Any comments, critiques, errors more than welcome.
This is the first draft. Most recent version is here: http://smashboards.com/threads/what-songs-they-would-sing.358238/#post-17093824.
This is the first draft. Most recent version is here: http://smashboards.com/threads/what-songs-they-would-sing.358238/#post-17093824.
The old armor dwarfed her frame as she rode. Even with the straps pulled taught, the iron plates sat twisted on her collar and wore her raw. Perhaps this was common among knights. She sat hunched in the saddle, covering the faint outline of a bull elk etched onto her breast. Pressing down her back was a great shield nearly half her size and made of a metal she did not know. It was lighter than steel but dark, not just on its surface but throughout. On the front of the shield was a large oak tree riddled with the scars of arrowheads and fire. Etched onto the leaves of its outermost branches were the names of her father and her brothers. When she was younger she used to trace their names in jealousy, but had not done so in some time.
The paths through the timberlands were far more unforgiving than Sylvia had imagined. Looking down on the sea of conifers and pines from the mountains had given her the impression of a lush and thriving land; deep greens that bend and sway in the wind like summer grass, a thick rug to comfort and mend her ailing mind. It was not until she had reached the base of the steppe that she saw the ground beneath the canopies, a graveyard of crags and boulders cracking beneath the weight of the arch trees. An endless cobweb of roots grew over the stones like a cancer, slowly crushing and suffocating them, draining the rocks of their color. With reigns in hand she led Malon over the fissures and root ends, listening carefully to the unsteady clop of its hooves. The sound carried too far over the stone and she looked back frequently, certain the echo was not her own.
It was near the middle of the Evening months and the sun glowed a fine amber atop the ridge; gold coins of light broke through the tree tops to dance upon the forest floor, kindling the dust in the air and letting it burn like fire. In a few more days the low arc of the sun would stop and slowly make its way back towards Noon and then Morning, never fully crossing the horizon. Those not born in the north fashioned the endless days a novelty. Some sought to tame it, but with no sleep and poor resolve most grew mad and left, abandoning their families and losses. But these days were all Sylvia knew and the light shed off her like the storm on new thatch. But still she slumped in her leathers. Despite her fatigue the clock in her head kept its perfect time, unable to rely on the mapmaker’s sun or stars it knew in name only. Through hazed mind she remembered the lessons of her father, the hourly then quarterly lashings she and her brothers endured until the pain was memorized. Even with drugs or fever, she would always know and never sleep more or less.
In time the two reached a small opening in the woods where the bedrock was too thick for the arch trees to root. The rider sighed, taking in but for a moment the dry, frigid air of the welcome expanse. From the edge of the arch trees she stared out towards the center of the clearing and saw an old outpost made of rock. It was small and pale-worn, the stones themselves unworked, never meant to fit or conjoin with the others, bearing large gaps where crude mortar should be. When the breeze quickened and the tree tops swayed, it whined with a thin whistle. The lichened stone around it spread out like an infection; perfectly round, emanating from the outpost and pressing against the growth of the tree line. The sluggishness Sylvia once bore drew thin and surged through her chest, prying her eyelids apart till they hurt. For some minutes she glanced back and forth between the outpost and the tree line. Between forced breaths she swore it must be ages abandoned but knew she was no master in such things. With the soft click of her tongue she steered Malon in a great, slow arc around the cairn.
The door on the front of the outpost hung loose and ajar, the planks beneath the hinges splintering under the weight. Sylvia strained through her visor to see the age of the tears but could not. After two passes she stopped and held Malon at the tree line. Even if the stones were dead, there would be no man in a thousand miles who would not check its gate once seen. But the wind is fierce and the storms fickle and flesh does much persuading. She looked up at the skies. An hour, she thought. If they don’t come in an hour they won’t come tonight. She guided Malon back into the trees, dismounting far enough therein to see yet not be seen. She unstrapped her bags from the saddle and heaved them between in the folds of the roots; raw grain and jerked meat, flasks, blankets, a small lantern of oil once lit. Malon followed her to the ground and tried to nestle into her metal breast. She took off one gauntlet and raked her hand through his mane like barley. The touch and motion soothed and brought great pains for home. But as she sat, leaning against the warmth of her horse, quietly chewing her rations, her mind remained on the outpost.
