Hotsuma
08-03-11, 12:57 AM
An expansive view of the city sprawled out beneath a brooding night sky. The full moon hung low to the west, partially hidden behind a cover of thin clouds. Its light filtered the world through a luminescent lens, lending everything before him an ethereal glow.
He shifted in his seat with unease.
The stirring within his soul at such sights as these was becoming more common as the days went by, each frightening him as much as the last.
With a sigh half relief and half regret, Griever looked away. On the grounds below, a wedding celebration was building up momentum for its second wind. The apparent chaos of such uninhibited elation had struck Griever as one of the most intriguing things he’d ever laid eyes on.
Flame eaters, jugglers, jesters, tale weavers, second rate magicians, puppeteers and even little people had all made an appearance. Each act did their best to please the hosts, and by the carnage that had been left behind, they had found resounding success. All around the square laid the bodies of patrons that had literally danced and drank until they had dropped to the floor. They didn’t go down without a fight however. Even now some of those casualties were groggily getting to their feet, fighting gravity as though it were the mightiest of foes.
The two souls that withheld a vague resemblance of sanity were the bride and her groom seated at the far end of the square behind a long table burdened with mostly untouched food and partially opened gifts. Griever felt almost as though he were intruding on an intimately private moment every time his eyes fell over them, though all they had managed to do this far in the night was drink in each other’s gaze like desert victims at a watering hole and nuzzle noses every now and then.
“The time has come,” stated a voice.
Griever’s blade was free of its sheath before the second word had been fully spoken. Another moment and the runes lining his face lit into black flame edged with a red glow. He would have wagered his life that the door had not opened, and therefore regarded any surprise as an immediate danger.
“That’s a pretty little trick you got there, friend.” a brief yellow flame brought light to a beaten looking man, a line of cloth tight over his eyes, as he lit the pipe sticking from his mouth. “Though I don’t think you’d’ve been as amusing as the rest of the clowns down there.” He chuckled to himself and vaguely waved with a hand, the heavy gauntlet covering it gleamed dully in the fire light, countless nicks and gouges marred its surface.
“You are?” asked Griever, his voice bled threat.
“I’m nobody,” said the man, pausing before he spoke again. “I’m the fool and the tyrant. The beggar and the lord.” He rose from his chair, a looming mountain waking from slumber. “I’m the Soldier, friend.”
A trickle of laughter drifted from below.
“But you.” Griever could see his teeth gleam in the moonlight. “You’re a trick. The poisoned needle that slides in our necks as we sleep, slick as a grin. A shit-eating maggot! Eating away at the world’s soul.” he chuckled. “A gods-damned arrow shot straight from heaven. Even now you‘re playing their notes, reciting their lines; why, you‘re the main attraction! As are the rest of us…” He grunted and turned away. “And what beautiful fucking instruments we are.”
Griever felt every word strike him true, echoing within him as the looked down and all but saw the manacles and chains binding him body and soul.
“Aye,” said the soldier, nodding. “You’ve felt Their ways worse than most, I can see that as clear as day.” He leaned forward, breathing a line of smoke into the air. “But if you’d look a little closer, you might find that you’re not as lost as you believe. A man’s choice is all he’s ever truly been given in this world that is truly his own.”
Griever shook his head. In his eyes rose a dead light. “Your words are like bile flowing from your mouth. What do you know of choice? What would you say to the man that had his torn away by a god?” His last words were wreathed in a snarl.
“Do we beat our fist to the ground, wail and tear the hair from our heads when we wish the night to be day? Or the storm to find peace? Or perhaps you would question the lion his rule, and command him close his mouth when you draw near?”
The soldier paused and took a deep breath before continuing. “Listen to me boy. Listen closely, for I will not have this chance again in a long while.”
He shifted in his seat with unease.
The stirring within his soul at such sights as these was becoming more common as the days went by, each frightening him as much as the last.
With a sigh half relief and half regret, Griever looked away. On the grounds below, a wedding celebration was building up momentum for its second wind. The apparent chaos of such uninhibited elation had struck Griever as one of the most intriguing things he’d ever laid eyes on.
Flame eaters, jugglers, jesters, tale weavers, second rate magicians, puppeteers and even little people had all made an appearance. Each act did their best to please the hosts, and by the carnage that had been left behind, they had found resounding success. All around the square laid the bodies of patrons that had literally danced and drank until they had dropped to the floor. They didn’t go down without a fight however. Even now some of those casualties were groggily getting to their feet, fighting gravity as though it were the mightiest of foes.
The two souls that withheld a vague resemblance of sanity were the bride and her groom seated at the far end of the square behind a long table burdened with mostly untouched food and partially opened gifts. Griever felt almost as though he were intruding on an intimately private moment every time his eyes fell over them, though all they had managed to do this far in the night was drink in each other’s gaze like desert victims at a watering hole and nuzzle noses every now and then.
“The time has come,” stated a voice.
Griever’s blade was free of its sheath before the second word had been fully spoken. Another moment and the runes lining his face lit into black flame edged with a red glow. He would have wagered his life that the door had not opened, and therefore regarded any surprise as an immediate danger.
“That’s a pretty little trick you got there, friend.” a brief yellow flame brought light to a beaten looking man, a line of cloth tight over his eyes, as he lit the pipe sticking from his mouth. “Though I don’t think you’d’ve been as amusing as the rest of the clowns down there.” He chuckled to himself and vaguely waved with a hand, the heavy gauntlet covering it gleamed dully in the fire light, countless nicks and gouges marred its surface.
“You are?” asked Griever, his voice bled threat.
“I’m nobody,” said the man, pausing before he spoke again. “I’m the fool and the tyrant. The beggar and the lord.” He rose from his chair, a looming mountain waking from slumber. “I’m the Soldier, friend.”
A trickle of laughter drifted from below.
“But you.” Griever could see his teeth gleam in the moonlight. “You’re a trick. The poisoned needle that slides in our necks as we sleep, slick as a grin. A shit-eating maggot! Eating away at the world’s soul.” he chuckled. “A gods-damned arrow shot straight from heaven. Even now you‘re playing their notes, reciting their lines; why, you‘re the main attraction! As are the rest of us…” He grunted and turned away. “And what beautiful fucking instruments we are.”
Griever felt every word strike him true, echoing within him as the looked down and all but saw the manacles and chains binding him body and soul.
“Aye,” said the soldier, nodding. “You’ve felt Their ways worse than most, I can see that as clear as day.” He leaned forward, breathing a line of smoke into the air. “But if you’d look a little closer, you might find that you’re not as lost as you believe. A man’s choice is all he’s ever truly been given in this world that is truly his own.”
Griever shook his head. In his eyes rose a dead light. “Your words are like bile flowing from your mouth. What do you know of choice? What would you say to the man that had his torn away by a god?” His last words were wreathed in a snarl.
“Do we beat our fist to the ground, wail and tear the hair from our heads when we wish the night to be day? Or the storm to find peace? Or perhaps you would question the lion his rule, and command him close his mouth when you draw near?”
The soldier paused and took a deep breath before continuing. “Listen to me boy. Listen closely, for I will not have this chance again in a long while.”