Freedom
By: Hannah
Williams
Crash!
The plate, the
teacup, the kettle, and the saucer all crashed to the floor.
The Duke of
Shippening let out an angry growl and aimed a kick at the young woman, who
dropped to her knees on the floor, grasping for the flyaway tableware
desperately. “Oaf!” he shouted. “Watch what you’re doing!”
The girl dodged the
kick with the expertise of experience.
She kept her gaze on the carpet as her shaking fingers closed around the
cracked teacup.
“Oh…” she heard
the Duke say. “It’s you.”
She knew who he
meant by “you.” She’d seen the Dragon
enter the room before the Duke had, and in her fright she had dropped the
tea.
The Dragon never
failed to frighten her.
Perhaps she should
have been used to him by now. She had
his appearance memorized by heart. His
black hair falling in dead strands around his face of chiseled marble. The glow of fire in his black eyes. The confident swing in his stride. Yes, he looked like a man. But she knew he was so much more. She’d seem him for what he really was. Many times.
Ever since her master, the Duke, had started corresponding with the
demon.
“Lydia !” the
Duke barked at her, pulling his pipe out of his mouth. “Leave the room.”
“She doesn’t have
to,” the Dragon said, his voice saturated with malevolence.
But Lydia was all
to glad for an excuse to leave. Heaping
the cup and plate onto the tray, she rose to her feet, and keeping her eyes
down, she sidled past the dragon with a shudder, even though he radiated heat.
The door shut behind
her, and their voices faded away as she hurried down the hall of Oriana
Palace.
She knew the
passageways of the palace well now. The
Duke of Shippening had taken it over some time ago. Pausing, she glanced at a picture on the
wall. For a moment she felt a flash of
surprise it had not been torn down. It
was a painting of the family who had lived here only months before. King Fidel stood smiling, his arms wrapped
protectively around the shoulders of his children: the princess Una and the
prince Felix.
She frowned. Curse the Duke for invading Parumvir! He’d driven King Fidel out to exile, Felix
was reported dead, and Una was missing. She
grounded her teeth. More happy
lives—thoughtlessly squandered by her cruel master.
In a burst of
despair, Lydia
dropped the tea tray on the nearest table and ran through the halls for the
gardens.
The gardens of Oriana Palace
were in seven levels, the seventh leading down into the mysterious Goldstone
wood. Once they had been gardens of
great beauty, but now they were filmed over with the ash and decay the Dragon
brought wherever he went. But at least
no one went there.
And being alone
was exactly what she wanted.
The air was no
less pungent with poison outdoors, but a crisp wind and morning mist made it less
stale then in the palace.
Dashing away
crystal tears, Lydia
caught up her skirts and ran down the path that cut straight down through the
levels. Only at the sixth level did she
stop and turn in.
With a deep sigh
she pulled herself up on the wall over looking the level underneath, and beyond
that…Goldstone Wood.
No longer
bothering to check the tears swiftly rolling down her smudged cheeks, she
stared out to the trees.
Lydia was a lovely
girl, even in that grey cast light. Her
hair was flaxen and fell in unbridled curls down her back. A light spray of freckles danced across her
nose. She was seventeen. She’d been the Duke’s personal attendant
since she was thirteen. There were times
when she hated her pretty face.
“I’m a slave,” she
said aloud. “I’m no better then a
slave.”
A branch breaking
caught her attention. Perhaps the Dragon
had come back out?
Gasping with fear,
she slid off the wall and tore into a thick bush, scratching her skin as she
did so.
The Dragon did not
appear.
Relived, she put
her hand down.
Right on top of
something fluffy.
“Mreeooowll!” A cat screamed at her, then sped out from
under the bush.
She stayed frozen
in shock for a moment before she hurried out after it.
“Kitty!” she
cried. “Kitty, come back! Kittykittykitty!”
The cat was
nowhere to be seen amongst the bracken and the broken down statues.
“Kitty,” she
called again.
Ever since she
could recall, she loved cats. She had
one as a child. The memory of it flashed
back to her. The wide green eyes above
the pink nose, surrounded by the fluff of cuteness. Since she served the Duke, she’d never seen a
cat. He owned dogs, and his dogs had no
appreciation for felines.
The kitty did not
appear.
Dejected, Lydia fell to
her knees, shoulders slumped. What a
fool she had been to think she could have found a form of comfort here. She began to cry softly, her tears falling as
thickly as the droplets of mist.
“Preowl?”
She looked up to
see the same cat taking hesitant steps toward her.
Yes!
Yes!
With gathering
confidence, the cat picked up pace and soon had his head rubbing underneath her
hand, arching his back in pleasure.
Her heart bursting
with delight, Lydia
looked the cat over. His coat was orange,
and his tale was fluffy. He raised a paw
to bat at one of her stray curls, and as he did so she saw his face.
