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  • Beqanna

    COTY

    Assailant -- Year 226

    QOTY

    "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]  dawn is coming, open your eyes, any
    #1
    NEUNA
    The child had recoiled from the light and the way it burned, the way it set everything ablaze.
    The way it cast everything in a soft, haloed glow. 

    (Too young, too sheltered to know that it was not the light that did this but something wrong with the eyes. Born too young, perhaps. Or skin too white, too reflective. A child born for a world gone dark, not this brutal light.)

    She finds the father once, tucked away in the shadows, but the love that pulses outward from the center of her is not enough yet to counteract the rage that radiates off him in waves and she does not seek him out again. 

    The pup crafted from shadows follows her as she explores the light and even this dark thing is ringed in a soft glow. The pup grows as she does, nipping sweetly at her heels, burying its nose in her tail and tugging. Sometimes it wrestles with her sisters’ pups while the girls nap under their mother’s watchful eye.

    But their mother is gone now and the third daughter, Neuna, is alone, too. Maurtia is gone to the Playground and Decima has wandered off someplace and Neuna is thinking about the fog their father had wrapped them in the day he’d been afraid to touch them. (And she does not know it but the thin markings draped between her bright white eyes glow brightly when she thinks of her father and the fog and the way he had looked at them and whispered so softly to them.) 

    There is such a thin wisp of fog that tangles itself around her ankles and she thinks that he must have sent it, that it must be an apology for the way he had sent her away the day she’d found him in the darkness. The pup at her feet lifts its shadow head and looks at her curiously.

    Hush, you,” she tells it, though the pup has not said anything. 
    Reply
    #2
    I shine only with the light you give me


    Cut him.

    And he will bleed not blood, but constellations.

    Northern lights that fire across the sky and dance and blow.

    Like the ocean?

    No, cant be, because it does not drag him under, but lifts him up, up, up.

    Tears trickle like a steady drip of water in a cave long forgotten, as an angry gash in his knee thrashes in colors of bright red. “Dad, dad,” a little boy aches. “You found it, James,” comes the voice of a father to a son. “The birthplace of northern lights,” he says, hushed. (It must be some great secret, is the only thing a little boy can think.) “From the tears of comets and the wounds of stars,” he says. James wants to say I am no comet. James wants to say I am no star. But innocence shrouds his mind and he believe he could be anything if just his father told him he was. And his dad tucks him inside a dream, one about how the sky flowed red, not with blood, but light.

    Light.

    A dull glow opens up before him, and James blinks bright blue eyes against it, but it does not go away.

    Blink.
    Blink.

    So entranced (moth to the flame? No, it is one firefly to another, simple) that he does not notice a fog gather at her feet. Maybe he would have stopped. (No, he wouldn't have.) “Did you trap a star in there?” He moves towards her too quickly, and had he been anyone else—who else could he be but James?— it may have looked far less innocent. “You ever gonna let it out?”



    Benjamen; my feet knew the path, we walked in the dark, in the dark
    never gave a single thought to where it might lead

    image by Gary Bendig
    @[neuna]
    Reply
    #3
    NEUNA
    They are alone, the third daughter and the shadow pup, and then they are not. 
    He is a small thing, this boy who appears from nothing all ringed in light and blinks so boldly at her and asks her things she does not know how to answer. 

    (If she were Decima, she might have seen him coming. If she were Maurtia, she might have been able to stop him. But she is Neuna, creator of life, she has no foresight and it is not up to her to decide where life ends.) 

    Her chest heaves once with surprise and whatever love she’d felt splinter outward from the very center of her is forgotten. And, as it disperses, the glow fades until it is gone altogether and the child’s pale brow darkens with confusion as she turns her proud head in search of whatever star he’s referring to. 

    Where?” she asks, though she knows that she has not seen a star and would not know to trap one even if she had. The wolf pop cocks its head curiously as the fog begins to fade, as well, as if the third daughter had been caught doing something she should not have been.



    @[Benjamen]
    Reply
    #4
    I shine only with the light you give me


    He is not alone. The second born, the first son. He was—before.


    But not now.

    Not now, not now.

    Her intake of air makes those black ears flitter forwards and a nose crinkle in response. Blue eyes glance at the puppy. He is not a boy familiar with dogs, but dragons. He too is not a boy of foresight, but he carries a vision shared never the less. A man of falcon wings, a woman spun of gold. A night full of star. A crashing of waves.

    “Oh,” is a quiet noise created from the parting of two lips. He searches her brow like a sailor for a horizon. And becomes as a disappointed as a man at sea for one too many days. And he might have stayed sad—if he hadn't smiled instead. “It’s gone now.” A boyish observation. “Or, maybe it is hiding…” A boyish wish. His nose reaches out and gently brushes against a pearlescent mane. “Lets see if we can find it.” A boyish adventure. It begins with a quick turn and upturned heels and a laugh that should you listen closely, sounds a little like bubbles on a water’s surface. “Please?” He asks as much as he pleads. Of everyone, perhaps he knows best how lonely adventures can be.



    Benjamen; my feet knew the path, we walked in the dark, in the dark
    never gave a single thought to where it might lead

    image by Gary Bendig
    @[neuna]
    Reply
    #5
    NEUNA
    She is young just as he is young but she lacks whatever thing it is that makes him a child. She has never had the heart of a child, the third daughter. None of the girls have, the three sisters tethered by that red string of Fate. The three sisters raised by those two magicians, one such a brilliant white and the other such a devastating black. No, the three daughters were never meant to be children. 

