[Mkguild] Blossom (6/6)
Rimme the Weasel
ontherimme at gmail.com
Mon Jan 23 21:00:00 UTC 2023
Part 6 of Blossom.
----
March 16, 717 CR
Volden did not mourn as long as he wished he could have. His heart still
felt like lead, but the sheep had been confined to Twone for long enough.
Inside, he could feel their yearning to see the Midlands once again. Life
must go on; the sheep must go to pasture.
That morning, before the sun was up, Volden stirred and rose from his bed,
his wife Jera still asleep. She was always a deep sleeper, to her unending
shame. Volden had already kissed her farewell last night, and so did not
wake her. He crept out to the rainbarrel outside and splashed some water on
his face. Wiping the sleep from his eyes, and straightening his hair, he
turned back inside. A long journey was ahead of him, and he needed to start
it out right.
His clothes, freshly mended and brushed clean, sat ready for him. His pack
stocked with rations and tools, his belt with his knife and flute and
waterskin and coin purse, and his crock all sat to one side, where he had
inspected and resorted them all over the last two days. One by one, he
donned each of his clothes, focusing as best he could on the names and
habits of his sheep.
The days had been slow at first. That evening after returning to Twone, he
told Jera what he had seen, and showed him their daughter's shoe. Jera, his
rock and his root in this world, simply held him, her tears silently
wetting his shoulder. They decided not to show their three younger children
unless they asked. Thankfully, they never did.
Jera put on a brave face, and kept the farm running as it should. She
didn't pressure Volden to take his sheep out. There was still weeding and
plowing and seeding to be done. They were menial enough tasks for Volden to
keep himself busy, without thinking about the sheep. The guilt crept up on
him, day by day, until Volden had to admit that he was letting the child
within him take over, and that he had to put his own words to practice.
There was business to get to.
After adjusting his smock one last time, settling the pack on his
shoulders, and taking his trusty crock in hand, he stepped out into the
early morning. The full moon had already set behind the mountains, and the
skies were purple with twilight glow. From the distant town, a few people
were already starting their daily chores, their voices a distant murmur in
the light breeze. Volden walked the edge of town southward to the barn.
Bola, their oldest child, was already at the gate, slingshot in hand. He
smiled and waved innocently as Volden came near. "Up early, aren't you?"
Volden said.
Bola looked aback. "I wanted to see you off," he said.
Volden smiled, and tousled Bola's hair, to which he squirmed. "Thanks,"
Volden said.
Bola pulled back and straightened his hair. "How old until I can come with
you into the field?"
"Not for a few more years. There's still so much work for you and Ma to do
on the farm." Volden paused, and answered the question Bola was about to
ask. "Not even Lori ever went out of the valley with me."
Bola was only eight years old; there was too much he had to learn before he
could go out into the world. The flock wasn't big enough to need two
shepherds watching them. And besides, Volden wasn't ready to lose another
child.
"I've been practicing my shot," Bola said proudly. "See that stick over
there?" He pointed to a stick lying on a patch of dirt thirty feet away. "I
can get it knocked over in only three tries!"
"Well, when you can knock down two sticks, side by side, each in only one
try, then you can come with me to the pasture." Volden had a twinge of
regret in making that promise, as he had no intention of keeping. But
perhaps it would give Bola something to do. And perhaps it would give Bola
a way to defend himself -- something Lori had never gotten.
Bola grinned and nodded. Volden turned his attention to the barn. He opened
the barn gate, and one by one undid the latches of the pens. He didn't
unlatch all of them -- just the ones for the sheep who were old enough to
go to pasture. If he was lucky, he might even sell a few of the
nine-month-old lambs to the butchers of Midtown or Laselle for Equinox.
Bola closed the barn gate and opened each unlatched pen behind him. One or
two ewes filtered out, eager for the open space, but most stayed in their
warm pens and looked back curiously at them.
Volden and Bola together opened the barn door, and Volden whistled to the
sheep. Those still sitting behind leapt to their feet and came running. In
total, there were about seventy sheep ready to follow him, and about a
dozen left in the barn. Volden expected eight to still be there by the time
he returned in August.