He had no eyes.
“Oh you poor
sweetie!” she cooed, enfolding the cat in her arms. “Poor, poor thing.”
His warm body
tucked against her, Lydia
remounted the wall.
Her fingers
brushed over his grimy coat absently, as she once more gazed out into the wood.
Freedom.
How she longed for
it.
Over the cat’s
purring, she fancied she heard the silver song of a bird. She didn’t know her birds very well, but she
was sure she had heard it before.
Perhaps a thrush.
Almost as if a ray
of sunlight had broken through the fog, she felt warmed and calm.
Words drifted
through her mind.
Beyond the Final Water
falling,
The Song of Spheres
recalling,
When your chains of
fear have bound you tight,
Won’t you come to me?
"Yes,” she
whispered, softly but firmly. “Yes, I
will come.” A pause. “Right now.”
She stood up,
dumping the cat from her lap.
Where the song had
come from she did not know. Who she was
going to she did not know.
But all at once,
she was filled with desire more then ever to escape and to runaway from the
cruel ownership of the Duke. She’d
always planned to. Why not now?
Goldstone Wood lay
before her, and people seemed terrified by it.
It was the perfect place to hide.
Heart beating
rapidly, Lydia
took up her brown skirt again and began to speed down to the forest. To her surprise, the cat darted ahead of her
and led the way.
Leaves crunched
underfoot as she ran. She had to get
away. From the Duke. From the Dragon. From her past.
~~~
The Duke of
Shippening sat scowling in King Fidel’s former office, as he brooded over the
Dragon’s words. The door burst open, and
a guard hurried in. “Sir,” he
gasped. “The watchmen have reported Lydia to have
entered Goldstone Wood.”
The Duke slammed
his fist down. “She’s made a run for it
at last! I knew it! Get riders out and bring her back!”
The guard
paled. “Sir…Goldstone Wood.”
“That’s an
order!!!” he bawled.
Bowing, the guard
left.
~~~
Lydia had not gone
through the forest very long, when she came upon a bridge. Without a thought she stepped onto to it to
cross over.
Suddenly the cat
sprang in front of her, his tail resembling a bottle brush, his legs rigid, his
ears were flat against his head, and his hair on end. He hissed.
“Lume’s crown!” Lydia
gasped.
She tried to step
around him.
He spat and swiped
out a paw.
“Bad kitty!” she
scolded, jumping back.
He growled.
Frightened, Lydia darted
around him, just missing his claws, and dashed for the other side.
“Don’t!”
She froze.
Slowly, she turned
back around to see the cat staring at her, body coiled to spring.
“Did you
just…just…speak?” she stammered.
If a cat ever
looked put out, this one left them all behind.
“Yes.”
“Cat’s…don’t
talk.”
“I do.”
Her eyes as wide
as the moon, she sputtered. “But it’s
impossible.”
Relaxing enough to
lick a paw, he replied, “Stranger things have happened.”
Before she could
answer, there came the distant sounds of horses breaking through brush. Horrified, she spun back towards the
palace. “The soldiers! They’re after me!”
“Don’t cross the
bridge! Go through the stream!” the cat
cried.
Something in his
voice (even though he shouldn’t have had a voice) was so desperate, she didn’t
dare disobey. Scooping the cat up in her
arms, she jumped off the bridge into the stream. A shock ran through her body at the icy
coldness of it. Ignoring it, she
scrambled up onto the other side. The
cat squirmed out from her arms and raced ahead of her. She fled through the trees in desperation,
the cat flickering before her.
She could hear the
sounds of the riders fording the stream, and forced herself to run faster.
Without warning,
the ground dropped away in front of her.
Arms flailing to
regain her balance, she teetered on the edge of a cliff. The forest floor went on below her. The cliff ran on as far to either side as she
could see.
The blind cat was
already springing from tiny foothold to narrow cleft down the cliff, and in a
moment he had reached the ground. His
eyeless face looked up at her. “Hurry!”
he shouted.
She flung a glance
over her shoulder. The horses would show
any moment. There was no time to climb
down. But if she jumped she would hurt,
if not kill, herself.
“Jump!” the cat
called. “I’ll catch you!”
“You’re a cat!”
she yelled back.
“I’ll catch
you! Jump!”
She had only two
choices. If she stayed she would be
caught and would be forced to return to slavery and despair. If she jumped…
The horses were
coming nearer.
Squeezing her eyes
shut, she leapt out into the air. For a
moment, the wind whistled past her ears.
Then she landed in strong arms.
Lydia’s eyes flew
open in shock.
For the briefest
moment she saw the face of a man. Then
her face was shoved up against his shirt by a firm hand, and she felt him began
to run.