    She does not understand a child’s hunger for adventure. So the pale figure arches her neck when the boy reaches out to touch her, nostrils flaring. Because she lives to be adored, certainly, but no one has ever touched her without permission. Not even her father had thought himself worthy. And then the boy laughs, turns and flees, chasing a missing star and the pale figure exchanges a glance with the wolf pup. 

    The stars don’t come out until it’s night,” she calls after the boy, though she is not entirely convinced that this will deter him. 




    @[Benjamen]
    Reply
    #6
    I shine only with the light you give me


    Look into those blue eyes and you will see a sky, void of clouds and wind. Stare into those blue eyes long enough though and the sky will be forgotten, and an ocean will stand in its place, ready to drag you under, to fill your lungs and pull the strength from your body. What you will not find is any red string running across him. Fate has tried to bind him before, and fate had failed. What would his mother think now? Praying to the old gods and the new, praying to the fates, to the ancestors? Does his mother hold that red string in her hands?

    No.

    It is woven through her hair like the white lilies on her wedding day.

    She’s beautiful, an arched neck, nostrils flared. He thinks he saw a girl like this once in one of Elliana’s paintings. His sister’s artwork always created the most stunning of images, raw emotions, vibrant expressions. They harbored all of the beauty that true life lacked, or was so fleeting no one ever got to see it. Not truly.

    And then the beauty, the painting, his sister, it is forgotten in the motion of spidery limbs and boyish grins. “You can bring your puppy,” he says as if the encouragement is needed. “How do you know that?” He asks, challenges with all the bravery of his mother, but the smile he wears is entirely his father’s, open, soft, bright, much like the star his father was shed from. “My dad is a star,” he says because its true, James knows his culture well enough, knows his history. “And he is out all the time.” Always. He tucks dark ears backwards in a mess of awkward black hair with uncertainty. “Maybe you just never looked hard enough.”

    Maybe fate has a greater sway for a young boy than previously thought.



    Benjamen; my feet knew the path, we walked in the dark, in the dark
    never gave a single thought to where it might lead

    image by Gary Bendig
    @[neuna]
    Reply
    #7
    NEUNA
    Still, the third daughter is unmoved. Unconvinced, though the shadow pup has already begun to stir. (This child is more fun, more adventurous than the girl it is bound to! How the pup hungers for this sort of adventure!) The girl calls the pup back because she is wary of strangers still, even when they are children. Even when their eyes are bright. Even when they are eager and prone to childish whimsy.

    The pup curls itself around her heels and she watches, always watches.

    He asks how she knows and she glances at the sky. She remembers the darkness. The terrible, terrible darkness. And then her father’s terrible anger, how his fury was as black as the rest of him. How he cast them all away and now the only thing she has left of him is the fog that had curled sweetly around her legs and the pup that nips at her ankle, wanting.

    Everyone knows that,” she answers, though she’s not certain it’s true.

    But she has never heard of fathers who are stars. Her father is darkness, impenetrable. The same kind of darkness that had descended over all of Beqanna. Her father is the opposite of a star, she thinks. He is a black hole, the reaper. (And yet she loves him all the same, the third daughter, because it is all she knows how to do.)

    Maybe he’s not really a star,” she challenges. Because she is a thing built for love, to command love, but she is her father’s daughter. She is her mother’s daughter. It is not said with malice but she will not be made a fool of either. 




    @[Benjamen]
    Reply
    #8
    I shine only with the light you give me


    Ben is a whirlwind of charm trapped in the body of a young boy. He smiles too wide, his eyes are too open, as if trying to catch everything that happens in the world around him. His voice is too smoother, unmarked by the terror the world (he can remember the drowning, when he thinks about it, but forgets it as quickly as it comes.)

    He likes the puppy, he decides, the way its body moves closer to him and Bnejamen feels his first pang of jealousy that rises in his chest, wishing it could be his. He has no name for this feeling, so it is forgotten in the next instant.

    “Did you ask everyone?” That question is most certainly one his mother would ask in this moment and so the boy asks it too. Though his does not hold the playful banter that his mother’s would, instead it is said with such a genuine, innocent nature, and sounds entirely wrong coming from his lips with that face and those eyes.

    Maybe he isn’t really a star. He is too young for this thought to have ever crossed his mind, to accept anything than what has been told of him, what he has experienced. That there was an alternative is not something had not been something he considered. He should be angry, or at least annoyed that she would question such things about his family that he loves so dearly. But neither the feeling nor the expression can falter his youthful glow. “Why wouldn't he be?” He asks, too young for doubt, but already too old to hold his tongue.



    Benjamen; my feet knew the path, we walked in the dark, in the dark
    never gave a single thought to where it might lead

    image by Gary Bendig
    @[neuna]
    Reply
    #9
    NEUNA
    There is a strange pulsing in her throat and she understands, quite abstractly, that they are on the edge of something. (It is such an unfamiliar sensation, this thing that itches at the meat between her ribs, nags at the base of her fine skull. She will not recognize it as disdain until she is much older because she is a thing built of love and for love but she is also such a terribly proud thing, a fatal flaw certainly, one inherited from her father and she does not yet know how to gracefully accept a challenge. Even a childish one.)

    How strange it is to powerlessly stand by as two equally powerful emotions wage war in her chest! So desperately she wants to love him, as she is wont to love all strangers and yet she so terribly wants to chide him for daring to question her. 

    Ultimately, she settles for a short, irritated snort (the very first of its kind). Should she have to ask everyone when it is considered a universal truth? But she says nothing further, just watches this boy haloed in light as he further questions her. 

    What proof is there?” she asks, though there is no trace of agitation in her voice. In this, she is only curious. 



    @[Benjamen]
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