Hope is the Thing with Feathers
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Metallic clinks, jangles and clanks joined voices, calling out in unison with every strike of the man’s heavy leather boots against the gravel-strewn trail.
The extent of the damage brought on by the recent conflict with Falderen had been unclear in the initial post-war phases, but as the preliminary reports trickled in, Clark had dropped everything. With only the testament of a handful of scouts thus far, the details had still been murky at best; that said, the prevailing sentiment was that any settlement that’d found itself caught between Castle Dormunt and the mad King’s army had been most unfortunate. With a sinking feeling in his chest, the young man had hurriedly flung the various mechanisms, scraps and other assorted oddities he’d uncovered into his bag before hitting the road.
For the most part, the run from Dormunt had been a blur. To say the least, thoughts of work, or even of old Ms. Morrison’s home-cooked meals seemed about a world apart. Between the dull percussion of his boots, the raggedness of his breath and the constant jangling of his shoulder-slung bag, there’d been little room in his head for any serious contemplation. Mostly, the sights and sounds of his surroundings had come as little more than flashes. Trees—lots of them. Stiff bodies lying quietly atop red-speckled grass—in his mind, they’d been about as numerous as the trees. The bittersweet chirp of a lone Astorean songbird—it’d broken an otherwise desolate silence, if only for a moment.
And towards the end, he’d caught a glimpse of something else overhead—it’d moved too quickly for him to identify it in any meaningful way, but he recalled that the figure had blended in almost seamlessly as it’d drifted in and out of the puffy white cover of clouds. It was a curious sight for the young man, and on most days, he might’ve stopped to gawk. But today, his legs hardly skipped so much as a beat, and he’d continued onward.
~
Clark’s eyes widened as he drew nearer towards the epicenter of his worries. His pace having slowed considerably upon entering the village, the air of devastation around him made his breath catch in his throat. The once lively crops now laid trodden and limp in their fields, a reminder of the legion which had seen fit to march through them without a care in the world. Just about every freestanding structure—nearly every fence, shop, barn, mill and modest home—looked to be thoroughly levelled, while the few that remained standing had clearly seen better days. Game or not, not once had an interaction with a so-called NPC left him with the impression that they were anything other than human. As far as he was concerned, their pain was real. Fighting the heaviness that threatened to creep from the base of his heart to the ends of his limbs, Clark compelled himself forward.
Alongside a handful of fellow players—they tended to easier to pick out, owing to their more flamboyant fashion and less bothered attitudes—the surviving villagers paid him little attention as he made his way through their village. Some wrangled together their scattered livestock while others worked to reinforce the buildings that’d managed to weather the storm. Naturally, more than a couple were tending to the sick and wounded. Up in the distance, he spotted a familiar face: it was the man who’d pointed him to several different ancient ruins on several different occasions. Only now, the man didn’t look nearly as chipper. Knelt down on the ground with a downcast gaze, the man’s entire world seemed to have shrunk to the small space before him. With the sudden realization that the man's unblinking stare was directed at none other than a young, seemingly unconscious child, Clark's pace picked up speed.
Last edited: Nov 30, 2017