Out of Character:
Childhood home - Describe your character's life at home from when he / she was young(er). Special thanks to the Ghost Writer for inspiring this prompt!
Out of Character:
Childhood home - Describe your character's life at home from when he / she was young(er). Special thanks to the Ghost Writer for inspiring this prompt!
Althanas Operations Administrator
"When we were young, was this the dream we had? We're celebrating nothing. We need to find our way back."
Cain stood upon the docks of Radasanth looking upon a fore and aft rigged whaler it was on the smaller side but his father had made a deal with the captain where little Cain would get an education while at the same time the captain got paid a sum of money to provide it. This was a common deal among sea faring people and one that was expected by Cain. By his feet was a sea bag filled with every thing he was told he needed two pairs of sail cloth trousers, two pairs of slops, a sennit hat, a pair of boots, two vests, two long sleeve shirts, foul weather coat, and a dirk.
This ship the whaler Teapot would be his home for months if not years during its cruise to hunt whales for oil and ambergris. His arms and shoulders felt heavy and weak. His parents were only a hundred feet away but he already missed them. He was sad almost depressed and he couldn't help but let tears roll down his cheeks. Giving a meek sigh Cain and continued onto the ship and reported to the captain. Cains orders were "report to the boatswain."
Little Cain stepped out of the cabin and began looking for the boatswain "Excuse me where can I find the boatswain?" Little Cain asked a gentleman in a green wool nit cap and brown jacket. The gentleman looked down upon Little Cain and in a gruff voice that could carry over the crash of the waves replied "I AM THE BOATSWAIN!"
It was at about that moment that Cain realized that the next several weeks at least that his life will be turned up side down.
It seemed to Little Cain that all the boatswains job was to be a most malevolent disciplinarian. There was nothing in those first few weeks that Cain did that was correct in the boatswains eyes; he would tie a knot and the boatswain would tear the rope off it's belaying pin and shout "A knot like this will cost a man his life!" and then he would make Cain tie the same knot again and again. He would polish a piece of brass and would have to polish it again and so on and so on.
The land faded from view and then from Little Cains fore most thoughts replaced by the day to day routine of sea life. At three bells of the morning watch Little Cain was awoken by the boatswain hollering "Out or down! Out or down! I am coming with a sharp knife and a clean conscious!" He would then pull his hammock a full fourteen inches of space for himself, take it up to the weather deck and pack it into the netting on the outer part of the ship.
He would then be a part of the holy stoning party taking a piece of sand stone about the size of a red brick and sanding the deck of the Teapot after he had been a part of soaking it. After holy stoning he was part of the team that swabbed and flogged the deck dry. After all of that Cain was pipped down by the boatswain for breakfast.
Breakfast consisted of something similar to oatmeal maybe some hard tack that most likely had weavels in it and maybe salted horse depending on the day. After breakfast he was back on deck learning every part of the ship from keel to royal top and from bow to stern. The life he had began to lead was that of hard labor when the ship had to turn he was the one hauling on the ropes, when the anchor had to be weighed he was the one pushing on the capstan bars. He was not yet aloud to go up into the tops and sheet the sails.
At eight bells of the forenoon watch Little Cain was pipped down to lunch which consisted of peas, soft tack, and salted pork. After lunch Little Cains education continued through the captains instructions in mathematics, seamanship, reading and writing. Of-course that was interspersed with more manual labor until four bells of the dog watch where he was pipped down to supper. After which the evenings liberty lasted till four bells of the first watch when Little Cain passed out only to be awoken to "Out or down! Out or down!" by the merciless boatswain.
“The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money.” Margret Thatcher.
Shot and powder
Cavalry Saber
Number one sea coat
William was a mouse, darting quietly and unseen through the side door of his father’s wood shop. He moved from wood pile to wood pile, steadily making his way across the warehouse with a certainty of invisibility that only a child could have. He didn’t stop until he was right behind Gerard Arcus, satisfied that the man hadn’t caught his approach. William watched his father’s work with a keen interest, despite the fact that he’d already spent countless hours of his youth watching the exact same thing. His father had told him that every block of wood held a wondrous work of art inside it, and that it was a woodsman’s job to cut it free. William watched his father’s awl glide back and forth over his latest project with rapt fascination, trying to catch sight of the work of art inside.
“Scamp, aren’t you supposed to be mucking out the horse pen?” Gerard asked without turning around. William started in surprise, thinking that he’d been able to sneak up on his father without notice.