An hour passed before she moved to brush the frost from her visor. She had grown so used to the stillness it seemed irreverent to break it. One more, she thought, just to be safe. At her side, Malon grew restless. She whispered in his ear to calm him, patting his neck and tracing patterns through his hair. It was thick and coarse and unkept, but even through gauntlets she would know its touch. The gentle repetitions lulled both horse and woman to slumber. As Malon closed his eyes and stirred, Sylvia, finally looked down from the outpost, wrapped her arm about his neck and whispered that two can never be lost.
Another hour passed and she woke. None seemed to have followed her and the outpost remained unmoved. Sylvia stood, shield still on her arm and stretched, letting the warm blood burn through her icy fingertips. She twisted, loosening the joints of her armor as silent as she could. The leather straps creaked in the cold as Malon’s ears twitched. As Sylvia turned she stared at the gray tree trunk she had been resting against; carved into the bark, level with her eyes, was a name, hers, in old letters, sap still fresh in the wound.
She turned, back against the tree, and struggled to pry her sword from its frozen sheath. Malon jumped, the whites of his eyes clear, and took a short stride before slowing. He paid no mind as his master gasped through the slits of her helm, her head turning within its shadows to check the edge of the trees. There was no other movement. In the stillness she reached down and pulled her brother’s great shield up from between the roots. When held by such giant men as her father, the great iron tree covered only their chest and lower torso and for only as long as their shoulders could bear the strain. But with Sylvia the bulwark covered all save her toes if she were to crouch, and, already so close to the ground, could be planted instead of carried. From behind the iron her mind raced. A stranger that close was sure to wake her or Malon, no matter how fatigued they were. But the proof was there. And what man knows her name but would not strike her on sight and drag her home? An unease grew within her far separate from fear of pain. No matter how hard she tried to watch the tree line, her eyes slowly pulled back to the outpost.
Her breath turned the edges of her visor white. She knew she could not outlast this fear. She could stay as entrenched as she was until the Morning months and her heart would still be as a hummingbird’s. But why had she stolen the armor and shield if not welcome danger like this? Perhaps the reality is fiercer than the dream. She gathered Malon’s reigns and tied them loose enough about a branch that if he truly struggled they’d come free. He stood still and calm, following her hands as if they might hold a carrot. For the first time Sylvia found herself wishing that he were human, that he understood what choice she was making and would plead with her to stay. Instead he stared, not knowing the difference between today and yesterday or a year ago. She patted the star between his eyes and whispered gently as she kissed it.
The door creaked. Dust and bits of stone fell from the hinges as she struggled to push it open. Inside, needles of light poured from crumbling walls to probe the darkness. In the center of the room, directly in front of the door, was a table covered in red silk. Around the edges of the table were a set of chairs, mostly broken, and all scattered across the floor save one, which remained untouched beneath the nearest side. On top of the silk was a basket of round fruit with dark green swirls she had never seen before. The skin of one had been torn off and, despite the cold and fickle wind, the juicy orange flesh was still pungent enough to fill the room. Their size reminded Sylvia of pumpkins and squash, but these were softer, with more vivid and patterned rinds. She touched the torn fruit with her sword and watched it stagger across the table.
Against the far wall was a ladder. Her eyes traced it up to the roof and saw the constellations of holes above her. Once the ceiling could have supported her. But now there was more air than wood and the rafters bowed desperately under their own rotten mass. Only after searching the room once over and did she realize the ladder also went down through a hatch in the floorboards. Resting her shield against the wall, Sylvia squatted next to the latch and pulled the door open. She leaned forward and watched the flecks of gold dust drift down into the pitch. With her sword tucked into her arm she pried off her gauntlet finger by finger and unhooked the small wicker lamp hanging from her waist. The ridges on the flint knob were smooth as marble beneath her sweat and only after a moment’s stillness could she grip it proper. A chance spark hit the wick and the lantern burned a pale yellow behind its glass cage. From outside, the outpost illuminated; large spines of light bored through the holes in the walls like an urchin. Sylvia hooked the lantern to her belt and slid her hand back into the leathers of her gauntlet. Like the chairs, the ladder was sturdy and had been crafted by knowing hands; the beams were a perfect geometry; the joints, though old and worn, were cut and joined so precisely that nails were not needed. She put a foot out onto the nearest rung of the ladder and pushed left and right, testing her weight. The comfort of those menial tasks, dressing, fixing the lamp, testing the ladder, all work she had done thousands of time without mind at home, thinned as she looked past her feet to the darkness. With a prayer in her throat she began her slow descent. Outside, the outpost relaxed and slowly retracted its golden quills.