"Bola," Volden said once all the sheep were out. "Watch the sheep here
while I'm gone. Your mother will help if you need anything. Take especially
good care of the youngest lambs. Ginger's lambs."
"I will. Ginger's a special ewe, isn't she?"
Volden smiled. "She's what makes this flock so strong. And her lambs...
they'll make this flock even stronger."
In at least one small way, he and Bola could keep Lori alive.
----
March 19, 717 CR
Nancy spent most of her time in fear, shame, regret, and self-hatred. It
was her words that had killed Lori. This was Eli's punishment for her
stupid, selfish, pagan ritual, her twisting of Lori's doctrine for her own
ends. Blood magic. Lori's words burned in her mind. Only the Moranasi
committed death magic. She had committed the greatest of sins against her
best friend. What reason did she have to live? How could there be any
redemption, or forgiveness, for what she had done?
Everyone was watching her all the time, never leaving her within range of a
weapon, probably fearing she might take her own life, perhaps justifiably.
Nancy knew she was too much of a coward to try it, to endure the pain. And
yet… an animal morph like her, lives and dies for the pain. She had killed
that badger in cold blood. Killing was what she wanted. She had tasted
blood. Even if she did become a badger morph, wouldn't Metamor be better
off with a deranged killer like her?
Maybe she had just been deluded and ignorant. Yes, it was wrong of her to
have trusted magic, to have tried to use it to countermand Eli's will.
Perhaps all she needed to redeem herself was to swear off all magic. Maybe…
maybe if she took up the old traditional cause, and led the Church's
crusade against magic, she could redeem herself. She could save other
people from making the same mistakes she did. All she had to do was flee to
the Midlands…
But no. If she became a badger morph, they would just kill her. And it
would be just the same as if she had taken up the knife herself and cut her
own guts out. She would just be inviting others to do the killing for her,
to make killers out of them. Coward.
Perhaps she should become a monk within Metamor's walls. She would shave
her head, renounce all identity, and live only for the benefit of the
faithful. Perhaps their faith could give her faith too, and strength to
rise above her sins. Perhaps Lori's death didn't have to be in vain. It
could be the start of a long career, of carrying the cross like Yahshua.
This last thought was the only one that comforted her, for as long as it
lasted, until the next thought came to her: "Is it faith that I want? Or is
it just selfishness, believing that good can come from my horrible sin?"
And she would be unconsolable again.
At first, her parents refused anyone to see her, believing that she would
recover in time, once the trauma of her manipulation by that wicked
Benjamin had passed. Nancy never corrected the misconceptions of her
parents, or of the rest of Twone, that it was her idea, that Benjamin would
never have set it up if she wouldn't have asked Ophelia to help her.
The days passed, and Nancy's mood still didn't lift. And her parents began
fighting each other, as they often did when it came to their children. Her
mother insisted that getting back to work would help her. Her father, her
loathsome father, suggested that she see her friends again. Her mother
insisted that her "friends" were the ones who had manipulated her into this
situation to begin with. After the old familiar arguments about how
ungrateful she was, and how much of an insensitive fool he was, she finally
relented and allowed for chaperoned visitations from her friends.
Tom was the first visitor, but there wasn't much he was willing to say
under the watchful eyes and ears of her parents. All he could offer was
feeble apologies for not being there, and talk a bit about how Benjamin was
doing, and give some vague hope that Lori was alive. They never found her
body, after all. Nancy barely listened. For all she knew, the pagan gods
dragged Lori's whole body into one of their many hells.
Maggie stopped by after that. She didn't bother talking about Lori's death;
she tried instead to talk about local gossip, and she brought a game of
checkers to improve her mood. Nancy couldn't focus at all on the game.
Somehow she won, but she figured Maggie must have let her win.
