Private - VI. The Lovers

Private - VI. The Lovers
Discussion in 'Brisshal' started by Rook the Quick, May 8, 2018.
  1. I am not here, the trees said, and tried to hide from him.

    Each leaf of the strange, eerie forest blended into other leaves, each branch curved slightly, kinked slightly, as if to shrink away from those around it. Can you only see the forest for the trees? These were shy woods, reclusive and hidden, long left alone on the border of Norforva. Nothing right came from the south. (Nothing left, either.)

    A small figure (a small swordsman, a small Rook) passed through the slender tree-trunks, pattered along the forest floor with its burrowing roots like ostrich-heads and its trembling foliage, which whispered faintly under its breath. Shhhhh. Shhhhh.

    He closed his eyes and felt something cool caress his face.

    The wind? A memory? Rook’s eyes opened and he cupped his palm to his cheek, replacing the phantom touch with warmth, with comforting body-heat from his own hand. The forest was filled with HUSH, with anticipation like bated breath. Its silence screamed of waiting. And of watching.

    Shhhhhhh...

    There! A flash of an arm, a hand, disappearing behind a tree. The black-haired Quick’s feet were leaptumbling all at once as he pursued, mindless without meditation, impulse and imperative. He chased the disembodied string of body parts— a foot here, kicking up a brittle leaf, a hand lightly touching the smooth bark, a glimpse of long red hair tossed over a shoulder—

    And Quick as Rook could be, he followed each one.

    Which way? Where did it come from, where is it going? Who knew, who knew! Not Rook with his map (and his patient charting, line-by-line) and not Rook with his pattering feet and his sandals sparking embers on the stones and tree-roots, captivated, uncontrolled.

    There was no Why, there was no Where, there was no Who. These questions were not Quick. For Rook there was only WHAT: what he saw, what he wanted, what he did. Point by single point, like a poem composed one word at a time by two different people, or a sentence strung together on refrigerator magnets.

    ROOK | CHASED | THE | FIGMENT| DEEP | INTO | THE | WOODS
    UNTIL | HE | FOUND | A | STRANGE | ABANDONED | VEHICLE
    A | WOODEN | CHARIOT | FORSAKEN | BY | MAN

    GOLDEN | IN | GOD | ‘S | EYE | .

    As golden where the light touched the faded, peeling paint as the sun, or a tattered rose, or a yellow dress.



     
    Last edited: May 8, 2018
  2. The sound of steps echoed over the slopes of the Maethe Woodland, and the arrows of Gwainedhel resounded with new fury as the combined work of feet, fingers and strings directed by the commanding haste of his hand, which thundered arrow after arrow, made a determined effort to cut off the flight of a wounded owl.

    But all his efforts were in vain. By the time the last bolt stuck to the poplar's trunk, the tip stuck well past the bark, the owl, faster than a gust of wind, had already left it and had entered a path to the unknown darkness.

    "Stop! ...Stop I say!" shouted Gwainedhel. "My head on a pit before you escape!”

    The ranger halted, the depths of his throat a boiling fire and, after his sore muscles slowly lowered the bow about his legs, his motion fell in a thick cloak of silence.

    "Darn it!" he teared it off then, and slammed a fist to the wounded tree. Teeth gritting, the flow of conscience continued to run. "That was so close. If it had just turned a few inches-- just a few inches!" He and looked down to his body, and his tilting lamp besides his rear. "I can't let that heap of cash go. Shit, I'm running out of oil..."

    He resolved to charge a row of swearings to upper beings he didn't even believe in, but then it a fresh and liquid smell came to entertain his nostrils. He peeked forward, the trail looked black and hollow like a wolf's throat. He took the lamp on his hand and the bow by the grip of his other and, hoping the light would endure, he stepped forward and crept into the dusk.

    He kept walking for ten minutes or fifteen and he found himself by the shores of a river. The whole place was pretty big and clearer and open to the night sky, which was already starting to show purple shades for a new daybreak. Further beyond, he spotted the owl from before on the top of a pointy rock, prunning its leaking blood under the wing. But just a little below, a big white slump rested upon the water.

    Then the white slump stood up and unfolded into the sight of a fine-boned girl, perchance a woman. She was very, very beautiful and her skin shimmered as if dressed by a veil of moonlight. No tresses nor wet blonde hair fell upon her shoulders to cover her breasts, because it was very short and dark as the feather of a mockingbird, and within her long lashes her teal eyes shone like two engraved gemstones.

    Gwainedhel shuddered as she witnessed her bathing. Normal thoughts barely formed in his mind before they were replaced with twisted barbacues his body grilled in his appetite. His saliva turned chalk and cardboard-y, drippling into his throat as stingy juicy venom. He saw as she squished her sponge around the shoulder, then the other shoulder, all the way to the chest and down past the abdomen, to more obscure corners... It had become so insane, it was almost hypnotic. She worshipped her figure with the likes of a sacred shrine. The more he stared the more he sucked in, and the more he walked into temptation…

    And then she stopped.

