The
blow smarted, but he merely tilted his head away in a differential manner.
The
muscular man looming over him snarled and stomped away. He stood staring out a window for a moment,
his great figure black against the pale sky.
Then he pivoted around, his arms crossed over his massive chest. “Last I knew, Sir Eanrin,” the man
growled. “You were missing only your
eyes, not your tongue.”
The
prisoner in the center of the room was clad in scarlet and his eyes were
covered by red patches. Notwithstanding
the fact that his hands were bound behind his back and that he was kneeling on
the floor, the prisoner held himself with poise, even authority. He tossed his head, flicking golden hair off
his brow, and gave the man a slight smirk.
“On the contrary, your majesty.
My tongue remains firmly fixed inside my mouth.”
The
large man stalked towards him, his pace slow and measured. “Then why?” he hissed, “Can you not explain
why you suddenly showed up again in my kingdom?”
“Would
you believe that it was an innocent mistake?”
Bending
down, he leveled his face with Sir Eanrin’s.
His blue eyes burned, and his breath was heavy and putrid. “Was the last
time you came an innocent mistake?”
“Oh
no,” Eanrin laughed. “That was
completely intentional, great king.”
The
king swore again, as a king never should, and swung his fist at the blind
prisoner’s face. But Eanrin dodged the
blow as if he had eyes to see it coming.
“Careful, your majesty,” he said, and now his voice had lost all
cheerfulness. He spoke in a low tone,
but there was a certain bite to it that would make anyone pause. “Careful.
If you strike me again, you’ll not hear another word from my mouth ever
after.”
The
king sneered. “Fool. You’re
in no position to make threats.”
“Agree
to disagree.” The knight cocked his head to the side and flashed a cold
smile. “You’re the one who’s so
desperate for information. I can choose
not to say a word. I actually do know
how to hold my tongue.”
“That’s
hard to believe,” the king grumbled, but he stepped back and lowered his hand.
They
remained there, staring at each other, one with eyes, the other with no eyes at
all. The king exhaled in a long
vibrating growl, before signaling to the guards who stood at the far side of
the hall. “Take him away and lock him in
the dungeon, no food or water. He can
talk or he can die, I don’t care.”
Grabbing
Eanrin by the upper arms, the guards yanked him to his feet, then pushed him
towards the exit. The knight looked back
over his shoulder and gave one last parting jab. “You’re a poor representation of a Faerie
King, Cozalimar!”
The
king snarled in his throat, but said nothing more.
The
dungeon was dark, dank, and cold. The
darkness bothered the blind knight not a bit, but the smell and chill was
unpleasant. As the guards dragged him
down to the under-story of the faerie castle, he wasn’t worried. Eanrin, knight of Farthestshore, Chief-Poet
of Rudiobus, romantic bard of all history, could work his way out of any
situation, in human shape or another.
But
he had not counted on the iron chains.
Iron
weakened faeries so that they were nearly powerless against it, some more than
others. Iron was banned in faerie realms; it was carried by only the shadiest
of dealers, such as Torkem of Arpiar.
But
even as corrupt as Cozalimar’s kingdom had become, Eanrin still hadn’t supposed
that they would have stooped to something so low-down as iron.
They
had.
Eanrin
found that out as they shoved him against the stone wall, and locked his wrists
in iron shackles. He caught his breath
at the icy fire that sliced through his body as the iron bands closed around
his skin. “Dragon’s teeth,” he muttered
through a clenched smile.
After
the guards left, dead silence imploded.
Eanrin
hung completely still for a few moments, unsure of his next move. He tried to swivel his wrists in the
shackles, but they were far too tight and any movement only prompted greater
pain.
His
mind flew back over the centuries, back to when King Cozalimar’s kingdom of Teltethma had been a faerie demesne of
joy and beauty. Before Life-in-Death had
entered the king’s mind. Before he’d
been driven mad. Before he had started
slaughtering every follower of the Prince of Farthestshore within his
borders. The people of Teltethma,
terrified and bewildered, had cried out to the Farthestshore for aid. The rescue of the Teltethma believers had been
one of the largest feats the Knights of Farthestshore had ever attempted. To succeed, someone had to distract Cozalimar
and his court.
