The Knights of the Farthestshore
enjoyed close relationships with their Prince.
They knew him and he knew them.
They trusted him with their lives, and he trusted them to do his will.
But they seldom saw him weep.
They knew, though. They knew that he sorrowed for every person
that he lost to Death-in-Life. They
would sometimes hear the wood thrush's song after another took the flame, would
hear the heartbreak in his voice. Other
times, they wouldn't even hear his song and they knew. They knew his sorrow because they could feel
it themselves, like a knife blade twisting in their hearts.
Once in a while, however, they would
weep with him by his very side.
*****
Sir Diarmid of Farthestshore stormed
into the Netherworld. Only that wasn't
his title now, was it? No, in a blaze of
fury, he had renounced his knighthood in front of his eyeless uncle, that
mortal the Prince had made Lady of the Haven, and a handful of his other fellow
knights.
Oh, what a shock that had been to
them! He might as well have spit in
their faces.
They were always saying that dragon
poison was bad. “Dragon poison will
addle your senses.” “Dragon poison is
full of lies.” “Stay away from dragon
poison; it'll cloud your judgment!”
“Dragon poison will cloud my
judgment, my foot!” Diarmid muttered.
“I'm thinking more clearly than I have in a long time-- since before I
became one of those dragon-blasted Knights!”
Who were they to call it poison when
it really brought everything into focus?
He had been in Nadire Tansu when there had been an explosion from
somewhere beneath the city. A few
moments later, there was nothing left, and only Diarmid and his uncle had
escaped. True, the “poison” had been
somewhat painful and disorienting when he had first breathed it. But wasn't that how truth was? It was painful and it disoriented a person
when it was first realized. And no
wonder, it flipped a person's perspective right on its head! But once the initial shock was gone, you had
to change and conform to the truth, or else slam your eyes shut again and
stumble around blindly.
The truth was simple: everyone who
trusted the Prince of Farthestshore was a fool.
Demarress had been right. At least, the dragon that had been Demarress
had been right. The Prince of
Farthestshore didn't care about them. He
would use them for a time and make them feel good and happy until his use for
them ran out. Then he would leave them
to rot, like Demarress in the dungeons of Nadire Tansu.
And who had gotten her out of
there? Had it been the Prince of
Farthestshore? No, that had been
Death-in-Life's work. He wouldn't
leave his own to waste away in a jail cell.
Instead, he set them free. The
only bindings that the Dragon's children had were the chains that they chose
for themselves. He empowered his
children in a way that the Prince of Farthestshore never did.
Ahead of him, he heard a
flame-filled voice calling after him, “Take my fire and lose your chains.”
Far behind him, an eyeless, yellow-haired Knight stepped
onto Death's Path, took up a lantern, and set out after his nephew.
And he heard a golden voice calling
after him, “Diarmid!”
He looked back over his shoulder and
snarled.
Then he turned forward again, pursuing that voice.
*****
In the Village, dragons paced back
and forth across the cavern floor, consumed in their burning. And the Dragon sat on his blood-stained
throne, presiding over all.
On other days, he would have them
amuse him. On other days, he would have
them dance for him. Or fight. On other days, he would breathe lies into
their minds, stoking their fires until the Village burned like a bonfire.
Not today.
Today his attention was focused
elsewhere, farther up his Path. He did
consider it his Path after all, for it did run through his demesne. It was his, no matter what his Enemy said.
One of his prospective children was
coming to him. Running to him like a
child to his Father. How delicious! That one was going to be his child. Soon, very soon. His fire was right. It would not be long now.
Something caught his attention on
the borders of his realm, and he hissed.
A Knight of Farthestshore! A blood-relation to the one coming to him,
what's more! He remembered how this
played out last time. One had sought his
fire while the other had pursued, with that wretched, wretched lantern in
hand! They had fought on his Path. What a battle it had been! At last the pursuer had been killed, but his
prospective child had looked into the lantern and his firstborn's poison had
been driven from his veins.
While the death of this particular
Knight of Farthestshore was something to be greatly desired, he would not
suffer to lose another of his children to his Enemy.
He had not interfered with that
battle, but this time, the battle would never come. He would kiss that wretch before the Knight
ever reached him!
So Death-in-Life slithered off his
throne and transformed into a monstrous Dragon with obsidian scales and flew to
the spot where Diarmid made his way to his new Father.
*****
Poison pumped through Diarmid's
veins, working its way deeper and deeper into his heart. He ignored the voice calling behind him. There was only to go to the Dragon and accept
his kiss.
Then wreak havoc for his former
kinsmen.
