Many years ago, he made a promise to the dark god.
He hadn’t intended to make it to the dark god. He’d intended to find the faeries, to throw himself prostrate before them and beg for Agetta’s memories to be restored. And he had walked up the mountain, but instead of finding any faeries, it had been the dark god waiting for him.
(All I ask, Carnage says, is one thing.
Anything, Garbage replies, I will give you anything, just bring her back.
I have a dead son, Carnage says, and Garbage almost laughs, because even someone as ignorant as he of Beqanna’s going-ons as him knows Carnage must have a hundred dead sons, but he will not be dead for much longer.
Who?
His name is Cancer, and he once loved you, the dark god says, as if Garbage were the kind of man who would forget the name of the man who had saved him from killing himself, who had made him anew. The man he had served, the father of his first son.
You are bound, Carnage continues, and I want to make use of it.
Garbage does not think of the consequences. He thinks only of Agetta.
Yes, he says, whatever you want from me.
There is no part of himself he wouldn’t give this dark god to make her whole again.)
He has thought, on occasion, of this vow. He had certainly not seen Cancer in the years since making his promise, nor had he felt anything amiss. He’d certainly assumed he would have felt something, some tug of the bind he shared with Cancer.
It begins with the headaches.
They are faint, throbbing things, but unlike any headache he’s known before. This is a dull pain that seems to zigzag in an odd way down his skull, a pain that zips along his cheeks and nose as well as the head itself.
Echoes, he thinks one day, and does not know why.
He does not tell Agetta for several days. He doesn’t think much of the headaches at first, and the pain is faint. But they begin to occur more and more often, until there was always some low constant of pain in his face.
It worsens like this.
He tells Agetta goodnight and sleeps with his back curled against hers. His head barely hurts at all. It always feels best like this, with so much of his skin touching hers, her warmth a balm for any ill, even pains so odd as his. And he sleeps.
And then, he wakes up and he is not in the same place as he was when he went to sleep. And he is alone.
He scrambles frantically to his feet, and the pain in his face worsens. He cries out, partially in shock at the pain of it, but also in shock at the familiarity of it.
He once tore his own eyes out, you see, and had broken most of his skull to pieces in the process (hooves are a dull and unpredictable instrument). This was a very very long time ago, but it was not a sensation one easily forgets, even several iterations later – and this pain felt much like a bone about to break, in the same pattern his own hooves had broken it..
He rubs his cheek against his own leg, ensuring his wholeness, and then he glances around frantically, orange eyes roving for the familiar glimpse of white. But she is not there – for the dark god had thought it much more entertaining to drop Garbage off in the meadow alone for this particular game.
Assailant -- Year 226
"But the dream, the echo, slips from him as quickly as he had found it and as consciousness comes to him (a slap and not the gentle waves of oceanic tides), it dissolves entirely. His muscles relax as the cold claims him again, as the numbness sets in, and when his grey eyes open, there’s nothing but the faint after burn of a dream often trod and never remembered." --Brigade, written by Laura
[open] I'll tell them put me back in it; any
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05-25-2024, 07:01 PM
he must be wicked to deserve such pain; garbage
05-30-2024, 11:50 AM
i am the mace, the map, the fall and the high He had loved games once. Not the childish play of youth, but those of fate. The ones where odds tumble in and out of favor and one can never quite be sure of where they’ll land. He had played, believing himself invincible. Then, he had lost. reave @garbage
05-30-2024, 12:51 PM
DRETCH
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