Eanrin
smirked at the memory.
Apparently,
the Faerie Lord had never forgiven him for it.
Suddenly,
Eanrin felt something cold, smooth, and strong coil around his arm, and
something flickered against his throat.
Before he could even feel his skin crawl, a voice spoke close to his
ear. A voice velvety and smooth, but not
without an insidious hiss. “There was
once a cat with no eyesss; he fooled the whole court with his liessss.”
Eanrin
drew his breath in sharply and didn’t even try to suppress the shiver that
swept over him. “Dragon’s teeth,” he
said again. “What are you doing here,
Kasela?”
“What
are you doing here, pussy?” the female voice replied.
The
knight let out a little growl. “Forgive
me if I never informed you that I detest being called pussy.”
“Blame
it on my memory. How’d you get in this
little messss?”
He
knew better then to remind her that he had asked first, so he took a deep
breath and began. “I’ve been recently
deployed in Parumvir. There was a prince
there, Felix, who was filled with dragon poison. I went to bring him back to Dame Imraldera
for healing.”
“Dear
Dame Imraldera,” the woman’s voice said in a sarcastic tone.
Eanrin
ignored her. “I arrived only in time for
the boy to be called away by a Fallen.”
“Hmmm,
unexpected.”
“Yes,
and I don’t know why he was called. I
can guess, but why Felix? I wonder… Anyway, he went to the old crossing to Arpiar
and stepped onto the Far Side. I was
chasing him, and it was too late for me to stop my pursuit, so I touched ground
on the other side. Where he went, I’m
not certain, but I landed in the middle of Cozalimar’s guards. Figure that
out. I couldn’t fight my way out, so to
make a long story short, I ended up here.
Now,” he sighed. “What are you
doing here?”
“Sssssight-seeing,”
Kasela purred.
“In
this dark?” Eanrin snorted. “Seriously though, what are you doing here?”
“My
business isss my own.”
He
shuddered a little, and he shrugged his shoulders, trying to remove the sinuous
coils that wound around his arm and neck.
“Interested in helping me out?”
“Twill
require touching iron. You’ll have to
say please.”
He
huffed. “Please?”
The
snake slid down to the ground, and the next moment, she morphed into a woman
with pale skin, black hair, and black clothes.
Her serpentine fingers slide into her belt, and she pulled out something
gleaming. When she slid it into the iron
lock, she gave a tiny hiss of pain, for even indirect touch hurt. But in only a few seconds, both shackles
snapped open.
Eanrin
let out a gasp of relief and jerked forward, rubbing his wrists. “Thanks,” he mumbled.
The
woman slipped back into snake form and slithered out of the cell. She looked back, her black tongue
flickering. “Coming, kitty-cat?”
“How
come you make everything sound like an insult?” he growled, switching into cat
form.
The cat followed
the snake up the stairs out of the heavy blackness. At last they reached the first upper-floor of
Teltethma’s castle, and paused near one of the many tall windows in the long
gilded hallway. When the light touched
Kasela’s sin-black scales, a blue shimmer passed over her winding body. The cat froze for a moment; one paw upraised,
and sniffed the clean air appreciatively, his whiskers twitching. “Cozalimar won’t be too happy to find me
gone,” he remarked.
The corners of
Kasela’s mouth turned up, and her white fangs gleamed. A change had come over her as she had
traveled upwards. Her coy style had
given way to something darker, and Eanrin had picked up a tenseness radiating
from her. “He’ll never find out,” she
whispered.
She
hadn’t intended for him to hear, but when Eanrin had lost his sight, his other
senses had improved. “What was that?” he
asked, his voice as sharp as a knife.
She
did not answer but slid away so silently he did not know she left. Only when she had gotten a fair distance down
the hall did she swivel her head back to face him. “It is time for me to finish him,” she
hissed. Then she took off in an obsidian
streak.
Eanrin’s
heart gave one great thud. Did she mean
it? She’d never killed before, but considering
her shady history, he did not doubt that she did mean it. And would do it. But why?
The
next moment, he was flying after her, an orange blaze. “Kasela!” he shouted.
She
ignored him.
His
ears pinned back on his head, he sped up.