Beneath the floor, the room widened with each step and the glow of the lantern no longer reached the walls. The temperature grew as the air became grew dense and humid; water seeped between her cloths and pressed against her skin as sweat. She rested often, clutching the bars in her forearms until her shaking stopped. She knew not the depth but she knew the time and, eight minutes in, she felt the thickness of the ground. It was ash, not bedrock, moist but like starch underneath her greaves. Despite the brilliance of her lantern she could not see the walls or ceiling about her but only the pale island of ground she steadied. Set deep but faint in the ash before her were overlapping prints leading out into the darkness. She squatted beside them; heavy, flat marks that packed the soil, no two the same size or form but all men. With her shield open and useless at her side, she followed the light and brave men out into the sea.
Farther and farther into the nothingness, flecks of light came and left, mirroring her steps. She paused and watched them. They remained, unblinking, eerie but lifeless. As she approached one straight ahead, Sylvia could finally see them whole; armor. Shattered greaves and helms with red stains long since turned black, chain mail torn and jagged, breast plates pulled inside out. With each step they grew in number as their metals grew more precious; bronze gave way to iron then steel with black silvers and gold.
On the horizon, nestled between the shores of armor straddling her path, grew a flame, small yet steady, not unlike the lantern about her waist. With a grunt, Sylvia threw her shield before her and stabbed it firm into the powdered ash. From above its rim she watched the flame. It looked like no one held it, but she was not sure.
‘Come.’
The voice was deep but feminine, some years older than her own. Despite the vestiges of blood and death before it, it called with warmth, like the tendrils of a winter furnace. How could a man walk towards so tender a voice with sword and shield raised? They, an intruder, breaking the sanctity of welcome. Perhaps their blade would scare her off, forever wound their honor. But Sylvia’s heart still beat fearful and as she walked, she held her shield, now with both hands, before her.
‘Come.’
As she approached, the walls grew solid and narrowed. The edge of her great shield nicked the stone about her shoulders. If someone approached there would be no room to swing axes or clubs. If they were to thrust with halberd or sword, even the King’s Hand would only find shield. Her back, though, was bare and there was no room nor speed in which to turn even at the widest spaces. But she would not dwell on this; her spirit grew thin and death had grown old. If it were to come it would come, no matter her worry. The walls narrowed one last time, forcing her sideways, before opening into a large, rectangular room. As she crossed the threshold, she saw the flame that led her way was the center of four others that lit the corners of the room. The floor lay buried in the furs of beasts she had never seen. Velvet tapestries lay draped over absent windows and bookshelves, bulging at their joints, stood weight against the walls. In the center of the room was a large bed with red silken sheets and a dark, oaken frame. A woman with black hair, long and straight as a razor, sat in profile along the edge. With her back upright they were the same height.
‘I have been waiting, Sylvia.’
‘How do you know my name?’
There were no callouses on her fingers, no veins on the back of her hands. The muscles in her thighs drove against her skin as she stood. Sylvia could see great strength with each step and knew she earned it some other way. Resting on the corners of her hips was a thin skirt cut to her outer thigh. Beyond this she wore no clothing save a golden chain about her neck and waist. Her torso was as slender and forceful as her legs and her shoulders were as wide and pale as any man’s. But for her great stature, her breasts were small, more skin than fat, and they did not sway like her hips as she stepped forward.
‘I am Can, one of the Witches of Izalith.’ She stood unnatural, arms stiff and rigid at her sides. ‘You have come to slay me. I know this well.’
There was something so comforting about the witch’s voice. Even with the dead and ravaged piled at her heels, Sylvia felt a desire kindle within her. Her heart quickened as if she were a child again, watching the chieftain’s sons and her brothers wrestle in the fields. Jealousy and lust swelled within her breast. But as her mind fell to the pleasure she opened her eyes and before her was only the witch, thin and hairless, stiff, devoid of scars. The more she stared the more desire faded to curiosity, then ambivalence and disgust. There was nothing for her here. With eyes pried open Sylvia rested the tip of her sword atop the great shield and pointed it at Can. The witch held out her hand.
‘Stop, sister. First, let us talk. I want you to know why you are not adorning the walls like the heroes before you. Why even this moment of peace is given to you.’
Her finger drew slowly to her right eye.