An evil smile worked its way onto
his features. He was going to enjoy
being a dragon immensely.
He looked up and saw his Father for
the first time, streaking towards him on ebony wings like a comet.
He was coming to give him the fire.
*****
Asha swung in Eanrin's grasp as he followed
Diarmid's trail down Death's Path. He
yelled his nephew's name every few steps while begging his Prince that the
blood ties would work for him and his nephew.
It had to! It had worked for
Akilun and Etanun; it had worked for Alistair and Florien. It had to work for him!
He just tried to push to the back of
his mind the fact that Akilun had died and Alistair had been seriously
maimed. He yelled Diarmid's name again
as much to shake that thought from his head as to slow Diarmid's progress.
Eanrin stopped. He could smell that his nephew was near. But he caught another scent, and he felt his
gut lurch.
The Dragon was near as well.
*****
The Dragon towered above him, all
black majesty as his scales gleamed in the light of his own fire.
He leaned in close to Diarmid, his
poison creeping in through his mouth and nostrils and coiling itself around his
heart and mind. It was a pleasant,
burning sensation.
“Take my fire and lose your chains,”
the Dragon hissed.
“I'll never bow down! Never!
I am my own master.”
“Your own master, free to choose
your own chains. Take my fire.”
“Very well. Give it to me.”
The Dragon bent down and his black
lips touched his forehead. Diarmid
screamed as searing agony coursed throughout his body. The last weak, pathetic remnants of Diarmid
burned away in flames.
Diarmid's scream transformed into a
roar as his frail human-like body gave way to the body of a small dragon with
yellow eyes.
“I'll choose my own chains!”
“Bow to me,” the Dragon said.
The dragon that had been Diarmid
bowed, just as a scream sounded behind him.
“No!”
*****
Waves of horror and terror washed
through Eanrin as his other senses told him what his missing eyes could not.
One moment, his nephew stood before
the Dragon. The next moment, a young
dragon roared, “I'll choose my own chains!”
“Bow to me,” he heard the Dragon
say.
A scream that had been waiting to
escape his throat burst forth as the young dragon bowed.
“No!”
The two dragons rounded on the
poet. He could feel both their fiery
gazes burning into him, and flames flickered in the back of the Dragon's throat
as he said, “Burn him.”
The small dragon's pupils narrowed
to slits, thin slashes of black in the yellow of his irises. He roared and sent a jet of white and blue
flame at him, and Eanrin braced himself for the heat, the burn that never
came. He heard the young dragon's roar
transform into a hideous shriek of terror.
The Prince of Farthestshore stood
between Eanrin and the yellow-eyed dragon.
The flames rushed around him and the knight that stood behind him,
unable to touch them.
The Dragon roared in triumph,
“You're too late, my Enemy! He's
mine! It's too late for you to reclaim
him!” He leaned in close to the Prince's
face, the flames in his eyes flared in triumph.
“Tell me, how does it feel to be rejected by one of your own? By one who has served you faithfully for
centuries? Does it burn? Does it feel like the sting of Death?” He chuckled deep in his throat, like liquid
fire.
The Prince didn't waver. “Leave here, Death-in-Life. And take your new child with you.”
The Dragon hissed and recoiled from
him, beating the air with his ebony wings.
In but a few moments, he and the yellow-eyed dragon were gone, retreated
further into the Netherworld.
*****
Eanrin stood in stunned silence in
the wake of what had just happened. And
while his heart was screaming in agony for his nephew, his mind was spinning
and whirling and struggling to grasp the truth.
“No,” he stammered, trying to
convince himself that his nephew wasn't a dragon. “No, no, it can't be true! Diarmid....
He can't be gone! He just can't be!”
“It is true, Sir Eanrin. Diarmid is gone.”
Eanrin turned his head toward where
the Prince stood, his head bowed and fists clenched. Then in a mere whisper, he repeated, “Diarmid
is gone.”
Then Eanrin's horror was doubled as
the sound of the Prince's weeping reached his ears. As he wept, the dreadful truth settled on
Eanrin:
Diarmid was gone. His heart belonged to Death-in-Life.
The weight of this loss crushed
Eanrin a strangled sob caught in his throat and tears slipped from underneath
his silken eye patches. He sank to his
knees as his body shook in his sorrow.
A moment later, he felt the Prince's
strong arms around him, comforting even as his own shoulders quaked with his
weeping.
“I'm sorry,” Eanrin gasped. “I should have tried harder. I should have done something!”
“No, Eanrin,” the Prince said. “There was nothing more you could do. You pursued Diarmid this far, but in the end,
it was Diarmid's choice. You could not
have prevented it once the Dragon came for him.”