The snake was fast, but the cat was faster. Pouncing, he pinned her down with his paws,
his claws digging into the wood floor around her. She writhed, hissing, her nostrils
flaring. “Let me go!” she spat.
“Kasela,
you cannot--”
She
struck at him.
She
did not make contact, but she came close enough for him to smell the venom on
her fangs. “One bite will be all it
takes to kill Cozalimar. The same goes
for you,” she panted.
Without
warning, she was a woman, and with a thrust of her knee, she sent the cat
flying into the air.
Eanrin
hit the ground as a man, and after regaining his footing, he sprinted after her
fleeing figure. In a few seconds, he
caught up and grabbed her by the arm.
“Kasela, you--”
She
whirled around, her eyes afire, and laid a naked blade across his throat.
They
both froze.
Slowly,
Eanrin let go of her arm and dropped both hands to his side. Kasela kept the knife at his neck, her face
wild and her chest heaving. “I’m going
to kill him!” she hissed.
“But
Kasela,” he reasoned. “That’s not like you.”
“Isn’t
it?” she cried. “Isn’t it? Then why were you so quick to guess my
intent? You know me as a street-world,
slanderous, sinister snake. Well, I’m
more! Or I was! My family was one of the hundreds who were
killed in Cozalimar’s reign of terror.
You don’t think I have a quarrel with him? You’re wrong!
I would have killed him long ago, but I haven’t been able to find a
Crossing since you rescued me. Today I
found a Crossing. Today I shall have my
revenge. I don’t want to kill you,
Eanrin, but if you stand in my way, I will!”
He
kept still and made his voice soft. “I’m
sorry about your family,” he said gently.
“I did not know…I…understand your hate and your pain.”
“NO,
YOU DON ’T!” she screamed, her
knife hard into his skin.
“Very
well, maybe I don’t,” he allowed. “But I
do know that revenge is not worth two lives.”
Her
eyes flickered. “Two?” She scowled in
confusion. “All it takes is one. Cozalimar’s!”
“Wrong,”
the knight said. “Revenge destroys both
the lives of the avenger and their victim.
I know it will ruin your already broken life, Kasela. The Prince of Farthestshore has offered you
forgiveness and redemption, but you--”
“SHUT
UP!”
Eanrin
shut his mouth.
Kasela
looked down, and closed her shadowed eyes.
The strength of her anger was beginning to drain, and the hand holding
the knife began to tremble. “Look,” she
whispered. “I admire you Knights of
Farthestshore. Yes, I even envy
you. I envy you, Eanrin. I envy Imoo.
I envy Oeric. I envy Imraldera,
and not because she’s the only woman you truly love.”
“Now
hold on just a se—
“I
envy your happiness, your nobility. I
appreciate how you’ve always treated me like a fellow person. None of you seem swayed by my appearance,
even when I’ve tried to get attention.
None of you shun me for my sins.
Most people do. Even some
followers of the Prince. I love you
Knights of Farthestshore. Perhaps I wish
I was like you.” Her voice shook. “But I’m not.
It’s too late for me. All that is
left in me is hurt. All that is left for
me to do is hurt. I must kill Cozalimar. Get out of my way.” She seemed to recover herself then, and she pressed
the knife in deeper, her teeth clenched.
Eanrin
let no emotion flicker across his face.
His voice stayed level. “Were you
challenging him to a fair dual, I would not interfere, though I might strongly
advise against it. But I cannot let you
murder him. I won’t let you destroy
yourself. If you wish to continue…you
must kill me first.”
Kasela
stared at him, her eyes huge, and her breath came in rapid little gasps. Suddenly with a cry, she drew back her arm
and thrust the knife forward.
Her
fist rested on his chest, and he did not move.
For she had slid the knife’s blade up through her hand till only the tip
pricked through the side that rested on Eanrin’s breast.
A
sobbing shudder convulsed her body as her final will collapsed. The knife clattered to the ground. Eanrin pulled her into one arm and led her
away. The fight seemed to have bled out
of her, and she weakly sank into him.
“We’re
getting out of here,” he said quietly.
They did not meet
anyone as they left, for Cozalimar’s was a dying kingdom, and few still lived
in his borders.