“I, uh, already finished,” William replied, a bit too quickly.
The awl in Gerard’s hands stopped mid-stroke. This time the man turned, a single dark eye stared intently at William from under a thick, bushy brow. And though he couldn’t see it, William knew that there was a deep scowl under the man’s beard to match the intensity of his stare. The boy’ face reddened instantly and his posture slumped as he unconsciously shuffled from one foot to another.
“What do I say about being a woodsman, Will?”
“You say that nobody buys from a dishonest woodsman,” William mumbled, his voice barely audible. Gerard grunted and turned back to his work. The familiar scrape of the blade over smooth wood wasn’t as friendly to William as it had been moments before.
“I don’t mind a little bit of slacking,” Gerard said, finishing one line and bringing the awl back for another. “It isn’t as if I haven’t missed you and your mother also while I was gone. I know you’re going to skulk around, Will, but don’t lie to me. Slacking cuts away a little of your time, lying cuts away a little bit of who you are.”
William dropped his eyes to his still shifting feet. A wellspring of shamed angst flooded up from his stomach. He’d been so excited to have his father back from the spring market that he’d messed everything up. Now his father was mad at him and he wouldn’t want William around. Hot tears rose to his eyes and a thick knot formed in the back of his throat.
“Eh, what’s a little extra horseshit for one day,” Gerard said, suddenly scooping William up into his wiry arms. The movement startled William so much that he yelped.
“Just so long as you clean the whole thing tomorrow,” Gerard said, to which William enthusiastically responded that he would. “Alright then, scamp. You want to help me out here? I think I could use a strong set of arms like yours. This seems to be a particularly tough piece of wood.”
“I’ll help,” William screeched and then laughed as Gerard tickled him. Gerard put William down and he laughed again as he ran to the other side of the workbench and clamped down on the piece of wood resting there.
William loved woodworking. It wasn’t just that he got to spend time with his father, who was often gone for long stretches of time selling his wares. He’d grown up in the shop, and it sometimes felt more a home to him that the cottage next door did. The smell of sweat and sawdust comforted him more than his mother’s freshly baked bread, and the sound of sharp iron tools scraping wood were a nighttime lullaby to the boy.
That wasn’t to say he didn’t love his mother or the cramped home that his father and grandfather had built, but his father, grandfather, and great-grandfather had all been woodsmen, and the shop was in his blood. William laughed as his father strained at the wood with a mock effort totally foreign to the way he had just been working, only to hand the tool to William who slid the razor sharp metal smoothly across the plank with no difficulty.
The two of them talked and laughed and worked through the rest of the afternoon until the sun was cradled low in the branches and William’s mother called them both in for dinner.
"I have looked upon all that the universe has to hold of horror, and even the skies of spring and the flowers of summer must ever afterward be poison to me." - Call of Cthulhu
David vs. Goliath: History's first recorded critical hit.
JC Thread - The Bitter King
He let out a small yip of protest when the man grabbed him by his hand and pulled him away. The boy snarled in protest as he was almost pulled off his feet and forced to follow the man he knew as Owen Ainsworth. Agitation swelled down the hair on his arms and he immediately tried to wrench his hand free. And yet no matter how much he tried he was unable to break the vice like grip that Owen held his hand in.
“L’eggo!” he roared in defiance, but the man payed him no mind as he was dragged away from the elderly alchemist.
His temper flared like a flame at the man ignoring him, and his instincts sang to him like a chorus. Bite, flail, ravage and raze! He would stir hell itself just to get his hand, and his freedom back. But he did not act. Instead of going for the man’s hand like a rabid beast, he just stared at how Owens hand completely engulfed his own. He stared upwards, at the back that had once carried him to safety.
His rage stammered to an ember, he had no desire to bring harm to this man. And yet, the taste of copper still continued to swirl bitterly in his mouth. Curiosity made him to look back at the elderly alchemist, but she was already being swallowed up by concerned citizens. His last sight of her was of the ice cold glare she sent his way.
He felt, wrong.
The world seemed to bear down on him, making his shoulders sag with an unknown burden. The righteous indignation he had felt burning within him like an inferno only moments ago now felt like the coldest of glaciers.
Resigned the boy allowed the head of the Ainsworth family lead him into his home.
Bitterly, he allowed the man to pull him into the kitchen and allowed himself to be sat on the dining room table. Watching intently as the man rolled up his sleeves, turned on the faucet and rinsed a cold flannel under the flowing water. He said no words as he turned to him next, taking the wet flannel and began wiping away the blood that was smeared across his face.
