed in his face when he had tried to recite her a small verse he had composed for her. Not being a handsome man, he had turned towards words to attempt to make up for his looks. But apparently his words were as plain as his face.
After days of thinking, of writing, he finally realized what he had to say would not make her feel one way or the other. He sought her out, trying not to get his hopes up, but inside his chest there was a bright burning spark, of hope, of longing, of love; so much to give, to feel, to say, never shared with another.
He found her on the riverbank near Ardee; she was with someone else. As he strode up to her, he saw the handsome Champion fastening a flower in her blond hair as she looked adoringly into his eyes.
They turned to him; the smile was still upon his face, but the light in his eyes had dimmed, as the spark in his chest extinguished, and he felt cold, cold, as if he had died but his body had not realized it yet.
He spoke a few inconsequential words to them, and he saw that they knew; he saw the pity in her eyes, the gentle sadness in his expression, and he turned to leave. The Champion called out to him; he invited him to join them in a hunt the next day. He realized that the man was not only fair of face, but also good of heart, and knew inside that he was the best man for her. He nodded and smiled, and turned once more to leave.
He was often in their company following that, and became friends with them. Having never had many friends before, he appreciated them very much. His bittersweet feelings he accepted, realizing what they had together was more than he could give, more than he was.
~~~
He sat down beside her. She stared sightlessly at the roof, face wet, and spoke his name yet again.
In the fierce fighting, her Champion, the best man that he had ever met, had gone down, slain by warriors of Midgard. She was devastated, grief-stricken; he had had to drag her away from his body, back to the keep.
As she cried, he tenderly fastened the rose in her hair. But she looked not at him; she was thinking of her love, shutting out the rest of the world around her in the agony of her grief, as her life slipped away, bereft of his touch, his fair words, his reassuring presence.
Downstairs, the battering ram crashed against the keep door repeatedly. He would not let her fall into their red hands; it would be his first and final gift to her.
He mixed the poison into his water-flask, and took a long drink.
He then held her head up, placing the flask to her lips; she drank automatically, still not aware of what was around her, in her grief.
As the door splintered downstairs, and he felt the cold of the poison work its way through his body, he recited to her the words he had planned to say to her, on that long-ago, sunny, hopeful day along the riverbank. The words flowed out of him, and he smiled as he told her in hushed tones of his feelings for her as he stroked her hair, how wonderful she was, how just being near her made his life complete.
She gazed into his eyes, a slight frown upon her tear-streaked face; startled, she raised her hand to touch his face with her fingertips, and she saw love in his eyes, and took what comfort she could in his love, though she thought of her Champion with her last dying thought.
A tear fell from his cheek and landed on her face, and their tears mingled together as their bodies grew cold, and the door was smashed in down below.