‘This eye. It gazes, always, into the past. The other into the future. Together, the present. With this eye I saw your brother inherit his father’s armor and I watched as disease crippled him. I watched you, next eldest, beg and plead to complete his right of passage. I watched you steal it and leave as they slept, watched you ride into the forests, searching for your demon to slay.’
The witch lowered one hand and raised the other.
‘And with this eye I have seen who leaves here, seen who limps through the arch trees.’
The point of Sylvia’s sword stayed on the demon but her pose softened and became more upright.
‘I let you slay me. I could butcher you, tear you like all the knights gallant who sought my head and my pleasure. But I do not. I let you, a woman, the first I have seen don the armor, cut me down. And I see in my death more sisters to follow you, to forego the contentment of dress and children. To slay demons. To become the power they seek and crave. But…’
The witch stepped forward with a new assertiveness.
‘If I just… kneel before you, bow my head….’
Another step, her palms open at her side.
‘The men will ask “Where are your scars? What lies do you weave?”
From the moment Sylvia had entered her room, the witch had betrayed no emotion. Perhaps she couldn’t. She wore a face that had been carved from the heart of men but there were no creases from laughter or sorrow. Despite the power of her voice, when she spoke her jaw was stone and her lips were strained to move. But as the tip of her shadow rested on Sylvia’s shield, an ecstasy filled the back of her eyes and a smile, taught and inhuman, cracked her skin.
‘Be strong, sister. You will earn the stories they sing.’
Sylvia crouched behind her shield and readied her sword. She had never fought, only watched and sparred. How does one kill a demon? Have they fire? When should she strike? What madness convinced her she had any chance of becoming a hero? She shook the thoughts from her head; doubt would not help her now. Through the thin slits of grating her eyes remained fixed upon the demon as they darted from wall to wall to ceiling.
***
Sylvia collapsed in the corner. She could not see out of her right eye so threw off her helm and it did not change. Her sword was broken; she clutched the hilt in her hand and the demon the blade in her neck. On the other side of the bed her shield blackened in the fire. She was proud never to have never lost her grip, even as the witch hurled it across the room. She looked down at where her forearm once was and saw only black. When she was stronger she would pick up the shield before searching for Malon. Everything else could be damned but she needed the shield. But first she needed to rest, find her wounds and dress them. There was no pain, only the steady loss of blood and heat.
As she closed her eyes, the demon was all she could see. She thought about how the witch did not flinch and the dark, pungent flesh knotted beneath her skin. She thought about how her strikes slowed as they fought, and the acceptance on her face as she knelt and pulled the hair off the nape of her neck. And at last she thought about her father and his ire, or perhaps his joy, and what songs they would sing.
The paths through the timberlands were far more unforgiving than Sylvia had imagined. Looking down on the sea of conifers and pines from the mountains had given her the impression of a lush and thriving land; deep greens that bend and sway in the wind like summer grass, a thick rug to comfort and mend her ailing mind. It was not until she had reached the base of the steppe that she saw the ground beneath the canopies, a graveyard of crags and boulders cracking beneath the weight of the arch trees. An endless cobweb of roots grew over the stones like a cancer, slowly crushing and suffocating them, draining the rocks of their color. With reigns in hand she led Malon over the fissures and root ends, listening carefully to the unsteady clop of its hooves. The sound carried too far over the stone and she looked back frequently, certain the echo was not her own.
It was near the middle of the Evening months and the sun glowed a fine amber atop the ridge; gold coins of light broke through the tree tops to dance upon the forest floor, kindling the dust in the air and letting it burn like fire. In a few more days the low arc of the sun would stop and slowly make its way back towards Noon and then Morning, never fully crossing the horizon. Those not born in the north fashioned the endless days a novelty. Some sought to tame it, but with no sleep and poor resolve most grew mad and left, abandoning their families and losses. But these days were all Sylvia knew and the light shed off her like the storm on new thatch. But still she slumped in her leathers. Despite her fatigue the clock in her head kept its perfect time, unable to rely on the mapmaker’s sun or stars it knew in name only. Through hazed mind she remembered the lessons of her father, the hourly then quarterly lashings she and her brothers endured until the pain was memorized. Even with drugs or fever, she would always know and never sleep more or less.