Eanrin walked the
Faerie Paths with more ease then those with sight, and he soon found a Crossing
out of Teltethma. They paused at the
joint between worlds, but Kasela offered no resistance, so he stepped over.
The
next instant, they stood in the Wood Between.
Twilight hung over the trees, and an evening fog threaded through the
trunks. The branches and leaves rustled,
and a stream whispered a gentle song.
After
some time, Kasela pulled away and stood still, head hanging, fists clenched. She
glared at the ground. “As soon as you
leave, I could go right back. I know my
way now. You won’t always be here to
stop me.”
Eanrin
shrugged.
She
didn’t seem to know what else to say.
The Wood watched them with thoughtful eyes. At last, she turned and walked away. For a moment she paused and looked back, her
black eyes glistening. “Eanrin…” Her mouth hung loose for a moment, and then
she shut it. The next instant, she was a
snake gliding away into the forest.
Eanrin
stared after her, still trying to calm his racing heart.
The
Wood was silent and morose, and the light faded to deep amber, the last sunrays
the day had to offer. A slight tenseness
hung in the air, a feeling of expectancy.
He frowned, and tuned his senses to pick up if something was wrong…
“Sir
Eanrin.”
The
knight smiled in relief and turned to where the Prince of Farthestshore
stood. The poet dropped to one
knee. “My prince! I admit you surprised me this time.” He licked his lips somewhat nervously. “Um…how long have you been watching?”
“I
am always watching,” the Prince said softly.
“Well done.”
“Ah…uh…thank
you,” Eanrin stammered. “I wasn’t
sure. Cozalimar is so evil. I half wanted her to kill him.”
The
Prince’s eyes shone compassionately.
“One day Cozalimar will be stopped.
But not that way and not by her.
You did right.”
“I
wasn’t entirely sure she wouldn’t kill me,” he admitted. “She seemed so full of hate.”
“She
is full of pain.”
“Will
she ever heal?”
“I
will never give up on her,” the Prince answered.
This
seemed to satisfy Eanrin, and they both lapsed into silence.
Then
the Prince said, “Eanrin, I have a new mission for you.”
The
bard’s famous smile secured itself back on his face, and he gave a merry
laugh. “Just when I thought my life
might get boring,” he teased.
The
Prince laughed with him, and Eanrin continued, “So where next? Shall I go in search of Felix?”
“No.” The Prince shook his head, a warm smile on
his mouth. “I want you to go to Hill
House, Southlands.”
The
poet’s brilliant smile almost flickered out.
“Huh?”
A
sober look entered the Prince’s face.
“Prince Lionheart is in despair.
He needs your guidance.”
Now
the smile plunged into oblivion. “Excuse
me?” He coughed; almost gagged. “Prince WHO?”
“Lionheart.”
“But…but…”
Eanrin stuttered, completely discombobulated.
“That…that no-good…scoundrel?”
The
Prince smiled again, rather amused.
“Weren’t you just talking to Kasela about letting go of hate?”
“But…”
Eanrin’s voice trailed away, and he scowled.
“I
need you to help Lionheart. Will you do
this for me?”
The
knight puffed a sigh, but swept a flashy bow, resigned to his fate. “As you wish.”
And
the next instant, Eanrin stood all alone in Goldstone Wood. Somewhere, far away, a wood thrush sang.
7 comments:
Hannah, this was excellent! I don't know WHO I'm going to vote for! With every story I read I think, "Ok, I'll vote for them!" But each story is unique and very, very wonderful! GAH!
Hannah! This was great! I loved the story! It kept me on my toes from the beginning. :)
I loved this story, particularly the way Eanrin convinced the lady to stop pursuing revenge and then turned right around and expressed his reluctance to help Lionheart! So like all of us, isn't it? THe descriptions were excellent. Keep up the outstanding work.
Great story! This was a wonderful message of forgiveness. Your characters were touching and believable, and Eanrin was his own silly self :) Well done!
Oh Hannah, this story was so sweet--loved the message about forgiveness found therein. Some of your word choices in regards to Eanrin made me grin--discombobulated suits him so well! :D
Hannah: okay, I can't say WHO I'll vote for yet, but you story is wonderful! And you have perfectly captured both Eanrin and Aethelbald - at least I think so.
I'm glad you all enjoyed the story!
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