08-27-2015, 07:41 PM
else
even angels have their wicked schemes
There was something befitting to the way fate had directed the circle of her life back to where it had all begun. Back to the sand, the stone, the sun-bleached bones. But that hadn’t been the beginning, not truly. There was life before that, there were faces and memories that slipped in and out of her nightmares like simmering smoke. But when the dreams faded, so did the glimpses of a past forced from her mind. She was left only with the hollowness of missing something, someone, a life she no longer deserved. Forcing the connections, chasing a memory as its tail disappeared into the dust, brought her in a confusing circle forged out of a false reality. Suddenly the smile that had seemed warm, that had felt like trapped sunshine in her chest, became the leering smile of the palomino magician who broke her bones like branches.
It had worked at first, this pattern she could only assume was deliberate, to keep her curiosity safely at bay. To keep her from seeking out a solution and ruining a game that would otherwise never have to end. A magician’s clever piece. But with Caius, something had changed. He became a new anchor, a new tether, one she chose instead of one that drowned her at the bottom of the oceans depths. Caius was something that felt safe in a ruined world. Before, there had been fear and doubt and a desperate urge to run away and leave everything behind. It had been Caius that held her back, the unwillingness to lose the first thing that hadn’t poisoned her with uncertainty. The first one to replace those haunting memories with something warm, something light. And then he gave her the world, he gave her Elanor.
When Elanor was born, something else had been born beside her. A fierceness that wasn’t there before, not in the before that Else could still remember. The change was subtle, so subtle, but she felt it every time her eye traced the softness in Elanor’s quiet expression, each time she followed the curve of that gentle smile. It felt like a memory, not a memory of one particular moment in time, but a memory of who she should have been. Of who she was before.
The ocean coaxes her from the shore and she obeys it willingly, wading into the glossy black water up to her shoulders. In the last few weeks, she had come here every night, wading as far as she needed until her reflection disappeared in the waves beneath her chin. From here she could see in the distance the place she had first stumbled upon, the first place. She didn’t need to see the bones scattering the shore, bobbing beneath the waves, to recognize it. That was a memory hung like a painting on a wall. Of course he had let her keep that one. She didn’t know why she had gone to the dying place, the dead place, but she did remember what had happened there and no amount of ocean would ever wash her of that memory.
She felt a pang of sorrow tear into her chest and bleed uncertainty into the water as the sun dipped just barely beneath the horizon. Over the past several nights spent with her shattered reflection in the ripple of the waves, Else had come to a decision. It was one that terrified her, and she couldn’t tell if those feelings were her own, or ones the magician had put inside her.
“I need to know.” She whispered into the approaching night, the confession sinking like stones beneath the churning waves.
It had worked at first, this pattern she could only assume was deliberate, to keep her curiosity safely at bay. To keep her from seeking out a solution and ruining a game that would otherwise never have to end. A magician’s clever piece. But with Caius, something had changed. He became a new anchor, a new tether, one she chose instead of one that drowned her at the bottom of the oceans depths. Caius was something that felt safe in a ruined world. Before, there had been fear and doubt and a desperate urge to run away and leave everything behind. It had been Caius that held her back, the unwillingness to lose the first thing that hadn’t poisoned her with uncertainty. The first one to replace those haunting memories with something warm, something light. And then he gave her the world, he gave her Elanor.
When Elanor was born, something else had been born beside her. A fierceness that wasn’t there before, not in the before that Else could still remember. The change was subtle, so subtle, but she felt it every time her eye traced the softness in Elanor’s quiet expression, each time she followed the curve of that gentle smile. It felt like a memory, not a memory of one particular moment in time, but a memory of who she should have been. Of who she was before.
The ocean coaxes her from the shore and she obeys it willingly, wading into the glossy black water up to her shoulders. In the last few weeks, she had come here every night, wading as far as she needed until her reflection disappeared in the waves beneath her chin. From here she could see in the distance the place she had first stumbled upon, the first place. She didn’t need to see the bones scattering the shore, bobbing beneath the waves, to recognize it. That was a memory hung like a painting on a wall. Of course he had let her keep that one. She didn’t know why she had gone to the dying place, the dead place, but she did remember what had happened there and no amount of ocean would ever wash her of that memory.
She felt a pang of sorrow tear into her chest and bleed uncertainty into the water as the sun dipped just barely beneath the horizon. Over the past several nights spent with her shattered reflection in the ripple of the waves, Else had come to a decision. It was one that terrified her, and she couldn’t tell if those feelings were her own, or ones the magician had put inside her.
“I need to know.” She whispered into the approaching night, the confession sinking like stones beneath the churning waves.
and you take that to new extremes