In time the two reached a small opening in the woods where the bedrock was too thick for the arch trees to root. The rider sighed, taking in but for a moment the dry, frigid air of the welcome expanse. From the edge of the arch trees she stared out towards the center of the clearing and saw an old outpost made of rock. It was small and pale-worn, the stones themselves unworked, never meant to fit or conjoin with the others, bearing large gaps where crude mortar should be. When the breeze quickened and the tree tops swayed, it whined with a thin whistle. The lichened stone around it spread out like an infection; perfectly round, emanating from the outpost and pressing against the growth of the tree line. The sluggishness Sylvia once bore drew thin and surged through her chest, prying her eyelids apart till they hurt. For some minutes she glanced back and forth between the outpost and the tree line. Between forced breaths she swore it must be ages abandoned but knew she was no master in such things. With the soft click of her tongue she steered Malon in a great, slow arc around the cairn.
The door on the front of the outpost hung loose and ajar, the planks beneath the hinges splintering under the weight. Sylvia strained through her visor to see the age of the tears but could not. After two passes she stopped and held Malon at the tree line. Even if the stones were dead, there would be no man in a thousand miles who would not check its gate once seen. But the wind is fierce and the storms fickle and flesh does much persuading. She looked up at the skies. An hour, she thought. If they don’t come in an hour they won’t come tonight. She guided Malon back into the trees, dismounting far enough therein to see yet not be seen. She unstrapped her bags from the saddle and heaved them between in the folds of the roots; raw grain and jerked meat, flasks, blankets, a small lantern of oil once lit. Malon followed her to the ground and tried to nestle into her metal breast. She took off one gauntlet and raked her hand through his mane like barley. The touch and motion soothed and brought great pains for home. But as she sat, leaning against the warmth of her horse, quietly chewing her rations, her mind remained on the outpost.
An hour passed before she moved to brush the frost from her visor. She had grown so used to the stillness it seemed irreverent to break it. One more, she thought, just to be safe. At her side, Malon grew restless. She whispered in his ear to calm him, patting his neck and tracing patterns through his hair. It was thick and coarse and unkept, but even through gauntlets she would know its touch. The gentle repetitions lulled both horse and woman to slumber. As Malon closed his eyes and stirred, Sylvia, finally looked down from the outpost, wrapped her arm about his neck and whispered that two can never be lost.
Another hour passed and she woke. None seemed to have followed her and the outpost remained unmoved. Sylvia stood, shield still on her arm and stretched, letting the warm blood burn through her icy fingertips. She twisted, loosening the joints of her armor as silent as she could. The leather straps creaked in the cold as Malon’s ears twitched. As Sylvia turned she stared at the gray tree trunk she had been resting against; carved into the bark, level with her eyes, was a name, hers, in old letters, sap still fresh in the wound.
She turned, back against the tree, and struggled to pry her sword from its frozen sheath. Malon jumped, the whites of his eyes clear, and took a short stride before slowing. He paid no mind as his master gasped through the slits of her helm, her head turning within its shadows to check the edge of the trees. There was no other movement. In the stillness she reached down and pulled her brother’s great shield up from between the roots. When held by such giant men as her father, the great iron tree covered only their chest and lower torso and for only as long as their shoulders could bear the strain. But with Sylvia the bulwark covered all save her toes if she were to crouch, and, already so close to the ground, could be planted instead of carried. From behind the iron her mind raced. A stranger that close was sure to wake her or Malon, no matter how fatigued they were. But the proof was there. And what man knows her name but would not strike her on sight and drag her home? An unease grew within her far separate from fear of pain. No matter how hard she tried to watch the tree line, her eyes slowly pulled back to the outpost.
Her breath turned the edges of her visor white. She knew she could not outlast this fear. She could stay as entrenched as she was until the Morning months and her heart would still be as a hummingbird’s. But why had she stolen the armor and shield if not welcome danger like this? Perhaps the reality is fiercer than the dream. She gathered Malon’s reigns and tied them loose enough about a branch that if he truly struggled they’d come free. He stood still and calm, following her hands as if they might hold a carrot. For the first time Sylvia found herself wishing that he were human, that he understood what choice she was making and would plead with her to stay. Instead he stared, not knowing the difference between today and yesterday or a year ago. She patted the star between his eyes and whispered gently as she kissed it.
