Difference between revisions of "A Necessary Sacrifice"
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[[Category:Bardic Merit Awards]][[Category:2006 Bardics]] | |||
By: Thenidiel | By: Thenidiel | ||
Posted on: June 29, 2006 | Posted on: June 29, 2006 |
Latest revision as of 05:55, 27 March 2017
By: Thenidiel Posted on: June 29, 2006
A Necessary Sacrifice
=====================
The wind blew her hood off her head, revealing a face pinched with cold and
worn with battle scars. Once she had been beautiful - her hair glossy and
sleek, falling over her shoulders in torrents. Now she was nought but a shadow
of her former self, tarnished by too many days at war. Her hair fell in rats
tails around her head, matted and greasy with lack of care. Yet curiously she
did not seem to be bothered at all - the misuse of her body seemed almost like
it was part of her.
Tugging her hood back up with impatience, she stalked onwards through the
tourmented mountains. She could see it on the horizon - the looming red
presence, choking all that entered it. When she reached it. she took out a
parchment and quillpen and began to write, detailing every aspect of the area
around her - the disgusting green seaweed that made the floor as slippery as
ice, giving out its putrid, nauseous stench.
Kneeling down to the ground, she scooped up some of the seaweed into a small
jar, covering her mouth and nose with her cloak to avoid vomiting over the
sample. Sealing it swiftly, she then placed it neatly into her kitbag. A serene
sort of calm crossed her face as she contemplated what she was about to do. A
necessary sacrifice, she told herself. Necessary to understand...to prove to
herself that nothing could survive here but that which had evolved.
Stiffening her resolve, she put her fingers to her mouth and whistled sharply.
A moment passed and then she heard hooves cracking down upon the rough ground
of the mountains. A whinny alerted her to the roan's presence, as it stumbled
in, shaking its head and spluttering in the Fog. She watched it, studied it
carefully, as its eyes began to water and lips peeled back, revealing a tongue
twitching in a gag.
As she watched her faithful mount choke to death in the poisonous fog, she did
not weep. The serene calm came over her once more and she stiffened. Strength,
she told herself. Strength through pain. Understanding through strength. A
necessary sacrifice. She averted her eyes when the thud came, letting out a
small sigh. She was weak, she knew that - but with time...with time, strength
would come.
She rose, slinging her kitbag over her shoulder, and closed her eyes in
concentration. Reaching out with her arm into the rift, she pulled a spool of
rope forth and lashed it to the roan's neck. Placing a booted foot on the
horse's haunches she pulled it taught, trying to ignore the strange snapping
sound that came as she did so.
It took her some hours to drag the corpse across the mountains - going down was
almost as hard as going up the mountain, when the corpse slid down the rocky
slope, pulling her with it. The sun had set when she reached the highway once
more, and rested. A brief supper of Eleusian bread and cheese refreshed her
enough to carry on, the distance to the shrine far shorter than her trek so
far. When she reached it, she slowly heaved the corpse onto the shrine, and
muttered a prayer of sanctification to her Patron, the tempest of Vengeance.
In the beckoning darkness, she crept back across the land to the village of
Eleusis, where she lay down in the Central Oak and slept. With the wind lapping
at her cloak as she awoke, she listened to the chatter of nearby Cubs and Wards
and contemplated, the jar of sludge clutched in her pale-skinned hands.
Though her resolve waned through fear, and she felt guilt for the loss of her
faithful companion, she did not waver in her acts. She proved to herself that
which she had sought - that the Fog took life, but gave life to other things
where it took, and so she continued to walk amongst it, to the dismay of her
fellow villagemates - but with her own peace of mind.
Her guilt faded with time. It was a necessary sacrifice.