    She turned around. She wasn't-- looking at him, was she? No, she was. The gleam in these beady teal eyes accused him, almost forbidden, almost invitingly. He wasn’t able to pin what did that exactly mean, yet her lips spread into a mellifluous smirk.

    She swaddled out of the water, the surrounding cloud turning to moss. Giggling, she tiptoed to the bushes and disappeared behind the poplars.


    ***


    There was no Why,
    there was no Where,
    where is his bride-to-be?

    There was no Who,
    there was no With.
    These questions were not Quick.

    For Gwain's just the WHAT:
    he saw, he wished, he did.

    Where did it come from?
    Who knew, who knew!

    Not Daphne on the run
    nor Hyacinth's disc

    could escape from the wind.


    ***​


    Hairs on the air as he leaped and galloped and his feet were replaced for wings. Now the one burned, and the other fled from the others’ call, taking him in the depths of the woods where he would definitely lose himself. As the light sparkle that stirs the flame in the campfire; or does the same with the torch, that hungrily consumes the sap and opens the way through the dark path, so the elf was altered by the flames, all his being ablaze for these boiling blinding passions. He sees the feet and he pressures the mood. He sees the feet and he turns. He sees the wrist and swings the hand to grasp nothing but a handful of nothingness. He praises her figure, her hair, her eyes, her everything (specially the eyes). Ahh, if she wasn’t so obstinate! But there she flees like a breath of air, and resists any sort of loving calling.

    He would have ran more as the beloved disappeared of sight, in the blink of an eye, leaving him in a state of dumbfoundness and disoriented bewitchement. The fires wired his body, rage flooding his temples, and he stormed to the only way he deemed immediate within reach. But the young lover didn’t think much at this point, as his sense of self had been consumed to ashes. He pushed branches and vine, he pushed them harder and faster, and kicked several bushes to clear his way of annoying obstacles. Tree's arms soon abandoned the top of his head and opened a big round sky.

    Black and purple was still the imperative of the composition, making the atmosphere pretty grim. But now, see the aurora begin to peek at the west, peer over the doors and have the first rose streaks over a weather-beaten chariot sunk at the moss’ floor. For instance, the chariot had an axle of rusted steel, that to the game of lights could’ve been old gold; and another old gold chariot pole, wheels with clunky rims, and circles of iron or silver spokes. Along the ancient dry wood and the absence of horses, which were nowhere to be found, a coat of arms glowed with forgotten brilliance amidst its state of decay.

    On the top of the chariot, a third person remained (or second, as Gwainedhel didn’t even see the person at the other side of the clearing). They sat in the middle, on the actual rider's spot, and Gwainedhel thought, "could it be her?” but he was unable to make up a clear answer as the stranger had this ghastly cloak wrapped all around their person. Yet the cloaked figure still instilled a certain charm. A deep exhalation pumped from the hood -- a rumbling, alluring rasp emerging from the inners of their mind:

    "Wilt thou not ride, thou gentle warrior?"

    Gwainedhel, taken a moment to discern the meaning behind these words, sluggishly approached the cart and pulled himself in, just like a smitten lovesick servant.

     
    Last edited: Jun 3, 2018
  3. Light, spectral as distant flame, touched the weathered vehicle with a first lover’s tenderness. It hesitantly brushed the broken chariot with wonder like fingertips of sun across bare skin, drawing gooseflesh, drawing color from its battered sides. Heraldic symbols, faded from the years. Insignias emblazoned with no grasp of permanence. They were the brands of cattle-masters whose herd had gone astray, the painted remnants of slavery unshackled.

    Blades of grass flattened, moss softening below his footfalls. Rook moved forward with a care and caution born of reverence, not fear. Shade draped the corners of the clearing with secrets and from them, Rook emerged. He was not silent. He was not stealthy. But the sight of the chariot intrigued the little swordsman, bewildered as a child observing abstract art.

    He did not understand. He did not comprehend. And for the most part, he did not try. He merely acted. He merely moved. And he merely listened.

    As two jaws close on prey, as two halves of a vice crank slowly shut, the two men (the two strangers, less-than-strangers) approached the chariot. Drawn to the abandoned cart like metal to a magnet (or drawn instead to one another?) the mystery there beckoned, hooded in a cloak obscuring all but eyes.

    Its breath, projected from its mouth like memory, called to Rook. Breathe in, to establish the self. Its words, projected by invisible lips, invited him. Breathe out, to exert that self over the world. It could not be declined. It could not be ignored. The choice was none at all.

    Drawn to the catalyst, the cataclysm, the black-haired fighter leapt onto the cart with a rattle, the wooden box bouncing on its frame and shaking its aged wheels. His shoulder touched another’s, someone sandy-blonde and vague-eyed. Rook wondered where the hooded one had gone. He turned his mask-bound face to look for her, for her thinbone fingers and her lilting tones.

    Wilt thou not ride…

    Would he not falter?

    Gentle warrior?

    Which gentle Rook was this?