When everything was said and done…
Was it enough?
As the last link of the chain was sealed, their pact complete, the runes began to peel from the boy’s chest in glowing ribbons of text. Like living threads they rose, twirled, tugging themselves loose until they hung suspended like kelp reaching for the surface of the sea. They undulated gently for a moment as the death-witch clasped her hands as if in prayer, rocking on her heels, binding forces beyond the two adventurers’ control.
Rook looked up as one of the ribbons of runes floated by his head and saw the record of his two sacrifices glimmer faintly as they passed, wraithlike and ethereal. LUCK. SWORD. The other ribbon passed by Rivers as if in slow-motion, reversing, mirroring its twin. TASTE. EYE. Before the Yladian’s one-sided gaze his losses—his gifts to the guiltless—drifted lazily as a daydream.
And then with a whip the two cords of dark and light bound themselves fast around the child’s belly, cinching him fast as the soaring strings of black and white runes braided themselves together in the air. Power and magic blasted out like high winds, leaving Rook clutching both sides of his cushion for dear life and blowing Rivers’ yellow hair back as if caught in a sudden storm.
The magic arched high almost to the ceiling and then came down like a striking snake. Like a torrent of beads poured from above, the runes vanished one by one into the body’s sternum like machine gun fire, an endless stream of symbols pouring one after another into the lifeless form.
LUCK. TASTE. SWORD. EYE.
The four runes appeared in quick succession, superimposed above the point of impact, before the body glowed with sudden life and its chest heaved with its first new breath. Warmth and color returned to its pallid skin, pink in its cheeks. The boy flexed his fingers, feeling something like fine black ash crumble away from his grasp where Rook had placed the rapier, now consumed by the ritual.
And his eyes—one blue, one light brown—fluttered open.
"!!!"
We did it! The exhausted death-witch, the newly-revived body, the form of Rivers, numb of tongue and single-eyed—the severity of the scene was lost on Rook in his rush of jubilation. He seized the boy’s hand and dragged the stumbling youth to his feet, seized Rivers’ grasp as well, skipped in place with joy and triumph.
It had worked!
Rook dropped their hands and capered past the pair, throwing the hut-door open. He stopped fast as pale rays of early-morning light fell upon him, the first trills of birds lively in the air. How can it be dawn? They had entered the strange-space not ten minutes ago, but already the sun was rising, the shadows retreating, the air fresh and cold and crisp with potential.
Shaking off his astonishment, Rook waved to the death-witch (the life-witch!) and to Rivers and the boy with the mismatched eyes. They had done a good thing (a hard thing, a sad thing) but the night was past—he had a new day to greet!
A new day! A new dawn!
And perhaps a new sword, too…
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Last edited: Apr 23, 2018