Marcus came by to talk about Ophelia, how she was feeling very sorry for
the mess that had occurred. It was little comfort to Nancy, and only made
her feel more guilty for hurting her. Bola came by, seeing he missed seeing
her big sister around, and wanted to keep seeing Nancy around. That meeting
was even worse. All these meetings did was confirm that her presence in
Twone was a detriment to their happiness.
It wasn't until plans for the Spring Equinox had gotten underway before her
parents finally let her out of the cottage. They seemed indifferent now to
whether she helped out around the house, or simply stayed lazy for the rest
of her life. Nancy felt like she had betrayed them. Or maybe this was their
way of saying that they wouldn't stop her if she tried to run away. It
didn't seem like a bad idea.
Still, she feared it was all an act, and if she ever did any conspicuous
packing, that their mood would flip and they would forbid her again from
leaving. Everytime she was outside, their eyes were always upon her,
watching her as she went to bathe or fetch water, or even just pass the
time watching young Bola lead the flock that had been left behind.
Finally, the Friday before the Equinox began, Nancy could take it no more.
It wasn't a deliberate decision, but after she dropped off the family
scythe at the blacksmith's for repairs, she started walking north of town,
just to clear her head. Then she found herself still walking, off towards
the woods, down the familiar path through the tall grass. She found the
familiar deer path, followed it past the mossy rockpile and to the stream,
then past the thickets and past the lone oak, and finally arrived at the
mud clearing.
To any outsider, there was nothing remarkable about the mud clearing.
Anything left behind had been long removed by rains and winds -- all except
one thing. Nancy's eyes snapped to the one reminder of what had transpire
that night, still sitting there from where she had left it that night --
the rock.
How long had it been sitting here, absorbing her memories and her pain,
chaining her mind to the ritual, sapping whatever will she had to be free?
Slowly, she stepped forward, fearing that some demon would strike her down
as she approached, as if the lines of magic were still there, hidden
beneath the mud. There was not even a gust of wind as she stood over it,
and finally picked it up. If it was all in her head, why did she still feel
a burning sensation in her hand as she held it? Through the stone, she
could almost imagine the scene as Lori must have seen it. Such savagery.
Such bloodlust.
This was the first time she had been here since that night. Often she
thought about the hours beforehand, as she stood watching Benjamin
carefully draw out the symbols in the dimming light; or she thought about
those minutes afterwards, and her strange wolf dream running through the
woods. But she never thought about the ceremony. She'd been too afraid to
look at it again, through her own eyes or through Lori's. Too afraid that
she might find something she'd done wrong to make everything else collapse.
She heard footsteps behind her – she almost swore her ears swiveled in that
direction. For some reason, that thought filled her with shame, rather than
joy. Why should she be happy if it was really the animal curse? She
wondered whether it was her parents come to drag her back, or maybe Errol
sent on their behalf to fetch her. Maybe it was for the best if they caught
her. Maybe they could whip this feeling out of her.
But no, it was just Marcus. He pushed aside the ferns and stared at her in
a mix of puzzlement and pity. "You came back."
Nancy shrugged. "I thought I should visit." She didn't know how true that
was, or if this was as far as she'd intended to travel.
Marcus smiled weakly and nodded. "That's good." He looked at the field.
"This might help you to heal."
"There's nothing to heal."
Marcus sighed. "You know the toughest part about being a man? It's everyone
telling you not to feel pain anymore. Telling you not to grieve, when
sometimes you have to."
"Why should I grieve?"
"... You didn't intend for this to happen."
"I absolutely intended something to happen. I messed with the will of Eli."
"No, I mean you didn't intend this specific outcome. You wanted to be an
animal morph. That's all you wanted."
"I was a fool," she said. "I wanted something without paying a sacrifice."
"You didn't think you needed a sacrifice. You still don't, Nancy. The curse
doesn't require a sacrifice."
Nancy looked away. She didn't want to discuss this anymore.
After a long silence, Marcus spoke. "Tom had a lot he wanted to talk with
you about."
"I don't care. I don't want to see him anymore. Is he still infatuated with
me? Is he still convinced that we are going to be badger morphs together?"
"There are some loose ends he needs to clear up with you, concerning that
night. Please. You're not the only one who was hurt by what happened."
