@White Timber |
The defeat left a bitter taste in my mouth. My leg ached. My body was sore. I was unsure how it all came crashing down, but the Imperial Army was demolished. The jail cell was filled with so many of us, even Ryker, who kept her distance. Perhaps she was just as scorned by this loss as I was. But I cared not for the loss of the King’s army, it bothered me to my very core that the loss was linked to me. I was supposed to be mighty, I was supposed to be a rising warlord. But everything I did failed.
Maybe I didn’t belong in the army. Maybe I didn’t belong under the rule of an absent general or famed, unpopular king. My mind whirred as I sat in a far corner, the others being warned with fang and snarl if they came too close. I wanted my solitude. I didn’t notice her as she slipped in, her voice catching me off guard, causing me to jolt. "How the mighty fall," I could scoff. What about any of us was mighty? We were pawns. And I so hated to be a pawn. My one good eye lifted, catching the shadow shrouded woman in her ghostly glory. I saw a spirit face in the dark, the abyss consuming almost all of her except the bits she allowed me to see. So alluring. Yet I made very little movement so that way attention wasn’t drawn to her. She clearly wanted to be hidden, and so I would oblige. Besides, wouldn’t want her to pick up on the fact I was downright giddy she came to see me. "Indeed," Baritones rumbled just above a whisper. "Pathetic." I tossed a glare at the rest of the cell. Some had escaped, some wallowed with me. If I was going to escape, I would take some lives with me. But it was all I could muster at the moment. I didn’t want to say too much, seem too eager. I didn’t want to say too little, seem too disinterested. But my heart thumped a few beats faster and my stomach twisted. What the hell was this? |
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Witch drew my attention again with her subtle presence. Her words filled me with an unbridled ember that ignited the ambition once doused, where it erupted into a volcanic spew coursing through my body. I felt it at the edges of my toes, pricking at my eye, twitching the tail. Ego and realization swelled where it had been dismantled by the previous battle, and a couple of events before. I recounted my displeasure with the captain, the displeasure with how the imperial army functioned thus far. It was beneath me. I was to rise far, far above it, where it tried to shackle me.
Yes, they were unworthy of me. It was becoming clearer by the second, and I looked to her, gold searching for emerald, where I’d find the solace I had once lost. Lips parted to let a reply slip, but then she slid me something, the hushed scraping noise of the item bringing ripped ears forward. I observed it, lifted a large paw to open one side of it to see a substance. It almost coaxed a smile from me, but i stifled it. She’d not see that yet. {They are.} Ego confirmed, but the Witch was right. So where would I steer this unruly ambition? How could I quench this thirst for a crown and throne, when none were at my disposal? I had much to learn, this much I knew simply from my interaction with the stranger, but I’d have issue reining in the patience for it all. Maybe she was the key, or perhaps the lock. {Am I worthy of knowing your name yet?} Baritones suddenly asked, drawling in a low thunder, unchecked by premeditated thought and revision. The question was out before I could stop it, but I did not regress as my eye looked up from the ointment to her. The shadows still danced with her angular features, the wraith upon the stone flooring then. She was a certain kind of beauty I had not seen on another woman, and I felt a young boy asking the girl to play. The enigma surrounding her name, her purpose here, and why she wanted to help me was another alluring thing for me, but I wouldn’t speak on it yet. I didn’t want to scare her away, and as begrudging as it was to me, I much enjoyed her company. Even still, my heart continued to skip beats and flitter with the electricity she pulsated through my body. Absentmindedly, I began to apply the ointment to my mangled forelimb. I feared I’d limp permanently, but it still made me proud to have gained this scar in battle - regardless of politics. |
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