In little time,
she felt his body slide down to the ground and her head pulled away from his
chest. They were lying under a bush, and
she could not see him for he was above her, and one hand was immovably pressed
over her mouth.
The mounted soldiers
appeared on the top of the cliff.
“Where’d she go?”
one shouted.
“Vanished,”
another muttered. “Vanished into the
wood. Swallowed up.”
There was a
dreadful silence, then with terrified faces, the men reined their horses around
and galloped away.
The two refugees
remained silent, save for the thumping of Lydia ’s heart.
Then the body over
her rolled away, and the hand dropped from her face. She scrambled to her knees with a shrieking
gasp.
Across from her
was a man clad all in scarlet, with sunshine colored hair. His eyes were covered in scarlet silk patches. A crimson cap perched on his head with rakish
attitude.
Her mind spun.
Right before she’d
jumped there had been a blind cat underneath her. She’d fallen into the arms of a man who was
also blind, in a forest famed for being mysterious.
Coincidence?
Lydia was a smart
enough girl to know that it was not.
“You’re a man!”
she gasped.
He flashed a smile
that made the sunlight dull in comparison.
“The lady’s observation skills do me credit.”
She began to
shake.
His smile
faltered, like a candle almost blowing out.
“I say, it’s all right, dear girl.
You needn’t fear.”
“You were a cat.”
He tilted his head
to the side, his mouth twisting in a smirk.
“You’ve seen a dragon turn into a man.
Is a cat becoming a man any stranger?”
She shook her
head. “Who are you?”
“Ah, of
course.” He rose to his feet and blessed
her with an elegant bow. “I am Eanrin, Knight
of Farthestshore.”
Farthestshore.
The name was known
to Lydia . It was in the fairy tales of childhood, but
it had always been associated with peace and joy…and freedom. There was no reason to fear
Farthestshore. She hugged her
knees. “I am free.” The thought overwhelmed her. “Where shall I go?”
He pulled her up
with a hand and gestured forward.
“Follow me.”
The sightless man
led on with the same confidence that he had as a cat. Lydia followed him. What other choice did she have?
After some time he
ducked underneath a curtain of ivy, and she followed suit. Blinking with surprise, she saw that she was
no longer in a wood, but in a small house with a bed, a table covered in food,
and a basin of water. “What is this
place?” she demanded.
“A refuge of my
Master. You will be safe here, and the faeries
will attend to your needs. You must stay
here until I send word that the Near World is safe.”
She gasped. “You’re leaving me.”
Pausing with one
foot already out the door, he explained, “I was commissioned in the
guardianship of Princess Una and Felix.
I must return to Oriana and wait for their arrival. If I can not personally come back for you, I
shall send someone else.”
“How am I to know
you will? What if I leave after you do?”
Lydia
cried, trembling.
He drew the foot
back in. “Don’t leave here, Lydia .”
She could have
sworn she’d never told him her name.
“You are in the
Wood Between. Stay here and you will be
safe. I promise I will not forget
you. Please trust me.” Though he had no eyes, his face was fraught
with pleading.
Lydia sucked in a
deep breath, pushing her lips together tightly.
Men had never given her a reason to trust them. But Eanrin was a cat. Kind’ of.
Maybe. Cats had always been her
friends. She trusted cats. Besides what other choice did she have?
Gradually, she
nodded. “Okay,” she whispered. “I will trust you.”
Smiling again, he
swept a bow. “Thank you, lady. I shall send one for you. You have the word of Eanrin, Chief Poet of
Rudiobus.”
And in a moment he
was gone, leaving Lydia
gasping in surprise.
~~~
The blind cat
purred with contentment in the arms of Prince Felix. All was well.
The Dragon had been killed. The
Duke had been killed. King Fidel, and
Una, and Felix were restored to their royal positions. Una was to marry the Prince of
Farthestshore. The royal family of
Parumvir had taken refuge at the coastal city of Glencrocus .
Now the cat was
listening in as the Prince of Farthestshore bade farewell to Una.
“I must find my servants and see to your
father’s interests as well. But I will
return for you, Una. Will you wait for
me?”
The princess smiled
before the bustling crowd swept them apart.
Hurriedly, the cat
wiggled out of Felix’s arms and dashed after the Prince. “My Prince,” he said in a hushed voice. “When you go to Oriana, will you also pick up
Lydia ? She waits.”
His kind eyes
smiling, the Prince said, “I will return for her for she is my child.”
The cat flicked
his tail in satisfaction and turned to leave.
“Eanrin?”
He looked back.
“Well done.”
The cat bowed
gracefully, his whiskers twitching, before he dashed away.
~~~
Lydia had waited long. Like the cat had said, all her needs had been
attended to by the invisible fairies. In
the lonely times she thought she heard a thrush sing, which somehow comforted
her.