“I’m sorry” He admitted with a hesitant pause. Owens stern gaze did not falter with the admission and continued watch him with a guarded look. Fear began to well up within the pit of his stomach. Owen had been nice to him and his daughters had played with him and made him laugh. And he … he did something terrible. There was only one conclusion.
They were going to send him away.
“I’m really sorry” he whimpered as the world distorted with tears welling in his eyes.
“I know.” Owen answered so quietly that he had almost missed it. The boy paused with a baited breath for the man to say something more. Instead, Owen rinsed the wet cloth and began to gently dab at the black bruises that were beginning to welt. The boy winced at the place where he had been kicked in the face, pain lancing down his spine as panic began to make its way to the forefront of his mind.
“I promise I won’t do it again! Please don’t send me back.” He urgently cried, wanting Owen to know how he genuinely did not mean to openly attack the Alchemist the way he had. He would never do it again, just so long as Owen did not send him back!
“Back where?” Owen asked with furrowed brow. A question the man had asked him many, many times. But like then, his answer had not changed from the first time Owen had asked the boy where he had come from.
“I… I’unno.” He failed to recall a time before the field, from before Owen had found him skulking around in the dark. Only the faintest of recollections burbled to the surface of his mind of a place that had made him feel so alone.
A place that had deprived him of all of his senses so completely, that he may as well not have existed.
“I won’t send you back” Owens voice cut through his mind, halting all his thoughts in their place for what may have been for an eternity for the boy. At first, he did not believe that the man had just said that, some of the things he and the others said tended to elude him unless they explained what they meant.
“Y…Y-you promise?” He whispered daring to hope.
“I promise” Owen said openly, leaving the boy little room to doubt.
Hide. Just hide. Hide and breathe. Breathe soft. Or don't. Cover your mouth. Don't move an inch. Not even a hair. Don't let him hear -
Violently, the cupboard door was ripped open. Old rusting sockets sprung off their balances, the wooden boards becoming unhinged in that single movements. Livid, raging eyes, as fearsome as a dragon's, glared into the dusty gloom that was the hiding place of the young girl. Her brown hair was a scraggly frame around her round features, and her thin body was curled up tight mimicking a foetus in a womb.
A second passed. The young girl refused to look up to meet the origin of her nightmares. Merciless, he came, extending hand down with fingers curled like gnarled claws, to grab her unwashed hair. Yanking this he pulled up the struggling, raggedly breathing girl and stared right into her eyes.
"What," his voice rasped against brittle, jagged tombstones for teeth, "Are you hiding from me for?"
Her hooves at the end of her jointed legs scraped grooves in the rough wooden flooring. Hands raised she grasped at the hand which held her hair, trying to find some source of weakness to end the unyielding agony which were the roots of her hair tearing out from flesh. Tears, small and agile, dripped from the canthus of either eye, hitting the floor with noiseless splashes. Barely did she make a noise, for experience had taught her shrieking and screaming would bring her naught but more punishment, naught but more pain.
"I said," the punisher pushed his tan-toned sharp-featured face forwards to meet her pale, near-white features. Lack of sunlight and a lack of good healthy diet had led the girl to become blanched - a fact that the punisher deemed unsavory enough to question his paternity of the child. "What are you hiding for?"
Lips trembled, eyes squeezed shut for the inevitable to come.
"For the sake of the gods, why do you never ANSWER ME?"
Maybe she could have summoned up the courage to answer. Maybe she could have woven together a plausible enough lie. Maybe he would pause enough, this one time, to consider her words - but in her heart she knew the certain, inavoidable truth. That whatever she said, whatever occurances happened, whatever history prior to this scene transpired, it consitantly led to the same conclusion.
Indeed, the girl had tried to speak. Before, she had tried to reason, utter, excuse, retaliate, but nothing could deny the strength of the brute. Strong, and built akin to a minotaur he was mighty, and impossible to battle against - for neither mother nor daughter. One would be used against the other, threats were intertwined into their very existence, and alternative punishments were concocted - one disappearing, the other left. One returning, welts of angry red across the face and the remains of chafing, coarse chains, the other kept in fear all two to four days, residing under the risk that they could permanently loose the other. On and on it had repeated, for almost twelve years now ...
"Please," came a whisper from behind the man, "Please, stop. Leave her ... leave her be."