Nancy rounded on him. "He left me and Lori to die. In the middle of the
night, he could have stood by us, but he cared more about his reputation
with the grown-ups than with us. Because of him, Lori is gone."
"Do you want the whole story, or just your side of it?" Marcus sighed.
"You're letting your anger and fear take over. Open your eyes. Keep them
open."
"Don't tell me to open my eyes," she hissed. "I've been keeping them open
ever since that night. I can't sleep at night because of what happened. How
do you sleep when every night you see and hear your own --"
"Only yourself," Tom interrupted behind Nancy. He was standing in the
middle of the mud pit, holding a familiar-shaped bag, with something
stirring inside of it. "It hurts to listen sometimes. You just need to be
patient."
"What do you want?" Nancy hissed.
Tom set down the bag, its neck already untied and open. "To start over."
Nancy nearly lurched back as a badger nose sniffed its way out of the bag.
"You... seriously expect me to repeat that ceremony? To chew out another
beast's heart, to lose another friend to the same madness? Or are you that
hungry for your own change, to go through it yourself? Well, fine then!
I'll be the one to stare at you as you indulge yourself in blood! Then
maybe the wolves of darkness can consume me too, for our heathen ceremony."
"I didn't mean the ceremony," Tom said. And he gave the badger a light kick
on its rear. Unlike the first badger, this badger seemed afraid to run
away. It looked back and forth between the three of them with an almost
domestic look in its eyes. It seemed to tense up under Tom's boot. Then it
closed its eyes and...
It seemed to almost melt closer to the ground, the way its body spread
outwards, only without losing any height. In fact, it grew taller in
height, the arms and legs spreading out like vines along the ground. The
badger looked up at her with quivering blue eyes, its two human-like
breasts naked but covered in white fur.
"I'm so sorry, Nancy," it said in Lori's voice.
Nancy fell to the ground.
----
The two girls finally broke their long embrace. It was Lori who first found
her words.
"I ran without thinking. When I heard the people coming, I just kept
running. I didn't stop until I had reached the mountains. It was still
dark, so I just hid in a hole until morning." She paused. "I woke up and… I
was still a badger. I thought it was still a dream, that it had to be a
dream. I was afraid of having you see me like this. That maybe… I stole the
curse that was intended for you…"
Nancy shook her head. "I don't care if you did or not. You're alive! You
have to come home."
Lori shook her head. "I don't want to head back. I'm finally free of Twone.
No one's been back to look for me. Everyone thinks I'm dead."
"Your father was really hurt when he thought you were dead," Marcus said.
Lori nodded sadly. "He would never have let me leave if I asked. He always
had a way of making me feel guilty for wanting my own life."
"You can't just live in the woods, though."
"She's right," Tom said. "She's terrible at hunting. I've been leaving her
dead rats and rabbits, just to keep her alive."
"I've been thinking," Lori said, "that maybe I could move to Metamor. There
are always new people coming in, and nobody asks questions of animal
morphs. Or I could move into the northern villages. People are very
accepting up there, and they won't know anyone from Twone up there."
"But you'd be leaving us. You'd be leaving me, Lori. Our promise…"
Lori smiled. "We really thought we could live our lives together, didn't
we? You'll always have my friendship, wherever I end up."
Nancy looked away at the mud that surrounded them. "So, that ceremony
targeted you with the curse, instead of me."
"I'm not so sure," Lori said. "Maybe I had the badger curse on me all
along, and you picked up on it, somehow. You wanted to be with me, and
somehow you knew that meant becoming a badger."
"But you hated animal morphs."
"I didn't hate them, they just made me uncomfortable." She looked down at
her fur-covered arms. "Maybe I just needed to accept myself."
Nancy nodded. "I still don't want you to leave."
"You'll always have a part of me with you." Lori put her paw on the rock
Nancy held. "Keep it. And remember me."
Nancy pulled her into another long embrace. Marcus and Tom, and the quiet
forest and all the heavens above, silently watched them.
FIN
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