One day, the wait
came to an end.
“Lydia ?”
She sprang up at
the voice and at the silhouette of the man in the door. At once she saw it was not the cat, but he
said he might not come himself. “Who are
you?”
“I am the Prince
of Farthestshore.”
The silvery song
of a thrush trickled through her mind.
Won’t you come to me?
In that moment, Lydia knew
without a doubt that he was indeed the Prince of Farthestshore, and that it was
he who had called for her.
“Yes,” she said,
although he had not asked the question out loud. “I will come.”
~~~
The Prince led Lydia with many
other people along a path to Glencrocus.
The royal household of Parumvir was waiting for them, and in the
exciting reunions of friends, Lydia
felt slightly lost.
“Meow?”
“Kitty!” Lydia cried,
swooping the blind cat up in her arms in delight. The next moment she remembered that he wasn’t
just a cat and she dropped him as if he’d burnt her.
“I say,” the cat
exclaimed, stumbling as he regained his footing from the sudden drop. “I know the rumor goes that cats always land
on their feet, but you could give a chap some warning.”
“Sorry,” she said,
blushing.
His tail flicked
twice. “You’re to come to the inn with
me. King Fidel will find a room for you
I’m sure. And you’re invited to the
wedding of the Prince of Farthestshore and Princess Una. The Prince asked you to come.”
Lydia’s jaw
dropped. A wedding? To which she was invited, as a guest not a
servant? A guest invited by the
bridegroom himself? “Yes,” she gasped,
joy filling her heart. “Yes!”
He gestured with
his head to follow him, and she did.
“But what shall I do after…” she struggled on the words. “What shall happen to me?”
“I’ve talked with
the Prince about that. He agrees with me
that you will be taken under care of a woman named Imraldera until you have
found a place in the world. You will
like her. She’s the sort that makes
everything better.” They had now come to
the inn, and he halted at the steps, one paw curled under him. “And one more thing. Don’t let on that I talk or change into a
man. Una and Felix don’t know about that
yet, and it would be rather awkward if you started talking about it, if you get
my meaning.”
She laughed and
nodded.
~~~
The wedding took
place by the sea. Lydia smoothed
down the folds of a sky blue dress that had been given to her, before resuming
to watch the beautiful ceremony. She
breathed deep, thinking about how wonderful her life had become.
All of a sudden, a
cat’s tail wound around her legs. She
looked down in surprise to see the blind cat.
Last she’d seen him, he’d been by Prince Felix.
“I’ve got
Imraldera after me,” he whispered.
“Intercept her if you would, I’d be most grateful.” Then in an orange streak, he was off.
Lydia looked up to
see a woman moving through the crowd towards her, turning her head in a
searching manner. “Are you looking for a
cat?” she asked softly.
The woman was dark
skinned and dark haired, and she wore green and lavender. Her lips rounded in surprise. “Yes, I am,” she said, equally soft. “Have you seen one?”
“Uh-huh. He told me you were coming.”
Her eyebrows shot
up. “Told you—?” Then a knowing smile
spread over her pretty face. “Ah, you
must be Lydia . My Prince told me about you. I am Dame Imraldera. You will come with me after the wedding,
yes?”
“Yes,” Lydia
replied. The woman, who seemed both
young and old, seemed like an instant friend.
They went silent as they watched the end of the ceremony.
Then Lydia
whispered, “The kitty…do you know him?”
The sparkling
black eyes of Imraldera laughed.
Lydia
reddened. “I mean the cat…I mean…the
man…Eanrin!”
She nodded. “Yes…I know him.”
Something in her
voice suggested more then friendship, and Lydia looked intently at her. But her expression gave nothing away, and Lydia had to
douse her sudden curiosity.
The ceremony was
complete, and the cheers of the crowd filled the air. Lydia closed her eyes in
contentment. Where would her life lead
from here? It did not matter. She had a new master, one who cared for her. She would follow the Prince. True freedom.
And in that moment,
Lydia
heard the voice of the sea rising up to join in the singing of the stars.
6 comments:
Oh, I love the cliff scene with Lydia and the kitty, where Lydia must make her decision: bondage or trust?
This is a great story - complete with adventure and a wonderful ending! :) Nice descriptions!
Everyone sure loves Eanrin's character - I'm excited to learn more about him in Starflower! :)
~Amber
Hannah- you've done it again. I loved this story! You are such an incredible writer!
Thank you everyone! It makes me smile to see how popular Eanrin is in the fan fiction stories. :)
Oooh!!! I love this story! It made me laugh and now I want to cry because I won't ever know what Lydia ends up doing. Good job!
I love it!! I was pulled in from the very beginning! Well done :)
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