A harsh kick out, furred leg with cloven hoof connected with a form and silence was bestowed.
Pleading often was tried, but did not help either.
"I hate you," hissed the girl through gritted teeth as she heard the slump of her mother on the ground. She could see the cascading falls of her chestnut hair fleeing into the air as the mother fell. This time she was trying defiance.
A thin wry smile came to the cracked lips of the man, the father, who still held her hair like he would a discarded toy. Small chuckles of maddened, illogical, amusement came out from between them.
"Oh I know you do," the father, the punisher, the imprisoner, the maniac jeered, "I know. And I love it."
"Tol. Mela. Othor." "Versh. Sai. Memnae." Come. Love. Conquer. - Philomel in Tolkein Sindarin, Faunish and Tradespeak
Very grateful winner of 2015 Althies Awards: Friendliest Member, Mrs Althanas, Best IC Rivalry (with Doge), Best Judge and Most Helpful/Friendly Mod and Admin Award of Moderator of the Year.
When a choice must be made between a night of sleep and a night devoted to one’s passion, passion wins out more often than not.
Varin knew this. The few times the child had elected to keep awake and have some time to himself, it always ended up in an awful morning the next day. A tired servant was not an efficient one. A tired servant made mistakes, dropping valuables and missing spots when they dusted. A tired servant was yelled at. All the same, there was a strong need for abnegation stirring in the boy’s claws, and he had little time to himself to satisfy it.
Ensconced furtively on the end of the cot that took up most of his shrunken living quarters, the boy pulled out the the tie holding his braid together and ran a hand over his achy scalp. Free to relax at last. He slipped it around his wrist and lifted up his threadbare pillow with a content yawn, pulling out his quietly collected possessions. All he had was a box of unused pencils he had sheepishly stolen away from the bedroom of one of his master’s sons (Plagah wasn’t putting them to use anyway), a few discarded scraps of paper (some already filled with small drawings and sketches), and a book filled with illustrations and descriptions of fantastic beasts. It was dusty, borrowed briefly from the mansion’s small personal library.
A sharper pencil was picked out of the pile. Varin’s sole light source; a window lit by Suthainn’s night glow. Crystals were strung into the canopy of the city, a ceiling that replace the starlight that barely penetrated the thick leafy canopy. Inviting earthen smells wafted in from outside.
Varin’s eyes were fixated longingly to the darkened scenery. One could see other the lofty houses of the nobility, and the tangle of branches holding them up. Drakari scurried across the webby mess of bridges, ladders, and walkways tying everything together. Down below one could see the branches where the Scale and Claws resided. From this height, they gave off the impression of ants scurrying about their day-to-day lives. He leaned over to press his nose to the bars. Scanning all that was below with his curious orange gaze, the boy stretched frail obsidian wings as a baby bird might theirs, wondering what he’d see if he could swoop down for a closer look.
But that was preposterous. Inside was where he belonged. Master had always told him so.
“Servant boy!”
His pencil had barely touched the first paper. Varin held his breath at the intrusive call, listening to the skittering night creatures outside and pondering the voice. No, that wasn’t his master, he realized with relief. The consonants weren’t gravelly; it was just one of his master’s offspring. What was it that they were bothering him about. He set his pencil down and stretched, reluctant to rise from his warm window perch. A few minutes of dallying could be spared if he was lucky.
“SERVANT BOY!”
The rough tone sent Varin rushing out the door and startling down the servant’s staircase to where it secretly merged with the main hall. One set of haughty grey eyes greeted him when he poked his head out from behind the curtains that separated the staff’s wing of the house from everything else.
He hated dealing with his master’s sons.
They three were curious, dragon-snouted creatures with scales in righteous shades of Piospius’ blue, but a few years Varin’s senior. Argo and Plagah were reasonable beings. They rarely bothered him beyond quiet insults and the rare attempt to trip him as he walked past. Kilrush was another matter entirely. Much like his father, he was a spiny, light-scaled beast with teeth as crooked as the those of the Evertu in the lands below and a temper to match. His interactions with Varin left two tastes in his mouth. One was the bitter bile of bitten-back anger. The other was the very literal metallic tang of blood.
It was Kilrush who had demanded his presence. Varin’s heart sank in his chest and fell through to the pit of his stomach.