He nodded, then drew a shuddering
breath. “Can nothing be done for him?”
“Yes.”
Eanrin started to speak, but the
Prince cut him off. “It is nothing that
you can do. Only I can bring
Diarmid back, and then only if he chooses to allow me to do so. It is possible that he will think the cost to
himself too high.” The Prince pulled
away from Eanrin and stood. He drew his
Knight upright, placed a firm hand on his shoulder and continued, “But you have
my word, Sir Eanrin, I will do everything that can be done for Diarmid. Not until he returns to me or else dies a
dragon will I cease to pursue him.”
Then they turned and left the
Netherworld empty save for phantom mists and a brood of heartless dragons.
*****
Somewhere in the Wood Between, a
wood thrush sang.
Some mortals would say that birdsong
was just that: birdsong. Nothing
more. But anyone who heard this bird
singing would find themselves to be dreadfully misled, for no one could mistake
the tears in the thrush's song.
He had gone to Diarmid. He had spoken with him, convinced him to
return. Then he had drawn Halisa, had
gone to finish his work and once again make Diarmid his Knight.
Diarmid's eyes had widened as he had
realized what the Prince intended, and he had transformed into a small dragon,
flames spewing from his mouth.
“Traitor!” the dragon had
shrieked. “You were going to kill
me!”
“This is the only way, Diarmid,” he
had calmly said to the furious yellow-eyed dragon.
“Liar!”
“Diarmid--”
“That is not my name!” he had
roared.
Then he had launched a volley of
flame at the Prince, but his flames could not consume him. When he had realized this, he had flown away,
never to return to the Prince's service.
The Prince knew this as he sang, and
it wounded him. He had lost so many to
Death-in-Life, but that made it no easier when he lost another. Some of them had returned; some of them had
yet to return, but would eventually. Not
all of them, though. Some of them never
returned to him.
But he would always welcome them
back. They could stop up their ears to
him until their dying day, but if they listened, they would still hear his
singing over them,
“Beyond the Final Water falling,
The Songs of Spheres recalling,
When the chains you chose are too
much,
Won't you return to me?”
VOTING: If
you would like to vote on this or any of the other fan fiction
submissions, email your top three titles to me at aestengl@gmail.com. Voting is for fans of the Goldstone Wood series only.
14 comments:
Ohhh! That's beautiful! Thank you so much, Natasha!
You're welcome, and thank you! I worked so hard on this one! I'm really glad it turned out well!
*sigh* Diarmid. He has always made me sad, and this story just reinforces that.
It was well written, though, and I enjoyed reading it very much.
I know. Me too. I do wish that he hadn't been so stubborn! But the Prince of Farthestshore did everything that there was to be done, and he still didn't return! :/ His story is so sad.
Oh, my. How very profound and wonderfully written. Diarmid breaks my heart, too. Enjoyed how you emphasized Eanrin's pursuit of his nephew and showed the Prince of Farthestshore's steadfast love. Thank you for this beautiful story.
You're welcome, and thank you! It was a pleasure to write it!
Diarmid... *sniff, sniff* This was nicely written, and touching, and sad (obviously). I'm going to go cry into my dinner now....
Heartbreaking and beautiful. This brought tears to my eyes!
*sniffle*....
A very well-written take on Diarmid's story! So sad. And I REALLY appreciated how you brought in the blood ties. Of course Akilun had died and Alistair was seriously maimed...poor Eanrin!
This was so sad but beautiful!! :( It made me tear up, especially when the Prince said that he would pursue Diarmid until he died a dragon...
Great job!!
Such a heart-wrenching, well-written story. Yes, I think we all must weep for Diarmid. I loved how you had Eanrin pursuing his nephew, praying for his return; and how the Prince pursued him and wept when Diarmid rejected his salvation. Now I'm going to go shed some tears over a strong cup of black tea.
So lovely and so sad. Poor Diarmid . . . I've always felt sorry for him and this just makes those feeling worse. And poor Eanrin as well . . .
You made me cry. Goshdarnit Natasha, you actually made me cry! You just had to write a Eanrin/Diarmid-centric piece, didn't you? You didn't help my glorious tragic little head-canon about Diarmid's origins, you've made it more tragic, and worse than that is that I'm totally okay with how sad this is!! You dastardly diabolical writer, you! Why must you be so good at this? Why must I love this piece even though it rips out my heartstrings one by one? You are a crafty bugger. A crafty bugger indeed. Fantastic job! :)
Blessings!
Melanie
Thank you all! This being just after I found out that This one got third place, I'm still absolutely bubbling! Thank you!!!
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