The door creaked. Dust and bits of stone fell from the hinges as she struggled to push it open. Inside, needles of light poured from crumbling walls to probe the darkness. In the center of the room, directly in front of the door, was a table covered in red silk. Around the edges of the table were a set of chairs, mostly broken, and all scattered across the floor save one, which remained untouched beneath the nearest side. On top of the silk was a basket of round fruit with dark green swirls she had never seen before. The skin of one had been torn off and, despite the cold and fickle wind, the juicy orange flesh was still pungent enough to fill the room. Their size reminded Sylvia of pumpkins and squash, but these were softer, with more vivid and patterned rinds. She touched the torn fruit with her sword and watched it stagger across the table.
Against the far wall was a ladder. Her eyes traced it up to the roof and saw the constellations of holes above her. Once the ceiling could have supported her. But now there was more air than wood and the rafters bowed desperately under their own rotten mass. Only after searching the room once over and did she realize the ladder also went down through a hatch in the floorboards. Resting her shield against the wall, Sylvia squatted next to the latch and pulled the door open. She leaned forward and watched the flecks of gold dust drift down into the pitch. With her sword tucked into her arm she pried off her gauntlet finger by finger and unhooked the small wicker lamp hanging from her waist. The ridges on the flint knob were smooth as marble beneath her sweat and only after a moment’s stillness could she grip it proper. A chance spark hit the wick and the lantern burned a pale yellow behind its glass cage. From outside, the outpost illuminated; large spines of light bored through the holes in the walls like an urchin. Sylvia hooked the lantern to her belt and slid her hand back into the leathers of her gauntlet. Like the chairs, the ladder was sturdy and had been crafted by knowing hands; the beams were a perfect geometry; the joints, though old and worn, were cut and joined so precisely that nails were not needed. She put a foot out onto the nearest rung of the ladder and pushed left and right, testing her weight. The comfort of those menial tasks, dressing, fixing the lamp, testing the ladder, all work she had done thousands of time without mind at home, thinned as she looked past her feet to the darkness. With a prayer in her throat she began her slow descent. Outside, the outpost relaxed and slowly retracted its golden quills.
Beneath the floor, the room widened with each step and the glow of the lantern no longer reached the walls. The temperature grew as the air became grew dense and humid; water seeped between her cloths and pressed against her skin as sweat. She rested often, clutching the bars in her forearms until her shaking stopped. She knew not the depth but she knew the time and, eight minutes in, she felt the thickness of the ground. It was ash, not bedrock, moist but like starch underneath her greaves. Despite the brilliance of her lantern she could not see the walls or ceiling about her but only the pale island of ground she steadied. Set deep but faint in the ash before her were overlapping prints leading out into the darkness. She squatted beside them; heavy, flat marks that packed the soil, no two the same size or form but all men. With her shield open and useless at her side, she followed the light and brave men out into the sea.
Farther and farther into the nothingness, flecks of light came and left, mirroring her steps. She paused and watched them. They remained, unblinking, eerie but lifeless. As she approached one straight ahead, Sylvia could finally see them whole; armor. Shattered greaves and helms with red stains long since turned black, chain mail torn and jagged, breast plates pulled inside out. With each step they grew in number as their metals grew more precious; bronze gave way to iron then steel with black silvers and gold.
On the horizon, nestled between the shores of armor straddling her path, grew a flame, small yet steady, not unlike the lantern about her waist. With a grunt, Sylvia threw her shield before her and stabbed it firm into the powdered ash. From above its rim she watched the flame. It looked like no one held it, but she was not sure.
‘Come.’
The voice was deep but feminine, some years older than her own. Despite the vestiges of blood and death before it, it called with warmth, like the tendrils of a winter furnace. How could a man walk towards so tender a voice with sword and shield raised? They, an intruder, breaking the sanctity of welcome. Perhaps their blade would scare her off, forever wound their honor. But Sylvia’s heart still beat fearful and as she walked, she held her shield, now with both hands, before her.
‘Come.’
As she approached, the walls grew solid and narrowed. The edge of her great shield nicked the stone about her shoulders. If someone approached there would be no room to swing axes or clubs. If they were to thrust with halberd or sword, even the King’s Hand would only find shield. Her back, though, was bare and there was no room nor speed in which to turn even at the widest spaces. But she would not dwell on this; her spirit grew thin and death had grown old. If it were to come it would come, no matter her worry. The walls narrowed one last time, forcing her sideways, before opening into a large, rectangular room. As she crossed the threshold, she saw the flame that led her way was the center of four others that lit the corners of the room. The floor lay buried in the furs of beasts she had never seen. Velvet tapestries lay draped over absent windows and bookshelves, bulging at their joints, stood weight against the walls. In the center of the room was a large bed with red silken sheets and a dark, oaken frame. A woman with black hair, long and straight as a razor, sat in profile along the edge. With her back upright they were the same height.