“Why must you keep me waiting for so long?” the larger Drakari commanded with an arrogance that befit a spoilt child. Words were lost to Varin in these situations. When anything could be used against you, it was better to not speak at all. He merely bowed his head and whispered an apology. Kilrush’s lip twitched in irritation. “Nevermind that. What I would like, is an explanation for this.” A round, steel shield was produced from behind Kilrush’s back and forced into Varin’s face. His own dull ember eyes reflected in the filigreed curvature. A few shallow scratches marred its sharply-scented polish.
He was brought down for this? For nothing more than a shield that didn’t have perfect shine? “It was buffed it yesterday...” Varin mumbled through grinding teeth, staring at his own reflection with as little distress as he could manage. It had been perfectly fine then.
“Meet my eyes, Fuilenir,” Kilrush demanded, forcing up Varin’s gaze with a sharp smack of the shield against his snout. Stars struck his vision as he reeled back from the blow. He gripped the curtains with one hand to keep his balance. “Fool. I don’t care what you did to it yesterday; it's scuffed now, and I was planning to use it tomorrow!”
Varin looked away from the accusing gaze, a hand to his smarting snout. Unspoken resentment boiled up inside him. No tactful reply came to mind.
You've been fooling around with it with untrimmed claws then. That's why.
Kilrush stiffened, standing up a little straighter. A sudden fury came to the noble Drakari’s gaze. Nostrils flared and pupils narrowed, he leaned towards Varin, forcing the smaller child back a foot up the stairs. “Would you care to repeat that?” he asked, his voice low with anger.
It took Varin a few seconds to realize that he’d slipped up. The secret inside-words had slipped out through his treacherous mouth. Now, it clamped shut. So too, did his eyes as he winced and drew away, knowing full well what came next.
The expected slap struck his cheek with surprising force, snapping his head back. Scaled knuckles and pointed claws left their mark on Varin, cutting his all-too-undraconian skin in several long streaks. Beads of blood pooled from them. He hunched over on the stairs, still closing his eyes, gripping the wood floor underneath him with trembling claws. An entitled clonk sounded out, the shield dropped at the base of the steps just before his feet.
“Hand this back to me first thing tomorrow. Every scratch needs to be erased from its surface. Else, I’ll tell father of your failure.”
Varin only had the energy for a slow nod and a hoarse reply. “It will be done, my lord.”
~~~
With a pained gasp, Varin woke on the floor of the homely inn he had spent the night at, cotton sheets snaring his limbs at every conceivable angle. His side ached, his right wing was numb, and he was still holding the left defensively in front of his face as one might hold a shield. Sunlight streamed in through the windows in an entirely unwelcome way.
He was too tired for being awake, and too alert to return to bed.
By far the loudest thing in the room was Arie. The bossy sparrow stamped twiggy feet impudently up and down on Varin’s chest, a concerned little foghorn all in her own right. Varin dabbed the cold sweat on his forehead with a groggy groan. Arie's racket was quieted with a stern tap on the beak. “It is alright, cease your worrying, my friend. No need to sound alarms. I merely took a fall off the bed. Again...” She tilted her head suspiciously at him, leaning into his face intensely. He sighed and pushed her away gently. “Honestly! It was nothing, I swear to you, nothing except a night of restless dreaming...”
Last edited by VarWenn; 04-27-17 at 10:13 PM.
"I’m funny, so they let me live." - Skippy’s List
The Wiki Matriarch. Always free to roleplay! I also play all these guys, so take a look at them too!
Varin's Themesong!
I had visited Pylos just once since that fateful day when I had run out. The ten year anniversary of that choice approached, and to mark the occasion I’d decided to go back once more. This time, I brought something with me that I hadn’t had when I last came here, when I had come seeking answers about my mother and father.
My eyes could now leap through time, allowing me to view the past while looking upon a scene.
The village had been abandoned over the years. Skeletons of small homes barely stood, enough for a score of families. The wood had been left charred and rotting, with the solitary inn and tavern serving as a vigilant sentry.
I closed my eyes for a moment, sending the magic into my left to activate the ocular power. When I opened them again, two parallel scenes played through my mind. Where one saw decay and abandonment, the other looked upon a time when laughter and moxie filled these dirt paths.
It was unnerving to see their faces again, knowing most had died. I hadn’t considered that emotional detail, as Mrs. Henderson ran down the street chasing Jimmy after he snuck a cookie before dinner. I couldn’t hear her, as my ability only granted me visual information, but my mind reached into its memories to fill in the gaps.
