The
bones had lain there for almost twenty years, picked clean by
scavengers and the passing winds of time. Once a neat pile where
the tired old soul had lain down for the final time, now they
were scattered over a half dozen paces, some resting in the
glare of the sun, others piled under the gloom of a thorn bush.
Footsteps disturbed the peace of the grave site.
A tall and willowy woman, dressed in a clinging pale grey robe.
Iron-grey hair, streaked with silver, cascaded down her back.
On the ring finger of her left hand she wore a circle of stars.
She had very deep blue eyes, and a red mouth.
Blood trailed from one corner and down her chin.
As she neared the largest pile of bones the woman crouched,
and snarled, her hands tensed claws.
"Fool
way to die!" she hissed. "Alone and forgotten! Did you think
I forgot? Did you think to escape me so easily?"
She snarled again, and grabbed a portion of the rib cage, flinging
it behind her. She snatched at another bone, and threw that
with the ribs. She scurried a little further away, reached under
the thorn bush, and hauled out its desiccated treasury of bones,
also throwing them on the pile.
She continued to snap and snarl, as if she had the rabid fever
of wild dogs, scurrying from spot to spot, picking up a knuckle
here, a vertebrae there, a cracked femur bone from somewhere
else.
The pile of bones grew.
"I
want to hunt," she whispered, "and yet what must I do? Find
your useless framework, and knit something out of it! Why must
I be left to do it all?"
She finally stood, surveying the skeletal pile before her. "Something
is missing," she mumbled, and swept her hands back through her
hair, combing it out of her eyes.
Her tongue had long since licked clean the tasty morsel draining
down her chin.
"Missing,"
she continued to mumble, wandering in circles about the desolate
site. "Missing ... where ... where ... ah!"
She snatched at a long white hair that clung to the outer reaches
of the thorn bush and hurried back to the pile of bones with
it.
She carefully laid it across the top of the pile.
Then she stood back, standing very still, her dark blue eyes
staring at the bones.
Very slowly she raised her left hand, and the circle of light
about its ring finger flared.
"Of
what use is bone to me?" she whispered. "I need flesh!"
She dropped her hand, and the light flared from ring to bones.
The pile burst into flame.
Without fear the woman stepped close and reached into the conflagration
with both hands. She grabbed hold of something, grunted with
effort, then finally, gradually, hauled it free.
Her own shape changed slightly during her efforts, as if her
muscles had to rearrange themselves to manage to drag the large
object free of the fire, and in the flickering light she seemed
something far larger and bulkier than human, and far, far more
dangerous. Yet when she finally stood straight again, she had
regained her womanly features.
She looked happily at the result of her endeavor. Her magic
had not dimmed in these past hours! But she shook her head slightly.
Look what had become of him!
He stood, limbs akimbo, pot belly drooping, and he returned
her scrutiny blankly, no gratitude in his face at all.
"You
are of his land," she said, "and there is still service it demands
of you. Go south, and wait."
He stared, unblinking, uncaring, and then he gave a mighty yawn.
The languor of death had not yet left him, and all he wanted
to do was to sleep.
"Oh!"
she said, irritated. "Go!"
She waved her hand again, the light flared, and when again it
had died, she stood alone in the stony gully of the Urqhart
Hills.
Grinning again at the pleasantness of solitude, she turned and
ran for the north, and as she did so her shape changed, and
her limbs loped, and her tongue hung red from her mouth, and
she began to feel the need to sink her teeth into the back of
prey again, very, very soon.
Scrawny
limbs trembling, pot belly hanging from gaunt ribs, he stood
on the plain just north of the Rhaetian Hills.
Beside him the Nordra roared.
He was desperate for sleep, and so he hung his head, and he
dreamed.
He
dreamed. He dreamed of days so far distant he did not know if
they were memory or myth. He dreamed of great battles, defeats
and victories both, and he dreamed of the one who had loved
him, and who he'd loved beyond expression. Then he'd been crippled,
and the one who loved him had shown him the door, and so he'd
wandered disconsolate-save for the odd loving the boy showed
him-until his life had trickled to a conclusion in blessed,
blessed death.
Then why was he back?