‘I have been waiting, Sylvia.’
‘How do you know my name?’
There were no callouses on her fingers, no veins on the back of her hands. The muscles in her thighs drove against her skin as she stood. Sylvia could see great strength with each step and knew she earned it some other way. Resting on the corners of her hips was a thin skirt cut to her outer thigh. Beyond this she wore no clothing save a golden chain about her neck and waist. Her torso was as slender and forceful as her legs and her shoulders were as wide and pale as any man’s. But for her great stature, her breasts were small, more skin than fat, and they did not sway like her hips as she stepped forward.
‘I am Can, one of the Witches of Izalith.’ She stood unnatural, arms stiff and rigid at her sides. ‘You have come to slay me. I know this well.’
There was something so comforting about the witch’s voice. Even with the dead and ravaged piled at her heels, Sylvia felt a desire kindle within her. Her heart quickened as if she were a child again, watching the chieftain’s sons and her brothers wrestle in the fields. Jealousy and lust swelled within her breast. But as her mind fell to the pleasure she opened her eyes and before her was only the witch, thin and hairless, stiff, devoid of scars. The more she stared the more desire faded to curiosity, then ambivalence and disgust. There was nothing for her here. With eyes pried open Sylvia rested the tip of her sword atop the great shield and pointed it at Can. The witch held out her hand.
‘Stop, sister. First, let us talk. I want you to know why you are not adorning the walls like the heroes before you. Why even this moment of peace is given to you.’
Her finger drew slowly to her right eye.
‘This eye. It gazes, always, into the past. The other into the future. Together, the present. With this eye I saw your brother inherit his father’s armor and I watched as disease crippled him. I watched you, next eldest, beg and plead to complete his right of passage. I watched you steal it and leave as they slept, watched you ride into the forests, searching for your demon to slay.’
The witch lowered one hand and raised the other.
‘And with this eye I have seen who leaves here, seen who limps through the arch trees.’
The point of Sylvia’s sword stayed on the demon but her pose softened and became more upright.
‘I let you slay me. I could butcher you, tear you like all the knights gallant who sought my head and my pleasure. But I do not. I let you, a woman, the first I have seen don the armor, cut me down. And I see in my death more sisters to follow you, to forego the contentment of dress and children. To slay demons. To become the power they seek and crave. But…’
The witch stepped forward with a new assertiveness.
‘If I just… kneel before you, bow my head….’
Another step, her palms open at her side.
‘The men will ask “Where are your scars? What lies do you weave?”
From the moment Sylvia had entered her room, the witch had betrayed no emotion. Perhaps she couldn’t. She wore a face that had been carved from the heart of men but there were no creases from laughter or sorrow. Despite the power of her voice, when she spoke her jaw was stone and her lips were strained to move. But as the tip of her shadow rested on Sylvia’s shield, an ecstasy filled the back of her eyes and a smile, taught and inhuman, cracked her skin.
‘Be strong, sister. You will earn the stories they sing.’
Sylvia crouched behind her shield and readied her sword. She had never fought, only watched and sparred. How does one kill a demon? Have they fire? When should she strike? What madness convinced her she had any chance of becoming a hero? She shook the thoughts from her head; doubt would not help her now. Through the thin slits of grating her eyes remained fixed upon the demon as they darted from wall to wall to ceiling.
***
Sylvia collapsed in the corner. She could not see out of her right eye so threw off her helm and it did not change. Her sword was broken; she clutched the hilt in her hand and the demon the blade in her neck. On the other side of the bed her shield blackened in the fire. She was proud never to have never lost her grip, even as the witch hurled it across the room. She looked down at where her forearm once was and saw only black. When she was stronger she would pick up the shield before searching for Malon. Everything else could be damned but she needed the shield. But first she needed to rest, find her wounds and dress them. There was no pain, only the steady loss of blood and heat.
As she closed her eyes, the demon was all she could see. She thought about how the witch did not flinch and the dark, pungent flesh knotted beneath her skin. She thought about how her strikes slowed as they fought, and the acceptance on her face as she knelt and pulled the hair off the nape of her neck. And at last she thought about her father and his ire, or perhaps his joy, and what songs they would sing.
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