I could hear her panting and crying out, her heavy bulk swaying as she lumbered after the lisping and giggling boy. He was half a dozen years my junior, and when the fire happened he was still a teenager. The poor lad never even began to live a life before his was snuffed out like a campfire at daybreak.
I walked along the dirt path, the wind whistling the sad tune of emptiness as the skeletal homes creaked and moaned. It was like the world around me could see what I saw, and grieved at the memories of those lost in the tragedy.
Frankie and Stacy stood at the side of the inn, kissing in the shadow of the big building while everyone went along their day. Soon enough, Stacy’s father, George, would come around with the axe he used for chopping wood and chase the boy off again. Nothing ever came of the chase, but it seemed a ritual of sorts between the suitor and the father.
Rebecca and Jennifer carried baskets of produce to the inn, getting all they’d need to make the day’s meals for the small town. Given the small size, work had been shared in a communal fashion. Tasks were divvied up and people had their responsibilities. Some were rotated about, while others stuck with certain families.
My family was responsible for the forge.
I walked through the scenes of past and present and made my way to where our small workshop had stood, tucked in the corner and away from the homes. The stone dome of the smelting furnace remained intact, with some of the metal tools and equipment broken and rusting by the anvil. The stone basin was filled with debris and stale water, a perfect mating pool for insects of the worst kind. It seemed almost identical between past and present, except in the scene from my past, my father hammered away. His hairy chest gleamed with sweat from the heat.
I didn’t need magic to remember this scene. It had become my day to day for so many years. I had spent more of my life at this workshop than almost anywhere else before or since. It was where my love of metalwork and blades was born.
It was also where my resolve had been forged.
My hand dropped to one of my two daggers, both vastly different from the twin steel daggers I’d made and named here before venturing off to Salvar. Virtue and Violence. I had engraved their names on the hilt of those steel blades. For a long time I had had a habit of running my finger over those engravings for comfort. It reminded me of why I had left, and of the resentment and anger that simmered within.
Anger was always a powerful tool when funneled into a goal of some kind. Unfortunately, it also poisons the mind and body. That had been a difficult lesson to learn, and one that continued to be a challenge.
I took a deep breath in to calm myself, and to keep those angry memories from taking root. They no longer had a home within me. As I did, I could almost smell the smoke of the forge from all those years ago, mixing with my father’s ferocious musk.
I ran my hand over the smooth and cold metal of the anvil, wondering how many weapons had been hammered into their devastating form upon it. Decades of work, including some of my own, happened right here.
I hadn’t come here for any of that.
I had come back here to see if I could see the truth for myself of my mother’s passing. I had come to witness the betrayal I imagined my father had committed, and find answers to what had truly been his role with the mercenary band. I had come to see if I could find notes, written in the past, that could help me piece together what had happened to Pylos, and whether the tragedy that had wiped this place from the map had been premeditated or an accident, as was claimed.
I shook my head at the thought, realizing that I still had work to do with coming to terms with the scars of my past. I closed my eyes, letting the magic fade from my vision. When I opened them, I was present.
It seemed ironic that I had developed an ability that let me see the past so clearly, when my greatest challenge remained living in the moment. The Thaynes seemed to love playing cruel jokes on us mortals.
“This part of my life has passed. It is not right to raise it from the dead.” The wind picked up my voice, embracing it like a warm hug and carrying it through the silent streets of Pylos. Whatever demons haunted this empty ruin, they were not mine to exorcise.
I closed my eyes and imagined my home – of now – and teleported back across the world to that place. I had left Pylos nearly a decade ago, leaving that quiet and small town, hidden in the forests just southwest of Underwood on the island of Corone. That choice had brought me to where my new life had begun, and continued.
For now, The Bearded Gnome Inn of Knife’s Edge, was my home. The past would stay where it belonged: in the past.
Last edited by SirArtemis; 05-01-17 at 01:44 PM.
2011 Althy Winner - Most Realistic Character
2016 Althy Winner - Best Contributor & Player of the Year (tie)
Artemis Eburi Wiki Page
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Solo Quests:
Hidden Beneath The Canopy (75)
Lost Loot of Lornius (74)
I remember the smell of oak. More than anything else, it's the smell that stayed with me. Hell, I helped build half of that damned house. Simply designed, made entirely of oak and stone. There were so many of us then. Rose taught the eldest to care for the youngest; those of us with a gift for it, anyway. I barely remember anything before I met her. I remember scavenging for food and clothes from the dead on a battlefield. I remember carrying around a worn and rusted sword. And I remember Rose, finding me there, and warming my heart.
I remember the lessons; we started at dawn, working the field behind the house. Rose lead the group, she was the best farmhand I had ever seen, and the best since. And as we all worked she gave us lessons; math, history, arcane theory, battle strategy. Nothing was inappropriate or withheld. Then, when the morning work was done, we had breakfast. The older kids helped with the field and the younger ones, or the ones not strong enough for manual labor, cooked. That's another thing I remember vividly; the smell of an oak kitchen and still warm breakfast food.
I remember competing with Alder and Boris for food. That was always the case at the table with the older kids. The young ones had their own food set aside, so we wouldn't leave them starving. I remember one time I tried to take a piece of meat from their table; Rose hit me so hard I can still almost hear my bell being rung.
I was never any good at the academic stuff. It just never stuck. But I was good with my hands, fixing the house as it broke (or maybe as we broke it). Boris was, of course adept at making tools. Rose named him after her father, cause his beard reminded her of him. Alder and Petey were great at figuring out how to fix everything. She named Alder for his eyes; as green as any I'd ever seen. "You just look like a Peter," she would say when we asked 'why Peter?"
It was like that a lot, in a house filled with orphans. Rose took care of us and we were grateful. She was a mother, and a teacher, and a mentor. I realize now, that we never knew much about her. I remember one night, when one of the little ones woke me up to take them to the bathroom; I saw Rose on the porch. She's been sitting there, silently, for what must have been hours. All kinds of animals had gathered around her. I stood in the dark kitchen and watched. I don't know how, but she knew I was there. She called me over and I sat down next to her. There was something different in her eyes that night; something I had never seen since. An emptiness.
"Your swordsmanship is getting better," she said to me, "but you still move like a little demon. You attack without hesitation or restraint, and without empathy. But if you ever want to defeat truly great foes, you'll have to defeat the demon inside you first. You have to swing your blade with humanity, if you want to be truly strong."
I didn't understand it then, but she spoke as if she was speaking to herself more than me. Like this was something she had to remind herself of.
None of use could ever touch her during sparring. Not Boris, the only dwarf she was looking after, with all his natural strength. Not Petey, the eldest and a dark elf. Not even me or Alder, the two best swordsmen. Even at that age, we were stronger than most soldiers who's passed through on rare occasion. And it wasn't like we were close to her skill; she was on a whole other level. We could feel it, we could almost sense that her sheer prowess had gravity to it. Like when she was ready to attack, we felt the weight of her intention and it crippled us.
That's things were, before the war. They were peaceful. They were good, in the full meaning of the word. And we were happy.
We never knew her to have friends. No one ever visited us, so when I saw her speaking with a strange man, I was instantly curious. When I'd asked her about it, she smiled disarmingly and changed the subject. She did that sometimes. When we asked about her past. But that time she told me, "there will come a time when I won't be able to be here for you all. . . I need you to promise me, that when the time comes, you'll find the humanity to protect everyone."
I didn't get it then, and I'm not sure I do now. Her words were foretelling, like she knew she'd be killed. Like she knew I would have to do it. But somehow I think she was talking about something yet to happen. I can't say I don't miss her. I can't say I don't blame myself for not being strong enough to protect all the things she cared about. But because there are still things for me to protect, I can't let myself dwell.
The days were long and the nights draped a blanket of serenity across our little home. There were difficult days too, but I don't remember them very well now. That little house, standing isolated and proud against the backdrop of a Salvaran storm is etched into my mind. With Rose, standing in front of it, surrounded by the family she'd chosen and saved. We all fought to protect her, but she just wanted to protect that image. The family she'd brought together. And the little child people had called a 'corpse eating demon,' who lived on a battlefield.
Last edited by Good for Nothing Captain; 05-01-17 at 03:18 PM.
“Excellence is never an accident. It is always the result of high intention, sincere effort, and intelligent execution; it represents the wise choice of many alternatives - choice, not chance, determines your destiny.”
― Aristotle
Rau-ko-rad
1. Elven; Red Demon
2. Victor Valentine
This vignette is now closed for judgment!
Althanas Operations Administrator
"When we were young, was this the dream we had? We're celebrating nothing. We need to find our way back."
Apologies for the wait on this one. It is being attended to.
Althanas Operations Administrator
"When we were young, was this the dream we had? We're celebrating nothing. We need to find our way back."